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tiy Dick Cavalli

A DIFFERENT IDEA OF WHAT
HEAVEN .Mj...J5T BE LII&lt;E:' . ·

).

}

MY FATHER 5A'Y5 HE;'LL I&lt;NON

ANDlHEY 6A'/, "WHO'S HE~ II

HE'S IN HEA.VEN WHEN HE .
A5K5 SCW.EONE IF THEY'VE
5E~N NASlY MCNAAF...

\

\
. •I

''

.

~/·. ,-~
?

WELL, I BOUGHr A
GIFT FOR RICK ANP
EILEEN'S NEW f36..6Y.

01-(GOOD.'
I HOPE IT'S
SO'v\ETHING
1
=-"''-'-y ~FE .

'It

WINTER WONDERLAND- An unldenlllied boy walka don a snow
covered street In Quincy, Mass. Suaday DIOI'IIIDI· Nearly 111-lncbes of
snow ball fallen In lbal commUDily since Saturday alghL The storm SliDday ill the worst snow storm to bit tile grater Boston area since the BUz·
zardof'78. (APLaserph&amp;to) (SeeAPWireSiory).
'

Priscilla's Pop
I THINK

"rrU TOLD ME NOr

!TIS!

TO GET ANYTHING
WITH SHARP EPGES.

·~· ---- witness to'testify
11-yearold
" MJA)U - J'r(lll!cutors say they will ~t-a neW'll·Y.ea~'&lt;~id "'llness when a black goes on trial a third time Monday In the beating
death of a while motorist during Miami's 1980 race riots.

RIGHT.' .AND ,A.NYrHING
PAINTED THAT MIGHT
CHIP, PEEL OR CRKK/

AND ·
ANYTHING
THAT MIGHT

I HOPE THE
6&lt;\6Y LIKES IT.·

WHAT IS IT?

A GIFT CERTIFICATE
FROM THE PIZZA '51-K

Nathaniel Lane, 19, who was acquitted of two other riot killings last
July, Is charged with first-degree murder In the slaying of 21-year-old
Benny Higdon. Two previous trials ended with hung juries.
Assistant State Attorney Leonard Glick said he expecled Kenneth
Shannon to bolster the state's case this tbne. The black youngster did
not testify In either of the previous trials and now lives outside Florida
with relatives.

SE SCARY.'

Byrd says congress is 'fall guy'
wASHINGTON - Senate Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd accused the Reagan admi~tration Sunday of trying to set up Congress
"as the fall guy" for the failure of the president's economic policies.
Byrd, lliterviewed on the CBS program "Face the Nation," said
Democrats tried to seek a "better mix" of budget and tax cuts but
were uruwccessful.
"We were defeated by the Republicai1B in the Senate who walked
lockstep Uke potilical. lemmings over the cliff in response to orders
from the White House and the Office of Management and Budget," the .
West VIrginia Democrat said.
Byrd also called for a re-evaluation of U.S. relations with Libya
because of reporta that Libyan leader Moanunar Khadafy has sent
"hit teams" to the United States to assaSBinate Reagan or other high
goverrunent officialB.
•

..

Reagan honors five artists
WASHINGTON - President Reagan paid tribute Sunday night to
five perfonning artists who "have lived the dreams and lightened the
hearta of millions of Americans," and joined them under a tight
security shield for a black-tie gala at the Kennedy Center.
"In their lives and art they have fashiooed lofty standards of excellence. Through them we can aU sing and dance and act and play,''
Reagan said at a gUttering reception in the White House East Room
for this year's recipients of the Kennedy Center Honors- ..nd leader
· Count Basle, movie actor Cary Grant, actresa Helen Hayes,
choreographer Jerome Robbins and pianls\ Rudolf Serkin.

Gunmen hijack three airliners
BARRANQUIILA, Colombia - Heavily anned Puerto Rican
nationalilts hijacked three Venezuelan commercial airliners today
with abOut 310 people aboard and forced the pilots to fiy from Caracas
to this Atlantic port city, said Ramon Pacheco, administrator of the

"ANOTHER THING, DnTTI
POR AYES.MAN I DON'T

"MOTHER! AFJVE-CAAATDIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RING AND
YOU'RE ~SKING IF I'M SURE IT'S THE RIGHT MAN?"

airport.
A spokesman from the airport control tower s:iid two of the planes
landed at 7 a.m. EST with abOut 230 passengers aboard. The third •
plane, which arrlvt!d arrived at 7:50 a.m., had about 80 aboard, the

spokesman said.·
.
Pacheco said one of the planes made a stop in Aruba and let II
people • · women IJid chi~-~ the plane.

Weather forecast
MOIIIIY cloudy with a dlance ol showen tonight. LowslD the upper
3011. Variable cloudlll , wiDdy and turnlag colder with aeattered
shown cbanglng t o - flllrrial TDNday.lfiPIIlGIUICI 40 but tanperaturel falling to the low • llf
Olanc:e ol pndpltatlon 30
percent tonlaht IJid 1'11 1-.. Wilda nartbnlterl,y 10.20 l1qlh tanilhL

-me.

,,.•
"A TEN-DOLLAR TREE? YOU WANT IT FOR A CORSAGE?"

i

cs·
•

wedznday ....

a..-11-•

''YOU KNOW THAT POLITICAL JOKE WIWIM~ING
1.
·. ABOUT LAST WEEK? GOT ELI!f,llll

H1

'l1niJaday ... c l ' . . . .

WedDerfayPJI'IIIua' '1
1

l.

1 SectiDnt 12 P-AteS
U CHtl
A Multlmedillnc. Newspaper

•

Surprise snowstorm
kills eight people

/

A BARBEaJE, TH.AT5 WHERE- HE'LL
STOF;': BECAt.Jst::' "THAT MUST BE IT.

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December _7, 1?~1

....AND WHEN HE CCJME!O TO A R::::ND
.. FUl-l- OF ~JANT l'FaJT:- AND A
~ ER FULLa= ICS&lt;a.DeE~--

YOU t&lt;NOW EVERYBODY H.A5

~ .. ANDAIHI0&lt;.5T&amp;*: 51ZZUNqCN

at y·

e

'

WINTHROP

•

c

.au. .....

1ft.

............ tlle . . Wet 1 day_,

J'IIJIQ, . _ ....., .. dJe .... '
I ................ Frtday.

FROM AP REPORTS
A snowstonn called the worst in
three seasons killed eight people and
stranded th!Jusands In New England, .
while Oregon gurgled under another
dose of heavy rain and six people
died because of fog that cloaked
Southern Callfoi'nla.
The surprise snowstonn dwnped
up to 2 feet of snow, hitting
Maasachuoetts and Rhode Island the
· hardest. Gusting winds plled the
snow Into drifts, and motorists abandoned their cars oo snowbound hig~
ways. Airporta and schools were
closed, and oo the vacation island of
Nantucket, 200 holiday revelers
.were stranded and as many as 30
whales beached themselves.
The storm that canied the snow
. was thoughtto be heading to sea, but
it first swept Inland and dwnped l'k
feet of snow on Boston, the most in
one day In 50 years, and 15 incbes in
Providence, R.I.
"We brought our children to
Boston to see the ilnow, but this is
ridiculous," .said George Porter of
Miramar, Fla., who was stranded at
Boston's Logan Airport with his
wife, Beverly, and their two
children, Glen, 13, and Tracy, 8.
Power tines in Rhode Island were
knocked down, and 5o,OOO residents
IQSt electricity. The Rhode Island
Tral18it Authority suspended all bus
service. Commonwealth Electric
Co. reported blackouts for 35,000
customers in Duxbury, south of
Boston, and, another 5,000 in Mar·
shfield.
"We' re grateful it's Sunday
because we don't have conunuters

Khadafy
·.~1·~-,.)l

·•-

'""'• 0 l&gt;

,.:..;_·

NEW YORK (AP) - Col. Moam·
mar Kbadafy denied sending
assassins to kill President Reagan,
but the State Department claimed it
has "strong evidence" the Libyan
leader is plotting the murder of
Reagan and other U.S. officials.
Branding the Reagan administration's charges "big lies,"
Khadafy challenged the United
States to show proof of such a plot.
"If they have evidence, we are
· ready to see this evidence,'' he said
in a television interview broadcaot
live by satellite to the United States
from his office in Tripoli.
"We are sure we haven't sent any
peOple to kill Reagan or any other
people in the world; and we want to
see these big lies," Khadafy said on
the ABC News program "This .Week
with David Brinkley."
·'We want investigation, to see the
truth, and let the American people
and the Libyan people and the
Congress of America to know the
truth, who is liar: Reagan or
Libya," he said. "I am challenging
them. I am challenging them to

going to work," said James Carlin, brought memories of the rustle ot of snow up here, only because of thti
the Massachusetts secretary of Iran·
excitement it creates," said Rlchan(
dollars.
sportation, as 2,500 snow plows
"I'd almost rather have 2 feet of Owen of New Hampshire's the Loon
cleared the highways.
snow on Bo~ton Common than 2 feet Mountain slopes.
The Weather Service measured
1010 inches of snow at weatherlocked Logan Airport, the heaviest
24-hour snowfall in December since
1926. Blowing snow was hampering
efforts to clear runways.
Rocco DeLuca, a spokesman for
the Rbode Island Highway Depart·
men!, said It was the worst stonn
since a blizzard In 19711.
The estimated 2,000 tourists who
went to Nantucket for a Christmas
celebration had to spend Saturday
night on the island whether they
planned to or' nOt because the stonn
forced cancellation of ferry runs and
plane flights. About 200 people
sought emergency shelter in
hospitals, hotels and homes.
The airport reopened Sunday af·
ternoon, but fenies we,ren't running.
"Whatever comes along, comes
along," said Paul Bowker, 53, of
Brewster, Mass., a member of the
Cape Cod Adventurers Club and one
of 42 people staying at the Nantucket
Cottage Hospital.
''We're aU adventurers now."
Two people were killed In weatherrelated traffic accidents in east·
central Connecticut, one motorist
was killed in a crash In New Ham·
pshi.re and an 11&amp;-year-old man died
CAtcHING SNOWFLAKES= han Hopki1111011, 5, of Boston catebes ·
in Vennont of a heart attack while
snowflakes
on his tougue while puUing his sled down Beaeon HUl In :
brushing away snow from his house,
Boston to Boston Common Sunday to take advantage of the nearly z.
authorities said.
lncbes of snow which fell. The snewfall was the biggest since the Blizzard
There was more than a foot of
ol '78. Outlying areas of Boston received as mucb as 26-lncbes and the
snow 'in New Hampshire and Ver·
Natioaal Weather Service at one point issued a blizzard warning. (AP
- mont, but there the crunch of snow
Laserpbolo). (See APWire Story).

~~nit:s assass~n
1ob,~ .. ~ •. ;;;r-~·,.,.""···..

flcials both here and overseas." The
statement did not elaborate, but
said:

involvement

-1

•'We

certainly hope that
Khadafy~s denial means that he w'ill
abandon the use of terrorism and

,,

''

~

''

assassination as a part of his foreign
policy. When he has slopped, we will
know it."

ma~e this investigation."

"It is the behavior of America ... to
assassinate me, to polson my food,
and they tried many things to do
this," headded but gave no details.
The State Department, In a
statement released after the interview, said, ''We have strong
evidence that Khadafv has ho&gt;o&gt;n
plaMing the murder of American of·

Arrest pair

after break-In
A routine traffic slop by the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department led to
the apprehel18ion of two Washington
C.H. men in connection with a break·
in in Meigs County.
The subjects were identified as
Charles L. Queen Jr., 21, and John
Queen, 18, according to Middleport
Police Chief J. J. Cremeal18.
The pair was stopped at 4 a.m.
Sunday after two deputies noticed
the car and Its driver acting
SU8piclousty. When they went to the
car, the lawmen noticed two sanllera, a chain saw and some copper
in the car with the pair, who, according to the report; were "nervous. ~ '

The deputiel took the pair to
Gallipolis fot qulllllonin(! and the
~ reported~)' admitted to
breeldnl IMo the Middleport city
prace early Sunday, laking the
above-menUoned 1tem1 and a bandheld spotlight. After Iakins
llatenienll, the tooll were returned
to Mlddlepcwt and the pair lumed

over to Cremea111.

SPECIAL AWARD WIN·
NERS - Tbree outstanding atbletes wbo
received special awards at
tbe Eastern Banquet
Satur:day were Todd Norton, most Improved
player; Mike Bissell, most
valuable player and best
defensive player; and
Jobn Riebel, beat oHe1111ive
player. And at bottom
Coach Arch Rose, left, of
tbe Eastern Eagles
welcomes Coacb Roger
"BDZZ" Kirkhart wbo served as tbe guest speaker at
Eastern's fall sports
banquet Coach Rose led
Eastem to a perfect IW
season and was aamed cocoach ol Cbe year iD tbll
dlatrlct, wblle Coach Kirk·
blrt led tile TlffiD.Calvert
Seuecu to Its lecGIId coaHI!IItive alate title. Botb
coaclael recorded )lel'fect
leuoDI dur!Jig tbelr fint
lleUG8 at EM1enl llilh
ScbooL See atorles aad
otber plc1urela.Pa1e 4.

•

�Monday, December 7, 1911
~

Commentary
When Monsignor Thomas J . McConnack announced that, inflation
being what lt ~as, he would most
regretfully need to charge a tuition
of $90 per month, nearly 10 percent
of the parents of the 1,250 students
who attend Cardinal Hayes High
School wrote in to complain. " Complain" may not exactly reflect the
emotions of parents who had, alter
all, been paying $85 per month.
Everyone knows the impartial
ravages of inflation, and any parents
who desired to look into the matter
at Cardinal Hayes would see tha:t it
was running at an annual deficit of
$200,000. Moreover, the school's
budget is only $1.5 million.
Just two years ago, a total of 14
teacbers approached the monsignor
and said, in effect, look, I love this
school, and the job it is doing for inner-dty students is remarkable, but
I can't get along with a salary differential as exaggerated as that paid
me by Cardinal Hayes, compared
with that available to me in tbe
public· high schools. In other words,
the parents recognized that nobody
was getting any richer from the five
extra dollars per month being asked
of them. So that their representations to the authorities were more
in the way of an invitatiCln to consider the pain that an extra $5 per
month causes the very poor in New
York, many of tbem one-parent

households supporting four, five, six
children.

So what does Cardinal Hayes do?
Well, it does everything. There Ia an
Inner City Scholarship Fund ( lts
chairman is Jewish). There is the
usual money-raising dinner for the
benefit of the 35 schools run by the
archdiocese of New York, which last
year raised $1 millioo. The rest has
to be got from the archdiocese,
which comes up with the money to
the extent it can. To the extent it
can't, the boys at Cardinal Hayes
whose parents can't make it are
detached; and go. to the public
schools, which are free. And which
cost the New York taxpayers not $90
per month, but three to four times
tllat figure.
Those who oppose the notion of
tuition tax credits are enemies of
education. The idea of public
education is first to promote
education. The word "public" is an
adjective, adorning the word
"education," which being public, is

advertised as free. Inasmuch as we
should aU by now know that there is
no such thing as a free lunch, ·we
acknowledge that even the very poor
in the inner city in New York, as
elsewhere in inner cities, are paying

for their public schools, through
taxation direct and indirect. But
many of them are not getting an
education, certainly not of the sort
that causes parents to S&amp;Crifice to
send tbeir children to · Cardinal
Hayes.
The students are there promptly

The Daily Seritine'l
Ill Court Strftt
Pomerey, Oldo
1114-992-%151
DEVIJI'ED T(] 'I'll£ INTEREST OF niE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

rsm~ ,.,..,__,._....,...,~d.~

~v

ROBERTI.. WINGETT
Publ.iriher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Buckeyes drub M

f&gt;ag-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo '
Monday, oecemller 7, 1911

- at the entrance is one of the 38
laytnen (there are also 18 priests
and six brothers), clapping his hands, urging them to run in to be punctual. They come dressed in tie and
coat. There is no such creature as a
security guard. The 14-year-old
freshmen often need a little decompression, and five percent of them
will flunk out for failure to meet
aca4emic standsrds, another five
percent for failure to meet
behavioral standards. After making
it through sophomore year, there
are few disciplinary problems, none
at all of the kind one reads of as
regularly tonnenting the llfe of
children In many of the public
schools. It is hardly a matter of race
- at Cardinal Hayes 53 percent are
Hispanics, 35 percent blacks, zero
percent are troublemakers. Eightyfive percent of the seniors go on to
higher educatioo.
Not surprising. Father Walsh
teaches a history class for advanced
placement students and today he is
talking about the rough syllogism attempted by Alexander Hamilton
when be said: a) good government is
in the national interest, b) the
"rich" and 'wellborn" (by such terms, !familton meant the 18th century squirearchy) serve good
government. "That isn't necessarily
true," said Father Walsh. "But that
was Hamilton's position." Later he
told the visitor that he teaches only

historical eptaodes In which controversyflgures.
Mucb of wbat goes by the name of
social tragedy it Is not easy to do
anything about: for instance, drug
abuse. ille~timacy, crime. When

E:TrA @1981
HUt.ME

.

one comes upoo such an inatitution of the First Amendment that WOUld
as Cardinal Hayes, serving the have baffied.the men who wrote the
ca11110 fl education, of racial integration, of good manners, and

renects that a few adamant
ideologues pleading a construction

amendment, threaten ltuurvtval by
blocking tuition tax credlta, one ·
despairs over the nodoua lengths to ·
which ideology taxes ua.

I"'O!r WO~ S'IJIR-~

N.E.R.

Driessen

1

"According to the sales reps from Washington and Moscow, they
the evil spirits away."

off block

kee~

U. S. aid goes to rich in
Jack Anderson
starving BangladeshL___ _ _ _ __
WASinNGTON - In the 10 years
since Bangladesh hecame a nation,
its hungry people have received
more than '1.5 billi~n in American
aid. There's just one problem: The
U. S. aid money is enriching the
wealthy, while the poor continue to

money changing hands," Grant
reported.
Unfortunately, the customs office
is not the most corrupt government
agency. That dubious honor goes to
the Food Ministry, which bandies all
the donated grain from overseas.
Like the topsy-turvy government
agencies of George Orwell's 1984,"
the Food Ministry keeps food from
the nation's neediest. It does this
through mismanagement and favorthe-rich policies.
Good weather and Western ·ship.ments have combined to fill the
granaries of Bangladesh. But it's
unlikely the oppressed poor will be
eating much of that grain. Here 's

to all grain transactions. Needless to
say, no transaction is made with less
than the pennilted five percent loss.
Many government warehouse
operators have grown fat on kickbacks.
·
- The Food Ministry makes it
childishly easy for corrupt officials
by keeping few useful records and
running virtually no audits or investigations. A recent confidential
study by the United Natioo's 'Food
and Agriculture Organization found
that the Food Ministry's hooks had
·not been balanced for at least the
past seven years.
Drought is currently
threatening Bangladesh's most important rice harvest, which means
the food in warehouses is the only
hedge against disaster. Yet Western
experts say that as inuch as 20 percent of the 1.4 million tons of stored
grain may be damaged, and 10 percent unusable. Grain is stored outside under plastic sheets - though
nearby warehouses have plenty of
•-pace.
- To get rid of spoiling wheat, the
ministry recently sold it off at
bargain prices - an open invitatioo
to corruption. Sure enough, the food
controller of Rajshahi was caught by
a city mob with some $4,000 in his
pocket - kickbacks for selllng good
grain at the bargain price. He was

i-escued from the angry mob by
police.
FOLLOW-UP: On October 3, I
publiShed the first report tluJ!
Libyan dictator Muamrnar Qaddali
had put President Reagan on his hll
list. Qaddali had confided this, I
reported, to Ethiopian strongman
Mengistu Haile Mariam shortly alter the U. S. Navy shot doWn two
Libyan jets.
This startling cooversatiiln between Qaddafi and Mariam was itt•
tercepted by the Nati9nal Security
Agency. U.S. officials not only confirmed my story, but added ihat
Secretary of State Alexander Haig
and Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger have also been targeted
by Qaddafi.
My sources say Qaddafl has got it
in his head that the Central Intelligence Agency is trying to knock
him off. By the code of the desert,
Qaddafi Ia justified in seeking to kill
his enemies before they kill him.
The sources add, ominously, that
Qaddafl won't necessarily use
Libyans to carry out his
assassination plots. Security officials have been warned that he
may use Palestinians, whose cause
he-has supported with money and ar-

'I

.'
.•

.

.

