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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

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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

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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

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GUN CABINETS, LAMPS; CHAIRS,

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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
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2 sections, 16 Pages
15 cents
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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

..... -

•

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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
•

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•.. .

ThP

r::ommentary
~

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IE

Gdansk?.______·_----,-___Wi_u_zia_m_F._.B_uc_k_ler_J_r.

·
XING TON, Ky. (AP) - Jerry
Clalborne
learned
hia football
froma
Paul "Bear"
Bryant
both
85
playerandcoach.
But Claiborne says he wiD be himIf

~niv:" .~ trt'esKto turnk around a

"'

::;. Pne has the feeling that a wah~~er through the street:' of Warsaw
~Y in a remote corner, defined as
W not direcUy under the super:~ of Poliah communists, might
~-illlo a graffito which would say,
:;:roLLYANNA WAS HERE. "
~le really thought Solidarity
~be permitted to triumph.
:t: ~~this writing the Soviet army has
~moved. But is it absolutely certhat it will need to move? There
~ nine million members of
~darity and their solidarity is
~wned, and certainly they out~ber the Polish armed units and
~~ee , who take their dirty inrtlclions from Moscow. But the
e size of the Polish dissident
_ ement does not argue that it can
:'~rwhelm the men with machine
~· Advised thal!OO,OOO American
:J!h~mans would not tolerate
~rica's entry into the First World
Yl'tir on the side of France and
~gland, Theodore Roosevelt is
~ted to have observed icily that
,.~ : have more than 100,000 lamp!~ . There are prohably more lam* Jlliosts in Poland on which to hang
- -1hem then there are Poles equipped
to resist.
·
To be sure as a practical matter
the Polish communists could not
contain nine million men and
women, and the next few days will
tell us how highly honed are the
skills of t!'e very few in subjugating

It is gratifying that in France, in sponsored consortium engaged in
Norway and in Holland significant building a '10 billion-plus gas line
nwnbers turned up to protest, lor a from Siberia to Western Europe anchange, not American efforts lo help nounced a suspension of ita aCtivity,
the West, but communist efforts to pending developments in Poland?
Wby haven't the chiefs of governkill the We~t.
Wbat about at home• 'From ment of the Western powers, who
Alexander Haig we heard confusing have no excuse for not having
references to his certainly thai the prepared for a contingency over one
refonns effected by Solidarity would
"continue." But it is predsely against those relonns that the Polish communists have been ordered to
At the extreme end of non- · mobilize. Mr. Kissinger, on the air,
chalance, we have that brave old predicted something very different
democrat, Helmut Schmidt. He from confident future refonns. He
traveled to East Germany, of all said that it was altogether probable
places, to stress .the point that that, one year from noll', Solidarity
would have become nothing more
nothing happening in Poland than
a communist-run labor union.
where orders had gone out to
executive anyone who referred to go So murh for the agony, the dreams,
to work - was important enough to of a people struggling to be free.
It is, of course, at moments like
affect his schedulj!d visit to his erstwhile countrymen Hving in East this - indeed, this moment may
prove to have been very nearly
Germany, who have not shown, in
opposing their masters, the same unique - that the organic weakness ·
of the West .becomes incandescent.
courage shown by the Poles.
It is high irony that when Mr. Sch- Wbat have we got, this side of atom
midt arrived in East Germa 0y, the bomb~i Well, we have an affinity for
only people permitted to greet him hwnan rights, and that is not to be
were the tested agents of the com- underestimated as a source of
munists. So that while he walked power. And we · have the overabout affecting informality and whelming purl of the world's
Gemutlichkeit, he found himself in a economic wealth.
Why have we not, in the United
situation not all that different from
Nations, programmed a theatrical,
what it would have been in Poland,
or any tyrannical state; his recep- mind-arresting, heart-stopping
filibuster? And on the Voice of
tion was stage-managed.
America' And BBC?...
Why hasn't the West Gennan-

the very many.lt isawaful to ponder
how many Poles would need tq die
before their oppressors stopped
shooting, because of fatigue or
revulsion. Wbo could end il? God, or
the Soviet Union. The pressures on
God, to judge from prayers said
round the world on Sunday, are very
great. The pressures on the Soviet
Union have hardly been unbearable.
If only Sakharov had fasted for the
Poles.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
614-m-:!156

DEVOTED TO TifE INTEREST OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~~

