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•

WINTHROP

bv .Dick

DO ""iOU KNON WHAT

A "THE5AURU6

I~ WINTHROP~

I

.

SURe. A IHE5AURU5.15 A
· CRE:AiU~E~ NOW EXTINCT;.
THAT ROAMED THS: EARTH
MILUa-.J5 CF "YSAR5 AGO.

/

... AND IT WA5 CO\IERED WITH
IMPENETRABLE
SCALES 11-IAT PRof""rrl-c;EC I ED
IT FRQAA 11'5 ~NEMIE;5~

I OFTEN WISH THAT,
! COULD H.AVE A
I
THe5AWRLJ5.

J

WALDO.~

ALWAY$
DO THAT-'

PIPE'?

WHENEVER lrOU SIT IN
THAT CHAIR, YOU ASK

PEOPLE 1D
FOR

ro THINGS

THAT'S

. NOT' TRUE-'.

YOU :' .

•

at y

enttne

'

CNORMOW6,
SOM.E:TIME5 R5ACHINt:i-A
H£;:1($4T OF 100 FEET...

I

·Gallipolis incident
follows separation
GAWPOLIS - A shooting in· Road.
.
cident in front of the Gallipolis Gity
He was again cited into court for a
Building Sunday night left a non-support charge last week, a case
Gallipolis woman dead and her which was scheduled to be heard in
estranged hUBband wounded In what · municipal court today. Jane Qualls
police are treating as a possible reportedly was In the police departmurder-suicide.
ment jUBt prior to the shooting to
Dead is Jane Saunders Qualls, 20, check the time of the hearing.
of 4121'. Lincoln St. Terry Qualls, 20,
As of this morning, the case was
F:'offieroy, was listed ii) extremely still under investigation by police
critical condition this morning in St. and the Bureau of Criminal InMary's Hospital, Huntington, W. Va,
vestigation in Londoo, Ohio. No
Accordlf~B to city police, the incharges had yet been filed against
cident began at 9:08 p.m. when a Terry Qualls, ·a department
dispatcher with the police depart- spokesman said.
ment, heard shots being fired in
Meanwhile, a 26-year-old Hun·
front of the city building.
tington police officer was shot and
The dispatcher then radioed to two killed early today while on the way
patrolmen who were returning from to help another patrolman in·
a domestic dispute call. Upon vestigate a sUBpicious persons
arrival, the officers found Jane and report,city police said.
Terry Qualls lying on the sidewalk in
Officer Paul Hannon died of head
front of the building, bQth shot.
wounds shortly after the 1:42 a.m.
. At that point, a deputy from the sllooting, said Lt. Paui Price. The
Gallia County Sherifrs Department, patrolman was dead before he could
Bob Meade, fowld what was ap- receive treatment at Cabell·
parently the weapon used in .the in- Huntington Hospital.
cident on the ground, picked it up
and placed It in an evidence bag
Price said Harmon had responded
before turning It over to police. to a call for a backup officer from
The gun is believed to be a -~ Patrolman Randy Byard and was
caliber automatic.
several blocks from Byard and
ONE DEAD, ONE INJURED- Gallla EMS persoanel treat two
According to the report, the gun' walking toward him when the
sbootlug victims In a po~~sible murder-suicide Incident In front of the
was loaded with .25-caliber bullets, shooting occurred.
. GalUpol!" city building Sunday night. J8De Qualls, 25, Gallipolis, died at
the hammer was cocked and the
The inCident took place at the insafety clip was in the fire mode.
tersection of 19th Street West and
The Gallia EMS was called to the Jefferson Avenue in a semiM
scene and attempted to treat the vic- residential section of Huntington,
tims at the scene. They were then P~icesald.
moved to the emergency room at
"We do not have anyone in
Holzer Medical Center, where Jane cUBtody. They do have some suspec,
' Qualls died at 10:20 p.m.
ts, that's all I'm at liberty to say,"
WARSAW, Poland (AP) today. The Soviet Union, in an ap·Terry Qualls was treated and tran- · the lieutenant said shortly after 6
Workers
at
two
of
Warsaw's
biggest
parent warning to the West,
sfe~Te~i to St. Mary's.
a.m. "We have officers out working,
factories
went
on
strike
today,
declared
that the actions by
The Qualls' had recently investigating ·what happehed."
Solidarity
sources
said,
but
a
Poland's
CollUnunist leadership
separated and filed for divorce In
Two inen were seen .fleeing from
threa.tened
general
strike
to
protest
were
an
internal
affair.''
Gallia County Common Pleas Court. the shooting scene in a 1972 green
the
crackdown
on
ihe
independent
Members
of
the temporarily
According to police reports, Terry Buick, authorities said. '
ia~or
moveme.nt
failed
to
suspended
Solidarity
union
Qualls had been cited into municipal
While police later four¥1 Hannon's
,
matQrialbe.
··
.,
.
"
c'(llla\rib\li!Ml'lealleta
ln.
W
,
e
l111lw,
SUI&gt;ol!ortlr afl4or T!la~ on empty . revolver &lt;il&gt;· the car, &gt;whicll'
The
ilay-old
martial-law
regime,
•
day
calling
for
a
ilatlonwld~
walkout
an assault charge after an Incident was recovered in Ken'ova, Price said
with his wife at following a party at 'tests.would have to be made to deter- which put the military in charge of in defiance of the government's
the Jackson Production Credit mine whether Hannon was killed power plants and coal mines Sun- proclamation of martial law and its
day, militarized still more factories suspension of the right to strike.
Association office on UpJ)Cr River with his own gun.

! THINK YOU'D BE
13ETTER. OFF WITH
A DICTfONAJ&lt;.Y.

10:20 p.m. in Holzer Medical Center and Terry Qualls, 25, Pomeroy, her
estranged husband, is in er!Ucal condition In St. Mary's Hospital in HUDtington.
•

Uproar continues in Poland_

'TOU GIVE
ORDERS FROM
THE THRONE.'

General protest strike doesn't happen
11

IT? AUAO?T N7 IF
YOU CAN'T [;0 AN'ffi-IING
FOR YOUR?ELF .'

1 Sect ion, 12 Po~ges
1S Ctntt
A Multimedia Inc . Newspper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 14,1981

Shootings leave two.area residents dead

t:t WA~

Ed Sullivan

. . , - - " ' - - - -.......lm'

"rr.J PLEASE
HAND ME MY

Ca~alll

I

Priscilla's Pop
HAZEL, WOULD

Voi .30,No.l70
Copyrl..,loc11911

•

POP WANTS TO KNOW

.

IF lrOLJ'D LIKE TO
HEAR HIS ?IDE ?'

;

Three Meigs reeidents hurt in crash

Three people were hospitalized after their truck struck a guardrail
and traveled into the Ohio River in
Meigs County late Sunday af·
temoon .
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Grover C.
Salser Jr., 48, Rt. 3, Racine, was nor., thbound on Rt. 338 at 5:20p.m. when ·
his pick up ran off the right side of
the road and hit the guardrail.
The vehicle then overturned
.before going into the river, . the
· report said.
.
·.· The emergency squad responded
to the call and took Salser and two
p&amp;ssengers - Dorothea Salser, 48,
Rt. 3, ltacine, and Geraldine M.
Webb, 61, no address available - to
Veterans Memorial HOIJlilal.
Dorothea Salser and Webb were
admitted for their injuries and
reported in fair condition this mor- .
ning. Grover Salser was transferred
to Holzer Medical Center, where a
c

.

spokesman said he was in fair t'&lt;ln·
dition in the intensive care unit.
The patrol investigated another injury accident in the Meigs area
Saturday afternoon.
According to the report, Lola K.
Robinson, 26, Rio Grande, was westbound on Rt. 124, three miles west of·
Rt. 7, at 4:40 p.m. when she lost control of her vehicle, went off the left
side of the road .and struck a ditch
and tree .
Her vehicle was severely
damaged, and she was taken to
Veterans MemdHal by the Meigs
EMS, where she was treated and
released.
An injury accident in Gallia County was also investigated earlier
Saturday afternoon.
The patrol said Edwin N. Baker,
75; Rt. 1, Patriot, back'!~ his vehicle
from a private driveway along Rt.
141, twl).tenths of a mile north of
County Rd. I, at2:25 p.m. and struck

a vehicle driven by Mildred R.
· Miller, 57, Rt. I, Patriot.
Miller was southbound on 141
when · the accident occurred.
Damage was severe to both vehicles
and Miller was injured, but not
treated. Baker was cited for failure
to yield.
The patrol said a pickup truck
driven by Craig A. Chapman, 18, Rt.
2, Crown City, was westbound on
Bladen-Mercerville Road, one-tenth
of a mile west of Rt. 7, at 9:30 p.m.
Saturday when the truck went off the
ri~ht side of the road and struck a
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. utility pole.
Chapman's vehicle was severely
damaged and he was cited for DWI.
In other matters, two people were .
injured in a one-car crash in Addison
Twp. early Saturdsy morning.
Brent E. Hogan, 23, Gallipolis,
was northbound on County Rd. 3 at
6:30 p.m. when he lost control of his

'FUliYAAA Sf)(

Spokesmen for the temporarily
outlawed Solidarity labor union told
reporters of work stoppages by
thousands in the giant Ursus tractor
factory and the Warsaw steel mill.
The reports could not be indeP,Cndentiy verified.
liJitial c~~luo ·~ .~~r lar~~c-.

torios msome,distr.ciS ~the cap1til
found no strikes or protests by members of Solidarity, many of whose
leaders were seized Sunday when
the government imposed martial
Jaw.

Employees on the first shift at the
o1eel plant began work at 6 a.m. but
put down their tools after a midmorning break, the sources said.

vehicle and overturned in a ditch.
"Nothing is going on 1 as you can
His vehicle was moderately
damaged, and both Hogan and a see for yourself, '' said a steelworker
passenger, Rhonda E. Hogan, 23, outside the giant steel works. But
Gallipolis, were injured but not there were no outward signs Qf a
strike, such as banners or flag s.
treated.
Conflicting reports emerged from
A vehicle driven by Nelson V. Vit,
the Ursus factory, in a Warsaw
43, Wapakoneta, suffered slight
damage after a deer collided with it suburb. Some workers said em·
on U.S. 35 over the Jackson County ployees were on the job, hut other
· sources said work had stopped in
line at5 :46 a.m. Sunday.
The patrol said James R. Wt.ite, several departments.
Earlier today a Solidarity mem19, Rt.1, Crown City, escaped l:'1jury
ber
at the steel mill said authorities
on Lincoln Pike at 7:02p.m. Sunday
.
had
"fished out iho most important
when he lost control of his vehicle on
(union)
me". ilutther~ no·e others to
a curve, went off the right •ide of the
take
their
place, so some time will
road and hit a tree ..
White's vehicle was demolished, have to elapse before they arrive at
some decision.' '
the report said.
Government officials said arresl-;

Snow falls

ahead of
cold front

would be an "ongoing process," but
Solidarity sources said some
detainees had already been
released.
Solidarity sources said as many as

3,000 members of the union may
have been rounded up in the capit..l
alone. Earlier estimates put the
total number interned in the entire
country at about 1,000.
Government leaders conferred
with Solidarity chief Lech Walesa in
an attem~t ~~ a~ert a r.~era\s1dke.
But Warsaw Radio c
ell no wotd
from him today.
Poland's Roman Catholic
primate, Archbishop Josef Glemp,
appealed to the workers in a broadcast sermon: " Do not start a fight
between Poles. Do not give your
· lives away."
Pope John Paul II also appealed
for restraint, saying: "Polish blOnd
cannot be shed, because too much
was spilled in the lust war ."
Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski, a
general who is also head of the Communist Party and defense minister,
cracked down on Solidarity after 17
months of general unrest, strikes, a
steadily worsening economy and
tension that saw the legalization of
the Soviet bloc's first independent
labor union and its increasing ifl.
sistence on major economic and
political reforms to rebuild the nearbankrupt economy.
Although it gave in to Solidarity's
demands, the government had hinted repeatedly that it would order
the anny to take action if the union
continued to challenge it. There also
had been recurrent fears of Soviet
military intervention.
The last straw apparently came
Saturday when the union leaders at
(Continued on page 12)

By Tbe Associated Press
An inch or two of snow is possible
in central Ohio by this evening. Snow
also is likely in northern Ohio today,
but little or no accwnuiation is expected.
The snow ex~cted in northern
Ohio is ahead of a cold front moving
through the western Great Lakes.
Southern Ohio's mixed precipitation
.this morning is associated with a
deve(oping low pressure area
moving northeast from the Gulf
Coast.
These two storm areas will merge
into one storm system over the midAtlantic Coast tonight. Some snow
may linger in eastern Ohio tonight
behind this storm center and a series
of new stonns that will form and
move ~orth along the Atlantic Coast.

,

"OF COURSE IT'S AGOOD INVESTMENTfLOOK WHAT
IT DID FOR JAPAN'S ECONOMYI"

"HE SA,YS HE HAS AJOB AFTER SCHOOL. BUT WE'RE
AFRAID TO ASK HIM WHAT IT lSI"

"DINNER WILL BE LATE, GEORGE. I MISTAKENLY PUT NIGHT
· CREAM ON MY FACE THIS MORNING AND SLEPT ALL DAYI"

llded " - die Icy water by a re.ldetlt, 0.. Bogeu,
.... wll nw llle craaJi. Tile Racjae Emergeacy
Sqaad eallod to !be ~&lt;eae at 1: 1'1 p.111. and admhlllila ed trealmeat. Tile Racine IIIII uallled by
S,r~~.We'l .-1 lrulporled die vlelima to Veterua
~ llaiJIIIII. ne 08P npor1ee1 lbatlbe veblclo
travtletl 311 feel lnm lbe time It left the ro.d to Ita
final polDI ollmpaet ID the river. ScoU WoHe pjlolo.
'

f

Some significant snow squalls
may develop In northeast Ohio on
Tuesday as much colder air pours
into the state, pulled south from
Canada by the East Coast storlllB.
Temperatures on Tuesday
probably will recover very little
fr0111 tonight's low readlnga, holding
oteady or falling slowly into the low
to mid-208 by Tuesday evening.

FIRST ACCUMULATION OF SNOW tl1la year """"rred Moaday 810,..

nlng. Steven YOUlll, Seed Sll'eet, Pomeruy, 1J8S oue oi111811Y wllet.d 1e
clean off the car before leavlq lor wariL Seboolo were fanctltlolil1c •
replar schedules Ia alllllree dlotrlds. Altei'IIOOII klndeflarlell cle- 111

the Meigs Local Dlltrlct were cancelled, bewever.

�..
The DailY Sentinei- Page-3

Ohio

Lancers top Marauders, 70-63

Commentary

' BySCO'ITWOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs'
Marauders, despite compiling a
torrid 57 percent average from the
field, dropped a disappointing 7~
d«isiQII to the Federal Hocking Lancers her! Saturday In a non-league
basketball CQJltest.
The Lancers were led by sharpshooting Davi~ Glass, who collected
a game-high 24 points, to keep FH in
the game with his outstanding outside shooting attack. The win boosts
FH to 1-4, while Meigs drops to~.
Besides Glass' 24 point effort, Ben·
ny BeMett netted 10, Rusty Kennedy
12, and Allen Koker nine for the win-

Making Shirley loQk good'-AI,________wz_zl_liB_m_F._B_uck~ley_J_r.
The excitement over the victory
by Shirley Williams in the British
by-&lt;!lection begs for a little analysis.
The election, it is generally known,
was in an area traditionally loyal to
the Conservatives. In the race there
figured, for the first time, the candidate of the new party, which
people are calling the "Alliance,"
short for the Social Democratic Par·
ty, acting in alliance with the old
Liberal Party.
One of the founders of the Social
Democratic Party was the candidate: Shirley Williams has figured
large in Labor Party poUtics over
the years, achieving several
cabinet-level jobs. But early this
year she, and three or four others,

protested the maniacal leftism of the
leaders of her own party - and split.
That was the good news.
The impression is all over the
place that Mrs. Williams has rejec·
ted the fanaticism of the Labor Par·
ty and that, in the seasons ahead, the
AlHance will take power, delivering
Englang. The question is, delivering

England from what?
Granted Great Britain, under
Tony Benn, would cease to be a constitutional democracy governed by
consensus, and if this was to be

Britain's lot, one might have cause
to ·he grateful to Shirley Williams.
But Great Britain is suffering
grievously right now, and primarily
from afflictions visited upon Great
Britain by - Shirley Williams and
her colleagues, over the past 30
years. Margaret Thatcher's Con·
servatives have not succeeded in
setting Britain right, but coilsider
what they inherited.
Professor John Hutchinson, an
eloquent British-American student
of industrial relations, has written
trenchanUy on the &lt;ubject in
National Review. Britain sutiers in
part from amateur management,
but primarily fr&lt;&gt;n union power.
Here are some figures brought
together by Professor Hutchinson :

ficient. By the way, in the Gennan
plant strikes are unknown. In the
British plant this year there were 20
strikes.
In 10 years, only two of them under
Thatcher, British labor costs more
than doubled. Meanwhile in West
1 Gennany they rose 20 percent, in
Japan almost not at all. In the five
years before Mrs. Thatcher, under a
Labor government, labor costs rose
almost 90 percent, while comparable
ligures in France were 4&gt; percent, in
the United States 36 percent, in
Japan, 2 percent.
The Bank of England reports that
unit labor costs have climbed by
almost 40 percent during the past
two years, compared with 12 percent
among Britain's chief competitors.
Morover, the Bank of England war:
A recent study considered the ns that no effort to increase British
operation of two Ford automobile productivity can he made unless
plants, one of them in England labor is willing to go along with
!Halewood), the other in West Ger- " near-zero wage increases for some
many (Saariouis). The two plants years."
Now Mrs. Thatcher appears not to
have identical equipment. In the
have
the power to effect basic labor
EngUsh plant, 10,000 workers make
union
refonn. But at least she
800 cars per day. In the German
recognizes
the problem. Shirley
plant, 7,800 workers make 1,200 cars
Williams
catT)e
in from the same
per day. I figure the German at .Ia
party
whose
last
prime minister,
cars per day , the Brit at .08, i.e., the
Callaghan,
once
said, "Find
James
English worker is one half as efout what the unions want and give it

·-

The Daily Sentinel
lllCourt Street
Pomero)', Ohio
611-992-%156
DE YOTEOTOTHE JNTEREST OF THE MEICS..MASON AREA

Q~

Publl!i;her

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Asslstanl Publisher/Conlrollr~

Geurral Malllll!er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
-Nrws Edflor
A MEMBER of Thr Alliodakd Press, Inland Daily Press A!l.loclatlon and tb e

Americaa Newspaper Publlshen Ass odlllion.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wekomfd. Thry should be lest llaaa 300 words loog All
lenen are subjel'l to Mlllng 11Dd musl be signed wltb name, addrfss and lelepboae ~m­
ber. Nu ua~Jgaed Aetten will be published. Lenen~ Mould be- Ia good taste addressilg
Issues, ool ptrsoulil!e&amp;. ·
'

were held tomorrow are aaldng for
the service of the same old under·
takers. It is truly amazing that Tony
is so had he can malte Shirley look
good.

IArRUrll•l
""~ .. aHII~·Wlf:U./W.

ners.

·.
TWO HANDED SHOTS - Rawly Murray gets ready lo fire a two
haoded jumper against Federal Hoelting Saturday night. The Laacen
won the D&lt;lD·Ieague game, 7G-63. Tim Tucker photo.

•

'

Mountaineers
top Buckeyes

•

What is needed in Great Britain is
fundamenta l refonn, calculated to
increase productivity and respon-.

·Announcement represents ·new business mood
nouncement seemed abnost like a

ROBERT L . WINGETT

lions and political action. Shirley
Williams wOUld not move in that
direction. The British voters who,
the polls reveal, would give the
Alliance a landslide if the elections

to them."

NEW YORK (AP) - The an-

csm~ f'""'T"'L.....I'-~·~d· ~
~v

sibilily. This can't be done; opines
Mr. Hutchinson, without a law
guaranteeing a secret ballot to union
members on such questions as the
closed shop, strike votes, union elec-

joke - a sick joke, business stylebut it wasn't.
Instead, it probably represented,
to some small d~gree at least, a new
business moOd for 1982: Count your
blessings and he grateful that you
survive. Hold on, but make few big
plans, at least for early 1982.
The announcement, a· year-&lt;!nd
swnmary and 19112 projection from
the National Association of Mutual ·
Savings Banks, a segment of the
thrift industry tbat was hard hit in
1981, expressed the mood tersely.
"The savings bank industry will

experience essentially zero net new
deposit flows next yeart it said, 11 8

significant improvement from the
record 1981 net toss, which is ex·
peeled to total $12 billion."
Which is to say that the savings
business might not go far in 1982, but
at least it may not continue to fall
behind as in 1981, when high interest
rates - and low-priced loans outstanding - ruined business.
Savings hanks were not alone in
being hurt. Business failures
through Dec. 3, counted by Dun &amp;
Bradstreet, jumped to 15,892 from
11,030 through Dec. 4 a year ago. In

.
the week ended Dec. 3 the number of being distributed bY companies and
failures jumped to 443, compared industries, the bright light is that
many of them - savings banks,
with a weekly average of 311.
.
autos
and bousing, to name the most
Even those numbefs do not tell the
lull story because many small com· prominent - feel they've put the
panies are holding on by their finger· worst behind them. Recovery will be
nails. The carnage is widespread slow, they say, but it will come.
too, DXB says, distributed through
It will come, they say, because
. mo.!:.1 areas of the nation and running
they have pared their work force~
through many types of business and otherwise become more ef·
operations.
ficient, because interest rates are
Breaking even therefore has now likely to be lower than in l981,
become equated with success, a goal because inflation appears to be
to shoot for, not just a disaster to be waning, and because income tax
avoided.
cuts will be showing their impact by
Reading through projections now mid-year.

New
state
law
removes
salary
ceiling
~tudy peace, not.-war
On the face of it, the timing could scarcely appear less propitious.
The United States is gearing up for a massive rearmament effort. We
are in a state of semi-confrontation with the Soviet Union over the nuclear
imbalance in Europe. Simultaneously we are becoming if anything more
deeply involved than usual in a Mideast that is even more inflamed than
usual with the distinct possibility of going one-on-one with Libya.
Meanwhile, back in our own hemisphere, the administration continues

to emit rumblings as to the possible necessity of forceful measures to bring
Cuha and Nicaragua to heel.
So now is the time that Congress is being asked to consider establishment of a national peace academy, the culmination of an initially private

campaign to institutionalize the study and application of techniques to
resolve conflicts without violence.
By way of basic baekground, the government got involved in the
business hack in 1978 with establishment of a Commission on Proposals for
the National Academy of Peace and Conflict Resolution. Given a budget of
$&gt;0(1,000, the commission was charged with conducting hearings around the
nation to gain public input prior to submitting specifi~ recommendations to
Congress.
That's where it stands - or rests - at the moment. The recommendations envisage a federally financed graduate-level institution offering
a range of courses up to a two-year master's program with branches at
selected universities and colleges.

