<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14818" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14818?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T23:39:09+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47037">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3689864e9825a1d6c1afcf38ef4ca435.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a5ada770580b421ee1544903ee1dd2b0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47139">
                  <text>Soviet planes
land in Poland
#
1

1

PAGE TWELVE

~-----Jt&gt;i--,
ONLY 9
I
1 SHOPPING !
DAYS LEn!

I
I'

I'

-JOB-UIMM---·

FRUTH &lt;"a~
PHARM·ACY

r•m·-----..
I
I
1 OPEN LATE

EVERY NIGHT

'·

I

"-'--------

1 AND SUNDAY

..,. .,,..

I

\

••

•

=•

-

\

weekeud to aid tbe silualloo in Pobmd. The supplies
are to be loaded oalrucks bl an attempt lo relieve lb...
sufferlag from food shortages tbrou8hout Polalld. (AP
Laserpholo).

AID FOR POlAND- Freaeb sokllen 81111 v. . .
teen wrap fqod 111J1Pilea Tuaday bl,a lllllllrtl ~ Pula
after dooall- were made ,by ParuiaDo durlq the

·e
Voi.JO,No.172
Copyrighted 1981

By The Aaaocialed Press
tanks, am~ored personnel carriers
Strjkes and government lockoulll and howitzeJ'll were deployed in for·
to prev~nt sit-ins paralY2ed much of ce around the countryside, and tent
Poland's heavy industry today as camps cOUld be seen.
government troops evicted
Although the regime could drive
the strikers from the plants they had
protesting workers and arrested
strike leaders.
taken over, they apparently could
not get tbe mills and factories hack
The British Broadcasting Corp.
into operation.
reported Western dipiomalll in War·
saw beUeved Soviet transport planes
Troops and riot police drove sit-in
landed there during the night, but
strikers from the Warsaw steel mill
tbere was no confinnati0n from
and ttactor factory Monday night,
otber sources. West Germany's Luf·
then guarded the gates to prevent
the workers from returning to
tbansa Airways said Polish air
apace was closed to foreign airUners
resume their protest.
during the night but reopened by
Reports from Gdansk said tbe ar·
1:15 a.m., indicating the nwnber of
my a1w ended the sit·in at tbe giant
Soviet filghts, if there were any, was
Lenin Shipyards 'In the Baltic coast
limited.
induatrlal center, but the yards were
The BBC also said its Western · closed and "many" other plants in
diplomatic sources reported heavy Gdansk were on strike.
Wanlaw Radio reported most
military movemenlll around Warsaw and other Polish cities. It said chemical plants and light manufacother reUable sources reported in- turing factories were back in
production Tuesday. But it said
tense anxiety in the capital as the
new martial-law regime used troops
nothing ahout' hl'&amp;vy industries or
to break the sit-in strikes with which tbe vital coal mines, indicating that
many of tbem were either occupied
the independent labor movement
by strikers or shut down to prevent
responded to the Corrununist Party's
crackdown last weekend.
slt·ins.
The occupying troops were repor·
Travelers arriving in Warsaw
Tuesday . reported Polish am~y

ted rounding up strike leadera, and
sources in Warsaw estimated at
least 6,000 members cf the Solidarity
labor federation had been arrested
since martial law was proclaimed
early Sunday and the union wu
suspended.
Solidarity chief Lech Walesa was
reported being beld outside Warsaw,
and union actlvislll who escaped tbe
pollee roundup said he was visited
by Roman Catholic Archbishop .
Bronislaw Dabrowski.
The union sources said Walesa
sent word by the archbishop that tbe
workers should abstain from violence and should strike only when such
action would be effective. He also
told tbe prelate, "Don't allow the
moral spirit of the nation to be
crushed," the union sources said .
The sources said the government
wanted to arrange a meeting ol
Walesa and Premier Wojci~h
Jaruzelski with Archbishop Joeef
Glemp, Poland's Roman Catholic
primate. But they said Glemp insisted the meeting be held at his
palh"e and that advisers be present,
and the government rejected his
conditions.

••

•

a1

enttne
2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 16,1981

lS Cents

A ~ultimedia Inc . Newspaper

Three prosecution witnesses
provide additional evidence
Three people who say they saw

·LAST M-INUTE

Cincinnati officers get awards
C!NqNNATl - Salt Lake City Pollee Chief E.L. Willoughby has
presented a warda to 30 Cinclnoati-area pollee offleerafor their work II)
tbe probe that led to the conviction of·Joseph Paul 11'1'8ilklln. ·
Franklin was found guilty of the anlper alaytnga of two black joggers
In a Salt Lake City park.
ctneinnati PoUce Chief Myron Lei8ller, who received one of the ribbons, said that Franldln iB sllll wanted in conncectlon with the June-8,
19110, sniper slaylnp of Dante Evens Brown and Darrell Lane in Cincinnati.

*

John ~wiB Young and his com·
panion, Terry Lee Brainsrd on Dec.
I, 1976, just hours· after Mary
Berry was stabbed to death In bed at

r.:

,.... home In Muon - IMifled lor

the atate in Mason County Circuit
Court Tuesday.
' Judge Clarence Walt allowed
Catherine Reed; Young's older
sister, and Debbie and Mike
Tivener, Mrs. Reed's daughter and
son-ip-law, to testify foUowing
questioning out of the presence · of
the jury by both Mason County
Prosecuting Attorney Damon B.
Morgan Jr. and defense attorneys
MIAMI - Nathaniel Lane, whose three murder trials stemmi~
Raymond G. Musgrave and James
from the city's 1980 riota aU ended with hung juries, was freed today
Casey.
'
after 19 months In Dade County Jail.
Since Watt had to first determine
Circuit Judge Herbert Klein ordered the :MI-yeaMld black youth set
the admissability of Young's aUeged
f~ when Dade State Attorney Janet Reno's office announced that tbe
statements to hia sister. and her
state would not prosecute him a fourth time in the !Jeliting ~eath of 21·
family, and . whether or not those
yeaMid Benny Higdon.
statemenlll were made voluntarily,
Lane grinned broadly, grabbed attorney Joe Kershaw Jr.'s hand in a
questioning of the three took up the
warm handshake, then hugged re18tlves, including hia mother, in tbe .: entire afternoon on the third full day
courtroom. He walked out, free for the first time since his arrest, at
. cf testimony in the trial of the 37·
9:34a.m.
year-&lt;Jid Young, who Is charged with
Mrs. Berry's murder.
Mrs.. Reed, the first ol the three
witnesses to testify in front of the
jury, said Young and Brainard
HOLWMAN A1R FORCE BASE, N.M. - An ainnan convicted of
arrived
at her home in Corning,
murder could be the first American serviceman ez~uted by the
military in 20 years Ua court-martial jury's sentence ill carried out.
Airman Robert Gay, 28, of Detroit, a mWtary aecurlty policeman
stationed at Holloman Air Force Base ~ Aiamagllrdo, N.M., was
angry at his supervisor over a reprUund aboot a hairCut when he
killed him 1aat Aug. 2 with an M-18 rifle, witnesses testified; Another
bullet kiUed an unarined security policeman.
Gay, who was convicted last week, w• aentenced to destb Tuesday
by a IIHnember jury cf Air Force officen.
·

Free after three jury trials

Prices In Effect Dec. 15th Thru Christmas Eve.

LCD

111&lt; ........ - - - - - - -

TIME

PEN

Airman could he first execution

Ohio, on Dec. I, 1976, at around 8 left her residence and went to the
a.m. While talking with the two in Tivener home, also in ·Corning,
her living room, Mrs. Reed claimed, where Young asked her to write
Young said to her, "If I told you something for him. Sbe was too
what I done you wouldn't want me . "shoqk up" to write, she said, so
Young went with Mike Tivener and
bere."
.
Ml's. Reed ..ld ohe told him, "You
know better than that/' and·then she

Brainard Into tile 'dlcllel\. Young
later called her to the doorway of the

Although Mrs. Reed could not
identify either of the letters submitted earlier as state exhibits as
the one Young gave her, she said she
could remember what she read by
the note Young gave her.
-. . . tGl4. . t-J'Iba'-'UiraMcl, ''1,;~·

John Lewis Young, did kill Mary
Berry on Nov. 30, 1976."
where
he
handed
her
a
note
kitchen,
told the jury her brother said, "I
and
instructed
her
to
walt
three
days
On cross-examination by Casey,
killed Mary Berry."
A short while later, Mrs. Reed and then take the letter to the Point Mrs. Reed said her brother did not
appesr to be drunk - "he talked
testified, she, Young and Brainard Pleasant Register to be published.
okay, and walked okay" - lx!t that
. she did see him drink a beer. She
also said she put the note, which she
claims was witnessed by the
signatures of Mike Tivener and
Bobby Ord, superintendent of Southern Local School District was
Brainard, behind a picture on a
given a new two year contract, effective Alij!. I, 1982, when the board
television set in th~ Tivener home,
met In regular session Tuesday night.
and although Mrs. Reed said she
The board, in other action, employed Clarence Roy and Lois Bailey
asked Young how he got to Corning,
as substitute custodians, adopted a school district philosophy and aphe never told her.
proved the goals of the school district which are on file for viewing.
On direct examination by Morgan,
A resolution was passed conunendlng Shirley Johnson for her work
Mrs. Reedalsosaid·thatafter Young
as a member of the board llf education. JohnSon's tennis up as of the
gave her the note, sbe drove Young:
end of tbe year.
and Brainard to the home of another
They board Increased insurance coverage on the boller and· apsister, Violet Rose Lee, in Pomeroy.
proved temporary appropiations.
Along the way, she said, they stopJoseph Malesick, band director, discussed the band program.
ped for gas, at a state liquor store
The board recessed until Dec. 21, at 8 p.m. Attending were Sue
and at a grocery store.
Grueser, Don Smith, DeMy Evans, Shirley Johnson and Charles
After dropping Young and
Pyles, board members, Dennie Hill, Nancy Carnahan, treasUrer and
Brainard, off at the -Lee residence ,
~
BobbyOrd.
(Continued orr page 18)

Or'd given contract

Elderly man

..'

•

robbed at

knife point

Rhodes signs new jobs bill

'l
•
' I

I

f

OUII BUSINESS
BEGINS
WITH
.
FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS

"THE EVERYTHING STORES"
101 Sixth Ave.
Huntington. W. Va.

2501 uckiGII Avenue
Point Pluunt, W. V•.

364 J•ckson Pike
Gillllpolis, 0.

120 W. 2nd St.
Wellston. 0.

ALL STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
FREE PARKING

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Aplnlt a baiSdrop ol 11.4 percent unemployment, Gov. James A. Rhodes hu liped into law a hill aimed at
crealinl itew jobs In Inner city areas.
.The meuure allon officials to create urban JC?bs and enterprise
zlines, offerlnil tax breaks to quallfylnc buslnesaea and industries
which locate or expand lacilllles in thole areas.
Also signed Into law by the governor Tuesday despite objections of
some firefighters was a law legalizing a new kind of tlpllce heater. It
estahllshes safety slandards for unvented ke~e-fired room

heaters.

.

Winning Ohio lottery nulnber
ClEVELAND - The winplng number drawn Tuesday night In tbe
Ohio Lottery'a dally game ''The Nwuber" wullli.
The lottery reported eandnp of ....111.10 frcrn the W&amp;~ering on
the daUy game. The eaminga ca1111 • . . . ~ .-.,4117.50, while
holders ~· wlnainll tickets are entitled to share f1M,JI8, lottery officials said.
'

Weather forecast
-

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

'
''
'

A 72-year old Long Bottom man
was robbed at lmife point of '170 at
his residence Tuesday at 5 p.m. by
two unidentified men the sherlff's
department reported.
Accordlni to.the sheriff's department two men came to tbe home llf
Emerson McDough posing as goverrunent winterizaUon personnel.
The two men told McDough that
they would insulate his home and
began takinll three bass of fn.
sulation from their car. They
carried two bags to the attic ares.
Both men came back down to the
· HVing room area where one man

•

•
•

•

•

•

•

•

• '

•

•

• •
•

'

.'

.

~

. .
•

•

'•.
''

..

'

.. .
.. ,

.
'

..'

..'

produced a knife and informed MeDough that he would cut McDough's
throat if he didn't cooperate and give
them aU his money.

McDough gave them his wallet
that contained approximately $170.
McDough told the men that wu all
he had.
The pair tben lied McOough with a
piece ~ telephaae wire they had cut
tram his phone before prcll.'8ldlns to
ransack tbe McDou&amp;b residence. After flndln8 no additional money they

left.
The lherlff'l clepartmeM ·~

that Hllcllntl an to notify the it U
men CGII1II to their ilcJ'ns atating
they are 11ovmunent winterization
people or juat someone wanting to
(Cantlnaedonpege 18)

r

•

£oo TUESDAY- n wu

Deeemll.- lJ, ..,, ...... I p.IL ... tile 1"11111 bow
tnflle wu •llllllhlr Brlilae - - K-•p

. - l'lllllt Plana• wblll h I'Oikpred lt ,wn 81•
Tllerday. A F'Jallwllf 1111811-.Jirldae Ia i*_.liJ •
dlrplay at tbe Ftdedl S.vblp
Alroc., wllleh

_.Lou

I
I

�Wednesday, December 16,1981

, Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Gregg provided main
ingredient-. attitude

·'

Mr.Re~~'sdeficll?~--~~~----~--~-·-~_R_
· B_~_M_ey_J_~
The projected deficit or over $100
billion in 1982 is extremely b!ld news,
and if you listened to such as my
brolher Tom Wicker, always a bad
ides, you would think that Ronald
Reagan had set out to eat 100 bilUon
one-dollar-apiece jelly beans and
charge them to the laxpayers. Mr.
. Wicker reaches such a state of
hysteria that he ends by predicting
that unemployed minority teenagers
' will never be able to get jobs, and he
italicizes the word "never." To be
sure ..,. he pauses, in order to accent
his own reflectiveness - they mighl
end up in prison.
Well, anything is possible; even
that Tom Wicker will one daimake
sense. But lei us review the situation
and ask the most relevant questions,
namely: How did we get into this
condition, and where were Tom
Wicker and Mr. Reagan's other
critics when Democratic
· congressmen were passing all those
· money bills and when we were
falling so far behind the Soviet
Union's tactical and strategic
weapons?

&gt;

In 1970, the federal welfare spending was $145.9 billion.
In 1980, the federal welfare spen·
ding was $500 billion (est.).
In 1970, tax.es paid into lhe
Treasury were $185.7 billion.
In 1980, notwithstanding lhat in
fixed dollars the gross national

product had not risen in 10 years,
taxes paid in to the Treasury as lhe
result of inflation and the bracket
creep were : $492.8 billion.
Now, one does not need to
"believe" in Mr. Laffer's curve, in

the sence in which you believe a
navigator's map on how to get from
Boston to Cleveland, in order to
know that it is suggestively correct.
Moreover, there is grudging
unanimity on lhe question whether
taxes should be raised, or lowered,
in times of recession. Conservatives
believe in lowering taxes on prin·
ciple, provided these taxes are !hose
most closely related to the rise of incentives.

And

economic

in-

terventionists believe 'that taxes
· should be lowered when there is
recession - even if the result is inflation.
Mr.

R~agan's

tax reductions for

1982 may or may not equal lhe
reduced inflation rate. His further
tax reductions will not take us back
to the tax load of 1970, given the in·
flation that came in between. Mr.
Wicker's statement that we haVe
scheduled $750 billion in tax reduc·
lions through 1984 is incorrect The
correct figure through 1984 is $280
billion.
What, then should be done? To say
that we should lower our defense ex-

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Coan Strett
Pomeroy, ObJo

114-ttz..Uil
DEVOTED TOniE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

-

Q~
tS:m
. ~ r""T"'\.....L_~·~=·~
~v
.

. '

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

· PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Allllltut PubUJbet/Coatroller
:

I

GeDenl Mauler

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
~ News Editor

A MEMBER of The Auoe•ted Prn1, .lnlaDd Dally Preis AuoclatJoa and tbe
Amerteaa NtMpper PubUdten Auodadon.

.

LE'ITER8 OF OP[N ION •re wele.mnl. They should be leu than 300 wordllo.ac. Ml

\etaenare~t.~IIIMI._.Iae....,.wt•....,. ...._ ...
....,.
1•
~.·u:=u~.. \e paMillled. ~.etten sboiald ID Rood tllatt, addrelalna
H

1,

be

'

The bomb as
chief industry

penditures is the equivalent or
saying that Soviet leaders should be
less bellicose. Right, lhey should be.
But until we figure out a way of performing a prefrontal lobotomy on a
couple of generations of Kremlinites
we have to Uve in the world they also
live in, and that means a world in
which we are sufficiently armed to
achieve our twin objeclives or peace
and survival.
Well then, how else do we cut
down?
That is the question the Qiberala
are always asking you. II is, so to
speak, the stock ambush. The speed
trap, where you are simultaneoualy
urged to travel qui~kly and arrested
for doing so.
.AI!hough lhe House is the origin ct
all money bills and lherefore bears
direct responsibility for deficit spending, it is the president who is
charged by the Constitution with
making recommendations.
President Reagan's proposed cuts
are clearly insufficient to effect a
balanced budget, which means that
eilher we tolerate the deficit or we
cut further. What irritates is that it
should be supposed our obligation to
specify these cuts. We!, why not
head back to the spending level in
welfare of 1970? To suggest such a
thing brings palpitations, as if we ·
were being invited back to the days
of the Great Plague.

--.
..-.

...
~. , ·

".

..

•.•.

.

..

..

.

-•,..

They revived "Charley's Aunt"
and •'Harvey.'' ''Woodstock" was in
1970, which means a baby boom in
19110 for which Tom Wicker !lad bet·

.

"

i

'
:;,
:::

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - When
in doubt, form a committee and conduct a study. It's a time-honored
melhod employed by many, including the Ohio General Assembly,
to delay decisions. on sticky
problems7- ·
But advocates say studies
sometimes produce meaningful an-swers.
And in drafting Ohio's state
budget this year, legislators tucked
away provisions for conducting a
serieS or studies.
Heading the list is an attempt to
determine lhe possiblities or translering control ct the $1.2 billion-ayear Medicaid program from the
welfare department to a private
firm.

NO ROOM IN THE STANDS - A disappointed
Beugals fan, Herbert Lockhart, learns that an the NFL
playoff tickets were sold out before the announced 6

••

p.m. bon&lt; oHlee tlme;I'Ueoday. The Beagals llllid so few
were left they sold them to the people standing In Hue
early. (AP Laserpboto).

.

~

,.•

~~ Meigs
Consultants will evaluate the
current system and see whether a
more effective method of adntinistration is available. Proponents of the change say it could produce
savings of $100 milllon or more for
lhe state.
Once the study is completed and
evaluated next year, the state will
have to decide whether to seek bids
from private insl!l'ers for operation
of all or part of the program.
·Among other studies, lawmakers
created a 14-member panel of
senators and representatives to
revie)V the state's current tax structure and how it might be changed.
That committee, which will be
able to administer oaths and issue

subpoenas, is to submit recommendations for tax alternatives by
Jan.l,l983.
Legislators agreed to authorize
studies of the board of tax appeals
and the environmental board of
review after hearing proposals to
abolish both or them.
Those studies will be required to
include a cost-benefit analysls of
each board's ojlerations, as well as
an examination or alternate
methods to meettheir objectives.
Legislators assigned the state
budget-management office to study
operations or the departments of
mental health and mental retardation, employing outside con- .
sultants for the wo,rk, if needed.
It Is aimed, among other things, ~t

improving the coordination of both
agencies in construction programs
and achieving lhe most cost·
effective method of providing services.
Also on tap next year are siudies
of work-relief programs and or state
administrative costs of federal
social service programs.
Studies contained in the budget
are, of course, not lhe only ones the
legislature has aulhorized.
Separate bills, lor elt811lple, have
provided for surveys or other mat·
ters, such as the increase in rural
crime; the shortage or nurses; and
. methods used by other states in
dealing with lhe problem of drunk
drivers.
'

School leader says borrowing bad
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The policy deferring part of their .
state superintendent or public in- payments from the state.
struction says a policy forcing some
Under the state budget, school
schools to borrow money from districts get 40 percent or their anprivate lenders to stay open is a bad nual state subsidies from July to
idea.
'
December and 60 percent from
The situation came about,because January to June.
of state government's attempt to
In effect, the state is using their
solve its money problemS and in- money to help run .the government.
volves miiUons of dollars in state
Legislators said that if any district
subsidies for Ohio's 615 school . was forced to borrow money from
districts.
commercial lenders to keep
The state Board of Education operating as a result, the state would
adopted rules Monday under which pay interest. Rules adopted by the
districts may ask the slate to pay in- board spell out which districts are
terest on money they borrow &lt;hie to a

eligible for the assistance.
. Franklin B. Walter, superintendent or public instruction, said
districts were concerned about the
change but have adjusted to it.
''The reaction was one of cone'em,
not alarm," ·Walter said. "I personally think it's bad public policy."
Herbert D. Brum, director of lhe
· division of school finance in lhe
department llf education, said he
does not know how many districts
might be eligible for the interest
reimbursements.
He said school districts have been
told lhe amount of borrowing on

vs. policies

which the state might pay interest.
Columbus City School District was
entitled to $23,012,413 fl'(lll July to
December but actually received 40
percent, or $18,409,930. The dif.
ference, $4,602,482, is the amount it
could borrow - lhe amount of subsidy deferred.
Amounts for Oilier systems are:
Cleveland, $7,318,390; ~ron,
$2,676,532; and Toledo, $2,876,224.
Brum said that to qualify for reim·
bursement, districts muat show they
needed money tbey borrowed to
maintain operations.

Don Graff

£---------~-------------------

Ocean coast or Africa. Losers in an plications.
airport firelight, they escaped
The preferring of kidnapping
aboard a conunandeered South rather lhan hijacking charges
African airliner . .
struck as off, among others, the U.S.
They landed in South Africa where state Department which publicly
· authorities ·swiftly . resolved protested South Africa's !allure to
whatever dilenuna they presented oboer~e obligations under inby lreejng ail but a handful of ternational agreements to'which it is
leaders. These, wbo included signatory. Kidnapping involves no.
Michael Hoare, a South African who mandatory penalty. South African
made something of a name for him- laws and procedures dealing wilh
self in the world as well as local hijacking, however, have recently
press during the unpleasantness been tightened . and conviction
preceding white-ruled Rhodesia's' means at lea'st five ·and up to 30
transformation into black"l!ovemed .years' imprisorunent.
Zimbabwe, were charged wilh kidnapping but then released on
Furthermore, the South African
minimal bail. Court hearings on the government has been among lhe
charges have been put Off .untn ~t energetic in' calling attention to
January.
lhe hijacking menace and in urging
international countermll!lsures. ·
Case, it would appear, ~!most
Such exist. Notably· conventions
c!OSB!I. The affairs or lhe Seychelles, adopted by lhe International Civil
a microscopic national entity of 111 Aviation Organization in Tokyo
aquare miles and 70,000 inhabUants, (1963), The Hague (1970) and Monas close to politically weightless as a treal (1971) defining .the crime and
country can be in world affairs, are spelling out obligations of signatory
not of a caliber to atlrlct outside jn- nations to p..-cute and extradite
terest for very long.
offenders.
.
Were it not, that is, lor the South
And there have been instances or
African connectil)fl and its 1m- cGmpllance. EllrUer this year,

Bulgaria returned a hijacked
Turkish airliner wilh hijackers; last
year Cuba performed a similar service for theUnited States, although it
should-be noted that in that incident
the hijackers were Cuban eXpellees
who were not welcome home again.
There are also special circumstances in the case or South
Africa. lis anti-hijacking laws are
aimed inward not outward, designed
to lhwart black opponents of its
white-supremacy policies. Further,
the mercenary mission to the
Seychelles was cOmposed largely or
South Africans and its target was a ·
native social regime that had ousted.
rightwingers more In South African
liking.

wrestlers

- in good showing.
' '

•

.

· The Meigs High School Wrestling
tesm looked very impressive Saturday as it finished second out of eight
teams behind a powerful Waterford
team, which also won the tourney
last year.
Coach Grimes plagued with three
forfeits· in the upper weight classes
look only 10 wrestlers, but all 10 did
their job.
On the day Meigs had four fourth
place winners, four second place
winners, and two individual champions. They were Mike Willford at
138 and Try Bauer at 126. Bolh
wrestlers pinned all their opponents
to get into the finals, and Bauer also
pinned his final opponent for lhe
championship. Troy Bauer was also
voted most valuable wrestler by the
coaches.
Other higlilights was having Doug
Priddy, a freshman, placing second
only losing to Tood Richards, a two
lime slate qualifier.
Another freshman, James Snyder,
placed fourth in the tourney losing to

awy.
.
II could happen here .

lhe eventual champion.
Also senior Gary Nakamoto at
heavyweight placed second in the
tournament after only one week of
practice. Gary had an eight second
pin in the semi-finals to tie a school
record for the quickest pin.
Final results were:
.
INDIVIDUAL
98 James snyder
4th
lOS Keith Kinzel
4th
112 Doug Priddy
2nd
119 Brill King
2nd
12' Troy Bauer
lst· MVW
132 Troy Bauers
4th
138 Mike Willford
lsi
145 Larry Romine
2nd
185 Danny Davis
4th
Hwt Gary Nakamoto
2nd
TEAM RESULTS
lst Waterford
2011/l
2nd Meigs
141112
3rd New Lexington
130112
4th Fairfield-Union
123
5th Nelsonvi lie· York
121
6th Tr imble
65
7th Amanda Clearcreek
15
8th Vinton County
6

Meigs willlravel to Chillicothe for
a tournament Saturday wilh wrestling starting at II a.m.

Game sold out
CINCINNATI (AP) -TIIectuaeapJs sold out an the
remalnlag tlcket1 lor two
'Natloaal Football Leape play,.!
pmes an hoar before the . .
IIOUIICed I p.m. box off!"" opeDillg
time at Riverfront Stadium oa
Tuesday.
The team's busilleas agent,
John Murdougb, said there were
so lew tlekelsleft for sale that the
Beugals decided to open tile box
office before 4 p.m. ~ause there
already were more than 100
people In line.
The Beagals' lint American
Football Coaference playoH
games are to be played on either
Jan. Zor Jan. 3.
"There are ou,ly %00 tickets left,
and there are more people
walling In line than tickets
available," said Bengal
spokeswoman lagrld Studley 101
el~~m~tl

Tu-yaflonlooD.
Mn. Studley oald that the club

had allowed season ticket holden
to buy an UD!Imlted number or
tlcketa. The stadium capacity is
59,754.
The Beagals, ll-4, wnpped up
tllelr flnlt playoff berth since 1975
by def..Ung the Plttsburgll
Steelers 17·10 last Sunday In Plt1811ulgb. Cincinnati's playoff opponent has no I been determllled.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cin·
clnnati Bengals always had the
tools. What lhty needed was a
change of altitude and Coach
Forrest Gregg was the man to do it.
The Hengals have won the
American Football Conference Central Division championship with an
11-4 record in Gregg's second'&gt;year
as head coach.
"I faced Cincinnati eight times
when I was at Cleveland, twice when
I was an assistant and twice a year
lor lhree years when I was head
coach. I knew their personnel quite
well," said Gregg on Tuesday as he
prepared for Sunday's regular
season finale with the Atlanta
&lt;li
Falcons.
"The b!lsic ingredients for a good
football team were here. There were
good players who weren't playing
well. Maybe there was a general attitade that it wasn't important to
win. Wanting to and doing are not
the same lhing," said Gregg.
"I think maybe they were looking
for ways to lose, not ways to win ....
That's sure not the case any more.
Man, these guys think they can
win."

The Bengals had consecutive 4-12
seasons before Gregg took over.
Last year, they fil)i.shed 6'10, but two
of the victories were over lhe defen·
ding Super Bowl champion Pi(.
tsburgh Steelers.
·
Reshaping altitudes wasn't done
overnight and there weren't any
111118ic words, he said.
Gn;gg did mention such things as
developing talent, hard work and
sacrifice.
"This is a demanding business.
Players have to make a lot of
sacrifices. Everybody else is out
whooping it up Friday night, end of
the week and all that, but our guys
know I expect lhem to be in. Friday
and Saturday are the two most important nights when you have a
game on Sunday," said Gregg. '
He said that the rest or the turnaround involved a few new people.
Seventeen Bengals on the current
roster weren't there when Gregg
was hired. Seven or them . are
rookies.
"We were able to draft well and to
pick up some free agents who have
c&lt;&gt;ntributed," said Gregg.
The Bengals won three or their last
four games in 1980 and haven't
looked back.