:
Life has always been harsh on that
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
pathetic piece &lt;1 earth called
,
.
Bangladesh. It is a fiat, almost marNeWlJ Edllor
shy plain, bedeviled by oppressive
· "
A MEMBER ol The Aaeoclalt-d Prns, IDlaDd Daily Prna A.s!IOCIIIUon and tbe
humidity, monsooo rains and
·.
American Newspaper Publlsben Auodatloa.
cyclones. The rains that enrich the
, '
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed.· They ••ould be leu tblla seo wenb lvn1. All
fieldS also support an ideal environ:,.
l'ue"' art JUbjed to editing aad muat be tlgned wltb a. me, ad*eu allll telephDe numment
for
cholera,
smallpox,
tuber. .,
~r. No uulgued letten wW be publlaheil. Letters ahould be in good tllk, addreulnJ
luuet, ant pel"!!rmaliUet.
culosis and malaria.
·
.
II the death rate is appallingly
,
high, the human birth nte is even why:
more astonishing. YoWig and old
''
- Most foreign grain donations go
work in the fields to bring forth more into the government's rationing
life. But the people who grow the system, which grossly favors the
food are themselves malnourished.
.,
well-to-do members of sOciety. Top
The American cargo ships, brim- priority is given to the armed ser,,
ming with abundsnce, have not vice,s g~vernment employees,
relieved the misery of tbe masses. A police, bank employees, and other
·
Here's a puzzler for you.
discouraging 110 percent of the "pnvileged" categories. Neld come
.
· Take three countries in a region of vital American interest. AU are in populace still doesn't.have enough to the city dwellers. At the bottom of
, ,
serious trouble ; economic distress is a !'OffilllOn denominator.
eat. I sent my associate Peter Grant the heaP is the rural population, who
Politically, the first has been a democratic bright spot in the prevailing to Bangladesh to find out why.
·
live in the most abject poverty. The
authoritarian gloom for three decades. For most of that period it has also
It didn't take him long to discover
·
peasants are led ·only if there's
prospered, parlaying years of good prices for coffee exports into the region's the main proble!JI. He noticed lt as anything left over.
· ···
highest standard of living. But the boom has gone bust, the country is broke, . he was crossing the border, in fact.
- Corruption is so widespread and
'
financially nattened by a huge foreign debt and its democratic institutions "The Bangladesh customa office accepted tlujt the government
nns. .
,
show signs of coming apart at the seams in the stress of an unusually looked like the two-dollar window at automatically allows for it with a
Reagan, Haig and Weinberger are . ,•
divisive presidential campaign.
a racetrack , there was no much
five percent "loss" factor figured inunder the lightest security, mean- , .,:
Tbe second country, long governed by an alliance of generals and a
while, ever imposed in Washington.
property-owning elite, is trapped in a civil war, the result of a moderate
palace revolution that failed. As the old guard's grip pushes back into power,
the opposition becomes more radical and economic decline steeper.
The third recently emerged from a popular revolution to find there were
more problems than fruits of victory. A weakening economy is exacerbating
political and social tensions. But despite pressing domestic need, the new
- and needs - black votes should
Richard Richards, Chairman
Robb was running ahead of
Godwin delivered a real old- I'
rulers are committed to honoring the huge foreign debt they inherited.
have to bear.
the Republican National ComColeman as Election Day ap- fashioned stump speech for
Which country is the United Sl&lt;ltes actively aiding•
Coleman, your candidate · in proached, but the Democrat's lead Coleman. He attacked the Voting , "
mittee
Certainly not the third, which is Nicaragua. Nor noticeably the first,
Virginia,
was a nice young man. In was not insurmountable.
Washington, D. C.
Rights Act and the proposed cOnCosta Rica.
·
fact, many Virginians - black and
Dear Chainnan Richards:
stitutional
amendment to give the : ::
The second is, of course, El Salvador, where American economic aid has
Your recent morning-after com- ·white - complained that Coleman
Then someone stupid made the District of Columbia two U. S. ,
doubled during the past two years with another substantial increase iri the plaint about Virginia's black voters'
was not radically different from the awful mistake of roping in former senators. He went on in thia veln for ....
offing. This in support of a supposed "centrist" regime from which all but a overwhelmingly rejecting you.· •' ar.man wbo beat him.
Gov. MiUs Godwin to give Coleman so long that even Ronald Reagan few token adherents of the Salvadoran political center have been driven out didate for governor caught "'Y eye. ·
Robb disavowed the programs of the official stamp of conservative he was at the rally, too - said lt was
- most into the ranks of the left-dominated rebels. The far right, through its
his iate father-in-law, Lyndon B. approval, Virginia style.
"We've got to find out what we'r&lt;
a tough act to follow.
oi
military allies, is making ~very effort to take over again:
doing wrong," you said after it Johnson, and tried to convince
Dick. you may ))ave forgotten who · Apparently lt was too tough.
Success would mean turning the clock back in a. country long charac- hecome clear that Democrat VirgbiJa voters that he and Coleman MiUs Godwin Ia and what he stands
On Electlon Day, black voters • :
terized by one of Latin America 's most unequal distributions of wealth. As Charles Robb had defeated occupied the same ideological sp« for. But most Virginia blacks have
marched
to the poUs and disCovered · 'late as 1979,less than 2 percent of the 5 miUion Salvadorans possessed 60 per- Republican Marshall Coleman. at the far right of center. Coleman, not. He was the state's last
that
there
was a difference between
cent of the productive farmland, took 50 percent of national income and
"They're distrustful of us and they meanwhile, did his beat to erase a Democratic governor - and its Coleman and Robb: The people who ·•
monopolized busine3ss, industry and finance.
shouldn't be. If we don't do better, mildly progressive past.
next-to-last Republican governor, liked Coleman didn't like them.
· : :t
Washington's exercise in diplomatic multiple choice raises a question as we're going to laoetime after tlme."
too. That's the klnd of state Virginia
' ', I
to the criteria guiding policy makers in granting or withholding American
·
Let me off~r some inalght Into
. Most Virginians might have is.
Well, Dick, that's about lt.
.,,.,
favor and assistance.
your problem.
'\
Godwin was what the newspapers
agreed with the IISIIe8sment made by
President
Reagan's
support
for
·
.. w
There is some cold political and economic logic to the passive response
"They" - the distrustful dusky George Wallace about an earlier called an architect of Virginia's Coleman 'probably influenced that · .~
to Costa Rica's dilemma. The Costa Ricans resist assuming responsibility
denizens of the Conunonwealth of electlon: There wasn't a dime's wor- Massive Resistance - the effort in heavy black vote for his opponent, · · ..
for their own salvation. With inflation of 60 percent annually and cltrnbing,
Vir!llnia - were'susplcloua of your th of difference belwoen the two can- the late 1950s and 1980s to close the but I think lt was Milia Godwin that · · ·
unemployment at 12 percent and climbing, the currency devalued and
man and of the company he kept.
didates.
state's public schools rather than in- really did the trick.
falling and foreign creditors pressing for restructuring the $2.8 billion debt,
Of course, the attack that you
In fact, the only cootroveny in the tegrate them.
And if you don't do better than ...
Costa Ricans await a miracle, any miracle. Preferably aU. S. bailout or the
made on black leaders earlier this campaign came when one candidate
Well, Dick, you can see right away that, Dlck, you're going to continue ·
ability of a new president to be elected next February to work magic. Meanyear didn't help either. ,.- ·
acc:uaed the other of smoking U1at this wouldn't sit well with black loelng time after time.
.•
while, they go on spending.
.And the Reagan admbilstratlon la something that mqst Virginia far- lolb in Vlrglnla - and probably not
Sincerely
:jt
Toward El Salvador and Ni.,.ragua, however, something other than
a droos that no candidate who seeks . mers don't grow and other denied it.
too well with white ones, either.
JallanBood
. ,,,
logic is shaping American policy. Fear. Fear of communism.
True, Communists are a strong presence in the Salvadoran opposition.
WS51.1f1fUf.;
111
And becoming stronger as to more and more Salvadorans the hard left apDfNriiO/IRt 6illl5. 6/llflfT'/
M/6U.,IIIIIR,' 'fiBj llfillCN'r
JMeii/DI
ITSMIAT
IJI. O'JIJ) . .
71/E
,
_ SFf1I!CH 15
fill/ITS
pears the only effectlve alternative to the resurgence of the hard right,
111/INI&lt;
/IIJW) /.N,111
tr5
IWRE~
IJeTA aPf
II/J/IN1Y
6(JAR.which is the real 'lf not entirely intentional beneficiary of U.S. aid.
1/fX.P AN ERA .
Tlfltr'S A
""''Yf
10Ati!WI?,
71111(1Jr
' I'
IW1EED IIY 71e
"'7HifTr
True. Nicaragua's Sandinlata leadership is avowedly Marxist. Curbs on
FINE l&amp;a4.
Pf/IR,
~~~
aJNS'ffTIIf/all.
l
\
/
political activity, restrictions on private business, an-ests of opposition
Cl/156 711/5 .....
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/
leaders and repression of the independent press are Wldermining lts original
"'
'!
commitment to pluralism. Its Ilea to Cuba are clooe and growing cl4lll!r and
-~
cuballlare an influential presence ln Nicaragua.
But 111e American . .ctionla unlikely to shape up Nicaraguan attl!wlee
and ~vlor u suppcll«&lt;ly dealred. SeveriJIC of economic aid that was
minimal ind gruclgin8 to ltart with, polltlcallsolaUon and talk of miUtary
~ are more likely to have the cootrary effect. Nlcaracua la
not yet another cur., bul Wuhlngton may~ make It one.
What tba policy maken could be provldlrqr in Central America la an u'
l l
cellent nample of how to 14lll two out of three. Maybe more.
Assistant Publlllher/Conll'nllu

One out of three

starve.

11

Where did GOP go wrong?__. _..:..___J_ul_ian_Bo_n_d

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By IlCOn WOllE
Yorl&lt; took control. Bebind a torrid
R0C1t SPRINGS - The Neilan- ohootlng spree, the Buckeyes opened
vtn.York llaclleylll, behind a111111e up a lopsided ~16 halftime lead. In
o1. 11111m11111um wlil1e placlnl four that canto, Bob Ashley made lll but ,
men ln double flgurel, handily . one of the marauder points.
defeated Meigs' Manllliers 71-47 In
In the third N-Y added another ZO
a no.league basketball contest point effort, then completed its atSaturday evening.
tack ln the finale for a 71-17 score.
·Within only one week afte
Meigs shot 17 of 69 from the field
.cJatmlng a state cbam:plonshlp in for a frigid 24 percent, whUe N•Y hit
footbaU, tha Buclleyea combined the other extreme by canning 31 of 49
their talents to trample Federal for a red hot 82 percent. From the
Hoddng Frld.ay, lhen'post a second line Meigs canned 13 of 26 for 50 perstraight win against Meigs. .Meigs . cent, while the Buckeyes netted nine
drops to~.
,
of 17 for 53 percent. Meigs had 12
Four 'men broke into double fouls and 'ZI rebounds led by Ashley
ligures including Tim llfalden with with 10 and Murray eight. N-Y
18 points, Tun Taggart with 15, posted ZO personal fouls and collecMark Pilla n, and Jim Slllntz II to ted 34 rebounds.
lead the Buckeyes.
In the reserve contest, the
Bob Aahley led all acorers with ZO Buckeyes won a squeaker, 40-38, in
points whUe Randy Murray pitched overtime after the score was tied at
ln 12. 8opbomore Nick Riggs added 3&amp;-36 at the end of regulation play.
eight lor Meigs and Roger Hovalchik Rick Edwards had 14 for Meigs and
had seven.
Greg Taylor 12, while McDonald led
After N-Y broke the scoring lee, thewinnerswith15markers.
Meigs exchanged buckets at an even
Meigs played Ironton Friday and
pace to produce what appeared to be Federal Hocking on Saturday.
an exciting ball game. After the
Box score:
score was 1~. howeve, the tide.sudMeigs- Riggs 3-2-8 ; Kov~lchik 1·
Changed and at the end of the 5·7; Ashley 9·2·20; Murrov 4-4·12.
den!
. y
.
Totals 17-13·47.
·•
first period Meigs trailed 1~. InNelsonville-York - Taggart 6-3·
cidentally all of Meiga' first period 15' Mays J · H; Pitts 4·3·11 ; Maiden
GOODDEFENSE-MD~~;a;;ls'
SHORT JUMPER - M"'-' Do...O.. Marra• (IZ) tHea a lbort)amp
porn
' ts ca~ at the hands of Randy 9·0·18; Shintzs~'l· ll ; Adam 1·1-7, and
during act~oof
s.~--'- '
. _ •-.r
'
erll' 1
Grantham 3·0·6. Totals 31-9-71.
a shot' by Jell Adams of Nelsonville-York u•
rom ....... y s
shot Saturday DIP! over tbe wllltretcbed buda of Nelloavllle-Y
Murray.
score by quarters:
non-league contest at !.arTy R. Morrison Gym.
Buckeyes won easUy,
Brian Ma)'B (U). Meigs' Rick Edwanls (ID) awallll rebaaDd.. Nellonvllle
In the second period, Nelsonville- Meigs
·
8 16 27 47
1-4 . Todd Tuckerpboto.
7 7
woo Its second straight game, 71-47. !T~odd~Tu~ck~er~pho~!o~---------------:------_:N:-:::_v_ _ _ _ __.::1B:_:4:0_:60:__:7_:.1_ _:::..:.__..:..:.:...:._:.__..:___ _ _ _ _ _ _.;__ _ _ _ _ _ __

HayL~e~s____,___
wd_1ia_m_F._.B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

Meanwhile, over at Cardinal

The Daily ~entinef-Pag-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) - Dan
Driessen, who asked the Cincinnati
Reds to · trade him last season,
probably will start at first base for
Cincinnati on Opening Day 1982, club
President Dick Wagner says.
Wagner, who is attending the annual winter baseball meetings, said
over the weekend that he has no intention of trading the sllck-fleldirtg
first baseman, who temporarily lost
his job to Johnny B8nch last season.
"Dan Driessen is basically the first baseman and I think he'll
probably open at first base for us in
1982," Wagner said. "It is not In our
basic scheme to talk about trading
Driessen."
Driessen hit .236last season. Reds
Manager John McNamara inserted
Bench at first base when Driessen
was injured early in the season, and
Bench's hot hitting kept him ln the
lineup.
Driess~n then sald that he wanted
to be trilded and didn't change his
mind when Bench fractured his
ankle befor~ the players .went on
strike in the middle of the season.
But Wagner has maintained
throughout that he won't trade
Driessen.
"You have to think of the factor of
\lefense and overall team
speed,"Wagner said. ·"Johnny Bench fits In in a number of ways ... But
he has to win a job."
Bench asked last season to catch
no more than iwo games a week. He
went to spring training hoping to win
another slarting role. Apparently,
he will be in tile same position again
next March, barring any significant
roster changes.
Wagner went to Florida hoping to
beef up the Reds' left-handed pitching, catching, speed and outfield.
The Reds have lost center fielder
Ken Griffey in a trade to the New
York Yankees and right fielder
Dave Collins to free agency.
There lias been talk of playing
youngster Paul Householder in cen- .
ter field and Bench in right.
Wagner said SWlday that the Reds
weren't close to any lrade.
"I don't .have anything hot,"
Wagner said. "We are just renewing
our discussions with people. Some
are more involved than others."

Young Eagleettes
lose 26-14 battle
ALBI\NY - Host Albany downed
Eastern 21&gt;-1 4 recently in girls'
Junior High basketball action. According to Coacl• Pam Douthitt it
was the flrsl. game ever for all of the
young Easterners and although ·
fighting nervoUSiless they &amp;1111
hianaged to stay close.
Coach Douthitt was pleased wltb
the leall''s overall perfonnance ln
its first ouling.
Dee Caae and Kristi Hawk, who
were ch4lll!n as co-captalna, led the
Eaglettes with four pointe each.
Tonya Savoy had three, Joy Brannon two, and Erica Keulnger one.
Beattr had 12 for .Albany, Dalley
eight, Crossen four, and· Daugdy
two.
Dee Case dominated the boards
with 17 rebounds, followed by Joy
Brannoo by Joe Bramon with five,
Krill! Hawk three, and Erica
ICeulnfler and Tooya Savoy each
with two.
Eutern'a next pme II Moaday,
Dec. 7, at Meigs betllnDinl at 5:10
p.m. The lind home game II 'l'llur.
day, Dec. 10 at Eastern against
Sh4de, alaoaU:30p.m.

..J•''

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CAM

ATH

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RATES AND
TIME.

AT THE
BANK ONE's IRA (Individual Retirement
Pccount) is providing all wage eamer:s with an
ideal way to shelter a portion of your 1ncome.
The A::count also offers you an easy way to
salt away additional funds for retirement. Any
deposits you make to our IRA (up to the legal
maximum of $2,000) can be subtracted from
your income before your taxes are figured each
year. And you can choose one of two ~ays to
eam your interest. You can choose an Interest
rate Which is set for eighteen months: Any new
funds will earn the 18-month rate in effect at the
time they are deposited. Or you can choose a
variable rate plan.
Act quickly to get the best tax adVantage.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan or
the variable rate plan, you will be assured your

money is earning inflation-proof interest for your
retirement. To maximize the tax-deferred
interest you earn, you should ~ake your .
contributions as sodn as possible after the f1rst
of the year. You will receive monthly statements
on the status of the Pccount and your funds are
insured by an agency of the Federal
Government.
Stop by any BANK ONE office for details.
There is a substantial interest penally for early withdrawal.

IIIDIYIDUAL RETIIIEMEIIl ACCOUNT

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Whenever you think

BANK ONE™

of savl111 money, our name
COIMI up first.

Member FDIC

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�,.

The Daily sentinel

determination, dedicatian,

For the record.
OblolfllbSeboolBo,. a..u~~ou
Satardly'IRHilltl

Mike Bissell; Outstanding Offensive
Player, John Riebel; Most lm·
proved Player, Todd Norton; Most
Valuable Player, Mike Bissell.

VARSITY TEAM

.
Darlene Barton, Carolyn Bowen,
Carrie Chevalier, Jahelle E _
l y,
Velvet Elkins.. Alison Cauthorn,
Sarah Goebel, LeaAnn Gaul.
RESERVE TEAM
Kristi Gaddis, Tara Guthrie, Don·
na Jacks, Kim Ireland, Kris Wilson,
Kelly Whitlatch&gt;, Renee Buckley,
Pam Riebel, Lori HUdson, Tina
Beaver.
Managers - Tammy Capehart._
Tammy Hudson, Bretta Deeter.

Ada 54, Ridgemont 40

47

Akron Ellel 83, N. Canton Hoover 56
Akro1o Sl. V.-51. M. 70, Akron B~achtel

Allla.nee 69, AkrM Garfield SO
Archbold 69, Continental 59
Athens 71, Marietta 71
Beall!ville 42, Buckeye W. 31
Bryan 56, EUda 53
o'uckeye Val. 48, Grandview 28
Canton Cath. 45, Canton South 43
canton McKinley 62, Cleve. St. Jgnatlus

"

Celina Sfi, o8y. Dunbar 52
Cin, Bacon 53, N. College Hill 51
Cin. Elder 6i, FalnnOf\t E . 38 ·

Cin. Princeton 74, Uma 72
an. st. xavier 52, Centerv!Ue 43
Cleve. Benedictine . n, Twlna:bufM 12
Cleve. Central CaUt 7&amp;, Oeve. Rhodes

"

Cleve. Hawken 61, MaMillon Chr. 38
Cleve. UniVenity 61, Hudson W, Re-

serve 35

Coldwater 56, Wayne Trace 53
Col. Academy 43, BWey 12
Col. Central 81, Logan 76
Co!. DeSa.let~ 89, Granville $7
Col. Marion-Franklin M, Lancaster

ar

Caraway 5$1, E. canton 5I
Gnmd Val. 70, Soulhlngton 88
Greenville 60, Pia~ e
Hamilton Badin tJ, Day. Fairview Ill
Hebron Lakewood 67, Uberty Union 85
Hlllaboro 74, Te.a)'l Val. 48
Indian Valley S. 61, Badger $3, OT
Jackson Center 75, Ohio City 3fi
Jefferson 58, Ledgemont 50, OT
Jewett-Scio 60, B~rgholz Spring. 60
Jonathan Alder 61, OJenlangy $8
Kenton 63, Bellefontaine 8l
Kentucky Deaf 8ll, O"lo Deaf 33
Ki:iki Prep, Pa . .7l, Lutheran E. U
lAkewood St. Edward 49, Cleve. Collinwood 39
.
Lancaster Fisher 60, Newark Cath. 47
U!tham Wes~m M, S. Webllter 42
Ll!t.nan Cath. t&amp;, Marion Local 39
Leipsic 62, Holgate 78, 201'
Lorain ~th. ~ Amherst Steele d
Madison PlaiM 80, Adena 79, 0T
Marysville 83, N. Union 46
Massillon Perry 1'0, Wocwter f8
Mendort-Union 49,. waresfield H
MJddlelown 68, Newar 16
Miller M, MWenport 61
Mogadore 51, Field 51
Napoleon 52, Defiance 43
Nelsonville-York 71, Mei~s 47

42,

N. Olril!lted :19, Berea 50
N. RidweviUe 51, Olmsted Falls S3
Norwood 50, Indian Hill 49
Oak Harbor 73, Margaretta 67
DakwOOd 61, Cedarville 41
Ottawa-Glandorf 72, FflstOrla 4&amp;
OtWville 84, Parkway 52
Paint Val. 00, Amanda-Ciearcreek 42

· Col. MifDin 64 1 Zanesvlllc 51
Col.

Ready

43,

Zanes.

Cocy-RawsCWI

55,

Grldersville

!ar

Rosecrall!i

Covington 36, Newton 35
Danbury 10, Monroevllle 64

Perry

12,
42

Day. Northmont 58, Troy 4(1
Day. Northridge 5&amp;, Natiooal Trail 53
Day. Roth 86, Cin. Hughes 82
Day. Stebbins 78, Day. Wright 56
Delphos St. John 112, Della 49
Dover 57, Sandy Val. a5
Dublin 70, New Albany fiD

EastSide Buller-, Ind.,' 68, Edon +t

Edl90ll 00, Norwalk St. Paul 3fl
Euclid 66, tleve. Orange 56
Evergreen 56, Anthony Wayne n
Fairless 65, carrollton 58
Fayette 17, Emamael Baptist 50
Fort Recovery 55, Mississinawa Val. 54

f

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Sherwood Fairview 71, StrYker 57
Smllhville 47, Kidron 13
s. Amhent . n, Black RiYfl' •
Spo.U lloi)1land . : . : " " ' - · 114
~lle at,
•lo
Sorinl. NE 10. S. Ow~ SE U

'tlpp -City H, Graham 41
Tal. Clth. &amp;3, Sylvania Ncn1hview 4!
Tal. Whtlmer 5t, Tal. St. franell ·45
Trt.valley 58, New . Philldelphia, 57
Triad IIi, DeGraff Riven6de 58
Trinity Chr. 75, Atwater Dlr. a
Tuslaw 60, Ma.uillon 4.7 .
.
Twin Valley S. &amp;1, Dixie 83

·I

Utica 82, Denville sr
Vanlue S3, Riverdale 5I
Versailles 66, Minster 55
Walsh Jes111t Ill, Akrm N. 114

Warrensville M, Bedford Chanel 4S
Wauseon 12. Tinora 47
Wellington "· Elyria Collo. 47

W. Jelfenoll 51, Big Wa~t 41
W. Uberty..!alem 42, 1"!\\an LUe 39

Wbeelersbarg &amp;9, GalliP.,hJ 53
Wlllanl 98, SandWiky 5I

Perry.sburg 80, Genoa 51
Pleasant 78, FairbarW :;.:;
Portsmouth '19, Minford 61
Pymatwling Val. 67, Fairport Harding

,.

Ripley !1, Cin. Seven Hilla t6
Rittman 69, CVCA 67, 0T

Rock HiU 19, Jackson 118

Rocky River 63, Lutheran W. 34
St. Henry 70. New Bremen 41

1

.
Cbltlf' •lblp
St.Joaeph'a, Pa. 18, Syracaase 57
South Flonda 12, Florida

sa.

f7 ·

MeJ;)NUI'• Duaie
CJwmsJI

•tp

w....,.........
'lp

Wichita st. Jl, Cincianltl 67

- ..,
Cbm£'

Louisville 11, W.Kentuci!Y 88
Wbce.ill . . .u-1

&amp;1~Ohio U. 56
EliHlllmONS
Athletes in Action Tl, Idaho 73,
North Carolina 77. Yllg€Mlavlan
01.-Chi.Circle

The Uuily Sc!llincl
lll8P81-) .

A.IHvldoa of~, IDe.

PubliJlood ....,. afternoon, _ , through
Friday, U 1 Cowi Street. ~ tf1:e Ohio valley
l'lobllJioJng c.m..ny • ultimodla, ......
Pomeroy, Ohio t$781, •2111. Second clau

pootqepaldatl'omeroy. OhiO.

I

By SCOTT MIU.ER
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's
domination of Kentucky Conference
teams continued here 3aturday
night as the Redmen recorded their
sixth consecutive win over their
southern foes, a 7~ decision over
the Union Buildogs. The victory left
them 9-2 on the season, while the
Bulldogs dropped to 1·7. Rio Gran·
de's win total is still the most in the
country by a small colleg~ team.
It was the second win of the year
over Union for the Redmen, wbo
thrashed the Bulldogs by a 101~
count two weeks ago. The Redmen
have also disposed of Kentucky Conference contenders Berea (72·70 and
87-71), Thomas More (84-79), and
Pikeville (101,100, twoovertimes).
The victory also moved Redman
head coach John )'..awhorn to within
two victories of his 3ooth career
coaching victory. J..awhorn has a Illyear coaching slate of 298-113.
Lawhorn will . have three op.
portunities at Lyne Center to reach
the 300 win mark this week as the
Redmen host Wilberforce University tonight, Pikeville Wednesday,
and Dyke Sunday.
Saturday night's Rio Grande victory was quite a contrast from the
Redman victory over the Bulldogs in
Barboursville, Ky., two weeks ago.
In the firSt meeting between the two
schools, both ·teams had few
problems puttiJlg points on the
bosrd.
Bulin the second meeting, neither
team could generate much offense
as the game remained a .scoreless
stalemate for the first 2'1.1 Minutes.
The teams traded baskets for much
of the next 10 minutes before Richardo Hairston put the hosts in the lead
to stay with a jumper from the lane
tolllllke itl5-14.
After Dan Curry sUpped in a jUitl-

r

DALE HILL

.TRACTORS

1------------L:=

f11111lllliMMMlllliM ..MM--------- · · ·

CHRISTMAS TREES

:1

BRADFORD'S

s

TREIUARM ON CHERRY RIDGE
FRESH CUT TRIO OR CUT YOUR OWN

I

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One Month. , .......•.....•.. . ..•... M.tD
One Year. : ............... . . . . . .. . Mit
SINGLE COPY
PRICI!S
Dally .......................... IICents

per to put the margin at three, Wat- the game and will present a check
son McDonald notched a follow·up for $100 in MdDonald's name to the
and Kevin Castleman a slam dunk to general scholarship fund at Rio
put the difference at 23-14. Mark Grande.