The curriculum would he designed to teach you and refine techniques in
peaceful resolution of conflicts in everything from labor negotiations to
hostage situations to confrontations between nations. Participants, in addition to full-time students, would be drawn from business and labor the
bureaucracy and military, and from foreign countries. A hope is that ;orne
would eventually hold positions of private and public power, through which
their training in peace could have positive effect.
Well, it sounds good. But the question at the moment i• whether the
initial conflict can be resolved - between the campaign's goals and thos" oi
this administration. The commission, for example, says money :;homo Uc ll'J

object, a year's funding being estimated at a fraction of the Pentagon's ex·
penditures for a single day. Even so, David Stockman's office is likely to be
an exceedingly difficult sell.
. •. , .
Further, the commission's report · is a legacy of the Carter administration and there is no rush to act on.it in a Congress preoccupied by its
dealings with a Reagan White House. Bills to enact the recommendations
were intrOduced in House and Senate in November, but committee hearings
won't begin until spring.
Still, it's too early to give up hope. The academy campaigners, who
report a fivefold increase in contributing supporters in the last six months,
certainly aren't.
On public institution dedicated to peace is unlikely to ,bring about the
millenium all by itself, butit certainly can't hurt. I! nothing else, it would a!&gt;'
pear to be the least that a nation maintaining four military service
academies might do for the cause.
And if the academy ever does open its doors, a readymade motto has
already been provided bY Spinoza:
Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice.
'

Letter to the Editor
Expre~ses

thanks

We want to publicly extend a BIG
TIIANKS to the aheriff's depart·
ment, and all ol the police depart·
menta and their olficors who worked
so efficiently and.effectively to apprehend suspects In the robbery of
the Swisher and Lohae Phannacy in
PomerOy and - 111 a result - IJing
an end to a dangei'OII8 and harassing
situation In Meigs County. · 1
It should be encouraging to aU of
j

-

·-·-.

us that our area police officers work
together so cooperatively and
capably for the benefit of the com·
munity. Long hours and dedication
to the job were absolute requlremen·
ts to bring about the arrest of
suspects.
Agsin - to an who participated our sincere thanka for a job well
done. We're proud of you. - Charles
P. Riffle, Kenneth E. McCullough,
Ronald W. IWlnlng, Swisher and
Lohae Phannacy, 112 E. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
college, mental health and mental
retardation officials bave been given
a new selling point to use in
recruiting lop faculty members, ad·
ministrators and physicians.
It'scalled money.
A new state law removed whai
was a ceiling on salaries which a
state-assisted institution of higher
education could pay its )ll!rsonnel.
Another measu~e raised the
salary cap which had been in effect
ior physicians employed by such
state agencies as the departments of
mental health and mental retardation.
Both changes were included as

part of the 1;136-page state budget
"We have a number of our best
bill.
faculty people who are right up
Under previous law, trustees of agatnst the $5&gt;,000 ceiling and have
state universities and colleges been for some time," Crawford said.
generally were barred from paying
"I think it's essential if we're
salaries in excess of $55,000 an- going to he competitive with the best
nually. There were exceptions for universities in the country that we
school presidents, provosts and cer- not be hemmed in by that ceiling "
tain others who could get up to he said.
'
$65,000.
. Crawford said it had posed a parNow ihere is no similar limitation.
ticular problem · in the fields. of
Edwin M. Crawford, vice · health science, enginering, business
president for public aftairs at Ohio and law.
Stale {!niverslty, said the old ceiling
Despite the change, schools
put the school at a competitive plagued by chronic financial
disadvantage in keeping and at- problems may not be able to fully
tracting the best faculty members implement it.
and administrators.
~
"There's not going to be any

wholesale moving of a lot of people
beyond the ceiling," Crawford said.
"There's not much flexibility when
your budget is the same as it was
two years ago."

Myers .R. Kurtz, director of the
Ohio Department of.Mental Health,
offered a similar assessment of the
measure raising the ceiling on
salaries that may be paid to
physicians.
Under the old law, his agency and
others could have paid thetr staff
doctors up to $5&amp;,000 per fiscal year.
The new measure raised that
amount to $75,000.

Texas bans the dictionaryL-----------------. Robert Walters

AUSTIN, Texas ( NEA ) - The
book recently banned bY the Texas
Board of Education wasn't a

salacious nov~l, a Marxist polemic
or a sex·education manual .
lt was a dictionary.

That's right, The Merriam·.
Webster New Collegiate Dictionary,
an authoritative standard reference
work used in homes, schools and of.

!ices throughout the nation.
The board's action would be
mildly humorous if it wasn't part of
a disturbing pattern that in recent
years had led to the suppression of
virtually every fonn of creative endeavor known to the hwnan race.
City, county and state agencies all
across the country have sought, with
varying degrees of success, to cen·
sor not only books but also
magazines, paintings, plays, soogs,

films, leaflets, pamphlets,
pl10tngraphs and records.
·Authoritarian government of·
ficials, self-proclaimed delenden of
the public morality and overwrought
citizens
attempting to nullify the
Constitution's guarantee to the free
expression of - and access to ideas.
.
The public agencies frequently are

are

being forced to .act because of 1973 civil suit that led to a U. S. idiosyncratic objections, Texu'
pressure from ideological zealots Supreme Court ruling that a status as a major purchaser of
oblivious to the profound dangers comedian's monologue was not school books gives it the economic
posed to democracy by the cen- suitable for radio or television power to influence the composition
sorship of unpopular or "con- broadcast.
of future editions of the dictionary
The following day, the Texas used not only in the 22 "adoption"
troversial'' ideas.
The lengthy list of challenged Board of Education - acting after stales but also in the 28 ".open"
works include these widely ac- virtually no debate on the issue states where standard-setting and
claimed books: Aldous Huxley's endorsed .Bynum's action in a lop- selection are conducted at the local
"Grave New World," MacKinley sided 17-4 vote.
level.
Kantor's "Valley Forge," George
The board apparently was
Orwell's "1!114," J . D. Salinger's oblivious to the fact that the seven
In a similary action earlier this
"The Catcher in the Rye" (by far the offensive words were buried among year, Alabama Gov. Forrest H.
most popular target) and Studs more than 150,000 other entries. In- "Fob" James Jr. convened and per·
Tertel "Working."
deed, one school board member sonally attended a late-night
Other targets of suppression in- characterized the dictionary as meeting of the state Board of
clude at least five magazines "s~ of like a manuel for dirty wor- Education (he)d at the governor's
Sports Illustrated, Esquire, Ebony, ds.
·· mansion) at which five history
Parents and Mademoiselle - 'and
The d~~on will not ban all copies civics and government bOO~
assorted films on subjects ranging of the dictionary from Texas school targeted by coruiervative critit'S
from drug abuse to unidentified libraries, but it rloes prohibit the lllle were removed from the list of stateflying objects.
of state funds to purchase the boob approved texts.
.
In the recent Texas incident - a for use In English ~nd other classes.
Almost a century ago, Irish adthor
typically outrageous episode Perhapa more 11gnificanUy, Texu Oscar Wilde effectively rebutted the
State Education Commissioner and California are the two most narrow-minded approach that leads
Raymond Bynum announced last popalot11 of the 22 states that uUilze to the auppression of tUctJonaries
month that he had removed the dic- a aystem requiring statewide adop- magulnea and history lioob.
'
tionary from UJe list of booka ap- lion of textboo1ts and other ~ "'!'here Is no such tNng ua moral
proved for wte by Texas public structlonal maleriala.
or bmuoral
Wilde obeei-ved.
school students.
~- publishers cannot afford "The boob that the world cau. 1mHis reason: The dictionary coo- the lwwry of printing llpeCial moral are the booloi that show the
tains seven oblcene words cited in a editions to · satilfy various .states' worlditaOii-nahame."

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) :_ A
victory over a college basketball
team with a 3-3 record doesn't seem
like a remarkable accomplishment.
Don't tell that to West Virginia

Senior center Phil Collins, who
scored 14 points and had nine
rebounds, agreed.
"This was a great win because we
have never beaten Ohio State and as

University's Mountaineers.

a team we really wanted this one

Although Ohio State has had its
troubles this season, as Coach Eldon
Miller knows all too well, the Mountaineers were more than happy with
their 73~ victory over the Buckeyes
on Saturday.
West Virginia raised its record to
3-1 with the victory- the first by the
Mountaineers · in nine lifetime
meetings against the Buc.keyes.
"We could not have played any
worse than we played here tonight,"
Miller said. "Our ball handling at
times was very careless and we did
not play with the physical strength

tonight," Collins said.
The win was the 20th in a row at
home lor the Mountaineers - the
third longest streak in the school's
history.
"! am excited about this team,"
said junior guard Tony Washam, a
transfer playing his first season. He
scored a team-high 16 points in just
26 minutes playing time.
"Ohio State is a good basketball
team. They are quick and can put
the ball in the hole. I think we played
some super defense at times and
that is the name of the game.''
Ohio State led by as many as eight
points in the .first half, only to see
West Virginia go from one down to
eight ahead midway through the
second half when the -Mountaineers
scored nine straight points, five of
them by Jones, who didn't start

we needed.

"We.are going to !Javeto play a lot
tougher, both offensively and defensively, if we expect to win tough
games like this. That was the advice
I gave our team in the locker room.
If we don't do this, it will he a long
year for us."

CHESTER - ·During the past
week, the Eastern junior high girls'
team scored a split in two decisions,
• dropping an !8-10 decision to Meigs
and winning 21-17over Shade.
Against Meigs Eastern was shut
out for three quarters, being out·
scored 8-0, 4-0 and 2.(1, trailing 14-0
after three quarters. In the finale
Eastern came to life and outscored
the winners !0-4, but dropped the !810 decision.
Eastern hit only four of 19 free
throw attempts, · led in scoring by
Tonya Savoy with six points and Dee
Case with four. For Meigs R. Zirkle
had six, Couch and Neece four,
Thomas and Musser two each.
Kristi Hawk had eight rebounds
for EHS, followed by Joy Brannon,
Dee Case, and Tonya Savoy with
five, three , and three respectively.
Eastern was credited with playing

Ohio HIP Srhool Bey1 S.11kelhllll
lly the A..uciated ~~
Saturdlly'• Rell1lltl
~run Ellet Bl , Akron St. V.Sl. M 59
Akron Garfield 12, Canton Timken ~7

Akron Spring. 61 , N. C&amp;nton 60
Allianec 65, Akron Buchtel ~

Anna 60, New Knoxville 48
,
Alltw&lt;!rp 48, 0.)00110 Jelfet1100 &lt;S
Archbold 52, Kallda 42
Arlington 6;, Colwnbus Grov~e S7
Alhtabu~

E~ewood

45, Jefferson

Athens 57, ~elpre 43
Beachwood 70, Cardinal 43

36

Bellvue 69, Norwalk $3

Berne Un ion 49, Zane Trace 411 •

Bethel 65. Gl'llham 311
Bloorn-Carr&lt;lll 1;, Falrmonl W. i.1
Bloomlleld 72, 1towland Olrist. 28
Clllvary

Chr.

46, Cin.

Perfonnlng .Arts

42
Cambridge 64, Marietta 82

Canton McKinley 73, Akron N. 41
canton South ~I , Marlington 45
Celina 56, PiqWI 4a
Chardon M, &amp;erkahlre 41. ZOT
ctn. McNi cholas 13, Milford S8
Cln. St Bernard 60, Deer Park 32

'

Cleve. Trinity 611 , Painesville Harvey &amp;4

a-.-Maule 77, BeUbrool&lt; 71, OT

Coldwlter 87, VIlli Wert II

Ool. MJIIIIn 70, I.-onion D

CGI. Northllnd Hl3, Zanesville 54
CCIPCIUon Val. 73, Maaillon Cbr. 54
Conu,.ul Ill, LlncolnYiew Ill, OT
· C o l y - 07, Wa,....O.Id "
covtnaton eo, Milton Unlun :D
Danville 56, . Cfntel'burM: _47

(•

,.

,,

scored six points, and Jones secured

the victory.
"The whole team played hard
tonight," West Virginia Coach Gale
Catlett said.

In the third quarter Federal
Hocking held on to its full court

~s able to neutralize its ef·
fectiveness. The Marauders broke
the press and scored easily on
several different occasiOIIS.
The effective outside shooting of
David Glass kept the Lancers on top
throughout the third periOd.
Overall, he managed 11 successful
field goals on the night. Meigs could
not capitalize on numerous scoring
opportunities, that would have given
them a tie or possibly the lead. when
opportunity would arise, Meigs
would miss the goal or lose the baU
on one of its 13 costly turnovers.
FH led 48-44 at the end of the
frame.
In the fourth quarter Meigs took
the lead on the combined efforts of
Riggs, Ashley, and Murray. Meigs
grabbed a two point lead with six
minutes left, but couldn't hold on due
to a couple key turnovers and the
los:; of Nick Riggs via five fouls.
Despite staying close, Meigs dropped the 7~ decision.
The difference in the game was
EASY LAYUP- Niek Riggs puts in an easy layup against Federal
that Meigs had 21 team fouls and 13
T.O.'s while FH had only 12 team Hoelting'• Allen Koker (10) Saturday night at Larry R. Morri•on Gym.
D~pite a good shooting game, Meigs lust a close encounter, 78-83. Tim
fouls and eight miscues.
Tucker
photo.
Meigs hit a red-hot 29 of 51 field
goal attempts for 57 percent, while had nine. Glen Singer led ail scorers
cannint five of eight from the line for .\':ith 17 points. Meigs hosts Waverly
62 percent. Meigs had four steals F-Wlt.ls- at Larry R. Morrison gymand 19 rebounds led by Bob Ashley nasiwn.
with nine. Federal Hocking canned
Box score:
27 of 54 field goal attempts for 50 per·
Meigs - R. Edward s 2·0-4 : A$h ley
531 JACKSON PIKE · 35 WEST
cent and hit 16 of 28 from the line for . B-2·18; Rig gs 7-2·16 ; Murray 8-1-17 :
Phone 446-4524
&gt;7 percent. FH had 21 rebounds and Kovalchik 4·0·8. To1als 29-5-63 .

eight turnovers.

Meigs won the reserve tilt !n
another exciting overtime finish 4644 . .lUck Edwards led Meigs with I&gt;
points, while teammate Jay Evans

Federal Hocking - Gl ass 11 -2-24;
· Bennett 5-0-10; T abl er 4· 1·5; Ken·
nedy 1· 10· 12; Russell 3·0·6; Koker 3
3·9. Totals 27 -16· 70.
By quarters:
Meigs
ll 17 16 19- 63
FH
14 16 18 22- 70

Southern bombards Vikings
By SCOTI WOlFE
WILLOW WOOD The
*amrolling Southern Tornadoes
shifted into high gear for the second
time this weekend, handily throt·
tling !he Symmes Valley Vikings, 9346, here Saturday in a non-league
basketball contest. Southern is now
4-0 overall and heads the SVAC at 2·
0.
Southern, utilizing its awesome

quickness and aggressive play,
sprinted from the gale, quickly
taking complete control of the game.
Southern set the fast pace of the
game by taking advantage of its
team speed on the fast break. At the
same time . Southern applied its
sticky press, and before the evening
was over forced Symmes into 38
turnovers.

Mter the first periOd fireworks
Southern led 21H2, then reloaded its
artillery for the second period
display. Again Southern dominated
the action and held an impressive 4327lead at the half.
Ironically, Coach Carl . Wolfe
cleared his bench eariy in the first
half and the young Tornadoes
eagerly took command, setting a

pace just as effective as its veteran
members.
In the third period Southern outscored the crippled Vikings 18-10,
leading at the nclusion of the canto
66-37. In the final go-round Southern
lifted its press, but the damage had
been done. The five Southern juniors
finished the game and picked up the
pace to the tune of 27-9. Wieh constant hustle Southern coasted in for
the 93-16 win.
Kent Wolfe paced the Tornadoes
with a strong 26 point effort,
followed by Robert Brown with 10,
Zane Beegle eight, Jay Rees seven,
and Niek Bostick seven. Every Tor·
nado broke the scoring column.
Todd Robinson had 13 for Symmes
Valley while Jim Sheppard had 10.
Southern canned 38 of 77 attempts
for 49 percent from the floor, while
hitting 17 of 24 from the line for 70
percent. Symmes Valley hit 17 of 40
for 43 percent, while netting 12 of 21
from the line.
Southern had 38 rebounds led by
Robert Brown with seven, commilled 15 turovers, 21 fouls, had
seven assists, and 24 steals. Symmes
Valley had 30 rebounds, 38 turnovers,and22fouls.

the same style 59-18 led by Kevin
Curiman with 15. Shawn Myers had
six for SV. Coach Howie Caldwell's
reserves are also 4-0.

Hey , Mom &amp; Dad:

Bring the kids to see
SANTA CLAUS
Tues., Dec . 22
! Between 11:30 and ,
12 : 30
Santa will be arri\ling
by helicopter a t the
Spring Valley Ci nema .
We will also have two '
matinee shows at 1:00
and 3! 15. Your choice of ·
two special Chri stmas
shows. All seats just
Sl.OO.

"Christmas Thai

AI most Wasn't"
11

Southern plays at Hannan .Trace

Hugo the

Hippo''

on Friday.

==c-o

Box score :
Southern (9 3 ) Wolfe 2·2· 6 ;
Frederi ck 1-4-6; Rees 3· 1· 7; N .
Bostick 3·1·7; Brown 4-2'· 10; Cum ·
min s 3-0-6;
c. Bostick l -2· 4;
Rose berry 3-0·6; Beegle 4-0 8; Wolf e
13-0-26; Brinega r 0 ·1·1; Pape 1-4·6.
Totals 38-17-93 .
Symmes Valley (46) - Myer s 1·2·
4; Sheppard 4-2-10; Walsh 1-3·5;
Wh ite 2·0· 4; Burcham 3-1·7; Mil le r o3·3; Robinson6· 1· 13. Total s 17-12-46.
Score by quarters:

Southern
s. Valley

20 28 18 27- 92
l'l l5 10

9---46

DALE HILL
TRACTORS
215 W. "Main
Pomeroy

992-2668

Southern won the reserve tile in

STARTING"""'""'"
"uHosT sroRv "

busy~===~~~~~;;;~~,~~FTCEO~TI'"~'
"'';'"L'~""~

a great defensive game, although
The next game is tonight at Bid·
having a hard time of it on offense. welL
Eastern did recover the fourth
periOd, but did not have time to pull
The Eastern Eagle seventh grade
it out.
boys' basketball team has been
While playing Shade at home, ·steadily improving, howeve, droi&gt;'
Eastern claimed its first triumph of pect two very close decisions to
the year, its record now 1·2. Tonya Southern and Albuny recently.
Savoy led the way with six points,
In an exciting and wen played
Kristi Hawk and Erica Kissing'er game against Southern, the young
four points, Beverly Wigal three Eagles dropped a 36-32 decision. At
points, Dee Case two, and Joy Bran- the half Southern led by just one at
non two. Guthrie had 10 for Shade, 17-16. In the third quarter Eastern
while RhOdes netted four, and took a one point lead, but faltered
Holland two.
going down the stretch due to
Joy Brannon had six rebounds, several costly turnovers.
Kristi Hawk five, Erica Kessinger
Eastern's Eddie Collins had a
three and Kim Dent two. Eastern game high 20 points, followed by
was credited with playing more TOdd Wflson wjth eight, Darrin
aggressively, having good team- Drenner two, and Mitchell
work, and again playing good defen- Barringer two. For Southern Matt
se.
Harris had 16 points, followed by
The Eaglettes are coached by Joey Roush with six, Jamie Hensler
· Pam Douthitt.
four, and T. Gilbride, E. Milliron
each with three points.
Against Albany Eastern came a
step closer dropping a 37·34 decision.
Day. Charn-Jul 70, Dar.. Wright 61
Eddie Collins had a tremendous
Duy. Kiser 65, Gr~nv ew 47
efort
with 19 points, followed by
Day. Norlhridt-J:i: 101, Duy. Chri~ lian 80
D.ay. Patterson 73, W. Ca rrolllon 62
TOdd
Wilson
with four, Darrin DrenDay. Roth 88, Col. Marlon-Fnmkli n 8J
ner three, Mitchell Barringer six,
Delawan! 64, Col . Cenlral 66
Delphot&gt; St. John 75, Newurk 63 ·
and
Brent Norton two points. Allman
Dixie 61, Eaton 52
led Albany with 17 markers.
E . Canton 47, Qirrolllon f{l
Elid11 61, Allen E . 49
Eastern is coached by Coach Scott
Elyrlu Cath. 70, Cleve. Benedictine 67
Wolfe. Eastern's seventh and eighth
Emanuel Baptist 61, IMer City t7
E\lergreen 76, Tol. Northwood 64
grade teams play at home against
Federal Hocking 70, Mel!' &amp;1
HaMan Trace on Wednesday at
Fort JeMinji~a 82, Ayerav II~ 3!
Fort Recovery 78, Ansonia :.7
Tuppers Plains.

• ......... ,.,a._
________
_,.. ___
__ _
---·--·
·---

....

-----~· ......

....

DDJOU••ntllto~toi!HfwldP

........•.

--

.........,
_

High school cage results

Boardman 73, Cuyahoga Falls 57
B.alns ll.1 W. Llberly-&amp;llem 511

'

for a Friday practice.
Key baskets late in the game by
freshman forward Lester Rowe, who

28.

EHS junior high teams kept

book;"

~

because he was a few minutes late

"Ohio State beat us in two overtimes a year ago and it has sort of
stayed with me," said West Virginia
guard Greg Jones, who came off the
bench to score 13 points. "I thought
we should have won that game, so
this victory has a special significance to everyone on this team."