.

~~~~~:~dt~
ROBERT L. WINGETT

!Jook.

Publlsber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Maaager

Au lstant Pu blisher/ConlrBU l'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
'News Editor
A MEMBER of The Ansuc:la!.ed Press. lnlaad Dally Press AUO(JaUon and the
Newspaper PubiiBhers Allsoclallon.

America~

LETTERS OF OPINION are llo'elcomed. The)' should be less than 3111 words lona. All
h!Uelll are subject lo edlllng and DIUII be slpe4 wltb oa~m:, address and telephone aum·
ber. No unalgn,ed letters will be published. Le~n should be In good taste, addrenlng
issues, aot persooalltles.

Most investments
didn 't fare well
NEW YOIU{ (AP) - Your investments didn't fare so well in 1981,
you say?
Well, it won't do much to change
the figures on the bottom line, but it
may console you to know that you
have plenty of company. And if
yoQ'd tried something exotic like
commodity futures or foreign
currencies, your luck might have
been worse.
In the stock market, the Dow
Jones industrial average is down
about!O percent since Jan. I. Bond
prices, despite a November rally,
remain well below where th• y were
at the start of the year.
Gold, which came out of the star· ·
ling gate at1about $600 an ounce, is
now hovering in the low $400s.
· Diamonds have lately been quoted
at prices 40 to 50 percent off their
peaks.
While forecasts of lower inflation
rates have done very little to help
stock and bond prices, they have inflicted plenty of damage on the commodity markets . .One index of commodily prices dropped almost 18
percent in the first 10 months of the
year.
How about Swiss francs, German
marks or Japanese yen? All have
fallen in value against the dollar ~ince last winter. If you simply held onto dollars themselves, inflation kept
eroding their purchasing power at
an annual pace of close to 10 percent.
Even that old standby, the family

home, was no longer the reliable inflation hedge it had heen lor the past
decade. In the third quarter of this
year, for example, prices of new
single-family houses rose just 0.6
percent, according to the Commerce
Deparlljlent.
Economists point out that if
breaks on financing and other sales
inducements being offered by
builders were taken into account actual prices probably would have
shown a decline. In any case, their
recent progress has been no match
for the inflation rate.
The one prominent success story
of the year that comes to mind is the
money market mutual funds, which
yielded returns of close to I61lfrCent
for the 12 months ended Oct. 31. That
goes a long way toward explaining
why more than $110 billion has
poured into the funds since the first
of the year, more than doubling their
total assets.
Unfortunately, money funds have
a weakness too. Unlike many other
types of investments, they enjoy no
favored tax status. For an investor
in tbe 40 percent bracket, a 16 percent money-lund yield become&amp; 9.6
percent after federal taxes- and it
'drops even further if state and local
taxes are owed.
To complicate the problem,
money-lund yields have fallen sharply, to the neighborhood of,I2 percent, in recent weeks with the
decline in interest rates.

Today in history
Today is Thur.olay, Dec. 17, the 35Ist day of 111111. There are 14 days left
in the year.
,
Today's highlight in history:
On Dec.17,1538, Pope Paul III excommunicated England's King Henry

vm.

On this date:

.
In !531, the Portuguese Inquisitian began under Pope Clement VII.
In 1830, South American patriot Simon Bolivar died in Colombia.
fn !965, Britain imposed an oil embargo on Rhodesia.
And In 1973, Arab guerrillas attacked a U.S. jetliner at an airport in
Rome, killing 31 people.
-.
Ten years ago: The 16-day-old India-Pakistan war ended with a Cl!llllefire In Weal Paklltan.
'
Five yean ago: The Soviet Union freed Ita most prominent imprisoned
dissident, Vladimir Bullovsky, In exchange for the releaae by Chile of the
jailed Conummlst Party leader, Lula CorV&amp;Ian.
One year ago: The Senate Anned Services Committee called for a
renegotiation of ~ Salt II treaty with the Soviet:' . .

01

Jerry Springer, former live-term
Cincinnati councilman, isn't relying
on his wife to help pick up the votes
of women. And he doesn't believe
geography is important in the selection of a lieutenant governor running
mate.

The 37-year-old Springer, who has
raised a field-leading $1.3 million to
finance his primary election campaign, expounded on some of his
campaign theories this week on a
stop in Columbus.
His wile, Micki, wants no part of
the campaign, he said, quoting her
as saying, ''You're the politician .''

She refuses interviews and doesn't
make·speeches, he said.
Asked if her lack of involvement
mi~ht not be a llandicap in a campaign where other candidates' wives
probably will be active, Springer .
said perhaps so. "But it's not
negotiable," he said.
Springer picked wealthy Cincinnati businessman Kellfleth M.
Keele to be his running mate,
ignoring tradition that calls for him
to choose someone from another
area of the state to give the ticket
balance.
Keele already bas proven an 88Set
to the ticket in one major aspect campaign contributions from him
and his wife totaling $295,000.
Franklin County Treasurer Dana
G. Rinehart, seeking the GOP
n~1mination for governor in 1982, has

..

President Reagan want:' eliminated
anyhow. It reported that all employees except Secretacy Terrel H.
Bell and one a1de were furloughed
lor half a day, at a cost of $260,000.
They wound up being paid even
though they didn't work.
The Department of LHbor, on the
other hand, didn't furlough anyb4ldy
despite administration instructions
to lay off all but essential employees
because appropriatioll8 bad expired.
But the department said it was out
$2.4 million, the payroll coot of a full
day's work, on the theory that
nothing useful was done.
"A full day's pay was ljlled to per-

'ThE 'Pfi.RTY SAYS .'EAT:' '

hired a campaign strategist whom
he says is skilled in getting dark hor· ·
seselected.
Raymond V. Hwnphreys, of
Washington, D.C., in recent years
has helped elect Republican governors in the normally Democratic
states of Virginia, West Virginia,
. Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee, he says.
"He's surprised a lot of people,"
said Rinehart, who is making hia first bid for statewide office in a
Republican field which.includes better known candidates such as U.S.
Rep. Clarence J_ Brown, Urbana,
former Cuyahoga County Com·
miasioner Seth Taft, and Sen.
Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland.
Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes
says his perennial attacks on U.S.
Sen.'Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio,

should not be construed as evidence
he will run for the Senate next year.
· Rhodes, barred by law from
seeking a third consecutive term as
governor, has been considered a
possible candidate.
But now; Rhodes appears to be
back peddling, possibly because of
President Reagan's programs. He
strongly endorsed the president's
programs during last year's
presidential campaign, pointing to
them as the answer to Ohio's
economic doldrwns.
Rhodes says the worsened
economic picture will have nothing
to do with his deciaion whether to
run.
As for Metzenbaum, the governor..
said his attacks are not new. "We've
been needling him since the first
week alter hia election," he said.

fo~ the one-day phasedown a~

suspension . of department
operations," the agency told the
GAO, By· the time that was done,
Congress approved an extension of
the appropriations that lapsed in its
budget dispute with the presidant.
That extension ·expired Tueaday
but Congress has extended it
through March 31, accepting
Reagan's · demand for additional
spending reductions to get his
signature on the JDeaBure.
In the process, spending authority
theoretically was whittled by about
$2 biUion from the level that prompted Reagan to veto the earlier ex-

The following is a · response to argwnents, into allowing 11&gt;-year- trwn. Had Buckley investigated our
William F. Buckley Jr.'s column en- olds to buy HUSTlER on their news- magazine before commenting oo it,
titled "Burn, Ulysses, Burn" from stands is abSurd. HUSTLER's point he would have learned thai Larry
Jack Oleaker, editorial director of . of view Is that adult reading • Flynt Publications - HUSTLER,
Larry Flynt Publlcallona,Inc.:
material should only be avalllble to cmc, and GENTLEMAN'S COM. I read, with great interest, the adults. I can understand Buckley's PANION - were the recipient of
recent column by Wllllam F. fa1lu~ to know our position on this, eight national awards by the
Buckley conco:rnlng cenaorahip. smce he obviously haa failed to read prestigious , Communlcallon ArtS
Although Buckley does not our publications prior to Including SocietY.
specifically name the topic as such
them his colwnn. But I would ex·
All this I can put down to shoddy
it Ia apparent that this Ia wh8t he .; peel him at least to be aware that joumaliatic work by Buckley. What
speaking of. !lind Buckley gullty of magazines such as HUSTLER can- cannot be exCWied Ia the particularly.
a nwnber of commonly made errors not, by law, be sold to. mmors. Ob- dangerous Idea he puts fdrth that an
in his column, including one glaring vlously his point is moot.
arbitrary line can be drawn between
error which I wn particularly surliterature and trash. Wbo would
prised to see a man of hia lnteUect
Secondly, Buckley seems to feel Buckley have reaponalble for
commit.
that books such as "Uly&amp;aes" and drawing that Une - librarians,
The Idea that people are
magazines like HUSTLER are at op- preadlera, Jerry Falwell, perhapi
seduced, under Firat Amendment ~ite ends at the inlellectuall!piC)- himself? 'l1le fact Is that It Ia a abort

.

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tensioo and order the governsttf~
pllaaeddowntoellsellllals.
· t:(:
But. it was up to each agen
4if
to d~ide which jobs were
ai
on that Nov. 23 and which
. .
Interpretations varied wide! •1 ' e
federal employees who were itnt on
what was supposed to be an un id
furlough for a lew hours were ':1d
they could aJipeal the aCtion to the
Merit Systems Protection Board
'l1le board was shut down but ihat
didn't really matter beca~ th
turned out to be no reason for
peals anyhow. That was because!;
salaries were docked for the 1011
time.

.. CLAIBORNE NAMED TO
KENnJCKY - Jerry Caiborne,
footllall 0011cb •I MaryJ.ad for
the laat 10 )'HI'I, wu blftd Wed-.lay as coacb •t Keatuelty, biB
alma mater. (AP Laserpboto ••

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step from detmnining what is acceptable literature to detennining
·what is acceptable sex and, from
there, what is an acceptable race or
religioo.
I do not say Buckley ahould be cenSOred from voicing viewJI with which
I do not agree. His right to do that u.
fundamental to our free SOCiety. 1
support that right. What Ia 1mportant Is that he recogniJe that it Is
only by BUppOrting our 111111e riglt
· that be may continue enjoying that
privilege. u some honorary committee ill10111e day empo""ted with
the r1cb1 to censor HUSTLER,
lluckJey would do well to reaHze that
he could be next In Une.

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with three Atlantic . Coast ConIerence tilles and seven bow1 appearances.This season's ~I mark
was hia first losing season.
The 5:1-year-old Claiborne conceded that the Kentucky job would
be a challenge, "but if I didn"t think I
was up to it! wouldn't take it.''

'

A response to
Buckley's 'Burn. •

i!'