•GRAVRY TRACTOR
SAliS &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Phone: 992·2974
. NEW WINTER HOURS:

Colavito newest KC coach
CLEVELAND (AP) - New Kansas City Roy ala · hitting instructor
·Rocky Colavito doesn't expect to see
much or slugging third baseman
George Brett.
"To start with, I don't think
George needs a lot or work," said
Colavito, named Tuesday lo replace
Rick Rennick, who was fired alter
the 1981 season. "Anybody that
needs help and asks lor it will have
it."
Colavito is 24th on the all-time
major league home run list and was
a lavorlte or fans during his 12-year
career in the big time. The job with
the Royals is his first in baseball sin-

Top Twenty
·~ ·-laletl . . . .

fte
The Top Twenty
team11 ill The AUoclaled PreM coUep butetball poll, wiUl
flnl-plllce votel in .-rentheaes, season's
record and total polnta. Point. bued on
20-lt-11-17·16-15--14·13·12-1 HO-!l-8-7 ...S-5-4-3·2·

,,

1. North Carolina (42 J
Ill
3. Loullville {IH
4. Wichita st. ( 1)
I. VIrginia (11
8. 1owa
7. DePoul
a. MIJinelolll
t.ArbnaU(I )
10. San Fnnc*'O
~ Kentudl~

What the ot)lerwise farcical affair
demonstrates is that the problem
wilh international measures to de&lt;!! .
wilh hijacking is not in the devising.
It's in lhe implementation when they
c'DIIIict wllh national Policies. And ·
whea it .comes to conructa of principles and policies, the Seychelles
and South Africa aren't ail that far

.

11.-

.. 1,1,
"" 1,077

1M)
4-0 1,017
1M)
. . 113

~ :m1

s.o
~

~15

6-1
1&gt;1
1M)

11. VIllanova

8-(l

W7
401
402
3$5
""'
Ill
119 i

:;.2

131

:Ill. OnplSI.

~I

59

11 Tiilaa
111Pd1ana
1~ Alaboma
15. SW l..4llillana
II. Ala.·Binnlnolwn
17. UCLA

• 1~ a-ptown. DC

~1

~1

3-2

DCMNINGOIILDS
INSURANCE .
·AGENcY '
1l5 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDL£PORT

staiiiU&lt;~~.

..

912-234~

•.

.

.

ce he left a post as hitting instructor
with the Cleveland Indians in 1978.
Colavito said that lhe decision to
return to baseball was not easy. "We
just built a new house," he said from
his Bernville, Pa., home. "That was
a major consideration."
"It does entail being away from
home a lot and my wife and I enjoy
our time together. It got to the poinl
where I didn 'I think I would go back
into baseball. The Royals made me
feel wanted.
"I've always gotten along super
with ·(Royals Manager) Dick
Howser and he had a lot to do wilh
my decision," Colavito said, notilig
thst the two hnd played together and
are friends.
Colavito is the third new coach the
Royals have hired after · a
housecleaning that began with the
firing or Manager Jim Frey last
season. Kansas City recently hired
former Indians third b!lse coach Joe
Nossek and· Ramee! Cloyd Boyer as
pitching coach.
Colavito said that he has not
talked in depth with the Royals
about the job because he wasn't sure

Open Tues. thru Fri.
9 AM. til 5 P.M.
Sat. 9 A.M. 1111 P.M.

FOR MEIGS

COUNTY, OHIO

ELECTRONIC
. HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly

Eckrich

SWEET SMOKED HAM ••••••~~••s3.29
Eckrich 1 Lb .

SAUSAGE.~.b~.!l.79

FRESH ROLLED

JO Cl. Michigan

Bunch

CELERY.................. 59'
31b. Bag Yellow

ONIONS .............~~?..69'

Ohio Colby Longhorn
I

CHEESE ......~~:. :~1.99

Golden Ripe

BANANAS ............ ~?; 39'

K.~ •••• ~~~. 79c
15 oz. CHEERIOS •••••••••••• ~.o:. $1.49
46 oz. Del Monte

PINEAPPLE ·JUICE••••••••••~~~. 51.19
24 oz.

ROYAL PRINCE YAMS ••••••• ~:.n.. 99'
20 oz. Del Monte

CHUNK PINEAPPLE .•••••••••~~~. 79'
15 oz. Del Monte .

SPINACH••••••••••••••••2 Cans For Sl.Q9
15 oz. Bush's

GREAT NORTHERN BEANS •• 2/69'
250 Ct.

NORTHERN ' NAPKINS ••••• ~~~~- 51.39
15 Ct. Chinette

COMPARTMENT PLATES.•• ~~~~ $1.29

~GRAVELY
5
he wanted to accept it until two days
c.a.n
•••
ago. "It's a high-dass operation.
They made me feel very welcome," I ~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~lJ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~
he said.
~
Colavito, a well-traveled major
leaguer who played for lhe lndisns,
Detroit Tigers, Kansas City A's,
Clticago White Sox, Los Angeles
Dodgers and New York Yankees,
said that be still entertains the idea
of nnanaging in the majors someday.
"If the right opportunity came
along, I would tske it," he said. "But
I'm not out looking for somebody's
job. My feeling is If you can't be
loyal to someone you're working for,
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS
staybome."
Colavito said that he had coaching
FOR A FABULOUS
offers from two other major league
teams for the coming season, bla
declined to name the teams.
Colavito, whose lifetime average
was .266, hit 374 home runs and
drove in 1,159 runs. He had 11 consecutive seasons with · 20 or more
home runs - seven ct them with 30'
or more and lhree years wilh 40 or
THURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1981, 6:00 P.M. TO 1:30 A.M.
more. He also was a six-time mem·
ber or the American League All-Star

CHUNK TUNA ••••••••••••••••

1.29

NEW YEAR'S EVE AT THE

MEIGS , INN

team.

FIVE ·WHEEL .DRIVE

FREE

HEARING TESTS SET

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD•••~~-.~1.39

6lf2 oz. Star K is! ·

913
.. "'8&gt;1 r;::==~=====================1~

hootile.

One or the area's major employei-s, Pantez has an annual budget extimated
at J15 mUl1on to po million, including a substantial payroll of:ft5
••
miiUon
per
year. Local political, civic and business leaders were hi8hly
•
critical crl tbe bllhop.
.
,
.
Tiley ''IIJplrently look at the question of nuclear proliferation as a
cllalllbllr afellulmereell\&amp;tter," responded an editor of the West TelUIB State
UniM*Y ra!11PU1 lleWip8per.
Mattbl f 1 • NYI that be "never ezpecled a mau resignation" but notea ·
that in 1111 private dlleaullllll with Cltbollca working at the (llllllex Plant he
1w fouad dill "ICIIIIe cr1 t111m are IUfferlng fram real sullt feellnp."
AKI' :ct' llllalllncJe Catholic worlrer at lbe facWty has resigned, the
~ · bi.lbap'a .UtiLI 1rt hu tolded elf the cammunlty'a flnt lulkcale publJe
~
dlat• tm af till WGrt pafonned at what once wu, in effect, a aecnt Ill~

was at 4.9 percent, inflation at 5.5,

and "Love Slory" was published.

ter prepare. And there was "Dirty
Dingus McGee" with Frank Sinatra,
41
Applause" and "Company." And
"Rich Man, Poor l\lan," which
suggests that there waa even then a
difference between the two, as there
will be, now and forever, amen.

•,

Prin~iples

..
..

ned golden brown. UnemploymJnt

When in doubt,form study comml .

Sprawling across a 9,11111-acre tract in the midst of lhe desolate, wind·
blown High Plains or Texas stand hundreds of nondescript buildings that
comprise one of lhe federal government's most sensitive facilities.
Only the signs posted on the perimeter fence offer a clue that something
· extraordinary is occurring inside. "All vehicles and personnel are subject to
search while on this facility , 11 says one warning.
Anolher summarizes the provisions of an obscure federal law known as
the Atomic Weapons and Special Nuclear Materials Regards Act. A third
idenlifles the faclllty as the Department of Energy's Pantex Plant.
Beyond the bulletproOf guard toweri;, the cyclone fences and the elec·
. trifled gates, approximately 2,400 men and women are engaged in a highly
classified, very specialized form of work matched nowhere else in the
•
nation.
The Pantex Plant is the final assembly point for every nuclear weapon
"'
produced
in the United States.
.
••
Shipped here by truck and train are fuses from a Motorola Inc. plant in
Just suppose for a moment an at. Scottsdale, Ariz.; neutraon generators from a General Electric Co. facility
tempt
to overlhrow the Castro
in Pinellas, Fla.; and electronic components from a Bendix Corp. plant in
regime
in
Cuba.
'' . Kansas City, Mo.
A
conunando
team launches a sur., .
Weapo115-grade plutonium and enriched uranium come from facilities in
prise
attack
that
comes within an
~'
S. C.; Richland, Wash.; Piketon, Ohio; Oak Ridge, Tenn.; and
. Aiken,
acre
or
succeeding
but; Is forced to .
Paducah, Ky .
••
retreat
before
disorganized
but
Workers at the Pantex Plant in the barren countryside 17 miles northCuban
forces.
Facing
superior
''
easl or downtown Amarillo transform those components into nuclear
def!'St and capture, the survivors
for both tactical weapons and strategic intercontinental weapons.
..." warheads
seize
an airliner at Havana's airport
Constructed as an Army ordnance facility during World War II, the Panand
escape
by air to Florida.
tex Plant was temporarily abandoned by the federal government in 1945,
.,,, then
What does an American adreopened in 1951 to perform its current mission.
.
;:
ministrution
opposed to Castro's
. Throughout moat of the ensuing 30 years, the facility operated in relative
"•• anonymity. Even residents of nearby communities in the Texas Panhandle rule and policies but conunitled to
international cooperation in curbing
.,
'
were unaware of precisely what was being produced at the Pantex Plant.
terrorism
do: Honor the commitToday, however, the facility is the object or a lierce controversy,
•'
men!
and
return lhe escapees to
touched off Ialit sununer by Bishop Leroy T. Matthiesen, leader or the
"' Catholic
Cuba
or
put
its own political inDiocese of Amarillo.
·
leresis
first
and
give them saneAfter President Reagan announced his decision to proceed wilh lhe
tuary?
·
production of neulrQn bombs, the bishop composed a statement, which apIt could happen. In fact,
peared in the diocesan newspaper, criticizing that decision as "tragic."
something
similar has occurred far
Other Catholic bishops throughout the country have decried the
froin
the
scene
or and on a much
escalation or the arms race, but Matthiesen's statement was distinguished
than
our hypothetical
smalelr
scale
by two unique sentences.
dilemma.
'
"The matter Is of immediate concern to us who live Pantex, the nation's
In case you missed the story,
final assembly point lor nuclear weapons, including the neutron bomb ... we
which
was not of the sort to stay on
urge individuals involved in the production and stockpiling of nuclear bombs
front
pages
acroes the country, a
to consider what they are gOing, to resign from such activities and to seek
planeload
of
mercenaries failed to
,..•• employment in peaceful pursuits."
pull
off
a
coup
in the Seychelles, an
Matthiesen received hundreds . of letters reacting to his call for
island
mini-state
off the Indian
.;. resignations. The mall from other sections of the country was almolt univer,
• saUy favorable, but the reaction in tile Panhandle was overwhebningly

.·

1970 ... In 1970 we were fighting an
ugly war, but there is no reason to do
that in our retu.-n to some of the
year's habits. I remember tbat in
1970 there were healthy people
about, the daffodils came in the
spring and In tbe fall the leavea tar-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

THURSDAY

DEC. 17
9 am.to 12 noon

'1750 Per Person Includes
DINNER
PRIME-RIB
OR
WHITE FISH

ENTERTAINMENT
FIVE WHER

DRI~

PARTY
fAVORS

I

Individual
Bottle of
Champagne
Per Person .

TICKETS MUST IE PICKED UP BY DIC. 26 .
FOR RESIRVA liONS CALL 992-3629 .

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN-POMEROY, OHIO

BAR STOOLS
AVAILABLE FOR
COCKTAILS

Anyontl who has trouble hearing 11 welc.ome ·to ha'Je a hearing test
usina modern electronic equipment to determine If his loss Is one
which may be helped. some of the ceuses of hearing loss will be explained and diagrams of how lhttar works will be shown.
Wt Also Service and Repair All MlkH of Hearing Aids.
BoHorlts And Suppllts For All Makos Far Sole.
IF YOU CANNOT COME INCALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 992·362f

15.00 Per Person Includes Pwty
'Fawn &amp; Glass of Champagne
.•

"

•

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Cal-Irvine remains unbeaten
.

Today~

.

Sports World

I

ByWWGrimlley
AP C..rreopoadeal
Now that the chess game is over, Ron Guidry remains In New York
pinstripes. And executives of 17 other major league hallclubS must
be saymg to themselves, "I knew it all the lime. "
There was from the start a suspicion among those 17 clubs which chose
Guidry in the re-entry draft that the left·hander had no more intention of
leaving New York than he did of giving up hunting.
Kansas City, we were told, had made "an outstanding offer," for Guidry.
The word on Oakland was that the A's were "a definite alternative," for him
and would get the last call. Houston was appealing hecause it is, after all,
within hailing distance of his off-season home in Lafayette, La.
But really, all of that was window dressing. Those 171eams were there as
. potential suitors to stir Yankee owner George Steinbrenner's interest. otherwise, George could get bored by being the only customer in this auction.
Guidry is the game's latest $1 million-a-year-man and certainly deserves
the status with an 87-34 record and 2.73 earned run average over five full
seasons. But the contract he signed Tuesday did not come easily. It took
some fancy maneuvering by his longtime buddy, attorney John Schneider.
. And Guidry did not make it simple because, early in the game, he declared
that he didn't want to leave New York.
That happened a year ago, when the Yankees were reported on the verge
of trading Guidry first to St. Louis and then to Boston. The rumors shook
Guidry and he talked over the situation with Schneider.
"I told Ron, 'If you want to stay in New York, say so,"' the at(orney said.
"'The public statements will keep you there, but they will hurt your
Yank~

• bargaining position.'''

: There was no trade but Guidry had played his trump card. Steinbrenner
: now knew that he had a great big NY stamped on his heart. And Schneider
knew that would affect free-agent negotiations.
"We felt throughout the negotiations that our position was not
.strengthened by Ron's public statements about wanting to stay in New
York," the attorney said. "So then we had to decided how we could
strengthen our position. Our strategy was to ask for more money from the
: Yankees than from the others."
: Steinbrenner was told it would cost the Yankees $7.5 million for five years
to keep Guidry. Kausas City, Oakland, Houston and the others were asked
for less. It was a bargaining policy that did not endear Schneider and Guidry
to Steinbrenner.
..
Why, the owner reasoned, must the Yankees pay more? Because, the attorney said, Guidry is worth more to the Yankees and they can afford him

more.
· Negotiations began with statements by both sides that they wanted an
· agreement !bat night. Three hours later, the pact was for all intents and purposes, set. Steinbrenner wanted Guidry.
·
Would Guidry really have gone elsewhere, Schneider was asked.
"We'll never know," he replied.

By Assocboted Press
Words do not come easily when
cal-Irvine Coach Bill t.fulligan tries
to describe his star center, Kevin
Magee.
Magee, named an Associated
Press first-team All-American as a
junior, was the first player to finish
in the NCAA's top four in scoring,
rebounding and field goal percentage. In his senior season, he's
taken the first step toward a possible
triple crown.
What more can I say about Kevin
11

Magee?

He's

unbelievable,"

Mulligan said Tuesday after Magee
led the unbeaten Anteaters to a 91~
victory over Loyola of Los Angeles.
"He can score from inside and outside, and he just keeps getting better
with every game."
Magee scored 46 points against
Loyola, grabbed 18 rebounds and hit

•

: she wanted her father, Ron, to pitch

: riext season.
"New York," said the little girl.
Jamie got her wish Tuesday when
;Ron Guidry signed a free agent con·tract which wlll pay him $1 million a

there ."
'The contract ended a year of onand-off talks between Gui![ry,
Schneider and Steinbrenner. The pitcher was asked about his relationship with the Yankee owner, who
had balke_&lt;:l for . a long time at

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Cleveland
Browns running back Greg Pruitt is
aware he may be switched to wide
receiver in the 1982 National Foothall League season.
Yet, he says he would like one
more chance to show that he can still
get the job done as a runner.
The 31).year-old Pruitt was among
the top runners in the NFL before he
injured his knee during the 1979
season and underwent surgery.
In 1980, he carried the ball just 40
times for 117 yards. With one game
left this season, Sunday in Seattle,
Pruitt has carried 31 times for 124
yards.
"I've often said Greg could be an
All-Pro at wide receiver," said

Coach Sam Rutigliano. ''I also think
he could best help the Browns at that
position because it's obvious he's

Gwdry's salary demands.
"Now? It's good, very good," he
said. "Before, we never really had

one. We are two independent people.
We were on two sides of the fence but
there was never a 'No Trespassing'
sign."

~

year for the next four seasons to
remain with the New York Yankees.

' The contract includes a fifth year at
the club's option.
"She'll be happy," the left-hander
.said. "She has all her boy friends
·here."

I

The Yankees. owner said. he was

aware of reports that the Atlanta
Braves were making a strong effort
to land Jackson, and said of the
National League club's owner, Ted