Herd· brought the visitors back to . McDonald got support from
within seven at 23-16 with a right Castleman, who connected for 12
side jumper and the teams traded points and dished out five assists
baskets until the closing minute while Penrod added 12, Hairston 1i
when . Castleman .netted back·l&lt;&gt;- an.d Jerry Mowery 10. Hairston also
back buckets to g1ve the Redmen had eight rebounds in a reserve role
their biggestlead to lhat point at 35Curry, a 6-7 freshman forward
24.
from Derby, Ohio, who bas averaged
AI Gover slipped in a .drive for nearly 14 points and 10 rebounds per
Union just before the buzzer as the game this aeason, left the game with
Redmen maintained a comfortable a sprained ankle just before status is
35-28 margin at the intermission.
questionable for tonight's game.
The Redmen had a 311-31 lead with
three minutes gone in the final stanza when McDonald hit a turnaround,
Hairston one of two at the free throw r;;::::::::=~====~;­
line, Rick Penrod a jumper from the
.key and Hairston a short jumper for
a big 45-31 bulge. Union never
I,
seriously threatened the rest of tbe
way.
McDonald, who connected on eight
of 10 shots from the floor, topped all
scorers with 18 points. The ~ senior
215 W. 'Main
from Warren also pulled down 15
rebounds and .was tabbed as the
player of the game.
PomeiVJ · ,
Riepenhoff-Budwelser Distributing Company of Jackson •P?DSored
992-26&amp;8

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8UIISCliiPTION RATES
By Canter or Mot.r Rou1e
One....t .......................... ll.llt

R edmen top Union, 79-66

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MAIL liiJBIICIIIPitONS
-IUidW..tVIrllaia
3 Mooth ..................... , .... '12.10
Six month ..................... , .• tJO,IO

LEADING NETI'ERS - Carolya Bowen (left) wu llllllled u
Eil8tern's most Improved volleyball player, wbOe Sarah Goebel received
tbe most valnableplayer award dllrlaiSaturday's Fall sports banquet.

Dallas, giving him the NFL rushing
lead with 1,506 yards.
Ailer the Philadelphia game, the
Cowboys finish their season by
playing the Giants at horne. A tie
with Philadelphia would give the

3 UNES ARE APPROXIMATRY

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SuhlcriJ:Ien not.desfrin&amp; to pay the carrier
li'IIY remit In advanc:e direct to The Dally
Sentinel on a 3, I or Jl month bui.s. Credit
wW be !livtOO corrler- JOlGOlth.

lYear ·····Ratti
: ·····················
Ou..llt Oldo
ud Wnl Vlr!liJola

led27~athaHtime.
'fony Dorsett ran for 175 yards for ~------------------------------~------------------------------~--------------------

.

POOTMASTER' Send addreoa lo Tloe Dolly
Sentinel, ll1 CourtS!.,.....,..,, Ohio !MOt.

.

:

r~~~~!~!~ili,l

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Member' Tloe "-latod Prtaa, Inland Jlaj.
ly PrSI AuociiUoa · and the American
Nelnplper Publiahen Auocilltlon, N1Uonal
Advertising Reprenn&amp;allve, Brantwn
Newlplper Sales, 733 Third Av1nue, New
York, New York 10017,

Velvet Elklruo, Tina Beaver, and Donna Jacks. Back
·row - Darlene Barton, Carolyn Bowen, Alison
Cauthorn, and Sarah Goebel.

England 21-14, and the New Yorlt
Jets lost in Seattle, 27-:IS, to IIIIP a
tie in the AFC Eut. The Dolpblna, 94-1, led the W.l Jets by one game.
The Buffalo Billl defeated San Diego
21-27 to sllp Into second in the
division, a hall game hack ot Miami
atll-6.
A three-way. deadlodl wu broken
in the AFC West when Denver got by
Kansas City 1&amp;.13. Denver, N, took
a one-game lead over the Chiefs and
the Chargers, both at N.
In the remaining National Football League contests, the New York
Giants and St. Louis Cardinals kept
alive allm bopea of earning wild card
playoff ·berths with their 7-7 records.
1ile Giants defeated Los Angeles 10.
7, and SL Louis walloped New
Orleans 36-3.
·
' Cowboys37, Colllld
Dallas' victory was engineered by
reserve quarterback Glenn Carano
and running back Ron Springs, who
scored three touchdowns. One of
those touchdowns came on a Z.yard
pass in the . aecond quarter from
Carano, who was subotituting for the
injured Danny White. The Cowboys

The Phillies reportedly are inHOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP)- Cat·
.chef Bob Boone, wbo fell out ol favor terested in Toronto's Dave Steib or
with tbe Philadelphia Phillies lifter Jim Clancy, Floyd Bannister of
tbe ,basebl!ll players' strike ended Seattle or Rick Sutcliffe of the Los
last season, has been sold to the Angeles Dodgers.
Pat Corrales, recently named
California Angels for a reported
manager of the Phillies, said he
$2li0,000.
Boone, 34 1 a veteran of nine years plaMed to go with just two catchers.
Giles said the plan was to go with
and •a · three-time National League
All.s,tar, was the first player moved Diaz, acquired last month in a threein what was expected to be a busy team trade that cost the Phillies outweek of trading at baseball's annual fielder Lonnie Smith. Either Virgil
winter meeting.
or McCormack would be kept as
Boone batted just .211 in 76 games backup.
Gene Mauch, manager of the
with 'the Phillies last season, and
Angels,
said he expected Boone to
was replaced as startilll! catcher by
young Keith Moreland.
catch at least 120 games. He said
· Ironically, Moreland, too, is on the ha'd uae present catchers Brian
~-·
trading . block becauae his value Downing and Joe Ferguson .as partprobably ean bring the Phillies the time outfielders.
It was obvious that Mauch did not
starling pitcher and bullpen hammer they believe they need to com- expect to sign catcher Ed Ott, who
pete for the NL East Division cham- has gone the free agent route.
\····
"Boone is not a .211 hitter," said
pionship.
: ;.
The Phillies still have four cat- ·Mauch. "Anyway, that doesn't conchers - Moreland, Bo Diaz, Don Mc- cern me. I just want him to catch
and throw and direct the pitching
'r •1•, Connaok and Ossie Virgil Jr.
' I,
Bill Giles, head of the group that staff."
'' .' recentlY, bought the Phillies for
The only other move made Sunday
•'
$311.175 million, said two more cat- was the re-signing by Toronto of free
chers will go if pitching ean be oJ&gt;. agent catcher Buck Martinez. .
·: tained in return.

TOURNAMENTS

nllli*FOR ;
. CM fl •1p ,

The AFC Eulern and Western
dlvisl0111 allo were in upheaval. The
Mlant Dolphlda defeated New

Eagles the dlvilion championship wu intercepted lwice before he left
since they have a better conference the game with a sprained toe in the game
snappedstreak.
Detroit'sDidtey's
threePackerswinning
record than Dallaa.
third quarter, and the 49era in- longer scoring strike went for 15 yartercepted his badlup, Jack Thool- ds to James Lotion and gave Green
Redett• U, m:.,Jes 13
Tnlllnc J3.8, Monte Coleman Jn. pson, once.
Bay a 2HO lead in the third quarter.
"They had been playing as the Lofton caught four passes for 90 yarten:epted a Ron Jaworski paas and
returned It 52 yards for a Redskins' best team in the league," 49ers ds.
touchdown with 8:29 to play, and the Coach Blll Walah said of the
The victory was the fifth in six
Eagles' third straight loss was Bengals, "~ut they didn'tquite meet games' for the Packers.
sealed when they botched a field up to their standards this week. I
Detroit led 1().() midway through
goal attempt with less than a minute still tbink they are one of the great the second" quarter, but Harlan
teams in the league."
left.
Huckleby scored the first of his two
Barefooled kicker Tony Franklin
Bues %4, Falcons 23
touchdownS with 4:46left in the.first
Tampa Bay quarterback Doug ball to pull the Packers within three.
was lined up for a 25-yard attempt Belin D, VIkings t
a c~ shot for him- with 54 secoods Willia{IIS threw a 71-yard scoring
Bob Avellini threw his first touchleft, but holder John Sciarra bobbled pass to wide receiver Kevin House
the snap, depriving Fran!Wn of his with 5:39 to play, and Atlanta's Mick down pass in two years, a 72-yarder
chance to tie it up.
Luckhurst missed a 45-yard field to Brian Baschnagel early in the
"John is the !Mil surehanded foot- goal try with four seconds left in the fourth quarter, to power the Bears
past Minnesota. Walter Payton
ball player we have," Coach Dick , game.
The TD strike was Williams' gained 112 yards to go over the 100.
Venneil said, "but he dropped the
second of the day and came four yard mark for the 46th time if! his
ball. Maybe we are just snskebit."
Mter playing Dallas, the Eagles minutes after William Andrews ran career.
~yards ·to give Atlanta a 23-17 lead.
The loss was the third straight for
finish at home against St. Louis.
The loss left Atlanta at 7·7, four Minnesota, while Chicago, 4-10,
49ers 21, Benpls 3
Joe Montans threw two touchdown games behind San Francisco in the snapped a three-game losing streak.
Dolphins 24, Patriot. 14
passes and rsn for another, and the NFCWest. .
The
Bucs
went
into
the
game
In
a
David
Woodley, booed after subSan Francisco capitalized on six Cinthree-way
for
the
NFC
Centralle&amp;d
par
performances
in his previous
cinnati turnovers to hold the Bengals
with
Detroit
and
Minnesota,
all
one
.
two
games,
ran
for
one touchdown
to three points.
game
ahead
of
Green
Bay.
and
threw
for
another
to help Miami
Cincinnati outrushed and outPackers
31,
Uons17
lake
control
of
the
AFC
East. The
passed the 49ers but lost the ball
Lynn Dickey passed for 279 yards loss was the seventh in a row for
three times on fumbles. In addition,
Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson and a pair of touchdowns as the New England, 2·12.

Phils sell Boone

W. C.rrvllton 17, FalmMat W. 1$

CUrler Claaic

Vlkinpl~.

Winter meetings undemJay

Warrtn Kennedy 79, Ywng. Mooney 5I

Park Hilla 19, Day. Wayne 68

Panna Padua 68, Gilmour 58
Patrick Henry 69, AyersvHle S9
Paulding 56, Antwerp 4G

•·

Uniontown Lake 66, Greenaburg

114

and the Chlc8go Bean doit11ed the

The 49ers already had clinched the
NFC West with an 11-3 record, but
there wu a new leader in the NFC'•
"Black-and-Blue" Central Division
after Sunday's play. Tampa Bay
defeated Atlanta 24-23 while llelroit
and Minnesota were losing, and the
Buccaneers took a one-game lead ln
t~ division with an 8.(i record. The
Lions, . Vikings and Green Bay
Packers were tied for second at 7-7.
Green Bay defeated Detroii3J.17,

Sl. Malyi 17; Bath 48

ala 10, OT

VOLLEYBALL SENIORS - These eight girls
were honored with senior awards durlJ!g Eastern's
Fall Sports banquet. Pictured are seniors, fron~ 1-r,

:
II)'AmelaledPreu
,. TDill Landry wu 111CC1nct, u
•• uaiYI.
.
;r "With a I~ lead, we only
' have to win one ol our lui two
'{) games. That's a plua," the Dallaa
1':. CowboYs coach said.
~
The Cowboys look a two-game
lead (IVer Philadelphia in tbe
National Football Conference's
, Eastem Divisloo Sunday with a 31-13
• drubbing ol Baltimore while the
, Eagles were loalng 1l&gt;-J3 to the
Wasbington Redoklns. Dallaa is 11-3;
~ Phltadelphla is 11-6.
""
The only team with a chance to
•• cUnctt its division Swlday was Cint' cinnltl, but the Benga1s lost, 21-3, to
•• San rrancillco, cutting their lead in
~ the American Conference Central
l~ Division to I'1.1 games over Pity. tsburgh, which plays at Oakland
tontcht. Cincinnati is iO..; Pit·
' tsburgh is 11-6.
,
Cincinnati plays Pittsburgh next ·
Sunday in a possible showdown for
lhat division lead, and Bengals
Coach Forrest Gregg sald: "There's
a lot on the line, If lhat's not enough
motivation, there's nothing I can

Todd Nortao, Jelm Rlellel, Reb SmUll, ud a.dle
MaAr. Bile• row- Mae Bllsell, P. G. Riffe, Dave
Woffe, Joe Sayre, Cbrls Allea, Ray Speaeer, 111111 Nidi
Looaard.AboeatwereGregColeudTroyllearllo.
'

Gillilan, Jimmy Caldwell and Ryan

year, highly commended his tern
Managers Kirk Fick, Brian
and his staff for such an outstanding Durst.
Lee Keney.
season. He also thanked all others
SE'iENTH GRADE TEAM
Dan·in Orenner, Kenny Ritchie.
who contributed to making the
Eddie Collins, Dana Eynon, Billy
season a success. Many special Mclaughlin,
Robbie Combs, Gary
thanks were presenled at this time.
Curtis, ~ussell Keller, Brian
Mike Bissell was named the most Reeves, Tommy Parker, Doug
outstanding defensive player and Beaver. ReK Justice.
CHEERLEADERS
the team's most valuable player.
VARSITY
John Riebel was named the outBrenda Calaway! captain; Pam
standing offensive player and Todd .. Murphy, co·.c aptain; Synthia White,
Melissa Thomas, Paula Frecker,
Norton was named as · the team's Terre
Wood. Advisor Jan
most improved player. Superin· Ei chinger.
CHEERLEADERS
tendent Richard Roberts presented
JUNIOR HIGH
the school a banner in honor of this
LeAnn Robinson, Terrie Starcher.
year's team. Coach Eichinger Angie Young, Amy Young, Delanie
presented Coach Kirkhart with a Baker .
1981
plaque from the 1971 team.
VOLLEY BALL TEAM
Following is a list of special awarDebbie Weber, head coach .

and

ted by advisor Jan Eichinger. These
young ladies were recognized for an

SENIOR CHAMPIONS - Tbese llllllor memllen
of the 1881 ebamploo Eaatem Eapes' footbllll team led
the l",agleo wblle both 011 and off tbe field. Pictured are,
1-r, front, Lee Gainer, Johmly Beaver, Mike Hauber,

Bearhs.

leadership. "One must take pride in
himself, his teammates, and his
school. Appearance is a great reflection on a winner ... it only takes a
nickel more to go first class.''
Preceding guest speaker
Kirkhart, the large crowd was ser·
ved a delicious feast by the Eastern
High School band boosters. The in·
vocation and benefiction were
ds and team members:
presented by Coach Mike Douglas.
Coaches Dennis Eichinger and ALL STATE TEAM
Second team defense, Nick
Scott Wolfe presented the junior 'Leonard;
Special Mention, Mike
high football awards. This group of . Hauber, P. G. Riffe, Roger Bissell;
young men was praised for vast inr HOnorable Mention, Dave Gaul,
Mike Bissell.
provement during the season.
1981 FOOTBALL AWARDS
Both junior high and high school
Outstanding Defenshte Player,
cheerleading awards were presen-

~

1981 VOLLEYBALL AWARDS ,
outstanding year, and )Vere a major
Most Improved Player, Carolyn
part of keeping great school. spirit Bowen
; Most Valuable Player,
within the school.
Sarah Goebel.
Girls' volleyball coach Debhie
Weber presented awards to mem1981 VARSITY AND
RESERVE TEAM
bers of the reserve and varsity
Chris Allen, Troy Bearhs, Mike
volleyball squads. Receiving senior Bissell, Greg Cole, Lee Gainer, Mike
awards were Velvet Elkins, Tina Hauber, Nick Leonard, Charles
Beaver, Donna Jacks, Rbonda Massar, Todd Norton, P. G. Riffe,
Riebel, Joe Sayre, John
Beard, Darlene Barton, Carolyn John
Beaver, Rob Smith, Ray ·spencer,
Bowen, Alison·Cauthorn, and Sarah Dave Wolfe.- Roger Bissell, Ken
Goebel. Carolyn Bowen was named Browning, David Gaul, Mark Holter,
Deren Jewett. Jeff Masters, ROd
l!lOSt improved and Sarah Goebel Tripp,
DOug Bigley, Tom Everett,
was the most valuable player.
CIIH Griffith, Troy Guthrie, David
Reserve football presentations Hawthorne, Allen Jacks, Mike
Mark Jones, Larry Life,
were made by assistant Coach Mike Jones,
Robert Maison, Jeff Bissell, Jay
Douglas. Coach Douglas praised his · Carpenter, Phil Eagle, Ron Hensley,
team for their efforts throughout the Todd Tripp, Karl Smith.
Managers- Ray Maxson. Darrell
season.
Robinson, Dennis Robinson. Jim
•Next to be· honored were the 1981 Weber.
SVAC football champions, who were
EIGHTH GRADE TEAM
Dennis Eichinger, asst., Scott
ranked fourth in the state in the final
Wolfe, asst. Joe Runyon, Jortn Rice,
AP poll. The team, which was un- Tim
Eynon, David McLaughlin,
defeated at !().(), was presented Royce Bissell, Kevin Barber, Kevin
awards by Coach Arch Rose and Morris, Sean Clemson, Tony ·chapGeorge Parker, Tim Dorst,
assistant George Gagai. Coach man,
Bobby Epling, Allen Reed, Tony

Rose, Class "A" co-coach of the

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.i Eagles, Bengals, Falcons lose key games

Former coach speaker at
banquet honoring champs
By
SC()Tl' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School athletes participating in fall
sports programs were honored with
a large fete and awards ceremony at
· the high school Satlll'lllly evening.
Guest speaker for the banquet was
Coach Roger "Buzz" Kirkhart, who
recently coached the Tiffin-Calvert
Senecas to their secood consecutive
state football championship.
In his initial season as a head football mentor, Coach Kirkhart guided
the Eastern Eagles to a perfect 9-0
season in 1971. Ironically, 10 years
later, under llrst year Coach Arch
Roee, the 1981 Eagles posted an undefeated season. Mter spending a
couple of seasons at Eastern,
J&lt;irkbart moved on to Tiffin-Calvert
where he bas buill a very successfui
·football program.
Coach Kirkhart provided an excellent slide presentation, featuring
methods used in developing a successful football progriml at TiffinCalvert. During his presentalion he
emphasized the idea of wbat it takes
to be a winner.
Coach Kirkhart said, "You can't
wish for a championship ... you must
work for a championship! To succeed in any area you must work at it
and he willing to sacrifice.''
The veteran mentor also talked of

Monday, December 7, 1911

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3 Month .......................... IIUO
6 Month .......................... 'IUC!

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(

) FOR SALE

(

) ANNOUNCEMENTS
( ) FOR RENT

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l•t&gt;

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lYear ...•.....• .. .... , ... , •... ,,Uf.JJ

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CASH ONLY! .

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Let The

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Be On Your

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Christmas List
This Year ... ·

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6.
1.
18.

This year, Qive the perfect Christmas package that's filled with
idea-inspiring features to help you l:q;n your new year with style
and originality. We can help you complete all those New Year's
resolutions in our home section featuring evervthir4! from building to landscaping to decorating or remodeli1111. Or if you're
irotu ested in entertaining, our food section carries • wide selection
of mouth-watering recipes and money saving ideas to usiJt you'in
planning the best in home entertainment. We can offer your
6iends titer and many more creative suaJOSrions, so Qjve the Qjft
that comes pre-wrapped and discover how big ideas can come
·
in smaH packages.

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COMMON CLASSIFIED

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Monday; Decemller 1, 1911 . ·:

Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

Extension Service sponsors workshop

I

. f .
GRAPEVINE WREATHS- More popular this year than ever are
grapevine wreaths and Shirley Huston demonstrated tbe techalque at
Thursday's worklihop. She used natural fibers and coDeB, and heauiHul
bows to de&lt;&gt;orate the wreaths.

Nutriiion should be kept in mind
she advised, and suggested
something different
marinated
vegetsbles and cereal party mix, or

like

.something more spectacular, like a
yille log.

Then she rerl&gt;lled the cake, iced II
with chocolate fl'll8tlng and used
fork to c~es~&amp;n the froetlng so it would
look like bark. The flllal stage was
culling a three-Inch diagonal piece
from ooe end and attaching it to the
side of the other Piece, fllllng the cit
area with Icing, sprlllldlng with
powdared siJI!ar to resemble snow,
and decorating with a few mar-

'1,

a

"

••

sJunallow 4 'mushrooms. ''
Patty Asbeck demonstrated how
to make a festive vest for your
hotjday wardrobe or to !live as a gift,
and Sheila Curiis of Carousel COnfectionery showed how to make
hand-crafted candies for the
holidays.
Ul Thortla8 of Gallia County
showed wheat weaving techniques
and displayed a wide variety of
hotiday decoratlons ilslng wheat,
whUe Betty Reese, extension agent,
home economics of Gallla County,
Mrs. Stoll, Ann Lambert of the
Febric Sbop, and Shirley Huston of
Syracuse, gave l1111ds of Ideas for
sewing gifts and decorations for the
holidays.

To make the yule log, Mrs. Stoll
used a package of the Betty Crocke•
German chocolate coconut pecan
snackin' cake mill, on..half cup of
water and three eggs, milled
·together and poured into a jelly roll
pan which had bee lined with
Tlierewasalsoademonstratlonon
aluminum foil and greased . making grapevine wreaths by Mrs.
generously. She baked the cake Huston, and one on how to pot spring
·about 15 niinules and then 1m- bulbs for Chrlstfmas by Janet Bolin.
mediately inverted it into a towel Using a food processor, Patty
sprinkled with powdered sugar.
Asbeck showed the quick and easy
While still hot, she carefully rolled way to make cheeseballs, and Annie
the cake and the towel from the wide Moon and Mrs. Stoll concluded the
end, and then cooled it on a wire day with a holiday casserole.
rack for 30 minutes. She unrolled the
The recipe for broccoli-ham
cake, removed the towel, and spread rollups;

.. ,

YULE LOG - 1'hlli yule tog created by Dale Stoll, Meigs c-ty Ell· ·
tension agent, at the Christmas workshop, was not only attractive but
deUcl0111. It was one of several "gilts from the llltcben" dem0111tratl001
conducted atlhe aU-day annual workshop of the Elltenslon Department.

Two 1~unce packages of broccoli
spears (frozen), 2 tbsp. butter •or
margarine; 2 tbsp. flour, ~'• tsp. salt,
'k tsp. dry mustard, 1 cup milk, I
cup sharp cbeddar cheese, flnely
shredded, 6 slices, 4 by 6 inches, of
boiled ham, thinly sliced.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
Cook broccoli accoding to package
directions until just tender. While
the broccoli is cooking, melt fat in a·
heavy saucepan. Stir in flour, salt,
and mustard. Gradually stir in milk.
Cook, stirring constantly, until
thickened. Add cheese and continue

stirring until cheese is melted.
Divide broccoli spears into six pol'tions, splitting large stalka as •
necessary. Alternate direction of lhe
flower ends with each portion. Place
broccoli portion on and parallel to

CHEESE BALLS- Vivacious Patty Asbeck •howed how to make a
cheese hall, the quick and easy way, using afood processor.

Social Calendar
Monday
POMEROY -

The annual

Christmas dinner uf the Pmneroy

United Methodist Church Women
will be held at 6 p.m. Monday at
the Meigs Inn. It is open to all
members and their guests.

Following the dinner the group
will ~o to the church for a brief
busirles.s session, a program and
the exchange of $1 humorous gif-

ts. New silent prayel' partners
Wl lln;llllt'll.

CHES'tEJ1 TOWNSHIP
Trustees Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
town hall in Chesler

Presbyterian Chruch annex.

POMEROY - Women of the
Heath United Methodist Church
will hold a holiday bazaar
Tuesday from a.m. to 3 p.m.
There will be a noon luncheon
with chili~ soup, pies, cakes, S8Q·
dwicbes and salads.
HARRISONVILLE Golden Age
Club will hold a free blOOd
pressure clinic from 10 a.m. until
I p.m. Tuesday at the Harrisonville Town Hall. Ferndora Story,
R.N., will conduct the clinic.

Tuesday
SYRACUSE - A Christmas
hataar will be held Tuesday from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Syracuse

---

/ 1, '
MEIGS LOCAL rVocal Music
Booslera meeting, 7;30 p.m.
Tuesday in vocal music room of
high school.

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS dinner
of Pomeroy United Methodsit
Church women, 6 p.m. Tuesday
at Meigs Inn; following dinner
group moves to church lor brief
business. session, program and
exchange of $1 hwnorous gifts.
INSTALLATION OF officers,
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, at
7;30 p.m. Tuesday; all officers
asked to be at temple at 7 p.m. to
• have their picture taken. NonMasons may attend by invitation; refreshments following
meeting.
PAST MATRONS of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern

Tuesday,
7;30
p.m.,will
home
r!-======================::;~ Star,
Evelyn
Lanning.
There
be of
a

Astrograph
December 8, 1981
This coming year things should work out in ways that will eoable
you to get more of the material things for which ·you have been
longing. Keep your shopping list within reasonable limits.
SAGnTARJUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) If you are working for someone
else tnday, put forth an honest effort to earn what you are being paid.
If the boss sees you goofing off, it could affect your job:
CAPRICORN IDee. :!2-Jan. 19) Normally you know how to get
pretty gOOd mileage from the money you spend, but today could be an
exception. You'll pay more for something than you should.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2t).Feb. 19) In order to be a good leader today
you will have to be finn and forthright. Flattery or appeasement won't
earn you the respect of underlings.
PISCES (Feb. 2t).Mareh 20) You're innately kind and compassionate, and someone with ulterior motives who recognizes these
qualities in your might try to take advantage today.
ARIES (March %1-Aprll19) Someone whom you met recently may