Virginia Tech, Claiborne was an
· tant at co1ora do 1or a year
BSSIS
before taking over a moribund
Maryland program in 1972 that had
pOsted a 7-25 record over the
previous three'yea.-.,
Clai.borne's Maryland teams have
been 77-37-3 over \he past •-·de,

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.. ,.

Auditors continue checking shutdown «;osts. ·.
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress•?nal auditors are. still
trymg to figure out how much 11 cost
the government when 1t alm~t .shut
down for lack of approprtat10ns.
None of them see~s to know the
~xact f1gure, but the1r best es\imate
•s that •t cost a lot and shouldn t happen agam.
The. only number the General Accountmg Off1ce. had to measure the
cost of the ~rllal shutdown Nov. 23
was $8.1 rmlhon. That doesn't mean
"?uch because .different agencies
figured the loss different ways.
.The Cabmet-level shutdown champ1on seem;; to have been the Depart•
men! of f Education, an agency

are hard work and an abillty to communlcatewithhiaplayers.
Claiborne said he was anxious to
meet with the Kentucky squad "and
gettoknowthembetter."
"It's good to be hom~," said
Claiborne, a native of HopkillBville,
Ky . who played at UK under Bryant
from 1946-49.
Claiborne ~erved as an ~sslstant to
Bryant af' Kentucky, Texas A&gt;&lt; M
and Alabama before becoming head
coach at Virginia Tech in,I961 and
compiling a &amp;1-37-2 record over the
next ten years.
After being unexpectedly fired at
.

Gn• . ._ file tOr
. bankruptcy

Springer's id~~a different from book
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - One
aspirant for the 1982 Democratic
nomination for governor brings
some ideas into the .campaign which
don't confom\ to the political rule

'

year in the making, announced a diagnosed by Whittaker Chambers
total economic boycott of the Soviet · almost 30 years ago in hia book "WitUnion on the plainspoken ground ness." In Poland we see. the best in
that the Soviet Union controls the the Western soul. Elsewbere In the
Pollall military, and the orders to West, we cannot do our part. Our
shoot dlssldenta were issued in irresolution may prove tenninally
effeetive. A century hence the
Moscow, not Warsaw?
Wby the Weat cannot seem to act hiatOrians may group . together
Ia an aspect of a dlseue beat Sarajevo- DaJIIIg- Gdanik.

oo hia cootracl after hia fourth consecullve
rail -6loaing season and an
ove 47 t.2recordinnineyears.
"I would like to see the Kentucky
program bacll: ·. .., top again,"
Claiborne said follOwing hia appointment. .ut he said be would have
to a
pliah that with hia own
I atributes and not anything
copied after other people, including
Bryant.
"I can't be Paul Bryant," Clalborne said. "Some people make the
mistake of trying to emula!e others.
I have to be myself.''
Claiborne said hia main attributes

en1uc Y football
program that has struggled in the
shadow of Bryant f or nearly three
decades.
'
Claiborne, · head coach
~ryland for the last 10 yea , was
Signed Wednesday to a fi e-year
contract as the new Kentucky coach
after receiving .the unanimous approval of the UK Athletics Board,
Kentucky never rediscovered the
glory it knew under Bryant - the
£~
~
Aiabamacoachwhohasarecord315
l.UIS
career Y,ictorles - in the late 1940s
.
and early 1950s. Fran Curci, the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mer- and $46,000 due Ohio Stat'e Bank. She
fourth coach since Bryant, W4slired
ehandise
in shoe stores owned by Ar· said debts !01 rented premises likely
Nov. 24 with three years remaining
will not be paid.
chie and Ray Griffin, football
T~ Griffin Corp. listed Archie as
players for the Cincin~ati Bengals,
president,
Ray as secretary and
and another brother, James, is being
James
as
vice
president and general
sold to pay off debts, their attorney
mal\llger.
says.
Documents in bankruptcy court
A petition lor personal bankruptcy
show
Archie has debts of $519,568,
liquidation for the three and their .
assets
of $127,750 and 19110 income of
wives ends a three-year venture into
$80,000.
Ray and his wile, Lynn,
a string of sii Athlete's Foot shoe
listed
debts
of $539,100 and assets &lt;i
stores. Five stores here and one in
$93,350,
including
a $90,000 residenSpringfield have closed.
Kathleen Ransier, their attorney, ce.
The third partner, ,James, and his
said she expects a liquidation sale to
produce enough to pay $170,000 oWed wife, have until Monday to submit a
the Small Business Administration financial report to the court.

rs• Y

i

I

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 17,1981

.

~ Sarajevo, .Danzig,

Claiborne chosen as Kentucky football mentor

•

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Thursday, Denmber 17,1981

T

Ohio

Turner
stalking
Jackson

Anderson heads AFC Bowl selectees
NEW YORK (AP) - Ken AnPicked with Anderson for the • Houston takes kick returns.
New York Giants and Matt Blair of
The rest of the NFC starting ofderson of Cincinnati, the National AFC's starling backfield were
Minnesota, linebackers ; Ronnie Lott
Football League's top-rated quar- Houston's Earl Campbell, the con- fensive lineup included Mike Kenn of of San Francisco and RoyneU Young
terback, heads the American Foot- ference's leading rusher, and Kan- Atlanta and Pat Donovan of Dallas, of Philadelphia, cornerbacks, and
ball Conference Pro Bowl squad an- sas City's Joe Delaney. The starling tackles; Herb Scott of Dallas, guard, Gary Fendk of Chicago and Nolan
nounced today.
wide receivers were Denver's Steve and ·Rich SaUl of Los Angeles, cen- Cromwell of Los Angeles, safeties.
Rafael Septien of Dallas will be
The San Diego Chargers and the Watson and Buffalo's Frank Lewis, ter. on defense, the starters were
Kansas City Chiefs each had five with San Diego's Kellen Winslow at Lee Roy Selmon of Tampa Bay and the NFC's place-kicker. Tom
players picked for the team, which tight end.
Ed Jones of Dallas, ends; Doug Skladany of Detroit will do the punwill play the NFC squad in Honolulu
On the offensive line, the voters ·English of Detroit, tackle; Lawren- ting, and WashingtQll's Mike Nelms
Jan.3J.
picked Pittsburgh's Mike Webster at c-e Taylor and Harry Carson of the will run back kicks.
1
Anderson was one of four Bengals -center, Hannah and San Diego's .---------------------------1
chosen in balloting ' by the AFC'i - Doug Wilkerson at guards and the
head coaches and NFL Players Jets' Marvin Powell and CinAssociation members. Other teams cinnati's Anthony Munoz at tackles.
with four representatives included
The starting defensive line has the
the Denver Broncos, the Houston Jets' Mark Gastineau and Joe
Oilers and the New York Jets.
Klecko at ends, with San Diego's
The NFC team, announced Wed- Gary Johnson and Miami's ~ob
nesday, will be led by San Francisco Baurnhower at tackles. Linebackers
quarterback Joe Montana, one of six picked to start were Robert_Brazile
49ers picked. He will be joined in the of Houston, Ted Hendricks ?f
slariing backfield by Tony Dorsett Oakland and Jack Lambert of Pitof Dallas, the NFL's top rusher, and tspurgh.
.
Billy Sims of Detroit.
!n the secondary, the startmg corBy TREADEASY
Wide receiver James Lofton of nerbacks were Oakland's Lester
Green Bay and defensive tackle Hayes and Pittsburgh's Mel Blount,
Randy White of Dallas were the backed by Gary Babaro of Kansas
leading vote-getters in the NFC, City and Donnie Shell of Pittsburgh
while New England guard John Han- at safeties.
nah topped the AFC balloting.
Pat Mclnally ?f Cincinnati will
The NFC leads the AFC in the handle the AFC s puntmg, while
series, 7-4, including victories in six Nick Lowery of Kansas City does the
of the past seven games.
place-kicking and Carl Roaches of
10662 CUFF F79

ATLANTA (AP) - Although
Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner
has received a favorable response to
a contract proposal given New York
Yankee slugger Reggie Jackson, efforts to sign the free agent are slippine lnlo the holiday doldrums.
"I can't aee anything happening at
all before Jan. 1," AI Tbomwell,
Braves execuUve vice president said
Wedneaday. "Our offices will be ofliclally clased from Dec. 2t to Jan. 2.
AU of baseball usually closes up

I

HAPPy GO *
LIGHTL

college basketball game Wednesday
night.
"We were making them take the
shots we wanted them to take," Rice
said. "We wanted Bobby Austin to
be high scorer and wanted to cut off
Dwight Jones and Mike Williams,
but they got away from us in the
second half. "
Cincinnati, 5-I, posted its I,OQOth
victory in 81 seasons, and 11 of their

last 12 over Duquesne, 3-3.
In other Ohio college games Wednesday, Bowling Green routed
Denison 59-34, Ball Stale beat Otterbein !l{HI() , Findlay edged Ohio
Wesleyan 6:Ki2 in overtime, Tiffin
defeated Wilmington 80-60, and
Baldwin-Wallace beat Illinois
Benedictine 85-67 in the first round of
the Rose-Hulman Tournament.
Cincinnati blew the game open in

the first four minutes of the second
half, hitting four of six field goals after shooting a cold 32 percent in the
first half in taking a 37-241ead.
" We rea lly are where we want to

be at this time, " said Cincinnati

Coach Ed Badger. " The one thing
that pleased me was our defense and
our bench. ''

Senior guard Maruus Newbern
scored 15 points to o_vercome a
Denison stall and lead Bowling
Green to its non-conference victory.
" We played with a lack of intensity,'' said Bowling Green Coach

John Weinert, "but that was due in

Jackson's ~gent, G~ry Walker of
Tempe, Ariz., telephoned Turner on
Tuesday "just to tell him that
Reggie is still very, very interested
... that this thing is down to four
clubs and the Braves have as good a

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Denison Coach Mike Ehrenfried. "I
scoring Denison 18-4.

"We told the kids at halftime to
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that was a big reason why Denison

Gary Egner scored a game-high 25
points and Stacy Andrews hit two
free throws in overtime to lead Findlay

to

its

victory

t

'

... , "

-

over Ohio

Wesleyan.
The teams were deadlocked 57-57
going intu uvertime.
Egner hit a field goal to put Findlay ahead 59-57. Ohio Wesleyan's
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For the
record •••

'\

ended up with 31 turnovers."

tc .Jt,p l.if~ p~cif.

•

keep
our momentwn
," said
"Going
into halftimeflowing
we wanted
to

don 't know what I said at the half,
but it sure did not work."
Bowling Green broke away at the
beginning the second half, out-

,

'furner respooded to the call,
Walker said, by mentioning for the
first time some specific nwnbers
that might be included in a contract
should the free-agent New York
Yankee slugger sign with the
Braves.
"I'd classify them more as figures
he felt comfortable with than as a
finn offer, as such," Walker said.
"We did not respond, but we will do.
that after feeling out everything else
from the other three clubs (Angels,
Yankees and Orioles)."
4
' 0bviously wf?' were encouraged
'br what he mentioned. It wiis very
fine, very fair ... good enough for us
to know that we'll be talking some
more,'' he said. '
Walker would not disclose the contract figures Turner menUoned, and ·
Turner was unavailable for comment.

'!For You and Those "j ou Love"

HIKERS

large part to the tempo of the game.
It was a very slow ball game."
Denison jwnped to 9-3 lead and
went into a stalling strategy, but the
Falcons came liack to make it 13-11
and held a 19-15 halftime lead.

Cincinnati rolled over the Pittsburgh
school 79..£0 in a non-conference ·

'

2lb.