Turner, "They tell me he's the guy I
have to worry about."
Braves Vice President AI Thornwell said Turner expects to speak
with Gary Walker, Jackson's agent,
Friday.
It was Guidry's deep ties to the
Yankees and New York that kept the
pitcher with his old club. He was

~~~
Bonham
for fourth place on the
The contract was worked out by
attorney John Schneider, Guidry's

HUBBARD'S. GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsetlias-$1.00&amp; Up
Christmas Wreaths, Can·
die Arrangements, Christmas cactus, Foliage Plants &amp; Hanging Baskets.
·
Open Dally 9 to 5
·'
Sun. 1 to s
Phone 9.9a-5776

•

was."

Rutigliano said the coaches will
decided in the off-season about how
to play Pruitt in 1982.
,
"If they want me to become a wide
reciver next year,l'll have to do two
things " Pruitt said. "One, lose

weigh{ to gain some speed, and two,
get to,gether with an experienced
wide receiver, a guy like Reggie
Rucker, to· learn how to read
coverages."

Pruitt has been used mostly as a
receiver coming out ?f the Browns

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Sunday 10 am·10 pm

~

GUIDRY STAYS IN YANKEE PINSTRIPES- Ron Gujdry dons
Yankee pinstripe• as wife, Bouule, watches Tuesday during conference
caUed to annoilnce that the slender Ieft-hander has re-signed with New
York. The game'• latest $1 mllUon-a-year man, Guidry had 17 teams
chasinghiminlhere-entrydraltlastmonth. (APLaserpholo).
,

· PRICES GOOD THRU

1981
I

Malu.a:-ua. llle, '

PublLshed every afternoon, Monday throuah

~

Friday, lll CoUrt Street, by th:e OhJ,o V1tley
Publl.!J1lng Cvmpony • Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, OhJo 15761, fl92..211WI. Second elus
postage paid at PomeNy, OhJo.
Member' The .w.ciated Pr.,., Inland Dally Press A.uoclatlon and the American
Newspaper Publiahen Auoclatioo. NaUooal

.

Advertlslng Repreuntatlve, Branham
Newspaper Slllee, 733 Third A~~enue, New
York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address

io The Dilly

Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,Ohio~789.

Still, he doesn't buy the argument
he cannot do what he once did when
he would rush for hetter than 1,000
yards in a season.

Chuck Roast ..... ~~ ..

SUBSCRIPnONRATES
By carrier or Mtklr Ro.le
One week • .. ...•........ ,., .•••.... '1.00

OneMooth ... ... , , , ,,, ..• , • , •. , .... $4.to
One Year ................ , . , ...... $62.10

SINGLE COPY ·

"The reason for my so-called ineffectiveness is that I haven't gotten
the hall enough to prove anything,"
he said. "I'm not complaining
because I understand we are a
passing team, and when we do run
the ·ball the running game centers
around Mike Pruitt.

PRIC&amp;§
Dally .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. • 11 Cent.s

(Ground Chuck 5149 lb.)

Subacribers not desirifl8 to pay the arrler
may remit in advance direct to 1be Dally
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month baala. Credit
will be given carrier each month.

.

Ground

.·

No subscriptions by mall pennitted in towns
where home carrier service i8 available.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
3 Month ............ ........ : ..... $12.35
SUI month ..........•........• . .•. $21.80
!Year .... .' ......... . . ......•.. . . t3t.OO
RateR OatlldeOIIIo

" But I would like to get the hall a
lot one more time before a decision
is made as to whether I am switched

.

.$
Tom Turkeys...... ~ 5
$
Hen Turkeys........69
G_RADE_A FLAVORITE

'· ~.,

'!

The Boot-legger
by Naturalizer:
Styled for Looks.
! Lined for Warmth

:}· -~;' ~~ &lt;. ·\
,,' " ,

\

I

I'

..-\

.

.\1·.~

··!

'.

,~

/

I

,

,

Grade A Ravorite

•

\ .

,. ,;~

\

l\ "1

' ;'

'

Fryer

-· .. . .

- - ,,.. '

''

I'

•I

l
I

.

•

1-LB. .PKG. OR MORE

HJLLSHIRE FARMS
SMOKED SAUSAGE

Open Each Eve.
Until 1100 p.m.

I

G 1ft Certificates

! Alway• Welcome.

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
210 E. Main

Pomeroy, OH.

PH. 992·5272

Tomatoes •••••••••••

LB.

.I

so~

Valley Farms Grade A

Large Eggs......~. 7

~·

I ' HERE ARE SOME GREAT, LAST MINUTE
I

~~iii

OFF

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 19, 1981

I

~

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex
Dec. 19.• 19il1

so~

'

~

I

BONELESS BEEF
ROAST

1o.14 LBS.

''

J

3 LB. OR MORE

1B-24lBS.

lJI $
Parts........ ~.~

Mixed

and happy all season long

('"' ~ ,..,~,·;~,.

'200 OFF

'

"'-'"'"' ·1 Th1s sporty leather boot is p1le-li ned for
extra warmth and featu res a roll-up
\
\ \
roll-down cuff for a versatile
.•~ -· •.
\
fashion look. It's waterprooled
._ _ ,
1
at t~e sole line. to keep your feet dry

\

9

.

*El.ECIRICAL APPUANCES

PICKENS HARIMME

k or Roast.~.~ 1°

3 Month .......................... $13.00
6 Month ............... . .....••... f23.40
lYcar ...................•.....•. $44.111

•f

Pugh bought54J tickets at '17 each
through the university and sold 15 of
them at face value to Ray Bonner,
his successor as coach at Columbia
High School in Decatur, Ga., a Pitt
spokesman said. Bonner reportedly
scalped the tickets for $35 each.
Pugh also placed a newspaper ad
in Atlanta to sell the, remaining 35
tickets at twice the original price,
the spokesman said.
Pugh visited Georgia while on a
recruiting trip. Pill is actively
recruiting two players from Colum·
bia High School there.
The scalping incident was reported Monday in the Atlanta Journal.
Pugh, a fonner player at the University of Alabama, has made no public
statement a bout the incident.

·•

*ALSO GIFlS FOR QIILDREN

. $}29
Beef..... ~~ ..

ffe$h Pork Butt

ud Wett Vlr&amp;lDil

to wide receiver."

-c~t~
;..."'

($1111 OFF ~ HAM)

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 19, 1981

,
IUSI'SI-)
A Olvi1IDD of

backfield this season. He has 60
receptions for 592 yards.

PITTSBURGH (AP) -University
oi Pittsburgh foothall Coach Jackie
Sherrill has chosen to punis:1, but not
banish, an assistant coach for
allegedly scalping Sugar Bowl
tickets.
Sherrill said Tuesday that George
Pugh, 28, a first"year assistant in
charge of tight ends, has been
suspended for a month without pay.
He will not accompany Pill to the
game against Georgia.
But Sherrlll said he expected Pugh
to rejoin his staff.
"Our players and coaches are part
of my family," he added. "And I
don't feel that anybody who has a lot
inside them would ever close the
door on a member of their family
because they acted the wrong way at

I
I
I

'*HAND roOLs

WHOLE HAM

The Daily Sentinel

~ ~

R

p(M£1 10QlS

E-Z-CARVE

Olr.l• ud Wett Vltgbrla

Pitt assistant
caught scalping,
gets suspension

~-'--r~~~~i~~~~~~;~~~~~~~l--~1s

*

'200 OFF

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

' JAI!NIMsztlll:•

longtime friend, and Steinbrenner.

. The two men met for three hours Iast
Thursday night during the winter
basehall meetings In Hollywood,
Fla., hammering out the details.
· The new contract will keep Guidry
·a Yankee, prohably for the remainder of his playing days .
"I don't know how long my career
is going to be," he said! "It won't be
· many more years. I want to get hack ·
' to a regular man's dream of sitting
with his family and building from

nowhere near the runner he once

times."

With father and daughter Guidry
now happy, Yankees owner George
: Steinbrenner indicated he would
concentrate on trying to sign Reggie
Jackson, another of his club's free
agents.
Steinbrenner said he had · been
waiting to hear from Jackson's
agent and planned to call him today.

chosen by 17 teams in last month's·
re-entry draft but said, "In my eyes,
· there was never any doubt that I
. wouldsignwiththeYankees. "
Guidry had an 11-5 record last
season, pushing his mark for five
full years with New York to 87-34, a
.719 winning percentage that is the
best for any pitcher in Yankee
history. His career earned run
average of 2.73 ties him with Ernie

push Houston to a 74-611 vi~ over
california-Santa Barbara. Williams,
a guard, hit a sbor! jwnper with 18
seconda left to give the Cougars a 72681ead.
Steve Trumbo scored 12 of hia 18 ·
points in the second half to boost
Brigham Young over Weber Slate,
63-55. Steve Roberts topped BYU
with24points.
Tony CampbeU scored 24 points
and Ron Stokes added 19 as Ohio
Sta~ muscled its way to a ~ victory, over SOuth· Alabama. SOuth
Florida rebounded from its lopsided
loss to top-ranked Nprth Carolina
last Saturday with a 57-48 victory
over JUinois-Chlcago Circle.

20 of 26 from the floor despite ranked DePaul whipped Western
playing with a heavily taped right Michigan IIS-46.
ne Top Tweaty
knee. He injured the knee In UCTerry
Cummings
scored 24 points
Irvine's 112-70 upoel of Nevada-Las
and
had
13
rebounds
as DePaul upVegas IBstSaturday.
ped
its
record
to
IHJ.
The Blue
"! felt. good," the 6-fooWI, 230Demons
were
awesome
defensively,
pound Magee said. "This was one of
those nights when everything preventing Western Michigan from
hitting a field goal for a span of 7:24
seemed to drop."
in
the second half as DePaul raced to
Last year, he was second in field
a
69-36lead.
goal percentage at 67.1, third in
Cununlngs scored 10 straight poinscoring at 27.5 and fourth in rebounts
for the Blue Demons in the first
dingal12.5. So far this season, he's
half
to help DePaul toa34-20lead.
averaging 32.9 points and 12.6
·
"Today,
I feel I am a more comrebounds.
plete
player
than I have ever been
The victory raised UC-lrvine's
record to HI, the best start ever for and I have confidence that I can do
the school's learn. Guard Randy things that I could not do before,"
Whieldon added 24 points for the An- · Cummings said.
UD1'811ked Teams
!eaters, and forward Ben McDonald
Rob Williams continued his
had 11 as well as 12 asaists.
In the only game Tuesday night in- comeback from a knee injury by
volving a TOp 20 team, seventh- ' scoring 26 points, Including a pair of
.gaskets in the final 18 seconds, to

Pruitt may become wide receiver

:Guidry joins millionaire club
NEW YORK (AP) - When the
1981 hasehall season ended, a group
of reporters approached 4-year-old
Jamie Guidry and asked her where

wednesday, December 16,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ACOMPLETE. NEW SELECTION OF
OF atRISTMAS MERatANDISE:
e CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENTS
(Live, Permanent &amp; Silk)
eDOOR WREATHS
eSWAGS
eCANDLE &amp; CANDLE RINGS .
a POINSETTIAS
e POTTED PL·ANTS
eTERRARIUMS
Stop in and register for a $20.00
gift certificate to be given away
each saturday, and a $50.00 cer. tlficate to be given away 1on the
24th.

.POMEROY FLOWER SHOP.
"The Way Ame~lca Sends Love"
Phone 992-2039
'
or992-5721
106 Butternut Ave.
We accept all major credit cards 1
Pomeroy, Oh.
everywhere.
' nd we wire flowers

I

II
i

_College Inn

I

Chicken Broth ...
Flavorite Chocolated Aavored
..
.
Ch IPS....·•....•............

•I
·I

I

''

--

-

OFF

1-LB. PKG. ANY SUPERIOR

WNCH MEAT
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 19, 1981

13.7s oz.

-

12 OZ. PKG.

~

GOLD

FLOUR
SLB.
BMi

· 89~

Limit one Per customer
Good Only It Powlll's
otler Explrtt Dec. 19, 1981

( IHJP IN

-

HYLAND (HUNK

SUPER VALU

FLAVOR~ .

DOG FOOD

COFFEE

SUGAR

25LB.
BAG

$329

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 19, 1911

llB.

CAN

$539

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Dec. 19o1981
Offer

5lB.
BAG

$129

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 19, 1981

50~

OFF
1~ Ol CAN

OYSTERS
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expjres Dec. 19, 1981

�Wednesday, December 16,1981

•

Page--6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

By Major Amoo R. Hoople
Sage of the Sldelllles
Egad, friends, the 1981 season was
- kaff·k8Jf .:_ indeed topsy·lurvy ·
By George Strode
In fact, it was the most turbulent
in the 46-year history of the Hoople
Football Forecast. Um-kumph!
No fewer than six teamsJleld the
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Jim Leyland has forsaken what might have been
lifetime security in the Detroit Tigers' baseball farm system to fulfill a long· No. I spot in. the weekly polls Michigan, Notre Dame, Southern
time goal.
California,
texas, Penn State and
The 36-year-old Ohioan from Perrysburg has signed to coach third base for
Pittsburgh. And now we have
the Chicago White Sox next season.
,
"This was the toughest decision 1have ever had to make," said Leyland. another No. I, the undefeated Clem·
"The Tigers gave me the opportunity to hang around baseball alter I son Tigers.
And, my dear readers, msy I, er,
couldn't play the ·g• rne anymore. And for that I'll be ·indebted to them
a)Jem, somewhat immodestly point
forever.
"It's difficult for me to be leaving the Tigers. F~om top io bottom, they're out that in the pre-season pred.ictions last August it was the Hoople
fiist class."
·
Leyland was making $36,000 annually to manage the Tigers' top fann Forecast - and only the Hoople
Forecast - that put Clemson in the
team, the Evansville Triplets in ilie Class AM American AssoCiation, when
projected Top 20.
he replaced Bobby Winkles as the Wbite'Sox' third base coach.
We, as you'D remember pegged
''Unfortunately," said the fonner minor league catcher, "there is no room
Clemson
for No. 18, saying they had
on the Tigers' staff. Sparky Anderson is set with his coaches and together
"the
necessary
troops to maintain
they have done an outstanding job. There:s no reason to make a change."·
high
ranking."
Har·rwnph!
Leyland signed with the Tigers when he was a 17-year-old American
Danny Ford's men exceeded our
Legion player for Pemberville. In seven years ip the minor leagues, the far·
expectations
and moved to the top
thest he advanced was Class AA as a No. 2 catcher.
spot
by
sweeping
their 11-game
So when the Tigers offered him the managing job of their Appalachian
League franchise at Bristol, Va. , in 1971, Leyland jumped at the opportunity. · schedule. Included among their vicIn II seasons, he managed winning teams at all levels, the last three at tims were Georgia and North
Carolina.
Pretty fair credentials,
Evansville.
h?
e
·
He won two division titles and a league pennant at Clinton, Iowa, in the
Close on the heels of Clemson in
Class A Midwest League, two pennants at Lakeland in the Class A Florida
the
Hoople Top 20 are the
State League and one championship wlth Evansville.
Sou th eas t ern. Con f erence co· . s: Georgta,
• • 1"1
champton
,. ' and

Southern, Eastern
gals post victories
ALBANY - The Southern Tor·
nadoettes scored an explosive 51·29

come-from-b:ehind victory over the

Alexander. Spartans here in a nonleague basketball contest recently.
The big win on the Alexander hard·
wood boosts Southern to J..l, while
Alexander drops to 3-2 overall.
The Tornadoettes ran head-on into
a first period cold front, trailing l!Hi
at the end of the frame, then dropped
to 12~ in the second canto before
caUing a time out to correct matters.
. After the short break' of strategy
·' Southern caught fire', enabling them
to overtake the Spartans and lead at
the half ~20. A bit boost of morals
before the half came when Tonja
Salser swished a 40 loot desperation
shot at the buzzer to give Southern
its five point margin.
The dramatic shot plus "a half·
time pep talk" seemed to be all
Southern needed as its offense ex·
ploded during the final half, and its
defense was twice as powerful.
Defensively . Southern limited the
potent Alexander offense to just nine
points in the last half.
At the end ol the third from the
visitors led 36-22, then coasted in for
the 51-29 triumph.
The Tornadoettes are coached by
!tlton Wolfe, Jr. and Larry Wolle,
while Alexander is coached by
Denise Radcliff.
Mel Weese led Southern scoring
with 20 points, followed by Tonya
Salser wiih 10 and Laren Wolfe
eight. Elaine Smith grabbed 10
rebounds and Laren Wolfe eight to
lead · the team in rebounding.
Southern hit 21 of 59 for 36 percent
and hit nine.ol20 !rom the line for 45
percent.
Shelly Lowry led the hosts with 14
points followed by Cindy Hawk with
eight. Southern's next game is a

league affair at home with Hannan
Trace Thursday at6 p.m.
Box scores:
Southern- Weese 8·4·20; Salser 42· 10; Wolfe 4·0·8; Evans 1·0·2; Smith
3: 0·6, Michael 0·2-2; Smith 0-1·1;
Johnson 1-0-2; Hemsley O·Ll·O. Totals
21 -9-51.

AleKander- Hawk 4·0-8; Payne o0-0; Jolly 2-0-4; Burton 1·0-2; Raines
0+1; Lowry ?·0-14. Totals 14-1-29.

EAST MEIGS - In girls' high
school basketball action, Eastern's
varsity and junior varsity claimed a
double victory over the Miller
Falcons Monday evening. The win
boosts the varsity Eaglettes to 3-2
overall, while displaying a 1·1 mark
withintheSVAC.
In the varsity tilt, Coach sue
Thompson's Eastern squad claimed
a 40-26 victory. Leading scorers for
the Eagles were Tammy Hudson
and Sarah Goebel with 14 and 11
points respectively. Becky Ambrose
ledEqsternwithagoodgameunderneathandsevenrebounds.
'
Although the Eagles were very
cold from the floor, shooting just 29
percent, its sticky defense caused
many costly turnovers by the Miller
squad. Miller- was led in scoring by
B. Tharp with 13 points.
In the preliminary contest, the
Eaglettes claimed a convincing win,
defeating the young .Falcons 23-!0.
Leading the way for Eastern were
Lea Ann Gaul and Mary Hibbs with
II and eight points respectively.
Kelly Whitlatch rounded out the at·
tack with four points. Eastern's next
game is at North Gallia on Thursday
for an important SVAC contest.

Alabama, II-H.
n.
di
th
tc
f th
ucpen ng on e ou ome o e
'
D
b
[
t
New Y ear s ay ow t'On es ts '
'th
G
·
hi h
k
et er one - eorgta, w c we ran
No. 2, or Alabama, which we rank
No. 3 - may wind up with the
mythical national crown.
Here is a rundown of the-1981
Hoople Top '20, with season records
(andBowlassigrunents): ·
1. CLEMSON II~ (Orange;) 2.
GEORGIA 10·1 (Sugar); 3.
ALABAMA 9-H (Cotton); 4.
SOUTHERN METHODIST 10-1
(ineligible); 5. NEBRASKA 11-2
(Orange); 6. PENN STATE 11-2
I Fiesta); 7. PITTSBURGH 1().1
(Sugar); 8. SOUTHERN CAUFOR·
NlA 11-2 (Fiesta); 9. TEXAS 11-1-1
(Cotton); 10. MIAMI, Fla., 11-2
(ineligible ).
II. NORTH CAROLINA 9-2
(Gator); 12. BRIGHAM YOUNG 1().
2 (Holiday); 13. WASHINGTON 11-2
(Rose); 14. IOWA S-3 (Rose); 15..
OHIO STATE (S-3) (Uberty); 16.
MICHIGAN 8-3 (Bluebonnet); 17.
SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI 11-H
Tangerine); 18· ARIZONA STATE !I2 (ineligible); 19. UCLA 7-3-1
(Bluebonnet); 20. SAN JOSE
STATEII-2 (California).
, Georgia's setback at.the hands of
&lt;;temson, 13-3, marred a very sue-

.

cessfu1 season, whlcb saw lbe Bull·
dog,s score at least tliree TOll per
game 88 they rolled up a total or 352
points. u.adlng the charge was Jier..
schel Wallier, the Helsman nmner·
up, who rushed for 1,891 yards ~lm&lt;!St enough for two men!
At year's end, the Alabama CriJn..
son Tide wBB playing as good foot·
ball as any team in the country.
They looked super in defeatlnl! an
excellent Penn State team, 31-16, on
the Nittany Uons home grounds.
1 Two weeks later,
Alabama ootslugged arch rival Auburn, 28-18,
giving Paul "Bear" Bryant his 315th
collegiate triumph, thus malting him
the winningest coach in history. An
amazing achievement for old friend
Bryant. Har-rumphl
The. Hoople No. 4 SMU Mustangs,
banned froin ~wl competition for
1981 and 1982, had an excellent yeljl'
forcoachRonMeyer. Thelronlylois
was a close !H affair to Texas, which
will represent the swc in the Cotton
Bowl. The SMU club complied a 7-1~
record in the SWC, compared to
Texas' &amp;-1·1 tally.
Tom Osborne's Nebraska ·club,
our No. 5 selection, should get a
specia1 award as the comeback
••am of the year. The Cornhuskers
dropped two Qf lbelr first three
games _ to Rose Bowl·bound Iowa
of the Bt'g Ten and to independent
Penn State,•now a M"''ClJIII'nt in the
i'O""
Fiesta Bowl. After that the Huskers
rolled to eight straight, includlilg a
clean sweep of seven Big Eight foes.
The No. 6
State Nlttany
Lions, in addition to knocking off
Nebraska, showed their
by
thumping Pittsburgh, 43-14, after
spotUng the Panthers a 14-polnl
lead. Joe Paterno's two looses came
at the hands of Hoople No. 3
Alabama and No. 10 Miami. No
disgrace there. KaH-kafl!
Pittsburgh tumbled to No.7 In the
Hoople ratings -whim it was soundly
thrashed by Penn State. Jackie
Sherrill's Panthers had 4ppeared 10
be unbeatable through their first 10
games. And the Hoople Hunch is
they will be back on their game for
their Sugar Bowl assignment again·
st the defending national champion
Georgia Bulldogs on Jan. 1. Urnkwnph!
'
The Trojans of Southern Cal, our
No. 8 team, were stunned by
Arizona. They suffered their second
defeat at the hands of Washington,
the pac 10 Rose Bowl rep. Aiding the
Trojan cause was Helsman winner
Marcus Allen, who rambled for an
unbelievable2,342yards; he was the
first running back to gain more than
2,1100 yards in a single season. Allen

and biB

petiUon for·Penn state 1n the Fiesta

Bowl. .

Hoople No. 9 TeDS beat a fine
Miami team, 14-7, and blaated old
roe Oklahoopa, 34-14. But later in the
year TelUIS was upset by Arkansas
and Ued by Houston, both of the
SWC. l1le Longhoma have a strong
offensive team and will be a good
Cotton Bowl entry.
Miami's Hurricanes, under Coach
Howard Schnellenberger, came

I

llorvord 71, -

two losses came at the hands or
Texas and MisSissippi Slate, 8
Tangerine Bowl contender.
Our Second 10 teams are only a
notct!'or two- helrheh- below the
top group. So, maybe the post·
season bowls will help sort things
out.
watch for my forecast of the
major bowl events - coming your
way next week. Um-kumph!

-

.

-

•• Loyola, Md. 13
Vermont 74, ~ I&amp;
West Yirglnt. 11!, WIJ.-Su.perlor

soumwfliT

ft4

9011111

JacUonville St. a , Valdoetl St. 11
Manhall It, hrmln 74

8'1

Ohio St. 81, S.Alabaml U

- - - -·-

.L' I

'IV

No.._, • .,.,...""''"'

....._,•• ea.

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

Lot A.ngeles 4• Buft.Jo 3
New v~
•·•·-~- 10• ,.....
~-bee •'
Ul"ll !aiiLIRKR
Sl.l.,ouls '· ~ 2
W~J'•G.ma

Buffalo

at ......Miami
_....,, Deftmlwr!CI

M«&lt;trea1 •• Hartford
~n..t..t.J..I.. at New York ftln"~"'
.. _Angelet
, _ at Pitubutgh
·~
lAI
WinniJ'Otl ot
Edmonton at Colorado
~to 81 v
'"""\Ill' · ancouver

Denver at O:Jit'aKD
t....... Ba•" at Yew v-~ Je·"
..., City '' MiMeoota
Sll..ou.b at Philadelphia

Montreal at &amp;&lt;:.ton
Quebe&lt; 81 Deb'olt

San Francisco at New Orleallll

Chi""'•

_,.,c.....

M=

Phllodelphta

=:., '!t

"""''"!'I"'"'''

-·

Phone 446-4524

Hey, Mom &amp; Dad:

~~

11811 ll.roytrr ""'II ·~•lei!! voi,j• ol.,n• w •t"h the wn~ tl•ot•l{l

Atlanta

'!1 S:O:on

com~W~•atl~t

orano or rth.t'IO

YCh.il

SANTA CLAUS
Tues., Dec. 22

I Between 11:30 and
12 :30
Santa will be arriving
by helicopter at the
Spring Valley Cinema .
We will also have two
matinee shows at 1: 00
and 3;15. Your choice of
two special Christmas
shows . All seats just
$1.00.

Washington at "" Angeles
O.kland

;~-='b~m..,.,.

"Christmas That
Almost Wasn't"
"Hugo the
. Hippo"
-=:-;;~""'

•

CHRISTMAS

••

•.
•

SPECIAL

~~~/
I

1

$129

.

I
I

liZ·

LDF

:

·

l·lb,
~

UIIT 2 LU. Will CoUPON
nl FAMILY

LIMIT ONI COU,ON

I

1

I
. .I
1 1 ;

- IIIIKIII
- -~
IR. 11-111. • . 11. !Ill
nm I LICII!WJ

--·············--

3 BIG DAYS ·

..

Thurs•• Fri. and Sat.

STOREWIDE SALE

•*
it
ilf-

Smoked Hams :..... ·lb.

Wishbone Turkeys

YOUNG PRE-BASTED

Turkey

lb.

3
Pot P111 ......... : .
·

8·01.

Pkgs .

.,

PH. 992-6545

•'

.......

~

.!

·

.:·c:~~-~~.\~~· $179
59

8-TRACKlO
CASSETIE'OR
CASSETTE10
&amp;.:rRACKI

*

i

·Mrs. Filbert's ....... ~~:
VAC PAK

5579

].lb.

Kroger Coffee ..... . can

-

......,.

65c

AVONDAlE

Avondale 42-ol .
Shortenlnt . &lt;••

5119

UOZIN ICIOOII

Glazed

.

.
Donuts ... . 14·AI
""•·

ALL ftU.,OSI

lrlgiJt
.
2.....
atener .. ,.. a••.

~VIIIDII L8WI'IIC1)

-

AVONOIUE

1 Kroger
~

-Gal.
uHerm1"lk ..'Itctn.
·

ggc

Fully Cooked
Turkey Dinner

~~:.~5 1 09
etn .

Eac~l9

·, Orange Juice .. ... .. .
KIIOGU
5129
White Bread ... .. .320-oz.
Ln. ·

•

c•eeae lalla '

OR 125 SIZE FlESH

''TIIe,._1.o.!.."D
•

"

JIWILRY

.

Fa."

Delicious Apples .. Each

SHILLIO

Complete

. INGILS FURNITURE

I

IXTIA FANCY WASHINGTON lSI SIZI
RID DR GOLDEN

Allegro-SpeaQn,l.

Aiwllo.The Fllpslde of Zenith.
IJ* I ,._._ .. _ ... __ ..,_

15 $1

•••

..
'',•

.

·

.

Pecan Halves ...... lb. .
Fruit Bowls
&amp; Baskets

15

C

.

.

t•.

,...,.

(APPI.I M. fl.-OZ. N . .,. lech 11.~
PUIH IAMIO. tCIO PITIT~

Clanamon Rolls ..... ~~:

COITCUTTII

Flalte
(ffiiiNI LIWI'Itclj

-

Oronge
JUICl

12·DI.

Ctn .

C

9

83 C

:~~~ ~:.~~ 5119
ItO VAUII

a.....

-

n ... .

a:....t.t

runS ........ ... .

u..

...... ..... 't::·

5399
.

.5349, $1395
0

Mlcklltpo!'f, 011.

,.

v

IIG VAlUf ·

$119
Pumpkin Pie .......... ... ·

pftiH IAttiO

Cost CuHer......
MargtrIne ""•·

PROZEN COST c:unu

$359

- I D DIIWSitHIISIIOOIOtl

Tangerines
Tangelos .. .. ...

Sirriu1lllld wood ctlblnet, grained Walnut finish. Shown~
;

Avondale ,.,. .••.
Dlnners ........

99

. aLIU . lACON, P01T WINI. CHIDOAI. GIIIN

"''· · ·39c
23
39c

MACAIONI &amp; CHII!II

11tln·7pm

.'

v

Buffer
Beanr .. .. , C•"

AVA.Aatf

... B.

••

~IIIIDII LIWI'IICI)

IN STOIIS WITH
Dill DIPAITMINTS
HOTFOOOS

'349•

(

5159

!$499

C

GOLDIN QUAITEIS MAIIGARINE

ggc

Asporogus "i:;;••·

Spotlight
Bean CoHee

~FROM

I

•

(:':,' "

AVAllAill ONlY

Ill
~·

'

Manilorln 11 •••.
Oranges .. .. &lt;••

•'

9tyka

1. •

AVOHDAU

~

Slorao FM/AM Receiver fearures 5 wans min Cont RMS
ct.1181lrom tOO Hz to 15 KHz Into 8 ohms .rith ~; or 1eo~'J"''
Bull-in AFC, AlB SpeakM and Loudneaa Bullons. and FM!AM ru;.
W.W. _!1-ltiCk Unit fulurtltl p.,.. and Fut Forward Controls
ng
C
e Unit Me Cue and Review and RtiCOrd LED Indicator.
~Record ChMgor hu lldjustllble Anti·SI&lt;ate, and 01 · •

.

..... lb.

Fo1 DeLult11 ·••·
PI111 . .... . ....

Flavoring ... ';~,~ ·

110 SIZE FRESH

•

lb.

8.9C
45C

flO ZEN

vanilla
KIIOGU

''

M2 3629
POMEROY,OHIO
It
Must Be 21 or AccomJNinled by Legal Guardian
***~****:U:U&amp;tua&amp;t..tt.tt~W -.,* U*****.*fttutt**ti:H:i*lr

c
'ggc
77c

5399
51 09

69c

69

U.S.D.A. GRADE A. A·7·ll. AVG. FROZEN,

;.

THE "MEIGS IN

.

HGUlAII

Examinations by
Appointment, Other
Examination Hours
Available by Request

Iu

.

· ftNext to Elberfelds

,..:.,'.

•

~~w

5149

~:

Tomato
Juice .

U.S.D.A. GAADI A F110ZEN. 10.·14-11. AVG.

~

~

AVOND~U

5649

3-ib.

tt"

Chocolate
Chips
'4~~

CHAPMAN SHOES

Record Chlnget

126MAIN

51 89.

sgc

•.••

COSl CUHlR II A~

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. GRADE A

Preclsioo Automalk:

I!
1
:

9· ·11-LI.. AVG .. ROUND DR FLAT.
WHOLE BONELESS

ENTIRE STOCK

FLORIDA FIISH IIIAND

'I

Whipped
t opplnt

lb.

.... 49 c.

!.Ct.

rtOIIN KIIOGII

Fresh · ·
Turkeys ............. lb.
Pick of the Chix .... lb.

·* ...

i

Whole
Fresh Hams ...

20.% OFF

,.

•

I
I

Kroger
Pie Shells

KloGll U.S.D.A.
GRADE A. 10·liS. AND

· FIIOZEN IANQun
•

Ill

.

1.. ·17·ll. AVG.

Canned Hams .... ~... con

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak .

* ...

•open Regular
Hours Til &amp;pm
Thurs., Dec. 24th.
·closed Dec. 25th.
CHRISTMAS DAY

FROZEN (10-0Z. 'ICC.)

U.S. GDV1. GIADID CHOICI

.
: .

OIM!~'&gt;­

atiOIL'I.

''BETTER MEAT"

PEAR·SHAPID, COUNTRY QUI

.

~ Oo
i. . ..

...
:,.1'.-:.....
,.

L 0 S · ANGELES
KINGS-Recall~:d
Andre St.La~U"ent, center, from New
Haven of the Ameriean Kockey l..atgue.

Steve

~~~~~:Ballard's Farm Sausage•

•

#~

·~~·************************+**********H·iH•*****U*********'

-~

METS-Mamed

9)fJ1

t

'FOR THE·FINEST FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT
:J
ALL WEEK LONG, VISIT WITH US
,.~,.

YORK

Schryver director of n1inw IU¥ue

$ 19

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

,~-· Rib Eye Steaks ..... lb.

!•

NEW

lOll. defenseman, lrum Fort Worth.

~U&lt;m.

·Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

w•"

p...rer..ae proclt

U.S. GOV1. GRADED CHOICE
IONELESS liEF

Bring the kids to see

of lhe American

cent&lt;r,

ROCKIE&amp;-Auiped . J1cll:
ond Pout 11111erl
II&gt; Fort Worth of the Centro
Leogue. Recalled G....,.. Ntdlo~

del-...n,

WHOLE

E•••,..,tl"l.h\J ,o... t&gt;\.1\o al t;ooger •$ guaranteed lor vUu• total
s.JI•sl.to. li&lt;JPI '~Qo)•dteu. ot IT'Wr'lulact ... ret 11 vou ar• oot will

New England at Baltimore

Hours:

Wed.1:00·S:OO
6:00·9:00

Larl')'
Wolle, Unt baeman, \Q VIIM.'OU\'tr ol tbe
Pacific C0U Lelpe for Gl! Kldllki, outfleldtr, Aulicned Kulllki to Indiln~polis

• J:)cuon

.

53'1 JACKSON PIKE ·AI. 35 WEST

H-

CINCINNAn~~\":aded

N_
_, _
• HOCUV

COLORADO

. •Re·Open Saturday, Dec. 26th.
At9 am And Resume
Normal Hourt

TOTAL SA TIS FACTION GUARANTEE

Tampa Bay at Detroit

at

,.

un~.

j,,

Cincinnati

--~-· at New Yuill lolanders

Ll• PI uf lhesf ~111'11180 •fef"'$ •S req.,.recl 10 be
•e.td•l'lr &lt;~•l•l.ol~ tOf tall!' '" eac;h ._,ove, Store e•ceot 11
~ •101«1 .,., thl- olld It Ne 00 ""'" Out of "'"' .,..,..,
It ~!!"' Nf' Mil Ot11!1' ,o.. yo.lu' ( hOoct' o l d comp,rotbfo:&gt; ''-"'
~ · d~d•l.olbfto •ellectJ"" tnt same s,h!lli)'• 01 a ra,nchec'
1!'1"1111~ ,o..., to p...rc hflte the adveri•N&lt;l •tern 11 the

1Ati An!feles 21, Atlanta 16
11
O.C...ber
Dallas at Sotunloy,
New York
Giants

•

'

lllotni&lt;Ur· .

the Kroger meat dapartmen~ for the best of
everything. Over 200 kinds ond cuts. U.S. Choice b-f. that
cooks up iender and delicious avery tlme.Top quality pork,
U.S. choice American lamb. prime vaal and 9rada A poultry.

•

No _ _ ._..

~':'!~~~~

tg;;:~·":cin

thn •ncord.
• •---.::&gt;

POT

CHILDREN'S VISION

Fri.

hitting

NEW YORK YANKEES-Sipod Roo
Guidry, pitcher, to o multi-year -..ct.

All KIIOGEII STOIIES Will IE

.

Cal-Irvine 9l, Loyola, CaJif. II
New Mexico St. lCO, N.Mex.Highlands

Aloboma st. 16, Llvillpton "

.CONTACT LENSES

Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
Caii667·648S

ftl&lt;ty CoiOvtto

dleton 3-0-6. Totals 15·8·38.

FAR WEST
Brigham Young 63, Weber St. ~

VISION EXAMINATIONS

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

-r.

KANSAS CITY CHIEP5-Pioced Jerry
Btanlon.
ond Todd ~
centB, t1t the injured relef\le lilt.
JIJllta Murphy, wide receiver; and ohP
OlencMDI, center.

KANSAS~~ALS-Named

Waverly hit 29 percent from the ners, Stegall canned eight for Meigs.
field hiUing 15 of 51 attempts and ·
The Marauderettes travel. to
Gallipolis Thursday.
seven or 16 free throws.
Meigs (Jl) - Anderson 4-0-12:
The loos left Melga with a 4.J
Crooks 1-41·6; Oliver 2-1-5: Meadows
overall record and 2-2 slate In 'the
J·o-6; Smith 0·0·0; Crooks 0·2-2 .
league.
Totals 12·7-ll.
waverly (:II)- Nutt 2·7·7; Sowers
Waverly took the reserve tilt. 21·
16. Smith had II points for the w!J&gt;. 4·1-9; M~ple 2·1 ·5; Reed 4-3 ·11; Pen·

for thebes

443-C Locust St.,. Middleport

,ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING·
..
.
SUPPLIES

Meigs hit 12 of 43 field goal at·
tempts for 28 percent and 13 of 17 at
the foul lines. .

Houston 74, cal&amp;nta Barbara 81_
Teus-EI Puo !IS, Abilene Chns. . .,

a. Bentley 11

DOCTOR OF OPIDMETRY

-NOW IN
NEW LOCATION

too.

MIDWFliT

ltomplhlro 13

James L. Schmoll, 0. D.

r------------l

Kristin . Anderson led the
Maraudereltes with 12 pouits and 11
rebounds. Reed paced Waverly with
11 pints nnd was its top rebounder

DePaul liB W.Michlgsn 46
Loyola, m: 79, T~ 70
Michigan St. 41J, Wlli.-GrHn Bay 41, OT

Lilla lalond 11. 10, .._ 74
St. Francia, N.Y. iO

r;:~::::::::::;::;:~·~~:::::;;:;;~;:::;~:;~;:;i

•

FOOI'BAU.

d
By'l\.e AIMdltell PNII

SOUth Florida :17, IU.-Oli.Circle tB
Tenneuee St. 84, Miuillsippt Yalley 73

+ ....

Tlelllly'JCeUep!
~
ByneAIMdltedPreu

.-tton .,

Penn

N_F_,_

~Y'ISpclrtiTNV

College results
IIABT

"

class

'l'Ds of an undefeated season. Thetr

I

A fourth period comeback by the
Meigs Marauder glrla' basl&lt;etbaU
team fell short Tuesday fllAht at
Waverly.
The Tlgerettes held on for a 38-31
win. With 2:38 remaining, Meigs cut
· the Waverly lead to one point, 32-31
· but failed to score another point the
·' restoftheway.

Pa9e-1

Sports transactions.
&amp;l8J!:B"-.IL

within two "called-back-by-penalty."

mates wW be good com-

The Daily sentinel

Comeback ·fails, Meigs gals lose 38-31

Har·ru~ph! Clemson No.1 for 1981
.

Ohio
Sportlight

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wednesday, December 16,1981

•

c-llllt ...

C

�,'

·'

Page-8- The Daily Sentinel •

Bob's Beat of the Bend

Meigs Board of Education
r
announces special session
Foll,owing an executive session
Monday night, the
Local
School Dlstrtct
8IUIOUllCed It
have a special
session at 7 p.m.
on Dec. 28. The
subject matter of
the
special

and organizations planning to go
caroling or present a program. You
can arrange to pick up whatever
copies you need by calling 992-5869
or stopping by the office which Is in
the Knight Law Office Building, E.
Second St., Pomeroy.

--

Gladys Fife of Middleport, her
husband advises, Is recuperating at
home following surgery on Nov. 10.
Mrs. Fife was injured whlle doing
some disco roller skating and went
into a split quite by accident. According to friends her split was a
success for she managed four splits,
broken bones, that is, in her left
ankle and lower leg.

meeting has
been iinnotlllCed.

However, 11
be "special" since
BOB
Dec. 28 is too late to do anything
about this year and too early to
organize for n~xt.
Tbe board Monday night named
Charles Cassell to a paraprofessional post without pay.
Cassell will coach fifth and sixth
grade basketball at the Bradbury
SchooL In the same action Ella Mae
Southern was named night custodian
~I the high scllool and Terry Powell
was named to a mechanic's post at
the bus garage.

There will be a "Snack With Santa" party /rom 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
~lurday at the Rutland Elementary
SchooL Pictures wiD be taken and a
variety of toys from which to select
will be on hand.
Apparently - or perhaps, I should
say, hopefully - .Big Bend merchants are haviflll a ~ll&lt;!d Chrlstmss
shopping season. There seem to be a
lot of people circulating and both
Pomeroy and Middleport are offering free parking to shoppers until
Christmss. Parking spaces are at a
premiwn so maybe that's an indication that thifllls are going well
with the business people.

A Pomeroy family of four burned
out Monday night.and clothing and
household items - all of 'em- were

lost.
Residents who would like to contribute something may do so by contal1iDI! Margie Proffitt at the Meigs
County Welfare Office in Middleport. The sizes are man's shirt,
1!&gt;-15'!2, trousers, 3H2, large size
coat, jacket, shoes, size 10; woman's
size 50 blouse and 48 slacks, size 50
. dresses and coats and size 10 shoes.
Clothing for two sons are needed and
those sizes are in a six with a dize 13
shoes for a seven year old and size 3
and a seven and one-half shoe for a
three year old.
The family, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Keeder, are also in need of a house to
rent.

On a brighter note - and I do
meao note - Gene Riggs of the local
John Hancock Insurance Office has
literally hundreds of Christmss
carol song hooks. These are
•vailable free of char~e tol)il groups

Wednesday, December 16,1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wellflesday, December 16,1981

...•

What's

•

Cooking.? c~-=3
Meigs C.W.Iy Exlealloo
Home Ecoaomlal

You can cook cranberries into· too!)
sauce, relish or dessert, and string
Cranberry Salad
them for decorations on the Christi 3 oz. box cherry jello
mas tree. The cranberry is a verI cup bot water
satile berry that is especially
I I lb. can whole berry cranberry
popular at holiday time.
sauce
The cranberry is low in calories,
I&gt; cup diced celery
too. Three and a hall ounces of cranIf• cup chopped nuts
'berries only have 211 calories!
I cup sour cream
How do you choose fresh cranSalad Greens
berries? The size, shape and color
Dissolve jello in hot water. Chill
will depend on the .variety, but
until thick but not finn. Break up
generally, cranberries are glossy, ~ranberry sauce with fork. Stir into
finn, plwnp and red. How do yoa
jello with celery and nuts. Fold in
know if a cranberry is bad? It may sour cream. Pour into one quart
be soft, shriveled or sticky. Throw mold .and chill unql finn. Overnight
· the poor quality berries out as you is best. Urunold on greena, Makes 4-8
sort them as they might add an un- servings.
pleasant taste to your dish.
For your free copy of a recipe for
Fresh cranberries are nsua'Uy sold cranberry crunch, a super dessert
in one pound hags. They will keep in
using cranberries and apples with a
the refrigerator either in the original crunchy topping, contact the Ex·
container or unwashed but covered teosion Office ai99U696.
for one to four weeks. Cranberries
are easily frozen. No need to thaw
frozen beries for sorting. Just pick
over the berries, wash and nse. One It
pound of fruit yields four clips and
make~ about one quart of cranberry
sauce.
Making your own cranberry sauce
is easy (and it's better· than store

PIICES . . n•siiY
FRillY Ill UTUIDif
DEC. 11·11-11

NIEIOY
STOlE OILY

The
ectobe.

By DALE M. STOU.

IDYl

.'

Pomeroy police reported a lot of
You can make a delicious sauce
action at the Village Green Apart- from cranberries. Buy one pound of
rnents Monday night. A spare tire,
fresh or frozen berries, and wash
twq, speakers and a jacket were and sort: Combine two cupa sugar
taken from Vern Ord's car and a
radio, eight track player and a spare . and two cups water and brtng to a
tire from the Mark Lawson car. Tbe
boil. Add the berries to boiling syrup
interiors of both vehicles were vanand cook over low heat until the
dallzed.
berries pop. Put sauce through a
strainer or food mill, or leave
1 don't !mow if these two vehicles
were left unlocked but generally
berries whole, as desired. (Makes
speaking, it's a good idea to lock
four cups of whole sauce __:,· thre&lt;i
your vehicle at all times. If you do,
cups strained.)
you'll find one Jess frustration and
Another recipe that. is super Is
'that makes it so much easier to keep
Cranberry Salad. I made this old
smiling ... '
favorite last night for my husband
and be thought it was really terrific.
(This is a good recommendation,

Dependable,·
accurate ·
quartz watches ...
priced to pl~se

IPICIILII
.

A. satin·flnish goldtone wllh ·
matc~lr1Q bracelet Dual
Etlgllsh/SPIOISh day diSC.
GIHmarksrs an sliver

claJ . 114. Ill

coont on ~ ... these highly styled
l
, quartz watches will rate nurnbef
one with just about a1yone. YO\J
can wea them piQUdlv. know you're .
right on ftme ... and know you paid c.
a lot less than anyone Imagines.
If you're at1er a watch that\ tops In
~~ _.
...,,..........
D.
every.....,.,_.",~, -...ro 'a...........,.,1
price-wa ha'l9 a wide telectlon.

=:::"'• ·

otaL EnQI!si!ISoonlln day
roslstant.

:•.=h~lll

""''""'

,~

-...·Jtxtureds 1.... ..,IW
, _ ., "'rror-b&lt;~nt
""· st~wr diaL I!US

U.S.D.L IISPECTEI
IEIIW.
.

TIRKIYI

~J•hlen

SHOE!~
,"Middleport

OF

~11

CREIT

·aaUIE
CUFFEE
.IllitES

on ""'""" ' '"'' diaL
11GUG .

__

RIYAL

MAXWELL

:~.:=.=.0::: ~r~' ·.

~(l9&gt;

From

her.ifage··-· _house
·

. Fellowship in talls ffi

••'•z $ I l l

•••••

GIVE

·

''DIEI RilE''
"RC • RC liD"

BlEil
11$
oz

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-1

Jl&lt;)~ght, too! )

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I. Meln, "-rev

'

MILl

II

$

.

HIMIIEIIZED

111$171

were~ Comwell~wtDs ~~e~oing rr~::::::~:::;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~;~~~~~;;;~~~

Officers for the new year
stalled by Vada Hazelson using the
theme "Instruments of an Orchestra" at the Thursday night
meeting of the Women's Fellowship
of the Meigs County Churches of
Christ.

Installed were Ann Lambert,
president; Virginia Wyatt, first vice
president; Ruth Underwood, second
vice president; .Jane Hazelton,
secretary ; An'na Davidson,
treasurer; Frances Hysell, news
reporter; and Norma and Kathryn
Russell, card chairman.
)\feeling at the Hemlock Grove
Church of Chriat, Jane Hazelton led
in group singing. Eleanor Hoover
· had prayer, and the officers gave
· ' reports. It was decided thatfrom the
II!Oney tree, $50 will be sent to the

totbe
Philippines for missionary work.
It was noted that each year there
will be a Thanksgiving dinner at the
Darwin camp for all the Churches of
Christ in the county.
Norma Russell asked that each
church contribute money for table
covers at the scboo1ln Mexico where
Peggy Russell 'erves. New program
ideas were solicited. It was noted
that on Sunday Chri.stmss programs
will be presented at the Zion,
Hemiock, Dexter and Pomeroy
Churches.
Aon Lambert had devotions usiflll
the parable of a common straight
pin - "keep your head, find the
point, and put the pieces together."
She also · read a Christmas
meditation.

•

They found us m

.,•••

'

the Common Classifieds.

'

·-·

'