want to borrow something from you today. It would be wise to get to
know this person better before lending anything.
·
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) Much can be accomplished today to
advance your self-interests provided you're not intimidated by
challenge or hard work. Get rolling early.
GEMINI (May 21-June %0) Be charming nod friendly toward
members of the opposite sex todliy, but be careful not to become too at·
tentive toward someone who is already ~ken for.
CANCER (June %!·July 22) Be loving and csring toward your
special someone today , but by the same token try not to smother him
or her by being too possessive.
LEO ~July 23-Aug. 22) Important agreements, especially those af,
lectlng your career, should be spelled out on paper today, rather than
being done orally or by a handshake.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Nonnally you're very Industrious, but
today you could ignore your tasks unless they are special chores you
truly enjoy doing.
.
LIBRA (Sept. Z3-0ct. Z3) Don't ask people who are fond of you to
do things today that could cause them considerable inconvenience.
They'll resent being used.
SCORPIO (OcL %4-Nov. 22) You'd better tie a string around your
finger. There's a poulbi!'IY you mightlorget SOIJ!"thing vital you .
li'OIIliaed to for your mate.

gifl exchange.
MIDDLEPORT - The annual
holiday bazaar of the Heath
United Methodist Church will be
held Tuesday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.rn. Serving of the luncbeon will
begin at 11 a.m. There will be
bsked goods, fancy work and
decorations for sale.
SYRACUSE - The Christmas
bazaar at the Syracuse United
Presbyterian Church will be beld
Tuesday in the church annex.
SYRACUSE - The Christmas
bszaar at the Syracuse United
Presbyterian Church will be held
Tuesday in the church annex.

Wednesday
MEIGS LOCAL Band Boostera
meeting, 7 p.m. MOPday at Meigs
HighSchool.

WOMEN'S AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 6
p.m. Monday in the hospital
cafeteria. Tho8e attending are to
• take a covered dish and their own
table aervlce. The meat will be
fumisbed. There will be a ~ gift
exchange.
'
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
Monday, 6:30p.m'. dinner at the
Melp IM. Party with gilt ex·
change to follow at the borne of
Mrs. Betsy Horky.

SYRACUSE - The Chriatmas
~r at the Syracuse United

Presbyterian Church will be held
on both Monday and Tuesday in
the church annex.
PLANNED Parenthood of
Meigs County will hold its weekly
clinic Wednesday from 4to 8 p.m.
insiead of Thur.day ufternoon.
Appointments are to be made at
992-$12. Walk-ins will not be able
to see the professionals. .
THE MlDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners will meet at the horne
of Mrs. Wallace Fetty, Pomeroy,
at 8 p.m. Wednesday night. There
will be a gift exchange and
judging of Chriatmas gift wrappings. Other hostesses will be
Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Walter
Crooks, and Mrs. Edgar Pratt.

POMEROY Chapter 110 and
Bosworth Councl · 46 will meet
Wednesday night at tbe temple.
The Order of malta wiD be con·
ferred by Ohio Valley Commandery 24 and members are
asked to lake their swords and
bells.
RUTLAND - 'l'he Silver Circle
club of Rutland will hold a free
blOOd prei!Sure clinic Dec. 9 at the
center on Mill Street from 12 noon
until I p.m. Barbara VanMeter,
R.N., will be in charge. The
public is welcome.

r---------------J
Birth announcement
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Cunningham, Marietta, are announcing the birth of a son, Paul
Alexander, Dec. I at the Marietta
Memorial HOilpltal. The infant
welgbed &amp;even pounds, four ounces
and was 19 inches long.
'
• •
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Woods, Marieua and
the maternal great-graPdparenta
are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Woods,
South Carolina, and the paternal
grandparenta are Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cunningham, Syracuse,
and Mrs. Bealah Roush, Middleport.

Initiated were Mrs. Jane Snouffer
and Mrs. Ellen Rought, seniOr members, and Michelle Roush, Bridget
Cross, Palma Wiles, Laney Hankla,
Amber Hankla, Tina Riffle, and
Erica McClintock. Conducting the
initiatory work were Miss Enna

Smith, Mrs. Dorothy Wells, Mrs: Iva
Powell, Mrs Pearl Knapp, Robin
Campbell, Mrs. · Tiemeyer, Anna
Wiles, and Kim Patterson.
Those in the older membership
group honored were Mrs. Edith
Sauer, Westerville, 51 years; Mrs.
I.Jllian Pierce, Pomeroy, 50 years;
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Middleport, 41!
years; and Mrs. Leona Smith,
Pomeroy, 41 years.
·
Mrs. Sauer, accompanied by her
daughter, Mrs. Jane Welker, Gahanna, joined the Auxiliary in 1932, was
president in 1950, and now is a member uf the Past Presidents. Parley.
Mrs. Pierce joined the unit in 1932,
and was accompanied by her
dsughter, Betty Wiles, her granddaughter, Anna Wiles, and her
great-granddaughter, Palma Wiles,
all members. Mrs. Hackett joined
the unit in 1943, served as president
in 1947, and remaillll active in both
the unit and the Past Presidents
Parley, as does Mrs. Smith, a member since 1936.
Two of the older members of the
unit now confined to nursing homes
were also recognized and were later
given a corsage and certificate.
They are Mrs. Eulalia Webster who
joined the unit in 1946, served as
president in 1952, and is a member of

Honor roll
RACINE -The Southen1 Junior Hh,:h School
honor roll (or thl! Sl,!t.'Oild six weeks ha!l been annowJCt.&gt;t.l. Those making a l(r&amp;de of B or above in
Hll Uwir Mubjecls to be n.tuned tnlhe roil arl! :
Seventh l(r8de- Rachel Reiber, Karla Smith, ¢
Tamuny Theiu, Larry Powell, MaU Jbrrls, Pete
JoM!jQII, Wendy Wolfe, Kim Adlurw, C•ruiBurucm, Geortr;e Cooper, An~~:ie OavU., David Det!m,
Man.&gt;J Merrifield, Kri!l Selltol'!J, Dblne Simpewn,

Cindy Anwld, Larry Pvwell, Juc ROWih, Terry
Roush, Brut-e WOJft! , Leginll Hart, Trad Hubb.lnl, 1M Pape, Tanuuy Wolle.

Eighth gnute - Todd. Adams, Ttre!!M Bing,
Dixit DuMan, Ryan Oliver. Li!la P11'110011, Kelly
Rl&amp;er, Kenda Rizer, PaLlia Winebrtnner, Se11n
Grueser, Lori Adam11, Jay Bo!Jtick, Heidi Cobb,
Heath Hlll, Mellllaa lhle, AltH\a Lyons, Tei'\!'Sa
Shuler, Bedty VanMeter, Jodi Harrla.

...

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r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;
A Limited Number
OITheNew

ON SALE NOW
For '2600Each

..
'

,I

Books to be mailed will
cost

, _.

.,

..
.

•,

,MEIGS COUNTY EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICE
WITH SQUADS LOCATED AT

1

Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Polnuttla-S1.00&amp; Up
Chrlstmal. Wreaths, Can·
die Arrangements, Christmas cactus, Foil• I• Plants &amp; HanglngBIIkats.
. OPifl Dilly 9 to 5
Sun. 1to5
Phone "2·5776

WISHES TO EXPRDS THEIR
'
APPRECIATION TO THE VOTIRS
FOR PAUING THIIMS LIYY
ON NOV. 3RD.

'P.rty to be held on Dec. 15 were
made when the Rutland TOPS OH
Tt56 Club met recently at Rutland.
"" Members were reminded to take
food Items as well as a gin lor exchange. Atotal of 13.75 pounds were
reported lllllt by the 17 membe~ attending. Jll8nne Fetty was the
week's top loser wi!h Sharon Black
and Donna Frye aa runners up. Mrs.
Felly was alao last week's best looer
with Ruby Fowler and Frances
Hysell as runnel'lHip.
Winner of the "JJata Off to TOPS"
contest was Francea Hysell with a
10.. of t.7&amp; pounds. lnforinatlon on
the club llllly be oblsined by cslling

•

Harrisonville
.

TUPPIRS PLAINS, RACINE,
SYRACUSE, POMEROY,
RUTLAND AND MIDDLEPORT,

:·.TOPS

~42-2171.

.Grange
• POMEROY-HarrisonviUe Grang.,

HUBBARD'S. GREENHOUSE

CHESTER-Initiatory work for
Dixie Lee Bealr of Chester was conducted at the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
Ruth Stethem of Lung Bottom was
reinstated and the Council
welcomed both Mrs. Beair and Mrs.
. Stetl)em. Charlotte Grant presided
at the meeting attended by 39 members. NOmination and election of officers was conducted by Betty
Roush, deputy stste councilor.
It was announced that the . Past
Councilors Club's Chriatmas dinner
will be held Dec. 9 at 6:30 p.m. at
Crow's Steak House. Members will
then go to the home of Marcia Keller
lor a meeting, Christmas program
,and gift exchange.
Keith Ashley was pianist for the
·-meeting. Next meeting will be held
Dec. 16 with a Chri8imas supper at
6:30 to be followed by a program and ·
$2 gift exchange.
Quarterly blrhdays were observed. The tables featured a
decorated cake made by Margaret
Tuttle, and white tapers. There was
a gift at each place. In the honored
group were Sandy White, Charlotte
Grant, Ada Neutzling, Zelda Weber,
Thelma White, Mae Spencer, Ada
·Morris, CarolY.n Halley, Virginia
Newlun, Ada Bissell, Alta Ballard,
Zelda Weber, Inzy Newell, Mary
• Showalter. ·
others attending were Virginia
Lee, Goldie Frederick, Pam Oavis,
• Dixie Beair, Opal HoUon, Erma
Cleland, Margaret Tuttle, Mary K.
Holter, Mae McPeek, Elizabeth
Hayes, Doris Grueser, Harlan
Ballard, Joe Bissell, Marcia Keller,
Susan Pooler, Mary Jo Barringer,
Leona Hensley, Mary Folmer, Lora
Damewood, Sadie Trussell, Dorothy
·'Ritchie, and Charlotte Grant.

~ RUTLAND-Plans for a ChristmUs

I ! ..I

.• !,

At the Middleport &amp;
Pomeroy Library thru
Christmas.

problem. To help, several persollll plastic that breaks Into razor-oherp
offered some advice.
edges when pounded. Be Slll'e paints
A pre-school Iacher; Avariety of are lead-free, avoid items small
toys li good, providing exerclae for eDOIII!h ~ be swallowed, and don't
both small and large mulclea. Allo, let projectiiHhootlllg IOylr endanger
-provide roto-ptaylng toya as children young eyell.
this age like to mlm1c adulta and
Retailer: Electronic lo)'s and
create · make-believe situations. games are pop'llar this year - and
Toys of "universal interest" Include these can be enjoyed by both boys
doctor kits, dotla io bathe, water and nod llirls as well as adulta. Be Slll'e
sand toys, telephones, fanns, gas these IOylr offer long-lasting Interest,
slstlons, work bench ldt3, kitchen easily understood lnstructlona,
sets, and tricycles.
flelibiUty in the number of players,
An"e(ementary teacher: I like toys and lllliss strategy rather than luck.
which augment the skills teamed in Also, don't buy any brand name toy
scbool. For example, the Uttle just for the name, although one Hood
Professor ($10) teaches four math quality, long-lasti~g toy for a
functions on three levels; kids learn slightly higher price is a better inwhit&amp; they play and think it's fun!
vestment than several cheap subFirst .parent; I resent toys that stitutes. And finally, don't let those
leave nothing to the irnilgination. TV ads fool you; the kids playing
Children should use their fingers and toys on TV are actors and actresses
legs and thinll for themselves.
· pretending to have fun.
Second parent: I want practic~;~l,
After all, the child is the final
inexpensive toys. Yard sales (even judge of a toy·~ success or failure, so
.at this time of year) are a soorce of keep the particular child's physical
gOOd, used, repairable toys. Play- and intellectual abilities, age, and
dough is a "98 cent miracle," and interests in mind when &amp;electing
the numerous workbooka and puz- Christmas gifts - nod the child may
zles avallabie are real bargains.
not even want toys! When asked
Grandmother: Toys must be safe what she wanted for Chri8bnas, one
and durable. Toys which last can be bright, perky second grader replied
passed on to younger children in the without hesitation, "A pair of
family. Also, avoid that hard. brittle · designer jeans!''

Slinderella

Do£ A

the Past Presidents Parley, and
Mrs. GladyS Mowery, who joined the
unit in 1947, and was president in
1954. Mrs. Webster is at the
Pomeroy Health Care center, and
Mrs. Mowery is at the PleaS.nt
Valley Nursing Home.
other past presidents introduced
were Miss Smith, Mrs Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs. Marge Fetty,
and Mrs. Veda Davis. It was noted
that Mrs. Powell has three
generations in the unit, and that
Mrs. Knapp and Mrs. Tiemeyer
each have three granddaughters in
the jw1ior unit.
Greetings were extended from the
eommander of Post 39. The refreshment table carried out the blue and
gold colors of the Auxiliary with ·a &gt; '
large blue candle with a gold poppy
ring in the center. The cake was inscribed with the Auxiliry seal· and • ,
"60 Years of Service for God and
Country." Mrs. Knapp served the
cake, Miss Patterson poured the
punch, and Mrs. Tiemeyer was at
the silver coffee service. Open laced , '
sandwiches, mints and nuts were ,,
also served.
Anita Smith and Tina Riffle had
eharge of registration and name
lags; and Miss Campbell and Miss
Patterson presented the corsages.

Meigs History
Book

'Tis the seaaon for timely toy t1pe,
it seems. December ll8Wiji&amp;pers and
mag.W.. runneth over wtlh advice
concerning toys for toto; mail«der
toy catalopes ue chock full of a
confusion of choices; g1amoroua toy
coOUili!I'Cilll dominate TV advertising and captivate children.
But very lew children actuaUy
receive new IOylr belw- Thanbgiving and Chriltmas, as moat
parents save for that gift-l!lvlng
spllll1!e on the 25th. 'lberefore;thls
is the perfect time to borrow a toy
from the · Middleport Ubrary for
your favorite young child A different, exciting toy will belp fill in
those tong, long dragl!ing days until
Santa COIIIOII. Toys avallable for
· check-out include dolls, pull toys,
musicallnstrwnents, puzzles, boats,
bloib, number cards, pop beads,
aod lll!lgnifying glasses - aU in
colorful plastic and wood.
These borrowed toys would not
· oniy beip with pre-Christmas entertairunent, but alao would help a
parent determine whether or not a
child enjoys a particular type of toy.
Also, persons who have children in
their home only occasionally might
consider borrowing library toys at
any times of tbe year.
.
At this tirrie of year, however,
choosing toys to buy can be a

Area groups' meeting notes

narrow eDd of each ham slice, eX..

tending flower ends over edges of
ham.
Roll as lor jelly roll with broccoli
in the center of each roilup. Arrange
rollups in a baking dish with seam
side down. Pour sauce over rollupa.
Bake until sauce is bubbly, about 20
minutes.

Legion honors the old and welcomes the new
A reception to "honor the old and musical program, Steve Eblin, Wanwelcome the new" was held Sunday da Eblin, Brenda Haggy, Rebecca
by the American Legion Auxiliary of Eblin, and Karen Stanley of the
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, at Laurel Cliff Church choir.
the hall.
.
Mrs. Iva Powell had prayer ·and
Loretta Tiemeyer, president, following the pledge, a moment of
w~lcomed those attending and in- ·silence was held to honor the war
·
troduced those pressenting a dead.

Mason Homemakers hold dinner
Local Teachers Association

Everything from fancy foods and
candies to fanlutic deconllons and
gill items were demonstrated and
displayed at the annual Chrislmu
wortrshop sponaored by the Meigs
Extension Service at the St. Paul's
Lutheran Church.

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The Oaity Sentinet-Pag-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

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Nearly a hundred area women
gathered in the fellowship hall f~r
the all-day event which offered
nwnerous new ideas for gifts, foods
and holiday decorations.
"Gifts from the Kitchen" with not
only ideas for holiday foods but alao
how to wrap them, and preserve
them were given by Mrs. Dale Stoll.
She suggested that families have a
Christmas gilt factory right in their
own kitchen where they can
"manufacture" holiday goodies to
give as gifts. She said that food gifts
are popular with just about everyone, especially if they are tailored to
the recipient.
•

Monday. December 7, 1911

e members enjoyed a turkey dinner
recentiJ at the home of-Mrs. Stella
~-and Mill Ruby Diehl.
NGnlllll WW, master, presided at
lba ll*ting, with Nonna. Lee, lecturer, pnnntlrtl the program. Mr.
-.1 Mn. Ran ENtmln, delegates to
... State OriJIII, ........ and
,..,.n.t • their trip. Olhent at-

AlliiN
- Mr.Ruby
Atldnl,
aad
llal. OnllerKinl,

Oolterlll.

PD. POLITICAL ADV.

Tips on losing weight. during the
holidays were given at recent
meetings of the Sllnderella cla.iises.
At the Chester Club Ruth Hayman
received her 20 pound weight loss
ribbon and certificate, Charlotte
Smith and Debbie Clonch tied for the
most weight lost, and Crystal Smith,
Sue Kibble, and Paula Cunningham
lied for runner-up.
· At the Pomeroy class, Jayne
Hysell lllllt the most weight and
Kelly Hawkins was runner-up. A
Thanksgiving dinner was observed
at the meeting. AI the exercise class,
it was noted that Jackie Reed lost
the most weight. Information may
be obtained from Jo Ann Newsome,

992-33112.

OES
The charter was draped for Mrs.
Clara Thomas at the Tuesdsy nght
meeting of Pomeroy Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star, held at
the Masonic Temple.
Jim and Sue Soulsby were appointed to the Chrisbnas commitee
for remembrances for the residents
of the Meig County Infirmary.
Mabel Goeglein ' and Mabel Moore
will handle remembrances for
shutins of the chapter. It was noted
that cheer cards had been sent to
Beulah Ewing, Virgie Hobstetter
and Edna Schoenleb, a sympathy
card to Millard Van Meter 1 and a
birthday card to Norma GOOdwin.
Aim Hemsley took the sunshine
collection. Conununicatiorul were
read from Grand Chapter, along
with thank you notes from the cancer and heart fund agencies. Invitations to installations were from
Athens, Beverly, Glouster, Blanchard, Gallipolis, llelpre, Reinersville, and Ashland.
Mrs. Helen Wolle read a poem,
"Silent Night" with James Soulsby
singing the song. Chloris Gaul read
"Spirit of Christmas." ,
·
Refreshments were served by
Thelma Dill, Marge Crow, and
Dorothy Downie.

Middleport Lit Club
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Richard
Owen was elected president of the
Middleport I.Jterary Club at a
meeting held Wednesday afternoon
at the home of Mrs. Charles Gaskill.
Other officers elected for the year
were Mrs. Forrest Bachtel, vice
president; Mrs. Robert .Fisher,
treasurer; and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
secretary.
Mrs ..Ben Philson preaided at the
meeting and welcomed a guest, Mrs.
James Johnson of New York,
mother-in-law of the Rev. Wanda
Johnson. Mro. Owen, program
chainnsn, introduced Mrs. Gaskill
who reviewed the book, "A High Old
Time or How to Enjoy Being a
Woman" by Lavinia R.... The book
offered practical but highly amusing
guide to life after 110. She said that
the worst thing which can happen to
any woman Is to wake up In the morning with nothing to do. In her book,
she tells of a hundred ways to avoid
this, Mrs. Gasldll coocluded.
For roll call members told their
favorite age. The hostess aerved
refreshments of candy, cookies, nuts
andeaffee.

Syracuse cluster
SYRACUSE - A group of men
fnlm Syracutle Clllller of the United
Methadllt Churcb metal the Mlnenl-

viDe Church Sunday for a regular
monthly meeting.
A program was prepared .by Roy
Jenkins and Rick Hauber on "What
does Thanksgiving mean to you?"
The future meetings were
discussed. The next meeting will be
at Asbury Church, Dec. 27, at 6; 30
p.m. The January meeting will be
the 24th at the Foreo-t Run Church

MASON - The Mason Ext~nsion
Homemakers enjoyed a pre-Thanks~iving dinner recently at the bome of
Mrs. Landon Smith with 13 members
and two gu~sls attending.
Devotionals were given by Mrs.
Kenn~th Watkins and included a
reading, "Thank You. God, tor
Everything," Psalm 118, and prayer
for Victory.
At the opening of the meeting the
president, Mrs. Catherine Smith, led
in the Pledge of Allegiance to Our
Flag, and was followed by the group
repeating the Homemaker's Creek.
Corrunittee reports on proposed
plan for the year were given by
Health chairperson, Mrs. Dan
Sydenstricker ; Safety, Mrs. Terry
Chapman; International, Mrs .

Lawrence Belcher.
Mrs. JOY&lt;" Carson presented tbe
November lesson, "Saving Dollars
With EnerRY Sense." The leader
pointed out how to read gas and electric meters.
She conducted a contest asking
t(lose present, what are the 10
favorite electric items , in your
hom~?, and asked the ladles to name
three items we could not do without.
And what do your electric bills tell
you• To 1nany it would 1nake a lot of
sense not to use some. appliances
that use a lot of electric.
Tbe ~roup diocussed a recent
pressed flower workshop which

some of the members attended in

New Haven, and sporlllored by the
Cl)erokee Club. The club members

discussed buying Chrisbnas flowers
to be placed in a flow~r box iJ1 tower
Mason.
The nell rneetinK will be held at
the home of Mrs. Clara illiarns on
Dec. 15 at noon. Everyone is
requested to bring a gift, and a dish
oiiOOd.
AtlendinK the potluck dinner were
two guests. Mrs. Paul Bailey and
Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo, and mem·
bers Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Ken~eth Watkins, Mrs. Clara
Williams, Mrs. Dan Sydenstricker,
Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Russell
Capehart, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs.
Ronald Carpenter, Mrs. JOY&lt;" Car·
son, Mrs. Terry Cha]llnan, Mrs.
Ahna Marshall, Mrs. Matilda Rose
and Mrs. Lawrence Belcher.

Third Wednesday group meets
A program on bread making was
presented by Dale Stoll, Meigs Coun·
ty Extension home economist, at a
recent meeting of the Third Wed·
nesday Homemakers Clu~ held at
the Syracuse Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Stoll explained about different kinds of flour nod showed how
to prepare dough from the types of

breads or foils being baked. She atao
demonstrated how to braid dough,
make cinnamon rolls and how to
decorate a loaf of bread with ribbon
to give as a gifl.
Esther Harden talked on home
energy management explaining
various ways to conserve energy
and reduce costs. It was announced

that the Chrisbnas dinner will be
held on Dec. 16 at 6 p,m at the church. Sarah Roush and Genevieve
Schneider wiD have charge of tbe
program and there wiD be a gift exchange.
Mrs. Schoeider gave devotions
with Elma 'Louks reading a poem,
"In Grateful Praise."
Door prize• were awarded.

Holds decorating
contest
A Christmas decorating contest
will be beld in Pomeroy by the Win·
ding Trail Garden Club.
Tbe contest, with prizes to be
awarded in the categories of
religious, overall, and entrance or

window, will be upen to all residents
within the corporation . limits of
Pomeroy. Businesses will be asked

to contribute prizes.

While registration is not requir
for a residence to be judged, th
sponsoring club is asking tha
residents complete the form below.
Judging will take place on Dec.
at 6:30 p.m. For more infonnalion
residents are invited to contact Mrs.
Robert Lewis, 992-2924. '

Name: ............. . ... . . .. . ..... , .. . . ... ..•. . .•... . ...... . ... .. :

Welding group

Address: ... . ... ... ... . •. ... . •. .. .• •. . .. .... . . . .. • ..... ..........

A meeting of the advisory committee for the welding program at
Meigs High School wa~ held in the
high school welding shop area, Wed·
nesday evening.
Present were advisors Bill Riggs,
Bruce Cotterell, and George Wright
and insiructors, Richard Fetty and
Ken Eblin. Areas discussed were;
program charts for J. V. and Senior
classes: certificales fur ~nior
students upon graduation;
aluminum welding wire for 1VIig
welding machine; enrollment of
more students from Eastern and
Southern Local School Districts; lab

Category :
Religious .. . . .
. .. . ...... ... .............. .. . .. ....... ..
Overall ..... .. .... . .. .... ... . . .. . . . . .. . ..... . . ...... . .... .... .
Entrance or Window .. . . . .. . .. .... . . ........ . . . . ... .. . ... ..... .
Mail to Mrs. Robert Lewis, Spring Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Levrs
'
....
'•

,

The original heavyweight
un -washed Levi Jeans.

FLARES
STRAIGHT LEG
Reg. S21.9S
NOW
Reg. $29.00

MEN'S

lADIES'

NOW

$18.

l

I

'

$21.75

Also Student Sizes

:I

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

:~

-

Are you at the end
·of your rope?

fee for students in program; air car·

bon arc cutting unit to be added to
program 198U3.

Cub Scout 245
Jay Reynolds received his arrow
of light in ceremonies at the recent
me~tlng of Cub Scout Pack 245 held

at the Chester Elementary School .
Jay is the son of Nelson and Joyce
Reynqlds, Pomeroy. Gale Osborne,
Master of · Scout troop 235, was
present at the meeting to welcome
Jay into the boy scout troop. To
qualify for the arrow of light award,
Jay completed ail of the badge
requirements.
Conducting the ceremony were
Ray Laudennilt, Bill Sim, Mike Sim,
den chief, and other webelos who
Reynolds
lighte9 the candles. Jay pre"!'nted ---------~--!._
his mother with a pin.
.Frank Newsome, cubmaster, conducted the opening ceremonies and
presented awards to the webelos of