Bearcats roll
over Duque~se
By The Associated Press
Duquesne Coach Mike Rice says
his team did everything it was sui&gt;'
posed to, but the score just didn 'I
come out right.
Senior swingman Bobby Austin
netted 24 points and Dwight "Jelly"
Jones added 20 as the University of

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Pomeroy-Middle~tort,

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio
The

Wahama plays Friday
6-2 Travis Gray; &amp;-2 Kendall
Weaver; 5-10 Nathan Davis; 5-10
Shawn Paugh; ~Estel Lavender;
5-10 carl Allensworth; &amp;-1 Glenn
Ferguson; 6-2 Alen Machir; 5-10 Jim
Powell; and 5-10 MarshaU Greene.
Junior members of the team are 5-8
Darren Gilland; 6-0 Mark Roush; 5-8
Jeff Russell; &amp;-2 Jerry Spradling; 6-4
Scott Kimes; and &amp;-1 Greg Harren.
Sophomores are 5-10 DoMie VanMeter; 6-0 Bill Clendenin; 5-10 Ron
seasons.
Bradley; 6-0 Eric Embleton; and 5junior varsity for two years com10 Tom Johnson. The lone freshman
Gibbs, along with six other piling a 24-12 record.
seniors, ended their careers at · Twenty-two prospective can- on the squad is~ Matt Dawson.
Returning lettermen are Travis ·
Wahama last year and have since didates are currently working out
Gray,
Darren GiUand and Kendall
graduated. Jn addition to Gibbs who under the guidance of Hall and his
averaged 20.9 points per game were: assistant, Tim Cullen, in an- Weaver . with all three figuring to
Scott Barnitz 11.0; Jeff Fowler 6.1; ticipation of Friday's .eason ' lid- . have the inside tract on starting berYork Ingels 5.8; Joey Roush 5.5; lifter. Of those 22, JO ar~ seniors, six ths during tlie coming year. Other
Tbdd Kitchen 3.0; and Dayid Sisk juniors, five sophomores and one possible starters could come from
Estel Lavender, Nathan Davis, Alan
2.0.
freshman.
As a result of the heavy toll
Senior memhers of the squad are Machir, Jim Powell, Shawn Paugh,
Mark Roush or Donnie VanMeter.
'·
This year's schedule shows a toqal
of 21 contests before sectional tournament play begiMing with BUffalo
on Friday and ending with Ravenswood on March 2, 182. Included in
those are a berth in the two day Poca
Holiday Tourney on Dec. 28 and 29.
In addition to Wahama and Poca
in the four team field are Buffalo
By Will Grlmlley
Putnam and Duval. Ironically, the
AP CorrelpODdellt
White· Falcons drew Buffalo in the
first round and will play the Bisons
.in the second game on Dec. 28.
Entertainer Bill Cosby was twirling hls television dial the other nigh, when
Also on the Falcons' cage card are
what to his wondering eyes should appear but 36-year-old Earnie Shavers, .home and away clashes with P~int
climbing into the ring once more.
'
Pleasant, Ravenswood, Meigs,
A few minutes later, right after Shavers did his thing, why there was Spencer, Poca, Southern, Kyger
Muhammad Ali, age 39, acting out the Drama in the Bahamas.
Creek, Southwestern, Buffalo and a
Being a sensible sort of guy, Cos decided then and there that senior citizens single game with Kermit.
like Shavers and Ali should be protected from reaching back for one more
Three of the locals' first four
springtime when ·autumn has clearly set in. So he has come up with a games are on the road including
solution which he offers, at absolutely no charge, to hoxing's Social Security their season opener at Buffalo. The
set.
bend area team's home opener will ·
"You know how tennis has tournaments for age classes li~e Men's 45 And be on Dec, 22 when they entertain
Over, or Men's Seniors?" Cosby said. "Well, they should do the same thing Ravenswood. The Whlle Falcons
in boxing. If you get older and you still want to fight, then you ought to be close out 1981 at Poco in the holiday
able to fight only against your own age group.''
tournament and open up the New
Cosby has a·whole list of aging candidates for his tournament.
Year at home on Jan. 2 against
'There's Ron Lyle and Kenny Norton," he said. "Shavers, Ali, Joe Southern.
Frazier, Scott LeDoux. We could even get Ernie TerrelJ and maybe Floyd
WAHAMA SCH~DULE
Patterson. I don't know, though. Floyd might be past'this."
Dec. 18- Buffalo· Putnam
Dec. 22- Ravenswood
There would, of course, be different rules for this group, .in deference to
Dec. 28·29 - Poca Holiday Tourtheir advanced years.
nament
, "The way I see it,'' said Cosby, "we would have two-minute rounds. Up till'
Jan. 2- Southern
Jan. S- Spencer
the eighth round, we'd have one-minute rest peribds. Then, after that, we'd
Jan . 8 - Point Pleasant
go to two-minute rests. If both men are still alive by round 11, we go to oneJan. 12-KygerCreek
minute rounds with a two-minute rest."
Jan . 15- Poe a
Jan. 19- Southern
The punches won't hurt much beeause Cosby's rules will require large,
Jan. 23 - Meigs
pillowy gloves to reduce the chance of injury to the aging. And In the corners,
Jan. 26 - Southwestern
there wiJJ be no stools.
Jan. 30 - Kermit
Feb. 2 - Kyger Creek
"Noooo," said Cosby. "We'll need recliners or maybe cots."
Feb. 5 - Pt. Pleasant ·
Cosby knows a little something about boxing. He is a ringside regular at all
Feb . 9 - Poca
of the big fights in Las Vegas and, in fact, he had a png careerofhls own.
Feb. 13 - Meigs
Feb. 16 - Southwestern
"Yeah, I boxed for about one minute," he said. "I retired undefeated. I
Feb. 19 - Buffalo· Putnam
was 1-0."
·
Feb. 26 - Spencer
His only fight came at age 12 in a Police Athletic League tournament in
March 2 - Ravenswood
· North Phlladelphla.
"They put me in against my friend, Edward Randall. Now in the first
round, Edward threw ahoul 7,000 punches. I just covered up. In the last 30
seconds of the round he was cbarging forward and I was covering up but
there were no punches. He was punched out. In the second and third rounds,
1 hounced and jabbed and won the fight."
Why didn't he continue?
.,.
"I had this terrible headache and I asked somebody why. He said 'That
other man was hitting on you.•I said, 'Does that happen aU the time?' and he
said 'Yes.' I decided then that it wasn't a good idea." ·
By GARY CLARK
Despite having 10 seniors and
three returning lettennen Wahama
High School head basketball mentor
Lewis Hail has ' a number oi
questions pertaining to the upcorning 1981-32 roundball season.
Most notably is the queslion oi how
his current squad will perform
without the services of Larry Gibbs
who has been the superstar of
Wahama basketball for the past two

graduation took from last year's 1111 sectional cbampionship squad,
Hall must flU some Important shoes
prior to Friday night's season
opener at Buffalo Putnam. ·
This year wiD be Lewis Hall's
third year as head coach oi the
White Falcon eager.. In his two
previous campaigns hls bend area
teams have posted 1$-1 and 11-11
records for a 27-15 overall suite.
Prior to !bat Hall guided the Falcon

Middleport Chancel choir to perform

I

•

~.

The Ollncel OIOir of the Middlepnrt Owrcb of Christ will present
"The Uvlng Chriatmu Tree" in
song Sunct.y at7 p.m. at the church.
The praentaUon is belnt! directed
by Maryln WUcox wltb Clarice Er•

.j'{

A Christmas program was
featured at the Friday night meetlng
of the Adult FellOWship Class of the
S)'l'aCIIIe O!arcb of the Nazarene.
Mary .JIIIIce Lavender led in the
singing of carols with EIJadeane
Watson readln« about the author of
"0 Utile Town Of Bethlehem."

'

1

row, TIDB HUes, Judy Weston, J~et Groves, Terri
Wilson, Breuda Dillon, Andrea Riggs aDd Vlekl
Teegardin.

Meigs women op col~ege
basketball squad at RGCCC!
'

-

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's Davis, a ·native of Oak Hill, Sophomore Sandy Steele bas the in-:
basketball Redwomen fresh off an averaged nearly 14 points per game sidetractontheotberguardslot, but:
exciting 77-55 victory over Ohio a year ago, while Clingman, from 5-7 Jackie Bonljll, 1efensive whlz:
Dominican traveled to Ohlo Univer- Springfiel.d, netted nearly 13 points Diane Martin and quick Tina May;
sity (Athens) to do battle with the and 10 rebounds per outing.
could also make a rnajoa impact this:
Lady Bobcats in the Convocation
Groves,' a native of Gallipolis, ac- season.
'
Center at 7:30 p.m.
counted for 16 points and 11 reboun,
The Redwomen opened the season ds per clash.
But it is inside where 'the Lady •
Saturday night at Lyne Center drop· VanArsdalen said that 6-2 Bobcats' strength could he. Cathy:
ping a tough 7HI9 decision •to ·sophomore center Terri Wilson oi Waller, a 6-2 center, averaged 6.5
Shawnee State in overtlme.
Pomeroy, 5-8 junior guard Kit:'· points and 5. 7 rebounds last year as•
"We're looking for a really tough Conley of Jackson, 5-9 junior for- a freshman. The forwards are likely:
game with Ohio University," said ward Vickie Teegardin of Utica, !Hi to be senior Patrice Marshall and'
Jalfiie VanArsdalen, Rio Grande's sophomore forward Vickie Clayton sophomore Karen Ga;egory. "We
first-year coach. "'fhey have three of Tippecanoe, and 5-8 junior for- have a solld nucleus to build around,
good guards and a lot of height and ward Tina Hiles of Lancaster will an said Ohio University's first-year
depth."
see action in a reserve role.
coacb Becky DeStefano. "There is
VanArsdalen said she'11 start ~
Heading the list of returnees for . np doubt1hat we have a Jot of work to:
junior Robin Hagen at guard point. Ohio University is Darlo Dutro. The do but the lalent is there. Alii have.
Hagen tl'ansferred to Rio Grande . senior was the only Lady Bobcat to to do is develop It and build It into a '
from Shawnee State where she 1 average double figures last year as cohesive unit." The Lady Bobcats;
averaged 17 points per game and she scored at an 11.3 clip a year ago: were6-20las~
was tabbed first team junior college / ~·
•I
,
Ail-American.
Gottfr1ed signs five-year contract
Starling opposite Hagen at the
.
..J ,//.._./ '-"' ·
,
other guard slot will be Sue Camp, a
CINCINNATI (AP) - University crease, but did not elaborate.
;
~ freshman from Swanton. She of Cincinnati football Coach Mike
Gottfried, who came to Cincinnati :
averaged 21 points, eight assists and Gottfried, who last week rejected an from Murray Stale University in'
six steals per game last season in_ offerfromtheUniversityofTexasat Kentucky, completed the first year
earning prep All-State laurels.
El Paso, has signed a new five-year of a lour-year contract this year.
, •
The UTEP offer reportedly in-:
Starling at the forward slots will pact.
be 5-7 senior Deanne Davis and 5-7
The university's athletic director, eluded salary, fringes and broadcast~
senior Kim Clingman, while 5-11 Mike McGee, said that the new con- clauses that were believed to Iota~
Janet Groves will open at center. tract , gives Gottfried a salary in- nearly $750,000 for five years.
'

ason

tzen

to

.

·Astrograph

Kim Cooley, Sue Camp and CarolyD Zefller. SecOad

Today's

Sports World

:Bass

Leonard
read scripture from
Matthew 2 and Rachel Cundiff had
prayer. A devotional meditation was
given by the Rev. James Kittle on
"The Night Before Christmas."
Games were played with Fannie
Aleshlre, Leonard and Oma Bass
oH

1881-112 RIO GRANDE REDWOMEN- Rio G,..,._
de's Redwomen opened !be 1881-82 season at Lyne Ceoler Saturday agalosl Oblo•Slate. Members of !be Redwomen squad IDclude, front r~w (froin left), Vlekl
Clayton, Robin Hagen, Deaune Davis, Kim Clinpaan,

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Imboden,
Syracuse, entertained with a surprise party in oboervance of the
third birthday of thetr son, Adam.
Altenclinc Were his grandparenll,
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Imboden,
Minersville, and lhe Rev. and Mrs.
Dale
Upland, Ind., his sister,