~~~IFF

Check tonight's ads and
see what you can find! !!

HILIDIY .

ll. .ll

I

UIM

1

I'
"

·

' ... ~~Sill

~t ...

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

z•IIC
······--~~.

$1·11
1LI

CALL (61'4)-992·2104
or (304)-675-1244

UIIY

RUTLAND
MASON
FURNITURE CO. FURNITURE CO.

&amp;elL ..

4 Ll

IRIIIT
WIRE

ROISTER

$

111111110

•

The Daily Sentinel. 992-2156
'

\

'CILIIPIRMI'
Ylll CIIICI

CIRD
GilES

$11!.

!SI

SPORTSIII'S
&amp;" LOCI BUIE

Kllfl

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

;

3u

-.. ... -.... .. '~~~-

.

1
$11
!
___...........

~.....,._

'

c

G'J./;fte•••

s a·a
UOI

.,. -•

~~~

,,

•••• 1:111

._TIYS
.&amp;.iiiiiiiijj;i,..ii

STRIWIEIIY
·SIIITCIIE
DOLL

CIMPREIIIR

LAIIIITED WOOL

11-

•TIE IIIIIUL'

iL ......-:................... ~~ •1 11

Point Pleasant Register 675-1333

GalliPolis ~y Tribune 446-2342 ·

........

'JUSTEI'
PORTABLE IIR

3 SHELF

DRILL PREll
IIliD

Sl.

CNILDIEI'S
WI IIIII'S

SPECIAL GROUP

.. 'JUSTEI'

17111.

Friday, December 11th,

••

aa~

GOBLETS .

sa••

HolWay Season, ·startlng

·'

$·4~!&amp;S-.!!·~1

FUIIEL
. SHIRTS

SEE 'I
SAl

OH.

1100 p.m. Thru the

HAPPY
HOLID'AYSI

LOll SLEEVE

WID ITIIUIU IUWUS
Ill MlmH IIIIWAII

· We Will le Open
Each Evening Unill

on Chrl1tirna1 Eve.

llnLE
FIIIEI ~••~

TOOL BElCH '
ORIIIIZER

YPRDDICE

For Your Convenience

We Will 1e Open
, Until 6100 P.M.'

4 PICI LIBBY
CITITIOI
WilE IUSSES

'11'11 TWI PIEf'

Office Hours by Appointment Only

ILARIU,

I

WILIIII.~.

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

W.VA.

REGAL
4 CUP IIIP

~

•••

Sill!.

..ILTII PIIIT
CIHIU WELIO

�Pomeroy

Page-tO-:-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 16,1981

Middleport, Ohio

Local organizations' meeting notes
Preceptor Beta Beta

During the business meeting it was
voted to donate $75 to the Christmas
treat for the Sunday school. Members exchanged gilts, and fruit trays
for shut-ins were filled. Refreshments were served to those named
and Cordelia Bentz, Ruby Frick,
Beatrick Buck, Dorothy Long,
Mabel Moore, and Agnes Dixon.

The Preceptor Bela Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held a
Christmas lWlcheon at the Meigs Inn
Satunlay.
A roWJd-robiJI card was signed for
Mrs. Grace Elch, social sponsor,
.. who U! recovering from surgery at
her home. Favors from Mrs. Eich
were presented to the members.
Attending were Velma Rue, June
Freed, Mary MorriB, Maida Mora,
A potluck holiday dinner was enAnn Rupe, Margaret Follrod, Pearl joyed at the home of Grace Warner
Welker, Ruby Baer, Clarice Kraut- by members of the Nifty Stitchers.
ter, Nonna Amsbary, Janet Theiss, The group exchanged gilts: AtJane Walton, Betty Ohlinger, Wlian tending were Mabel Moore, Louise
Moore, and R- Sisson.
Bearhs, Kay Logan, Willa Maude
AvU! Jackson of Portland was the Coates, · her great-grandchildren,
winner of the quilt used in a fund- Ashley and Allison Roach , Jean
raising project. Next meeting will be Blazewicz, Lucille Leifheit. Norma
held in January.
JeweU, Helen Milhoan, Marlene
Wils.on, Ruth Moore, Janet Korn,
and Agnes Dixon.

Nifty Stitchers

Willing Workers

Members of the Willing Workers
Class of the Enterprise United
Methodist Church held a Chrishnas
party at the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Bowen friday evening.
· The meeting opened with " Baby in
the House" and several other
readings. Sarah Dill read the Christmas story from the Living Bible, and
there was group singing of carols.

Drew Webster
AChristmas party to be held at the
home of Mrs. Marjorie Fetty Friday
night was planned during a recent
meeting of the American Legion

Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39.
Pomeroy.
Loretta Tiemeyer presided at the
meeting with Rhoda Hackett and
Mary Martin reporting on a get-

Assist in wrapping

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

p.m. followed by a party at the
home of Mrs. Jim Soulsby. Members are to take a homemade tree
decoration and a gift for the infirmary residents.

BLOODMOBILE
HARRJSONVILLE Order of
the Eastern Star, Past Matrons
Club, Christmas party at the
home of Jim an&lt;l .O!!nna Nelson,
Wednesday night, '6~38 ••p.m.
Members are to take their
husbands and a $3 gift exchange.
REV. BILL Reynolds will he
tile guest speaker at the Ash
Street FreewiU Baptist Church,
Middleport, Wednesday evening.
Services begin at 7:30 p.m.
THE MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League wiU have
its annual Christmas dinner at
the Meigs Inn Wednesday at 6:30

Wednesday

at senior citizens center from

1:30p.m. to 5:30p.m.
OHIO VALLEY ~ommandery
24 will confer the Order of Malta
on Wednesday, Dec. 16. All sir
knights are invited.

Thursday
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
Christmas party, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Carrie Grueser. Members will
make ChriStmas baskets.
BRADBURY. PTA Thursday, 7
p.m. at school with students to
present a Christmas program.

Announcements
Doe to the iUness of the president,
a meeting of the Meigs County
Genealogy Society announced for
Sunday has been cancelled.

RJO GRANDE ~ Rio Grande
Community College Board of
trustees will hold a special meeting

as co-hostess. The Martin home was Cowdery, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal and
beautifully decorated for the holiday Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson by the
season and gifts for exchange were hostesses, Mrs. Martin and Mn.
Rhoda Hackett and Mary Martin ·
placed under a lighted decorated Boring. Each was given a smaU hanwere in Columbus over tlie weekend
tree. The meeting opened with the dmade stocking with a candy cane
for the December pouvior of the
group repeating the Lord's Prayer for a favor. ·
The January meeting wiU be at the
Eight and Forty held at the Ramada
and Mrs. Sue Reed gave tile Christhome
of Mrs. DoUy Reed with Mn.
Inn.
mas Story from the second chapter
Pulman as ccrhoateaa.
Lucille Woodling, departemental
of Luke. Mrs. Sandy Cowdery
- Mrs. L. Balderson
chapeau, presided at the aeaal!lll
presented the program with a candle
which opened on Saturday night with
lighting service with the candles
a dutch supper and carol singing. At
representing peace, hope, joy and
the business session Sunday, Linda
Jove. This1 was concluded with a
Edmundson,
departemental
prayer by Mrs. Vivian Humphrey.
l'aumonier, asked for prayers for
Mrs. Violet Satterfield played recor- . The Heath United Methodist
her book of prayer. She also asked
ded Christmas carols during the ,Women meeting Monday night at the
that the names of deceased· memhome of Mrs. Betty Fultz for a
meeting.
·
bers be reported to her. Jane WiUis,
ChriStmas
party voted to pay- on
Mrs. DoUy Reed, president, conThe annual Reedaville Christmas ducted
Ia archiviste, asked !&lt;H" publicity
the business meeting. Thirty the church budget after It was 'IOted
clippings to be sent to her, and Ruth Tree Lighting ws held at ReedviUe- sick calls were reported. Several that the recent holiday bazaar
Krugar reported that the goal for Belleville Dam Park Tuesday cards were signed for friends. Mrs. cleared $6110.
partnership is 1,810 with the number evening. This has been sponsored by Satterfield and Mrs. Barbara
Mrs. Fultz presided at the meeting.
now standing at 1,282. A project was the Riverview Garden Club for 14 Masters gave a report of their recent and cards were signed for Beulah
carried out to increase the nurse's years. Rev. Elden Blake gave the in· visit to the Holy Land. The birthdays
Hayes, Beulah Jones, Cecile Kinvocation and read the Christmas . of Mrs. Verna Rose, Mr Vivian Hum- caid, and Lillian Smith. It was noted
scholarship.
Beulah Taylor noted that another Story from Luke. Rev. Blake turned phrey, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal, and that the Eleanor Circle will meet
the lights on the tree. He has been Mrs. Sue Douglas were observed. A Thursday at the home of Mrs. Fultz;
very faithlul to help the Garqen Club decorated birthday cake, made by · and !hat the Afternoon Circle will
with this project through the years.
Mrs. Marlene Puhnan, was presen- have a luncheon meeting on ThursJames Wilhehn, Band Dir~or of ted to the ladies. Names were drawn day at the church.
Eastern High Band, presented with everyone receiving a prize.
Elizabeth Mourning was the
several Christmas musical selec- Donr prizes went to Mrs. Puhnan devotional leader and read "The
Sale of Christmas eo&lt;iki~s and
tions with a brass group from the and Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson. Birth of Jesus" clo&amp;ing with prayer.
handmade items will be held.
band. Treats were given to ap- · Refreshments se.-.ed buffet iltyle Nan Moore was the 9rogram leader
proximately 125 children by Santa were served to: Mrs. Dolly Reed,
and after reading ahout the purpll!le
who arrived at the Tree Lighting on Mrs. Sue Reed and Angela, Mrs. Sue of Christmas, had three stories·,
RIVERVIEW GARDEN CLUB
the Olive Township Fire Truck. An- Douglas and Jonathan, Mrs. Mamie
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. for a
"Story of the Magi" by O''Henry;
nouncing and leading the group Buckley, Mrs. Barbara M~sters,
potluck Christmas dinner at the
"Why the Chimes Ring" by
singing was the president of tile Gar- Mrs. Judy Horner, Mrs. Connie
home of Mrs. Okey Connolly.
Raymond · McDonald Alden, and
den Club, Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
Rucker, Mrs. Marlene Putman,
"The Other Wise Man" by Van
THE MEIGS County Humane
Mrs. Vickie Keller, Mrs. Pearl
Dyke. Members sang ·"Joy to the
Society will meet Thursday at
Baker, Mrs. Connie Bowman, Mrs.
World"· with Donna. Byer at the
7:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
Verna Rose, Mrs. Lillian Pickens,
piano. Refreshments were served by
The ReedsviUe UMW held their Mrs. Shirley BOWill8n, Mrs. Mary
Maxine Gaskill, Emma K. ClatChristmas party at the home of Mrs. Alice Bise, Mrs. Virginia Walton,
worthy and Joanne Robinson around
Pat Martin with Mrs. Erika Boring Mrs. Violet Satterfield, Mrs. Sandy . the Christmas tree.
Several area residents were in
Athens Friday to assist in wrapping
gifts for the residents of the Athens
Mental Health Center. In the group
were Ruby MarshaU, Iva PoweU,
Loretta Tiemeyer, Dorothy WeUa,
Mary Martin .of the American
Legion Auxiliary, .Drew Webster
Post 39; Lula Hampton, Auxiliary,
Lewis Manley Post 263; Eunie
Brinker, Racine Post 602 Auxiliary,
and Eileen Martin, Julia Monk, and
Kathryn Robson.
·

Heath UMW

Reedsville UMW.

-~-

Friday

MEIGS COUNTY Coon Hunters, 7 p.m. Friday at headquarters on Snowball Hill; election of
officers will be held.
CARPENTERS LOCAL Union
650 . Christmas party, 7 p.m.
Friday, at the haU; members
. only.

Anderson

James W. Lewis, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wilson Lewis, Jr., of Crown
City, Ohio, has completed basic
training at Fort Jacks!lll, S. C.
During the training, students
receive instructions in drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map reading,
tactics, military courtesy, military
justice, first aid, and Army history
and traditions.

Pvt. Alice M. Anderson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Knox of
Route I, Ewington, has arrived for
duty at Bremerhaven, West Germany.
Anderson, a medical specialist
with the 7th Medical Command, was
previously assigned at Fort Sam
Houston, Texas.
Her husband, Daniel, is the son of

Astrograph
Dec. 17, 1981
You may have some Interesting challenges to contend with this
comlag year, but you'D be more than a match for anything that co...
fronls you. They might slow you down a trifle, but they won't stop you.
SAGITI'ARRJS (Nov. ZS.Dec. 21) You know what needs doing
today and you have the capabilities to do it. However, you might do
more thiDIIIng about it than actuaUy putting forth the effort.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZWIUL 11) Two things could hold you back
today: Selfo(!efeating thoughts and trying to do something the identical
. way it proved unsuccessful previously.
AQUARRJS (Jan. 26-Feb. 19) Don't dig too deeply today into a
friend's personal affairs. You might uncover something you won't be
able to resist teUing others about.
PISCES (Feb. 26-Marcb 20) Important decisions which personaUy
affect you should be made by yourself today, not by others. Though
their intentions may be gOod, their judgment could be faulty.
ARIES (Marth Zl-AprU 11) Beware of making judgments today if
you're not certain you have aU the facts. Decisions baaed upon sketchy
infornnation could cause problems later.
TAURUS (AprD 1&amp;-May 28) Don't bank too heavily today on persona who have proven to be unreliable, eapecil!Uy .ill Jituations where
there Is money involved.
GEMINI (May Z1..Jane 28) Both you IUid your mate may not be too
good tod8y at keeping promiJea made to one aiGther. Neither should
make CGIDIIIItmeall wblcll-'t be faJfDled. CANCER (Jane Zl..July ZZ) Avoid particiJlllting In office gossip
today with coworkers. Word could get bac_k to the boas, making you,appear to be the culprit.
•
LEO (JaiJ ZS.Aog_ !Z) Be doubly protective of, and careful with,
your resources and Pllll•lona today. Carelessness or leaving things
imguardad~ lead to a 101111.
VIRGO (Aq.IHiepl. ZZ) There's a chance today that you might
be 1\ind to those who don't deserve It and hoaWe toward those who do.
l)lsllngUish betweea persona who matter and ones who don't.
UJ1RA (SepL ZHlcl. U) Normally, evaluati0111 are baaed upon
logic lind facll, but today you may merely play your hunches. This
could get you aft-track.
800ftP10 (OeL lf.Nov. ZZ) This Is not a good day to becclme involved In flnlnCill cfeelhljJI with friends. There's a )IOIIIIbiUty
· something could go awry and create bad leeUngs on both sides.

.r r

Births
Imboden

Will

Mr. and Mn. Paul Imboden,
Syracuse, announce the birth of a
daughter, Karen Lynn, Dec. 4. The
. infant weighed eight pounds, four
ounces and was 21 inches long .. Mr.
and Mrs. Imboden has a brother,
Adam, at home. Paternal grl\ndDec. 21 at 7 p.m. in the Rio Grande . parents are Mr. and Mrs. Oscar ImCoUege board room to consider boden of Minersville. Maternal
projects in Sub. Am. H.B. 552.
grandparents are the Rev. and Mrs.
Dale Bass, Upland, Ind.
i "''ii:

Mr. and Mrs. Dana Anderson of
Route 2, Pulaski, N. Y. ·
The private is a 1979 graduate of
Vinton County Consolidated High
School, McArthur, Ohio.

•

•..

•

r

•

'!"

f '

Kenneth E. English, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard E. English of 120
Kerr St., Pomeroy, has been
promoted in the U. S. Air Force to
the rank of technical sergeant.
English is a supply facilities
supervisor with the 36th Supply
Squadron at Bitburg Air Base, West
Germany.
He is a 1969 graduate of Meigs
HighSchool, Middleport.

,..,.

•

WEST COLUMBIA~ Pvt. Lucian
D. Taylor, son of Walter R. Taylor
Sr. of Route I, West COlumbia, W.
Va., and Gravie M. Taylor of Route
2, Point Pleasant, W. Va., has
arrived for duty at Kirch-Goens,
West Germany.
Taylor, a teactical wire operator
with the 3rd Armored Division, is a
1979 graduate of Point Pleasant High
School.

·Morrison
Pvt. Nelson R. Morrison, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene 8. Morrison
Sr. of 132 Pe•rl St., Middleport, hla
graduated from the quartennuter
and chemical equipment repair
·course, a seven-week training
program at AJ¥!rdell! Proving
Ground,Md.
The· student wu taught how to
maintain smaU encl-. Jalllldry
wdll, atoves, Iaten, machines and·
chemlaiJ equlpnllbt.
Mllrrilan II I 1111 graduate of
Meii(S High School, Pomeroy.

Hawk

Cassell
Mr. and Mrs. Charles CasseU of
417 Lincoln St., Middleport announce
the birth of their first child, a son,
James Rodney, born !lll Dec. 12 at
the Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. The baby weighed nine
pounds, five ounces and was 21 in· ches iong. Mr. and Mrs. CaaseU have
. three other sona, Trey, 14, Tim, 12,.
and Steve, 11, and one daughter,
Susanne, nine.

Mr. and· Mrs. KeUy Hawk of
Village Green Apartments in
Pomeroy are announcing the birth of
a son, Derek Brandpn, Dec. 8, at the
Pleasant Valley !fospital. He
weighed seven pounds, six ounces
·and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents .are Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Kerns, New Haven,
W. Va., and the paternal grandMr. and Mr.s Tim lhle, 331 Barrett
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert .
Street,
Canon City, Colo., are anHawk, Hemlock. Grove. Greatnouncing
the birth of their first
grandmother is Mrs. Emmett Hawk.
child, Sera Elizabeth.
She was hom on Nov. 22 at Saint
Thomas More Hospital in Canon
City. She weighed eight poonda, six
.Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Soulsby of
113 Union Avenue,.Pomeroy, are anounces and was 21 inches long. .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
nouncing the birth of a daughter,
Tara Renee, born Wednesday. Dec.
and Mrs. Robert Bobo, Rutland, and
2 at Camden Clark Hospital,
the paternal grandparents are Mr.
Parkersburg, W. Va. The infant and Mrs. Edward Ihle; Racine.

DWI

lead~

arrests

Out bf 41 arrests made by ~id­ the right of way, squealing tires,
dleport Police during November, 11 fighting in public, driving under
were made on charges of driving ' suspension, speeding and leaving
while intoxicated, Chief of Police J. the scene of an accident.
J. Cremeans repOrts.
Police vehicles were driven a total
Of the total, seven were charged of 4,880 miles during the month.
with disorderly manner and four
Meanwhile, the Middleport Fire
each with reckless operation and Department answered a total of 44
destruction of property. There were calls during the month of November,
two each for trespassing, petty theft, 1981, including seven fires and 37
and expired driver's license while emergency TWIS, Fire Chief Jeff
there was one each for consuming in Darst reports. All vehicles were
a motor vehicle, littering, no motor- driven a total of 1,003.3 miles during
cycle endorsement, failure to yield the month.

Imboden

Ohio Valley Uvntock Ce.

lbli. 36.5(1..47;

Marke,Repurt

Sale every saturday at I p.m. Prices taken
from the aucUon of SatW'day, Dec. 12. Trends :
Veal calves $5 to UO lower, feeder cattle $31o $7
lower, cowa S3 tots lower. Total head 125.
Feeder Steers : Good and Choice 250to300 lbs.
i:i.so.M.75; 300 to 400 Jbti. 41.50-54.50; 400 to 500
Jbs. fG-63.75; SOO tofiOO lbll. to.54Hi6 ; 600to 700 lbs.
31.51-52.75; 700 to 800 lbi. 38-67.50 : 800 and over
37.50-61.75.

Feeder Heilen~: GoodandChoice200to300lb::~ .

40.50-48.50;

:m to 400 lbs. 40.fiB..46.50;

400 to 500

lbs. 31.50-44.50 : 500to6001bs. 37-17.50; 600to700

DollliiUU, Jot t..:onlcy.

to be named to the ron are:

the leCOnd all weeki IP'Hinl: period hu been announced. 'I"hooe maklne a pade of B or abOve in

Flrslgrade - M.lct•el EvPII, Corey Hatfield,
Virginia Pl.,...,., Kmty Rile&lt;, Rachel RJ&gt;oe,
Barbie Rouh, Shawn Wolfe.
~ grade -

JOIOO&amp; Codner, Glenda

Holter, RonnleWa1ner.
Thin! grade - Melanie Adamo, Junle Bee1ie,

L.b. cW- Jerry Alelhlrt.

Tht Radnt EJeomtntary School honor roD for

aU their aubjedl to be named to the roD are:
Grade one: Mllty Hlyman, He.thtr Hill, Julie

HtU, Nlk.ki Ible, Eddie S.wyers, Karl Whitaker.
Grade two: Michelle Brown. Kellle Ervin,
Angela Goody, Todd U.rr!Jon, Andy HJII, Jarney
Holter. Valeua Hunnel, David Jhle, Trevor

Joy""' Codner, Cbrtlllannon,
·
Fourth gr.de - Ray LYM OaUey, Nancy
Petn!l JemyVamey,
1
llwlt, Tommy Jupen, J . J. Ll....,.., Tanya •
Gra~ three ~ Jarr.od Circle, Ja1on Circle,

Meadowl, Rwoh, G"'" · W"ldle, 9ulle
Spr&lt;ge,
" o~·•• &gt;
Fifth lmde - Triela Raub, O.wn Johnlon,
, DebbieGruthoule, RyanEva111, Beck)'EVIDI.
Slsth pade - Donelte T - . ltlm Slobllrt.

Shannon Counta, Jenny Dlmron, John Bill
Hot.ck, Colln Maide111, Norman Matson, Joyce
Pickens, Jennifer Smith, Angel Snider, Shelly
Winebreooer, Mllyla Yoecbam.
Grade lour: Amy HaniJon, Kalhy Ihle, Brtn-

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) .:._ A onetime city police officer was shot to
death today as a Columbus Police
SWAT team tried to serve him with a
murder warrant, detectives said.
Homicide detectives said John C.
Gross, 49, was shot at his home
about 5:50 a.m. as officers tried to
aerve a warrant charging him in the
slaying of Wayne E. SuUivan.
Police reports say officers tried to
aerve the warrant Tuesday afternoon but couldn't find Gross.
SWAT team members staked out his
home in northeast Columbus.
Police gave this account of the
shooting:

Attendance .at the momlng Ill!~'
vices at the.Free Methodist aturch
Nov. 29 wu 11. Choir membel'l
present were 12- There.,... 111010 b)'
Putor Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Perry, Athena,
spent 'lbankspvlng with Mrs.
Perry's parent~, Mr. and Mn. Nlll'
111111~ •

.

John StarY, wbo attends Bell and
Howell ecbael In COiwnllal, ipellt
Tl•mhl'vln&amp; qcallon wllb her
pareall, Mr. and Mn. Vern S&amp;ory.
Mr.lllld Mn. David Sdlaefer, Mt.
Vernon,
ipellt 'l'llanbgivbig ' with
.

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Pearl Gilkey visited
a recent Satunlay evening with Mrs.
Detla Stahl.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Churt'h Dec. 6 was 30. Choir members present were 16. Larry Clarll
.111111! a solo.
Ml'l. Tina Jacobs, who hu been .
iU, attended church seniors Sunday
at the local church;
Sidney Lalfheit, COlumbus, baa
been very w. Mr. Leifheit flmlly of
this CCIIIIIJIUIIIt). He bu been
released~ )qpllll.
The Cbrlltmu Jll'OIIT8III will be
Sundly evenJac, Dec. 101117:30 p.m.
The publlc Is welciJme.

, caused Oregon's rivers to rise •
toward flood stage.
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - A FinParts of eastern Washington
dlay
school board member says if
became a motorists' nighhnare af"Catcher
In The Rye"· were under
ter freezing temperatures gave
debate
for
use ·in city schools, he
slushy snow a slippery crust.
would
not
give
parents the option of
Washington's Yakima VaUey got
up to 14 inchea of snow, including 7 barrlrig children from reading it.
Jerry Kramer, an eight-year
inches in six hours, and 'SChools and
school board veteran, proposed an
county offices were forced to close.
A tree blew onto a woman and option system that settled a conbroke her leg In Salt Lake City, of- troversy over a health book for
ficials said, and shards of glass from eighth grade students.
Titled "Let's Talk About Health,'
a window that blew out in the
Metropolitan HaU of Justice cut the the book aUows students to form
their own conclusions about
police chief's secretary.
The wind shattered windows in marijuana use, alcohol consumption
dQWntown Salt Lake City depart- and sex. Opponents of the text atment stores, toppled two 71l-foot tacked it as Undermining parentS!
trees at the state Capitol an.d blew authority.
Under Kramer's proposal, adopdown a walkway from the roof of the

ted by the board Monday night,
parents will be aUowed to chose .
either the "Let's Talk" text or
another.lesscontroversial one.
But Kramer said he would not
have offered the option if the controversy had involved a history book
or a fiction novel like "Catcher In
The Rye," a 1950s book ahout
growing up. Authored by J.D.
Salinger, the book was banned the~J
in many school libraries.
Kramer, who is leaving the school
board at the end of this month, said
he hopes parents wiU not view the
option as "a precedent" that can he
applied to aU books.
Kramer said the compromise is
possible with divided classes.

"It's possible because the classes .
rotate every nine weeks," Kramer
said Tuesday. "We, can have part of

. a new class using one book andoplrt
of the class using another."
However, Kramer emphasized,
such a plan would not he possible in
a regular, year-long class setting.
"I want to stress that this (compromise) is not to be considered a
precedent for future objections to ,
other books," Kramer said. "I

realize, and the other board members realize, thai there were topics
discussed in the book that parents
might not be comfortable with. I as a.
parent would not be comfortable
lalking with my children ahout some
topics mentioned In the book."

make a

LiHiet

over 34-fll.

•

ioo to BOO lbs. 33.50-48.75 ; lioo and

Feeder Bulls : GOOd and Choice 250 to 300 IDs.
41.50-Sl: 300 to too lbi. 40-$0 ; 400 to 500 lbs. 3841.75; 500 to 600 lbs . 38.5G-46; GOO to 700 lbs. 3847.50: 700 to tJO lbll. 36.51&gt;-43: 800 and over 35-41.50.

Holstein steers and bulls 300 to*'D lbs. 3$--41.50.
Bulls 1,000 tbti. and up 37.50-f2.
Slaughter cows: utilities 31.50-35. ~: canners
and cutters :lll down.

Veal calves - choice and prime 61-7R ·
4&amp;.50-57.

,......,..~

As he tried to serve tbe warrant,
officer Joseph Weyland drew a
weapon.
Gross grabbed Weyland, ani! other
policemen who were at the rear of
the home came to the front and
opened fire. Detectives weren't Immediately certain who fired the shot
that killed Gross.
Gross served on the Columbus
police force between 1958 and 1963.
SuUivan, 23, was shot in the chest
early Tuesday in front of a .servic.e
station following what witnesses
described as an argument with
another man over a debt, police
said.

·3 UNES ARE-AiftOXIMATB.Y .
15 WORQS - USE 1HE BlANK
BELOW 10 WRITE YOUR AD.

·Do you have a Christmas greeting
for a special family or person?

Nama
'

(

) WANTED

(

) FOR sALE

(

If so, place a Christmas greeting

) ANNOUNCEMENTS
( · ) FOR RENT

in the Christmas issue of the

CASH ONLY! .

dl Zirkle, Angle Manuel, A1nwe Wolfe.'Trlcil
Wolfe.
Grad!:! five: Shawn Diddle, BUly Jonea;, Mark

Potter, EUubeth Smith, Melanie VanMeter.
Grade 1lx : Pltrec. Clrtle, t.earu. 'Ciart,
Tammy Holter, Donnie Rlffle, Heather Slluler.

1.

RIO GRANDE - Three lOCI! Jbidenta ..Vt!
been named to the honor roll hlr the fall quarter
at Rio Grande Collese and Commwlity cone~.
. In order to qualify for the honor of 1 llbadent
mwtt earn a J.~ srade point averalle (on la 4.0 ...
acate) for all wollk taken dutUtc tf\e previ0111
tenn. A atudent muat hive been enrolled for a
minimum of 12 hours for COI\IIkleratlon and mull

-.The Daily Sentinel, Dec. ·24th

'

2.

'

3.
4.

CGmplete ollcouno..
Ttioae area students 111med to the llallnci~Mit:
J~L. Swilher, Vlotoo; PameliJ. TOon, Ham·
den; Sondra E. WIU, McArthur.

3 Lines

5.

115 Wordsl

I 6.
7.

Mason personals

9.•
10.

a-se Robert Stewart, ll'llltaylng

11.

W!ughter-ln-Jaw, Mr. IIIII Mn.
with her W!W she.fully recovera.

for

$2.00
To Grandma Joy,

To the best Grandma ever,

Merry Christmas!
From your
G-ran&lt;:lttaughter Ami/

Dearest Keith,
1 love you and hope you
have the Merriest Christ-

8.

Mn. Evelyn Stewart baa returned
home after belntl hoeplllllaed at St.
JOiepb's HC11J1llal foUowtng knee
illlrJ!'!ry. She entered the )qpllal the
last of October. Her eon and

masever.

Love Dian

12.

Mr. and Mn. Law1ence Belcher ·
vlllted- ....U..., Mn. Mary Pall
·and'- illlltr, Mn. Nellie Moore 111
Plnrlllll, w. v•. fer 'l'hanbllivlng.
Mn. Helen Stew1rt apent
'l'haDhclvtnc with - dlluillter and
son-In-law, Mr. and Mn. PhJUi)l
Werry and family.

l

.

-

County Correspondence
LaurelCliff

thern and central Colorado hazardous Tuesday night as the storm
swept Into the state from Idlho and .
Utah, officials said.
In addition to the new snow In
Maryland, snow was faDing in New
York, New Jersey and Pen-.
nsylvanla. EUicott City, Md., reported six Inches of snow by midnight
Tuesday and the Baltimore
metropolitan area had ahout two inches on the ground by about 2 a.m. ·
today.
. There was heavy rain along the
northern East Coast from New York
City to Maine today.

Fonner SWAT member shot to death

Meigs·County Schools' honor ·rolls
PORTl.'.ND - The Portland Element.ry
School honor roll for the RCGOd s!J; weeki
grad.ing period has been amoonced. Thole

Pollee Investigating the stabbing
death of a transient had trouble
keeping the body steady 'tor evidentiary photographs.
The National Weather Service
said winda were clocked at 60 mph at
Salt Lake City International Airport

as the cold front passed at 2:29p.m.
The service said temperatures fell
1~ degrees - from 58 to 43 degrees In half an hour.
The weather service said winda of
up to 100 mph were reported at the
peaks of ski resorts east of Salt Lake
City.
The cold front hit PocateUo, Idaho,
around noon with thunder, heavy
rain, hail and a peak wind gust of 77
mph - the strongest wind ever
recorded in the city. Sustained willds
wereclockedat55mph. .
Snow and rasping winds of up to 411
mph made mountain passes in nor-

Market ·reports ·

Soulsby

making a grade ofB or above in all their aubjecll

Taylor

Brenda Browning·Will and Duane
Will are anrtounclng the birth of a
soti, Duane, horn oo Nov. 29 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The baby
weighed six pounds, one ounce.
Grandparents are Nonnan and
AUegra Will, RuUand, and Henry
and Charlotte ·Browning, Point
Pleasant. Don Wood of Pomeroy is a
great-grandfather.

BIGGIES ~Fern Norris, Raelne, ralles rather large tunl... One of
the lurnlpa weighed seven pounds aad measured ZZ lnebes Iii diameter.
Tile smaUer one welghedfour pounds.

Thle

' "'
,/.

English

'-

~

'

weighed seven pounds, eight OWlces.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. James Soulsby, Pomeroy,
and maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. James Cowdery, Reedsville. Great grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jed Will, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Virginia Walton, ReedaviUe.

Poet Office.
The guata blew down power lines,
and nwnerous brief power blackouts
were reported along northern Utah's
heavily populated Waaatch Front. A
faUen line set fire to tires on a tractor-trailer IUid Qfflcials said snme
traffic Ugbta were blacked out.

Op •
~;.,rad~':~ ~eg': ':i _,
lion system sett1es controversy
.

Tree lighting

Residents' military news notes
Lewis

FromAPWirea
The first big snowstorm of tho
season In the Nortlnreat flung up to
14 inches of """" on Washington
while a cold front east of the storm
roared across Idaho and Utah with
winds of up to 100 mph that smashed
windows and t088ed trees Into power
lines.
·
Thesecondsnowstonnlntwodays
hit Maryland today and the National
Weather Service predicted It would
leave up to B Inches of new snow In
the western and central parts of the
state.
The western storm Tuesday dumped 8ll much as a foot of snow~ the

with a sales receipt auacbed.
AU high school band students are
urged to compete In the solo and ensemble conteat sponsored by Ohio·
Music Educators' Asaociation. The
contest will be held at Athens In late
Februa)'Y, but studenta ohould see
Mr. Hill to select their muaic before
Christmas vacation.

will rehearse in the bandroom at
6:30 p.m. for the basketbaU game.
Band students are reminded that.if
they cannot attend tbeae games,
they are to find a substitute In the
same section to fill ln.
AU Senior band mem~s are
reminded that uniforms are to be
tumed in by Jan. 8, 1982. The unifor'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

14 inch snow blankets Northeast U.S.

ms are to be in a dry cleaner's bag

On Friday, Dec. 18, the pep band

Social Calendar
Wednesday

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Band Notes ··

acquainted tea held for the district bed baa been endowed at Denver and
president, Mrs. James A. Gatewood, donations are needed from the
at Lithopolis. A gift for her waa aent Salons. The resignation of Eleana
by the unit. Thursday members will Wagoner due to lllneu was accepted
go to the ChiUicothe Veterana and Helen Peoples, a past chapeau,
Hospital birthday party. Donations was appointed to fill the vacancy.
of cookies, cakes, and candies are Dues were increased 7~ cenls a year.
needed. Several members were in Next pouvior will be held March 6
Athens reeently to assist in wrap- .and 7 at the Ramada Inn, Columbus.
ping gifts for . the residents of the
Athens Mental Health Center.

8 and 40

Wednesday, December 16,1981

13.
14.
-

15.
IJ

•.

,.

�Page-12-The DailY Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 16, 1981

Ribbon cutting ceremony set Friday
Ribbon cutting ceremonies. officially opening the new access road
from Union Ave. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, will be held

IIEALllt W~t.

~m~ ...... ·.........~

wlllt1o&gt;l9-,..
DO liiOT

•~"eino
1 r.J I ~ .:1

,

County ha,nnenz·ng.·o
:I'y
a
Marriage licenses

Swt 1't'ollows
•h
•d t
JO aCCI en

E11'r1R

ed to
Marriage licenses were illsu
Mark Alan Parsons, 20, Rt. 2,
Racine, and Tamarah Gay Gilland,
ha 1
23, Rt. 2• Racine ; Charles Mlc e
A suit in the amount ·of $300,000 Ralston, 19, Middleport, and Elaine
· CountY Common Mina Barnhart, 20, Pomeroy.
was f'.led ..m Meigs
Pleas Court by Jeffrey Lee Thorn- T 0 end marriage
ton, Rt. 2, Racine, against Evert R
Harrell, J oplin, Mo., for injuries he · Hattie Ellen Hall, Reedsville, filed
received when ran over by a truck at suit for divorce against Marion
his employment on June 29, of this Augustus Hall, Reedsville.

The plaintiff (Tbornton) was emyear.
ployedbyJ. D. DriltingCo.,andwas
workingatsitelocatednearRutland
when the accident occurred.
The defendant (Harrell) was
asked to stop the truck he was
driving, for Central Oil Field Supply
Co., so a water line could be clealled.
Harrell did stop, but before Thornton could complete his task, Harrell
resumed backing the truck and
crushed the plaintiff, according to
the entry.

Tag reminder
CLEANUP UNDERWAY- With new warning signs (top photo) in
place and aided by cold weather work crews on Tuesday (lower photo) ·
begin removing contaminated sludge from an industrial incinerator near