Den 1, Eric Sim, craftsman,

All tied up in knots because your attic and base·
ment are overflowing with all kinds of junk 1
Remember.. -One person's junk is another person's
treasure. Don'td.,pair! Check il all out, make a lin
of what you have, then sell il fast with a person-to·
person Classified ad in ...

The Daily Sentinel
Call 992-2136

_______________;________

engineer, showman; Del ~uder­

milt, citizen, craftsman, engmeer,
showman, scholar; Brian Bailey,
engineer, scholar, traveler; Floyd
Ridenour,

citizen,

craftsfnan,

engineer, forester, scholar; Tony
Lee, outdoorsrnan; Jay Reynolds,
citizen, engineer, naturalist, out·
doorsman; Jay Reynolds, citizen,
engineer, naturalist, outdoorsman,
showman; David Klng, aquanaut,

'

artist, craftsman, outdoorsman;
Tinuny Clark, artist. athlete and
outdoorsman.
Den 2. cubs: Bobcat badges went
to Robert Bauer, Paul Erwin, Matt
Finlaw, Kevin Heaton, Dean Mays,
Matt Rldenoor, and Donnie Spencer,
with Kevin Heaton also receiving a
bead badge.
Den 3 cubs; Bill Johnaon, two
yellow beads, wolf badge; Scott
Justis, three yeUow beads, _and tbe
wolf badge; Jason Ridenour, three
yellllW beads and the wolf badge;
Jason Ridenour, three yellow beads,
and Tom Hunter, two yellow beads.
Del Laudermllt .received a special
·patch and certificate for hiking.
Adult patcbea went to Cathy Workman, Sherri King, Bill Slm, Ray and
Cheryl Laudermilt, Frank and Jo
Ann Newsome, Bob Bauer, Jlm and
Helen Heaton, Mary Hunter, Roberta RldeJiour, and Patty Capehart.
A skit ...U ~ by the
webelll8. Refrealments were aerved
by the parents.

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�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 7, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:'Day of Infamy' was
' 40 years ago today
·'

7,

For all of your wir·
Ing needs.

the

1

like

George Miller
clleck your present aloctrlcalsystom.
Rasldonllat
&amp; commtrcilll

SUNRISE HBDNG &amp;
cmJNG
Recuperative
Coleman Air
· Arkla·Ser·Gos
Condition-Ing, Sheet Metal Work.
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp;COOLING '
Rt: 2, Albany, Ohio
614-691-6791
11 -16-lfn

....

. HARRISON .
.TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
uSed Color TV Set_s for

.,

Sale.
N.EW PH.ONE NO.
276 SycamOre Sl.
Middleport, Ohio
9-21 ·tfc

.

•',,

·'

These cash rates
include discount
•'

&lt; )Wanted

.

( ) For Sale
· ( }Announcement
&lt; ) For Rent·

17. _ _ _ _ __
1 8 . - - -- - . 19, _ _ __ __

WRECKAGE - The wreckage of a twin-e1J41lne
Beecbcraft Is hauled wt of Peari'Harbor Sunday. Gne
_ member of tbe parachuUng club Jump Hawaii sill'-

· vived and 11 others were killed in ·Saturday night's
crash, (AP Laserphoto).

\

3. _ _ _ _ __

·---~---

Girl dies, 3 hurt in wreck
MURRAY, Utah ( AP) - A bus Alta ski resort.
loaded with teen-agers returning · Club adviser Zem Hopkins said he
, •from a sk1 resort overturned on a · told the bus passengers to grab their
: 'steep· canyon road southeast of Salt ankles and brace themselves before
;. Lake City Sunday, k1Umg one g~rl the driver tried to slow the bua by
: .and seriously injuring three others, hitting an embankment on .t he right
side of the road. He said the bus then
police said.
Salt Lake County sheriff's "hit the side of the wall, spun and
' , deputies said the yellow school bus rolled."
was carrying 38 teen-age members
Karyn Walker, 18, who received
" of the Kemmerer, Wyo., High School minor injuries to her head and neck
ski club and two adults. They said it in the crash, said that after Hopkins'
overturned after hitting an em- warning, "everybody started
ban]onent while headed down the .screaming and we were going
, , l:.ittle cottonwood Canyon road from around ... really fast."

'- ---------"
2, _ _ _ __

Officials at Cottonwood Hospital in
)'Iurray aaid Julie Poulsen, 17, was
dead at the crash scene. Annelise
Wilson, 16, was in 110rious condition
at Cottonwood, and George Crank,
18, underwent · surgery at Cottonwood for a ruptured spleen.
Madonna C!'OIIIlweight, 17, was
flown by helic&lt;&gt;pter to LDS Hospital
in Salt Lake City. Nursing Super·
visor Kathy Wood said Miss
Croasweight was in critical con:
clition and was taken inunediately
into surgery.

5 .~-----

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8,

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10.
11.
12.
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16. - - - - , - - - - -

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2 4 . - -- - - 25. - - - - - 2 6 . - - -- -27,-- - - - 28. - - - - , - - - - 29. - - - - - 30. - - - - ' - - 31. - - - - , - - - 32.

33. - - -- - 3•.
35.-- - - - -

· Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The 'D aily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457•9

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ALMOST NEW RANCH ·
- All on one floor and
arranged conveniently,
this 3 bedrOQm home
has a laundry area,
llllrge kitchen, an at·
tached garage, plus
another gai'age. Large
acre lot that is
beautifully landscaped.
$39,900.00,
POMEROY- Approx. 6
year old home with 3
bedrooms and a large
kitchen. For:c:ed air furnace, paneled walls and
could have a full
basement . $19,500.00,
TRAILER WITH EX PANDO
2-3
bedrooms, · big living
room with new carpet
throughout. Includes un·
derplnnlng, porches, air
conditioner and "lUIPped kltchen. ,$9,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
"2-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
"2-5692

A. lB

RGIL B. SR.

,I

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yn. E ~eptrltnce

Gameyiea:dSiJ;:i~e;•,;~~
Moun.ts,

Novelties. Custom Tan·
ning. Fast Delivery.

To$79.95
PH. 992-3269
12-3-1 m9. pet

•

pliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeli,pg,
plumbin, electric. and
heating.

Re~t~•ceme~t

Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

11 -12-1 mo.

For bulk deliVery of
gasoline, heating oil and .
diesel fuel, call Land.mark, Traders Qay. Dec. 12.
El!gle Ridge Fox Hunters
992~2181, Pomeroy, Oh. ·
Cobin, eagle R;dge Rd.,
Gun Shoot Racine Gun Bob Clonch.
Club. Every Sun. starting
ot 1 p.m. Factory choke Stolen Property. Antique
kitchen safe. Antique
g_u_n_s_o_n_IY----~~~~:: dining room cabinet. Two
chairs. Other
TRAPS and TRAPPING rocking
items.
Anyone
knowing or
supplies. Gene Hines, seeing this furniture
being
Amesville, Ohio. 614-.US- hauled in the vicinity
of
67.,. Dally after 1 p.m.
Flatrock, WV on October 10
later. a liberal reward Is
Rac;ne Fire O.ptcsponsors I oi•fer·ed. 675-1302.
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m., Bashan. Factory OEER·skinned, cut, wrap:
. ped. Call Cisco. 304-675choke 12 guage shotgun.
149S.
RAW FUR bUyer. Beef &amp;
deer hide-glnshang. Trap·
ping supplies. George
Giveaway
Buckley, Rt. 2. Athens, Oh. 4
614-664-4761.
Open ANY PERSON who has
evenings.
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
No hunting or trespassing offer any other thing for
day or night on the Charles sale may place an ad in this
E. Yost and Ivan Well far - column. There will be no
ms.
charge to the advertiser.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992·7656

L-----:-::..:c:...;;;.::-11

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance

•Roofing of all types

OFF SEASON RATES
S120WEI!KLY

$400 MoNTHLY

~IHS5· 3833

or 98S-J364
11 25-1 mo. pd .

•Siding
•Remodeling
•Freeesti,.•tes
•2G Yrs. experience

toM HOSKINS

Rates based an
occupancy.

1-304·675-.6276

Ph. 94N160 or 949-2412
. 7-5-lfc

ALL STEEL

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

Birchfield's Taxidermy. Female kiHen to give away
Deer heads mounted. East with IIIIer box. Call after
ot Rutland on 124. 614-742- 3; 30, 388-9934,

BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 30x24"

2178 .

SMALL

Utility Bu iklings
S~zes

from 4 to 6 and all
wOOd buildings 24x36.

Insulated Dog Houses ·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Rt. 3, BOK 54
Racine. Oh . .
Ph. 614-843·2591
6-15-tfc

PH. 992·5663
11·6·.1·mo.

we still have plenty of apples at F itzpatrlck Or· Found Afghan mix dog.
chard, SR689. Phone 614- «6-9356.
669-3785.
Lost and Found
LOST Mlnature black male
poodle. Lost In GarfieldPortsmouth Rd. area . can
4-l6-2457.

6

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DRIVEWAY
.LIMESTONE .

......AddOnsand
remod•llng

_Roofing anCf gutter

-

work

Conc..-twork
_ Piumbi'N! and
ele-c:trlal woi-k.

..... Coal

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215or992-731.t
Pom-r. Ohio

11-12-1 mo.

K"p This Ad for

APPLiANCE

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SERVICE
985-3561

' PARfS AND SERVICE
AU MAKES
•Woahwt

•PrYer•

•ftong••
•Disposals

••Diahwa~hars
•Hot Water Tanka

9-5·tfc
t •

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'I,•
}
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THE

... TAXIDERMY
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SHOP----·

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BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, ports. etc.
Onler Guns 111'16
AbOve Wholes11e

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call Alter 4 P.M.
992-,7656
11 -12·1 mo.

New Homes - extensive remodel·
ing;
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7513
11 ·19-1 mo.

•

'
-Fine.tQuallty

IKcelltnt Strvl~e­
itftlo · Gal!MitHll·
Plus

~lllfMIIIlltl·

Hldt Tanntne

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic SYllems
Water. Sewer &amp;
Gas Line•
eDumpTruck

3·

CALL:

Licensed &amp; Bonded

POMEROY

Ph. 992-7201

lANDMARK

5-21-lfc

6 t 4-992-21111
For Farm and
Home D-elivery of
Gas
Diesek Heating Oil.

EVERYBODY
Shops the

PRICED RIGHT.

WANT AD WAY

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

CLASSIFIED AD -INDEX
CERTIFIED GAS
OUr Specialties
Cigs: 63c pk.t_ cartons
S5.9S reg.; $6.0:t lon,.s.
We sell the fonowmg:
8 Pk. RC, Diet RC or ~C
100 $1.29 plus dep. &amp; tax
6 pk ,, RC producls5l.S9
8 PJ&lt;. Pepsi products
. S1.39 ptu• dep. &amp; lax
6 pk. Pepsi products
·
S1.99 &amp; tax
a pk . 16 oz. Cokes
s1.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
Hours: Mon,·Sal.
6 A,M,-9 P.M.
Sundoy 8 A.M.-9 P.M.
11-15-1 mo.

e RENTALS

eANNOUNCEMENTS

••-H~ ... for Rent

, 1-cerd of Ttlanll;s

42--MDIII.. Hcnnn

:t-In Memorlem
· :t-Announcem1nls •

4~Fu.-nldttd

•12~.Yd.

25 · Rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nantiSJ,JOup.

9

Wanted to Buy

WANT to buy house in -P t.
Pleasant on land contract
or lease basis. Write Box A·
In care of Pt. Pleasant

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

SI - HeUII!MICI GooB
n-c:a, TV, Radio Equipment
n-Antlouts
Sf-Mise:. Mtrr:Mftdlse

LOOKING for 1981. Ford
Supercab, 6 cylinder with
overdrive. Take over
payment or negotiate. Call
after 5:00 713-466-1261.

&amp; Audlon

11-He.,Wafttecl
12-SH"uetion Wentlld

B-Bulldlng Suppllu
S6---Pets tor Slit ·
S1-Muslcellnsh-•ment
st-Fruitt I Y..,...bles
St-For S.leor Trade

13-lnsunnce
14-BuliiiQI Trllnlng

61 _Ferm

EquU~m•nl

62--WenMG to Buy

2t-BuslfteU
Oppoftunlty
n - Moneyt.Loan
U-ProleU10MI

·

6J-Livestoc~

'"'

'-t-Hey I Grein
. 65-SHd I Fertillllr

service~

eTRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

Jl- Autos for Salt
n- Trucllt for Sill

11-HomiiiOr Sllf
J2-Moblla Hom•s
torSI/e
U-IFermslor Sill
:M-8u•lneu 8uUdlnts
U-LOIS &amp; Acre. .e
:S.- Rell

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamJ)el! lOK, 14K, 18K and
dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store, Galllpon• «6-2691 or
992-20541n Pomeroy1
Buying Gold,
SilVer.
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes availab.le. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale. Spring Valley
Trading, Spring Vallev
Plaza. 446·8025 or 446·8026.
Wanted to buy tnotor for
1976 Honda Civic. Call 256·
6652.
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
«6-0069.
. BeDS-IRON. BRASS. old
furniture. gold, silver
dollars, wooct ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households.
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or992·7760.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co ..
Rock Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy. 992-2689. ·
Gold, silver. sterling,
[ewelry, rings, old cOins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber Shop, Middleport. 9923~76 .

Industrial sewing machine.
614-742-2656.
Raw fUrs. hides. scrap
metals,
batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brok.ering. H!lrper-Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street . 675-5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily. Open Monday ·
Frldav 1·5 pm.

OLD fashioned lace curtian
stretchers ,.with nails,
phone 304-675-2658.

J)-Ve••••w .o .
J~-Motorr:vcltl
.
J5-BG1tl &amp; Motors

J._Auto fltrltl

Accenorles

Et let~Wanted

J7-Auto Rep.~~ir

17- Rtan.rs

Help Wanted
Pinecrest Care Center now
accepting apPlications for
RN's·LPN's. Immediate
opening for LPN with pharmacology, 11 ·7 shift. Con·
tact Judy Hoi lev RN OON,
«6-7112. EOE.
Jacques Seed Co.. Dealers
needed in Gallia Co. Far·
mers earn extra money, no
investment required.
Phone 245-9174. eihory or
Mary Wetherholt.
RN's &amp; LPN'S needed for
new upcoming IC·CCU in
full or parttime pOsition.
evenings and night shift.
Contact Personnel Dept.,
O'Bieness
Hospltal 1
Hospital Dive, Athens, Oh.
45701. EOE.
Now accepting ap plications for char-broiler
person. Apply in P._erson at
Bob Evans Steak ~
TAKING applications for
bar waitress &amp; tleaflng.
Valley View Inn, 304·576·
2277,

f:lll.&lt;sifif!tl Plll(es cover the
followinl( tele11hone exchanges ...
•

SERVICES
11-HOtnllmprOvemenll
12-Pivmbint&amp; Haellng
13-Excavellnt
, 14-Eiec:lrklll • .
Retrtter•llon
15-Ginlrll HIUIIftl

Want-Ad Advortlllng
Deodllnts
Monday 2:00 on Saturdlr

Tltnctay ttru F r•IY I: DD t'.M.
ttu dav before publlcet!on
5u1Mfey2:11 P.M. Frlctl't'

16-M.H. Repair
11-upno11Mry

Rates and Other Information
up rouwortt ... oneelly ln•rtion , , .......•.... , •......•.. s,a.Dt
Up to Uwordt ... th.... Uy lnMrllon ........ · · · · · · · · · · --'· · · · M.DI

Upti11WNI'ttl ... staavs•aertlon ..... .... . .............. SJ.Dt
C&amp;verlfl 4 w•ll• ptr 1111•1
Mf'!le Heme "'" uMI v a I'd ••'•• ,,.. •&lt;cept.cl onlr with caUl
with ...... IS ~nt CIYrtt lor atli carrylnt ... NUJt'!btt' In C:trt et

Tilt............
'
TIM! fl'u-.,IMr rnervn thl rltftl tDecllt or ... ltcf

~ny eels Mmlll
obl.ctiONI. Thl Publisher •HI not 1M rnpMIIbleiDr niert ~n Mt

lftCWrtCJ unartltft.

'

Will babysit children 4 and
under . 949·28.54.
Insurance
13
'-"---====--SANDY AND BEAVER lnsur~nce Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage In Gallla Coun~y
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personc.l
property coverages are
available to meet in·
divldual, needs. Contact
Kail Burleson, agent .
Phone 446·2921 .
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE been cancelled?
Lost
your
operator'.s License? Phone
992-2143
18
wanted to Do
Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processirfg .
Call .«6-2851, Gallipolis,
Oh.

742-Rutland
667-CooiVille

Masonco.,w. va . '
Area COde 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
576--Appte Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Letart
937-Buflakl
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

1 will do babysitting in my
home. Rosa Greene, Hartford, WV, 304-882-2912. ·

WILL do odd' jobs, carpentry, plumbing or electrical,
have
gOod
reputation, 304·675·5918 or
675-3770. Ask for Steve.
WILL do babysitting in mv
home, on Sandhill Rd .• day
oi night. Jo.t-675-4399 or-675·
1526.
WILLING to do house
cleaning in ~t. Pleasant
area, 304-675-7374.

2.~2c...._M=on"e"yLto"'-!L,o,a,n__
columbus First Mortgage
company FHA·VA Financing Loan Rep. Cookie
Krautter (304)675-3473.

Professional
Services
Piano Tunlng-L.et ·your
piano sound pretty for the
hoHdays, only $30.00. Call
BUI Ward, 446-4372.

$5 discount for pianos tuned
before Christmas. Call Bob

Grubb, «6-4525.

TUNING-Lane
PIANO
Daniels. Associate:
Brunicardi Music. Phone
614-742-2951 or 61H92-2082.
Discount to Meigs reslden·
Is.
HARPER Adult Care Cen·
ter-prov!dlng the Ptrsonal
c;:are yOur elderly need In a
home like atmosphere.
Vacancies now availlb!e.
caii30H75-1293,
·
Roofing, insulation, plum·
bing, and general home
maintenance. For estimate
call 675·5496, it no answer
call675·3147.
COMPLETE home malntainance,
appliance
repairs, no job too small -at
a price to please. &lt;referen - .
ces) Call 304-576-27911,

3i--- Homes for Sale
------------

BY OWNER: 4 bdr., spnJIevel, living room &amp; dining
room combination. eat-in
kitchen, lg. family rm., 2
112 baths, located in T-'ra
Estates, Club house and
pool prlvHege•, $75,0oo
firm. Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call «6-9.103.
The Roush home at 2515
Mt. Vernon, Pt. Pleasant, ·
is for sale. Call the son at
61&lt;-927-5413.

in Meigs County

446-2342

992-2156
In Mlson county

C &amp; L Bookkeep;ng. Complete bookkeeping and fa)(
service for business and individuals.
Carol Neal «6-3862

---------

ln·Gallia c;~nty

- - -· - ..!.,... _ _ _ _ _ _

SANDHILL Roo~, Pt.
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms. llf2
baths, double garage ..
owner will finance . 1mmediate occupancv. 304·
675-5811 ,
·------ --.-~--

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TV servi·ce calls. Call 9922034. Also used color TV for
sale,

.

h\e1gs Co. Areil Code
Galli a Co. Area Code,
614
'
614
992-Middleport
446--GaiHpolls
Pomeroy.
367-Cheshlre
. 985-Chester
3-VInton
343-Portland
245-R 10 Grande
247-Letart Falls
256--Guyan Dlst.
949-Rac:lne
~43-Arlbla Dist:

Jt-Campinl Eaul~tme•t

12 ,. Situations W•nted
Elim Resthome. Care. for
handicapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
Jimlted care. Or continuous
home with us. equipped for
wheel chair. 742-2266.

23

a FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFII'IANCIAL

1 Creek Bed
3Galden 1
Harvest

Rooms

CASH PAl 0 for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAIIIpoll•,
Ohio. Call «6-2282.

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Auction every Wed. night
az Hartford, CommUnity
Building. Sa le time 1 p.m.
Lots of new and used mer·
chandise every week. Consignments from dealers
and individuals welcomed.
Richard Reynr 1ds Auc·
tloneer. 30•·27S-3u69.

,._Wintl'd to Buy

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3ROW

Yard Sale ,
FLUFFY brOwn female
dog, ·part collie, recovered
htnd leg injury, well cared .
for. Phone 446-3225.

1

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

I CB Rep.lllr
11- wantld To Do

1 Blue, Rust

LOST: Bull 315 lbs. Baney
Run area. 992·3866.

~6-Sp,~ce for R1nt
47-Wantfll to l1nt
~f-Equl,.,ent for Rent
4,_For L•eu

I,...:.Redlo, TV,

END ·oF YEAR CLOSEOUT

Lost: Dog Wed. on Silver
Ridge Rd. Eastern High
School. 614-985-3818.

far R1nt
4t-Apa.-tmentt f•r REnt

4-0iveawly
5-HappyAdl
6-Lost Hd Found
J-V'1rd lilt
t-PubllC Slit

15-Sc:nootstnstructlon

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

LOST three heifers from
the J. Justice property
near Bidwell, one white,
one R,W spot, one Herford
650 to 850 lbs. Reward, 3889753 days to three.

8

WANT AD INFORMATION

"IIIUtlful, CUllOm
lull! Goratn" ·
Colt for trH lldlng
ostlmatts, 949-2101 or ·
949-2160.
No sunday Calls

Buy Now &amp; Save 52:56 Per Yard

I ,.•

_

GU"SMilHING

lnst•ll d•

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11 -19-1 mO.

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCilON

scout camp Rd.
Chester, Oh.
Order Now for
Christmas:
• Gifts for Gaffers .
• Discount Prices on
1
Shirts, Windbreakers.
Sweaters, Socks,
Pants, Shoes
·*Short game practice
• Prop-Golf lessons for
an ages
• ReiNir: Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
lt'ltth change,
weight change
• Fast service
• 4 Free lessons
drawing ·

,,,.

JIM LUCAi ·
PH. 742·2753

•. ,

IWB

I,

A

Gas &amp; Wat&amp;r Lines

S&amp;W
ANDCUSTOMIZI~G ,

Call Ken Young
Far Fast Service

Trailer
sites &amp;
Driveways, Small lolls a
specialty. Dlfdter or
Trettch Service.

(FrH htlmotet)

Ph. 992·2772

',.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

GRAVEL

PH. 742·2225
(

• Storm Windows

· WElDING SHOP

From 534.95

_I

!'!hone
)-1614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING ', - 2
houses, Orle 4 bedrooms,
bath, furnace, ga~age &amp;
level lot for S.16,SOO, and
a 3 bedroom with' bath,
all utilities, garage and
level lot for S13,ooo: or
both for 528,500. 1
18 ACRES - on State
Rt. Some fence, · old
farm
house and
bl.lildings. 2 bedrOom
12x52 mobile home .
Ideal for family Or you
can sub:dlvlde. T.P 1 •·
wa~er,
near Eastern
school.
COUNTRY RANCH Lovely big family room
with
woodburning
fireplace. ThiS ri10dern 2
vr. Old home has B
rooms, 2 full bathS, 2 car
garage and 1 nice lt!vel
acre. Lots of good (&amp;r·
peting and not far out.
ON RT, 143- 5 vr. Old
one floor plan. a rooms,
2
WOOdburner,
3 bedroo•ns,

·

D&amp;D

-THE

116 E. Second Street

Custom kitchenS Mid ap-

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
F~om· th• s.mlllest
Hao.ter Coto to the
Largos I Radiator.

Pomeroy,Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Available
Made trom
Ced~r,
Cypress, Wa Inut &amp;
Cherry.

Address----------:-----

BRADBURY - Really
nice 11f2 story 3 bedroom
frame home that has
been completely redone
with new roof, new
siding, new wiring, new
plumbing. new car·
peting, new cabinets,
new appliances, In ·
sulation, and new walls
on most of the house .
$53,000.00.

Ph. 992-6564
1012·1fc

·HANDCRAFTED
CLOCKS

•
•

'

!

Phone _____________

Now picking up (unk 1 .
auto bOdies. Top prftes
pold ter 1,1110 bOdies,
scrap Iron aftd m.,als.
1 · mlfe west of Fair·
grounds on Old Rt. 33.
Mon.-Fri. 1:30 to 4:00

CONSTRucnON

Aluminum Siding
elnsulotlon
• Slorm Doors

Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza~ 446·8025.

C. R. MASH

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
VInyl &amp;

SCRAP

!Pomeroy - scrap
Iron
&amp; Metall

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

992~259

"

,----·- -----.------------:-1
I · Curb Inflation I

Pay Cash for
I
1 Classlfleds and
Savell!
I

TO

'

CHRISTIAN lady needed to
work In personal care
home. Live-In neceuarv.
Write Box C-27 In care of
Pl. Pleasant Register, ·

TRAPPeR. We hove a corn, ·

-----------+----------1--------:----f----------j

Want Ad

HOBSIEIIER REALTY

Need tutor fCII' algebra. 992-

61197.

wax. supand
plies. Traps,
line of dye,
trappl~g
:::::::=====~=~=========~~======~~~~=======m::":~i pl~te
lures.
Spring Vallev

32

. -Skydiver recalls ·disaster

Fuller Brush Repr-n·
tatlve In vour area. Call
3114-273-&lt;1559 or write Rt.1,
Box 2~3. Ravenswood,
W.Va. 2&lt;1164.

· 2 locations
32'1 N, Sec , Avo.
Middleport
&amp; 107.. u.s. 35
Jac~son,OH.

Call742-3195

..

'

Coni of Thanks

Boots &amp; Shoes tor
whole family.

~ot

Small investment, large
return. Sentinel Want Ads

;~

r-

'

SERVICE

memorial; mostly Americans he could have hit him with a
and Japanese shai'lng in the remem- baseball. A piece of shrapnel hit the
brance of World War II as they back of his neck, but was deflected
by a gas mask canister.
shared in its sacrifice.
"Disaster! That's what I
"I could never have imagined it 40
thought,"
he said._. "I c&lt;&gt;uld see the
years ago," said one recent visitor,
f.
famy.''
Arizona
burning."
Makato Sando, a Japanese Zero
• • Forty years have passed since
Hit in the forward magazine by a
pilot wbo participated lnthe attack. ·
•· Japanese bombers pierced the early
Japanese
bomb, the Arizona S8llk in
"I myself did not expect to return
Sunday morning clouds over Pearl
38
feet
of
water,
its crew dead where
(from that mission)," he said. "I Jefl
Harbor on Dec. 7, to dropthe deadly
they
lay.
Fuel
still
seeps from its
my parachute behind. All . of the
, . load that blasted America's Pacific
submerged
tanks,
its
eerie sheen
pilots left their.parachutes behind."
fleet •· and-tgnited a generation;s
dispersed
by
the
waves.
Sando's attack group followed the
. patriotism.
-first Zeroes to strike Pearl Harbor .
The billowing black clouds, the
" Because the first group already
For some of Garbuschewski's
the Pearl Harbor attack~ yean ago, durinC lbelr villi
thud of armor-piercing bombs and
MOURNING - Klkuye Uda, left, 8lld her friend
hjld gone, when we came · over listeners, the Arizona Memorial dif·
at
his grave In Haaolulu Sunday. Mn. !Ida, who ba4
- ·the rattling percussion of •anti·
Yaeko M-ota weep as they honor Imperial Navy
... ships were burning, hangars were fers little from monuments to battle
been
the dead pOol'• fiancee, later married his
aircraft fire _live only in the
Lt. Fusata !Ida, the lint Japanese plio! kOied during
burning .... Most of the planes were at Gettysburg or Saratoga.
brolller.
(APLaserpboto).
memories of those who survived the
already damaged, " he said through
But others remember a radio an·
.nouncer
bre11king
into
the
Dodgers,_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