Tanya Stoblrt, and Shirley Bumgardner; tenors, Dan Erwin. Mike
Stewart, Adam Martlll, GleM
Evans, Paul Bricles, and Ron Alb;
and bus, Earl )lcKinley, Mac
Stewart, l(evln Loving, and David
Cole. The public II invited.

Christmas program highlights fellowship meet

l

~~

'

win, organist. Tbe choir members
are IIOpi'IJIOI, PeCil)' BrlctJes, Joam
alit, Debby Meltan, Mildred Riley,
Bea Stewart, Trudy WIDiama, and
Dorotby Roada; 111011, Mllzl Salt.
man, Cathy Erwin, Tanunl Stober!,

Imboden celebrates birthday

.
Deeember 18, 1981
This coming year are likely to become involved In thr!!e important
projects or V'lll!ures. ·Although they wO(I't be related to one another,
each has a good ~ce of succeeding.
SAGrrrARros (Nov. 23-Dee. 211 Just because you may be uncertain of achieving total success regarding a goal which ill important
to you, )'01! ahould not use this as an excuse to discard it.
CAPRlCORN (Dee. ZWan. IJ) An ambition you've been keeping
to yOurself has a good chance of being fulfilled today, but be very
:-'-careful not to hurt another's feelings in getting what you want.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Try to spend time· today with ~r­
:.. .Ons who stlmulate your thlnking, even thotigh yiiUI' beliefs may conflict. Each can learn by exchanging Ideas.
.~.
PISCJl'Jl (Feb. ZO.Mareb 20) Don't be afraid to stand up for your
·"· rights today if you feel you're not being treated fairly regarding
~· something to which you are entitled.
-.;
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Considerable give-and-take may be
• " requited today in several important one-~ne relationships.,Don't off
to a bad start by making unfair demands.
TAURUS ( ApriiZ&amp;-May 21) This shOuld be a very productive day,
· • provided you don't do thlngs in fits and starts. Having too many irons
. in the fire will bamper your efficiency.
•.
GEMINI (May Z1.Jue 20) Be very careful today not to turn ac; , tivities whlch should be fun into competitive situations. Should you
. • become too auerlive, It wiD arouse the ire of your companions.
;,
CANCER (JUlie U-July 2%) For sake of peace It) the household
today be sure there's agreemeQI on ways the youngsters should be
managed. Eruptions are likely if there are two sets of rules.
,
LEO (July Z3-Aug. 22) Even though yoll may feel your ideas and
, 1 suggestions are better than your peers today, be careful how you
,,, .present them. Use the soft sell.
.
'
VIRGO (AUI. 23-Sepl. 2%) In your material or commercial affairs
' :, today you ·are likely to use prudent judgment in some instances while
, in others you could be far too extravagant.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) Persons in accord with your way Of
thinking wiU find you a very pleasant and amicable companion today,
but any who challenge your·ideas will see another side.
SCORPIO (Oet Zt-Nov. ZZ) Even though you may deem it
distasteful, it would be wise at this time to remind one whose
·:. obligation is overdue of his or her indebtedne,'ls.

winning the prizes.
Sandwiche!a, homemade cookies,
candies, punch and coffee were served to Mr. and Mrs. James Millet,
Arlie Grindley, Enuna Hayman,
Ella Quillen, Oma HyselJ, Gertrude
Hall, Mr. and Mrs, Leroy Watson,
Junior Marlin, Mr. and Mrs. John
Powell, Uz Rice, Marie Rizer, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Lavender, Rachel
Cundiff, Fannie Aleshlre, Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Presley, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Bass, Hue! Hayes, the
Rev. and Mrs. Jamea B. Kittle. Next
meeting will be on Jan. 22.

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Mlin, PomerOy

j

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Finch-Leonard
·ready fo~ fight

.,

lillY'S

ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - Bruce FinFinch signed a seven-year
ch's days in boxing obscurity are professional contract with a
dwindling as hls title fight against Milwaukee promoter and learned
Sugar Ray Leonard draws near, and the hard way that boxing is not
both men agree that the hout is a on- popular in Milwaukee.
.
ce-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Fin"A lot of people don't even have
my record up to dale because a Jot of
ch.
The Elyria native meets Leonard fights weren't reported. That's why
· for the undisputed world weller- people don't know too much ahout
weight championship on Feb. 15 in me," Finch said.
.
Reno, Nev.
He moved to Las Vegas last sumFinch, 'll, wasn't Leonard's first mer and said that he found a much
choice for the fight, but fate in- better boxing atmosphere. Still,
most boxing publications give
tervened.
" I knew. he (Leonard) didn't want Milwaukee as his home town and list
- a rematch with (Roherto) Duran or his record as 16-3-1. Finch said that
(Tommy) Hearns right away," Fin- he is 34-3-1.
ch said. "And then Randy Shields
One of Finch's came when Hearns
was next in line, but he couldn't fight stopped him in three rounds. Finch
because of a bad shoulder."
said that the experience of that fight
Shields is ranked second by the and watching the Leonard-Heams
World Boxing Council, while Finch bout helped hJm devise a strategy
·
is rated fourth in the welterweight 'for Leonard.
"I found a couple openings I can
division.
"I believe Mr. Finch has a once-in- beat Leonard on," he said. "I \i1ink
a-lifetime opportunity to knock off a !'In better than Hearns and I think
man of my position and my I'm better than anyone else Leonard
capability," Leonard said wh•n the has fought."
aMouncement oi the fight was made
on Nov. 4.
Finch agreed. "I know they were
looking for someone to take lightly,"
he said. ''And I hope he does take me
lightly."
Finch had a rough lime gaining
notice In a popular weight division
that's crowded with weJI-knuwn
names. He was scheduled on the unPOMEROY BOWUNG lANES
ILUU.Y WEDNESDAY
dercard of Leonard's Sept. 16 tit.
MIXED LEAGUE
light agaiN! Hearns, but .his o:
Dee.~ 1111
Tum
Pta.
ponent Milton McCrory, w1thdrc .o: Smith-Nellon
Motol'l
70
after ~juring a hand in training ,
Toey'• carry Out
11
..
Finch's boxing career beg~n a Lon~
Zlde
Milwaukee 10 years ago. He co1 •· SmJih'ollody.....,
10
piled 8 »-6 amateur record and w• " 9C~- Jolin ry,.. 115, Pol Canon,:',
the 1f13 WiaCOnlin Golden Glov• ·o ~ _..and BID Pwter Ut, Botty Smllh
championship. His 1Mt amate1 ·
flllh pme- BW ,...._1., Pat Ca1'!01'12ll;
bout ..,.. 8 quarterfinal lou t • Jom Tyroe aa, Pol ea.......
Tnmllria- Zkte'.Splll't!laop 19111 .
Leonard in the natlmal Golde11
Tum pme- Tonr'• Carry Ou\730.
Gloves (Ournalnellt.

bowling

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,,

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-·-IMt

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It's called "Wi~rer Terry," a luxurious sweater knit with Jantzen's
finest aery lie yam in soft heathered colors. $28.50.

..

New
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�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Social Calendar
•

'Thursday
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
Christmas party, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Carrie Grueser. Members will
make Clirtsttnas baskets.
B~BURY

PTA Thursday, 7
p.m. at school willl students to
present a Christmas proRram.
Sale of Christmas coOkies and
handmade items will be held.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN CLUB
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. for a
potluck Christmas dinner at the
home ol Mrs. Okey Connolly.
THE MEIGS County Humane
5ociety will meet Thursday at
7: 30p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
'

Brethren Church, Teus community, will hold its annual
Chrialrnas program at 7:Ml p.m.
Sunday. A pgy, "The Gille olthe
IM" wW be Jll'llented by tbe
YOWIII people. 'l'bel-e will be
recitatiON and special vocal .
mllllic. 1be pubUc Is invited.

officers will be held.
CARPENTERS LOCAL Union
650 Christmas party, 7 p.m.
Friday, at lbe ball; members

only.

THE ANNUAL Christmas
program of the Carle~ Church
located on Klhgabury Road wUI
be held at 7 p.m. Sunday. there
will be a gift exchange following
tbe pragr~.

S da

un Y

CHRISTMAS CANTATA "Joy
To Tbe World," by Robert J.

Hughes, will be presented at the
Mason United Methodist Church
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. under tbe
direclion of Mrs. Luco'lle
Swackhamer. Accompanist will
be Mrs.
LynnEvelyn
IDrehen
at lbe
piano
and Mrs.
Proffitt
at
the organ. Soloists are Connie
Gilland, Debbie Roush and Gary
Stewart. Narration by the Rev.
Ben Stevens. The public is invited
to attend.

.ntE UNITED Pentecostal
ChurchofM!ddleportwillpresent
"Mary Had A Little '·-b,"
a·
_...

MEIGS COUNTY Coon Hun,
ters, 7 p.m. Friday at headquar·
ters on Snowball Hill~ election of

Racine UMW plans fruit trays for shut-ins------

Fairview News Notes

new appooad• to the birth of tbe
Messiah at I p.m. Sunday allbe
churdl. Tile publie II invited.

By Mn.llerbert ._..
st.opped In Albona a nc:Mt Sunday.
Om Manuel vllltedbluuter, Mr.
Mrs. Vlrtlle Sh.'Wal'l or Point
and Mrs. ArnOld Hupp a recent Pleaaant. Mr. and Mrs. James'
Saturday. Mr. and Mrl. Ernest Preston or CUlton viaite.J their
Bulb, Mrs. Jean llul and dalqlilten llilten, Mn. Elba Warner ar d Mrs.
or CUftcll were 'l1lanklllvlng Day Pearl Norrlll Monda)'.
gues1a of tbe Ruppe.
· Manclf and MlcbaeJ Rulse1l spent
Billy wuaon of New Phlladelpbla a Salurday night willl their grandand Brenda Kortzlnger of Dover p&amp;~"J~nla, Mr. and Mrs. RU&amp;'!Illl
were recent weekend guasll of 'Mr, Roush; Mr. and Mrs. Rusaell Roush
andMra. ChucliBurri'Fbanksglving. spent a Sunday willl Mr. and Mrs..
Mr. and Mrs. Joe manuel, Sid and Eddie Hupp and Jeremy at Por-;
Denise Manuel and Tim Manuel ttand·

SUNDAY 118l'Yicea at tbe Grace
Epi8cGpa1 CliUrch will be held at &amp;
p.m. with tbe Chrlllmu Eve aerviceal7p.m. On sUnday, Dec. 'II,
tbe evening service will be held at
5p.m.

--- '

CHRISTMAS program will be

held Sunday at the SyraCu.e
Church of tbe Nazarene. At 9:55
a.m. the children's department
will present a program lindl!r lbe
di~'on of Ora ""'- and t 6
• ""~
.....,
a
p.m. the teen depsrtment will '
ha ve a program ·-'....., tbe direc-

FILL YOUR
LIST AT .

AT BOB EVANS,
.A BISCUIT MORE THAN
AN HOUR OLD WILL
NEVER CROSS YOUR UPS.

June Perry of Route 1. Box 124.

warm Pine

SPECIALLY PRICED .
FOR CHRISTMAt! . I

All AMITY PRODUCTS

40% Off
15% OFF

&lt;15:&gt;

~~--~----------------VILLAGE PHARMACY

INGELS FURNITURE

PH. 992·6669

"The Two-tn·One store"

. AND JEWELRY -

.

The Danville Wesleyan Church
wilt bave its aMual Christmas
program on Wednesday, Dec. 23, at
7:30 p.m. Included will be tbe
children's program, a youth nativity ·
scene, and special singing by the
children and youlll along willl the
Rev. and Mrs. R. D. Brown. The
pubUc is invited.
Clarence 'E. McDaniel, . Mid·
dleport, bas been hospitalized at the
Holzer Medical Center since September. He is paralyzed from tbe ,
neck · down. Cards will be appreciated and may be sent to him at
Room 338, Holzer Medical Center,
Galllpolis, 45631.

$39500

BEMJTIFUL
7 DIAMOND SET

.

19!)00

ssgsoo

5
Reg.

mo.oo SAVE 551.00

•

Reg. 5695.00 SAVE 5100.00

: 1/5 CARAT
1FASHION NECKLACE

MAN'S DIAMOND
SOUTAIRE

. ssggoo

5159.95

1 CARAT TOTAL
·1,, ~ARAT TOTAL ·
• '14 CARAT TOTAL·
'• ,115CARATTOTAL
•1110 CARAT TOTAL
•.07/100 CARAT TOTAL

*

.-

WAS
$2.495.00
449.95
395.00
299.95
195.00
119.95

HAPPY
.HOLIDAYSI

&amp; BUCKLES

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