Meigs got tremendous efforts
from Bob Ashley, Randy Murray,
and Nick Riggs who netted 18, 17,
and 16 point efforts. Roger
Kovalchik had eight and Rick Edwards four for I\IHS.
Meigs grabbed the opening tip and
notcbed the first score when Bob
Ashley swished a,jumper to give
Meigs a ~ ·advantage. Although
Meigs hit the. scoring ranks first , it
was Federal Hocking that took control of the game. The Lancers em·
ployed a full court press the entire
length of the game before dropping
into its effective 2-3 zone. Meanwhile, Meigs stayed with its consistent man-to-man defense to stay
close.
The first period score ended at 14ll with Federal Hocking ahead, as
both.clubs proved to be fairly evenly
matched. By the end of the second
canto Meigs had gained one point,
aqd trailed by just two at the half, 3().

pressure defense, however, through
the efforts of Randy Murray Meigs

Gallipolis 58, Waahint{ton C. H. 5J
Garfield Hts. 12, SOlon 67
Greenon

a;, London 68

Hamilton 78, Cin. Hughes 2
Badin 53, Middletown
wick 49
HanUitOn

~

Fen-

· Hardin Northem M, DeGraff Riverside

47

'
Heath 611, Hebron Lakewood 39
Hudson W. Reserve fl7, Independence

51, OT

Jewett.SClo 59, Buckeye W. "
Kenton H, Adl 45
Kidron 71, Canton Heritage 31
Klrtllnd $1, Newbury 48

H. CNUh:olhe 17
lJberty Benton 84, qoidersville Perry 72
~

Uberty Center 7), N. Cenlrlll 64

Umt Cath. 61, Sidney 49
Lopn II,
Like 4t
Loraln Cath. . . Lorain Brookalde 83

t.-

l...ouilvtll~

101 Ak:r-011 Kenmore
Markin LGCaJ 71, ArcaaLI{TI 58

at~

• First $2,000 of Interest earned filing ajoirtt return;
$1,000 filing individually is TAX-FREE.
• $500 minimum deposit.
• One-year maturity with flxed ·rate based on 70% of the
average Investment yield for one-year U.S. Treasury Bills.
Six month Money- -lllollloo OM bt tronolonod lo tho "AH _ , ... -lfloatu p~or
to maturity wttllout uny wlthd,_l penalty.
· .

.Granville 50, J.ohnslown Northridge 45
1

DIAMOND SAVINGS '~
TAX·FREE "All Savers" Certificate

HUBBARD'S. GREENHOUSE
• Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias-Sl.OO &amp; Up
Christmas Wreaths, Can·
die Arrangements, Christ·
mas Cactus, Foliage Plants &amp; Hanging Baskets.
Open Daily 9to 5
Sun. 1 to 5
Phone 992-5776

DIAMOND SNINGS
AND -LOAN COMPANY
216 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6655

Ta)!: -Free Yield
Effe&lt;::tivo
Oec. l •Dec . 31 , 1981

�•

Page-4-The Dai

Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bengals capture AFC title
From AP Reports
Is'' five down, five to go in the
race for the National Football
League playoffs, and it could go
right down to the final game of the
regular season before the field is
completed.
Eleven clubs are still in contention
for the five berths remaining after
the weekend's games, in which two
~eams

cJinched

divi~ion

titles and

two others assured themselves of at
least 11dld-card spots.
Things are so tight that only one of
the 13 games played. Saturday and
Sunday - Chicago's 23~ victory
over Oakland - had no bearing
whatsoever on the postseason pic-

ture. And tonight's nationally
televised game between Atlanta and
Los Angeles will help determine the
Falcons' and other learns' fates.
On Sunday, the Cincinnati Bengals
won the American Conference Cen·

tral title for the first time in eight
years, beating Pittsburgh 17·10. The
Dallas Cowboys, meanwhile,
reclaimed the National C011fcrence
East crown, downing last year's
division
champions,
the

Monday night.
-In the Central, only divisionwinner Cincinnati makes the playoffs.
- Denver takes the West if It beats
Chicago or if San Diego loses. If the
Chargers win so bOth they and Denver finish 1~. San Diego wins the
title through a better intradivislon
mark (8-2 vs. 5-3), Either West team
can win a wild card only if the Jets
Jose.
The NFC is much more complicated, and took conference officials until late Sunday to figure
out. Here's how it looks:
-In llle East, Philadelphia can
clinch a wild card if Atlanta loses to
Los Angeles tonight or if the Eagles
beat St. Louis next Sunday. The
Giants can gain a wild card with a
win over Dallas if Philadelphia loses
or, if the Eagles also win, if Green
Bay loses. Washington can win a
wild card only if &amp;.'! teams are involved.
-In the Central, the Tampa BayDetroit winner takes the division
title, ev.en if Green Bay also ·wins;
the Packers can lake the title only if
they beat the Jets and the Bucs and
Uons tie. Green Bay takes a wild

Philadelphia Eagles, 21-10.
Both the Miami Dolphins and the
Buffalo Bills clinched spots in the card with a win over the Jets or a
AFC playoffs. The Dolphins beat the loss by the Giants, and at least one
Kansas City Chiefs 17-7 to remain loss by the Falcons. The Bucs-Uons
atop llle East, a half-game ahead of loser takes a wild card only if 8-8
the Bills, who beat New England 19- teams are involved. And Minnesota
10.
was still alive, although just barely.
Miami apd Buffalo play in the It will take a Falcon loss to the Rams
Orange Bowl nex:t Saturday, ·with and having IHl teams involved In the
the winner becoming division champ second wild-eard detennination;
and the loser taking a wild card.
then, the Vikings make it on the
In ot'her games Sunday, basis of net points within the conWashington beat Baltimore 38-14; ference, the fifth tie-breaking level.
Green Bay defeated New Orleans 35- · -In the West, an Atlanta win
7; the Giants downed St. Louis 211-10;
tonight would eliminate both the
San Diego edged Tampa Bay 24-23; Vikings and the Redskins. Atlanta
Denver topped Seattle 23-13; San can take a wild card with two wins
Francisco, already the winner of the plus a loss by the Giants. The
NFCWest, beatHoustonm.
Falcons would also take a wild card
On Saturday, the New York Jets if .a lllree-way lie developed with
nipped Cleveland 14-13, while Philadelphia an.d Green Bay or if a
Detroit defeated Minnesota 45-7.
four-way tie developed with the
Eliminated from playoff con- Giants, Philadelphia and Green
tention during weekend play were
Bay.
four clubs - the Steelers, the Chiefs,
Bengals11, SleelenllO
the St. Louis Cardinals and the
The victory gave the Bengals their
Oakland Raiders.
first division title in eight years and
Those still in the chase for the fjve eliminated the Steelers, 8-7. from the
remaining slots are the Jets, the playoffs for the second year in a row.
Broncos and the Chargers in the Ken Anderson passed for two touchAFC, and the Eagles, Giants, Red- downs, and the Bengals' defense inskins, Buccaneers, Lions, Packers, tercepted Pittsburgh quarterback
Vikings and Falcons in the NFC.
Mark Maione twice.
So the AFC's playoff possibilities
Cowboy• 20, Eagles 10
took like.this :
Since the first day of training
- In the East, the Miami-Buffalo camp, llle Cowboys, 12-J, had aimed
loser gets a wild card. The Jets can to take the NFC East title away from
clinch the other wild card from the' Philadelphia.
conference by beating Green Bay, or
Danny White passed for two touchif San Di ego loses to Oakland next downs, including an 8-yarder to

u.s.

•
WIDS

Monday, December 14,1981

.Feeney Bennett members to serve at bloodmobile

Tony Hill that was set up when
Eagles kick returner John Sciarra
bobbled a punt late in the second
quarter.
Dolpblns 17, Clllefs 7 •
Touchilowl18 by Tony Nathan and
Andra Franklin, and Uwe von
Schamann's 39-yard field goal lifted
the Dolphins to 10+1. Kansas City,
8-7, losing for the third straight week
and the fifth time in seven ga•es,
was eliminated from the playoff
.

race.

The Feeney Bennett Post 128
American IAglon AuDllary mel
recently, followiDs a belled steak
di.nnt!r ..rved to both the legion and
the auxiliary.
President Erma Hendricks
opened the meeting, which was attendeq by eight seniors, and
chaplain PeuY eaton led the group
in prayer. New members Jean
Gibnore and Carolyn Triplett were
welcomed. The pledge and preamble
were repeated by all preaent,
followed by the reading and a~
proval of !!&lt;Crelary and treasurer
reports.
Areport was given on the field ser·
vice orientation, held Saturday,

.

liOlli II, Patriots 10 ·
Joe Cribbs caught a scoring pass
from Joe Ferguson and rushed for
153 yards to increase his season total
to 1,0J3 mark for Buffalo. Roosevelt
Lea!&lt;. also se01 E'd • TD for the Bills,
10-5, and Uefensi\"a enfi Ben Williams
tackled Pats quarterbllck Matt
Cavanaugh in the end zone for a
safety.
Chargers 24, Buccaneers 23
Roil Benirschke kicked a 29-yard
field goal with 45 seconds left to play
to lift the Chargers, 9-U, over Tampa
Bay, preventing llle Bucs, 8-7, from
clinching the NFC Central title.
Bucs running back James Wilder
scored touchdowns for a 23-21 lead
with 8: 06left, but BiU Capece missed
the extra point after the Bucs' final
TD.
Broacos 23, Seahawks 13
The Bronocs stayed a game in
front of San Diego in the AFC West
as Craig l)iorton threw for one touchdown and Rick Parras ran for
another. Denver, 10-5, woo for the
eighlll time al home this season
without a loss. Seattle is :i-10.
Uons 45, Vlklngs1
The Uons, 8-7, beat the Vikings, 78, behind quarterback Eric Hipple,
who threw for a pair of TDs. Billy
Sims scored on a 14-yard run and
Robbie Martin returned a punt 45
yards for a TO for Detroit.
Packen 35, Saints 7
Lynn Dickey threw for a clubrecord-tying five touchdowns to
move the Packers into a three:.way
tie with Detroit and Tampa Bay for
the NFC Central lead at 8-7. George
Rogers scored for New Orleans, 4-11,
on a !-yard run.
Giants 20, Cardinals It
Defensive end George Martin's 2().
yard touchdown return willl a
recovered fwnble keyed the victory
for the Giants, 8-7, who eliminated
the Cardinals, 7-8. The Giants
sacked rookie quarterback Neil
Lomax lllree times.
Redsklnll38, Colts U
Joe Theisman passed for tqo
touchdowns and ran for a third to
lead Washingtoo, 7-8. Bert Jones
lllrew TO passes. to Ray Butler and
Reese McCall lor Baltimore, lc14.

ON TilE
- Clncllllllll Be••ls' qiW'
terback Ken Aaderaon 1'11118 lor 1 tm-yord gain as
Steelen' Jack Ham, 511, moves In to make the slop

I

For the record.

NatJOIIIIIBukelbtll A.s~JUCiatluo
Slturdlly'• G.mes
AUanta 108, Bat~ton 91
Ind.Jana 101, New Jersey 88
Milwaukee 104, New York 116
Denver 120, Clevt!land 115
San Antooio lll, Utah f1
Philadelphia m, Chicago 114, OT
HOU!iton 101, Dallas f1
Wushington 106, Ph~ntt 118
Seattle 117, J:ketroit 111
Goldt.m Slale 98, Kansas City 98
SIIOdly's Gamn
Los Angele~ 122, Golden Slatt&gt; liB
Mllbaukee 127, Philadelphia 101
SeatU~ 91, San Diego 14
Portland Ill!, Detroit 99
MUIIIby'N Game11

No

1

duriDg third quarter NFL action Sunday in Pftllsboorglo.
The Bengal&amp; won 17-10. (AP Laserphoto).

~wnes

San Francls(,'O 28, HOWitOn 6
Dallas 21, Philildelphia 10
Denvt!r 23, SeatUe l3
Moaday'11Game
Atlanta at Los Angeles
S.tunll.y, Dttemher 11
Dallas at New Yort: Giants
Buffalo at Miami
s.dly, ~btr II
Denver at Chica10
Green Bay at New York Jets
Kansas City at Min11er1o&amp;a
St.LoWB at Philadelphia
Tampa Bay at Detroit
New England at Baltimore
San Francisl'O at New Orlean~&gt;
Cincinnati al Atlanta
Cleveland at Seattle
Pittsbw-gh at H01.131on
Washington at · l.b.l Angeles
Munday, Det&gt;embtr %1
Oakland at San Dit'go

•

scheduled
Tuelldll)''• GauneY
New York at Atlanta, 7:35o p.m.
Milwaukee at Indiana, 7:35 p.m.
Dalla~ at Washington, 8;06 p.m.
Cleveland at Chicai!O, 8:35 p.m.
Phoenix ut Houst011, 9:«i p.m.
San Antonio at Utah, 9:30 p.m.
Seattle at Denver, 9:31i p.m.
San Diego at Portland, 10:30 p.m.
Dt!troit .at Golden State, 10:35 p.m.

DID REGUI...AR SEASON
N11tiea.ll Htttlky kaJUe
Sll8dly'~ Gamet~

Bo.ston 5, Colorado t·
Quebec .f, Buffalo .f, lie
Chlca.go 8, Hartford 3
Detroit %, Winnipeij 1

TOURNAMENTS
&amp;.yoaClaNk
Clt.•"fv lllp
SW Louisiana 57, reano st. a1
C&amp;pilal CllyCiutk
,

N•tlunal Foolhllll!Aapr
Suoday'• Rtsul..
Buffall) 19, New England 10
Cincinnati 17, Pitlllburl(h 10
Green Bay 35, New Orleans 7
New York Giants ~. st.LouiN 10
San Diego 24 , Tampa Bay 23
Miami 17, Kansas City 7
ChicaiiO 23. Oakland II

l:hamo_l,

Kentucky St. 75, F'lorlda A&amp;M 70

c.....,CJauk

Brll(~m Youn~na

6.1

0

0
t 'lnt Ulllon lnvitatioblll

1

CbampiH11hJp
UNC-Ctlarlotte 78, Davidson 71
DUal Clanir
ChampiODIIblp
Illinois 76,
•

Te:w~

A&amp;M 63
lDdiaal Claulr

c............

Indiana 80. PeM St. Sl

Polan,..U Mnnurilll IavlbiUoul

Cloomploolblp
Marshall 67. Oklabortut St. 65
'1111rdPLaee
Vennont &amp;3, Cnmell 58
WeekeodSpurtl TniiSIIt'IIOOS
By "De A.uoclated Prn11
1
BASKETBAll.
National B1111ketball A.l~laUon
CLEVELAND CAVA.LIERS- Si~ned M~l
Bennett, £orward.
FOQTBA.U. .
,
Natillftiii.Football League
KANSAS CITY CWEFS- Waived Jame!!
Murph~·, wide ret.'flver. Activated Carl~
carson, wide rectiver.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS- Placed
Aaron Mitchell, safety, on ~ Injured reserve lilll. Sjl(ned Jeff Delaney, ddensive
back.
HOCKEY
Nalloul H~trkeJ League
LOS ANGELES KINGS- AnnowiCed the
retirement of Rick Martin, ll!ft wing .
COI.l.EGE
GEORGIA TF.CH-Announced the resignation of Ken Blair, defensive coordina tor; Terry Tuley, receiver coach; and
Jeff McLean, running back l'DaCh.
SOUTH CAROUNA-Fired Jim Carlen,
athletic director and head football coach. '

The Uaily Sentinel
uilPS 1,._1101

A Dlvi1io11 of MultimNU!, lac.

Davis Cup in his first year as caplain.
·
McEnroe, playing on his fourth
Davis Cup team, pointed Oijt that
Ashe has built a reputatioo as a gentleman. McEnroe is known more for
his outbursts, which drew fines and
a suspension this year.
"It's really a tough situation to be
coach of a Davis Cup 'team,"
McEnroe said sympathetically.