,...
_
_
_
_
_
_
_,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
attack, which brought the United
an interpreter.
·- States into World War II.
· How did be feel about the mission? Giants football game to flash news of
' But the day of history is notforgot- .
"When you are in the military, you the Japanese attack.
·., -ten. A graceful white memorial
have to follow your orders whether
They remember the "initial defeat
· 'straddles the submerged huU of the
you like it · or not," he said. ''Our and ultimate victory" that architect
.
.
"
USS Arizona, with the names of 1,177
mission was to atlack Pearl Har- Alfred Preis expressed symbolically
dead
crewmen,
most
still
buried
bor."
' ,•
in the memorial's fonn.
within the ship, engraved on its marBando was 24 then. Now robust
ble walL
anu animated at 64, he recently
It stands where the Arizona's
retired from an insurance c&lt;&gt;mpany
"The structure sags in the center,
- mangled turrets once jutted from
and is filming his memoirs for a but stands strong and vigorous atthe J-'7'.._.."':"'.._.."':":"....,"':"'....,~~~=;:~~~~~~~~~~;;~:;;~~~r=~~~~:;T.;~~~
·. .oil-slicked waters and the USS
Japanese televisionsta~ion.
ends," Preis wrote. ''At low tide, as
·· -· ·PUbliCNCJtiie--·Public Noti"cL.__
Publir; Notice
Public N~tice
, . Oklahoma wallowed on its side, its
''That guy was doing his J'Ob like I the sun shines upon the hull, the bar·
~ -~--·· - · -- -· ·-~-Oil and gas rights which on sa id · real estate and iS address Monday_ through ·
air pockets a living hell for men who
was doing mine," ~id another nacles which encrust itshinuner
· 1 ~C::1:i~~[o\t~\
~~~:,;e:~~v ehde ~Yra~ot~'!'~~ gfi~~cfi~~ ~ n %~2oa-~~~~9~1~ ~:~~~~m~rom 9:·oo a.r:n. to
survived up to 17 days.
reCent survivor, speaking not . gold jeweJs ... a beautiful sar~
OF REAL EST ATE
to h~ve all rentals from of the Ohio Revised Code.
The above collateral
cophagus."
I am offering for sate at leases from said · land,
JAMES PROFFITT." item isbelngsold under the
The memorial- near the shore of
specifically of Bando, but of his
public .sale the real estate · bei.ng the same as reserved
Sheriff of terms of a certain Security
, Ford Island in the middle of the.barJano
.
nese
enemy
in
general.
Dedicated
in
1962,
the
nlenwrial
deset!1
bed
hereinafter
and
set
forth
in
the
deed
to
'Meigs
countv,
Ohio Agreement between Daniel
' bor - honors the 2,341 American
as bw'lt from go·vernment and owned by William L. George Howell b" Charles {11l ·23_.30(12l7.14,4tc
R.andOonnaMcCioud.159
"'"
Horst "Fred" Garbuschewski was w
Hoover and Rebecca Bell ~nd wife, re~orded in
. South 4th Street, Midservicemen who lost their lives in
at the memorial on 8 Tuesday af.. · private funds, including proceeds Hoover. Said sale is to oc· volume 151 , page 569
Public Notice
dl~rt, Ohio 45760 and the
the attack. Navy records list 68
ternoon, proudly weitring the hat from Elvis Presley's 1961 benefit ~~~rft ~h~us~eig~o:;,~~~~~ ~~~~~f~~~~J~ ~:e~h~~~ 0 f~
u"c:~f;gres~vings &amp; Loan
civilian casualties as welL
Oh;o, at 10 :00 A.M. on hereby made.
PUBLIC llii,;iicE
Company, 300 West Second
and shirt of the Pearl Harbor Sur: c&lt;&gt;ncert.
h'
December 29, 1981. Said
Reference Deed: Vol.
A 1973 Chevrolet Truck, street, Pomeroy, Ohio
The only other ship •iill on the barvivors Association, and telllng IS
real estate was appraised 275 ,page 717 ,Me;gsCounty Serial No. CCQI-438114510, 45769.
.
• •;, bor bottom, the battleship Utah, lies
h
red toas.
k
bY me appra1sers
·
will be sold at public auc · (12) 7• lie
storytothosewoca
apoeedRecords.
po;nted by the Court of
TRACT TWO : Beo;n,n; 110 t;on on Monday, December
just off the opposite side of the
Garb usc hewski was 21 years old
Tobringbackasenseoftheworld common Pleos, Meigs _, 1 th.e southwest
28, 1981 at 10 :00 a.m. at
.. ··;·:·
island. It is commemorated with a
· toward war, the Na t'tona1 c oun t y, Ohl 0 • for the sum ••an eighteen acre
Capital
Loan
on Dec. 7, 1941. He was tuning up hi s movmg
Ct;&gt;mpany,Savings
300 West&amp;second
·. GET'tOOR_wmiA
0
shoreside plaque and flagpole.
clarinet for the Sunday call to colors Park Service shows a historical film ~ini~U~ ·~~ou~rd whti~~ ~~r't~~~~t ~c~~~r:r
. street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
, Navy boats shuttle nearly 2,500
· when he of the attack and 1'ts place m'' World sa;d renl estate can be tsold tion No. 6, ownship . , start;ng
m;n1mum
bid
a boa r d the Uss Cal1·rornta
price otat a$300.00,
" terms
visitors a day from the National
f
ta
shall
not
be
less
than
wo·
Rang~ No. 12, of the
i
h' t th h' he
.
ttedth
J
Ze
0
W
II
d
1
spo
e apanese r s.
ar
rawmg upon news 00 ge thirds i213) of the ap· Compan"'s
Purchase,· cas . o e 1g st bidder.
Par~ Service's new visitor center to
· •1 , or""•300000
,
·
o 1t.
pra1s
, .. ·
thence East
on the l.i ne of Saiditemisavailabletothe
bl f
I'
One pilot came so cI ose, h e sa1'd , for pa rtf'
Said rea l estate is ·
d
b R E G
pu ic orinspec 1onatsaid
described as follows :
ian owned Y · · reen ----;:;~:-...:::::=-~
Situated in the Township formerly owned by William 11
Help Wanted
Real Estate- General·
Green 20 rods to a corner.
of Orange, County of Meigs thence North 8 rods to a
and State of Onio, to·wit ;
corner; thence West 20
COMMUNICATIONS
TRACT ONE: Beginning rods to a corner; thence
TRAINEES
in the center of 01~ . State south 8 rods to the place of
Route No . 7, at the South · beginning, contain1ng one
17·2S. No uperienc'e rc·
OFFI(E 742-2003
west corner of a one acre acre, more or less . See
qui red. lt1 Ohio Call:
GeorgeS.
Hobstetter Ji-.
tot of Vada Koenig, recor· Deed No. 4n&amp;, Vol. 121 ,
l-800-282·ll84
BrOker
HONOLULU (AP) Mike
The skydivers, members of Jump compound leg fracture, suffered ded in Volume 152, page page 496, Deed -Records of
TOLL FREF.
238. Mei9s Countv Deed Meigs County, Ohio . Also_in
Salmons said tbe plane carrying him
NEW LISTING
Hawaii, were being flown to Aloha when be hit the tail of the plane.
MON . ~WEO.
Records; thence East 290
1 139
388 1 1·
COUNTRY LIVING
" and other skydivers was doing "all
teet
along
the
south
line
of
vo
·
·
page
•
a
so
n
9
A.M.-2
P.M.
Stadium for a jump preceding a footSaJmons, seated closest ' to the
Vol.'! 52 . page 192.
Approx. 7 acres with 4
the said one acre lot to the
Referenc~. Deed:
Vol.
, ~ kinds of crazy stuff" so he used his
ball game between the University of door, was the first one out. The other center
bedrooms, 2 bath home,
of New State Route
1
619 M 1- c
t
parachute to leap to safety moments
full
basement,
.South Carolina and the University of three who jumped didn't survive, be Np . 1; thence South 11 de9. ~ee~~ge~ords. e gs oun Y
overlooking
pond . ·HookNUCLFAR
50'
West
480
feet
to
a
post
1n
Said
real
estate
is
located
before the plane crashed in Pearl
Hawaii.
said, because by the time they got the center of s~ld State in ORANGE TOWNSHIP,
FIELD TRAIN,_ES
up
for
trailer
for add' I.
Harbor, killing II. He was the only
But the plane sputtered, looped ·out the plane was too low for them to Route; 'thence West 143.5 MPins inuntv , Ohio. and is
income, 545,000.
feet 1o the center of Old known as 42719 Vanderhoff
survivor.
MULBERRY
AVE.
H1qn ~CI'IOOI.l lq C I)r,l l'll'lplul. hi
and crashed into 3t feet of water use their parachutes properly.
·
·state Route No.7; then~e Road , Coolviii~,Ohio45723 .
Ohon(,,ll·
LOCATION
·Gracious
" I decided I didn't want to stay in
about 250 yards from the USS
Brede said that when he found north 5 deg. 24' West 470.5 Said real estate Is bounded
1-800-'282-1384
two story
home.
feet along fhe center of said on the west by Old State
there ...1 jumped and three others
TOll FR'F. E
Arizona Memorial for the Salmons, the skydiver had waded State
· featuring
three
Route
to
the
place
of
Route
No. 1. now krlown as
jumped," Salmons said, recalling . Americans killed by the Japanese about 200 yards from the wrecked beginning, c:onfaininQ 1.5 Vanderhoff Road, and on
bedrooms, 2 bath$,
~~~-~~~·· ·
living room, dining·
Saturday night's crasb: "The others · attack Dec. 7, 1941 - 40 years ago plane in a futile effort to lind other acres, more or less, ex· fhe east by . New State
cepting all legal rights of Route No . 7.
room, kitchen, full
decided to slay with the plane."
today. '
survivors.
Said sale is being made
way.
basement w/wood ·
MF..CHANICAl
E.xceptinq one ·half of the to satisfv a mortgnge lien
Eleven bodies- including those of
. Nolin Brede, one of three men who
burner. sitting on large
Club Vice President Stephen
TRAINEES
level lot. S65,000.00 ,
:the three others who jumped- have
witneSSed. the crash and helped pull Fischel identified two aboard the
17·2S. No e~tperience reTHE
EVERYTHING
been recovered, and officials said
quired. In Ohio Cnll: ·
Salmons from the water, said the plane as Jump Hawaii President
HOME DESI·GNED
1-800-282-1384
they believe they have acc&lt;&gt;unted for
plane came down in a spin and its Byron Black and Black's son, DanFOR HAPPY LIVING
TOLL FREE'
all aboard the twin-&lt;Ongine BeechLovely, 5 bedroom,
•jmotors were revved up real high" ny, who piloted the craft. None of the
MON.-WED.
2112 bath home on
craft, although Salmons said Sunday
when it hit.
9
A.M.
·2
P.M.
others was identified.
I
I
private lot on ljncoln
there was a 13th person on the plane.
· About 7 p.m., 10 minu\es before
Hill.
Pomeroy .
Miyachi, who was at the football
Six bodies were recovered Satur$75,000.00,
the crash, the pilot radioed the con- game at Aloha Stadium, said ground
RACINE , .Very
day night by Nav.y and Coast Guard
trol tower at Honolulu International crews had marked out a target on 1
,
It
st~acious two story home
crews, the Navy said, and five more
Airport that he was climbing to 3,500 the field and set up windsocks for the
with · plenty room for
bodies were found Sunday.
11
growil"'g fami.ly . Five
feet in preparation for the jump, skydivers, but abruptly cleared the
bedrooms, bath , corner
Chief Jerry Lambert, spokesman
,
I
Federal Aviation Administration area without explanation. Reporters
fireplace In family room
for the Pearl Harbor Navy Base,
spokesman George Miyachi said.
in the press box were told the jump
w/bean ceiling . Big
said rescue efforts continued until
Salmons, 34, an experienced had ~ called off because of low
yard, near school and
write your own ad and ord;;:-by- mall with this I
shopping.
Only
_d ark Sunday because of Salmons'
skydiver, was hqspitalized · for a cloudS.
E.Malo•coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1 ,
$25,000.00.
report.
results. Money not retundabl~.
POMEROY,O.
COMMERCIAL BLDG.
1
- Two story A-frame
992·2259 .
w/attached storage, ·g as
furnace,
Main Street,
Name------------~~,~-TRAILER OR HOME
$17.500.00.
Pomeroy.
LOT. IN TUPPERS
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
PLAINS- A large level
Phone 742-3092
lot with water. electric,
Cheryllen~lev, Assoc.
septic tank and a cirider
Phone 742·3171
plock porch . $6,000.00.

,t

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

:Business ·Services

.

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (API
- With private thoughts of war and
of peace, they come - AmeriC8!1
·' and Japanese alike - to remember
the day President Franklin D.
,.: · Roosevelt said would "live in in-

•

~-

1

�Pag~lO- The Daily sentinel
Homes far Salt
12x60 I ndv Mobile Home,
$6,0 00 .
Financing

or 3 bdr. house in Eureka.
oep. required. Call 2.56·

avai lable. Ph. 388·8747 .

W3.

3 bedroom farm house.
Rutland Suburbs. 949·U28.
Needs some remodeling.

3 bdr. house in Rio Grande.
will accept children. Call

446·0157 .

The James H. Lawrence
farm situated in Lebanon
Township, Meigs ' County,
will be sold at public auc·
tion on the court House
s teps.
Meigs
County.Pomeroy, Ohio at 10 :00
a.m., Saturday, December
19, 1981 to ttle highest bidper for not less thi!tn the ap·
praised value .
A forty ac re parcel w ill
be sold sepa rately to the
highest bidder for not less
than the appraised value of

dep. 446·0338.
Caii3U·8795."

2 BEDROOM apartment,

Vinton, S145 mo. Call 245·
5818.

New brick house In Cen·
tenary, 3 bdrs, 2 baths,
garage, adults, reference
and deposit required, Cal-l

The remainder of ' the ·
farm consists of a 20 acre
parcel
appraised
at '
$4,339.62; a 20 acre parcel
appraised at $4,339.62; a
one acre parcel B!;)praised
at $217.00; and a 25 acre
parcel
appraised
at
$7 ,424.54. The two twenty
acre parcels, one acre pereel and twenty-five acre
parcels shall each be offered for sale as separate
parce ls, the highest bid for
each parcel shall be recor·
ded ; then the four parcels
consisting of a total of 66
acres shall be offered as a
whole to the highest bldd~r
for not less than the ap·
pra ised value of $16.320.76.
The total of the highest
offe r for each of the four
pajcels separa tely and the
hig hest offer for the four
parce ls as a whole shall be
used ·to determine which is
greater, and th e greater of·
fe r shall be accepted .
Cash on day of sa le. For
furth er inf ormation call
614 992 -2720 or 614-992·2186.

l-643·2644.
3 Bedroom house on
R lver Road. Deposit
reference required, no
pets. Telephone 446-3537 ,
2 bedroom all electric ran ch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available

Nov. 15. Caii61H49·2849.
2 bedroom house, furnished. Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersv ille. 992·3324.
3 bedroom house and bath
in Rutland. 614·992-5856.

1

576-2711.
32 -:- -M

'

tor Sale

T R I STA TE MOBILE
HOM ES. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobi le homes. CALL

&lt;46·/572.
CL~AN USED MOBILE
HO·ME S
KESSEL 'S
QU'ALITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LES, 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868 .
B At;'!G~l N !

or614·992· 2430.

Lost : 1982 Eastern class
ring. Left in Murphys
ladies restroom at
Gallipolis. The ring was
,wrapped in blue angora.
Reward no questions ask,

Call 614-985·4313 .

new dnlled well , acre tot.

3431 or 675-3030.

Calt446· 4394 .
~---

3 bedroom unfurnished
house in Henderson. 304·

675-9760.

1974 RMT 12x60 2 bedroom
furni shed . Washer and
dryer , A ir condi tioning,
andu nderpinned. Also 1972
Skyl i ne 12X44 1 bedroom
f urfished. Ideal for couple.
Park lot can be rented . Kall
614· 992-7479.

42

furn . 388·8508.

1st. floor unfurnished apartment, deposit &amp; referen·
ces required. Call at 631
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,

OH .
3 rooms with private bath,
845 Second Ave. Phone 4-46-

7, 1125. Adults only, Call
256·1157.

1976 KIRKWOOD custom
built trailer, 3 bedroom, 2
full baths, with washer, ·
dryer, air conditioner, por-!
ch &amp; outbuilding, gas for · I
ced air f urnace, $6,700. 304- t

I

34
BuSinj~ _!'!_ildings
.
PROFESSIONAL offi ce
building w ith full 2400 sq .
ft. basement, situated on 3
lots, in h ighly desirable Pt .
Pleasant WV location, with
ISO ft. roct d frontage on
~a c~s on Ave_. Office space
1S currently leased to
medical doctors &amp; other
professionals. Owner f inan·
cing
av a i la ble with
negiotable terms. This
bu ilding &amp; real estate will
make an outstanding ta x
shelter &amp; long term investment; upper bracket ..
For ~dditional information,
phone JOJ-675-5440 days,
675·6595 evenings .

-

lJ. --- ~&amp; Acreage

3-bedroom doubre·wide
Green Local School. 2mobile home K &amp; K,
Gallipo:lls. Call 675·3000 or

446·0682.
3 bdr. mobile home completely furnished. Call 446·

9669 .
Small' trailer Spruce St.
Water &amp; gas Included . $200

per mo. Caii4A6·2991.
Furnished mobile home
near Centenary, washer
and dryer, air. Big yard,
adults only . No pets. 446·

3918 .
12x60 ·Mobile Home, on Rf.

218 .

$175

month,

$75

2nd. floor furnished ef·
flency apt. 729 2nd. Ave.,

Gallipolis. Call

446·0957.

Adults only, no pets.

2 Bedroom upstairs fur·
nished apartment, 2 bdr
cottage. call446-2374or 446-

One apartment furnished,
partial utll pd, also 4
mobile homes wilh all
utilities paid, one child ac·

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

No pets. 614-949-2875.
Apartments for rent. 614-

p.m.

Apartments. 675·5548.

TWO bedroom mobile
homes, Mason &amp; New
Haven. Adults only, no

pets. Phone 304·675-1452 af·
ter3 p.m.
TWO bedroom mobile
home, furnished or unfurnished , call 30.t·675·1341
or 675-3812 .
nished, adults only, no pets,
you pay utilities, phone 30~ -

44

3/4

m lie out

Apartmemt
lor Rent

FURNISHED apartment,
phone 304-895·3-150.
CLEAN, 3 room furjllshed
cottage, utilities furnished,

adults, no pels, deposit,
30-1-675· 2812 or 675· 1580.

House on F rlendiY R ldge
Rd. Ref . required. Call2566260.

New
1

'fdJ

r.v..r
w.ve. ~ ~7
~ 10 tMt:e1"~i'&gt; ~

lr

SLEEPING ROOMS oncl
light ho&lt;lsekeeplng opt.,
Park Central Hotel.

"

Weekly RatesAvallobl.e $60
Coll-146·2501 .

601b. nun'lber one pet.._,
S6.60. 5Jb. tomatoes $2.00.
Apples, poc•ns. oranges,
tongoloes. gropelrull. We

Room and bOard for senior
citizens In the country. 61 A·

•c:cept
food
stamps.
Rayb·urns
Market,
Kanaua~, Ohio., A-46·8247.

and up In Circles Motel.

742· 2266.
46

mobile

homes. · houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and GaiHpolis.

6.14·446·8221 or 614·245·9484.
2 bedroom twin .single In
Pt. Pleasa-nt' at 205 Poplar
Street. $200 month plus

deposit. 1·614·263·8322
614· 263·2669.

or

Mason, wv. 773·5651.

·

Twin single, large rooms
and yard. Pt. Pleasant.
Deposit and references. 1·

614-263·8322
2669.

or

1-614·263-

IN Middleport, 2 room efficiency apartment, 1·304·

882-2566.
IN MiddlePOrt, 2 bedroom,
apartment,

1

In Middleport 2 room elapartment.

1-30o4·

In Middleport 2 bedroom
unfurnished apartment. 1

For rent 3 room furn. apt.,
adults only, no pets. Call

675-2453.

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

III.OWToP....

new, 311:1·882·3145.

CAPTAIN EASY

•

l..ll.anda.
ClJ
A GMAT DAY TO
f!IMEIIIII!R
.
!NTI!RTAINIIII!NT

74

fi

1980 Chevy Scottsdale, 3/4
ton, 4 WD, 4 spd .. PS, 28,000
mi., good cond. Call 773· ·
5150.

991-7479.
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

... ....... ''"........ ..

Lump Coal 132 per ton.
Zlnr\ Cool Co., Inc. Call~·
1&lt;011 between 9 and 5.

'

···~-

51

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker,

ot-

up to $350. ,Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,

$99. Ma"resses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets. $195. 5 dr. chests, $19.

15'Ho discount on wooer &amp;
coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block Co.,
123112 Pine St.. 446·2783.
Firewood. 1 load $35, 4
loadS $100, 10 IOIIdS $200.
Call 256-1471 or 614-886·
6624.
Candy

Making Supplies.

or electric ranges, $295. Or-

thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames S20, $25, &amp; SJO.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavltle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri .• 9am to5pm, Sat.

chocolate morsels 52.00 lb.
Nestle caramel, candy
boxes, molds, sticks, bags,

etc. Little Bits, St. Rt. 233,
Oak Hill, Ohio. Phone 614·
682·7562 for
formation.

more

In·

t

2 maturnlly dresses. Sears
and Penney's brands. Ex·
cellent condition. ' Several
tops and panfl too, size 9-

9, $20.00. Coii30H.51· 1997.
FirewoOd·seasoned

har-

dWood, 535 pickup load
delivered. Call446·4176.

Electric Tapan range used

256·1427.

tires.

Hanshaw1 s,

SEARS Captain beds, 1
year old, 5500.00. Clock.
wall
sconzes.
$15.00.
Womens clothes, size9, 304·

773·9130.
14 112 ft. car trailer with

winch 11,500, air comp.
$800, car lift S«&lt;I. Call 304576·2602.

-446·1909 or -446·9160.
CoucH for sale, excellent
condition, Ph .446·3945 alter

Maestro electric piano, ex-

cellent condllion,coll 24592.58.
MAYTAG wringer washer

$85.00. Sears drver $75.00.
30Hl5·5811.
REFRIGERATOR $30. call
675-5915.
CB, TV, Radio
Equipment

VENDING

machines,

.1

sandwich, 1 popcorn, 1 bot·

tie pop. 304-882·3356 or 304·
773-5611.

moonraker.

p.m.

•

SUIT, size 38. Trim, all
38 . 304·458·18Siolter 5.
Baldwin Orgoson'rc $850.
Singer 'Touch 'n SeW with
cabinet $195. Boys: suit
size 10 $10, shoes Size 4w
and sm. $5 each, coat size 8
$10. Girls: shoes IC $5. Tap
siZe 13 53. 675·2191 otter 6

304-675-6937.

55

abcrle tracJbrs If purchued
before Dec. 15. Outdoor
Equipment Sales, Jet. Rts.
7 &amp; 35, Galllpells. Ph. 446·

3670. Closed Tuesdoy and

Building Supplies

Building materials. block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Coll245·5121.
U

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Tavror at 3677220.

Chow
Bumper Pool table solid Hrmaloyon,
slate top, cues &amp; pool balls Siamese klnens.
Included . Call 446-4347 · 38&lt;Uotter4p.m.
weekdays after 5.

CarPet Cleaning

WOODBURN lNG STOVES
Free·slancllng &amp; fireplace
Inserts. Top quality at a
low price. Jividen's Farm

Equipment, 446·1•75.
snow plow for pickup. Ex.
cond. with power .angle.

Caii3BI-984.
Beautiful wedding gown,
o11 white. srze16. see ot474
Kathy Dr .. Pleasant Valley
Estates.

Registered Quarter Horse

lilly,
Registered
Ap·
paloosa, ~ yrs. old and good
blood line. Call 256-1&gt;413, 12

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·

Holstein Heifers, 4 fresh-9
others close up. Health
papers furnished. IBR and

leptoed. Call614-949-2574.
Livestock
Registered
Hereford bulls a, heifers.
Cerlttled &amp; accredited
Hereford. Phone 304·882·
2255.
:.'"':,:-~: :.;:-~::

:.

71

Auto for Sale

76 Ford Cobra Mustang PS,

equipment. Call256·1&gt;413, 12
p.m.to9 p.m.

'

LaFont

wooer

splitter, 25

2 Wooden Mantels, 1t least

25 yrs. old. Call Dr. R.D.
Thomas 446·0152, alter 3
call446· 1291.
Lamps,
owls, clocks,
sllverstone, figurines, 1nd

other gilt Items far Christ·
mos. Faye's Gill ShoD,
Brooclwoy St., Middleport
614-992·2598.

.m

POlaroid SX70. L.lke now.
wlll1 loo!Mr COM. 61.....,:J.Giolter • p.m.

Live female roccoona tor
breeding or restocking. 9-1'1·

77 Ford Mustang 28,430
miles, • AM·FM otero·
~·

14 Chevy wagon, good
cond., ~ new Tempo tii-es,
1970 Chevy Caprice, 2 door
hardtop, good condition for

$300 .• 256-6836.
.1970

Plymouth

GTX-4111

auto.,

orr

com -

1961 Ford Galaxie, runs
good, $250. 1969 Ford L. TD

$275. 675·2851 .
1980

Plymouth

Horizon,

speed,
3419.

new tires, 14500. 882·

3734 evenings.

Willie Pint.

ALLEYOOP

8:05 W
MOVIE
-(REUGIOU.DRAMA) '''II
Rollo" li63
8:58
CJIILUPDATE NEWS
11:00
MONDAY NIGHT AT
THI! MOVIES 'Child Bride 01

ffil•rn

Call446·3675.
pickup long
transmission,

••· ••uu. Call446·8380 alter

Service.

Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl

882-2079.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola; QuaZar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
.or .u6-2454.

GASOLINE ALLEY

l need -fiftq bucks
to qet it out
of hock!

.'.
''

"

'

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·

left mq
wallet
in it,
too!

11!.81!.n!IJ1on .)
8:30 U W IIIII HOUSE CALLS Dr.

Water wells. Commercial
and DomestiC. Test holes.
Pumps Sal'es and Service.

Weatherby 11 havtng hla houae
painted. 11 allergic to paint
tumea, and trlcka Ann Into
lnvlling him to stay at her
!!!!..Brtment.
l1J
PROGRAM

304·895-3802.
EXP'ERIENCED

cor ·

penter ava I Iable for home
or business remOdell ng or
new structures.
Free
estimates. references. 304·

U!IANNOUNCED

WE WENT TO la!SSIA,
~0 PJ!IGO,~Y'

675-24«1.

~lf/l.'lfE

ro6ETHE.GI:
•.• R!'MI!'M!JER :'

,;;;====;:P:;::ru=m=b;::,l=n g===
12
&amp; HN!Ing
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone -446·3888 or 446·.W77
13

WERe

PfFI'B&lt;· .
EN7'
THEN ...

YOU t'!PN'T HAVE
TUTU OR TIMMY,

ANP I 171t'N 1T
HAVE !JILL!
!JUi I WOU!.DH'T

SION 'No Time for Sergeants'
Andy Griffith. In hi a first TV role,
ataraaaaGaorglaplowboywho
ia drafted into the Air Forcaancl
tries to b~rlend his aargeant.

10:00

FOil! TI-ll!. WORLI7,,. "-~""•
WOULt7 yOU?

TIIERE,

()) AUTISM: REACHING THE
CHILDWITHINinthiadocumantary by a mother of an autistic
chUd, the dlaabllity Ia explored
I all Ita ramlflcallona.

TI-IEI&lt;'E, !IIRI71f
... tfESTfll

A.'*/

10:28
10:30

Eloctrtcar
&amp; Rofr!toralloil
SEWING Mllchlne repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric , Shop. ·
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
,

I SHORE WISH I HAD
ME A LITTLE DAB OF ..
CARD·PLAVIN' MONEY

10:58
11:00

LET ME
SEE IF I GOT .
ANV LOOSE
CHANGE,

HONEY POT

11:21
1 I :30

Limestone
379-2642.

hauling.

l

0

hlker'arktt~adeatralghttotha

hoaltll when the car

•

''
'

or•••·

(Ropootl 'ThoChiohOimo' 1878

PEANUTS

:-"'u.,,.,.=•=rvL-_ .

MOWREYS UDIIOiatory Rt
I lox 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304:
675-415-4.

I

NISEG

(I)

ILOYMEDj
r) r

1

t
I I XJ

tTHACLE

)

Prlnranswerh8re:

WELL, NOT ACTUALLY ·
THE BOOK VET...

115 BEEN UPI-IILL

ALL'THE wAY!

Stara; Robert Preatan,
R011amary Harrla. Btn r.tufphy,
A proud and poor VIrgin.. farm
family 1011 their IMd In al-ee!
dlapul• end dtcidt to head
weal tor lhtllmll~aa tend• of

f

rico'altonllor. (Roptat)
AIC CAPTIONIO NIWS
·
MOYIE
·(COMIOY·AOVINTURI)
··~·De••noera" 1...
1 ~~og · ~lalle 111W1
. 12:00
IUIIIII- ALLIN ·
MOYII
o(ADVINTUIII.OIIAMAI 00 \I
~~~rtttem Purault~'