Flint, Michigan. The site was declared a toxic emergency earlier this
year but lhe state was unable to find means and the money to get rid of
the sludge. (AP Laserphoto).

West Virginian dies
in one-car accident
An Apple Grove man was·killed in
a one-car accident in Mason County

center.
Benjamin F. Price, 36, Vinton,
escaped injury when his vehicle
went off the right side of the road an
overturned after striking an embankment on Deer Creek Road, a
mile west of Rt. 325, at 11 :30 a.m.

early Tuesday morning , according
to the Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
Tlie department said Billy Steele
died.after his vehicle hit a telephone
pole a quarter-mile north of the The veh1cle was moderately
Goodyear plant on W.Va. Rt. 2.
damaged.
The report said Steele was apAccording to the report, Elbert
parently ron off the road by another Mullins, 63, Dexter, was northbound
vehicle, causing him lo lose control on Meigs County Rd. 10 at 10 p.m.
and hit the pole. He was taken to St. when he swerved to avoid coUision
Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., with another vehicle, went off the
by the Valley Rescue Squad, where right side of the road and drove into
he was reported dead on arrival at a ditch. There was moderate
9:25 a.m.. Tbe body was Ia ter damage to his vehicle.
released to tile John Chapman
Three car-deer accidents were
Funeral Home in Winfield, W.Va.
· also reported to the patrol Tuesday.
In. other matters Tuesday, the
Ronald E. Massie, 20, Rt. I, NorGa!Ua-Meigs Post of the Ohio High- thup, was northbound on Mitchell
way Patrol investigated several Road at 6 p.m. when a deer ran into
· minor accidents in itB coverage his vehicle, causing slight damage.
area.
The report said Reid Brubaker, 38,
The patrol said Randolph Gallipolis, was driving southbound,
Fluellen, 61 , Rl. 2, Bidwell, was on Gallia County Rd. 5. at 9:50p.m.
southbound on Woods Mill Road, when his vehicle struck a deer. The
north of Rt. 554, at 2:20 p.m. when vehicle was moderately damaged.
his vehicle collided with a norA vehicle driven by Ricky D.
thbound auto driven by Patrick T. Smith, 21 , Rutland , received
McGraw. 25, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
moderate damage when it was
There was no injury and moderate struck by a deer on Rt. 124, four
damage was reported to Fluellen's miles north of Racine , at 10:30 p.m.
vehicle. Fluellen was cited for left of

\

American auto sales
continue slow pace

I

t .

By Tbe Associated Press
U.S. automakers began December
at the slowest pace in 22 years, with
sales plunging 27.5 percent compared with last year.
The reports Tuesday by the five
major domestic automakers showed
Ford Motor Co. slipping the most in
the first 10 days of December, with
sales off 37.7 percent compared with
the same period a year ago.
General Motors Corp. said its
sales feU 26.4 percent. Chrysler
Corp. reported a falloff of 14.6 percent, Volkswagen of America put its
slide at 16.1 percent and American
Motors Corp., the smallest of group,
was off an estimated 27.5 percent.
Interest rates as well as high
prices have been cited as causes of
the auto slump and a blow on tile
credit front was registered Tuesday
when another big bank raised its
prime lending rate.
The Central National Bank of
.· Cleveland said it would raise its
prime to 15.75 percent from 15.5·percent. Crocker National Bank in San
Francillco made the same move
Monday.
In other economic news :
-Standard &amp; Poor's Corp.
released a survey today claiming
. · American industry's labor costs for
19110 were the lowest in 26 years, with
19 cents of every sales dollar going
toward laboe The report said,
however, that subtracting the costs
at the profitable oil Industry raises
the amount to 21 cents on the dollar.
Inflation, t ec s !on and automation
also were cited for the lower figures.
(
.

Friday, Dec. 18, at 10 a_m. on the
hospital side of the road the commissioners announced Tuesday. The
public is cordially invited to attend

- The Treasury Department said
Tuesday it will give in to pleas from
Congress and tbe thrift-savings industry and ask postponement of ending the cap on interest-rate limits
Americans get on savings accounts.
The ceiling would have been
removed e,arly next year. The move
was a reversal of President
Reagan's position that all interestrate caps should be 'remov.ed by the
rnid-1980s.
-Commerce Secretary Malcoim
Baldrige said the world's steel trade
could fall into chaos unless
European companies quickly improve compliance with voluntary
rules against unfair exports and imports.
- A report by the House Government Operations Committee said the
failure of federal regulators to share
infonnation or react quickly allowed
major speculators to build huge
silver holdings, driving market
prices sky-high in 1979 and early
1!1110. Soaring prices eventually led to
the collapse of the silver futures
market and sparked the
congressional inquiry.
-The House approved a bill to
allow the Federal National Mortgage Association to recapture $14
million from the Treasury through a
tax break. Fannie Mae, as It is
called, was created by the government 25 years ago as an Indirect
source at home loans. It is expected
to lose $400 million or more this
year. The Senate Ia expected to go
along.with the House bill.

Me1gs DeputY Auto Registrar
Sarah Gibbs reminds residents with
last names starting with the letters,
U. v. W, X, v·or Z they must have
their new licen.Se stickers by Dec. 31.
To secure the stickers car owners
must take both their certificate of
title and registration certificate to
the registrar's office, the former
Gibbs Grocery building on Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. The office is open
from 9 a.m. to I p.m. and from 2 to
4:30 p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday and from 9 a.m.
to noon on Thursday.
Additional bours for tbe . convenience of vehicle owners are

Friday evenings from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
and Saturday mornings from 9 a.m.
to 12noon ..

Have visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lewis and
daughter, Anita, Okeechobee, Fla.
visited Susnday evening with Mrs.
Iva Powell. They are in Ohio to attend the funeral of his sister,
Dorothy, in Cambridge.

the ceremonies..
In other business, a letter was
"":'d from Ohio EPA Director,
Wayne Nichols, infonrung the board
that the county has been granted
permission to develop;. new landfilf
site near Howell Hill Road in
Salisbury Township.
In addition, it was reported that
the COWlly health department has.
granted a temporary li~ for the
county to continue operating at the
present landfill until the new site is
ready for use.
Larry ·Spencer, clerk of courts,
requested permissiol! to hire an additiooal employe to work in both the
title office and clerk of courts office
on a fulltime basill.
Commissioners stated they would

Checks totaling $260,362.65,
representing tbe months of July,
August and September 1981 coal
severance tax distributions, have
been sent to counties and
municipalities throughout West
Virginia, State Treasurer Larrie
Bailey reports.
Checks for the following amounts
have been 5"111, Bailey said:
Mason, $3,906,65; Hartford, $84.70,
Henderson, $79.72, Leon. $30.86,
Mason, $212.01, New Haven; $247.21,
Point Pleasant, $984.03. ·
McDowell: $75,960.65; Anawalt,
$126.75; Bradshaw, $99.49, Davy,
$159,61, Gary, $435.92, Iaeger,
$132.12, Keystone, $162.02, Kimball,
$154.63, Northlork, $118.46, War,
$322.11, Welch, $666.90,

Public Notice

Public

NOTICE BY
aCtion naming you as
PUBLICATION
defendants in the above
To the Defendants, The named Court by filing its
Unknown persons, who Petition on November 25 .
have a vested, contingent, 19 1
or reversionary interest in
~ he object of the Petition
the real estate known as is the sale, under the
th e Hiland. Chapel, Chur· provisions
of
Section
ches Of Christ In Christian 1715.14 of the Ohio ~evised
Union. Sa lisbury Town· Code of ·th·e · following
ship, Meigs County, Ohio, described real estate"
and their unknown heirs-at· known as the Hiland
law, next of k in, devisees, Chapel, Churches Of Christ
legatees, their executors. 111
Christian
Union,
admin istrators, custodian· Situated in the County Of
s, assigns, or guardians Meigs 1 in the State of Ohio
and
the
unknown and in the TownshiJ) of
executors, administrators, Sa li sbury and bounded and
guardians, custodians. or described as follows :
assi gns or heirs-at· law next
The following parcel of
of kin, devisees or legatees land, namely seven rods
of any persons who have a square, bounded on the
vested, contingent or State Road, on the west
revisionary interest in the side of said Road, and on
real estate known as the the west side of the Creek,
H iland Chapel, Churches near the South east corner
Of Christ In Christian of Fraction No. 32, Range
Union , Salisbury Town· No. 13, TownshiP. No.2. The
ship, Meigs County, Ohio, above
descnbed real
Whose
Residence Is estate, being in Salisbury
Unknown:
Township, Meigs County
COURT OF
and State of Ohio.
ClilMMON PLEAS.
Last Transfer:
Deed
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
Record Volume 189, Page
Address: Meigs county 261
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
, Said premises being also
Ohio 45769
known as Hiland Chapel.
Case No. 18036 Pomeroy, Ohio
NOTICE
Petitioner is The General
The General Board 01 Board of Trustees of The
Trustees , Churche s' Of Churches Of Christ In
Christ In Christian Union
Christian
Union.
The
Petitioner
Hiland ChapeL Churches
VS
Of Christ In Christian
The Unknown persons, Who Union is a regularly ad·
have a vested , contingent mitted member of the
or reversionary interest in south Central District of
the real estate known as the Churches Of Christ In
the Hiland Chapel, Chur- Christian Union . Said
ches· Of Christ In Christian
Hiland ChapeL Churches
Union, Salisbury Town- Of Christ In Christian
ship, Meigs County, Ohio,
Union, having become ex·
eta I
tinct, Petitioner seeks (1)
Defendants
the sale of the above
. Plaintiff has brought this

8

AUCTION

Pub I ic Notice

described real estate pur"
suant to Section 1715.l4 of
the Ohio Revised Code; (2)
an order of said Court
authorizing and directing
Petitioner to hold the net
proceeds derived from said
sale of said real estate pl)r·
suant to the terms ahd conditions of Section 1715.14 of
the Ohio Revised Code; and
(3) for such other and further relief as may be just
and proper in the premises.
You are requ ired to answer the petition within
twenty-eight .days after. the
last publication of this
notice, which will be
pub I ished once each week
for six successive weeks,
and the last publication will
be made on January 6.
1982.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as permitted bY.
the Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure within the time
stated,
·\ udgment
by
default wi I be rendered
against you for the relief
lemanded in the Petition.
Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas,
Meigs county, Ohio.
Meigs County
Courthpuse
Pomeroy , Ohio

12:00 Noon January 20,
1982, and at that time
opened by the Treasurer of
said Board as provided by
law for one (1) 66
passenger schoo l bus, ac·
cording tQ specifications of
said board of education .
Specifications and instructions to bidders may
be obtained at the office of
the Treasurer{ Eastern
High School But ding .
,
A certified check paYable
to the Treasurer of the
above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed l)y the bidder and
the surety companY In an
amount equal to five per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
mltted with each bid.
Said Board of Education
reserves the right to waive
informalities to accept or
reject any and all or parts
af any and all bids.
No bids may be with: ·
drawn for at least thirtY
(30)
days
after the
scheduled closing time for
receipt of bids.

{Note: This notice is issued
and published pursuant to
Rule 4.4 of the Ohio Ru les
of Civil Procedure) .

(12) 2. 9, 16. 23 . 30 ( 1) 6, 6tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
SCHOOL BUS FOR
THE EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF
EDUCATION
Sealed proposals will be
re ceived by the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School District of
Reedsville, Ohlo at the
Treasurer's Office until

OLD HIGfi SCHOOL GYMNASIUM
MAIN ST., RUTLAND

12 ·. ~6 · 1

mo .

Classified Ads
bring you
eltra cash
for
shopping sprees ,

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and ap·
pliances,
custom
bathrooms. remodeling,
plumbin, e lectric, and
heating .

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH- 992-6011
992-7656
8·20-tlc

HARRISON
1V SERVICE

NOW

OPEN

BOARD OF
EDUCATION OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
)'lEW PHONE NO .

992-6259

ELOISE BOSTON
TREASURER .OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SR 7 ·
REEDSVILLE. OHIO
45712

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 -tfc

•

SCOTTISH INNS

Our SpeciaHies

•

auto bOdies. Top prrces
paid for auto bodies;

scrap iron and metals . .
t mile west of Falrgroundson Old Rt.l3.
Mon.· Fri. 8:30 to4 :00

Rat's based on do1ublej
occupancy .

Ph. 992-6564
10·12-tfc,

1-304-675-6276

Keep Thit Ad for
Future Reference

HANDCRAFTED
CLOCKS

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Available
Made from Cedar,
CyP,ress ,, Walnut &amp;
Ch erry . •

GET
AnEITIOI

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK

TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS STUDIO
202'1&gt; E. Main St.
Ph. 9'/l-6720
Just In
Time for
Christmas: Membership Gift Certificates.
Rates
per
visit
available.
come in &amp; see what we
havetooffer.
..
"Get in Shape for the
Holidays ."
12·11·1 mo.

PRICED RIGHT.
Misc. Merchandice

PHONE 992-2156

' THE

From $34.95
To $79.95

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOuNCEMENTS
1- c.,--o of Thanks
2-ln Memoriam
l-Announcements
4- Givuway
s-Happy Ads
6--L.osr and Found
7- Yard S•te
8-Publlc Sale
&amp; Audion
9-Wanled to Buy

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11-HeJpWantect
..
Jl- Situatltlrl Wanted

13-lnsurenc•
14- Bus!ness Tralnint
15-Schools lnstructoon
U-Radkl, TV,
&amp; CB Repair

11- Wanted To Do

• FINANCIAL
'l i - Buslnen
Opporh.lnity
22- Money to L.oan

lor Rent
4&lt;1-Aputmenu tor REnt
U-Furnlthed Rooms
46-Space lor Rent
n-wanred to Rent
41- Equipment lor Renf
4J-ForLelse

•MERCHANDISE
51-H 0 ul4!hold Goocll

S!-L.OU&amp;Ar;rea•e
Wanted

Je - A:~I Estat~

JJ- Ri•ttors

Sunday 2~CIO P .M . FrtCIIY ·

'1

BISSELL
SIDING CO,

Yd.

"Beouflfuf, Custom
Bull' Glrllll"
Cllf for frH 1ldlng
tsllmotts, 949-2101 ar
949-2160.
Na Sunday Cells

Buy Now &amp; Sa~e $2-$6 Per Yard
25 Rolls Carpet in stock to pick from .
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remnants $2.50 up.

3·1l·ttc

5'2- CB , TV, RICI60 EQUI.ment

54- Misc . Mercttandtse
B-Bullding s 111 ppll81
56--Pwts hw ~11
51- MuSICa1tnstrUIIIent
51-Frulh &amp; Vegetables
59- For Salt or Trade

., _ ,arm EQuiPment
n - W•niH to luy

CENTRAL REALTY

.U- Li~IIOCII

S;~le

13- Vtn1&amp;4W.O.

loi- Motorcyr;lel
7!--Boats&amp; Mohln:
16- Auto Parts&amp;

Ar;ceJSoriu
17- Auto RetNir
JI-Camplng Equlpm•t

ll-E•ca¥'•tlng
M-£ IKfriCII &amp;

'

u.ot

Up to u word&amp; ... .JitrH day lnurtiiNI . / .. , .•... , . , , , , . , , , .... M.DI
Up to 15wGercls ... tiJI d•v•lnurtlon ...•.........•.......... sr.oo
c Avtrltt 4 ....... Ptr lllle)
Mobile Nomt ..... •nd Vlrd Hlel are •r:ceptH only with cath
wtttl onttr. 25 ctwt ctMirp f• ads carrytnt Jox Nut~~blr In Cart. Of

, ... SentiiMI.

Tile ''*tlblr nHn'n ttla rltM te NH ar reitct any aCisdetmiCI
OltlKIIMIL Ttll P•bltiMr wl• 1101 be
lor mort tftan Mt
lncorrwt lnstrtton.

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

EvelynJ. Hartley, dec. to Allen W. • ,
Hartley. Cert. of trans., Pomeroy. IL.---------T----------1

DEER HUNTER SPECIAL - 1 acre 2 B.R . fUr
ni&amp;hed trailer wit.h city water In Long Bottom .
$8.000.

· Finest Quality
Ex1=e11ent servl.~e

Rentals Available Sometimes 5100·5300 Ran9e

CALL US TO BUY OR SEU
Nancy Jaspers- Associate
PH.I43·2075

HHfc

ALL STEEL_
BUILDINGS

Sizes start from 30x24"
SMALL

Utility Buildings

Trailer
sites
&amp;
Driveways . Small jobs a
spe'cialty. Ditcher or
Trench ServiCe.
Gas &amp; Water Lines

Sizes "from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36.
tnsulated Dog HousesJ

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

· JIM UtCAS.
PH. 742-2753

Rt. 3, Box: 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
6·1Hfc

,--------~-------------~

1

1

Savel .ll

Call 742-3195

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

•

II Nama ______...,.._ _ __
Addran----~----­

Phon•-----------~-----------

work
Concrfilt work

= Plumbing and

elfiiCtriaJ work
{Free Eatlmote•)

V. C. YOUN~ Ill
w.l-6215 or 992-731•
Pomeroy. Ohio

9-30-tk

And Home Maintenance
•Roofing of all'tvpes
•Siding
•Remodeling
• Free estimates
•20 Yrs. experience

)Wanted
J For Sale
) Announcement
)For Rent

' TOM .HOSKINS

1. _ _ _ __

Ph. 949-2"0 or 949-2412
7-5-ttc

2. _ __ _ __

•I
•

Flsh- Glmt Hold·
Lift Size Mounts - PIUI
Hide Tanning

PH. 742-2225

PRATER'S .
CLEANINGC
SERVICE
We will clean any
size business - olfice- homes' banks
- etc. No Job Too
Small
or Too
Large. We will do it
all.

Reaonable Rates.
Phone 992-99~1

CH IP WOOD. Poles max .
.diameter 10" on largest
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10.50 per ton .
Deli verd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
f!ock · Springs
Rd .,
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

992-2156

ANY PERSON who has
anyttting to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer, any other thing for
sale may place an ad in thls
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser .

17. - - - - - , - 18. - - - - - 19, - - - - - -

20. - - - - - 21. ~----22.
23.
24.

4.

5.

6 . · _ _ _ __

25.

7.

26.
27.
28 .

8.

9.
10.
11 .
12 .
13.
14.
15.
16.

•

Welding ou tf i t, ~ tanks ,
guages, torches. Must be
rea"sonable. Room ~ ize
braided rug. 742·2395.

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDE S. Gene Hines
Pups, 1;, Airdal e, 379-2313
Rt, · 1. Amesville, Oh 448·
In Mason County
after S.
6747. Buying raw fur after
Dec. 12. Daily 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays. Also
Fluffy br own fernale dog,
part. Collie, recovered hind · closed Dec. 24 &amp; 25.
Card of Thanks
leg lnlury, well care d for .
Dear relatives anCI frien · Phone 4~· 3225 .
Raw furs, hides, scrap
ds. We can never thank you
meta l s,
batteries.
enough for all your prayers Reg .
rad ia tors, ginseng, yellow
black fema le
and get well wishes ctvring Pekinese. Call 446·0505 .
root, and merchandise
his illness. Your genuit'"fe
br okeri ng . Harper· Halste·
concern for all of us will
ad Salvage Company , 300
never be forgotten . May, Very lovable pup. Male 8
Eleventh Street. 615-5868 .
months,
good
w
i
th
God bless all of you for
Also Flea Market open
your help. Thank you children,• stays inside,
daily . Open
Monday ·
again. The ours Family, 23 never be big Don't take
Friday 1·5 pm .
him
unless
you
·
can
feed
Vase Lane, Lev.ttown, Pa ..
Junior, Kathy, Mike, Sob him and keep him warm.
Timber or land, approx . 5
992-5849.
and Usa .
acres or more. 61.4-289-2476
qr 614·a93·2591 .
BlacK gerbil with cage &amp;
2
In Memoriam
food. Call2~ · 1932 .
Real Estate
General
In loving memory of
Used pool table, good con·
Stirling w. Rayburn, who Outside dog , l oves
dit io n. 675·5817 .
passed away 5 years ago
children. Call 446·3005.
tOday Dec. 16, 1976.
Beyond The Sunset
Should you go fir st and I White &amp; black kitten, litter
remain , to walk the road trained. Needs a good
VIRGIL B. SR.
home. Call446·2507 .
alone.
216 E. 2nd St .
l'lllive in memories gar·
11
Help Wanted
den. dear, with happy days Female Labador Retrlver .
Phone
NEEDED babysitter in
we've knOwn.
Call Mavis McCla in at 446·
1-( 614 )-992-3325
Thurman-Rio Grande area
In spring I' ll wait for 7000.
for 2 children. Dayshift .
roses red, when faded, the
Cal l 286·5740.
lilacs blue.
NEW LISTING 3
3
year
oll:l
Carin
Terrier
.
when
Un earl ysfall
bedroom home i ust out
brown leaves fall I' ll catch Phone 446· 1694 or 446 -1 503.
of town. Furnace, wood·
Applictions being taken
a glimpse of you.
burner,
stove , and
Thur sday , Dec. 11, 1981 at
Should you go first and I PUPPIES to gi ve away, 2 Fitness Center Health Spa,
refrigerator, basement
remain, for battles to be six week' old Coll ie pups . 2 411 Sec . Ave. for Female
on level lot . $38,900.
six week old Hu skie pup·
fought.
NEW LISTING - 112
Instructors. Come in betEach thing you ' ve ptes. 304· 458· 1533.
room double house . 2 ,
ween the hours of 3 p m .
touched along the way will
baths , kitchens, f\.111
and 6p .m .
be a hallowed spot.
basement. all utilities ,
PUPPIES. 6 months old.
I'll hear your voice, I'll part Beagle, 304-895·3633.
la rge lot with excellent
Over th e road tractor
see you smile, tho blindly I
garden and view of tt)e
trail er driver , must be 25,
may grope,
Ohio River.
Happy
Ads
have two years or over
The
memory
of
your
S
APARTMENT - Nice
recent ex per ience, current
helping hand will buoy me Dear Bleu,
one bedroom , bath, gas
. physi ca L
and
dr i ver
on with hope.
furnace,
and 2 car
Organized _rel i gion is all
quai
lfic
at1on
card
Call367·
and
l
Should
you
go
f
irst
garage in Middleport .
psyche ! Worship God by
7811 .
remain one thing U'll have yourself!
Wantonly $17,500.
you do:
RT. 124 - Racine school
·
Rohelio.
Walk slowly down that
GET VALUABLE training
distr ict ; six rooms,
long long path, for soon I'll
as a young business person
bath, natural gas, city
follow you.
Lost and Found
and earn good money plus
water and 12 acres of
6
1 want to know each step
some great gifts as a Sen·
land.
·
FOUND Blue Tick female t inel route carri er . P.hone
you tak,e, so I may take the
POMEROY
2
pup, 3 mos. old. lndentify&amp; us ri~ht away and get on
same.
bedroom frame home.
For someday down that pay . Ca11446·4922 .
the eligibility list at 992Bath, coal furnace, and
lonely 'r oad, you'll hear me
2156 or 992-2157.
full basement on one
call your name.
LOST Beagle on bulaville
acre lot. $16,500.
Sadly missed by wife and
Rd . White, brown &amp; tan. RN 's · L PN' s NEEDED
MI·DD LE PORT
sons Iva Pearl, Stirling and
Reward. Call 367·1224 or NOW to fulflll requiremen·
Reasonable 3 bedroom
samuel.
home: Natural gas F.A.
367-0233 .
ts of I.C .F . Certification .
furnace, bath, basement
Salarv commensurate-with
and 2 lots. out of ALL
l
Announcements
FOUND Sma ll light brown training and experience .,
floods. Only 521 ,000.
fexa le dog . Has 2 collars. Extensi ve benefi ts In ·
SWEEPER and Sewing 992·5154.
eluding
pa id
Housi11g
machine repair, parts, and
hospital i zation, retirem ent
supplies.
Pick . up and ·
program. no penalty sick
Headquarters
delivery, Davis Vacuum LOST·black male coon leave. 3 week vacat ion to
area,
hound,
New
Haven
Cleaner, one half mile
start. More. Contact Per·
reward, 304-882-3348.
Georges Creek Rd .
sonnet Director (304) 675·
Real Estate General
446·0294 ..
3230 or write
Lakin
Public Sale
Hospital, Lak i n, WV 25250.
8
TRAPPER We have a com ·
• &amp; Auction
plete line of trapping sup·
R.N.'s· L. P. N.'s NEEDEO
PUBLIC
auction, all day
plies. Traps, dve, wax, ~nd
NOW to fulfill requ i remensale.
Saturdav,
December
lure:; .
Spring
Valtev
ts of I. c. F . Certification .
Trading Co .• Spring Vall ey 19th. 10:00 a.m . Mt . Alto Salary commensurate with
Auction Sale, 10 miles
Plaza, 446-8025 . ·
training and experience·
south of Ravenswood on Rt.
E.~&lt;:tensive
benefits In ·
2. Antiques, collectables,
E.Mainl.
For bulk delivery of Christmas gifts, new &amp;
e lud i ng
paid
gasoline, heating oil af'!d used merchandise, fur - hospi tl aization, retirement
POMEROY,O.
diesel fuel , call Landmark 1 niture in the rough, program, no penalty sic k
992-2259
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .
leave, 3 week vacation to
glassware, primitave s,
guns, old tools, new tools, sta rt. More. Contact Per ·
THIS MAY BE EXAC·
Gun Shoot Racine Gun ,many boxes of assor te d sonnet D i rec tor (304) 675·
TL Y THE RIGHT TIME
La k1n
Club. Everv Sun. starting items. 78" marble top 3230 or Write
TO BUY A HOME Hospitai , Lak in WV 252.50.
at 1 J).m . Factory choke table, 12ft. oak bench, wat·
EViN IF INTEREST
ch makers dish, oak jelly
guns only .
RATES GO DOWN ...
cabinet , walnut chest,
THE
PRICE
OF
DEP E NDABLE babysitter
accordian,
HOMES WON'T I OVER
to care for small child, 1
Racine Fire Dept. s·ponsors showcases.
70 PROPERTIES TO
day week, in mv home. 304·
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights childs high chair, organ
CHOOSE FROM .
6 :30p.m .• Bashan. Factory stools. draftsmen desk. 675-6275 .
blanket chest, very old
choke 12 guage shotgun.
wood folding bed , stoves,
RACINE - 4-5 bedroom
Insurance
assorted chairs, lots of (3
home. Approx . 1!2. acre
RAW FUR buyer . Beef &amp; small collectors items,
lot, 6 fireplaces, familY
deer hide·g1nshang Trap· assorted glassware, assort- SA NDY AND BEAVER In ·
room. hardwood floors ,
ping supplies . George ment of cast iron toys, surance Co. has offered
and carpet. $45,000.00.
Bu ckley, Rt . 2, Athens, Oh. banks, &amp; figurines, lamps, services for f ire insurance
614 · 664·4·761.
Op e n trunks. This is an inventory coverage in Gallia County
MIDDLEPORT
evenings.
reduction sale The largest for almost a century .
Reduced price - Outsale of year, lots of good Farm, horne and personal
standing
va l ue
3·
property coverages are
bedrooms, 2 story house
B irchfield' s Taxidermy. usable household items. av~ilable to meet in·
Truckload
of
new
mer~
on nice tot
Sunny
Deer heads mounted. East
dlvidual needs. Contact
modern kitchen, 11/2
of Rutland on 124. 614!742· chandise w ill be sold at ·Kait Burleson agent . Phone
beginning of sale. Refresh·
baths, dining and fam il y
2178 ..
446·2921.
ments served all day . Ter·
roomS, full basement.
ms-cash . Ken Cole Auc·
Central air. fully in·
Flea
Market .
New
AUTOMOBilE
IN ·
tioneer.
sula ted. garage and just
Opening . 7 Qays a week .
SURANCE
been
ca n $37.500 .00 .
The Heart of Middleport. 20
c e ll ed?
L os t
your
Wanted to Buy
N. 2nd St : formerly Martin 9
operator's License? Phone
LANGSVILLE
-3· 4
General Store. 992·6370.
WANT TO BUY Old fur · 992·2143
bedroom house . Dining
and family rooms, ap·
niture and Antiques of all ~==:;:~;::;:;:=;==
We still have plenty of ap· kinds, cal l Kennet~ Swain, 18
prox. 1 sere lot. Also
Wanted to Do
pies at Fitzpatrick Or· 256·1967 in the evenrngs.
rental income from tile
·~~-====-.c:==-chard, SR689. Phone 614·
building and garage apt.
Butcher's Shoppe Custom
669·3785.
$36.000 .00.
CASH PAl D tor' clean, late butchering &amp; processing .
model used cars. Smith Ca ll 446·2851, Gallipolis,
IN POMEROY A
Racine Gun Club dues are Buick· Pontiac, GAllipolis, Oh .
home you won't believe!
due . $25.00. Must be paid Ohio. Call446·2282
Ranch
type,
2
before Jan. I, 1982 ~
TV servi {::e calls. Call 992·
bedrooms, w .b .f. p., full
BUYINGGbLD&amp;SILVER ' 2034 .A I ~ouse dcolorTVfor
basement, carpeting,.
The lzaak Walton Club will paying cash for anything sa le.
garage, central a ir.
have a muzzle loading stamped 10K , UK , 18K and -~--~--~~
Owner
must se ll.·
target shoot Sun ., Dec . 20, dental gold. crass rings, BABYSI TT IN G in mv
$17,500.00.
Dek. 27 and Jan . 3. Starting wedding rings, silver coins home, 304·675-7827.
1 p.m . at their farm 3112 or
anvthing · stamped
RUTLAND
2
miles South of Chester on sterling. Clarks Jewelry
bedrooms, 1112 acres,
Shade River Road. Bench Store . Gallipolis 446·2691 or WOULD like to take c;are of
several buildings, gar·
elderly woman or coupl~ in
and otf hand shooting . 992·205-f In Pomeroy1
den space, enclosed por- ~
Pt. Pleasna t from 8·4. 304·
Prizes, Ham, Bacon and
ch. Assume this V .A.
675·1054.
turkey .
~II
shooters Buying
Gold ,
Silver,
loan , $2,500 down
welcome.
' Platlnum 1 old coins, scrap
paymen,t, 12% Interest·
Flnanelal
rings &amp; silverware. Oai ly
rate. 29 year term, SJOt
Bailey's Shoes, Middleport , quotes available . Also
per monttl inclu,des
will be open Thurs ., Dec. 2.4 coins &amp; coin supplies for
taxes and insurance.
22
Money to Lean
&amp; Sat., Dec. 26. Closed for safe .
Spring
Vall e y
Total 529.~.00 .
vacation Dec. 27 to Jan . 3, Trading, Spring · Valley Columbus First Mortg age
1982.
.
Plaza. t"6·8025 or 446·8026 .
Company PHA· VA F i n·an·
REALTOR
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
Stlllen Property. Anti(lue wanted to buy motor for Krautler (304)675·3473.
992-6191
kitchen safe . Antique
1976 Honda Civic. Cail 256·
ASSOCIATES
JNn Trussell 949·2660 1 ' dining room cabinet . Two 6652.
23
Professional
rocking chairs. Other
Turner H2·1692 '
. Services
items.
Anyone
knowing
or
Turner H2:Mt2
we pay cash for late model
seeing this furniture being
Piano Tuning -Let your
used cars.
hauled In the vicinity of clean
piano sound pretty for the
Frenchtown Car Co.
Flatrock, WV on October 10
holidays, only $30.00. Call
8111 Gene Johnson,
or1 later, a liberal reward is
Bill Ward, 446·4372.
446·0069.
offered. 675·1302.
h ~ ,.,,nu

Curb Inflation I r------...---==:-11
I
Pay Cash for
III
Classlfleds and 1

3. _ _ _ __

UNUSUAL HOME - 3 floors of living space on 6
acres, garage &amp; root cellar. Hom e f ea tures : bri ck
indoor &amp; outdoor barbecues, f.p het''·a· lator , two
redwood decks, 2 cemen1 patios. 4 sliding glass
doors to decks &amp; patios. 2 1 t~ baths, carpeted .
tflroughout. maintenance free. A sking $73,000.

3 ACRES - Can be bought in Rilcin e area on land
co·ntract. Asking $35 ,900 .

Rates and Other Information

Ph. 992-7201

DOZER

For all of your wiring needs.

ROOFING

39 ACRES - All mineral right s, livable home,
aSking $35,900 .

Retrig1r1t•a•
U-Gentrat Hauling
.......M.H. Repair
17-UIIhoiJterv

rn,.,.u•••

NEW LISTING - Quiet stre-et in Racine. Nice 2
B.R trailer, large living r pom , ea t·in kitchen in
eludes appliances. Offered at $1 1.500.

Licensed &amp; Boncled

Racine, Oh.
PH . 949-2202
12·15·1 mo .

MILLER ELECTR
SERVICE

_Addon•and
remodeling
_ Roofing OnCJ gutter

•Backhoe
• Excavating
• septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
eDump Truck

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
&amp; trim Shop

Tappan Recuperative
furnace, Coleman ~ir:
conditioing ,. Arkla ·Ser-vel Gas Air CoQ.clition•.
iilg, Sheet Metal Work .
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio
614-698-6791
ll ·J6·tfn

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

CONTRACTING

Bar Stoots
ns.oo
Truck Seats
SIOO.~
Labor &amp; Material
Effective Dec. 15th
Thru Jan . 15th .

ttc

Let
George Miller
check yoUr present etec·
trical system.
Residential
&amp; com merctal

J&amp;F

R eupholstery .
SPECIAL

water· Sewer-E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush

SALES &amp; SERVICE

t- No. l600 Oieul Ford
Tractor w/ Cab
MOO·&lt;IOIO Die~et J . D. Tractor
M00·123 1 Row New Idea corn
Pjcker

BEAUTIFUL BRICI&lt; - Home has 3 B .R.' s, 1112
baths. laundry off kitchen, f ireplace.•storm w in
dows. well constructed, assume small equity &amp; take
over 10% mortgage . Ask tng$35,900.

,1 - H0 me1mprovemlflll
n-Ptumblllg&amp; tiHting

Up to IS words ... ont day lnllf'ftM ... .. , ·'· . _. ... .....•. , , :.

'!l'e'aa&gt;;:f:i~~,•}~

Game
Mounts, . Wit
e
Nove1t1es, Custom Tanning, Fast Delivery.
611H85-3833
or 985-3364
11 25-1 mo. pd ..

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

. OHio VAU.EY

FARM EQU I PMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICt:i
USED EQUIPMENT

scout Cilmp Rd.
Chester. Oh.
Order Now for
Christmas:
*Gifts for Golfers
• Discount Prices on
Shirts. Windbreakers,
sweaters, socks,
Pants. Shoes
*Short game practice
• Prop-Golf lessons for
all ages
"*Repair: Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length change,
weight change
"*Fast service
"* 6 Free lessons
drawing
11 ·25-1 mo .

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

BOGGS
u:'S . Rt . " ealt
Gu.&gt;'SYIIIe, Ohio
Authoriied John Deer e.
New Holland, &amp;v•h Hog
Fum Equipment
Deiller'

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

•TRANSPORTATION
11- Autos for Salt
72-Trur;lo:s for Salt

Bulld•ngs

1 Blue, Rust
1 Creek Bed
3 Golden

53-Antiques

• REAL ESTATE

~~ - auslneu

· 3 Rolls to
Pick From

Sq. yd. Installed

•RENTALS

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

3 ROLLS

41 -HOUI .. for Rvnt
42-Mobtle Homes

64- Hav &amp; Gnln
•s-s.ed &amp; Fertlti1er

tor Slle
ll- Farms lor Sale

SHAG

'12"

23- Prolesslonal
Services

11-Homlts for Sale
J2- Moblle Homes

KWB

1H9·1mo.

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
jars, antiques~ etc.,
Complete
households .
Wr ite : M .D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760.

Gold, si lver , sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burke« Barber Shop, MiddleQOrt. 992·
3476.

In Meigs County

446-2342

wanted to Buy

Personnel."

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Gallia County

9

675·1333

985-3561

tensive remodel ing.
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Pit. 992-7583

LAFF-A-DAY ,

Meigs Co. Area COde
614
992-M iddltport
Pomeroy
'85-Chesfer
343-Porlland
247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutfand
667-COolville

Mason Co., W. Va.
Area Code 304
675-Pt . Pleasant
4S8- Leon
576-,A pple Grove
773-Mason
182- New Have"
895- Letart
937- Buffalo

Call Ken Young
For FaSt Service