I

"'The players expect something, and
the press expects something else.''
Tony Trabert, former U.S. Davis
Cup captain for five yean, reportedly intervened Sunday during
McEnroe's final match. Trabert
said he was asked by the team doctor to come into the dressing room at
the break after the third set.
"'! was under the impression that

~~~r1•11 ~~ay92S 1 ~·~-;o!nau sL.

MIDWEST

Toledo 115, Detroit Ill, OT
S..tunlaty '• CvUrJr Baakelbllll Scuret~
EAST
Boston Coli. 82, New Hamp:shire 00
Dartmouth M, ·Bates f9
FairleiKh D!ckinsoo 83, Howard U. 71
Fordham 'lf, Syrac\Uie ~8
Geor,.:e WashinKton .U, DuqueSne 40
Georl(etown, D.C. 7$, Amerkan U. 63
Long Island U. 10, Hobtra 72, OT
l.oyol11, Md. 53, WaMner 48
Maine 70, BrOOklyn COli. 64
Mii~hWiells 75, Harvard 73
Prineeton 72, Duke {)I;
Providence 78, Brown 8$
Rutgers 67, l.arayeUe 60
St.Bonavenhar~ 73, Wheelin~ 50
St.Francia, N.Y. 82, Siena ~
St.John's 15, Manll.!ittan '(;4
Sl.JotlePh's, Maine 99, Newport 63

Temple 81, Rider 72
.
Villanova 7~. Penn Ill
W.Virginia 73, Ohio Sl. 8B
W.Vii"JI:inia Tech 17, W.VIrl!:lnla St. 64
Yale 53, Trinity, conn. 45
SOlJ'Ilf
Aillblma 79. Vanderbilt 6(1

John and Arthur (Ashe) were not
talking," Trabert said. "! talked tb
John and asked him if he wanted to
hear my thoughts on bow to play

Pu_bUshed every aftemoon, Monday through •
Fnday, Ill Court street, by the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company · Multlmedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Oh.io .:i769, 992-21S&amp;. Set!ond cla.s.!l
posta11e paid at Porberoy, Ohio.

aerc."

Member: The Associated Pffll.'l,lnland Daily Press Association and the Amer1can
New»paper Publishers Aisocl.atlon, National
Advertising Reprt&gt;sentative , Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, New
York, New York 10017.

Trabert said he understood the
pressures and problems Ashe was
encountering in his first year as captain.
"I fr.el sorly !r-r Ar-thur," Trabert
suid, "it's 6 todj;l: i••t."
,
But A.&lt;he wasn't feelilo£ •0rry for
himself after the victory Slillday,
· saying he'd like to stay on as U.S ..
captain.
11
1 don't want to leave," Ashe said.
"!love it. It's a natural extel18ion of
my tennis life."
Ashe was disappointed when Jhnmy Cunnors, the United States' No. 2
ranked player, chose nol to play in
the finals. He said Sunday that Connon would be invited to play on the
1982team.
"He'U get an invitation like the
.other guys who could play singles,"
Ashe said. "But we aren't going to
chase him anymore, •that's for
sure."

I

College .results
By The Auuciattd Pmla
Sulldlly'sColle&amp;r BulletbaJJ Scum

73

Clem.'lon 67, South CMrollna 6::i
Florida 81. Florida St. 6S
Gt.'Urgia 113, Ca~Newnwn 61
J..oui»ville 83, .Tennes.see St. 58
Memphis St. 101, Indiana St. 89
Mert.'t!r a:J, J&amp;l·k»onville II
.
Middle Tenn. 119, E.Kentucky lit
Morehead St. 73, Tem~ Tech 71 OT
MorehoW:lC 78, Georl{ia St. n
'
Morray St. 67, YoungHtoWh St 63
N.Carollna 75, South Florida :it
N.CaroliJ\11 St. 74, Maryland $3
TemW!IHee a&amp;, Auburn 79
Tunn.-Martin 8:), MiS!Iiludrpl Sl. n
1\.llallt' 111, Rgosevelt, II . r.a
Vlr~o:lnia St. Hit, St.Paul's· 102
Vir~inia Tech 100, Old Dalninion 72

•

'

Pomeroy.

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Daytnn G2, Xavle!', Ohto &amp;1, 01'
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NOTICE

BEARCAT" 5

SEARS OF POMEROY WILl BE OPEN MONDAY

'
DECEMBER 14th, AND TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15th,
FROM 9 A.M. TO l P':M. -SO THAT OUR CUSTOMERS
CArr STOP BY OUR STORE AT THEIR CONVENIENCE

wnt ,.,.
. Pamon1y, Ohio

IIAIIS. IIOIIUCk AND CO.

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp;JEWHRY
"The Two-ln·One Store"

.,-_;Money lkll

ISearsI~·

sggoo

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AND PICK-UP THEIR ORDERED MERCHANDISE.
IMIIfertla'l Dlw-..G cw

It has more features and more excitement. . )tor
less than you might expect to pay. Scans 8 channets across 5 bands. Great for the lirst-ttme
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ONLY , '

Middleport, Ohio

St'"'· ·.

and Bernice Hoffman; Grand Chap- Christmas program in the
ter committee chairman, Heart seasonably decorated chapter room
and dining area, featuring poin- '
Fund, Lois Pauley, and the
meeting's sunshine page was Helen settias, swags, and candles.
Johnson. .
The Worthy Matron presented a
The collection was given to Estarl. reading, and Ruby Diehl read the
Birthdays of Mildred Jeffers and second chapter of the Book of Luke.
Marjorie Rice were celebrated, and 'Away In a .Manger' and 'Silent
the Deputy Grand Matron thanked Night' were sung by Charldine
officers for the dozen red roses she Alkire and Jane Wise, who also acreceived at the November chapter companied on the piano.
meeting.
Past Matrons Christmas party
The singing of "If I Have Wounded . and dinner will be held Wednesday,
Any Soul Today ' concluded the Dec. 16, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
meeting which was followed by a Jim Nelson. Dinner will he served at
6:30p.m.

to the East. Also recognized were
Past Matrons Lois Pauley, Pauline
Atkins, Donna Nelson, Sharon
Jewell, Stella Atkins, Lois Thorn·
pson, Bernice Hoffman, AvaneU
George, Frances Young, Betty
Bishop, Marjorie Riee, and Rulll
Earlewine, and Past Patrons Harold
Rice, Chester King, Charles King,
Don Wilson, Doug Bishop, and Norman Will. Fifty year member Ruby
Diehl was present at llle meeting.
Officers attending with previous
grand appointments were Junior
Past Deputy Grand, Estelle Ankrum

SINGING GOODBYE - Still full of that 4-H spirit alter a week ol
worbbops at Natlonalf.H Cougressln Chicago, Ill., tills 4-H honors group
takes its turn to lead a chorus of farewell soDgll before memben of West
Virginia delegation reluru to their respective eoanties. The teens' out·
standing 4-H careers earned them expense-paid trips to the aanual
educational conference. Among West Virginia's 31-member delegation
were: DeRose Stephens of Point Pleasant &lt;sitting at plano), who exceUed
in 4-H swine projects, and Mike Douglas of Poca, who excelled in citizenship projects.

Harrisooville Cbapter 255 Order of
Eastern Star recently held its
regular meeting at the Harrisonville
Masonic Temple, with Pl!.l!linc
Atkins, worthy matron and Chester
King, worthy patron, presiding.
The meeting opened in regular
form with aU officen present except
the chaplain, marsbaU, and EJecta,
who were all reported ill. Protem officers were Ruby Diehl, Sharon
Jewell, and Harold Rice. The flag
was presented, with the group
singing 'God Bless America.' .
Deputy Grand Matron Gracie
Wilson was presented and escorted

Christmas concert scheduled

Meigs' Hearthstone Class holds Christmas party

The Chancel choir of the Mid· 'Watclunan, TeU Us of the Night',
dleport Church of Christ will present 'The Promised One', 'Angels from
a program ol Christmas music Sun- . the Realms of Glory', '0 Come, All
day, Dec. :11, at the church, located Ye Faithful', 'The First Noel', 'Go
on the comer of 5th and Main Tell it on the Mountain', and 'We
Streets.
Waitfor the Coming of Jesus'.
The choir, which ~be standing
Maryln ·Wilcox will direct the
in the shape of a ChriBtmaB tree, wiU presentation, and Clarice Erwin will
sing a nwnher of choral pieces, serve as·organlst. ~evin Loving and
which include, 'Glory to God in the Don Erwin are in charge of lighting
IDghest', 'Angels We Have Heard On and scenery respectively.
High', 'Hark the Herald Angels
The public is invited.
Sing', 'A Child This Day is Born',

Mis3ionary group holds party
The missionary . society of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church held
a Christmas party Thursday
evening at the Meigs County lnfinnary, which included a program
presented by members of the church.

Betty Will opened with a scripture
,reading, followed by several poems
and a story by carol Cool&lt;. Mary
Skinner, a guest, led singing of
'Christmas carols, and was joined by
Betty Will in a duet. Refreshments

were served, and each resident of
the infinnary was given a gift.
After the party, the regular
missionary meeting was conducted
at the church. A love gift offering
was taken by Carol Cook, and a
'special offering for projects was also
coilected. The group decided to send
a $10 gift to Steven Wood, their
scholarship student.
The meeting was closed with a
prayer circle, and refreshments
were then served.

Weaver retires from service
M&amp;Sgt. David L. Weaver, son of air force.
Following a brief vacation with
Mrs. Wilda Br~riker of New Haven,
W. Va., and the late Chesler M. relatives in the Bend area, Sgt.
Weaver of New Haven, recently Weaver began employment with the
retired from the U.S. Air Force after Yellow Bird Express at Adams
:11 years of service, including tours Field, Little Roek, an air freight
of duty in Okinawba, Thailand, and charter service, where he will pilot
various types of aircraft.
Saudi Arabia.
Sgt. Weaver is married to the forAt the time of his retirement, Sgt.·
mer
Marge Zielinski of Omaha,
Weaver was stationed at the Uttle
Nebraska,
and the couple has three
Rock Air Force Base, Little Rock,
children,
Donna,
16; Deanna, 13;
Arkansas, where he served_ as
and
Nicholas,
4.
They
reside at 69
squadroo maintenance supervisor.
Aloha
Circle,
North
UU!e
Rock,
He receiv.ed several awards and
Arkansas.
citations during his career with the

The aMual Christmas party of the
Hearthstone Class of the Middleport
First Baptist Church was held recen·
tly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Werner. A dinner at the Masonic
temple served by members of
Evange)ine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, preceded the dinner.
Violet Campbell, president,
welcomed the group extending
special greetings to Mr. and Mrs.

New members join Slinderella
Three new members were taken in reaching her goal. Runner-up was
when area Slinderella classes met Mrs. Freda Furley.
The Pomeroy class met and took
last week.
in
a new member Tuesday evening.
Monday the class at Chester took
Vicki
Ferrell received her 20 pound
in one member. Charlotte Smith and
ribbon
and certificate. Mabel RamsLeslie Wells tied for greatest weight
borg lost the most weight, and Dean
loss, and Sue Kibble was runner-up .
The Mas.on class, meeting · Barnitz and Betsy Stivers tied as
Tuesday morning lock in a new rwmers-up.
Thursday morning, exercise class
me.mber also, willl Juanita Sayre
met
and Jackie Reed lost the most
losing llle most weight. She also
weight.
Cora Folmer was the run- .
received her 35 pound loss ribbon
and a slim and trim ribbon for

Shrinettes' party Tuesday
The Twin City Shrinettes will hold
their Christmas dinner for members
and their husbands Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy at 6:30p.m.
Following the meal, members will
meet at the home of Jane Clat-

ner~ up.

Next week llle classes will be
holding a Christmas dinner and gift
exchange. Anyone with questions
can call JoAnn Ne.,.some, !192-3382.

A Limited Number

Of The New

Meigs History

Book

r··-------.,

!Orders· are now being~
!taken for decorated cakes!
! "nd cookies for Christmas.~
M Place your orders now. g

1

~
!

worthy, Middleport. Members who
plan to attend are asked to call Edna
Slusher, !192-3407 by Monday; and a
$2 donation for llle bums institute is · ~
asked.

POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP
216 E. Main 'St.
Phone 992-2971

ON SALE NOW
For

'2600

--- -

~

At the Middle,Port &amp;
Pomeroy Library thru
Christmas.

~

Books to be mailed will
cost

~

J

I

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for your year 'round entertainment

Entertaining is more fun with these homewarm ing
deep tufted bars from Krebs Stengel. All have carefree Formica•
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45 DEGREE CORNER BAR

ty White, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
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In your choice of Chestnut or Pecan.

Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Harris, Sr., Pomeroy. The wedding
took place on Nov. 4.

Area Thanksgiving dinners
Stephenson
• The family of Mamie stephenson
gathered at the home of her
dall(lhter and 1011-ln-iaw, Jim ard
Pawette Farley, In Marielta for a
Tllanksgiving dinner.
Attendlnl were Mrs. stephenson's
901111 ard daqltlen, Jerry 11nd Barb
Colmer, Harold 1llld Nancy Whit·
teldnd, David and Tanuny Johnson,
Randy Snider, and Jlnunie Snider.
Her grandchildren and greatgraDdchiidren there were Shari
B18ekwel~ the fonner Sh8ri Colmer,
and daughter, Amber, DIU and Tim
Colmer, Davy 1llld Jamie Leach,
Rlcti Farley, Shawn and Daniel
WNitekind, and Jmmy Johnson.
Later In lbe day, Mn. Blackwell
rec:ltfed a telephone call from her
hallilnd, Steve, who Ia stationed at
Fort lllill. ,._ lor bulc trllnlng.
He .-tly en1iated with the Ohio

Netlonal Guard.

•
J

·Brannon
Mr. and Mrs. Don Grueser, Akron,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jay, Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gerlaoh, Tara
1llld Alison, Mr. and Mrs. William
Grueser, Clyda Allensworth, and
Nina Russell were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Brannon.

BLACK &amp; WHITE BAR
•

A dramatic refreshment cen:er with padded arm rf!st and
front of black and while vinyl. Walnut top , sides and
base. Measures 48".

31" TALL SWIVEL BAR STOOL

Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris and Mr.
and Mn. Bob Adams have returned
from a trip to Florida where they
visited Mr. and Mr .s AI Alto at Lantana and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall
and children at Weal Pabn Beach.
Enrbute borne they viailed Mr. and
Mrl. Norman Norria, Orlando, and
took in many places of Interest includln&amp; Dilney World and Sea
World .

$79ea.00

Gleaming tubular chrome base ; black vinyl, with white
trim , padded seal. ~hoose either swivel or stationary style.

Return trom trip

-INGELS FURNITURE and JEWELRY
"IHE ni).IN.ONE STORE"
MIDDlEPORT OHIO

,,

Each

' .

. . . . . . . Jlllii:IO&gt;lliSlllllllllllllilllll

Childs and Harris wed
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
.William D. Childs, Middleport, announce the marriage of their
daughter, Sheila, to Thomas Ray

ment.s were served to the Rev. Mr.
and Mrs. Mark McClung, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Camphell, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Chase, Mr. and Mrs. John
Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. John Metzger,
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
David Darst, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Hood, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Anthony,
Mr. and Mrs, Carol Cleland, Mr. and
Mrs. John Werner, Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Baker, Mrs. Gibson, Mrs.
Kate Wilson, and Mrs. Mary
Hughes.

...-------------1

Gruesers observe 1Oth
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Grueser
celebrated their lOth wedding an·
nlversary on Dec. 6. Dioner guests
were Karen Green, ThO Plains; Bet-

Mark McClung on behalf of toe
class, ~nd in a response the minister
thanked the class for the gift and extended appreciation for the mem·
bers and their diligent work in the
church. He invited church members
to an open house at the parsonage
Sunday.
Gifts were exchanged with Dndie
Cleland in the role of Santa. Refresh-

John Tucker, Mrs. Keith Wilson, and
Mrs. Flora Marie Gibson. She also
thanked the Wemers lor opening
their home which was extensively
decorated for~ holiday season.
Devotions were by Mrs. Clara Mae.
Darst on the topic, "How t.o Keep
Christmas" followed by prayer.
Mrs. Campbell presented a
monetary gift to the Rev. and Mrs.

MIDWEST

101 West

.

POSTMASTER: Send address to The Daily
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

ArAnsas St. 24, WisA}reen Bay 23
Ceni.Mk:hipn 78, Muk.lncwn 11
Cincinnati fl6, Michigan St 1$

Ohio
ISearsI Pomeroy,
Main

JT'SOURS-JohnMeEaroeollbeUldledllllltlllllldlllle
high above hl1l bead lfler be defealed J-Lall Qere fll Mil 'I I 7,1,
1, w;w, w durla&amp;lbelr,...... mateh Saaday 111 ctnelllulllo diDibe
Davis Cup for the Ualled Sillies. tooklns oo lathe u. S• ...., traJ-. BDJ
Norris. (AP Lalerpbolo).

Cards were signed for Mrs. Jean
Moore
and Mrs. Beulah Strauss, who
The Chi11icothe veterans birthday
party is scheduled for Thursday, are ill.
Mrs . Crooks reported on the
Dec. 17, and members interested in
going made plans to meet at the hall meeting ol the lighting committee
at 8:30a.m. that day. The preceding and the cooperation of the club with
Tuesday, a cookie-making sesl!ion the Middleport Garden Club in the
will be held at 12 noon to prepare for home decoration contest which is
the party. A $10 doiultioo was made scheduled for Friday, Dec. 1~. at
6:30p.m.
by Freda Clark toward the event.
Refreshments were served from a
Plans were made for the auxiliary
table
decorated in th~ Yuletide
Mrs. Pat Holter, thanking the club
llleme,
with Smith serving. Small
for lllelr help with the coffee hour at
llle regional meeting, held at hand-made wreaths were given as
Eastern High School. Mrs. Blakeslee favors.
The club wiU not meet in January
was congratulated on having won
the Horticulture Sweepstakes award and February. The next meeting will
be March 10 at the home of Mrs.
at the Chrisbnas flower show.
Lillian Moore.

Nov. 28, at Lancaster. Sympathy
eards were sent to Mrs. Enna Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Jack King, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Clatworthy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Christy.
A party at the Arcadia Nursing
Home, Coolville, was held Monday,
Nov. 23, with members Jerry Parsons, Sonia Parsons, Peggy Caton,
Sue Uttle, !!:Ita Will, Ethel Hawk,
and Nettle Hayes aUendlng. Thirty·
six towel bibs were made and taken
to the facility, and the next Arcadia
party is scheduled for Dec:28.
The unit will be serving at the
Bloodmobile Wednesday, which is to
be conducted at the multi-purpose
building, Mulberry Heights, in

Recognizes deputy grand matron, past matrons

Davis Cup despite disagreement

CINCINNATI (AP) - For most of the finals, occasionally walking
three days, they were a study in con- from his chair to the wnpire to
trasts - U.S. Davis Cup team Cap- discuss a call. When McEnroe
tain Arthur Ashe sitting placidly at engaged in heated exchanges with
courtside while John McEnroe the Argentine team during a doubles
fwned and won on the court.
match, Ashe came onto llle court to
But when the United States clin- calm McEnroe and later got into an
ched its 27th Davis Cup on the animated argwnenl with him betstrength of McEnroe's singles play ween games.
Sunday , the two celebrated with a
Ashe, who played on 10 U.S. Davis
hug.
Cup teams between. 1963-78, took a
"We both want to win. We always more passive role than counterpart
had different ways of going about CarlosJunquet of Argentina, who ofit," McEnroe said. "I'm a lot more ten popped out of his chair to argue a
emotional. He just sits there, more point.
·
or less."
''_i'·m not a cheerleader
Ashe remained tow-key for most of =~~·~·:,sa~id Ashe, wiru"ing

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'

�.....
Page-·6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Social Calendar
Tuesday

6:30 p.m. Tuesday in east-west
wing at Veterans Memorial
Hospital; party to be held.

POMEROY - The Baptist
Women of the Pomeroy First
Southern Baptist Church will
meet Tuesday, Dec. 15, at 7:30
p.m. Members are asked to brin~
fresh fruit £or preparation of
baskets lor shut-ins.

HARRISONVILLE Order of
the Eastern Star, Past Matrons
Club, Christmas party at the .
horne or Jim an4.Qj)Ma Nelson,
•
Wednesday night, I •'6~39
·..
lllembers are to take their
husbands and a $3 gilt exchange.

,.m.

TilE JUNIOR HIGH and senior
high bands or Eastern High
School, directed by James
Wilhelm, will present a concert of
Christmas music at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the high school
auditoriwn. Ugh! refreshments
will be served following the concert which is open to the public.

REV. BIU. Reynolds will be
the guest speaker at the Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church,
Middleport, Wednesday evening.
Services begin at 7:30p.m.

prizes will be awarded and
refreshments will be served.

JUNIOR AND senior high bands, directed by James Wilhelm,
will present Christmas concert,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Eastern
High School Auditoriwn. Light
refreshments served following
concert; public invited.

Brenda Diane Fry, daughter or
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Fry, 8 Cole St.,
Pomeroy, has been accepted lor
membership in the United States
Collegiate Wind Band, a highly
selective

musical

Fry

OHIO VALLEY Corrunandery
24 will confer the Order or Malta
on Wednesday, Dec. 16. All sir

burg,

musical

shrines,

chtesgarten,

places

music interest including

knights are invited.

lnnsbruck,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Page- 7

Announcements
AVietnam veterans dinner will be
held , Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
American Legion, Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, horne. All VIetnam veterans are invited to attend
aod wiU be guests for the dinner. The
Meigs County service officer wiD be
present to discuss and answer

questions concerning
benefits.

veterans

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

·Honor roll

1:30p.m. !o5 :30p.m.

Wednesday

Monday, December 14, 1981

organization

which will make a concert tour of
England and seven European coun·
tries next July and August.
Diana plays French horn in the
Meigs High School Band, directed by
Douglas M. Hill.
The invitation to tour with the
United States Collegiate Wind Band
was received from Prof. AI G.
Wright, director or bands emeritus
at Purdue University and L'Onductor
· of allll of the previous United States
Collegiate Wind Band tours since
they started in 1971. Associate conductor is Gladys Stone Wright who is
the rounding. P.resident of the Women
Band Directors National Assn.
The United States Collegiate Wind
Band will travel lor three weeks,
July 3-Aug. 5, in England, France,
Gennany, Austria, Italy, Holland
and Switzerland. Among th'e citles in
which concerts wi1l be perfonned
are London, Paris, Lucerne, Salz-

BLOODMOBILE

at senior citizens center from

Wednesday

U. S. Collegiate Wind Band
accepts Pomeroy resident ·

prior to their departure from Ken·
nedy Airport on July 13. While in
New York City the band will play in·
vitational concerts at .the Lincoln
Center lor the Performing Arts and
in the Plaza or the Americas at
Rockefeller Center.
Acceptance for membership in the
band is considered a musical honor
or national importance. Members
are selected from across the United
States once each year.
In addition to performing concerts
members or the wind band will visit

THE MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League will have
its annual Christmas dinner at
the Meigs Inn Wednesday at 6:30
p.m. followed by a party at the
home of Mrs. Jlm Soulsby . Members are to take a homemade tree
decoration and a gilt for the infirmary residents.

POMEROY - Artcraft Concepts open house will beh eld by
Kathy Borders, 32852 SR 33,
Pomeroy, Tuesday, from 12 noon
to 3 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. Door

Monday, December 14,1981

Lugano,

Munich,

Ber-

Vernona,

Cologne, Milan and Heidelburg.
Members of the band will assembly in New York City for rehearsals

or

musewns and

Richard Wagner's house in Lucerne,
Mozart's birthplace in Salzburg and
Beethoven's house in Bonn.

Students or the Letart Falls
Elementary School making a grade
of "B" or above in all their subject8
to be listed on the honor roll were announced today .
First grade: Nick Adams, Nickle
Beegle, Jell Butcher, Cory Rowe,
Darrell Sayre, and Kyle Wickline.
Second grade: Jody Hayes,'Jody
Hill, Brenda Hunt, Terry Gloeckner,
Robin Manuel, and Dawn $huler.
Third grade: Jason Shain, Stacy
Craig.
Fourth grade: Crystal Craig, Tim·
my Powell.
Fifth grade: Tracy Beegle,
Christrina Cooper, Carol Fisher, and
Crystal Hill.
Sixth grade: Bill Hupp, Donita
Manuel, Trish Mulherin, and Dina
Shuler.
EMR class: Tanuny Clark, Joan
Evans, Loretta Taylor, and Brenda
Teaford.

LeVIS
The original heavyweight
un-washed Levi Jeans.

flARES
STRAIGHT LEG
Reg, $21.95

MEN'S

NOW

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Reg. 529.00

LADIES' . NOW '21.75
. Also Student Sizes

NEW YORK
aDTHING HOUSE

CANDYSTRIPERS meeting

Astrograph

·.
,.. ,.

December 15, 1981
When youde~ire to, you are able to make friends easily. This inner

., ' ..

urge to do so will be greatly enhanced this coming year. Your circle or
both acquaintances and intimates will be substantiallY. enlarged.
SAGmARIUS INov. 23-Dec. 21) Dealings with persons who live
in distance places, or any handling of foreign merchandise, are two

• ' '

fortunate areas for you today.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 In financial or business affairs
today, try to avoid the middleman. He could delay things, so try to go
directly to the top guy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21)-Feb. 19) The one thing you don't want to be
today is a loner. Get out and mix with others. Good things could happen to you from contacts you'll make.
PISCES (Feb. 21)-March 201 Whether you're aware or it or not, you
are being closely observed by persons who could be helpful to your
career. They'lllike what they see. ·
ARIES (March 2l·Aprll 19) You should be very good today at
working out complicated _situations wherein others as well as yourself
are involved. Your ingenious solutions will benefit all.
TAURUS (April 21)-May 201 Changes tend to work lor your
ultimate benefit today, even if they don't appear so at first. Flow with
events. You'll be able to handle whatever occurs satisfactorily.
, GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II you're in need or a favor today, you
should be able to .lind someone from your long list or social contacts
who can help you. Pals can be relied upon.

CANCER (Juac 21-July 221 Continue to devote your time and
energy today to fattening your bank account. Your luck still holds In
areas where you can earn or save money.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're likely to be a bit restless today. This
.can be best satisfied through activities which challenge you both mentally and physically.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Persons to whom you've been helpful
are working backstage today on your behalf. Something good is about
to break, but you may not see it at once.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) The aspects are still favorably where

Jack Frost nipping at your pocket? Come see
us fo.r barga~ns you can't afford to pass up!

•

.

' '

your latest ventures are concerned. Set aside the old tempOrarily.

Focus on the new.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Methods a bit bolder than usual may
be called lor in competitive sitlllltions today, but you'll know how to
handle them. You're able to distinguish between recklessness and
assertiveness.

3 UNES ARE APPROXIMAmY

15 WORDS - USE lHE BlANK
BELOW TO WRITE YOUR AD•
.

Name
(

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(

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(

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CASH ONLY!'
1.

2.

3.
4.

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5.

6.
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8.

9.
10.
11.

COMMON CLASSIFIED

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13.

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1.1 mg nicotine' av. per cigarette. FTC Repon

14.
15,
•'

00

••

.·

. •;: J

'I

·I

·l

l~

�•
Monday, December 14,1981
Page-a-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 14,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

In and around Meigs County_________