t.U

orronge lho

-

clroled - . 10

fonn the IUipriN arwwer, u aug·
goaled by lho abo¥t conoon.

rn KI xI I I )
(ANworo lOmOrrOWI

•

. SaiUrday·s/ Juml&gt;l..: GUISE

BOOTH

AGHAST CANKER .

Answer: What the talkalive butcher's "sPecial"
obviously was-TONGUE
J umbfe Book No. 17; cont•lnlng 1to puufat, 1e l'lllil(lb~ tar 1t .tl po~tpald
lromJumbte,Gloth11 new.p•PM. Boa 14, Norwood, N.J.071141.1ndMdey...
n•m•, 1ddrel1, tl Code 1nd m•k• c:hKks
tt»e to N•
•·

BRIDGE
Minor suit bidding
By O.wllltl J....,y

aU AJu Soatag
NORTH
+ll

Oswald: "American bidders bave great trouble blddlnl mlnor·sult 1ameo.
Somebow or o!Mr, they keep
looldllg lor major aults and
notrump. Perhaps this is due
to too much match point
play where lour notrump
counlll 430 or UO."
Alu: "Here is a band
from a very Important IMP
mateb. The blcldiD&amp; at the
winners' table Is shown In
the box. The key action
came wllen · Soutli passed
over ~t's one-spade over·
call. This led to a spade
raise by West and a tlireeclub call by North ."
Oswald: "South'olour..:lub
call is Jorelp to IIKXIt of our
younaer experts. He bad
available three hearts and a
spa,de cue bid all of which
would have served to thorourdlly conluse Nortb ud
pu{ him under a lot of pressure. The lour..:lub bllf was
perfect. Nortb could ~ or
bid again. Nortb made the
rllht decisbm and bid the

11·7-11

9K63
t 10l1U2
+AKH
WEST
EAST
+ KQ 10 II
+JH!
9JI
•Qtn4
t Al7
.Q6t
+IOU
+72
SOUTH

.... u

9AU7
tKJ

+QllU
Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South
Weal N- Eul
Pua
2+
Pus
Pass

It

t+
Pass
Pus

r.+
r.+

OpeniDg lead: +3

all, siDce deelarer was able
to set up dummy's diamonds
for three discards "
Oswald: "The other table
got to three notrump and
were down one after a spade

same."
Alan: "The play was silopie also. Soiath woa the
spade lead and prompUy
played his tlng of diamonds.
The defense got two diamond tricks and that was

•

lead .~ '

dl
Cl'llt1'rM11. If
by THOMAS JOSII'H
ACROI!IS
1 Dessert wine

Z Palm
leaf

5 Picture puzzle 3 Ascend
10 Potpourri

4 Pilch

11 Authority
1Z Church
service

5 More
Infrequent
I Night

13 lli.fi's bass
and -

before
7 Gangster
Nelson's
nickname
8 Set
free
9 UnrelenUng
U Meander
15 Esau's

Yeslerdoy'a Aanrer

14 Junkyard,
lor one
11 Pro vole
11 Disfeature
18 Craze
19 Tarry
21 A snap
2% Heavenly
sight
23 German
composer
24 Bellow ·

time
,_;;;;,:.:._.,.......,,_

25 French
painter
28 The works
Z7 The "It Girl"

1:-:-+-1--l-

grandson
19 Playing

for

28 Black
substance
Z1 Attention
ZZ Sun

rooms
Z30ne Is

•

Z7 WWII's
Battle of
the 30 Toward

:U Unnerve

the sunrise
3 oI •....,ardlng
32 Uprising

Z5 Gift

33 Neck

"super"

recipient

part
35 Intimate

28 Ex..:he&amp;s

champion
29 Forget

34 Extra-base
31 Gunther's
"Inside-"
37 Printed
quantity
31 Cessation
39American
symbol
to Lug about

l

DOWN
I Pippin
or pear

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'o

ANOTHERUFE
AI,I.INTHI!FAMILY
(IJ CBS LATE MOVIE

Qulncy.M.E.: 'A Good Smaokln
The Mouth' A yOUft9 httch-

J'

.,11_ _

..,.7G3ar..,.1133.

~

oo ~·rblo Bloke. (Repoot: eo

Call

' TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc, Ave., Gallipolis.

CBN UPDATE NEWS
SING OUT AMERICA
TBS EVENING NEWS
NEWS
l:Jifi_UI'PATE NEWS '
.(I).())IJD) NEWS
NAIHVILLE RFD
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)
•• ~ "Bear tlland 11 1080
Cll DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
liD ALFRI!D HITCHCOCK
EII!NTB
.
.!:.11!UPDAT!N!W8
,
IICIJTHETONIOHTBHOW
'The Sesi Of Caraon' Gu11t1:
Karl Malden, Mel TUlia, Terl

General Hauriiii-

NOW-HAULING house C&lt;NII
&amp; limestone lor driveways
Call lor estimates 367-7101 . ·

I'
ell~ LOU GRANT A blner
feud, femlly secreta and a
gam·•tudded golden oro sa
emerge when a time capsule
from a clemoliehed building Ia
opened, and Billie suapacta all
Ia not'11lt ttema. (60mlna.)

Exc•vatlnt_

JDNES IIOYS WATER
SERVICE. Coli 367·701 or
367-0591.

::,~':..:=.~= t1 .::."ta./1l:~~-·

IHl GOLDEN AGE OF TELEV~

N·NO••• iS08!
.'S0/!1!... 1 .
GtJE'SS NOT.

CHANGE THAT

Gallipolis Dlvoralfied Con·
st. Co. Cuatom dozer &amp;

15

1974 Ford WI- von; Red

JLS.A.)

&amp; CIJ@) M.A.S.H. A lhlello

remodeling. Phone 304-6752018 or 675·&lt;1560.

Phone 882·2079.

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

provide'coverage of the game
between the Pittsburgh
Stealan at the Oakland
Raidara. (Closed-Captioned;
victimizing tl'ta 4077th
compound, ataaling avarythinQ
from penicillin to staaka to
Hawkeye andB.J. 's"ew Instant
camera. (J:'an one of a two-part

JACKS REFRIGERATIO-

runs

"1841" 18111
()) IIJIII MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL ABC Sporlo will

perlenced mason, roofer,
ca~penter,
electrician,
general repairs and

N. air condition ser'vlce,
commercial, Industrial.

Fish Tank and Pet ShoP
2413 Jackson Avo., · Pl.
PlooNnt. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thun.,/ Fri. II to 6. Tun.,
Wed., I Sat. 11 to •. Chick
our Fish Special.

Short Creek' 1981 Stars:
Conrad Bel n, Chri atopher
Atkins, Diana Lane . A Korean
· War veteran returna home and
propoaea marriage to a 15
year-oldglrlontytolaamthathla
father, a -nan who practices
polygamy, plana to marry the
. I himself. (2 hra.)
; 700CLUB
MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "\1

now and save. 614-992·6309.

36,000 mi., dual tanka,
$4,600, great for winter.

Two AKC DGMrman -

Hll1fatcl WV 304-tn-:11116.
SC- Plnt, Spruce &amp;

.....•

CARPET

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675-1331.

GREAT PERFOA-

MANCEI'Mra. Reinhardt' Ia a
dramatization oftwo short
atoriea by Edna O'Brien ,
adapted by the author, which
teltatheatory of an English lady
fleeing to eacape 1 troubled
marriage only to find an
unexpected and aurprlalng
!2._mance. (90 mlns.)

Cleaning. Special rates for

1979 GMC 3/4 . I, 4-WD,

Prlctd far quick Nit. 992·

CHRISTMAS TRiES, your
chOice, eny llllt 1.00.
1111111111 Alllltnd Stltlon.

C!IU~DE

roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

LOCKSMITH

Cll llDl SIU.Y GRAHAM

Cll IHl

French City Painting
Residential, commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and · texured
ceilings. Ph. 367-7784 or 367-

backhoe work. Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 4A6·4UO . .

2578.

cllcl-.t.•aa.

8

20 yrs. exp. Caii38B·9652.

Nov. and Dec. only, Call

Remington 1100 .12 guage
seml·tutomlltlc lhol!lvn.

3061.

ahlp at solving the truatratlng
· Rubik'a Cube puzzle; a
couragaoua.ltgleea high
achool athlete competes in
football and bneball, and
dazzling dlaplayt, of leoerder·
malnabya13-yeeroldmaglclan
will b§.ta.llu~- (60 mine.)

PAINTING · interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.

GENES

AKC Cocker Spenltl P!JPI. I ga1Dd,S300.
make • ntce Chrlstm..
~.304·•75-57H.
ii
Y1!1114W.D.

,.ew, never blln ihot.

compatafortheU.S.ch~mplon­

Call446·2107.

PB, 302, nw paint lob, tires,

front wheel drive, TC3, ,.

HOOF HOL.L.OW Hones &amp;
ponies.
Everything
Imaginable In horse equipmont. Also belts, boots. 698·
3290. Rulli Reeves.

BLE At stunning apMdl, aome
under one minute, regional
winners horn ag.. nina to 19

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

rims, 12,700. Call 446·7122
or 446·3100.

1980 MIG I II Replica car of
1953 MGTD. E•aollent con·
dillon, priced to sell, $6.000.
304-8-47-7678 or 304·847-5697.

AKC Register She11and
Sheepdogs
!Shellles).
Small dog, goocl with
children. 4&lt;16·2152 alter
~PM.
.

()) IIJI. THAT'S INCRED~

.

Call 446-2801 for termite,

Couch for Sale exc. cond.

AMC Spirit, 2 door, hatch
bock, . 19 model, 304·882·
2890.

3 Bedroom 8 fl. showcoses
with lights, 1 Iorge
bedroom suite, double
dresser ond cheat, 2 on·
tique clocks, 1 mut sucor

1182.

hosta thla lptCIII that foCUitl
on all aspacta of advertising In
the 200 yaara of Amilrtcan
commarclallam.

ANNIE

7160.

. ...

Reg. O-rman
pups, red I. rust, ready
Dec. 14, will hold lor Christ·
maa, 175. Call 318·9848.

446-4208
textured ceilings, com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 256-

HILLCREST KENNEL - pletely restored,
stock,
Boarding all brHds, clnn . rare, price negotiable. 742Indoor-outdoor facilities. 21-0.
Also AKC Reg, . Dober·
mons. Ca11446·7795.
1911 Ford LTO station
wagon. 61~·992·3489 after 6
BRIARPATCH KENNELS p.m.
.
Boarding and grQOmlng.
AKC Gordon setters.
English Cocker SPinlels. 73 CAPRI, runs goocr, new
paint, low mileage, $800 ..
Coll311·9790.
30H.51·1074.

2 AKC

tpECIAL '
(!) REMEMBER WHEN: THE
IMAGE MAKERS Dick Cavett

STUCCO PLASTERING
Livestock

.