~~~a~~~~~~

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St .• Pomeroy, Oh. 4576'1

.,

Cigarettes
63c pack
Cartons
55.95 &amp; 56.05
Open 7 Days A Week
Open Mon.· Thurs .
6a .m. to10p.m.
Open Fri. at 6 11.m.
thru Sunday at 9 p.m .
OPEN 24 HOURS
FRI.-SU J:I.
We Sell Pepsi~ R.C., &amp;
Coca·Cdla Products by·
the 6&amp;8 Pack and.also in
liter baffles.
Authorized Sunflower
Dealer. Sell or Rent
These Signs.

Now pic.king up , i.unk

OFF SEASON RATES
S120WEEKLY
$400 MONTHLY

446-Galflpo!is
367-Chesh lrt
388-VInton
245-Rio Grande
".156-Guyan Dis!.
'43-Arabia Oist. ·

CERnFIED GAS

(Pomeroy· Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)

· SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

(12) 9, 16. 23. 3tc

WANT AD INFORMATION

MOndo!l'f z:ooon Saturday
TutiCiav tbru FrldiY 3:111 t'.M.
the dly W}ore pubtlnhon

'/

PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996

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

Good variety of Chrismtas Items: Tools, Toys,
Games, Radios, _Watches, etc . Dealers Welcome .
GOOD FOOD-PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
Sponsored by Rutland Fire Department. Not
responsible for accidents. Terms: Cash or Check
with Positive 1.0.
.
.
AUCTIONEER: LONNIE NEAL

Advertising
Deadlines

.

Open Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7,30 Till10:00
Sunday 2 :00 to 4:30
New Year's Eve
7: 30tol : OO
Private Parties
Available

services prOVided by the Family .
Planning- Planned Parenthood
program.
They requested. that . the commissioners provide addltiona1space
on the first floor of the courthouse
for the office. The request was
tabled. The commissioners recessed
until Friday at 2 p.m.
Attending we.re Henry Wells, ·
president, Richard Jones fl!ld David
Koblentz, commissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha
Chambers.

FRIDAY, DEC. 18 A"'' 6:30 PM

Want·~d

ton.

.Bearhsmetwl~theboardtodiscuss

Public Notice

Not~ce

SERVICES

Charles A. Dobbins, V. Evelyn
Dobbins to Harvey R. Leamohd, Anna Mae Leamond, Parcels, Letart.
Edwin H. Davis, dec. to Elnora
Davis, Cert. of trans., Salem.
Fred E. Smith, Ruth Smilh to
Donald C. Shaffer, 1.06 acres, Sut-

SKATE-AWAY

TO BUY
SCRAP

PH . 992 ·3269
12·3·1 mo. pd.

54

Receive checks

61~

w

Cantata set Sunday
A Christmas Cantata, "Joy to the
World" by Robert J. Hughes, will be
presented at the Mason United
Methodist Church, Sunday; Dec. 20,
at 7:30p.m.
The choir is under the direction of
Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer with Mrs.
Lynn Kitchen at the piano and Mrs,
Evelyn Proffitt at the organ.
Soloists are Connie Gilland, Debbie Roush and Gary Stewart. The
narration will he by the Rev. Ben
Stevens. The public is invited to attend.

Gallia Co. Areil Code

Srna}} mves
•
l menl ' large .·
•·.e1 an·t Ad. s
re·t urn. sentm

Honor parents
The children of Sam and Martha
Fry honored their parents recently
with a surprise 25th anniversary gettogether for relatives and friends at
their·home.
The afternoon was spent visiting
and reminiscing. Mr. and Mrs. Fry
are the parents of four children,
Cherie See, Pomeroy; Becki Ball,
Long Bottom, and Christine and
Brenda Fry, at home.

n!CI=

have an answer to the
~~
the departmental budg
worked QUI and the .amount of
available money detemuned.
Mary Lou Pritchard and Phyllis

The Daily Sentinel-Page--13

Cl111111i{led flll!(l'll mver the
fr•lluwin!( telephrme exrhanf(eH .. .

Business Services

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

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

29 . ' - - - - - - 30. - - - - - , -31. - ' - - - - - - 32 . - - - - - ' - - 33 . - - - - - 34 . - - -- - - 35. - - - - - -

I
I
. Mall This coupon with Remittance
1
The Dally Sentinel'
I
· 111 CourtSt.
I
Pomeroy, 011.45769 •
I,
~
I
.J,
--------------------~.

1

-.

---

IB

. _ ..\,, ...:..

--------

'
'

�'

Page-14-T he Daily Sentine l
23

P role ssional
Servi·ces

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com ·
plet e bookkeep ing and tax
ser v ice for business and In·
divi duc-ls.
Carol Neai446-J862
$5 discount for pia nos TU ned
befor e Christm as. Ca ll Bob
Grubb, 446-45251
-

35

44

Lots &amp; Acreage

20 AC RES in Pt. Pleasant,
no down pay ment, phone 1·
614-263-8322 or 263-2669 _

In M iddleport, 2 r oom efficiency apt. Call 304·8822566.

L.evel lot, Apple Grove,
wv ' 576-2386.

A partments. 675·S5.t8 .

Nl CE r iver lot at Glenw ood
with 14x60 all · eJec tric
trai ler, work shop, $18,500,
304-576·2866.

Estat e~.

poo l

Club house and
pr ivile ges, $75.000

f irm . Ky ger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call446·9403 .

For re nt or sa le-- 2 story , 3
bdr . house, fireplace, in
Vinton, large lot, garage.
no inside pets, sec. dep . &amp;
ref . r equ ired . Ca ll388·8795.
Or r ent -3 bedroom furnished home on Bud Chat ti n Road an big level iot .
576-2711 .
THRE E bedroom hom e, 5
acres gr ound, 10 m iles
from Pt. Pleasant, 304-6756597.
House-M eadowbrook Ad dition . 3 bedrooms, fam il y
room w ith fi re pl ace, central air, basem ent . 304-6751542.

6 ROOM house, 1 acre
along K anaug a River at Pt.
Pleasant, 1·614-263-8322 or
263-2669.
FULL Modul ar houses·
Fa r mers Home Approved·
Al so b ank fina nciAg with
low down payments. We
sell the ver y best In 24' -26' ·
28' wide hom es. Ranch, 2
story. bi·level , trHevel.
Full m odular home on
d ispl ay at Sisson' s Modular
Hom es, Ripley, WV . Phone

3 0 4 - 3 7 2
32

9 3 7 1 '

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOME S. Ga l li polis . Year
end sal e, price r educed ,
used mobile homes. CAL L
446-7572.
CLEAN USED MOBI L E
HOMES
KE SSEL'S
QUALITY
M O BILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WE ST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35, PHON E 446-3,868.
BARGAIN! 14x70 3 bdr ..
new dr illed well, acre lot,
Davis Rd. off 218, $8,000.
Call 446-4394.
1965 Gener al m obile home
12x65, completely read y fo r
setup, incl udes cement
bl ocks &amp; sk irt ing, $4,800 .
For more information call
446-0511 .
For sale 1963 Skylin e
mob ile home, 12x55, $2,500,
f inanci ng ava il able. Call
-446·4185.
1974 12x60 2 bedroom com·
pl ete ly f urni shed and set
up. Also washer , dryer &amp;
awning. 992 ·7479.
1971 Da ri an 1 2 ~ )( :6S.t._ 3
bedroom s. 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 w ith 8 X 10
expando. 3 bedrooms. 1973
Ut opia 12 x 65. 2 bedrooms.
1972 Inva der 14 )( 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
xs60, 2 bed room s. B 1/ 4 S
Sales, Inc . 2nd and Vi and
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV .
Phone 675-4-424.
1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned . 675·-4064.
·

New 3 bdr. home w ith 1 1/ 2
bath .. &amp; garage. Between
Ga ll i polis &amp; hospi ta l. Ca ll
446·0390 or 446-7100. ,

dit i oning ,
c a r pet e d ,
dr apes, unfurni shed . Mu st
sel l ! $5,000. 30A-675-2560.
Priced to sell. l'hree used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at D and W
Estates . f orm erl y K and K ,
Rt. 62 north, Pt. Pleasant,
wv .
1973 GRANViLt..E 14x70, 3
bedroom. mobile hOme.
partiallY furnished or un·
furnished, 304-882-3433.
USED MOBIL E HOMES
1978
Ho l ly
Park ,
3
bedroom, 2 baths, tota l
electric . 1976 Salem, 2
bedroom, total electric .
1974 Buddy, 3 bedroom , l'h
bath, tip out room . 1973
camaron, 2 bedroom . 1978
Georgetown Nobility, 3
bedroom, gar'den lub, total
electric. 1978 Georgetown ,
2_.x60
double
w i de ,
aluminum siding . Sisson's
Mobile Homes, south Church St., Ripley, WV. Phone
- ~- 372-9371.
'
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

•

2, J acr e house lots, on 5,5.4,
low downpayment, land
contract. rura: water,
columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256-6413, 12
p.m . to 9 p.m.

25 ·acres. Nice lane on
'R25.
7284.

•

I

I

Pomeroy.

6tH92·

11~ O'MY, CA12.\..'{J.e!
11-li~ i ~ OIJR.
Cfl~;&lt;&gt;frM&lt;ifRee !