Senior Citizens' Open House set
.

.

Four Meigs County service p.m. Thursday at the senior citizens
organizations wiU join to hold d main activity room at the multi·
holiday open house !run 12 noon to 3 purpose building on Mulberry ·
Heights.
,

•

'

Manley

Auxiliary'

Clark

Torres-Mills

·I{

Karr, Ruth Crouch, Martha Moore,
Beulah Ward, and Rev. Stanley
Merrifield.

A Christmas dinner, catered by
Circle's of Gallipolia, was held l.enri.recently for. the Eagle Class of the
".u
Asbury United Methodist &lt;lturch in
c_o_m_b-iru_·_n_g-fo_r_th_•_
· a_c_ti'-v-ity_a_r•_th_•_r_er_r_es_lun_•_n_ts_wiU_·_be
__
se_rv_ed_._The
__
Meigs
County Senior
C(tizens Cen- public is invited.
the church social rooms. Tables
were decorated in the Christmas
theme by Vera VanMeter, and a
The Lewis Manley Auxiliary Unit
Attending the party were Becky
lighted Christmas tree was featured 263 American Legioo held its annual
Ackerman, Jerod Cook, Leanne Cunin the area.
Chrisbnas dinner party Tuesday
diff, Stephanie English, David FetScripture was given, and a evening at the Meigs Inn. Prayer
ty, Amy Hart, Mary Jacobs, David
reading entitled 'The Star' was preceding the meal was led by Mrs.
and Emily Heighton, Lee
presented by Beulah Ward. Wanda Will Winstoo.
Luckeydoo, and Dodger Vaughan.
Rizer conducted a humorous game,
Following dinner, memben went
Unable to attend but sending gifts
with several members receiving to the home of Mrs. Arnold Richarwere Nicholas' grandparents, Mr.
prizes.
ds, where a gift exchange was held
and Mrs. D. Mills; Kristin's grandAttending the event were Mr. and and games were played. Prizes were
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Delgods;
Mrs. Carroll Norris, Mr. and Mrs. woo by Mrs. Winston, Mrs. Dou~
Michael Ash, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Don Lisle, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Johnson, Mrs. Ernest Bowles, Mrs.
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Danny CorRizer, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloos, Mr. Richards, and Mrs. AUen Hampton.
ders, and the John Jacobs family.
and Mrs. Bob Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Richards' handiwork was
Charles Hollack and son Eddie, Mr. displayed throughout the Yuletideand Mrs. Bill Winebrenner, Mr. and theme decorated home, featuring a
Mrs. Glenn Cundiff Jr., Mr. and popcorn and gwndrop tree, and a
Mrs. Virgil Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. while calico tree with matching
Herbert Parker, Mr. and Mrs. table place mats. A dessert course
Millard VanMeter, Mr. and Mrs. was served at the Richards residenDick Ash, Marv Cuodiff, Marcia 1 ce

Bz.IJ"thUjJar'J1/J___
f ,

ter, the Meigs County Mental Health
Center, the Meigs County Health
Department and the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Association. Light

Asbury UMC
dinner ·

...

(

Clark

Jerica Renee Clark was honored
recently with a party in celebration
of her second birthday at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ricky
Clark, Village Green, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Etoilla Cassell, Jerico's
great-grandmother, was among the
guests. Gifts were received (rom

Torres
Kristin Marie Torres, dau~hter of

Norma Ann Torres, Middleport, and
Nicholas Mills, son of Cynthia Mills,
also of Middleport, re ce ntly
celebrated their fourth birthdays
with a party at Burger Chef,
The theme of the party was Big
Bird and the Muppets, with guests
being served "fun meals," nuts, candy, and Big Bird birthday ca ke.
Each child also was given a bag of
party favors.
Games were played, with prizes

going to David Fetty and Emily
Heighton.

decoratioru;.

Circle
Christa Nichole Circle, daughter
of Jeff and Sonia (White) Circle,
celebrated her first birthday with a
party on Nov. 28.
A Holly Hobbie cake, potato chips,

mints, tea. and coffee were served to
the guests, who included grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover White,
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Circle;
great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Fortney and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circle; Synthia and Serena
White, Sheila, Dan, and Kirt Spencer; Ralph, Wilma, Brenda, and
David Ballard; Bill and Ruth
Perkins and family, and Keith, Fritzi, and Casey Circle.

Mills

•
Klem

By Mrs. Herbert Rou•h
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst, Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa · Parsons and Don
Thomas visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Click at Cottageville, Mrs. Ding
Ankrum and son George, Mrs. Chloe
Click at MI. Alto and attended a
square dance at the Community
Center at Letart, W. Va. Saturday
evening.
Mrs. Doris Randolph of Colwnbus
spent Thanksgiving with her
daughter, Mr. · and Mrs. Charles
Hupp and family at Clifton. On
Saturday they all visited Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp and family at Portland. other guests were Tina Hupp
and friend, Brad Layne and Mickki
Hupp.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp,
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
Thanksgiving Eve and enjoying
music played by Paul Sayre, Bill
McKelvey, Chester Durst, Don
Thomas, and Don Dudding were Mr.
and Mrs. Camel·un Sand;; of
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Kelly of Hollywood, Fla.; Darla
Kelly of Pomeory; Walter and Edith
of Troy; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Georgia and Chester Durst of
Niles; Don Thomas, 1\onald Cox,
Craig Reeder of Mineral Ridge,
Russell and Bernice Roush, Cindy
Roush, Ed RllWih, Ronald and Nancy Russell, children Mandy and
Michael, Doug Sands of Cheshire,
Robert Lawrence, Bud Belt and
friend, David Sands and friend, Dorsa and Bessie Parsons, Dana and
Roberta Lewis, Tammy Eichinger.
Mrs. Irene Hupp spent Thanksgiving weekend with her daughter,
Mrs. Retha Clonch and family at
Rutland.
Mr.s Joann Proffitt, daughters
Karen and Tammy, and Rev.
¥Honker of CantOn brought Rev.
yOiiker to spend a weekend with Joe
stobart at Racine and they spent a
weekend with Mrs. Proffit's
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Craig and family. She also visited

•

her mother, Mrs. Irene Hupp at
Portland.
Thechildren and grandchildren of
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp enjoyed a
hayride and wiener roast at the
Hupp home recently. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp, sons
Jimmy and Billy, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hupp, daughters Tina and
Mickki of Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
die Hupp and Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs.
Rocky Hupp and son R J., Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass and daughters,
Corrine and Kenda, of Clifton and
Mr.s Irene Hupp and Robert
Lawrence.
. Spending Thanksgiving with Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Manuel and
daughters at Racine were Mr. and
Mrs. l-ester Roush and son Johnnie,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Connolly, children
Brian and ·shelly of Syracuse, Mr.
amd Mrs. James Smith, Missy Rif·
fie, Monte Riffle of South Webster,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith and son
Travis, Mr. and Mrs. Greg Cundiff
and Valerie, all of Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Roush and children,
Jeremy, Brandi and Adam, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Roush.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush a recent Friday evening were
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush of
Rucine, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush, Kim and Jenny Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Casper,
grandsons, Kevin and Billy Dye,
spent Thanksgiving weekend with
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells,
children Mandy and Amy, of
Gallipolia spent a S~y with Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnsoo, Sr.
and children of Racine, Della Johnson, Jimmie O'Brien; Jerry Johnson, Jr. and friend, Debbie, were
Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Tucker of
South Boston, Va. were Thanbgiving weekend guests of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll White
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Tucker of
Racine and visited Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsa Parsons and other relatives.
Mr. and .Mrs. Chester Dunt, Don
Thomas, Ronald Cox, Craig Reeder

TEAFOR

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. 2nd st.

A surprise birthday party was
held Saturday, Dec. 5, for Mrs.
Virgie Klein, at the home of her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse' Buchanan, Five Points.
Mrs. Klein was presented with a
cake decorated with 57 pink roses,
one for each year.
Twelve of Mrs. Klein 's 15 .children
were present.
Attending the party were Katie
Klein, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Buchanan
~nd David Henry, .Trena Buchanan,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pullins and
Sheila, Shellie Pullins, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Klein and Michelle, Mr. and
Dennis Jr., Donna and Tammy
Klein, Connie, Mike, and Myrtie
Mae, David Klein, Charlie Klein,
Paul Klein, Kenneth Klein.
Sending ~ifts were Russell Cundiff, Bill Klein, Amanda Autherson,
and Mike and Scottie Autherson.

of Niles were Thanksgiving weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Doras Parsons
and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and remained till Tuesday to enjoy
deer hunting.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy spent Wednesday through
Thanksgiving weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and remained
till Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Roush and the Herbert Roushes ·and
enjoyed deer hunting. Other guests
of the Roushes were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert McKinney, children Virginia
and Bl:!y of Scott Depot, W. Va. on
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Dur'
st, Mrs. Russell Roush, Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons, Lester Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush, daughters Kimberly and Jennifer, were Thanksgiving Day evening dinner guests.
Thanksgiving Day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. DaUas Hill were Mr.
and Mrs. Marshall Roush, children
Joey aod Cortney, Mr. and Mrs.
·Darrell Norris, children Tracy and
Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Art Hill,
John, Joe Shain, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Casper, Kevin and Billy Dye
of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett,
daughter Tracy, Mr. imd Mrs. Roger
Roush and daughters; Kim and Jenny, were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Michael.

.,.,,.,,a.,

Phone
1·(614)·992·3325
NEW

LISTING

-

3

bedroom home rust out
of town. Furnace, wOOd·

burner, stove and
refrigerator , basement

on level lot. $38,900.
NEW LISTING 12
room double house . 2
baths, kitchens, full
basement, all utilities,
large lot with e)Ccellent
garden and v iew of the

Ohio River.
APARTMENT - Nice
one bedroom. bath. gas
furnace, and 2 car
garage in Middleport.
Want only $17,500.
ilT. 124 - Racine school

Mrs. Dennis Boyd, Jennie, Joe, and

County Correspondence
Apple Grove
News Notes

A ohort business meeting Wll conduded by Mrs. Bowles, president of
the unit, wbich included a reading of
the bulletln from Eighth Dlatrict
Preiddent Mrs. Tllora Gatwood. Announced were the district ChlUicothe

202 111 E . Main St.
Ph. 992-6720
Just
In Time for
Christmas: Member·
ship Gilt Certificates.
Rates
per
visit
·available .
Come in &amp; see what we
have to offer.
"Get in Shape for the
Holidays ."
12-11 · 1 mo.

veterans birthday party scheduled
for Dec. 17, and the mid-winter con· ·
ventioo, slated for January 29 and 30
at the Hilton IM North, Columbus.
Attending the meeting besides
thooe previously mentioned was
Mrs. CarnpbeU Harper, member.
The next meeting of the auxiliary
is scheduled for Tuesday, January
12, at the home of Mrs. Richards.

district , -six rooms,
bath, natural · gas, city
water and 11 acres of
land.
POMEROY
2
bedroom frame · hOme.
Bath , coal furnace, and
fun basement on one
acre lat . 516,500 .
MIDDLEPORT
Reasonable 3 bedroom
home . Natural gas F.A.
furnace, bath. basement
and 2 lots, out of ALL
floods. Only $21.000.

Housiflg
Headquarters

OF REAL ESTATE
1 am offering for sale at
public sale the rea~ estate
described
hereinafter
owned by William L.
Hoover
and
Rebecca
Hoover . Said sale is to oc·
cur at the Meigs county
Court House, Pomeroy,
Ohio, at 10 :00 A.M on
December 29, 1981. Said
real estate was appraised
by rhe appraisers ap:
pointed by the Court of
Common Pleas. Meigs
county, Oh io, for the sum
of $4,500 .00,
and the
minimum amount which
said real estate c:an be sold
shall nat be less than two
thirds (2 / 3) of the ap·
praisal, orSJ.OOO.OO.
Said real estate is
described as follows ·
Situated in the Township
of Orange, County 'ot Meigs
and State ot Ohio, to·wit :
TRACT ONE : Beginning
in the ·c enter of Old State
Route No. 7, at the South·
west earner of a one ac:re
lot of Vada Koenig, recor·
ded in Volume 152, page
238, Meigs county Deed
Card of Thanks

I would like to ex-

press my sincere
thanks to all my
friends, neighbors
and relatives for
all oftheir prayers,
cards and flowers
during my illness.
Sherry Buskirk

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

TOPS OH1456 Rutland honored

Ruby Fowler and Frances HyseU as
best losers of the month, presenting
each with a ribbOn and a cash gift.
The week's best looer was Ruby
Fowler, with Nancy Vance as runner
·up. Fowler was presented cash and a
ribhon.
Weigb-ln next week wiD be from
5:30 to 6 p.m. with the Christmas
party beginning at 6 p.m. Each
member is asked to brin~ a gift for
the exchange.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Guages"
Coli lor lroe &amp;ldlng
estimates, 949·2101 ar ·
949·2160.
No Sunday Calli
3-lHic

l-In Memarl•m

322 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport
&amp; 10788 u.s. 35
JacksOn, OH.
1HJ·1 mo .

NE-W PHONE NO.

992-6259

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 · tl c

CERTIFIED GAS
Our Specialties
Cigs: 63C pk.; cartons
S5.l5 reg.; S6.05 lon_gs.
We sell the following:
8 Pk. RC, Diet RC orRC
100 S1.29plusdep.&amp;taK
6 pk. RC products$1.59
8 pk. Pepsi products
Sf.39 pfusdep.&amp;taK
6 pk. Pepsi products
·
S1.9tl &amp; taK
8 pk. 16 oz . Cokes
S 1.39 plus de~. &amp; tax
Hours: Mon. ·Sat.
6 A.M .-9 P.M.
Sunday 8 A.M. -9 P.M .
11 ·15· 1 mo.

11-He!pW•ntltd
12- Sittl•tion WlniHI
ll-lnurlnCit
14--Busineu Tnlnino
U-Schoolslnstructlon

t.-Aidto, TV,
Rep.~lr

eFINANCIAL
21-Buslneu
OpiiOJ'tunlty
22-Meney to l.Nn
23-Profenlonal
Servlcn

...._-

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

I

l
I
l

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

~

l

l

I
I
I
I'

11 ·19- 1 mo.

.

OFF SEASON RATES
S120 WEEKLY
$400 MONTHLY
Roles based on doublt
occupancy.

51-HQU ..hold Goods

1-304-675-6276

52-CI, TV, Radio Equipment
5l- Arttkjues
54-Mile::. M.,.c::Nndlse
55 - BIIIIIIinl Supplies
,.__Pets for Sale

)Wanted
J For S'ale
JArmouncement
, For Rent

eTRANSPORTATION

1. _~---

2. - - - - - -

21.-- - - - -

I t-HO,.-. tor hie
n-MMI!Ie Home•

3.

lot IIIII
:u-Farmslcw Sail
M-luiiMIS IUIIIIIrtll

71-VIMI4 W.O.
74--Motorcyclts

4.

1~101111

s.

Motors

7t-AutoPirtt&amp;

6.

ACCHsoriltl

17-Auto Repair
71--C.Implftl Equlpt~~ent

I

SERVICES
Want· Ad Ad•erllslng
DHdllnes
MondiY 2:011 on S,aturd•v
T......ytllniPrthyt:ltt'.M.

ttttlllay....,.lltl*leatton
Sunclly t:• P.M. Prlll1y

11 - Hctlfltlmt~rtlllrnentl

Rates and Other Information

...,lltlor'fleft ................ ,.........

Upto15w...........
U.DI
Up to 1Swonll ............, I"Nrtton ••........•.. .. , . . , ..... IUO
Ut~loU .......... II•MriNitwtkNI .. .,, , , . , .. , . , ..... , , ,. . U.DI
CAvltr41flt 4 wonll ,., NniJ
MeiNIII HeMI ........ Vtrtl Htet are .l«epfeci enly Wltll Clltl
wlftt onNr. IS cent ciN,.. ,_HI carrylftt lo• NumMr In C1re 01
TPNI SlftftiMII.
,,_ Pubt4tlltr ,....,.,.. 1t1t riBflr toiCIH or rtl«t .,., ... -........
Olllecfiefl411. TIN Pullllltwr will not bt rnpon11ble lor rnor•
ene
lncorrKf kiMrtlort.

*"

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992-7201

23.
24.
25.

26. · _ _ _ __

8.

27.
28.

10.
11.
12.
13.
14.

12-P'tumblntl Heau...
Q-111Ct¥•Hnl
M-lttctriC411&amp;
Relrlfer•tlon
11-GMtrll Hnllnt
M-M.N. RltfNik
17- UIItOIIIitrY

Backhoe
Exc&lt;'vating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eDump Truck

22. - - - - - -

z.
9.

•
•
•
•

17. - - - - - : - - 18. - . - - - -- 1 9 , - -- - - 20. _ _ _ __ _

1t-AufOI.Iorhle
11- Truc111 tor sate

J7-Ri.lltofl

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

51- Mullc:all•nrument
51-ll=ruits I 'lltfel•bles
Jt- For SlletrTrue

M-Hiy I Gr.11n
n-s..t 1 Fertlliulr

as-t.otiiAcr...-

el nsulatlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• ReplaCement
Windows

PARTS A~D SERVICE
ALL MAKES

•Wasners
•Dryers
•Rang&amp;s
•Disposals
· •Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tanks

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
9-S·Ifc

11 -12·1 mo.

FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Available
Made
from Cedar,
Cypress,
Walnut &amp;
Cherry .

le

i I d I i fe
Novelties , Custom Tan·
ning . Ff'st Delivery,
614-985-3833
or 985·3364
11 ·25·1 mo . pd .

PH. 992·3269
12·3·1 mo . pd.

S&amp;W

MILLER ElECTRIC
SERVICE

GUNSMITHING
AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, parts, etc.
Order Guns10%
· Above Wholesale

For all of your wiring needs.

PUI.LIN~
Call After 4 P.M.
992-7656
11· 12-1 mo.

DRIVEWAY .
LIMESTONE.
GRAVR

29.
JO.

15.

31. - -- -32 .
33.
34.

16.

35.

-

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

•

IH2· 1 mo.

~-----~:~~~~~:~7~-------j
I

• Honse COal
Ph. 992-2772

j

1

Central air. fully in ·
sUiated. garage and iust
$37.500.00.
LANGSVILLE
- 3·4
bedroom house. Dining
and family rooms, ap·
prox . l acre lot. Also
.rental income from tile
building and garage apt .
$36,000.00.

We will clean any.
size business • office· homes- banks
- etc. No Job Too
Small
or Too
Large. We will do it
a 11.

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

IN POMEROY A
home you won't believe!
Ranch
type ,
2
bedrooms, w .b.f.p .• full
basement, carpet ing ,
garage, central air.
Owner
must sell.

m,5oo.oo.

RUTLAND
2
bedrooms, 1'h acres,
several buildings, gar ·
den space, enclosed por ··
ch. Assume this v A
loan, $2,500 down
payment, 12% interest
rate , 29 vear term, $302
per month includes·
· taKes and insurance .
Total $29.500.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949-2660 ·
T"""'"992· 5092
Dn•ttie• Tu&lt;rnoer992·5692

&lt;&gt;••••••

Furnace, Coleman A1r
C:onditioing, Arkla-Ser-.
vel Gas Air ·cofldltion-.
ing, Sheet Metal Work.
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp;COOLING
Rt. 2, Albany, OhiO
614·698·6191
11·,16·ttn

•~•or f"'

Finest Quality
Excellent Service

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2482
7·5·tlc

tract It dnn
11uch faster

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Wa ter·Sewer· Electric

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
OFFICE 742·2003

_Addons ond
remodeling
_ Roofing onct gutter
work
_ Concret work
_ Plumbing and
electrial work
(Free Estimat&amp;s)

Gas Line· Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septi( Tanks
county certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
1·7· 1 tfc

V. C YOUNG Ill
99N~215or"2· 73 1 4

Pom•roy , Otuo

9-lO·tk

Trailer
sites
&amp;
Driveways. Small jobs a
specialty. Ditcher- or
Trench Service.
Gas &amp; Water Lines

POMEROY
LANDMARK

JIM LUI:&amp; .

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

PH. 742-2753
11-19·1

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

PRICED RIGHT.

Scrap

Iron
&amp; Metal)

STARTER HOME - 3
bedrooms, living room
w/ woodburrler, nice kit·
c:hen and bath. On
tot.
Price
60'x100'
Reduced, $22,500.00.
LARGE TWO STORY Brick , 5 bedroom home.
MOdern kitchen . Has
been nicely remodeled.
Must see th i s nice
spacious home! Only
$30,000 .00.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex·
eel lent location, close to
stores. 3 bedrooms,
dining room,
full
basement . Has fenced In
back yard for the kids.
Reduced. $38,500.00.
MOBILE HOME - Ex·
c:ellent condition . . 19SO
Liberty, 14'x52' total
electric . 2 bedrooms.
Sells tor only S9,500.00.
Rent the tot.
MIDDLEPORT
Owner
finaf'lcing.
$4,000.00 down and 10%
interest rate . Home has
a southern style flair
with riverfront view.
New furnace and carpet
are
only
a
few
amenities. Call today .
Asking S26,500 .00.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171
Jelma Nlcinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Tap prices
tNid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
I mile west of Fairgrounds on Old Rt. 33.
Mon.- Fri. 8:30to4 :00

END OF YEAR CLOSEOUT
SHAG CARPET
3 Rolls to
Pick From

Ph.992-6564
10·12-lfc

'12"
Sq. yd. installed

Good ~election

. Kttchen
Rubber Backed
Cash 'n ' Carry
Brown, Blue
STARTING AT

'4~ . ~d.

1 Blue, Rust

1 Creek Bed
3 Golden

Harvest

'12"
Sq. Y.d .
Installed

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard

U. 5..Rt . ~ E11t

2S Rolls Carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends ' Rem·
nants 52.$0 up.

Guy5vllle, Oh1o
Authorlzltd JoM Deere.
Ntw Holland, Busfl H09
Fum E:•Uifmtnt
De•ler
FARM EQUIPMENT

PART5 &amp; SEIIVIC~
U5ED EQUIPMENT

DrivP A Little

1--No. 1600 DitMI Ford
Tractor wt C•b

Save A Lot

IUJHAND FLJRNII URI

MOD-.. 10 Dtevt J.D. Tr1ctor
M00·3U .._., NtW telt.l Clrtl

MAII\I S I.

Picker

.'

who prayed for me, for the
cards, letters and flowers
during my stay at Univer·
sity Hospital for open heart
surgery. May God Bless
You.AII. Elsie Circle .

2
In Memoriam
lri Memory of Monroe Ball.
It has been 2 vrs. this 14th
day of December.· Since
you been gone . But the hurt
goes on.
Wife,
Avanelle
&amp;
Family
3

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, _one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
446·0294 ..
TRAPPER We have a complete line of trapping supplies . Traps, dye, wax, and
lures.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co .• Spring Valley
Plaza. 446·8025.
For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181. Pomeroy, Oh .
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p.m . Factory choke
guns only .
Racine Fire Dept . sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6 ~ 30 p.m., Bashan. Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun.
RAW FUR buyer. Beef &amp;
deer hide-ginshang. Trap·
ping supplies. George
Buckley, Rl. 2, Athens. Oh .
614·664·4761.
Open
evenings .

3 ROLLS

-

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

Card of Thanks
1 wish to thank all those

HOBSTffiER REAL

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

/12 ?/ 11

1981 HONDA 1100 In·
terstate, $4200.00, 304-675·
6644.
Stolen Property. Antique
k~t~hen safe. Antiqu~
dtntng room cabinet . Twa
ro cking chairs. Other
items . Anyone knowing or
seeing this furniture being
hauled in the vicinity of
Flafrock, WV an October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
offered. 675-1302.
Birchfield's Taxidermy.
Deer heads mounted . East
of Rutland on 124. 614-742·
2118.
4 .

Giveaway

ANY PER'SON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or Jttempt to
offer any other thing for
s~le may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
Small
housedog ,
Oaschund· lik'e, excellent
with children. female. Call
245·5100.
6 weeks old German
Shepherd·Husky pups. Call
388·8539 after 6.

Flea
Market.
New
Opening. 7 days a week.
The Heart of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992·6370.

---~ ---

WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, ca ll Kennelh Swain,
256·1967 in the evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buic:k ·Pontiac. GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446 ·2282 .
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying c:ash for anything
stamped 10K, 14K ,'l8K and
dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings, sil ver co ins
or
anything
stamped
slerling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992-2054 in Pomeroyl
Buying
Gold,
Si lv er,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sal,e.
Spring
Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza, 4.U·8025 or 446·8026.
Wanted to buy motor for
1976 Honda Civic . Call 256·
6652 .
We pay c:ash for la te model
clean u~ed c:ars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.

Pups, 1h Airdale) 319:2313
after 5.

BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood Ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc. ,
Complete
househo l ds .
Write: M .D . Mi ller, Rt . 4.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992· 7760.

Anyone w ith a .s mall Collie
or Shepherd to giveaytay
caii9B5·4302.

Lost alldi=ound

LOST Walker CoOI"]hound
black, white, &amp; brown .
Brown collar with no name .
Urgently needed has litter
11/ 2 weeks old. Lost in vin ·
cinity of Garnes· Ford Rd .
Call 388-9785 .
LOST·black male coon
hound, New Haven area,
reward, 304·882-3348.

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma'll. .
diameter 10" on -largest
end . $12.50 per ton. BUnd led
slab . $10 ..50 per ton.
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co .•
Rock
Springs
Rd .•
Pomeroy . 992-2689.
Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old cains &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber Shop, Middleport . 9923476

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Wednesday
night at Hartford .Com ·
munity building. Sale time
7 PM. Lots of new and used
merchcindlse every week .
Consignments
from
dealers and individuals
welcomed.
Richard
Reynold, Auctioneer. 304·
275-3069.
Wanted to Buy
BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hines
Rt . 1, Amesville, Oh 446 6747. Buying raw fur after
Dec. 12. Daily 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays. Also
closed Dec:. 24 &amp; 25.
Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals,
batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brok.ering . Harper· Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Ele-venth Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily . Open
Monday Friday 1·5pm.
WANT to buy house in Pt.
Pleasant on land contract
or lease basis. Write Box A 27 in care of Pt. Pleasant
Register .

Extensive
c 1u ding

benefits

in ·
p a 1d
t
hospitla ization, rn•a'l';yemsecnk
PIrogram3 ' no "pe
,. 'I
eave,
wee,.. vaca •on o
start. More. contact Personnel Director (30.4) 615 ·
3230 or write
Lakin
Hospi t?.~ I, Lakin WV 25250.
Texas Oil Co. needs ml!lture
person in Pt. Pleasant
area . We tra in . Write T. T.
Dick , Box 789, Ft. Worlh,
TX 76101.
DOG LOVERS ·desperately
need donations of old dog
houses, barrel Is. etc .• so or·
phal') dogs may have a
warm and lav i ng Christmas. Call after 4 p .m . 304675·6770 .
SECU RITY OFFICERS ·
Guards Mark Inc. will be
accepting applications for
full time employment in
the Pt . Pleasa nt area . If
you are 21 years or older,
have a clean police record,
a high school diploma or
equivalent, and think you
may be interested in the
Security Industry, then we
would like to talk with you .
No experience necessarywill train. Please send brief
resume by December 17th.
to Suite 404, 1031 Quarr ier ·
St. Charleston, WV 25301.
InterViews will be con ·
duc: ted on a schedul ed date
in the Pt. Pleasant area .
E .O.E .

GET VALUABLE training
as a voung business person
and earn good money pius
~me great gifts as a sen ·
t1ne1 _ route carrier . Phone
us ng~t away and get on
th e el •g ibili ty li st at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

12

Situations Wanlecl

Wanted : Working person to
share expenses on fur ·