~~~~· ~~~~~~·~~~i!~~~~:;::::"!"!'!'
MIDDLEPORT

29P

·Jack Frost nipping at yoQr pocket? Come see
us for bargains you can't afford to pass up!

Levrs
The original heavyweight
un-washed Levi Jeans ..

.

'

FLARES
STRAIGHT LEG

•

Reg. 521.95
NOW $}8.
Reg. 529.00
I~S' NOW

MEN'S

$21.7

.

A Iso Student Sizes

NEW YORK
'

CI.OntiNG HOUSE

5127.95 .

Name
•

( · ) ANNOUNCEMENTS
( ) WANTED
) FOR SALE ( ) FOR RENT
' (

NOW

CASH ONLY! .

51995.00
359.95
299.95
229.9$
159.95
89.95 '

-

1.

2.
3.
'

5

Reg. $800.00 Save 5201.00

D
. r• ,JS,
IK.L

15 DDS - USE 1HE BUNK
BEUM 10 WRilE YOUR AD.

14K DIAMOND EARRINGS
·PRICED FROM 549" .

ssgsoo

~ECKLACE

I

'

. .
.. . . REG. $149.95 SAVE $30.00
:.TOO MANY
LE5 TO LrSl' ,

112 CARAT
DIAMOND
Q.USTER
.
. ..

LADIES' HANDBAGS,

3 UNES ME APPROxiMAtn1

' 14K DIAMOND NECKLACES
Reg.
Now
91
$129.95
s 99.95
'119
.
$329.95
5249.95 .

ONLY
Reg. 5595.00 SAVE $200 .00

8 DIAMOND

WORK SHOES CHIPPAWA, RED WING, SHEBOYGAN
CARHARTT MJRK CLOTHES
WESTERN SHIRTS, BIUFOLDS

Friends have ~Med a card
shower for Tommy H. McGralll who
is confoned to hls home by illness, on
his birthday, Dec. 22. Cards may be
sent to him at Long Bottom, 45743.

Bert ·Grimm. well-known Meigs
County resident, underwent heart
surgery Monday at the Riverside
Methodist Hospital • in Colwnbus.
Cards may be sent to him at Room
2012, Intensive Care Ward, 3535
Olentangy River Road, Columbus,
Ohlo43214.
·

Reg. $595.00 SAVES J·:io.OO .

We Will Be Open
Until .6100 P.M. ·
on Christmas Eve.

Announcements

·· ~

S47500 .

Frlclay, l;)ecember' 11th.

TONY LAMA; SHEBOYGAN
KNIVES BUCK AND CASE .

r---------1

Middleport. Oh.

·NECKLACE

Hollclay Season, Starting

Smith.

at only

We will be closing at 4:30 p.m. on . ·saturday,
Dec. 19th for our annual Christmas Party.

16 PIAMOND HEART

We Will le Open
Each Evening Until
1100
. p.m. . Thru the

4,000 pair of LEE JEANS
WESJERN BOOTS T£XAS; WRANGLER,

on

finish

Timex Watches

For Your Convenience

.

~e. baa returned from an ex·
tended depioyment to tbe Indian
Marine Cpl. Johnny A. Johnson, Ocean. He is a·a ewmember aboard
whose wife, Colleen, is tbe daughter lbe aircraft carrier USS America.
of tbe Rev. and Mrs. Robert Persons homepurted in Norfolk, Va.
of Route I, Box 46E, Long Bottom,
During lbe saVen-month cruise.
recently participated in mechaniud lbe America Participated In ••vera!·
combined arms training at Fort training exercl.ses involving units of.
Pickett, Va.
lbe U. S. 6111 and 7111 Fleets, and
He is a member of 2nd BattaUon, lllose Of allied nations. Port visits
2nd Marines, based at Camp were made to Palma De Mallorca,
Lejeune, N, c.
&amp;pain; Perth, Australia and
His unit participated in l!QUBd, Sln~pore.
·
platoon and company level tactics
' May a, 1981, 111e Amertca
involving the use of tanks, artillery,
tracked vehicles, air support and inbecame lbe first super-&lt;!arrier to
dividual weapons. They conducted transit
the Suez Canal, an event
live-firing exercises with the M-16 celebrated by a "Canal. Marathon"
rifles, M-80 machlnegun, the light aboard 111e carrier ~th more 111an
anti-tank assault weapon, mortars
The total distance covered by 1be
and other anli·tank weapons.
The training was designed to em- numers
was calculated
to be in ex·
1,200 crewmembers
participating.
phasize fire support coonliruotiol) IJe. cesa of 3,500 miles.
tween infantry, air, tank, artillery,
mortar and anti·tank missile units.
Tbe America Is 1,047 feet long arid
A 1977 graduate of Warren High carries a crew of 2,800 plus2,150 per·
SChool, Vincent, Jolmson joined the sonnel assigned to aii attack aircraft
Marine Corps in December 1976. ·
wing. It baa lbe capability ol
carrying 95 jet al~craft and can
travel at speeds in excess of 30
knots.
Navy Machlnisl's· Mate Fireman
Smith joined the Navy in January
Edward R. Smllll, whoae wife 1979.
Leala, . is the daughter of Fred and

I

Cloc~ os shown in .a

.· RUTWtD
MASON
FURNITURE CO. 'FURNITURE CO.
011.

Military news notes

A lot of pride hos gone into
this Ridgew&lt;Jy dock. And
you're sure to get a lot of
· out of it. This Qttractivit .deco·
rative accent becomes a source
of enjoyment for the whole
family as it marks each
.
hour . with beautiful West·
minster chimes.

Every daY, we make our biscuits from scratch and
bake them just before you're ready to eat them. Then we
serve them hot with lots of fresh honeY,
.
Our sausage is made fresh from the best cuts. And
every day we make our special sauce for our boneless
bart&gt;eque rjbs.
·
At Bob ~va!ls Restaurants, because we're so careful
from the beg1nmng, our food tastes better in the end.

it..

.

r~c~hl;ldre~n';s;m;uel;~;;;~;;;y;ing;;a;;;u;,·on~of~Deb;;m;·e~Tri;~;fil;;~;;;;~

THE MT. HERMON United

refrelhments . .

r-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;••-.;;;~

noere

Johnson

QllUSTMAS PROGRAM at
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The public is
invited to attend.

lbe year. Margaret Weal served

Fndt lraYI for shul·int will again church and tben go to McCoy's tbe thank ollerilll! service. Members
thl.s year be carried out u a apecial Realllurant in Ripley. W. Va. lor a turned in tbelr thank ollerlngs fer
Chriltmu prject by the Racine
.dinner aDd party.
will be • .,
United Methodlst Women •
gift ~· MariaM Flaher will
Plans were made during a present lbe program.
meeting held recenUy at the church
Etta Mae Hill conducted tbe
with members to meet at tbe church bus~ meetinl· Members agreed
later thiJ week to prepare lbe trays. to collect for lbe Heart Fund in
The aMual Christmas dinller and February. Loulle Stewart conducted
party will be held Monday at 6·30 tbe pledge service and Mn. ffill had ,
p.m. willl members to meet at

'

'•

Friday

The Dai

Thursday. December 17,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4.
5.

"

6.

Reg. s379:9s SAVE sio.oo

7.
l

9.
10.

.

OPEN _EVERY NIGHT

.

••

113

...
I

•VISA
, • MASTERCHARGE
.
. . ., lAYAWAY

nLL a:oo . o·~

c.N!rt St.

·POifiiiiJ, ~
.' 112·2814

· First choice
· .for

.·.

11.
12.

/

•

.

'

•

.

COMMON CLASSIFIED

'

13•
14.

IS.

.

,.••

II

;\

�\

•
Pomeroy-Middle

Page-lG-The Daily Sentinel
,

'

..

72 units of blood
collected at visit

Pomeroy United Methodi~t Women
install officers, make donations
Chrislmaa donationa

for

~

and offlcen
the 111112 year installed at the recent Chrlatmaa dinner rnellng of the Pomeroy United
Methodlst Church Women.
The group met at the Melga IM for
a dinner and then went to the church
social room for a meeting and pnrty.
Mrs. Robert McGee, president, advised the members of a reqlll!ll from
Annette Lambert of the Pooleroy
Health Care Center for a donation as
weU as for volunteers to aaalst in
programs for the patients. The
group voted to give $25 and several
of the members voiWlleered to assist
at the Center.
Allee Walnsley, RSVP director for
the Senior Citizens, advised that
trall!iportatiOI) for volun~ could
be provided by the Senior Citizens
and also that once a month, the
volW!teers and candystripers have a
get-together to discuss the work.
The group also decided to make a
$25 donation to the Meigs County
Jaycees for their Christmaa basket
project. Several thank you notes and
a communication from Olurch
Women United for a dooation were
read.
In a ceremony conducted by Mrs.

.

;:: CHRISTMAS MEANS CAROLING - Scouts of
r:,.,p 1100 "'Salisbury braved the cold Wednesday al·
~oon lo carol for pntlenls at Veterans Memorial
1 '

Hospital and the Meigs County Infirmary where they
also took favors for the residents. Margaret Parker
and Barbara Fry are leaders of the group which
traditionally caroi at the Mulberry Heights facUlties.

t outh will lead evening service
The youth of the Portland United
Methoilist Church will lead the ser·
viceDec. 20 at 7:30p.m. when the
churches of Southern Cluster No. 2
meei; at the Portland Church for
their'Sei'Vice.
TnO churches involved in the ser·
vice:are Bethany, Cannel, Morning

Star, Portland, and Sutton.
Twenty-six people from nine chur·
ches were present for this week's
evening service, held at the Cannel
Church. ,
The Dec. 27 service will be held at
the Bethany Church, with Eddie
Wandling of Charleston, W. Va.,

sharing music and message.
The evening service is held the fir·
st Sunday night of each month at
Morning Star, the second Sunday
night at Cannel or Sutton, the third
Sunday night at Portland, and the
fourth Sunday night at Bethany.

Missionary Society .meets,
holds
·christmas
program
..
•.

•

M,&amp;nbers of the Missionary
Society of the Pomeroy Church of
Chri!lt mel recently at the home of
Mrs: ·Janet Venoy for a Christmas
program and gift exchange,
Mrs. Eileen Bowers presided at
the lneeting with Mrs. Evelyn Smith
givipg the opening prayer. Roll call
was· on Christmas. Anna Davidson

had a reading on the woman of the
Bible, Mary, the mother of Jesus.
The mission study was on the Maxie
family who will be here in February
and was given by Betty Spencer.
Charldine Alkire the secretary's
report, Mrs. · Spencer, the
treasurer's report, .and Mrs. Venoy
the flower fund. The program was

presented by Mrs. Spencer with
Mrs. Venoy and Mrs. Alkire singing
1

were made

'Silent Night.''

Refreshments were served to
those naJI)ed and Elizabeth
Ohlinger, Gertie Bass, Eva
Dessalier, Naoqli Ohlinger, Next
meeting will be at the church with
Miss Ohlinger as hostess.