Cil NATIOIIAL GEOGRAPHIC

304·882·2695.

magnum,

New woodbur.,rng furnance
Davis 700 tren·

Restaurant equipment
reconditioned by RADCO.
CAll 304·523·1378. Hgtn ..
WVA,

wide front end, hydraulic,
new tires, new batttery,

PS, PB, auto. Call446·8267.
CAT·
AKC
CFA
ond
446·

•

STANLEY STEEMER

eMCellent cond. Call
35911.

Pets for S1le

••

Home
Improvements

81

TRACTOR, John Deere M,

cassette radio, new tires,

. K

Misc. Merchandice

«so,

condition. Phone 304·458·
185-Ufler 5. ·

Phone 446-3945 otter 5PM.

4

cher &amp; hoe $5.500. «1 11.
Fruehauf -troller 13,500,
26 11. goose-neck flat bed
trailer $2,500. Phone 614·
256-1216.

excellent

leather black overcoat size

beams, phone 30-1-675·156-4.
54

Form Equipment
equipment,

M

AN!tTHIA UFE
eCIJ FAMILY FEUD
LAVERN! AND SHIRLEY
· AND COMPANY
(J)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS

THE PRAIRIE A fnHalking
aaleaman convinces Mrs .
Oleaonthataha ahould turn her
restaurant Into a fa at food place
by ruahlng her patrone;' her
husband and Charlea try to
bring her to her aenaaa by
rUining harbualne81. (BO min a.)
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)

GRAVEL. Y tractor, wilh
all

!NDI GuHt: Tim Conway.

r)
I I
.:-:.;..=-=.!.-·' - - . . .

7:31 ENFOAo AND SON .
7:58
l:!l!l\IPDAT! NEWS
B:OO
• CIJ UTTLE HOUSE ON

stalled from $200·$230. Auto
Trim Center. 446·1968.

p.m. to9 p.m.

SEASONED oak firewood .
Call 304·675·2757. oller •

COBRA XL.R &lt;0 channel
sse bose CB. Pearce Simpson Super L.Yn•. 23 base
CB, 100 Will IPOIIO bose
linear.

61

63

PLAY pen, like new, $25.

Thursday untlll M1rch 1
1982.
,

3 PIECE bedroom suit,
electric freplace with man·
tel, dresser, metal bed, call

.. :--:·:: :::.;...
--.. . ...
.....' ''
:~

pm.

with"' .,....••
and
$2,361, sale 11.900. FREE
snow blade )lf'lth 1ny of 'the

BORN LOSER

Auto Repair

work. Insurance work
welcome. Sunroofs In-

~

Used

AP ·

PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges. ~ Skaggs
Appliances, 1918 · Eastern

;:

eMUPP£T8HOW
CAROL IURNETT AND

IJD)
RICHARD SIMMONS
8!'10W
IHl TRAINING DOGS THE
VIIOOI!HOUSE WAY
IIJI •
ENT!RTAINMENT

Ouarrtv Autobody &amp; Paint

LUMP COli $45. ton
delivered. Firewood 530.
ton delivered. 304·675-7199.

Ieee. Worn only twice, size

-446·0022
USED

77

Nestle chocolates starting

at $1.35 lb. Nestle reol

batteries. 446;7717.

2318.

I'=~·
l!ePORT

Dale's Kitchen Center. 675·

Lucas Lane R&lt;Nid. 675-7360.

10. $20.00 lor all moturnlty
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed Items. Also a long velvet
frames, S20.ond S25., 10 gun royal .blue evening gown
-Gun cabinets, SJSO., dinet- · with an empire waist line
te chairs S20. and $25. Gas trimmed with while oullel

GOOD

Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker servlce 1 buy
automobiles, radiators and

Discontinued coblnets. top,
stove, hood, .link. 11200.

:::v

DAYI AQAIN
TICTACDOUGH
MACNEiL-LEHRER

Motorcycles

7:30

They'll Do It Every Tim.e

FQ..Pell,,AA.

•

Selleck, end Snan A.n ton
celebrate Chrlstm.. from the
eunbathed b81ch.. and luth
green velley1 of the Hawaiian

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

r--:....-;;=::;:;;::.J..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. trailer
mounted, split , _
In trve pieces. Ph 245·5478.
1!UT ltlCA '11:101&lt;
'1115 R:lOST5Il

VAN-1972 Volkswagen bus,

•

•
1,

7:05

HP engine, battery st1rt,

60SSORA/111'$JIIT
IJINA 01'.... A
MISSlliG F.CE" ••

;l

\

!V!HINO
7:00 (J) • .1M NUORS' CHRIIT·
MAIINHAWAIIJimNoboroond
hll guettl, Carol B•mett. Tom

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

1nd misc. orocery store
ONE
bedroom. unfurnished. located
'"

,

78 JEEP CJ5, good con·
dillon, $3900. phone JO.I·773·
5260.
rebUilt engine, new paint,
new mUffl&amp;r, Interior like

IIONOAY

oec. 1,1u1

IIl

Will trlde tor 1 truck or
stot-agon o · 12 gouge
1100 seriH Remington
VIIU,.. It 13«1. Call 6757260.

second Floor Office Space,
carpeted, heat and light
furnished . Call 446· 1737 or
write P .0. Bo• 409,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.
·

52

furnished

79 DODGE power wagon, 4wtlttl·drlve, 29.000 milts. 8
cyl. call alter 3 p, m. 304·
675·3891.

Por Salt or Trodt

Space for Rent

5P.M.

Efficiency rooms by the
week. on MaIn Street,

Television
•
•
VIewmg

1971 SUberu Station wagon.
4 . _ , drive, ~no
amoktt. body rough. 30-35
mpg. reouror oa•. Mlony
new portL 6U-992·7U7 Uk
far Fred. Will ucrlllct tor
$1«10.
DNI! HOlton Artiste trum·
pet. Excellent tor Jr. High
ployen. 304-675-&lt;1153.

near Centenary. 1-216· 734·

with option to buy. 3 bdr.,

' ..,~

'\

2 Sears wood &amp; coal stoves,

small child. 1-304·882-2566.

Call alter 5:00, 30H75·3015.

Gallipolis. Call446-~74.

_Aot.'l Ctttl, CAIW/l.e.I

882·2566.
S180 plus utilities. References and deposit required.
No children. 992·5834 after 5

TWO bedroom trailer, furnished. except for 1
bedroom . $200.00 month.

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

Ir-------------..::..:=:!,;:::::;

Furnlshld Rooms

45

6 mos .. gold. Caii3B8·8200.

fiency

Sandhill Road. 675-3834.

no pets. 57 Olive st, Phone
446-711&amp;1.

136.5.

Ave., 4-46-7398.

-146·1990.

2 bedrooms,

Unfurnished house for rent,
1 bdr ., SUS mo., dep.
required, no utilities paid,

SMALL. furniShed apart·
men!. Pt. PleiSint, »'-675-

chair and loveseat. $275.
Application being taken for
1 &amp; 2 bdr. apartment at Sofas ana chairs priced
fram 5285. to $795. Tables,
Valley View in Rio Grande.
$38
and up to $109. Hld.-a·
1 bedroom apt available ·
beds,S3«1
.. queen size, $380.
now. Equal opportunity.
R:ecllners, 1175. to $295.,
Call245-9170.
Lamps from $18. to 565. 5
pc . dlfettes from $79., to
Apartment, 1 bedroom, $385. 7 .pc., $189. and up.
5150 plus utlities, no Wood table with 4 chairs,
children, no pets, 456 2nd. $219 up to $495. Desk 5110.
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446- Hutches, $300. and S375.,
2129.
maple or pine "finish.
Bedroom suites - Bassett
2 room furnished apt., Oak, $615 ., Bassett Cherry,
adults, private entrance. $795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
Call 446·0168.

deposit. Stove and
refrigerator furnished.
Water paid. Call 256·6283 or

675-2535.

Houses for Rent

room
Street.

toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,

small child, 1·304-882-1566.

ONE bedroom trailer. fur·

1

3

7th

no blowers, $200 each. Call

2 bedroom trailer down Rt.

675·1 553 .

tumllhod

Adults. 67HI11.

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

APARTMENTS,

1971
Brookwood ,
3
bedroom, bath and half ,
ga5 heat , unfurnished. Call

Nice

apartment,

Vona&amp;4W.D.

71

. 2215.

4110.

1977 · Victorian 14 x 70, 2
bedroom, family room, all
electric. Call675-3987 .

Home for sale, rent, or rent

~· 3937.

992·5908.

12x60 Completely fu.-n., air
cond., adults only . Call 446-

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

41

Call

ceptable, dep req . 446·1384.

Trailer for rent ~n Rio
Grande, $150 de~:~, rent $1.50
per mo. plus utilities, part

..... ...,..- ---.-----

2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
low downpayment, land
con t ra ct , rural water.
CoiU(nbus and , Southern
Elec tric . Call 256·641J, 12
p.m. to9p.m .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call-446·0175.

1971 Dari an 12 x 65 , 3
bedroom s. 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bed room s. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nasha u, 1A
X 60, 2 bedrooms. 8 lf4 S
Sa les, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . Pleasa nt, wv.
PhOne 675- 4424.

=-

2 bdr .• apt., large living
room &amp; kitchen, no petS.

0284.

10 x 50 Mobi le Hom e, needs
work,$ 1,200, 368·935.4 .

882-3157 or 304-773·5572.

Small furnished house,
adults only. Call-446-0338.

Call446·2236 or 446· 2481 .

HOUSE for rent, 304-675 ,

sa.ooo.

qualified. 304-675-5104 or
304-675-736-4.

Executive
Home-New
brick &amp; wooc! 4 bedroom, 2
bath, bi-level home with at" 2 bdr. apt. completely furn.
electric
newly
tached garage, finished all
family room . Gas heat, decorated, 2nd Ave., dep. &amp;
electri·c air. Immediate ref. required. S225 per mo ..
possession . Lease either Call446·2236 or ~ · 2481 .
short term or long term or
with possible option to buy. l bclr. apt. completely furn.
Rent negotiable depending all
electric
newly
upon particulars. RCS Real decorated, 2nd Ave. , dep. &amp;
Estate Co. 992·3612 or 593- ref. required. $200 per mo.

5571.

l&lt;!Xi O 3 bdr.,

Davis Rd. off 21 8,

3 bedroom, 5 room house
plus bath and uti lity room.
Nice and clean. 614·446-1519

2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave., Pomeroy. Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6.
S195. month not including
utilities. 992 ·2288.

oQie Homes

2 bdr. apartment unfurn.,

4rms .. 1 bath, unfurnished, , kitchen furnished, HUD
fireplace. clean, Main St. in program, utilities paid, If

$8,679.22.

Or , re nt·J bedroom fur·
nished home on Bud Chattin 'Road on big level tot.

Furnished apts. $210 ..
ulllllltl pd., 1 bdr .. near
HMC, edults. Call 446·.W16
alter 7PM.

Mobile home In cltv central
air and heat, adulfl only,

"e&lt;luh·ed.

by ....,., WJW!t

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

rn crown City, Ohio. Call
256·6520.

ceo·

'

The Daily sentinei-Page-11

Aportmemt
hlrRonl

31

.

Mond•V· December7,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

how
AXYDLBAA:XK
LONGPILLOW

It

to

\YOrk

It:

One letler aimply stands for another. In thla 11mple. A It
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single leuers
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are

ali

..

hinta. Each day the code letters are dllrerent.

CltYPT&lt;MIUOTES

BWMLMYZ

NA

NE

NVABRU

0

AMDIWB MU PIBOV IBTBEDB . - ABEBWO
Yeslmllly'a

FE RENT

CrJitt*luallo: THE FI.JTIJRE WILL BE OIF.
IF' -WE MAKE THE PRESENT

DIFFERENT.-PETERMARVIN
I

I

.•

''.
•

�Pap-12-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Co~nty

happenings
Locker 218 and Radio WMPO In Mid-

Tuesday at the temple. Offtcera are
to be at the temple no later than 7
p.m. to have pictures taken.
Refreshments
~rill be served
·
Local emergency units were kept
following
the
meeting.
on the lllOW! over the weekend answering calls, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service repor- Jaycees begin effort
Is.
On Sat111'111y, the Middleport Unit
The Meigs Cowtly Jaycees have
at 10:32 p.m. took Mary Warren opened their annualfood basket and
from E. Main St. to Veterans toys for tots program to help the unMemorial Hoeplllll and the Mid- der-privileged in Meigs County.
dleporl Unit at II :13 p.m. took Carla
Chairmen for the toys for tots are
SmithfromS. SecondAve.,toHolzer Bruce Reed and Jay HiD. Anyone
Medical Center.
wishing to doriate any toys can leave
Swxlay calls included Pomeroy, 10 them at the Fanners Bank and
a.m. Herbert Farms, NelsonviUe, Sear's Store in Pomeroy or at

.Squads kept busy

from Route33 to Veterans Memorial
Hoopital; Middleporl, 2:21 p.m..
Brenda Imboden from OUver St. to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains, 6:03p.m., Mrs. Dale Pickett
to Veterall8 Memorial; Pomeroy,
10:23 p.m., Wade Smith to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse, 10:44 p.m.,
Gladys Robson from her home in
MinersviUe to Holzer Medical Center with injuries received in a fall;
Racine, 11 :48 p.m., Dorothy Bentz
from Fifth St., to Holzer Medical
Center.

Minor damages
.,

dleport.
Brian Conde is chairman of the
food basket program IJiis year. An
appUcaUon form will be published in
the Dally Sentinel for thole needing
basket. or they may apply In writing
to P.O. Box603, Pomeroy.

Conduct open house
Appro2imalely 1,500 peraoris attended open ho11110 at Hubbard's
GreenhouaeSsturday andSwxlay.
Wlnnera of door prizes were Judy
WeD, Shirley Beegle, Norman Will,
Lencra Lushest and GObert Beard.

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

1

Fort Myers with burial in Memor)o
there. Mrs. DaUey and
Mrs. Slusher left via plsne Monday
afternoon to attend the services.

Jeanette L. Hysell

· Gardell8

Jeanette L. HyseU, 89, Ravenna,
died Sundsy.
Mrs. HyseU was hom March 14,
IB92, 1n Pomeroy. She left Pomeroy
in 1944 and moved to Ravenna. She
was a member of Ravenna First
United Methodist Church and D. of

injury.

Veterans Memorial
Ssturdsy Admissions-Ids Young,
Rolland; Glenna Souisby, Pomeroy;
James Meadows, Portland; Adsm
Barton Syracuse; Mary Warren,
Pome.;.y; Beatrice Rairden, Hart-

She is survived by two dsughters,
Mrs. Edgar (Shirley) Krafla, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Robert (Betty)
McGowan, Kent; two sons, Lawrence and Dannie both of Ravenna; one
sister, Chloe Compton, Urbanna; 10
grandchildren and nine great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
the sports Funeral Home~ Ravenna,
· Wednesdsy at II a.m. Burial will be
in Maple Grove Cemetery, Ravenna.
Friends may caD at the funeral
home Tuesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Saturday Discharges--Beulah John C. Cook
Jones, Kathy Robinson, Arthur
John Cliff Cook, 87, Mason, died
Nease, Brends Imboden.
Ssturday, in Veterans Memorial
Sunday Admissions-Sbelly Prof- ·Hospital in Pomeroy.
· fill, Portland; Herbert Farms,
He was horn Feb. '13, 1894, at
Nelsonville; Martha Stutler, Graham Ststion, W.Va. to the late
Pomeroy; Maxine Sellers, Racme.
Robert and Ruth Clarke Cook.
Sunday Discharges--Charlotte
His wife, Hattie Mae Cook,
Nease, Carla Teaford, Pauline Ssun- · preceded him death in 1966.
ders.
He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are five sons, Robert M.
··clinic set Tuesday
Cook of New Haven, Kenneth D.
Cook of Middleport; Donald C. Cook
The HarrisonviUe Golden Age of Wintersville, Ohio; J. Bernard
Club will hold a free blood pressure 'Cook of Hartford and J .E. "Bill"
clinic from 10 a.m. until I p.m. Cook, of Pomeroy, one dsughter,
Tuesday at the town hall in Mrs. Danny "Charlotte" Yonker d
HarrisonviUe. Femdora Story, RN, Mason; one sister, M~"S. Ester Roush
will conquct the clinic. The public iB of Letart; 15 grandchildren and 13
Invited.
great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Marriage license
Tuesday
at I p.m. at the Foglesong
A marriage license was issued to
Funeral
Home in Mason with the
Ezra lsacc Barrett, 25, Rt. I, MidRev.
Bennie
Stevens officiating.
dleport, and Mary Lou Sturgeon, 16,
Burial
wiU
follow
in the Graham
Rt. 1, Middleport.
.
Cemetery.
Put on probation·
Friends may call at the funeral
home
today from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m.
1n Meigs County Common Pleas
and
from
7 p.m. until9 p.m.
Court Fridsy, Blaine Qualls was sentenced to six months to five years in
a penal instituUon when he appeared
Dana L. Brechtel
befiire Judge John C. Bacon.
Dana Leroy Brechtel, 64, Norlh
QuaDs was sentenced on three
Fort
Myers, Fla., formerly of
counts of breaking and entering, and
Pomeroy,
died SWidsy as the result
one count of criminal trespass. He
of
a
heart
attack.
was placed on probaUon for two
A graduate of Pomeroy High
years. Qualls had plead guilty to the
School, Mr. Brechtel was preceded
charges earlier.
in death by his wife, Almends, and a
To install officers
brother, Martin McAngus.
He is survived by a sister, Mrs.
Officers will be Installed when
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;:AM, meets at Irene Dailey, Middleport; three
cousins, Edna Slusher, Pomeroy;
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
LuciUe Roush, Marion, and William
Officers wiD be instal'ed at a Morris, Middleport, along with
meeting of Mlddleporl Lodge 363, several nieces and nephews.
Services wiD be held Tuesday atF&amp;AM, to be held at 7:30 . p,m.
.the Harvey Funeral Home at North

'

().

Mrs. Doria -M. Shwnway GUmore,
89 5719 14th St., East, Bradenton,
F~.. formerly of Syracuse, died
Saturday at Manatee Memorial
Hospital in Bradenton.
She was preceded In death by her
parents, Fred and Nelle Frederick
Shwnway of Syracuse.
Surviving are her husband, John
w. GUmore, a former Meigs County
newspaper man; two dsughters,
Mrs. Robert E. (Jane) Beegle of
Racine, and Mrs. Richard (Valerie)
Ashley, Bradenton; a son, John F.
GUmore, Ssrasota, Fla.; six grandchildren, and several cousins who
reside in Meigs County.
Mrs. GUmore was a former member of the Asbury Methodist Church
in Syracuse and' was a member of
the Oneca United Methodist Church
in Floria.
.
Services will be held Wednesday
at the Griffith-Cline Funeral Home
in Bradenton and burial will be In
the Manasota Mem~rial Park at
Oneca.

ford ..

.

•

DorisM.Gilmore

A.

Light damages were incurred to .a
truck driven by Robert Shain,
Racine, at2:55 Sunday whe~ a deer
came from the river bank area onto
E. Main St., and hit the left front
fend of the vehicle. Shain escaped

·I

ea death S

A
. r

Daile Pigott

.,

•
..
. _,
•

.

~

DIGGING OUT - 81118D Beolon of Booton attempts 18 dig her car out Sanday In Booton after. the
btgg..t slorm llinee the BJiuard of '78 dumped JS.
Incbes of ano1r on Bolton. Tile National Wealber Ser-.

vice at one point IAuecl a bllalrd nruJac ntell.canceUed early Sanday llilbl The 111101r caiiHd H•
tewlive cancellaU.. and clGied Lopll AlrporL (AP
Laserpbota). (See AP Wire Story).

6%
BAVARIAN

Man faces
DWI charge

CHRISTMAS TRIE

Every Tuesday Nlfltt At Cror• ·

The state highway patrol cited a
Pomeroy man for DWiln a one-car
accident 41 Meigs County Saturday
night.
The Gallipolis Post said Terry I.
Watson, 26, was westbound on Rt.
124 at 10:35 p.m. when he attempted
to tum righ,t into a private driveway,
missed the driveway and drove into
a ditch.
The vehicle Watson drove was
iilighUy. dsmaged, and he was cited
after troopers got to the scene.

and struck an embankment, causing

~2!~~
35 MINIATURE

. ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN 'EAT.

~·- LIG

FOR JUST

$325

'2''

DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Sorrv, No Substitutes except
leverages which have •n addlllonol price.

w. Main

. ..

.

ELBERFELD$
THIS YEAR. GIVE.. HIM

R~urant

.

.

r:se:v:ere:dsma:~g:e·~·_· _ _ _ _ _j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BROWN DUCK ·WORKCLOTHES ,
COMPL£TE SELECTION OF SlYLES
AND SIZES

carhartt

/

'

. -

.

EROY

!

•

••

4%0z.

. · Open .a
Christmas Club Accot•nt
at the Farmers Bank.

··Nluoll, :·],·•

·• ·
MB

••

•
•

~II. TON
...AOUV

w

~

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.Make 49 payments
.get the ._soth FREE.

I

.

'

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Fa

Farmers
Bank

.

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•

'
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MtmberFDIC

•..

,..••
'

The Community · Owned Bank ·

:.

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..

.

S1S.tt ,

'

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._. ,,

' @N~·

I

ELBERFELDS
IN
.

I;

... NRYDAY
.

I

.-··

·..aac

Aa:T

r

eQuilt lined coveralls in plain leg or
zipper leg
eQullt lined and blanket lined «_oats
eQuilt lined or blanket lined, zipper
front 1ac kets
eSherpa lined coats or jackets
• Bib overalls, quilt lined or plain
eQuilt lined dungarees
• snap-on hoods, quilt ,lined or blanket
lined to wear with c.o veralls - jackets
· or coats.

YOUI CHOta

~~~·~~

•

)

'

NEWs~~~a~7~gt

Pomeroy, OH.

Ph. 99Z-543Z

•

.

'

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---

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·=
............
.......

served with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Gravy, ,
Cola Slaw, Hot Roll! Butter
·and Coffee.•

·Crow's Family
228

il" LOG
WRAPPING

NILIOWIIIO. MAt

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

' .~

MY, KINO

Mrs. Daile Pigott, 66, Long Bottom, died Sundsy evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an extended illness.
in other matters over the
Mrs. Pigott was bom in Dodridge weekend, the patrol said Cheryl A.
County, W. Va. She was preceded in Rall8om, 19, Rt. 2, Racine, escaped
death by her husband, Riley Pigott Injury when ber car overturned on
in 1979 and one son WiUard Pigott in , Dravo-HaU Road in Meigs County,
1977.
• foUr-tenths of a mile west of Rt. 338
. She was a member of the Long at8:40p_m.Sunday.
Bottom United Methodist Church
and attended Mt. Olive Community
The report said Rarlsom was east·
Church. She had been a resident of bound when her vehicle loat control,
the Long Bottom area for the past 65 ' went off the rigbt side of the road
years.
Pigott
home; five
Mrs.
She isatsurvived
by daughtera,
one son, Donsld
Rezal (Ann) Sununerflled, Reedsville; Mrs. Rex (Sina) Batley,
Chester; Mrs. Henry (Eileen) Bahr,
Long Bottom; Mra. Royal (Lucile)
Wilson, Coshocton, and Mrs. Lorena
Wolfe, Cleveland; one dsugbter-lnlaw, Mrs. Bettie Pigott, Long Bot·
tom; 'll grandchildren, 43 great
grandchildren, and two great great
granddaughters.
Funeral services wiD be held Wednesdsy at I p.m. at the White
Funeral Home In CoolviUe with the
Rev. Richard Thomas officiating.
Burial wiD be in Sand HiU Cemetery,
Long Bottom. Friends may can at
tbe funeral home after I. p.m.
Tuesday. At the request of the
deceased no flowers will be accepted.
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