~~~:~t;e~e~~g~ t ..3~i~~{4~
after 5PM .

Welding outfit, tanks,
guages, torches. Must be
reasonable . Roo m si ze
braided rug . 742·2395.

E!im Resthome Care for '"
lland ic:apped, aged, or bed
patien t . T empora ry ·or .
limited care . Or conti nuous
home with us . Equipped for
whee l chair. 742 ·2266.

Timber or land, approx . 5
acres or more. 614·289·2476
or 614 -493 2591.

Have vacancy room , 'board
and laundry. For elderly or
hand icapped. 992 ·6022.

-- --- --·
8

-~--

5AN DYANDBEAVER1n·
surance Co. ha s offered
services lor fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
11
Help Wanted
for almost a century.
NEEDED bahysitter in Farr:n, hom e and personal
Thurman · Rio Gra~ a"rea property coverages are
for 2 children .payshift . available to meet i n·
Call286·5140 .
div tdual needs . Contact
Kail ~urteson agent . Phone
Applictions being taken 446·2921.
Thursday , Dec . 17, 1981 at
Fitness Center Health Spn, AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
411 Sec. Ave . for Female SU RA NCE
been
can ·
Instructors. Come in bet · ce ll ed?
Lost
your
ween the hours of 3 p .m operator's License? Phone
and6p .m .
992·21 43

~e~de_d_:-Hous_e_
k~ P-.-,--i~

18,=:===;~;,;~~;:::

exchange for room and
Wanted to Do
board and some pay . Gen Butcher's Shoppe Custom
tleman in early 30's . Kids butchering &amp; processing ,
O.K. Call675-726fl
Call 446-2851, Gallipolis,
Oh .
RN's · LPN' S NEEDED
NOW to fulfill requiremen·
ts of 1A:.F . Cert ificat ion.
Salary com mensurate with
training and experience ·
EKtens i ve benefits in ·
eluding
paid
hospitalization , retirement
program . no penalty sic:k
leave, 3 week vacation to
start. More . Contact Per·
sonnel Director (304} 675·
3230 or
write Lak in
Hospital. Lak in, WV 25250.

UH.•.•ified JiHges rover the
following telephone I'XI'hnnges ...

Will do baby sifting in my
home. Cai i446·865J .
TV service ca lls. Call 992·
2034 . Also used color TV for
sale .

2_2

--=_M-on-e~v~t~o~L~o~~~n=_~_

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA F inan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
Krautt er (304)675·3473 .
23

_,

_...,

----- -

Professional
Services

,.

~----

Gallia Co . Area Code
614
446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643-Arabla Oist .

Meigs co . Area Code
614
992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985-C hester
343- Portland
247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742- Rutland
667- Coolville

Mason Co. , W. Va.
Area Code 304
675- Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
576- Al-ppte Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895-Letart
937- Buffalo

Racine Gun Club dues are
due. 525.00. Mu•t be paid
beforeJan.1.19112 .
Art Class Open House
Kathy Borders. Call 992·
77Jio. Dec. 15th, 121o 3 and 5
to 8. Door prlze5, refreshments. Crafts and 1982
catalog on display.

wantedtoBuy

Two wheel s to fit a 1977
Mustang II. Call 446-4410.

We sli II have plenty of ap·
pies at Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 614·
669-3785.

.'

R.N .'s-L .P.N.' s NEEDED
NOW to fulfill requiremen ·

l -4 month old Beagle pup .
Call446-4737 aiter 5.

6

You 'II

General

.

9

Two k ittens 7 mos. old, 1
black long ha i r and 1 black
and white fluffy . Call 4463067.