,,

Seventy-two units o1 blood were
colleded at the Wednesday visit of
the American Red Cross Bloodmobile held at the senior citizens
center.
Seventy-six.personS attended and
of the 72 units of blood received 30 o1
them were replacements.
Richards Barton was an 18 gallon
donor, Howard Parker a nine gailon
donor, Mary K. Spencer, eight
gallon donor, Clara France and
Helen Blackaton, two gallon donors
Mark Riggs, Rodney Spires, Josepb
Hall, Donna Aleshire and Faye
Wallace aU one gallon donors. There
were nine first Ume donors.
Doctors on hand were Dr. Wilma
Manafield and Dr. James Witherell.
Nurses assisting ' were Ferndora
Story, Lenora Leifheit, and Jackie

McGee, the new officers were ln- made visible both In the penon ''
l&amp;alled. They are BeUy Beronick, Jesus ChriJt and iD Hill people, al •·I
president; Evelyn · Lucke,. vice to experience the joy of ,beCamir•.;
president; Ruth Moore, secretary; visible In love lor other.
A medley of Christmas~ w:.
M)'rtUl ·K. Parker, treasurer;
played
by Mrs. Martha Hoover l c
Maxine Goellieln. aecretary of
open
the
prngrllll. Mn. Lub read
p'rogram resources; Polly
"A
ChrtslrnaB
Service" with Thelma
, Eichinger, secretary of Olrlstlan
Dill,
J&gt;!eUie
Wright,
and Mrs. Downie
personhood; Marie Chapman,
before
a
manger
scene
doinB 1111 insecretary of supportive conununity;
Alice Struble, secretary of &lt;lu1stlan terpretation of the carol, "There's a
lliobal concerna; Faye Wildermuth, Song In the Air." Clnda lfllrkless
chairman of the committee on was soloist as the group joined in the ·
·
nomlnatiOII8, and Nellie Wright and interpretation.
Goegleln,
a
pest,
Charlene
Thelma Dill, conunittee members.
llhared
the
story
of
Merclel
Doly,
"A
As each officer was instaUed, she
True
Christmas
Story."
Mrs.
Lucke
was given a key to her office and a
comment from the installlng officer read a Christmas vignette written
on the duties of the office. Mrs. . by a missionary family serving
McGee thanked the group for ovel'SI'8S, and Mrs. DUI had the
cooperaUon during her two tenns as closing prayer.
In the rule of Santa, Mills Goegleln
president. On behalf of the group,
distributed
the gifts whlc)l had been
Dorothy Downie thanked McGee and
placed
beneath
the Cbrlstmu tree
presented her with a gift of a past
by
members
for
their prayer partpresident's pin.
Evelyn Lucke was program leader ners, along with other glfta for memusing the theme · "A Humble bers. The prayer partnera were
M•:nger." She emphasized the pur· revealed and new names drawn.
pose as being to hear the story of Among the de®raUons was a
love made visible both at the firSt ceramic manger scene made by
Olrtstmas and now, to undel'llland Myrtis K. Parker. "Silent Night"
better the celebraUng of Christmas closed the meeting.

recitations being by Travis Grate,
Adam Sheets, Tyler Wolfe, Mandy
Slaven, Annie Riffle, 1111d Brenda
Ash. Plano selectons were 'by Tara
and Debbie Gerlach, Aaron Sheets,
and Jared Sheets.
The Christmas skit entitled
"C~ristmas," Yesterday and
Today" was presented by the .
primary children, Sharia Cooper,
Jared Stewart, Kim Hanning, Tara
Gerlach, Stephanie See, Linda Chapman,. assisted by their teacher,
Cathy Cooper. "Away in a Manger"
was sung by the childen listed and
Stephen See and David Cnnichael.
Debbie Mellon led in
congregational singing or'"Hark the
Herald Angels Sing." Juniors taking
part in the skit were Chris Stewart,
Jeanie Terry, Matt Erwin, Scott
Melto,n, Sherrie Cooper, Paul
Melton, Scott Hanning, Joey Loving,
Davey Dodson, Pete Brickles, Kay
Smith, Mandy Hubbard, Pam and

U!ura Krebs and mother, Maude
,Hol~omb, recently toured in the
eastern states including points of in·
terest in New York State.
special revival services were held
at Temple United Methodist Church
with Rev. Carl Hicks as evangelist.
The services were well attended. A
potluck carry-in dinner was enjoyed
a recent Sunday followed by a hymn
sing and praise service.
!teed Jeffers has returned from
California where be spent two weeks
as a guest of his son, Lee Jeffers and
fmil!ly members.
Ralph Jordan spent Thanksgiving
vacation here with his parents,·Mr.
Mrs. Dorsey Jordan. He is a
student at Hocking Technical
. m
. NeIsonvt'II e.
CoIIege and .lS I'tvtng
.,.., visiting at the Jordan home
"""''
i
wer.e Mr. and Mrs. DeMis Devoe,
Columbus
·"" Akr'onand Miss Dawn Hun·

an4

Sl,ner,

•

'l'hanksgiving Day guests at the
of Mr . and Mrs. Willi'am
Clltadle incbeluded Ltinheda fHaoll"'!"'g
11$ily mem rs,
rnson
an11 Bin Ross, Stoutsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Johnson and son, Cir·
Doris and Cindy Ross,
Joe Gerchey, Ashville ;
.Mr. and Mrs. Rex

..
home

Cheadle, Don, Kathy and Bradley, COllectedtben andSecret'Palgiftex·
andMr.andMrs. Re.ieCheadleand change will be held. Plans will be
son, alllllcal. .
completed to fill boxes for several
Ida Denison returned home a church and ocmmunity members.
recent Friday after spending
Bertha
Crippen
spent
several days, including Thanks- Thanksgiving with a brother·in·law .
giving, with Edith Talbert near and sister in Clevelllnd.
Salem Cente.r
Murl Galaway was a guest of her
Those from Colwnbia Grange who son-in·law and daughter, Mr. and
attended Officers' Conference for Mrs. Leon Woodrum in McArthur on
Meigs County Grangers at Rock Thanksgiving Day.
Springs Grange hall included Bertha
Family members gatllering at .the
Crippen, Arthur Crabtree, and Mr. home of Mr. and Mrs. Mendlll Jorand Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
dan during Thanksgiving Day inMrs. Harold Gillogly, Vicky and eluded Mr. and Mrs. KeMeth CrabBruce and Mrs. Walter Jordan, tree, Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, .
. Joshua and Jeremy, joined family . Sarah Faye, Keith and Bryan,
members at the home of Lincoln Tracie Brown and Mr. and Mrs.
~ussell, Wolf Pen, on Thanksgiving Waller Jordan, Joshua and Jeremy.
Day. Mr. Russell, who spent a few
days at Veterans Memorial ·
QflQf fQ
Hospital, Pomeroy, is now at home.
· E "'
.
•Mrs. Le WlS
. Sm1'th VlSl
. 'ted Wl'th her beeRIO
GRAND " ne toea 1 otu-nll! have
1111111 1Wd 'o the honor roD ror the lall quarter
son-in-taw and daughter Mn and oiHinGrandeColl•i"OMICCNrununltyCollege,
M
R
th · '
' .
ln ordertoquallfyforthe honorastudtntmult
rs. eece Pra er m Ketenng eama3.75 ~Jradepolntaveraee ronaUscalel
from Wednesday until Friday recen- ..rtudent
ror '" work lak"" ""''"" '"" previOW&lt;Ienn. A
11
must have benn enrolled for a minimwn
Y·
o112 houn ror constderaton aOMI mual compler.
Mrs. WallerJordanwashostessto oiiCOlllr8eB. ' ~..•
thel , 1 1... _
theTempIe Um'tedMethodistCh ur·
•-••,.-"'"'namedto
"'"'-'
Noncy A. Burtlll, Middleport, saOMiy
L GarMrschWomenRa Pri
's _Groundp inM herMhomndae. ~ih=l~~ ~: ~~~~~
.
Y ce a
rs. e I Ta;runy L. PI,.., Lon!&lt; aouoon; Joan Rllc:hart,
Jordan gave devotions using "The Syracwoe; o... R, Snowuon ••" Roloin M.
Gills of the Spirit," as the theme. r-811
_ ..
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree wilt be hostess
for the December meeting in her
home. The World Bank gifts will be

H

.11

=

All Middleport Village funds as of
Nov. 30 totaled $419,062.95, ac•
cording to the monthly report of
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck. Receipls
and expenditures of each fund for
the month and the balanae at the end
of the month, respectively, follow:
General, $22,733.33, $16,923.59,
$1~.394.60 ; street light, $2,796.34,
$1,113.95, $12,944. 70; cemetery,
$1,555.16, $938.46, $1,269.76 deficit;
lire equipment, $48, $552.21, $1,429.58
deficit; swinuning pool, no receipts,
$23.53, $225.10 deficit; fire truck,
$5,015,57, $41.28, $31,585.29; planning
commission, no receipts, $12.56,
$167.27; street maintenance,
$11,628.13, ~.871.33, $598.50; street
levy, $2,798.35, $66.42, $2,793.46;
federal revenue sharing, no receiP:.
18, no disbursements, $8,388.~1;
HUD, $100,064.75, $100,346.~8.
$6,223.31; general bond retirement,
$932.78, $22.14, $19,552.56; sanitary
sewer, $5,753.95, $5,984.68, fii,IJ4.78;

Christmas.'' .
The program was directed by
Dorothy·Roach with Jennifer Sheets
at the piano. Others assisting were
Thelma Boyer, Dinah Stewart, Betty
McKinley, Edna Evans, jane Hess,
Trudy Williams, Mitzi Saltsman,
.and Sharon Johnson. Junior high:
members serving as ushers were .
Caro1e Bailey, Carol Smith, l)arin
Roach, and Paul Brickles. Treats
were given to the children.

ntE "RANGER"

---------------------------ALL

BLANKETS
•
~

20%(ff

species of pine groopings. Members Susie. Warner, Mrs. Kathryn JohnpineswasgivenbyMrs. ldaMurphy wereremindedoftbepinelreesale son, and Mrs. '11¥!lma Giles. Mrs.
at the recent meeting of the Fer- · with orders to be in by January.
Johnson used a Christmas theme in
nwood Garden Club held at the home
The Lord's Prayer was repeated · her table decorations and refreshof Mrs. Helen Johnson.
and Mrs. Johnson served refresh- ments and gave each an ornament
Mrs. Murphy talked of the ments to those named and to
lor her family tree. ·
varieties of pine noting that they are r;;;;;;;~=~~~~~:;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;
always green and decorative and
spoke of the many varieties, some of
wh,ich make good hedge, some with
flOW!i"" or berries, and others with
only green foliage. She spoke of
WEARE
training and tr~ pine and
noted that all need Jots of water and
W11H PRICE REIIJCIIJNS 01 M1 OOR
aliquld or solid plantfood.
As a Christmas tree, Mrs. Murphy
1978 AMC
1910 JEEP '
said that one should consider the
CONCORD II;
CJ.7HMDIOP
color, the foliage, the retention of
A.C.,
S
speed.
Alloy
Local
one ownH", 6
needl08 and the llhape and strength
Local owner, 6 cYI ., 4
cyl., automatic lockwheels.
door, A.C.• P. ~ .
. of the tree with the Scotch pine, blue
out hubs .
onruce, while pine and Dou..l•· fir
Wn$3995
..,.
~
beintJtbefavorites.
'
Now
Slle paaaed out copies of material
1978 BIJICI(
which she used in her presentation.
1976 OlDS
Mrs. Marjorie Purtell had
SIMMK
CUI1ASS "44Z"
devotions using a· reading "A.
V ·6
Power seats, locks,
Local one owner. · Economical
Spanking Clean Christmaa" and a
top.
windows.
A.C . ,
black
on
black
.
engine,
vinyl
prayer for December.
A.C.
cruise control.
Forlherollcall,,membersbrought

.Hush
lli ' .. '

LADY'S GIFT
1 GROUP
AILEEN

PP.!~~

WARM UNED
BOOr FOR MEN

1h PRICE

1979
MaGNUM XE

1BI'OIRW:

socket seats and
console, chrome
wheels, A.C.