Fish Tonk and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pteasent. 675-2063. Mon..
Thurs., 1 Fri. 11 to 6. Tues ••
Wed., I Sot. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special .

\

HAPPY
HOLIDAYS

3 or 4 bedr oom home in
town. good locaf ion, $300
mo.; 3 bedroom ranc h w-6
acres, Kyger Creek Schools
$250 mo.; 2 bedroom home
on Lower River Rd. , 1.3
ac., $250 mo.; 3 bedrOOm
hOme w -family room in
No rthup 275 mo . ;
4
bedroom brick in Ri o G ra n·
de, very nice, $350 mo. ; 3
bedroom home in Rio
Gr ci nde, $195 m o.; 3
bedroom home w-1700 sq.
ft . and tam . ri'n ., $350 mo.
Ca ll th e Wi seman A gehcy
446·3643.

Tw in si ngl e, l arge rooms
and yard. Pt. Pleasant.
Deposi t and r ef er ences. 1·
614-263-8322 or 1-614-2632669.

2502 DEC'SO

Wishing all of our
fine friends and
customers a bright
Christmas. '

For rent 3 r oom turn. apt.,
t
c 11
I
2453on y , no pes. a
adults
675·
·

IL- -- - - - - - - - '

42

45

Mobile Homes
for Rent

ONE bedroom t ra iler , f urnished, adults only, you
pa y utilities. Phone 304-6752535.

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

2 bedroom ail electric ranch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. Referen ces ana
deposit required. Available
Nov . 15, Call614-949·2849.

2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave. . Pomeroy . Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6.
$195. month not inc luding
utilities. 992-2288.
Unfurnished very nice 2
bedroom house. St. Rt . 248.
985-4244.·
Beautiful country home for
sale or rent to qualif ied
per sons .
2 or
more
b edroom s,
d e po s it
requ ir ed. Located in Flat woods area . Phone 614-A-462359.

3 Bedroom,

room house
arid bath and utility room .
Nice and clean. 446-1519,
992-2430.

VERY nice two bedroom
house with furnace heat,
range and refrigerator furnished. Located 2 miles
from downtown Gallipolis.
$275. month . Deposit and
reference requ i red. 304·675·
3655.
CL EAN, 3 room, furn ished
cottage utiliti es furnished,
adults, no pets, deposit,
304-675-281 2 or 675-1580.

42

sm a ll furni shed house,
adults only . Call -446 -0338..
3 rooms with private bath,
845 Second Ave. Phone 446221 5.
Furn ished Apt. 1st floor,
utilities furnished . Ref .
requ ired. No pets. Adults
preferred. Call al 631 4th
Ave.
2nd. floor furn ished ef fien cy apt . 729 2nd . Ave. ,
Gallipolis. Ca ll 446-0957 .
Adults only , no pets.
Apartment, 1 bedroom,
$150 piUs utlities, no
children, no pets, 456 2nd1
Ave. , Gallipoli s. Call 4462129.
3 &amp; 4 room apt. rent partially furni shed , adults
only . Call446-3733, even i ng
446-0171 .

~

House and apartments.
Call Cleland Realty . 9922259 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr and 3 bdr . mobile
homes. Call 4-46-0175.
House trailer adults only,
no pets, 322 3rd. Ave. Call
446-3748 or 256-1903.
Modern 2 bdr. furnished,
12x70 trailer. Convenient
location, sec. dep. &amp; ref.
required, utilities paid except electric. Call 446-8558
after 5.
Look! 14x 70 mobi le home. 3
bedroom, o Rodney area.
Call collect 1-304-735-1471.
Trailer in city limits, S250,
utLt l t i es paid, security
deposit. couple onl y, ref .
required, no pets. C,:all 446·
8252.atter 5446-2491 .

2 bdr. mobile home, Smiles
from hospital at Rodney,
will accept children &amp; pets .
Caii446-01S7 .

Weekly Rates Available$60
and up in Circles Motel.

46

Modern 3 bedroom home,
gar age, 6 ac ._wooded lot, 6
mile t own 3 m i. Holzer,
$250.00. Extra nice 3 or A
bedroom , 1 1/2 bath s,
basement, garage, quiet Mobile home in c ity central
location edge of town, air and heat . adults only,
$300 .00 . Wi seman Real dep. 446 -0338.
Estate, 500 2nd, Ga ll ipol i s,
446-3644.
2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitchen furn ished, HUD
Small 2 bdr ., 104 4th A've, program, utilities pa id , if
Gallipolis. Suitabl e for qualified . 304-675-5104 or
304 -675-7364.
coupl e only . Call-4-46-2957.

bCtr . &amp; bath. 3 mites from
Gallipol is. Call446-0997 .

SLE EPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Centra l Hotel.

C ~ l l 446 · 2501.

Furn i shed apts. $21 0.,
utilities pd ., 1 bdr ., near
HMC, adults. C:: all 446-4416
after 7PM .

5 room house for rent, 3

Furnished Rooms

Apartment
446-0390 .

tor

r ent. Call

2 bdr. apt., 2nd Ave., large
living room , kitchen, bath,
completely turn. , all electric , newl y Qecorated,
deposit &amp; r ef . requ i r ed,
$22S month . Call 446-2581 or
446-2236 .
Apartments f or rent. 614992-5908 .
3 bedroom apt. in MiddlePQrt. $150. month . 9925692.
.

Space for Rent

Pri va te home lot close to
town. Call after 5: 30,. 446·
2266.

Household Goods

LA YNE'S FURNI'fURE
Sofa, chair, roc ker, ottoman. 3 tables. $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat. $275.
Sof as and cha irs pr iced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc . dlfettes from $79 ., to
$385. 7 pc., $189 . and up.
Wood table With -4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
' Hutches, $300 ~ and $375,,
maple or pine . finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
1275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs. full or twin, $58. ,
firm. $68. and $78. Queen
sets. $195. s dr. chests. $49.
4 dr. chests, $42 . Bed
frames, $20.apd $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinet!, $350 ., ~inet­
te cha irs $70. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Orthoped ic: super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20 $25, &amp; $30.
Electric f ireplace, gun
cabinet , Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
U sed ,
Range s,
r efr igerators, and TV's,
3 m i les out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fr i. , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446-0322

-

61

1~
•

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

123 112 Pine St., 446·2783,

54

Misc. Me~:"chandlce

Very gentle pony, make
lovely Christmas g ift . 992·
6512.
Dinette table &amp; 4 chairs.
Like new. Wen Router.
Mrs. Gall Miller, Mid·
dleport.

Firewood. 1 load $35, -4
loads $100, 10 loads S200.
Ca ll 256-1471 or 614-8866624.

Men's hiking boots, $39.95
pr., Boy's, $33.95. Bailey's
Shoes, Middleport.

Firewood-seasoned hardwood, $35 pickup load
deliVered. Catl-446-4176 .

Discontinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink. $1200 .
Dale's Kitchen Center. 615·
2:118.

WOODBURN lNG STOVES
Free·standing &amp; fireplace
inserts. Top quality at a
low price. Jividen's Farm
Equ ipment, 446-1675.

Exercyc /e with pep units
with cushioned seat, brand
new, $1 ,200. Call 61-4·446·
3912.
1980 Coleman camper, 1977
harley Davidson 1200, AKC
Springer Spaniels liver &amp;
white. Call-446-823_.,

For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs. $25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport.
1977 Chrysler Newport low
mileage for sale or trade.
Fuel oi 1 furnance. 48,000
BTU . Call256-1291.
Pa rtially new Lowerv
pl ano-console, Buesher 400
alto saxaphone, and portable
Underwood
t ypewriter. Cail4-46-0541 .
2 maturnity dresses, Sears
and Penney's brands. Ex:cellent condition . Several
tops and pants too, size 9·
10. $20.00 for all maturnity
items. Also a"- long velvet
roval blue evening gown
w ith an emplre waist line
trimmed with white outlet
lace. Worn only twice, size
9, $20.00. Call304-458-1997.
New wood stove. half price,
never used, $350. Can con vert to furnance . Call 2561216, Gallipolis.
For Sale : Bearcat pocket
scanner, battery powered,
5 crystals included, SlOO.OO .
Call 446-9303,

Used tires. ' Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road . 675·7360.
SEASONED oak firewood .
Call 304-675-2757 after 4
p.m .
SEARs free
standing
fireplace, brown baked
enamel, with gl ass doors,
used 3 months, $475. 304675-6581 after 5.

$180 plus utilities. Referen·
ces and deposit required .
No children. 99H834afler5
p.m.

Plano In storage, responsible party may take on tow
monthlY payments. Call
credit manager collect 614·
642·5180.
I

Construc;tion
workers
trailer for three. Phone 30_.773-5651, Mason.

Grave Blankets. 992·7320 or

U9·2Q.I.

Furnished 1 bedroom
mobile home, all utllties
paid, outskirts of Henderson. $230 month. 675-

Bell and Howell 8 · mm
Sound,
color
movie
camera . Carrying eeu &amp;
accessories. S225 . m -1274,
992·7294.

6730.

One whell trotter for sale,
S35.00. Call 9115-38.52 or 9927165, before 9:00AM oo" bel·
WHn 4:1J0.5 :)10 1PM . •

r

""-----'===---:--:----

,

- ~

LIKE new. Savage .308
lever action rifle. ,.x: scope,
sling and case. $210.00 call
304-675-6628.
L ike new Colt Python .375
magimun 6 inch barre/1,
nickle platled with hot~ter.
$380. Caii30H75·6628.

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245-5121 .

u

Bass boat, alum inum, _-40
LP Mere. 0 / B tournament
equlped. S2,8SO. Call 4469-408 eveningsafter6 :00.

.
.:

Auto Pari5
&amp; Accessor'ie5

'

Pels for Sole

POODLE GROOMING.
Coil Judy Taylor at 367-

7220.

(I)

f

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, metal top, runs

1969 Plymouth wagon. 318
auto. 985· 43-46.

1975 CHEVROLET Impala
with all the extras, in good
condition, reduced for
quick sole, 304-675·3763.
SURPLUS CARS, JEEPS.'
AND TRUCKS . now
available thru local government sales, calll -714-569.0241 for your directory on
how to purchase. Open 2-4
hours.
1968 Olds. S150. Call 675-

1724.
72CHEVV Chevellewagon,
good condition, $550.,350 v 8, automatic, 30-4·576·2866 .
73 MERCURY, 6 cyt,, standard transmi ssion, $200.
JIW-675-1643.
1978 PLYMOUTH Salon, 4
door sedan, 311 cu. engine,
e)(cellent. clean. phone 304·
675-1296,
'

Ford Truck, 250 camper
special. with new stoke bed
and dual wheels. Call 256·
6413, 12p.m . to9p.m .
1977 Chevy pickup, standard trans, PS, PB, 7-4227341
'
1981 Datsun pickup. SHort
bed, air, 5 lspeed, am-fm
radio, trim package. Will
take $850. &amp; take over
payment~ or will trade as
down payment. 992-7841.

-===::=.=:~:::;::==
i7

BORN LOSER

~JeD'S
~D'S

:S.YAArESr
r:a;. ~u.

~

1977 Half ton Ford F100 ..
power steering, new tires,
$2300. 304·675-5147.
73

Vans &amp; 4W.D.

1976 Ford win- van. Red

&amp; whlfw, priced reduced,
S1,150. Coll446--1394.

QOOSTICJI.l~-~1---/i--/
f.oK .

STANLEY STEEMER
carpet Cleaning
446-4208

ANNIE

lH' A\CWRY?

WHO WEIU:
Tl£ KEIW..

6EE - THEN I
6UE% "OOVIN"
oro 60 I!IWKE -

E611\TE
I'EOPLE 'lOO
CI£Ct&lt;EO ·

- 1£CL06E/)

STUCCO ?LASTERING
te)( tured ceilings commercial and residential ,
free estimates. Call 256-

1182 . •

THEY'RE 11E

IT HADDA
BE "LOTT5

SELLIN' 1\'l'
NOBOQY•S

'/iiTH'i'

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by ~
Haffelt Brothers Custom .
Carqets. _ Fq~·e estimates. ·~
Call446-2107.
·•

OtiE5
LEFT IH lOW/!!
EVERYONPG
()I'lLy

BUYIN'!

.•

PAINTING - interior and o
e x terior , plumb i ng , •
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388-9652 .
v
Frenc h City
Painting
Residentia l, commercial.
interior, exterior, pa~r
hang irig , and te x ured
ceilings. Ph . 367·77fW or 367·
7160.

AlLEYOOP

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

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential , automoti ve.
Emergency service. Cawl
882-2079.

GASOUNE AlLEY

RON'S Television Service.
Speci alizing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or -4-46-2-454.

Don' b6'

a fool.

Rufus!

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

It ain't
fer folks

whai's
Iivin'!

It's fer
folks whats
dyin'l r---"

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex- ;
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician ,
general repairs and
remOdeling. Phone 304-6752088 or 675· 4560.

Experienced carpenter
available for home or :
business remodeling or ,
new structures .
Free ~
estimates. References. 304675-2440.

50 THE COMPANY
HAS MGWEY..RH:t7-l
. tEMS. SURELY A
lfAN.K•• •

MONEY 15 77GH7...
ANI? INTEREST
R'ATES' ARE
OUT OF

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

,..

OH, YEA!i ...
I FVR60T .AJ.L
f.\SOUT lOUR
N01B TO LITTLE

Excivating

Gallipolis Diversified Corl- ~
st. Co. Custom dOzer &amp; .,
backhoe work. Special 1
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. -4.t6-.UCO.
•
14
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

- -'"-"=-"-= ==--

:
• (
·

0 LI7 'AUNT'

BESSIE .

· HOWDY, FELLERS!!
I'M BOWSY·WOWSY.
TH' TALKIN' DOG

MAW!! VOU FERGOT
VOUR COSTUME

with saddle and
bridle. Very ,gentto. Ex·
collont for a beginner. SIOO.
614-992-7201.
AKC
, Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle

pups, 304-195-3951.
DACHSUHUND
JIW-4511-1620.

l

•,
,

puppies,

AKC reelateriiCI, wnttw Ger·

675-asl.
and

Golden

P._nll. »H95-3P72.

IS

1975 ooDGE powerwogon.

4X4, $1.600. 304-675-6644.

General Haullno

JONES BOYS WATER ;
SERVICE . Cotr367·7471 or
367·0591.
:
'

NOW HAULING house coal

I.

&amp; limestone for driveways .
Call forestlmates367 -7101 .

'14 ton, ps,

pb, at. 350-4bbt, good
mechanical
condition,
, . _ tttfto body work. 89.53472 alter 6 pm •

HAULING· drlve
stone, 304-895·3925.
87

way

Upholstery

71 FORD Step Van, 6 cyl.,
automatic, good Condition,
right hind drtvo, small,
30ol-57..2166.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave ., Gallipolis
446-7833or-146-1833,
·

=s.

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt
1 Box124, Pt. Pleasant. JIW:

79 JEEP Renegade, hlra
29000 m1101, JIW-576-

f '

675·4154.

'

By an Interesting colncl·
dence, Jobn Rau, an old
partuer and. dear friend of
O.wald Jacoby, plltyed with
Alan Sontaa In the open
pairs In the 1880 sprln&amp;
arand nationals. Alan .
reports that Johnny played
his cards Ul:e·a )'011111 man
ud with a Uttle luck they
might have woo lllstead of

MAYeli. VOV'RE 'lllf KIND
WHO'S AIAAJD TO AlLOW
HIMSELF TO GET UPSET.• ,

AH·
CHOO!!

.

'

Jobn elected to open one
club on aceount of the
worthless doubleton In

klnf

stage of

proceedings

spades.
Jobn needed eight tricks
at notrump to ~tCCm~ plua-120
and beat any South players
wbo were plus--100. .
II was no problem for

WEST

EAST

tiQIGIII

+A

.1093

•an

+Jess
+QJ863

+AK1
+5

SOUTH
tJV84
.AKQ

+85
+AK 7 2

Vulnerable: East-West

Dealer: South
West

Nonb

Eall

Soallt

I+

Pass

Pus

!NT

Pass

p.,.

I+

Paas

Opening lead: •K

He 8lmply led bla
deuce of clubs to dummy's

John.

nine. East took the queen
and led back the jack. Jobn
look bla ace led to dummy's
10, cashed ibe jack of hearts

~n of cliamondl,
threw
t In with the jack
of diamonds and scored the

and

all·lmportant eighth trick
since East had to lead a
club.

a~,•••r'
lty THOMAS JOSEPH
zIn motion
3 Reformer's

ACROSS
I How droll!
5 African snake
10 Hebrew lyre
II Role In
11
otello"
13 Stupefy ·
It De Niro
15 Not hers

feat

t .Alder. tree
(Scot.)
5 Simply
8 Love,
In Lombardy
7 Playing
ICI!-lU."'

marble

16Sea (Fr.)

11 Building

19 Ruminant 28 Actor,
compassion · ZZ Dismissed
George s Tenant
Z3 Sun
29 Presbyter
at O'Hare
rooms
33 Burrowing
1% Map
%4 Placed
beast
Z5 Custard
book
35New
apple
18 Native
Mexican
26 Projecting
Indian
Indian
rim
38John servant
I Symbol of

wing

18 Gratify
20Through
(prefix)

Zl French
stateSIIllijl
Z2 Pride, envy,
anger, etc.
Z!Doln
24Smootb
consonant
Z5 VersUier

ze 1.ont1 toolll

lir+-+--1

Z7 Willi! (Lat.)
Z8Giadaome

:JOCrlticlze
31 Radiation

unit
3Z Tree
34 Gone aloft
38 Wall part
37 - and

dining
38 RUBSlan

39 Playing

marble
tO To be (Fr.)
DOWN

!Jumble
-DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLIIAAXI
II LONGFILLOW
One letter limply otiJlds lor another. In this oainple A Ia
used for the three L•s. X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,_
apootrophll, the lenath and formation of 1he words are oQ
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.
.:

mHNTI

ALL IN THI! FAMILY
UPDATE NEWS
TH!TONIOHTIHOW
Ouaat: Stewart Granger. (80
na.)
AHOTHI!R UFE
MOYII·(ADVENTURE)

I

'owtoma,.,htm.(R-')'Ono

• Q 10' 2
+1094

q-•

ALFRI!D HITCHCOCK

Mon' tara 81ara: Lon C11tou,
Jayne Eaetwood ,

the

bad an alnlost perfect
count of the band. He cubed
the ace-king .and
of
hearts and when everyone
followed be decided that
East's trey of diamonds bad
been an honest fourth best.
Hence, Weal bad li-S.3-1 distribution and would have
been one down at two

ll-11-11

JobD

11~ llla5~~~~:0UII

.alCIILATEIIOYIIWKRP · lnCtnclnnatt:'IDo,tDo,ForNow'
Hoyt Axton gueat at1ra as
Jonnllot'o ohlldhooc! . -.
oon-. - . . , tnCinolnnotl
to make Mr kHP h.- ona-tlma

notrump

West opened tbe king of
spades. East look bla ace
and led back the three of
dlamondl. West cashed the
ace and
and got . out
with the 10 o hearts. At this

or.

··~ "TMOOIIton" teao
(J) IINNY fiLL SHOW
·

one

dlamondl. Ilia

rebid bought the contract.

ftU~ATENEWaz.

, 11 :08
11:28
11:30

NORTH

Al82
.J6U

finlibln1 Juataeventh.

CINUPDATENEWS
SINO OUT AMERICA
LIFE CAN IE FROZEN Thio
documentary u._minea: the
hlatorlcal and future applica·
tiona of cryobiology , the
~enot of freezing.
NEWI

!O:H

APRON EMPLOY MISf1AP
Answer: What kind of a dentist Is he now?" PANE-LESS"

By O.wald Jacoby
ud AJu Soalag

~~~~~E, SIDNEY

~~

D r I XX )

Timeless play

(!)

10:28 ,
t0:30

•

197~ cnevv ven.

AKC ~ana, l'ld &amp;
ten. 304-675-6916.

FINCHES

1979 Bronco Brown. low
mileage, AC, CC, PS. PB.
AM· FM. 614-949-2196 after 4
p.m.
.

Now arrange the circled leHers to
form ltle syrprisa answer, as aug·
gestod by the llbovt canoon.

BRIDGE

'ii) OuiNCY To learn lo
nelp tnoaa close to the
terminally Ill or deceased ,
Quincy consults a dyi ng
thanatologiat and is asked to
counsel one of h i s tamale
patients who Ia critically Ill and
t:!futLnQ!raatment. (60 mine.}
liJ (iJ). DYNASTY When a
eklrmlihwlth JefllaavaaFsllon
hungry lor revenge, an atfalr
with Nick Toaoannl becomes
-...,_ her goal; Blake gate help from
the mob in a buelnaaa deal: and
Alexia Ia a tung at news of
Kryatle'a
pregnan·cy. (80
mlna.)
· 10:06 [I) reS EVENING NEWS
10:11 11) STANDING ROOM ONLY
'Red Sica lion Pra88nle Freddy
Tha Freeloader' a Chrlatmaa
Dinner' Red Skelton wrote thla
orlglnalatory'that combines
comedy, drama, mlmtand
mualc In thla htart · warmlng etory of Freddy'a Chrlatmaa

JACKS REFRIGERATIO- ·
N. air condition service, ·
commercial , industrial . ~
Phone882-2079.
,

CRACKED WHEN
IT'5 HEA~c::&gt;.

1· Jumbles: SHEEP

1

CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHTMOVIE'Iarael'aChoice'
1981 Stars: Jean St a pleton,
Richard Kiley, Peter Colota.
@ NATIONAL FINAL HES.
a:3D
10:00

I

.

(Answers tomorrow)
Yoslorday's

~~

Water well s. Commerc ial
and Domestic . Test holes . .
Pumps Sales and Serv ice.
304-895-3802.

I

.e -16

Print answer hel&amp;:

AMERICAN HERO A booby·
trappedminafiliedwlthgoldand
a family of murderous mountain
men tranaform a pleaunt
camping trip by Ralph'a claaa
Into a bruah with death in
California gold country . (60
mlntJ
II (J) ROBERT SCHULLER'S
C!tRISTIIAI EYE
[I) liD LIVE FROII THE MET
'Rigoletto' Thla production of
Verdi's mBiterplece, video·
tapedl!vefromtheMetropolitan
Opera Houae, atara soprano
Chriatlane Eda·P ierre singing
the role of Gilda, ba r itone
SharriiiMIInaaaaRigoletto,and
Luc i ano Pavarottl as the
lecheroua Duke of Mantua . (2
hra., 30 mlna.)
® DA . SlUSS' HOW THE
ORINCH STOLE CHRIS.TMAS
Animated I ale about the miserly
Grinch who triee to er.ue
Chrialmaa kom the tiny town of
Whovllle by ateallng all the
materlalaymbola oflts 'Yuletide
celebration, only to discover
that th'8realapirit of the season
!!_beyond hie grasp. (Repeat)
8:05 ·llJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) • "
11
DowfthiU Racer" tOIIil
8:30 .CIJ WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Andy Ia bent on getting a new
tranamllter for the alation and
mlxaa buaineae with pleaaura
whenhatakea Momma Carlson
out af1er hours.
® 'TWAS THE NIGHT
B~FOA! CHRISTMA&amp; Joel
Gray narrates this animated
mu alcalapecial about a friendly
family of mice, a genUa clock
maker, and a aenaitive Santa
Claua.who team up to spread
addilional holiday cheer during
the Yuletide aeaaon. Features
lhe voice• of Tammy Grimes, .
John McOi ver and George '
Gobel. (Ropest)
8:58 (I) CeN UPDATE NEWS
' '
a:oo CIJUcrJTHEFACTSOFUFE '
Natalia'alnittalannoyanoeover
her grandmcther' s aurpriae
visit give a way to a feeling of
respect and warm admiration
f01 her relative.
(I) 70Q_CLUB
CIJ~ID THEFALLOUYColt
and Howle eel oul for what
seems to be a lovely Hawaiian
vacation aplcedwlth the almple
Job of picking up two balllumping moonahinera, until
Japanese mobsters enter the
picture to hand Colt the biggest
cnallenge of hla career. (80

3290. RUth RHvet.

Pony

J I I

i

(11jh«zAI"~~~7~REATE8T

t&gt;"AJ.N

81
Home
- --"
1m
= p,_.ro._,v_,
e,_
m,e,nt,_,o'-::'-:-

SEWING Machine repairs,
Service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servlcel Shar~n
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 992-1274.

(J

ENTERTAINMENT

7:31 (fl':::;rORD AND SON
.
7:5e
_!;_BN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
U l!l REAL PEOPLE A'ioit
1o a toy man·ufa ct u rar ' a
convention ; akateboardino In
tf'le snow; why the polntaattiaa
are aymbol s of tf'l&amp; Yuletide
season; a a now festival in
Florida: a man who decorates
hla elevator for lhe holiday&amp;;
and a report on an organization
that tries to locate mining
children. (80 mina.)
(I) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
!i!'ECIAL
(!)MOVIE · (DRAMA)" \4o

motor and
vw
automat ic tran smission
and body parts, 3CM-8822502.

83

'

~OQ~ILTINO

(fti •

·72

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

~

.(J) FAMILY FEUD
LAVERNE ANO SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(I)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
I!!!POAT
(jDJ
RICHARD SIMMONS

WINDSHI ELD &amp; front fen der for Plymouth Duster
304-675-3135.

Trucks for Sale

rx

1

TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNIIL.f.EHRER
PORT
!I_EWI
• IIUPPI!T SHOW
. CAROL BURNETT AND

n~AIKEDFOAIT
MIQ.THER UFE

7:30

2-13" Armstrong Radia l
studded Snow T ires. used
one winter. $75.00 . 992-2770.

82

12

I

7:CII

CARPET
HARTS Used Cars, New GENES
Haven West Virginia. Over Cleaning. Special rates for
20 less expensive cars in . Nov. and Oec. only. Call
now and save. 1§1-4·992-6309 .
stock . ,
1968 DODGE GTX 5500. 1
wheeled cart $100. 304-4581926.

---

INTIIlTAINMENT

•

good . $750.00 . 256-6769.

1980 Oldsmobile Toronado
Brougham Coupe . Real
leather Interior. Ziebart
protected, many ex tras.
Will sell for less than
wholesale if cahs deal or
will consider trade. 9923491 .

I.
I:::.;..--·-·
I 0 I

., ROCKA

'O::~y DAYIAOAIN

CHARLIE'S SA LVAGE Auto parts, auto repair ,
wreck er servi ce, buy
automobiles, r adiators and
batteries . .w6-7717.

-to

tach oquano, to 1o1m
four ordinary-·

rn• ·PM MAGAZINE

7:00

•

I 10-0AIII
Dv-Amoldondllob lM

u.......- lholo lour~-

' ont

EVENING

'100

1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon. PS .
PW,
PB ,
reclining buCkets, T · Top,
velour interior . Like new .
$4150. 614-992-6362.

AUTOMATIC
washer,
Warm Morning heater, 75
Ford station wagon, 1212
Ohio St. 3CM-675·2048.

.•

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Auto for Sale

1979 AMC Concord stationwagon, 4 sPeed trans.,
22.997 mites, low mileage,
A-1 condition. Call245-5294.

ftfl~r.\.flfii}'ft ~THATIN!A

~ ~ ~~ ·

WEDNeSDAY
DIC. 18, 1111t

"·'

ALL sizes denim i?Jckets,
reasonable, U .S. Army
field
jackets, combat
leather boots Government
specifications. Sam Somer·
vi lies' Warehouse, 7 miles
East Ravenswood's New
Bridge. Routes 56-21 (New
Era}. Open Wednesdays
through Sundays 12-6 p.m .
!Call in orders 304-675-3334,
Pt. Pleasant}
SONY cassette deck ,
dlacoustic, realistic amp .,
$300. phone 304-675-1513.

VI~wmg

78 JEEP Renegade, $4500 .
phone 304-675-3628 .
.

. . .......
.........
, ......... ..
'

•

•

Registered Quarter Horse .
Auto R'epair .
filly ,
RegiStered
Ap·
'-'---'===-= '-:--:paloosa, _. yrs. old and good
ouality Autobody &amp; Pairit
blOOd nne·. Call256-6-413 , 12 work. Insurance work
p.m. to9p.m .
welcOme . Sunroof s in ·
stalled trom $200-$230. Auto
Trim Center, -446·1968.
ONE 5 year old RegiStered
Angus cow. Rebred arttllcally, 1100N plus, $600.
Auto painting, sanding,
firm . 304-675-2902.
minor bodY . repa ir, $169.
Call379·2679.

1973 Mercury Capri ,· new
paint, $1 , 100 or best offer.
Call446-1692.

man Shopllot ~ pUppy. JIW.

MobIle home with ac, com·
pletety furnished, washer
and dryer, carpet,. on
private lot In Mason. No
pets. 773-9520 or m-5751 .

;:==::;:;;;:;;~;;;:===
Livestock

63

Plastic memorial flowers
for Chrismas decorating.
S1 to $5. Phone 882-2562.

It

25,000 BTU air conditioner
for sate. Phone 614-6676636.

Mobile home for rent. Call
446-0508.

Fum Equipment

f~~~~s &amp; compare. Caii446--

11

55

wheel -drive, 29.000 m•l es, 8
cyl. call after 3 p.m . 304675-3898.

. . . . ..