WANT AD

services
worker with
Buckeye Community
Sei'·
vice. Provide a home,
friendsh ip and guidance for
person with mental retardation afld earn a salary,
and benef its and room and ·
board rate , No degree
required. Will train you to
help another person good
and develop . For further
information contact Jul ie
~~~-11 Kamer, 197·4166 or write :
33 Heartmen Rd .• · The
Plains, Oh. 45780. Equal
Opportunity Employer .
CHRISTIAN lady needed to
work in personal care
home. Live·in necessary ,
Wr i te Box C·27 i n care of
Pt. Pleasant Register.

To an adult on ly. Small
white Spitz dog about 7 or 8
years old. 985-4302.

Wj th I

TOM HOSKINS

·

-::!-· II

m

PH. 742-2225

And Home Maintenance
•Roofing of all types
•Siding
•Remodeling
•F ree estimates
•20 Yrs. experience

Rec:uperati~e

_

with
- I'R~S~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~ltsSalary
1. commensurate
c.and
F. certification
traot
i ning
experienc~ .·

Ml
ooLEPoRT
Reduced
pr ice - "Out·
standing value . 3·
bedrooms, 2 story house
on nic e lot . Sunny
modern k itchen , 11h
baths, d ining and family
rooms·, full basement.

PRATER'S
CLEANING
SERVICE

Phone 992·9981

J--'-LJU....:C

RACINE -4·5 bedroom
home. Approx. 112 acre
lot , 6 fireplaces. family
room , hardwood f loors,
and carpet . $45,000.00.

Fish· Game Head Life Size Mounts · Plus
Hide Tanning

OHIO VALLEY
ROORNG

SUNRISE
HEAnNG &amp;
cOOLING
Tappan

BOGGS
.

THIS MAY BE EXAC·
TLY THE RIGHT TIME
TO SUY A HOME EVEN IF INTEREST
RUES GO DOWN ...
THE
PRICE
OF
HOMES WON ' T! OVER
10 PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM .

Call 742-3195
2· 8-tfc

5·2Hfe

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Let George Miller
check your present elec·
trical system.
Residential
&amp; Com mercia I

STUART WAYNE

1 Pomeroy·

601

Scout Camp Rd .
Chester, Oh .
Order Now for
Christmas;
*Gifts for Golfers
* D:iscount Prices on
Shirts, Windbreakers,
Sweaters, Socks,
Pants, Shoes
'*Short game practice
• Prop-Gotf lessons tor
all ages
• Repair : Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length change,
weight change
• Fast service
• 6 Free lessons
drawing

Reasonable Rates

From $34.95
To $79.95

SCOTTISH INNS

REnt

•••

]6- R..I Ell.lfeWant@d

Coli Ken Young
For Fast Service
985-3561

. ~-

Phon•------------------

62-WII\fftl tO IU'I'
n-llvestoctc

eREALESTATE

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Addreu--------

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
11-F•rm R'I\I!Pment

11- W41!:!1HTO Do

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Major Hoople 1 1 --H~-~d

E. Main

KLUB

Real Eslalt

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,

S~le .

O-W•nlt&gt;d to Rent

&amp; At.~ction

Thanksgiving diMer gueata of Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Durst, Don
Thomaa, Craig Reeder, Ronnie Cox
of Niles, Doug Sands of Cheshire, Ed
Roush, David Roush of Bedford,
Ky., and Cindy Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush were
Thanksgiving weekend gl*ts of
Mrs. May Gould at Ironton.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe, son Austin, Mr,
and Mrs. Jaclt Ord of LeWi, W. VL
and Amy Wolfe of l!,acine dined at
Mrs. Perry's Rellaarant at Ravenawood a recent Sunday. Jerry Wolfe
of Racine also dined there with
them.
Early Roush and Mrs. EUeen
Buck apent Thanklglvlng weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Pat Greene at
Columbus.

Deed

41-EtUIDm.nt lk Rettt
49- Forl.HIIt

t-W1ntt'd to Buy

1 ce

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
Used Color TV Sets for

45--Furnllflftl Rooms

7- YardSalt
hilt

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

-

411--StNCI for litent

~Public

8·20-tfc

Nam•-------------------

41- Housellor Rent
·tl- Mebtle Homes
44-Ap.~rtm~tntllor

992-7656

Keep This Ad for
Future Reference

i

lor Rent

4-Givtaw•y
s-Happy Ads
6-lOSIInd Found

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

SHOES

rods to a corner; thence
south B rods to the place of
beginning, contaimng one
acre. more or less. See
Deed No. 4238 . Vol. 121,
pagE' 496, Deed Records of
Meigs County, Ohio . Also in
Vol. 139, page 388, also in
Vol. 152, page 192.
Reference Deed : Vol .
271, page 619, Meigs County
Records .
Said real estate is located
in ORANGE TOWNSHIP,
MP.io~ Countv. Ohio. and is
known as 42719 Vanderhoff
Road, Coolville , Ohio45723.
Said real estate is bounded
on the west by Old St~te
Route No. 7. now known as
Vanderhoff Road, and on
the east by New State
Route No. 7.
Said sale is being made
to satisfy a mortgage lien
on said ·real estate and is
being sold under authority
rJf Section 2329.20 · 2329.31
of the Ohio Revised Code.
JAMES PROFFITT.
Sheriff of.
Meigs County, Ohio
111) 23,30 02i 7, 14 . .Ctc

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

eRENTALS

l--Announ~m@llll

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

HANDCRAFTED
CLOCKS

2 Locations

l Curb Inflation
I
l Pay Cash for
I
1 Classlfleds and
.I
Savelll
- - -

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
•-caret of Thanks

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011

BAILrs

r----------------------~

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

from 4 to 6 and ali
building!. 24.:36 .
'"''utate·d Doq Houses

Boots &amp; Shoes for
the whole family.

I

PHONE 992-2156

Utility Buildings

· --------T---~---r------~

TOPS

the said one acre lot to the
center of New State Route
No . 7; thence South 11 deg .
50' West 480 feet to a post 1n
the center of said State
Route; thence West 143.5
feet to the center of Old
State Route No. 7; thence
north S deg. 24' West 470 .5
feetalongthecenterofsaid
State Route to the place of
beqinnlng , c:onfainlng 1.5
acres, more or less, ex·
c:epting all legal rights of
way.
Exceotinq one · half of the
oil and gas rights which
were reserved by former
owner. and the Grantee is
to have all rentals from
leases from said land,
being the same as reserved
and set forth in the deed to
.George Howell by Charles
Bell and wife, recorded in
Volume 151. page 569
Metgs counry ueea t-~ecor ds. reference to which is
hereby made .
Reference Deed : Vol .
275. page 717, Meigs County
Deed Records .
TRACT TWO : Beginning
M the Southwest corner of
an eighteen ac:re lot in the
northeast corner of the
Northeast q~arter of Sec ·
tion No. 6, Township No. 4,
Range No. 12. of the Ohio
company's
Pu 'r chase;
thence East ·on the line of
land owned by R. E . Green
formerly owned by William
Green 20 rods. to a corner.

Custom kitchens and appli&lt;~nces ,
cus ·t om
bathrooms, remOdeling,
plumbln , electric, and
heating . --

with

~--------:::::::-·lif~~~~~~~fJ~}I;m,~~~~Jl~O~~JI
Full own
tirne home
employment
in
I'
your
as a home

CONSTRUtnON

Sires start from JOx24"
SMALL

The Daily Senlinei-Page-9
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

--------------------,---------------------,---------------------~--------------------1
TOP OF THE STAIRS
THE
C. R. MASH
FITNESS STUDIO
BUILDINGS

Small investment, large
return. Sentinel Want Ads

o[B

.Business Services

.

relatives and friends. After the din- ._--=======-~~=~;;~~~~=~r==i2::;;;~~~=~r::::::~;;;~~~~=
n~r. a cake baked by her mother, I _ .
---Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
and ice cream were served. A clown
Real Estate- General
· the
NOTICE OF SALE
Records; thence E.3St 290
thence fl.lorth 8 rods to ci
theme was carried out m
IN FORECLOSUJlE
feet along the sr"~~Jih tine ot
corner; thence west 20

Pomeroy.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TO PLA'CE ANJA,!l CALL
In Meigs County

In Gallia County

446-2342

. 992-2156
In Mason County

675-1333

$5 d iscount for pianos tunl'd
before Christmas. Ca ll Bob
Grubb, 446-45251
P IANO
TUNJNG -Lane
Dan1el s.
Associat e :
Brunicardi Music . Phone ·
614-742-2?51 or 614·992·2082.
Di scount to Meig5 r esiden
IS.

HARPER Adult Care Cen ·
ter ·providing th e personal
c:are your elderlY need in a
home like atmospt1ere.
vacanc ies now availible .
ca II 304·675· 1293.

.·

Roofing, insulation, plumbing. and -general home
maintenance. For estimate
C-311 675-5496, if no answer
can 615·3147.
M &amp; M Electric. All electric:
work guaranteed &amp; bonded .

304-675·2236.

.·

�,

•
Mondav. December 14,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
23

Professional
Services

Piano

Tuning-Let

vour

piano sound pretty tor the
holidays, only $30.00. Call
Bill Ward, 446 4372.
c &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com plete bookkeeping and tax
service tor business and in·
dividuals.
Carol Neal «6· 3862

31

Homes for Sale

BY O"Y~ER : 4 bdr., splitlevel , l1vmg room &amp; dining

room combination, eat-in
kitchen, lg . family rm ., 2
1/ 2 baths, located in Tara
Estates, Clu b house and
~001
priv i leges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call446·9403 .
.

.

Or rent-3 bedfoom fur nished hom e on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level rot .
576·2711.
THREE bedroom home:, 5
CJcres ground, 10 miles
from Pt. Pleasant, 30-1·675 -

6597.
Hou se-Meadowbrook Ad ·
dition . 3 bedrooms, fami ly
roam with fi replac e, cen·
tral air, basement . 304·675·
1542.
6 RCOM house, 1 ac r e
along Kanauga River at Pt .
. Pleasant, 1·614·263 -8322 or
263 ·2669.
l2

Mobil e Homes
for Sale

TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipo lis. Year
end sa le, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
446·7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
H OMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WE ST, GAL.LIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868 .
BARGAIN! l4x70 3 bdr.,
new drilled well, acre lot,
Da vis Rd . off 218, $8.000 .
Call 446·4394 .
1961
mobile
home
Detroi ter, l0x45, partial I y
furnished , all wood in ·
teri or, $1,000 . Cal! 367·7644 .

-------

12x60 mobi le home fur nished, $5,200 . Financing
avai lable. Ca ll after 6PM ,
36].0416.
1965 General mobile hom e
12x65, comp lete ly ready for
setup, includes cement
blocks &amp; sk i rting, $4,800.
Par more information call
446·0511 .

~

For sale 1963 Skyline
mobile home, 12)(55, $2,500,
financing available. Call
446·4185 .
1961 Det ro cter M .H . IO X 45 .
Partially furnished. All
wood i nterior . $1 ,000. 614·
36H644.
Small unfurnished Mobile
Home in good condition.
$2195. Possibl e financing
available . 985·4455 .

4-,:lc __:H'-!!'o,us!!eo.!sc.:f,or'-.!'R_,.e,n,_t_
--

2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home . l ' mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required . Available
Nov. 15. Caii61H4n849.
3 bedroom hbuse and bath
in Rutland . 614·992·5858.
2 bedroom house. Spri ng
Ave .• Pomeroy. Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6.
$195. rt"onth not includ ing
utilit ie~. 992·2288.

House for rent to sales
oriented person to assist in
the sales of memorials .
Rent negotiable. Logan
Monument Co. Leo L.
Vaughan . 61-4·992·2588.
Unfurnished very nice 2
bedroom house. St. Rt. 248.
985·-4244.
Beautiful country home for
sale or rent to qualified
persons.
2 or
more
bedrooms ,
deposit
required . Located in Flat·
woods area . Phone 614·446·
2359.
3 Bedroom, 5 room house
and bath and utility room .
Nice and clean. 446· 1519,
992·2430.

3 rooms, bath, good
location, adults, on Jefferson Avenue. 675·3052.
VERY nice two bedroom
hOuse with furnace heat,
range and refrigerator fur·
nished . Located 2 miles
from downtown Gallipolis.
$275. month. Deposit and
reference required. 30-4·675·
3655.

1974 12x60 2 bedroom com pletely furni shed and set
up . Also washer, dryer &amp;
awn ing . 992·7479 .
1971 Darian 12 x 65, J
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
.Hrtven. 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
e11pa ndo. 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 ;.; 65. 2 bedrooms .
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
xS60, 2 bedrooms. B 1/.a S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . Pl easan t, wv .
Phone 675-4424
1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un ·
derpinned . 675·4064.
1977 Victorian 14 x 70, 2
bedroom, fa m i ly room , all
electri c. Call675·3987 .
1972 Sc hultz 12x65, 3 bdr .
304 675-2907 '
1974 CAMERON 12 x 60, in
good condi tion. air con·
dit i or i ng ,
ca rpeted ,
drapes. unfurnished . Must
sell ! $5,000. 304-675-2560.
Priced to sel l. Thr·ee used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms.
can be seen at D and w
Estates, formerly K and K,
Rt . 62 north, Pt . Pl easa nt,

wv .

1973 GRANVILLE 14x70, 3
bedroom, mobile home,
partially furnished or un ·
furnished, 304·882 ·3433 .
35

Furnished ·apts. $'210 .•
utilities pd ., 1 bdr., near
HMC , adults . Call 446·4416
after 1PM.

9 room house tor rent in Rio
Grande. Call -"6·345.
Mobile home il) city central
air and heat, lldUits only.
New J bdr. home with 1 112 dep. 446·0338.
bath &amp; garage. Between
Gallipolis &amp; hospital. Call 2 BEDROOM apartment,
446·0:!90 or -'46·7100.
kitchen furnished. HUD
program, utilities paid . if
New 3 bdr. home with 1 1/2 qualified. 30.4·675·5104 or
bath &amp; garage betw.een 30H7H364 . . ·
Gallipolis &amp; hospital. Call
446·0390 or 446·7100.
Small· furnished house,
adults only . Call «6·0338.
2 bedroom well insulated
t10use near Rio Grande 1st. floor unfurnished apar·
College, $225 per month tment, deposit a. referen·
plus utilities and S100 ces required. Call at 631
refundable
deposit. Fourth Ave.. Gallipolis,
References required . C~ll OH .
245·9325 or 245·5364 .
J rooms with private bath,
In city unfurnished, 3 845 Second Ave. Phone 446·
rooms &amp; bath . 5150 ·m o. 2215.
references and deposit
required . Also modern 3
bdr. ranch, I 1/2 baths on "Furnished Apt. lst floor,
utilities furnished. Ref .
Rt. 35 near shopping cen ·
ter . Refences and deposit re(luired . No pets. Adults
required . ,Call Canaday preferred. Call at 631 4th
Ave.
Realty, -446·3636,
3 or 4 bedroom home i
town. good location, S300
mo.; 3 bedroom ranch w-6
acres, Kyger Creek Schools
$250 mo .; 2 bedroom home
on Lower River Rd ., 1.3
ac. , $250 mo.; J bedroom
home w ·family room in
Northup 275 mo. ; · 4
bedroom brick in Rio Gran·
de, very nice, $350 mo.; 3
bedroom home in . Rio
Grande, $195 mo . ; 3
bedroom home w-1700 sQ.
ft . and fam . rm .• 5350 mo·.
Call the Wiseman Agency
446·3643.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . and 3 bdr". mobile
homes . Call 446·0115 .

2nd. floor
fiencv apt.
Gallipolis.
Adults only,

furnished ef·
729 2nd. Ave.,
Call «6·0951 .
no pets.

Apartmen't,
bedroom,
$150 plus utlities, no
children, no pets, 456 2nd1
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446·
2129.
7 rm . house on Rt. 35.

Jackson -Pike , $200 mo.,
dep. &amp; ref . require-d. Call
446·3919 or 446-0021 .
3 &amp; 4 room apt. rent par·
tially furnished , .3dults
only . Call 446·3733, evening
446·0171 .
Apartment
446·0390.

~or

rent : Call

In city 4 rooms, 2 baths,
$200 mo . References and
deposit requ i red. Call
Canaday Realty. 446·3636.
Apartments for rent. 614·
9n5908 .
3 bedroOm apt . in Mid·
dleport. $150. month. 992·
5692.
2 downstairs apartm~nt,
626 West. Jrd, Pomeroy.
Completely remodeled .
Floor cover ings, drapes,
heaters, parking, 4 room,
partly turn. 5 room un·
furnished.
Ref,
dep.
required. No children or
pets. 9n2878.
In Middleport 2 bdr. fur·
nished apartment, one
small child. 1·304·882 ·2566.
Attractive 4 rm . and bath
apartment, over doubje
garage n Middleport.
Newly decorated, car ·
peted. fullY insulated .
Adults only, No pets,
securtty deposit required.
s190 mo. 99H292.
Apartments. 675·5548.
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221" or 614·2-45·9484.
2 bedroom twin single in
Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street. S2o0 month plus
deposit. .1 ·61-4·263·8322 or
61H6H669.
Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason. WV. 773·5651.

3 bdr. mobile home com·
pletely furnished . Call 446·
9669.

Twin single, large rooms
and yard. Pt . Pleasant.
Deposit and references. 1·
6t4·26J.8322 or Ht063·
2669 .

House trailer adults · only,
no pets, 322 3rd. Ave. Call
446·3748 or 256·1903.

For rent J room furn. apt.,
adults only, no pets. Call
675·2453.

Modern 2 bdr. furnished,
12x70 trailer. Convenient
location. sec. dep. &amp; ref.·
required, utilities paid ex·
cept electric. Call 446·8558
after 5.

FURNISHED apartment,
phone 304·895·3450.

Furn. mobile home near
Centenary, washer , dryer,
air, big yard, fuel oil, out·
side pet . 446·3918.
Look! 14:x70 mobile home, 3
bedroom, Rodney area.
Call collect 1·304·)35 ·1471.
5180 plus utilities. Referen·
ces and deposit required.
No children. 992·5834 after 5
p.m.
2 bedrooms , J;_. mile out
Sanclhill Road. 675·3834.

small furnished apart·
ment, Mt. Vernon Ave.,
adults, 30H75· 1902.

ONE 3 bedroom apart·
ment, one 2 bedroom
trailer, phone 304·675·-40-45.

25 acres. Nice lane on
CR25, Pomeroy . 614·992·
7284.
3.6 acres, 1!2 mile from Mid·
dleport. Very secluded .
Nice spot for home or
trailer. 992·2889 after 4.
Before 4, 992 ·5248 . $3,500.
.3"5,____,Lots &amp; Acreage
For lease·toQacco alot·
ment, 3000 lbs . Clifford
Dunn . 675·2.435.
20 ACRES in Pt. Pleasant,
no down payment, phone I ·
61063·8322 or 263·2669,

construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773·5651, Mason.
Furnished 1 bedroom
mobile home, all utilities
paid, outskirts Henderson.
S2:W month. 67H730.
TWO bedrOOrf1S, furnished
except 1 bedroom. $200.
month plus utilities, 304·
675·3015.
44

Apartmemt
for Rent

NICE furnished 3 room
apartme-n t, 7th . St . Adults.
304-675·3811.
FURNISHED, I bedroom
apartment. extra nice,
adults only. no pets. phone
304-675·1386,

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLVLE '"

Househeld Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, thalr, roCker, at·
loman, 3 tatiles, 1500. Sofa,
chair nnd loveseat, $275.
SOfas and chairs priced
from $285 .. to $795. Tablos,
S38 and UP to $109. Hide-a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, S17S. to S295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
~. dlfettes from $79 .• to
S385 . 7 pc., $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 ctt~tlrs,
S219 up to $495. Desk sno,
Hutches, S300. and $375.,
m~ple
or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$195, Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $3~. Captain's beds,
$275. complete . Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm. $68. and $78. Queen
sets. St95. 5 dr. chests, U9.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.anct $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets. SJSO .. Qinet·
"te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295. Or·
thopedic super firm, S9S,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; S35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; SJO.
Electric fireplace , gun
cabfnet, Living room ·suite,
wOOd table &amp; 4 chairs.
used,
Ranges,
r .I rt·gerator5, ad
n TV' s,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri .. 9am to5pm, Sat.
446·0322
·
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
d.ryers.
refrigercitors,
ranges .
SkaGQS Ap ·
pliances. 1918 Eastern
Ave ., 446·7398 .
2 Sears wOOd &amp; coal stoves,
no blowers. $200 each. Call
256·1427.
Couch for sale, excellent
condition. Phone 446-3945
after 5 P-~·

Lump Coal S32 per ton.
Zinn' Coal Co., Inc . Call-4-46·
1408 between 9 and 5.
1.5% discount on wood &amp;
coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block Co.,
1231/2 Pine St., 446·2783.
FirewOOd. 1 load SJ5, 4
loads SlOO, 10 loads S200.
Call 2511· 1471 or 614·1186·
662~ .

Firewood -seasoned har·
dwood, $35 pickup load
delivered . Call-446·4176.
WOODBURN lNG STOVES
Free-standing &amp; fireplace
inserts. Top qualify at a
low price. Jividen's Farm
Equipment, .«6· 11i7S.
3 Bedroom 8 ft. showcases
with lights,
1 large
bedroom suite, double
dresser and chest, 2 an·
tique clocks, 1 meat slicer
and misc. grocery store
e(luipment. Call 256·6413, 12
p.m. to9p.m.
LaFont wood splitter, 25
HP_ engine, battery start,
tra•ler mounted, split logs
in five pieces. Ph 245·5478.
Exercycle with pep units
with cushioned seat, brand
new, $1,200, Call 614·446·
3912.
.
Diamond
Engagement
Ri ng size 6, never worn .
Call 367 ·7554, ask for Tom
after 6PM .
1980 Coleman camper, 1917
harley Davidson 1200, AKC
Springer Spaniels liver &amp;
white. Call-446·8234.

61

Weekly Rates Avatlables60
and up in Circles Motel
Call446·2501.
'
Room anQ board for senior
citizens in the country 614·
742·2266.
.
SJ)I!celor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
MOB ll E home lots, water
&amp; sewer furnished, Everet·
te Schwartz. phone 304-675·
1076.

74

••

-··'

"0

E "rirSEii IF
HI!'S IN YET.

_.
••

-

25,000 BTU air conditioner
for sale. Phone 614·667·
6636 .
RacK of dresses &amp; blouses
12 price . Electric hair
dryers &amp; curling irons lf.a
off. Mon ., Tues., Wed.
Aline Weaver's Dress &amp;
Beauty Shop, Sth &amp; Vine,
Racine, Ohio. 949-2666.
1

Piano in storage, respon·
sible party may take on low
month ly payments. Call
credit manager collect 614·
64B180.
Grave Blankets. 992·7320 or
94n493 .
Bell and How'e ll 8 mm
Sound,
color
movie
camera. Carrying case &amp;
accessories, $225. 992·7274,
992-729&lt; .
Discontinued cabinets, top,
stove, . hood, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 6752318.
Used tires. Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road . 675·7360.
14 1/2 ft. car trailer with
winch $1,500, air camp.
$800, car lift $400 . Call 30A·
576·2602.
VENDING machines, 1
sandwich, 1 popcorn, I bot·
tie pop. 304·882·3356 or 304·
7n5611.
SEASONED oak firewood .
Call 304·675·2757 after 4
p.m .
Complete face lift for your
car . Clean, wax, shampoo
carpet, clean motor, minor
repairs. Call for ap·
pointment 675·2563.
Furnace and stove repair,
gas and fuel. 675·6073 .
Would like to share a UHaul truck with someone
going to Texas. 304·675·
2851.
1971 Chrysler Newport low
mileage for sale or trade.
Fuel oil furnance, 48,000
BTU. Cal1256·1291.

t-;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;~~~;;;_l===::::::::::::J
They'll Do It Every Time

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4£6·
38.u after 4 p.m .
fiiLlCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call446·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.
Reg. Quarter Horses for
sales, boarding, training,
English &amp; Western lessons.
Dan Beam, Gallipolis, 446·
0183.
Dragonwynd has new kit·
tens and puppies: seal &amp;
cho. siamese:, white Hims.,
and red and black chow's.
Also can order Orientals
and Snowshoes. Call 446·
38« after 3 PM.

,

71

Auto for

, '

St~le

1972 Torino, 6 cyl., . orig.
owner, only 38,000 miles.
20+ MPG. e)Cc . condition.
Call 446·40o48 after SPM or
weekends.

72 Chevy Nova, 2 dr, e)Cfra
clean. new tires. Call 446·
3870.

1976 Malibu, .4 dr., p.s.,
p.b., a.c., 350 2 bbl, new
tires and paint, 61,000 mi.
$1900. 446·2888 anytime.

58 Jeep, meatle top, runs
gOOd. $750.00.
1977 cUtlass Supreme
Salon,
PS,
PW,
PB,
reclining huckets, T ·Top,
velour interior. Like new.
Ut50 . 614·99H362.
1980 Oldsmobile Toronado ·
Brougham Coupe. Real
leather interior. Ziebart
protected, many extras.
Will sell tor -less than
wholesale if cahs deal or
will consider trade. 992·
3491.
1969 Plymouth wagon . 318
auto. 985·4346.
1976 Monte Carlo, 1975 Ford
pickup, 742·3132 or 742·2746.

1975 CHEVROLET Impala
with all the e:xtras, in good
condition, reduced for
quick sale, 304·675·3763 .

SURPLUS CARS, JEEPS,
AND
TRUCKS
now
available thru local goverRegistered AKC BO)Cers, nment sales, call 1·714·.5690241 for your directory on
$125. 446·3870.
how to purchase. Open 24
hours.
HOOF HOLlOW Horses &amp;
ponies.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·
ment. Also belts, boots . 698· 72
Trucks for Sale
3290. Ruth Reeves .
Ford Truck, 250 'camper
special, with new stake becl
D.oberman Pinscher pup· and dual wheels. Call 256·
P•es. Registered. 4 blacks, 6413, 12p.m. lo9p.m.
4 reds, loving pets. Super
guards. $100. 992· 7888.
1979 Ford PU, 6 cyl., stan·
dard, 35,000 mi., good cond,
Pony 1 with saddle and $2,975. PU topper, good,
bridle. Very gentle. E)C· $150 . .UH322 .
cellent for a beginner. $100.
614·992·7201.
197' 1 ton Chevy truck, flat·
bed, 8xl0, $2,200. Call after
AKC registered poodles. 5, 2511· 1694.
Good around children and
housebroken. Phone 614·
1977 Chevy pickup, stan· .
667·6636.
dard trans, PS, PB, 742·
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 615·2063. Mon.,
Thurs .. I Fri. 11 to 6, Tues.,
Wed,. I Sat. 11 to 4, Che&lt;k
our Fish Special.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pups, 304-195-3958.

WALKER

coon

hound,

AKC Dobermans, red &amp;
tan, 304-675-6916.
AKC rOIJIStered, while Ger·
man Shepherd puppy, 304·
675-5151.

t'rvll

BURSON'S MARKET 12
mile Nortll of Pomeroy on
us 33, truck loed ule,
JumbO navel orange. 36-MI·
64 sire ~5 buohel box 112.
Rod grapefruit, ,.gular
orangeo box 17. 75,
Tongw1-, tengelot box
at.75. Special 6 lb. -

11111111n0

mu111,

IOCktl Mil, $10,00,

1972 Ford truck 112 ton.
Runs good, tires good, body
rust. S195. Call614·667·3085.
1967 WV Beetle runs good,
$195. t-61H49·2252.
1910 Dodge one ton truck.
$1000. 576·2372.

puppies, 7.~3_ __:V!.!a!!!n'!.s.!'&amp;~4C!W!,·~D:,_.__

flOOd tree dOll, 304-675·3501.

Sl

273~.

40

Pc-

For sale 1977 Dodge Ral'1·
charger, ... wheel drive. 360
ci. built, custom paint •.
custom Int.. many extras,
must be seen, 16,000. Call
256·1269.
1919 Bronco Brown. lpw
mileage, AC. cc, ~s. PB,
AM·FM. 614-949·2196 after~
p.m.

t

lour ordinary words.

AlBAN

.

DAYSAGAlN
TACDOUGH
MACNEIL.UHRER

"
CAPTAIN EASY

•

THe G~AT CUllAN
SOUTHPAW COUL..P
AAVf A No-HITTefll

AND

And The

moUI!R!OOI"

(I).W FAMILHIUD
crJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
C1J
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
®)
RICHARO SIMMONS
S!IOW
(lj) HANUKKAH Edward Aaner
narrates thla hJatorical and
cultural examination ol the
ancient Jewiah reetlval.
!JZ •
ENTERTAINMENT

BORN LOSER

7:35 11=0RD AND SON
7:58
~llJIPOATE NEWS
8:00
• CIJ CASPER'S FIRST
CHRISTMAS Caaper apen\Js

Chrlatmaa Eve at home
decorating and waiting tor
Santa Claua, but his holidl'tl
spirit ia sheltered by Hairy
Scarey, whoretortatodeviliah
tricks when 1 ome tr lend a
ather tor a party. (Repeat)
llJ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
~ECIAL

STANlEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com ·
mercia! and residential.
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

ANNIE

" TOIW" TtlEII! A~ AS AA

.'
• '
.'

TI\IUHEi THIS CHILO 11&lt;naE A&amp;e A 141LLIOH
IWIIA~YS A YfAII: -AND
l'M NOT TAitiNIS MIY CYf
THE~ IN!

.

CAPTA I N STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffett Brothers Custom
Carqets . Free eStimates.
Call 446-2107

rt

.. .'
''

'

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remOOeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388-9652 .

IT'S "YOU AND I"
-AI\0 l'fll61V1Nq

YOO A5 MUCH
TIME AG YOU

OE6ERVE

..'
Painting- ....

French City
Residential, commercial: -;~ ;
interior, e)(terior, pape~ ---·¢.1: 1
hanging , and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367-778-4 or 367· 7160.

·'"!' :

CilMOVII! ·(COMEDY) ••• ~
"10" 1170
THAT 1S
ill ll2l ID
INCREDIBLE
G (I) illl RUDOLPH THE
RED·NOSED REINDEER Burl
1'1181 narrateathia animated
holiday muaicalapecialal;lout
the ' ... moat famous reindeer ot
all .' Rudolph and his friend ,
Harmy the Elf, journey to the
lalanct of Misfit Toys after being
chased by the Abominable
Snowmonater, (Repeat; 60
min.IJ
(IJWJ SHAKESPEARE PLAYS
'Timon ol Athena' Jonathan
Pryce, v•hoaa revolullonary
portrayal ol Hamlet was a
highlight of the Royal Shake·
apeare Company season In
1979, portraya the profligate
Tlmon, and Dl ana Oor• plays the
pari pat at ic C&amp;I!JP follower
Tlmandra in the Bard's c:lark
drama of avarice and ingrati·
tude . (2 hrs., 30 mine.)
8:05 ill MOVIE ·(ORAliA),..
01 PI1~1nThaSun''1t52

ALLEVOOP

Call 446-2801 for termite,
roach , bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBi 11 Thomas.

8:30

CJJ U CIJ

8:58
Q:OO

ffi

eoDI&gt;! MA&gt;i JEEP'S PO.RKED

AROUNI&gt; TH' CORNER! I'LL GET

SOME .JACilETS /IIH' BE R:tGHT
Wln-&amp;VUH!

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec . only. Call
now and save. 614-992·6309 ,
LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residentio11, automotive.
Emergency service. cawl
882·2079.
RON'S Television Service
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
.house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446· 2454.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

'

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

''

e&lt;:., :

RINGLES'S SERVICE
perienced mason, roofer, · ' ·.
carpenter.
electrician, .....
general repairs and ·
remod~ling. Phone 304·615·
2088 pr 67H560.

Q:30

Water wells. Commercial · •·
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
·w
304-89H802 .
Experienced carpenter
avai I able for home or
business remode ling 01"
new structures. Free
estimates. References. 304·
675-2440.

10:00

WINNIE

·-

'

_,
"'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'"
''
'" '

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477
83

""
'"'

~ 11fAr.5 WHY

YOU 1'117N'T WANT

YoU'VE AVOII'EI'

ME TO KNOW

ME LATELY...

THAT "WINNIE

13EEN COOl- Mt&gt;
ALOOF. ..

WINKLE FASHIONS"

15 IN

Rii.R.""I{4Wr/t'/At.I

.. ''

7lf()U81.e.

''
.'

Excavating

1
Gallipolis Diversified Con· i ' "
'
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Special : •H •
far~ rates. Call us tor free ·
estimates. 446·4440,
1, '

' t ".
::i::

a4:==-=

ElfCtriC~I ::..:.

&amp; Refrigeration

-----·----·- ..-

'

1

· :

GRN6WRY, LUHEY!!
~I

LOST MV
-BRAKES!!

'

' ''
.'

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367-7471 or
367·0591.

..

''

:;

NOW HAULING house coal· : '

&amp; llmeston~ for driveways. . • ~
Call for estimates 361·1101 .
·•

.

17

Upholstery

way

i

TRISTATE
'
UPHOlSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipoli~
•
446·7833 or 446-1833.
· ·'

·
Saturday's
.

I

rI

XI ]

.
(Answe"rs tomorrow)
Jumbles: TOPAZ FILMY OUTLAW DEFINE
Answ91: " I'm not rude-or am i?"- " I'M-POUTE"

BRIDGE
Old·time safety plays
By Oswald Jacoby

NORTH

•sz

odAiuSoalq

12-14-81

·A~JIIII

Oswald: "We haven't wrlt·
ten mach 011 safety ,plays
lately. Maybe we should

.74
• 65

sbow some this week."

AlBD: uHere i.s an old·

timer that came up recently
In a ntbber bridle 1ame· at
New York's Mayfair Club."
Oswald: "It bas appeared
in books and columns for
yean and It also appears
occasionally In normal play.
South finds blmseU In siX
notrump with a good play
for seven. All be needs Is to
pick up the beart suit.
However, playin1 at siX be
must (IU&amp;rd against finding
all four hearts In the West
band. If East holds all four
South Is stone cold dead."
Alan: "South wins the
spade lead and ~lays a heart. ·
Once West follows South
must pial dummy's nine. Re
does no mind losing the
first trick to an unprotected
queen or 10. He will still
bave six heart tricks pius
three ace-Icings."
Oswald: "What actually
happened here?"
Alan: "It was an all-expert
game and when West Collowed to the first heart he
oroduced the queen . If South

EAST

WEST
.QJD
• Q 10 8 7
• J7
.QJDS

.lDilllf

·----

tQ 10842
.10 3

SOUTH
.AK
.32
t AK93
.AK862
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

w...

Nortll

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1.

E111

Soalh

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

INT
5NT
8NT

2t

P:ass

Opening lead: ~

had been the least bit careless be would bave won the
trick with the ace or king
but South was Brial Glubok'
one of our best young play:
ers. Re simply let West hold
hiS 9ue_en and was still sure
of his stx heart tricks ."

dlciM~tr'
loy THOMAS JOSEPH
37 "Be i t -

ACROSS

humble ... "

1 "Vic and -"

38 Final sale

5 Himalayan
stipulation
cedar
· -39 Sore
11 Manitoba
40 Yiddish
Indian
author
12 Repeat
DOWN
perfonnance
1 Brawl
13 McCay or
2 Pugilistic
property
setting
14 Consecutively
3
Potential
15 Conjunction
killers
16 One- time
4 Slippery
11 Notion
customer
18 lnsignUicant
5 Divinity
20 Dross
6 Sicilian
21 Growl
city
22 Common
7
Fall mo.
limerick

r.--,..-,......,,...

word

Yesterday's ADBwer

8 Matrimony 25 Trench tool
9 Money owed 28 "GigP' star
10 Back out
16 Old French

29 Greek

column
decree
30 Orange 19 Full-dress
32 Middling
suit
:15 Threefold
20 Trim off
(prefiX)
22 Vocal effort 36 Woolly
23 Of love
one's cry

23 Distaff
French
friend
Z4 Super Bowl
shout.
25 Fish
26 Marsh
elder
%7Gennan

b--i--t-

man's

name

28 Man of
the cloth
31 Japanese

river
3Z - volatile

33 And not
34 Matur~
38 Food on
paper

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
, II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter slmply stands for another. In thia sample A il
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apoatrophea, the len1th and formation of the words are ali
hiats. Each day the code letters are dllerent.

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE ·(ORAliA) .,. II
"The Oo-letween"

11:31
11:11
12:00
12:01

,Jl7~UINTHEFAIIILY

~ IIDVIE ·(DRAMA),. ••
'l'l·~:"or" 1Q7Q

m

BURNIANDAUEN
IIDVII·(DRAIIA) "'lo
~
~~HouRtoRama" 1083
12:11 (I) lOUD GOLD Holt: Dionne
Warwick. Ciold record winners

...
'

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt :;
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant;304: • 1
675-415.4.
:;
•

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the. surprise answer, as sug·
gested bv the above cattoon.

Atiswer here: IT["WI"""IV"'WI"""'~ THE

~

.. ''
"' '

'·..•·

J

1

epeal)

PEANUTS

. \:

~·nC~NUPDAT!NEWS

SING OUT A~RICA
CHRISTMAS SNOWS,
CHRISTMAS WINDS Thlo
program relives one man's
Chriatmu reminitcence of a ,
Western farming community In
the 1940's and Chriatmu wittl
all the trimmings.
NEWS
10:35
TIS EVENING NEWS
. 10:58
C.B!BIPDAJUIEWS
11:oo
•rnarniEl NEws
NASHVIUE RFD
DOCTOR IN TlfE HOUSE
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
!SENTS
I 1:28
l:B.!! UPDAT! NI!WI
I 1:30
IICIJTHETONIQHTSHOW •
'The Beat Of Carson' Gueats :
GeorQt Burna, Johnny Mathia .
epea1; 60 mlna.)
ANOTHER LIFE
,
(I) CIS LATE MOVIE
Quincy, M.E .: 'Sullied Be Thy
Name' A priest Is found dead in
a compromising aituatlonthatia
Ironic in IIQhl of hla crusade
again at pornography. (Repeal)
Banacek; 'Ten Thouund
Dollars A Page' A manIa
persuaded to dilplay hia
pricale~e book. and when 11
vaniah11, Banacak tlndathe
·moat likely auapecll among
Tyson's own employeea.

.' '

----- - - - - - '

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
Wheel-drive, 29,000 mlles, 8
cyt, call ofltr 3 p.m. 304·
675·3898.

10:28
10:30

ffi

BARNEY

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service
commercial, industrial:
~hone 882·2079 .

TUTU HAVE
THEIR oWN PJ&lt;'08Li:M5
· .. , I:STA!ILISI'IIN&lt;S A
NEW I!!U51Nf55t

l J.

~

~

·
':

NO/ HE ANI'

A CHIPMUNK
CHRISTMAS Though he is
eagerly looking forward to
playing a harmonica solo at
Carnegie Hall on Christmas
Eve, Alvin give a away his prized
harmonica to a poor, sick boy
whoae family cannOt afford
thing lor him.
~N UPDATE NEWS
UCIJ ABINGCROSBY
CHRISTMAS ' ... Like The Ones
We Used To Know ' Kathryn
Crosby and Gene Kelly hOst this
special featuring clips from
Bing's past Christmas shows
starring Jackie Gleason,
Mictlaai Landon. Mary Martin
and Fred Aatalre. (Repeat ; 60
mlns.)
Cll !lJOj;LUB
(I) 1)2) 11J MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL Atlanta Falcons at
Los AnOelea Rams. (Closed·
CaP:tioned; U.S.A.)
D ill®l M.A.S.H. Klinger
a tenets court ·martial for
allegedly stealing Hawkeye
a net S.J.'t new camera and
Major Wlncheater serves a ahis
altorne£,.(Concluaion)
D (I) C1l!J HOUSE CALLS Or.
Solomon'slovellleisgoinQ sour
and he blames II on his heavy
lmopjlal !Xhodule.
lL! MAC DAVIS:
CHRISTMAS IS S SONG Moe
Oavls' Yulellcte celebrallon,
with guests Andrae Crouch, the
Poi·nter Sitters and the
Commodore a. (60 mint.)
(J) IIOVIE ·(COMEDY) •••
"Thaln--Law•" 1171
D(l) ilDJ LOU GRANT Charl;o
Hume'snervoua young nephew
ahowa up looklng lor a job and
turns out to be a mental cue
shakily balanced by drugs he
doesn't want to take. (80

I

.'
'

SE~ING Machine repairs,
serv1ce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service . Sharpen
Scissors . Fabri _
c Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2274.

as

rJ

I

Home
· Improvements

82

1?11?
TIME HE
i~IED T0 50
'TOO FA~.

HALF AN

Auto painting, sanding,
m.nor body repair, $169. · ,
Call379·2679.
81

'AI\.&lt;',..,. 5HE

EVE~Y

r==::J

Slit M-OllE OUT~ AND

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Insurance work
welcome. Sunroofs in·
stalled from $200·$230. Auto
Trim Center, 446·1968.

HAULING · drive
stone, 30H95·3925.

1975 DODGE powerwagon;
Ax~, $600, 30H75-6644,

Unscramble theM four Jumbles

ontletlef to each square. to tomi

TO

""
'

Auto Repair

1979 I nternattonei Scout 4·
wh"l drive. Loaded with
acces., 13,795, Calll14l·2-451,

71 JEEP Renegade, S-4500.
pllont JOH75·3621,

'

~

1

1980 MIG I II Replica car Of
1953 MGTD. Excellent con·
Puppies mother AKC Reg. dltidn, priced to sell, $6,000.
black Chow-father Collie :WH4H678 or 30H&lt;7 ·5697.
and St. Bernarcl. Excelleht
Chow features, 2 females. 1 -- - ·---~
black and 1 tan. Call 367· HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
0663.
20 less expensive cars in
stock .
AKC Reg. black female
ChoW. 11/2 years old, good
protector has pedigree. 1968 DODGE GT X $500 . 1
w,!leeled cart SlOO. 304·458·
Call 36].0663.
lu6.
Blue Tick male cOonhound,
14 mos. old , $60. Walker
female coonhound 5 mos.
old, $40, Registered Moun·
tain Cur PuP had all shots
and wormed, 8 wks. old.
S125. Call days 10·5, 367·
0637.I

77

1975 Camara, gooct cond ..
$1,900. Call446·7322.
.
1979 AMC Concord stationwagon, 4 speed ' trans.,
22/1'97 miles, low mileage,
A· 1 condition. Call 245·5241.

byHonnAmoldonoBobLee ~

-~

Boats .ind
_ _c.:M~o~t~o"rs,_f,.,o~r_;S"a"'le:.___
Bass boat, aluminum, 40
LP Mere. 0/B tournament
equlped. $2,850. Call «6·
98 evenings after 6:00.

15

2--13" Armstrong Radial
Studded Snow Tires. Used
Registered Quarter Horse one winter . $75 .00. 992·2770.
filly,
Regist.ered
Ap·
paloosa, 4 yrs. old and good
blood line. Call 256·6.fo13, 12 WINDSHIELD &amp; front fen·
der for Plymouth Duster
p.m . 1o 9 p.m .
~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:===- 304-67HI35.

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

~ ~ ~~ .,

MONDAY
DEC. 1", 1Q81

'!'"'!
••

t~~~~~~jii~~~,~~~~~~~~~~1•;;;3t=:::JLgl~v!e~st~o~ck[:==
54
Misc. Merc.h andlce
~
54 Misc. Merchandlce
Partially new Lowery
piano·console. Buesher ..00 We buy. sell or trade new
alto saxaphone, and por· or used fur:nifure. City Fur·
table
CUnderwood. niture·discounf furniture
1ypewr 11er. a11 446·0541..
store, with 2 convenient
locations 330 Main St. and
2 maturnity dresses, Sears 4.07 6ttl St. both in Pt.
and Penney's brands. Ex· Pleasant. 30.4·675·2608.
cellent condition. Several
tops and pants too, size 9· SEARS Kenmore heavy
10. $20.00 for all maturnity duty dryer, 30H75·6838.
items. Also a long velvet
royal blue evening gown
with an empire waist line
Building Supplies
trimmed with white outlet 55
lace. Worn only twice, size Building materials block
9, $20.00. Caii30H58· 1997.
brick, sewer pipes, w'in-dows, lintels, etc. Claude
New wOOd stove,'tfilf price, Winters, Rio Grande, o.
never used, $350. Can con· Caii24H121.
vert to furnance , Call 256·
1216. Gallipolis.
5'
Pets for Sale

fi~I)N} fii}l} ~ THAT 8CfWIBLED WOAD GAME

Television
•
•
VIewmg

MEASl-E'S ISN'T BACK
YET- I'M CALL INS
~0UAMS:Y's ROOMING

Motorcycles

For Sale Honda 7.50 full
dressed low mileage, $1,500
firm . Phone 256·6506.

The Daily Sentinei-Page---11

Ohio

DICK TRACY

..,.•

76
Auto Parts
____,&amp;c.:A,..c,c,.e:.css!!o~r~le~s.__
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
350 John Deere bulldozer, 6 automobiles, radiators and
way blade, 540 POT, 3 point batteries. 446·7717.
hitch, hyrqraulic hookup,
exc. shape, 94N072.
8' truck topper, 10' slide in
stock racks. Caii446·62B5.

&amp;Vogotabln
46

Farm Equipment

Jividen's Farm Equip·
ment. See the hay equip·
ment of the future. new
from Vermeer··also 8 full
line of equipment from
Long, Kuhn. Kelley &amp;
many others. With your
selection of rrparts &amp; com·
plete servlc. Used Hydro 70
IH tractor (like new), 1 .....s
Long tractor, 2 rakes,
hayblnd, New Holland
round baler. bus-hoo, disk
&amp; cultivators. Check our
prices &amp; compare. Call 446·
1675.

Furnished Rooms

SlEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt
Park Central Hotel.
·•

Mondav, December 14,1981

~

DACHSUHUND
304-458·1620.
45

For Salt or Tra,..
\/Ins &amp; C W.D.
73
1971 Oldsmobile for sale or
trade of equal value, $550. 1976 f:ord window van. Red
&amp; white, priced reduced,
Call «•H570.
Sl ,850. Call446·.4394.

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

For Sale: Bearcat pocket
scanner, battery powered,
New touch $700. 6 pc dinet" 5 crystals included, $100.00.
te set $180. New juke box Call446·9303.
stereo $180. 576·2602.
Girls leans, tops, coats,
3 pc bedroom suite, book· raincoats, boots, shoes,
case bed, good condition, dresses,
slacks,
also
$60. 675·1262.
upright freezer. Call 446·
2996.
GE heavy duty washer In
gold. Sears Kenmore, large Sale. for month of Dec,
dryer, white. Side by side . Mbile home wood burner,
refrigerator
with
ice $459. Through the wall in·
maker. gold. Phone 304·675· sulated vent kit, $149. Hot·
2534.
point hectVY duty washer
and dryer, $599. Kingsbury
Parts and Accessories, Rt.
124, Minersville, Ohio.
S4
Misc. Merchandice

1 bedroom furnished apart· Restaurant
equipment
ment, utilities furnished, ·reconditioned by RADCO.
Sl50 a month. 675 -~760 .
Call 30023·1378. H~ln
WVA.
• .
New efficiency apartment,
suitable for 1 person. 675·
9760.
SEARS free standing
fireplace, brown bakecl
New 1 bedroom un · enamel. with glass doors,
furnished
apartment, used J months, $475. JCM·
washer and dryer hookup. 67 H581 after 5.

Lots &amp; Acreage

2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
low downpayment, land
contract , rural water,
ColUmbus and Sou thern
Electric . Call 256·6413. 12
p.m. to9p.m.

51

... : '

1 bedroom apartment in For Sale Kitchen table and
Henderson, partially fur· 2 chairs, $25. See at 769
nished. 675· 1972.
Brownell Ave., Middleport.

67H760.
2 bdr . trailer free water
and garden, 2 miles from
Pt. Pleasant on Rt. 2. Call
304-675·2894. .

..

;,: : --:. ~ :

AINrlmemt
for Rent

44

I

f!l'!l!!nl tholr h~ - - .
CII).AIC . .WI.IIIQHTLINE
~Tedf&lt;Gitpol .
12:30 (J) • Ill TDIIDRRDW
CDAIT·TO·COAITOuell: '
entertainer·prlett,FalherTom
Sm~h. (110 mlno.)

CllYPTOQUOTBS
PGOEGNW
TWDYM
TWFE
UWYNZ

DF

EUW

HOWRFWJ
RYJ

URTDE
LDEU

EUW

L U Z. -

SVQLDVM

KRY

QC

JZSW

Ytltenllty'l Cryploqoale: TO BE A GIANT AND NOT .A
IN YOUR PROFESSJON, YOU MUST ALWAYS BE
GROWING.-WIWAMMATI'HEWS

DWARF

•

•

�SUPPlEMENT TO:

Ohio

Monday, December 1 1981

Meigs .County happenings
Probe break-ins

QUEEN - These five Soutberu lfigh School
seniors have been nominated by their elassmatea as
candidates fur Christmas Queen. The 'queen will he
named at a formal dance to be held at the high scbooliu
Racine from 8 to 11 :38 p.m. next Saturday with music

to be provldeol by "Music UDlimlted." All students ol
the hlgb school will be invulveol·ln the sele&lt;Uun of the
queen. The dance is spoasored by the senior class. Candldatea from the left are Sherry Beegle, Alicia Evans,
Amber Warner, Mindy Morris and Beverly Roush.

fidence.

General
(Continued from poge I J
their meeting in Gdansk called for a
nationwide referendum to retain' or

·Lo

IIIII II

.

A

reject communism unless the government met their demands for
economic and political reforms
before the end of the year.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were issued to
Perry Randall Rail, 18, Middleport,
and Beverly Zenn Hubbard, 18,
Mason; James Virgil McHaffie, 'll,
Pomeroy, and Sharon Grace Sinclair, 28, Pomeroy.

'&gt;&gt;

Brother, sister
drown in pond

Tower worker falls to death
RICHVILLE, Ohio -

Two breaking and enterings are
under Investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
A breakhll! and entering occurred
late Sunday morning at the Meigs
County Garage. All that was reported stolen was gas from two trucks.
Entry was made by knocking out a
panel in an overhead door.
The department · is also · investigating a breaking and entering
that occurred at the Jaymar Golf
Course. Taken was approximately
'70 in cash, along with candy,
cigarettes, sun glasses, tool box full
of tools and two sets of·key.
·
A J&gt;0i1 machineg outside the
building was also broken into and
approximately $20 to $30 taken. Entry was made by breaking a window
in tile kltchen area.
Anyone luiving any infonnation
regartling the breaking and enterings are urged to contact the
sheriff's department. All lnfonnation will be held in strict con-

Cleveland man fell85 feet to his death while

working on the transmiss ion tower of a Canton radio station, station

officials said.
Mark Ryan, 27, was installing an FM broadcast antenna on the 360foot WHBC tower, southwest of Canton, when the accident occurred
about 3 p.m. Saturday, said Bill Gl asser, chief engineer for the station.

Glasser said problems apparently developed with Ryan's safety belt.
''As near was we can tell, his safety belt- one of the clips on it ... a~

parently became unclipped," Glasser said: " We can't figure out how."
Ryan was pronounced dead at Aultman Hospital, a hospital
spokesman said.

Boy falls through ice, drowns
FINDLAY, Ohio- A 12-year,old Findlay youth drowned when quarter-inch ice broke as he and his twin brother tried to cross a frozen
pond.
David Smith's body was recovered in 20 feet of water about 40 feet
from shore about two hours after the 5 p.m. Saturday accident about
three miles cast off here.
His brother, Dan, told rescuers that he was closer to shore, climbed
out of the water and ran about a half-mile to his home for help.

Jurors. not convinced yet
LANCASTER, Ohio - Despite another man's confession to the
crimes, Fairfield County jurors who voted to convict a Lancaster man
of rape, robbery and burglary last year aren't convinced they wronged
him, according to the Columbus Citizen-JournaL
" If he (Bradley C. Colt) is innocent, he hung himself by all the lies he
told," a juror told the newspaper Sunday.
Altlmugh she admitted she was one of the two jurors who favored
acquittal at the outset of deliberations, she said overwhelming evidence changed her mind. When Cox took the witness stand, he contradicted himself "all over tile place," she said.

Weather forecast

Closing December 24

Installation set

Veterans Mem()rial

Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will
hold Its annual installation of of· ·
ficel'll an&lt;l "What's Right With .
Masonry" night at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
Officers are to report to the temple at 7 p.m. Friends and family are invited and refreshments will be served following the meeting.

Saturday
Admissions-Ellen
Couch, Pomeroy; Fred Kinch,
Pomeroy; Pamela Stene, Ratland ;
Beosle Turley, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Eleanor
Werry, George Starcher, Tanuny
Bable, Evelyn Schuler, Ida Young,
Woodrow Hendrix, Sr., Lemley·
Russell, Charles Mash.
Sunday . Admissions-· Cecil
Eiselstein, Pomeroy; Hazel Webb,
Racine; Dorothea Salser, Racine;
Sue Imboden, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges--Velma
Siders, Pamela Slone.

Party this Friday
Carpenter's Local Union 650 will
bold ils annual Christma• party at 7
p.m. Friday at the hall. The party is
for members only.

Property transfers

Sale Starts,Today
Good thru December 20, 1981
While quantities las!. Quantity rights reserved. We are nat responsible for
typographical errors. Sarr)t, no dealers .

Emergency runs

Still need toys

Local units answered five
emergency calls on the weekend, the
The SalvationAnny, Pomeroy, is Meigs Emergency Medical Service
.
still in need of new or good used toys reports.
On
Saturday
at 5:50 p.m., the Midto be distributed to needy children of ·
dleport
Unit
took
Bessie Farley from
Meig.s County and surrounding
the
Stonewood
Apartments to
areas for Christmas.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital;
Canned goods and food products
Pomeroy
at
ll
:
11
a.m.
took
Fred
are also being accepted. Items may
Kinch
frortl
Lincoln
Hill
to
Veterans
be left at 115 Butternut Ave.
Memorial and the Rutland Unit at
Pomeroy.
5:41 p.m. took Pam Candle from
Route 124 to Veterans Memorial.
Santa event set
On Sunday the Racirte Unit was
called to the scene of an accident at
A "snack with Santa" program
Antiquity at about 5:38 p.m.
will be held at 10 a.m. to IZ:30 p.m. Geraldine Webb, Dorothea Salser
Saturday at tbe Rutland Elementary and Grover Salser, Jr., were taken ·
Scliool. Pictures will be taken of San- from the accident to Veterans
ta with children and there will be a Memorial Hospital and Grover
variety of toys on hand for parents to Salser was later moved to Holzer
select ~rom.
Medical Center.

The Meigs County Court House rr~;;;;;;~;;;;~~;;~;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;
will be closed Thursday, Dec. 24,for ·
thechrisbnasholidays.

MADISON, Ohio (AP) - A 13year-old boy and his 7-year-old sister ·
drowned and their brother was
rescued after ice broke as they
played on a froz.en golf course pond,
Oyde Ferrell by James J. Proffitt,
o£ficials said.
Sheriff, to Bank One of Pomeroy,
Michael Brown, 13, and his sister, NA, Parcel, Rutland.
Amy, 7, were pronounced dead SunDebra Fulks (nee) O.,bra Grate,
day at Northeast Ohio General Edward Scott Fulks .to Miclt.el
Hospital in this Lake County com- Grate, Parcel, rutland.
munity. Their brother, Steven
John Roy Nonnan, Mary Ann NorBrown, 8, was hospitalized for man to Mary A: Nonnan aka Mary
hypothennia today.
·
A. Smallwood, 2. 72 acres, Rutland.
Betty Parker, a spokeswoman for
I van Cannan to Royal Petroleum
the Madison Township Police Depar- Properties, Inc., Ease., Salisbury.
tment, said officers arid fire departIvan Cannan to Royal Petroleum
ment rescue workers were called to
Properties Inc., Ease., Salisbury.
the pond on the Lake Erie Shores
Edison Hobstetter, Exec., Allen
Golf Course shortly after 4 p.m. Sun- W. Hartley, dec. to Suzanne Evelyn
day.
Hartley, Lol•, Pomeroy.
Two neighbors of the children
William ·Edward Demoskey,
called authorities and rescued the 8- Carolyn Y. Demoskey, Betty Lou
year-old from the 60-foot-by-30-foot Denny, Earl Denny, Jr. to Lillian
pond. It took rescue workers )t
Demoskey, Lot 96, Middleport.
hours to recover the two·bodies, said
Ruth Hayth, Sidney T. Russell,
patrolman Richard J. Mongrell.
deceased, Affidavit, Middleport.
Rescuers used oars and a pickax
James E. Winebrenner to Kinnie
to chip away at the ice, Mongrell L. Chamberlain, Lydia N. Chamsaid. Several bystanders joined in,
berlain, 61 1/3 acres, Scipio.
digging at the twe&gt;-inch-thick ice at
Walter P. Brown, Margaret J.
the pond's edge that thinned to about Brown to Oayton L. Johnson,
a quarter-inch at the center. The Shirley Johnson, .50 acre, .2 acre,
pond is an estimated 10 feet deep, he Olive.
said.
Mongrell said the children's sled
was on the pond's bank. He believed
they strayed onto the pond while
playing in the snow.

.,...
IA¥101.1

10 LIGHT TREE
TOP ANGEL
Cat, No. 251 U.L Listed l'rH Top Angel

with Beautiful M.. h Oren, 10 Lights.
Cachet. A gift as In·
divldual 01 1he is.

N8.10M'I MG. •1.2t

r

NIUON'I IIG. U.4t

~

THEliA

.65 Oz.
Spray cologne

·,..-.~, .·?•]19,
~1 .0.. _ ':
'
·· nt,... .... .,.ae

anol
1 Oa. Talc

NIUON'I RIG. M.2t

SJIW

Every Tuesday Night At (row's

$4''

'·' '

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

,14 Oz.

'

NILSON'S
IIG. M.tt

'

·~
~

' .:.·MalON's.. MG. •1~2t

.-.-

DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Sorry, No Substitutes except
~everages which have an additional price.

'

' t 'C(.

.... ~
~

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

'"""'·.·

~~T

:.::

;:~~~
.....

·Crow's Family Restaurant
228 W. Main

Ph. 992-5432

Pomeroy, OH.

'

-·

SMQKE DEtECTOR
Our Special Price 1 14"
less $3.00 Rebate From
Mfg. Your Final Cost

To end marriages':_ _

Ooudy with a chance of snow tonight. Lows in the mid and upper 20s.
Cloudy and colder Tuesday with snow flurries and snow squalls likely
in the northeast. Temperatures steady or falling slowly into the low to
mid~20s by evening.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
Cold with a chance of snow flurries lu the northeast Wedaesday and
Thursday. Otherwise, fair weather. Highs in tbe upper ZOs and 38s
Wednesday and in the 20s Thursday and Friday. Lows lu the teens.

/;/ o:·.~ ..

--::::; \\'

Two marriages were dissolved
and another was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
The marriages of Roberta A.
Hawk and Steven P. Hawk and
Suzanne I. Prsons and Elmer B.
Parsons, Jr., were dissolved.
. Lance Elda Chapman was granted
a divorce from Marilyri Virginia
Chapman.

IIODIL alollf'C

'

PIOIICT YOUI

FAMILY

'11''

r-••.•wwwwwwwwwwww•www•••••••••••••lf¥-y

I

I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
O~EN EVERY NIGHT TIL 8

I

I

1:
i

!
I

1
11
1

BLUE DENIM

II
I

BASIC JEANS

I

,:.~! "~~..~'""'

-NO-FAULT~

•

FREEDOM FROM SHRINKING
FREEDOM FROM WRINKLING
FREEDOM FROM PUCKERING

SALE ·

I

99

Waist sizes 28 to 42, lengths 30, 32,34 or 36 inches.
Pre-washed 100% cotton . blue denim. Buy tor
yourself or Christmas Giving.
Bring the children in to see Santa Claus
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 2 tol.

L.!i:!!!!!_~~!..!!!!_O~!!!~Y.
'

Open
a
.
II
Christmas Club . Account
~
I
at the Farmers Bank.

II
I
'I

I
1:

.I\:IORTHERN

1400WAn
PRO HAIR DRYER
WITH 5 An

I:IOFmERN

liiGH ROllERS

Make .49 payments
get the 50th _FREE.

The dry hairMHM 101' curly gr
C:OIUOI ••h. Compact de•ltn

t.on-1 ...,.
fwl ...,

tarllfiOmMI'IH with

10 NmO'Ie rolt.r. on MCh

•!d.. T,..,.,.Nlnt ....... ~told

oul to open ~ hoW t-1 wMn
eloMd. 3D rallen In w .. ai'l" lnIU,.. o Nil ,_,. of Mit ll'fiM .
Ontoff 1wttd! wlfto.llght . ...... do.t
1!pot. .,..._. roitef't ore NDdy. Lilt·
up mnylnt ~. Cord Wf"'ll"

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ank

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Farttters
Mombtlr FDIC

NILIOM'IIIG. e:n.tt

The . Community Owned Bank
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