~~~;;~~~~~~~r.;;;,~~~~~~~ &amp;round
baler, bus·
hog, disk
cultivators.
Check
our

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

They'll

~ &amp;

Jividen's Farm Equipment. SH the nay equi pment of tl\e future, new
from vermeer--also a full
line of equipment from
Long , Kunn, Kelley &amp;
many oth~rs . With your
selection of ~rts &amp; com·
plete servlc. Used Hydro 70
IH tractor (like new}, 1-4-45
Long tractor, 2 rakes,
haybind, New Holland

DRAGONWYND
CAT 2 dOwnstairs apartment,
TERY _, KENNEL. AKC
626 West. 3rd, Pomeroy . GOOD
Chow puppies,
CF~
U S ED
AP Compl etely r e mode l e d . PLIANCE S · washers,
Himalayan, Persian end
G irls jeans, tops, coats,
Floor coverings, drapes, dryers,
r efr i gerators, raincoats, boots, shoes, Siamese kittens. Call 446heater s, parking . -4 room , r a nges .
38«ofter4p.m .
Skaggs
Ap·
slacks ,
also
partly turn, 5 roo m un- pl iances, 1918 Eastern dres ses,
upright freezer . Call .u6furni s hed .
Ref,
d e p . ·Ave., 446-7398.
HILLCREST KENNEL m6.
required . No children Or
Boarding all breeds, Clean
pets. 992-2878 .
lndoor·outdoor facilities .
2 Sear s wood &amp; coa l stove s, Whirlpool washer 18 lb.
Also AKC Reg. O-rno blowers, $200 each . Call
tub, real nice, $110. mans. Coll446·7795.
In M iddleport 2 bdr. fur- 256-1427.
Frigidaire. dryer , A · 1
nished apartment , one
shape, guaranteed, $90.
small c hild. 1·30-4-882-2566.
.BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Couch for sal e, excellent 446-8181.
· Boarding and grooming.
condition. Phone 446-3945
Attractive 4 rm . and bath after 5 p .m .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
Cllrlstmas Trees for sale
apartment, over double
English Cocker Spaniels.
c ut your own ts.OO. Call367· Call 388-9790.
garage n Middleport .
0135.
Newlv det orated, car - 54
Misc. Merchandice
peted, fully i nsulated .
Reg . Quarter Horses for
Adults only . No pets, Rubber
Stamp
Shop . Hardback &amp; paperback sales, boarding, training,
securi ty deposit required. Ususa/ly one or two days books lin good condition) ,
English &amp; Western lessons.
$190 mo. 992-5292.
service. Dismuke' s, 405 records, 1 dog house, 2 Oaf Beam, Gallipolis, 4462nd . A ve., Gallipolis, 446· fans. Call446-3710 after 5.
0183 .
'
CM74.
'
Small 3 room furn ished
apt. Pomeroy . Short walk
200 Mercedes dlesttl engl!le, Registered AKC Boxers,
from center of town . 10x24 heavy
gauge 18 HP evenrude outboard.
S125. 446·3870.
·
Responsible person only . aluminum awning . Phone 1 steel chalnsaw. Call ~992-2588.
446-7483 after 5PM.
9638.
AKC
Reg . Labrador
I .:::::::::::::::::::..L::::::::::::::::::~ Sale for month of Dec. Retriever ·puppies, 9
weeks, shots, wormed,
Mbile home WOOd burner,
$125 . Exc. ll!mparment,
Do
Every Time
$459 . Through the walltn·
614-682-7477.
sulated vent kit, Sl.f9. Hot·
point heavy duty washer
and dryer, $599 . Kingsbury HOOF HOLL.OW Horses &amp;
Everything
Parts and Accessories. Rt. pontes.
Imaginable In horle equip124, Minersville, Ohio.
ment. AIIO belli, boots. 698·

r

•

The Daily Sent inel- Page- I ~

Television

79 DODGE power wa~on , -4- •

75

'

rt, Ohio

Pomero

vans&amp;4W.O.

73

76

if WAS A
NeW fJII&gt;
l&gt;ieTl

Trailer space pri vate lots
in Centenary . Ca ll-446 ·4053. 3· 8 ft . showcases with
lights, 1 large bedroom
COUNTRY MOBIL E H ome suite, double .aresser and
Pa r k, Route 33, North of chest, 2 antique clocks, 1
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call meat slicer and misc .
grocery store equipment.
992-7479.
Call 256-6413, 12 p.m . to 9
p.m .
MOBILE home lots, water
&amp; sewer furnished, E veret·
te Schwartz, phone 304-675· L aFont wood splitt&amp;r. 25
HP engine, battery start,
1076.
trailer mounted. split logs
In five pieces. Ph 245·5478 .

51

'

'

WA!, PftAib

5.c4'"--'M
= is-"c ..__,M
= er,__,c"'h"a"n d:::l,ce
"Henderson, part ially fur-, Lump coal $32 per tot1.
nished . 675-1972.
2 i nn Coal Co., Inc. Call4461408 between 9 and .S.
FURNISHED, 1 bedr oom
a~ ar t ment, extra nice, 15% discount on wood &amp;
adults only, no pets, phone
coal stoves while supply
304-675· 1386.
last. Gallipolis Slack Co ..

I'

_.,.,

He~'/eN! I

1 bedroom apartment in

From all of us a t
Gallipoli s Daily Tribun e
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasa nt Regi st er

.....
--·__
.......
........ ,....

IAANK

Efficiency r ooms b y the
week on Main Str eet,
Mason. WV . 773·5651.

&lt;S CW II&lt;(

2 bedroom well insulated
house near Rio Grande
College, S225 per month
plus ut ilities and SlOO
ref undabJ.e
d e posit .
Ref er ences required, Call
245-9325 or 245-5364.

l974 CAMERON 12 X 60, in

Qood c ond i tion, air con-

registered poodles.
Good arwnd children and
housebroken. Phone 614667-6636.

Houses for Rent

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER : 4 bdr .. spl i tlev el, living room &amp; din i ng
room combi nation, ea t -in
kitch en, lg. f am ily rm ., 2
112 baths, loc ated In Tara

AKC

AP A RT M E NT S, m obi l e
ho m es.
hou ses .
Pt .
Pleasant and Gall ipolis.
614-446-822 1 or 61 A-245-94«4.

New 3 bdr. home w ith l 1/ 2
bath &amp; ga r age between
Ga ll ipolis &amp; hospital. Call
446-0390 or 446-71 00.
31

by Larry Wright "
~--P'--'e"-t"s-'1'-"o~
r s=·~··~-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

2 bedroom twin si ng le in
Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street . $200 month plus
deposi t . 1 - 614 - 263- 832~ or
61 4-263-2669 .
41

M &amp; M Elect r ic . A ll elec t r ic
work g uaranteed &amp; bonded .
304-675·2236.

Apartlnemt
for Rent

Weclnesde:;o, December 16,1981

wednesda y, December 16, 1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Roof ing, lhs ulatlon. plum ·
bing, and ge ner al .home
maintenance. For estimate·
c all 675· 5496, if no answer
caii675·3H7.

.

CBYPTOQUOTES

RURQV

'

TWV

JD

VYXQ

fcRWP

JD

WQWS

OQYURQS

CJPR

JB

w

A J B H Y Q V.

Ye 1 ...... Cryploqtlltte; YOUR ADVERTISING SHOUlD BE
WR1Tl'EN TO' OONVINCE YOUR CUSTOMERS AND Nrtr .
. YOURSELF.-ROY L. SMrm

�•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol'oio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

w,d!lesday, December 16,1981

~-~~~~s-~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~.~£!!.~~~~~~
eight &lt;1 them oo speeding charges-

Mayor Fred Hoffman Tueaday
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor night
Clarence Andrews Tueaday night.
Fm'ed were Thomas Hoffner,
They include Uoyd D. Moore, Middleport, and Ch8r1es Cundiff,
..,. .., ___ w Resta i . Middleport,..,., and coots. and three
Syracuae, ..,.;
... ""'""'"
Gl
D· M n
days In jail each, on charges of
Colorado• .,...,;
en
· ayes,
F:lorida,
driving
while intoxicated;
Steven
P.
Florida $33;
$33 Willlam
·G
MJ . Sullins,
p ·
Hawk, Middleport,
$100 and
costs,
.,_....:., .,,i Doayld L. Steimn, leavi•• the scene of an accident;
Midd'i~;rt~;l; v:Ont litOSS:.~:
p . Hooten, Jr., Middleport,
"'--ro ... J ph M Do h
$100 and costs, reckless operation·,
"''"'"' y, ...,; ose
· na ue, David E. Watkins, Middleoort. LiO
Albany,$31,allofspeedingcharges,
and Carroll E. Cleland, Middleport,
failure to maintain control of a
t113 pooled on a charge of running a vehicle; Ricky D. Wilson, MidtJ:affic liiJht.
dleport, $10 and costs, improper
•Fined $31 and costs in the court on backing, and Pearlie Jewell, West
a speeding charge was Terrence D. Columbia, $100 and costs, assault,
"""'""
and $50 and costs, disorderly con.,.~., R ut1and.
.
: Meanwhile, seven defendants duel. Forfeiting a $100 bond posted
'!ere fined and an eighth forfeited a on a disorderly manner charge was
Denzil Proctor, Middleport.

°•

.....,

Robert

moratorium on big oil company home.
Brown's bill, wblcb wu reviled wwld prevent a takeOVer of crude
takeovers apparenUy is dead wtlil
Backen also gave up on seWng after a cooference with Packwood oil ~. 111ch as Mobil Ia atCongress returns on Jan. 25 from its similar legislation to the floo~ of the and oinnon, would ban until June IO, ternplin&amp; in its~ acq1,1laltioo
holiday recess.
Senate.
·1913, a lakeilver by one of the top 10 of Marathon.
Rep. Clarence J. Brown, R.Qhio,
Brown had been working with
0 ~
who is the rna jor backe r of the Sens. Bob Pa ckwood, ~·~. and
h the H rdW Ca
0-N
·
!
moratorium
ob~lmCergerstasukc
as
of
f
owrt
ta
ha
.
thennon,
evta.,krnedaneproposed Mo 1 orp.
eover
o o ve
measure c
as a r-a~~~ii~~~::=====~~i~i~~....,...the Marathon Oil Co., abandoned riderontoanotherSenateblll.
hope Tuesday of getting action on his
Brown aide Roger Bolton said that
bill before the recess, which was ex· the senators were Wlable to find "an
· te hi I "t Ita h their
peeted tosta•toda
"
Y·
. appropl'UI ve ce oa c
Brown's biU was voted out of a legililalion to, and that a _couple of
House subcommittee, but senators threatened a fiUbuster to

.---------------------------l

Court overturns '·ruling

STOREWIDE SALE
KXPFJK~H;

20% OFF

BK~tf WI~HK~

OF' THK ~KJI~ON

Ohio (AP) - The Ohio Card."
Supreme Court, in a ~ decision
The high court's ruling came in a
tu&lt;Jay, upheld the constitutionality of
1979
case in which James W.
a fireanns registration ordinance in
O'Leary,
a private investigator, had
lhe city of University Heights.
been
charged
with violating the or.,; Its ruling overturned lower court
dinance
after
poUce discovered
aecisions which had found the
several
encased,
unloaded weapons
jlleasure unconstitutional because it
in
the
trunk
of
his
car.
was overbroad, vague and unen·
forceable.
Both the _ Shaker ·Heights
.; At issue is a C\ty ordinance which,
wi.th certain exemptions, prohibits Municipal Court and the court of ap!he possession and carrying of a . peals agreed with O'Leary, who is
firearm in a vehicle unless an in· not a University Heights resident,
• Wvidual has obtained a "Restricted that the city law was un,
.Weapons Owner's Identification constitutional.
.

.

rhree prosecution

••

COATS
BY PlAYUND &amp; BRISTOL BAY

l/5 CARA;tr
OF DIAMONDS
'29500

CANDY'S CLASSIC COllECTIONS
INGLES FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT

said he could not really tell if Young
was "high" or not on Dec. I, 1976.
1
The state was expected to rest
' went across the river to see if
anything had happened to Mary · today and the defense will begin

SN(MSUITS
BY DNJ 1PIS
IN~=1ERS

30% OFF
30% OFF

OPEN EVERY N

20% OFF

reported the theft of two Christmas
trees from the Carl Offutt property
on Eagle Ridge Road. The trees
were cut from the front yard and
taken to a truck parked on the road.

FOR ALL OCCASIONS

LIVING ROOM SUITES,·

·Carousel Confectione~

GUN CABINETS, LAMPS; CHAIRS,

Ph. 992-6342

317-N. 2nd

Middleport

•

If you provide Information
leading to the arre1t of
anyone tampering with or
.
breaking Into any Sentinel
· neWipCiper rack.

•

'

GALlJPOLIS,- Sheriff James Montgomery says he expects improvements to be completed next month that will bring the Gallia
County Jail up to state m1nlmum staqdards.
· •
·
The renovation costing $52,000 began in September, but was stopped
for two months when deputies went on strike and remodeling workers
refused to cross their picket Unes.
County prisoners have been held in nearby counties since work started on the jail,

Metzenbaum calls for probe
WASffiNGTON- U.S. Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaurn, [).()hio, asked
Wednesday for an investigation of what he said is an overly tough
review program wtder which lhe Social Security Administration is
taking away disability benefits from many persons.
Under a "massive, accelerated eUgibility review of current
disability insurance beneficiaries," the agency is halting benefits to 47
percent of the cases that it has reviewed in Ohio, Metzenbawn said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - West Virginia d~tectives investigating the
lllaylng of a Huntington police officer have ttaveied to Colwnbus to
look into the background of a man sought in the shooting.
' ·
Officer Paul Hannon, 26, was shot and killed early Monday while be
and another officer were investigating a report that two men were acting suspiciously near an all-night grocery store.
. Police were seeking to question two men who fled in a car that is
registered to Bobby D. Stacy, 30, of Columbus. The search was
proceeding in Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio.

WASHINGTON - Over the furious, shouted protests of many
RepubUcans, the House vnted 223-107 just before its adjournment Wedneaday to block Mobil Corp. from acquiring Marathon Oil Co.
The bill was rammed through the House the same day it was' introcluced under pressure from the Democratic and RepubUcan leaders
of the House Energy Committee, who allowed only five minutes of
debate on the bill.
.
1be Senate adjourned for the year moments before the House vote,
meaning the bl1l cannot become law until next year. ·
.

_________ _____
___,;.

I

Breay and turning colder toaigbt and Friday with snow flurries
likely tonight and cllaDce of flui-riee Friday. Lon tonight in the teeni .•
Higha FrltW In the low Ill. Cllanee,of pnclpltaliCJ1170 percent tonight
and 40 percent Friday. WlDdl nortlnielterl,y 16--11 mph toniiJht.

....

s..., .......,

By Lee Kampmeyer
"It's an attempt to show his
and Judy Owen
· (Brainard's) personality," Casey
Two character witnesses, one ~ said when asked by Judge Clarence
fOJ;mer girlfriend of Terry Lee Watt the purpose of questioning BenBrainard, and the other her neigh- nett about the man. As the trial
bor testified Wednesday morning in progressed, the defense was
Mason County Circuit Court as the periodically instructed by Watt to
defense began presenting its side in "restrict the issue" or inquire about
lhe murder trial of John Lewis the threat and its relevancy to the
Young, charged with the Dec. 1, 1976 Dec. I, 1976, murder.
stabbing death of Mary Berry.
When cross-examined by
For approximately two hours, the Prosecuting Attorney Damon
jury listened to Lolita Bennett and Morgan, Bennett described
Marceline Schultz, both of Point Brainard as "a very nice guy" who
Pleasant, who when questioned, helped her.
provided an account of a Dec. 11 in·
When Schultz confirmed that
cident in which Brainard allegedly Brainard approached her home and
verbally threatened to kill Bennett.
was "carrying. on," Morgan obWhen aaked about the threat by jected when Caaey aaked ber what
. defense attorney James Casey, Ben- she saw and heard during the
nett said Brainard had approached alleged threat. W~tt excused the
her home although she requested jury and and told atlorneys to keep
him to stay away ·from her. She said evidence pertin~nt to the murder
she notified police from her neigh- an&lt;) further added that the fact
bor's home (Schultz) and then men· Brainard threatened Bennett had no
tioned Brainard said "I'm going to relevancy to the murder. "We're
kill you like Mary Berry," when he not going to try Terry Brainard threatened her. However, when notin my court," Watlsaid.
Casey later asked her if Brainard
When the jury was permitted to
ever made a statement about the return to the court, Schultz conmul'\ler, Bennett told the court tinued describing the incident at her
Brainard said he never conlmitted home, but could not recall if

Brainard said he was going to kill
Bennett.
Later in the afternoon the defense
recalled Brainard, who testified for
the stale on Monday, and questioned
him about the alleged incident with
Bennett. He said he was with her on
Saturday- that they had had a date
- but denied making a,ny threats
against her.
Brainard also denied telling
W.Sley Gibbs, who was also called to
testify for the defense yesterday af·
ternoon, that he was not actually at
the Berry home during the murder,
but had left to try to get into the B&amp;B ·
Market which was owned by Mrs.
Berry.
Brainard said he had
discussed the murder with Gibbs,
wh.o was an inmate at Huttonsville
Correctional Center at the same
time Brainard was there, but could
recall telling him only that he had
nothing to do with Mary Berry's
death.
Defense attorney Musgrave asked
Brainard if he had made any
statements to anyone other than
police or attorneys about his in·
volvement in the murder, to which
Brainard replied, "Anybody that's
ever asked my, yes. I tell ~hem I

didn't have anything to do with it
(the murder).
Musgrave also asked Brainard if
-he had ever testified in any court
case against John Lewis Young in
exchange for promises to have any
charges which were pending against
him dropped. Brainard said, "As
far as I know, no."
Brainard also testified upon direct
examination by Musgrave that
Young was "totally drunk... passed
out in a plate of pork chops" when
the police arrived at Violet Rose
Lee's house in foomeroy, Ohio, on
Dec. I, 1976, to arrest him. Young
had consumed whiske~ he purchased in Pomeroy before going to
the Lee residence, Brainard said.
Mrs. Lee, a sister to John Lewis
Young and Brainard's aunt, also
testified for the defense and told the
jury that several days after Y~ung
and Brainard were taken into
custody by police at her home she
found a knife under the maltress of a
bed in an upstairs room.
She also said that Brainard was
the only one of the two she saw go upstairs and that Young, who "appeared to be pretty full (of alcohol)''
(Continued on page 12)

i\.

·McDade prepares to fight dumping problems

Search takes team to Columbus

Weather forecast

for·11101'8 In feN matlon.

.

4,allia jail to meet standards

CLEVELAND - 1be w1nnirig !lumber drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "'11le Number" was 088.
The lottery reported earnings of S692,061 from n&amp;ering on ita daily
game. 'I1le eaminga came on sales of ,1,005,443, whlle holders of winning tickell are entitled to share t313,392, lottery officlala said.

--~-___,;.

•

WASffiN(lTON- The .Air Force has decided to turn over the
Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base near Colwnbus, Ohio, to
· civilian use as a conunercial air cargo facllity.
·
Air Force officials said it will allow the Rickenbacker Port
Authority to make agreements that will allow quick development of
the air cargo property while final federal procedures-for turning over
the base are completed.
Since 19711, the Air Force has been working on plans to turn over
nearly 2,000 acres at the site to the port authority. It will retain part of
the base for air guard operations.

Winning Ohio lottery number

Contact this paper
'

Approve base for civilian use

House blocks Marathon Oil deal

WALL ACCESSORIES,
TABLES, DINING ROOMS,
BEDROOMS AND
ACCESSORY FURNITURE

'100.00
. .REWARD
OFFERED

2 sections, 16 Pages
15 cents
A Multimedia Inc:. New~paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 17,1981.

CINCI~ATI - The principal of a CathoUc high school feels his
students were complimented when a montb-long police .undercover
drug probe yielded only eight student arrests out of 960 students.
. "O_nly eighl were involved out of a total school population of nearly
1,000. That's less than I percent of the student body: For that I'm
grateful. I'm elated," said Brother Dennis Johnson, Society of Mary
principal of Purcell-Marian High School.
'
Police Lt. Tom Burke said most of them were charged with trafficking in drugs. Police also arrested 17 adults oil drug sales charges
and corruption of juveniles.

INCLUDES ALL

DECORATED CAKES

cola Hill, Pomeroy. Approximately two lncbea Ill snow
bad fallen by 9:30 a.m. cl01lng all scbool in Meigs
County.
·

at

Voi.30,No.173
Copyrighted 1981

Archdiocese cooperates in probe

FURNITURE SALE

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;i

•

e

40%
OFF .

ELBE RF.ELDS

insulate their homes.
Persons are advised to get a license number if possible. There is. a
possibility that one of the two men
involved in the robbery was at the
McDougb home approximately
three weeks ago trying to sell part of
a load of limestone.
Anyone having any limestone
hauled .by an outside individual is
asked to contact the sheriff's office.
1be offenders are .believed tO have
been in the lAng Bottom and Portland area. Tbe telephone nwnbers
at the sheriff's office are 992-3371 or
992--38119.
1be sheriff's department also

DOING HlS PART 'lbunday momlng was eight year
old Josb11111lrown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Clark, Un-

State rests; defense calls
Witnesses in nturder trial

calling
its witnesses.
~;;::::==;::=::;;;;;;;========::=::;
A former
Mason County state I1-;;==========================:::::~::;:'•
..
·She passed the B&amp;B Markel,
oWned by Mrs. Berry, which was
trooper,
who headed
the murder
for sta_teinvestigation
police, took
'
closed, then drove near the Berry for
~me where she saw several police . the stand Tuesday morning and .
cars and went to her mother's house . acknowledged identification of
mMason.
items he took in custody and
' Debbie Tivener, whose testimony revealed initial observations of his
fGllowed Mrs. Reed's, said that when invesligation of Mrs. Berry's home.
State Trooper Uoyd Akers of the
Young and Brainard arrived at her
Cabell
County detachment told the
hOme on Dec. I, 1976, "John said he
court
during
questioning that he had
t!u'ew his bloody clothes away
taken custody of a sheath and knife,
corning up the road in a creek. ''
. She also said Young asked for pen· blue flannel shirt and orange shirt,
cl1 and paper, said he wanted to previously retrieved from Sunday
write some notes and she then iden- Creek in Chauncey, Ohio.
He said the items were examined
tified the two letters presented
earlier as poles her husband had by a criminal laboratory bureau in
South Charleston and eventually
written.
On Cl'OSlH!Xamination by the used as evidence ,for Young's first
defense, Debbie Tivener also said trial in Wood County Circuit Court.
Akers said he was accompanied
she saw Young drink a beer while at
by two other police officers when he
herhome.
·
Mike Tivener identified the two arrived at Mrs. Berry's home and
letters he wrote for Young on Dec. I, found her body in the upstairs
1976 and further identified Young's bedroom. During cross-examination
signature which he had witnessed by Musgrave, Akers said he
with his own, on those letters. He discovered a shoe lace wrapped
said the statement in the notes was around the woman's wrist.
When questioned by Casey about
copied at Young's request- from an
the
nature of a hand print located on
original written by Young in which
wall
against a stairway, Akers said
he confessed to killing Mary Berry.
Tivener said he did not know what he did not know what substance it
happened to that first letter but said was composed of. The state trooper
the last time he saw it, it was in mentioned · he detected no other
Young's possession. He later turned evidence outside the home except
the two letters he copied over to a for footprints in the snow. He said he
Mason County sheriff's deputy, could not determine the type of footwear that would have produced the
Tivener said. ·
On cross-examination, Tivener footprint.
____;&lt;_eon_tin_ued_f_ro_m.:._pa=-ge_1)_ _

swung full force into the tri-county
area,, dwnping two inches of the
whi~ stuff by 9 a.m. today 11nd
mak1ng driving conditions
treacherous at best.
Snow was expecied to change to
rain during the day today as things
warmed up, and then tum to snow
again tonight as temperatures dip
into the teens.
1be snow came after warnings of
a severe winter storm coming this
way were issued Wednesday. By late
Wedneaday night, the watch was
cancelled for the central portion _of
West Virginia and the southern edge
of Ohio, but 1-2inch"'! were expected
by today's end.
Road crews began tackling the

clear up approximately 250 miles of
Meigs area roads.
County workers were out around 7
out by 5:30 a.m. spreading cinders
and no problems were reported by a.m. and again, no problems had
mid-morning. 1be snowplow had been encountered, although the
alSo been sent out, a spokesman spokesman noted, "I wish it'd stop
snowing."
said.
Tbe GallJa-Meigs Post of the state
Gallipolis City Manager Chris
highway
patrol reported no roads
Morris said street department emclosed
by
the snow, although they
~J~oyees were also out today. He said
the storm caught their salt supply · were cov.ered and considered hazaroff-guard as they only had 80 tons &lt;1 dous. Early this morning, a dispatsalt. a-:ailable thi8 morning, which cher aaid the patrol had investi&amp;ated
· was "adequate" for the preaent a handful of accidents in its
situation. An additional 89 tons of coverage area.
· salt is expected for delivery this
"We've !lad calls where people
week, he added.
have slid into ditches, but by the
In Meigs County, a county higb- time the trooper gets there they've
been pulled out," the dispatcher
w~y department spokesman said
"we've formulated a system and a . said.
(Continued ci" page 12)
schedule, and we're fo!lowin~ 'it'' to
problem early thi8 morning. Gallia

County highway garage crews were

SLEEPW£AR

STARTING AT '14900

.; (Contlnuedfrompsgel)
~- Reed tearfully told the jury she

Elderly man_

After a dry run of about an inch'&lt;1

snow last week, winter's heavy hand

40% -0FF

WEDDING SETS 'COMPLETE"

~rry."

Tri-county area
victim of snow

Exl •••OI!Iorenurt

Although it's an aCknowledged
fact trash and other dispossbles are
1dumped along isolated country
roads, the Gallia County Health
Department is prepared to fi2ht th•
problem.
Sanitarian Don McDade said dumping near Cheshire may not only be.
done by Gallia residents, but by
people from Meigs County beca~
it's a conveniently nearby location.
"You have to catch it, and I
haven't caught anyone because I
couldn't get there In tb'ne," he said.
Dumping is a violation of Ohio
Revised Codes 3767 .:KJ and 3767.21,
which prohibit the disposal or transportation of trash along public
roads. Tbe fine is listed as $100 and
90 days in jail. The jail sentence isn't
applicable on the first offense.
McDade, a Meigs. County nat!~
employed by the health department
for the last four years, said Kenneth
Tomlinson, senior game warden for
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources in Gallia County, and the
. Gallia sheriff's department are to
patrol areas to spot dwnping and
· anyone caught in the act.
Tomlinson has the power to lasue
tickets on the scene, the sanitarian
said, and he will be patrolling the
areas on a daily basis.
Another way the deparhnent can
, fight the problem, McDade said, is
to get the iwne.o of property owners
alld alert them by letter to the dumping. Tbe letter will inform the
owners they have so many days to
clean the meas up before being cited.
McDade said one of the worst
areas where dwnplng bas occurred
is in the stripmlile area in Cheshire
and Addison townships.
.
"I would guess that It's been going
on in back of Addtaon for nearly :MI
years, but It's getting worse," he
said. "We're afraid aomeone fl'OJil
Meigs County - paalbly ·small,
commercial people - are coming in

GallipoUs attorney John HalUday
(who originally complained to McDade about the problem) but the
remains of one dead animal and a
few deer on opposite ~nds of the
road.
Another area where dumping has
recently begun is· Stafford School
Road, two miles west of Gallipolis.
"It's an .eyesore, littering in the

county," McDade commented.
"People should take more pride in
their cowtty rather than throw stuff
into a ditch.

roads is understandable since the
old GaUia landfill in Rodney was
abandoned after reaching capacity.
The new fill is on Roush Hollow Road
near Morgan Center In the northern
edge of the county. The Rodney fill
was more centrally located, he said;
Meigs County's green box
program also bit the dust last year
and it presently bas no landfilL
'

' 'It's a nuisance to suiTounding

residents, and It causes the presence
of rodents," he continued. "And if it
happens to get into the streams,
your wildlife is threatened."
McDade said dumping on rural

here."

h):

S.Wfl!u'rllrJ ?kllltradaj.h!rS I )IIIIIMiaday.HJPrlra
tile . . S.lllldaj, - . 8 'ry ... *41 llcalay. U. _.. II
S.tar*J,IIltlle.._IIDAjadiNIM 'y.
•

'

On a br.lef illapecttoo on Brick
School Road Wedneaday lftemoon,
McDade not only found mounda li
tlllrha&amp;e on· property owned by

..... -

•

I

e

5
I

..

Depjlb&amp;JIII.•Ia.fn, .pr!l1lll 111 • tru11
o.ru. Uti ......, •wldtiill
apot OD s.Ronllleboela.d o.tllpolk.
""""' paldiiF I IIIII&amp;
said tlnmplac Ia 08 tile rt.e, particularly Ia the strip-

wllere be bellevet!

boih

uve foud a CODVenient
•

'

,,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="215">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2805">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47141">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47140">
              <text>December 16, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