A.C .. till whoel ,
cruise control, road

GRAND PRIX
Wheels.
57491

:.:1549S '4115 rt:!

I F'SMIIE

A.C., wood·
rear wiper.

Leather

Lilt this little 4 _ .
~--:...~ drive , you

\)~~~1\~S

.

lsotoner Gloves
Blazers
Levi Bencloven
Skirts
Sweaters
Cas.,al Jackets
Car Coats
All Weather Coats
Dreu Coats
Blouses
Slacks
Dreues
Scarf Sets
Handbags
Billfolds
Key Cases

GIFT .
CERTIFICATEs.

5 Uppers

Hosiery

Thermal Underwear

BAHR 'CLOTHIERS

SHOP IN
MIDDLEPORT
STORES OPEN EVENINGS TIL CHRISTMAS

James ArdeQ. Depoy, Route · I,
Guysville, has filed a suit in the
amount ,of $9,8110.72 against the
Buckeye Union Insurance Company·
and the Universal Underwriters In·
surance Company, both of Columbus. The action is for a claim on
t!l"ls stolen while the. plaintiff was
employed at the Pomeroy Motor
Company.

,

FREE PARKING
mas Dollars Spent Locally
lp ~uild A Brighter Community
Every dollar· you spend shoppin'g in your town during
this hoi iday season , is, in effect, a present for you and
everyone
else
in
the
community!
This
money
redistributes itself in the form of business improvements
and expansions, creating more modern facilities for your
buying enjoyment! ·
Local businesses want and need your patronage during their busiest time of the year ·and they're willing to go
out of their way to serve you better. To them, the
customer is always tops on their list ... holiday time and
all through the year! Remember .. . there is no need to
roam anywhere else. The best shopping is right in your own
backyard .. . at home!
;

Toaster Boots
forWonlan
.

by

'

ntiS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY ntE
MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION
REGISI'ER Af PARTK:IPATING MERatANTS FOR

u~.""
;

Regular '29.99

SALE

•

.$2·399

•

' 00 P'IN:s

1110.00 TO BE GIVEN MAY DEC. 5th
11110.00 TO BE GNEN AWAY DEC. 12th
'100.00 TO BE GIVEN AWAY DEC. 19th
, '200.00 TO BE GIVEN AWAY
22nd
1

Keep your feet warm
this season in Toaster
Boots by Thom MeAn.
Good looking · boots
with suede uppers and
lots of fleece inside.
And a soft and flexible
non-skid sole.

WosS4m'4195

1171 CIDS

V·6, auto., a.c., p.t :,
p.b.. cruise, wire

wheel coven.

.

.

heritage house

• Pigskin

...- .". '1HE SHOE BOX
'

Westchest~r

GALLIPOLIS

OONVERTII!
Low. low mlln. New
Spirittrade-in, super

i

Leather Gloves
Belts
Levi Denims ·
Levi Casuals ·
Hats
Caps
Wallets.
Underwear
·Flannel Shirts
Travel Kits

Money action filed

-

Gas Bill at:

·. · '

"Christmas That
Almost Wasn't"
"Hugo the
Hippo"

@11 980BOB EIIANSFARU FOODS. INC

•Tin .Brushed·
Pay Your Columbll ·

11.00.

sanitary sewer escrow, no receipts,
$1,783 .50, $143,198.79; water, ,
$8,446.06, $10,769.62, $43,508.63;
water meter trusts, $450, no disbur·
sements, $8,496.13; water tank,
$5,537.53, no disbursements,
$15!,020. 78.
Receipts for the month totaled
$167,757.95 while disbursements
amoWlted to$141,330.87.

1528 EASTERN AVE.

velour Int.
WuSS395

l!xtra clean clir.

matinee shows al 1:00
and 3: 15. Your choice of
two special ChrlstmiiiS
shows . All sots just

IIESTAUIIANTS

Sport Coupe, turbo,
V -6 eng .. cruise,

dOn'! mill! thll one.

Spring V•lley Cinema.
We will also have twa '

lord, Brenda J. Davia, Lesa Sinuns,
James Simms, Paul A. Rice and
Thomas W. Hoschar; Mineraville,
Deborah D. Brown; Middleport,
Patricia Vaughan, Debra Carder,
Patricia Logan, Joyce Bartrum,
Lillllll. Haley, WUUam Allen Black·
wood, James R. Dailey, Kenneth W.
Madden, Carolyn Triplett, Marjorie
Caton, Faye L. Wallace, Judith K.
HWller, Lealy Chaateen and Clara J .
France.
From Chesler, ~ C. Wolf;
Rucine, William H. Hoback, and
Dorothy M. Sayre; Syracuse, Millon
E. Room,OonnaJ.~reand
Virginia L. Davia; Long Bottom,
Harlan Ballard, Henry Bahr,
Howard E. Parker; Rutland, Larry
llau, Karolyn Black, and Fred H.
George; Tuppers Plains, Sarph Lun·
sford, Maxine Wiener; Cheshire,
Rodney Spires, Charles Searls;
Reedsville, Deborah L. Sanders,
Richards S. Barton, and Mace! Barton~ Rutland, Michael Warner, and
Lois, A. Walker; Hemlock Grove,
Jack R. Welker and Jena Walker;
Portland, Lawrence R. Groggel.

FOR HER

FOR HIM
Suits
Sport Coats
Sweaters
Shirts
..
.
lsotoner and

~b-

1977."
lherr~.

'6195

l Between 11 ,30 • net
12:30
Santa will be arriving
by htllcopt11r at the

a:Vaughan, Faye F. Clif.

~C: 14495 '3195

1978 IUlCIC

• Tan .Smooth ·

1---------------: OPEIIll. 8 11 aBniAS

'2:115

Tues., Dec. 22

AN HOUR ()I D WILL
NEVER CROSS YOUR UPS.

A program, ori the versatility of

13395

SANTA CLAUS

.A BISCUIT MORE THAN

.

::!

Brlq ""kids to ~ee

Kenda Braun, GlOria K.

Riggs, L.

FE&gt;R 1161 mlttllll

Hey, Mom a Did:

Village funds total $449,062

Kris Ash, Jennifer Mckinley, and
Jared Sheets. They were assisted by
their teacher, Maryln Wf.ICox. "The
First Noel" was sung by .._, group.
A dialogue "Thfl Unchanging
Me~ge" by grandmother aqd
grandchildren was given by Clarice
and Matthe\V Erwin. Singing of
"Silent Night" and prayer by Mike
Gerlach concluded the program.
The children left the auditorium
singing "We Wish You a Merry

versatt•lity of pm•
· es at meetm•g

_.,.._._-_o&amp;_,. ,_"'_"_'·- ------'--'---------,---1

LAST MINUTE GIFTS

FAMILY GIFT

.

Clark,

Clearical · workers were Mary
Nease, Juanita Sayre,1 Etta Mae
Hill, Grace Drake, Faith Perrin,
JW1e Wamsley, Virginia Buchanan,
Joyce Hoback, Margaret Eskew,
Crystal Richard, Mace! Barton,
Lula Hampton and Vernon Nease.
Chairs and tables were placed by
l'lllployes of R.S.V.P. with Mrs.
Jeanie BraWl serving as chainnan.
Senior ciUzens assisting were
Thelma Dill, Florence Richards,
Clarence Struble, Bernadine Meier
and Myrtle Sisson. American Legion
Post 128, Middleport, was in charge
of the canteen.
, Donations were III8de by Quality
Print Shop, The Dailey Sentinel, The
Athens Messenger, W.M.P.O. Radio,"
senior ·citizens program and .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Donors from Pomeroy were

Meigs County Correspondence Fernwood Garden Club discusses
;
Carpenter

---

·llt·'Mie GIFI' IPMS

531 JIIICdON ... ...... WElT

Loraine Venoy, Kelll aellllld, \
Taylor, Diana Jarvll, Enna Sllllth,
Carolyn Jeffera, Debra Mora,
RusseD Moore, Mary Starcher,
Helen Blacbton, Mark Rilgs,
Rowena Vaughall, Leo Vaughan,
Opal M. Grue&amp;er, JOIMjPh C. Hall,
Donna L. Evans, Howard P. Logan,
Homer Baxter, Mary K. Spencer,
Billy J. Spencerj Virgil Byrer, Bar~ J. Kt!nnedy, Gerald Rought,
Virgil Windon, WUUam Quickel,
Jack Welker, M-,rk Venoy, SheUy

Frost.

Middleport church children
present·Christmas program
The 8Mual Christmas program by
the children of the Middleport Church of Christ waS presented Sunday
evening at the church.
The children entered the sanctuary singing "Joy to the World" af·
ler w~ the primary chll~ sang
"Belli ilf Christmas" and the nur·
sery children performed with bells
while .the older children sang
"Jingle Bells."
Taking part were Evan Saltsman,.
Kasey Williams, Jonathan Stewart,
Brandon Johnson , and Tyson
Slaven. Toddler childrert giving
recitations were Alison Gerlach,
Cindy Stewart, Chris Olapman,
Jacob Davis, and Brent Hason. They
also presented a song and finger
play assist,ed by their teacher, Deb. bie Gerlach.
A recitation and song, "Happy
Birthday, Jesus" was given by
Bridget Davis with other primary
children participating with

1

The

r 17 19t1

;

'

Ofii!QU
Middleport

. 225 N. second

·~

.

-~

'
.. ' •

.

· Middleport,

,,

I~

\

'

. '·

.,

"

l

'

�•

I

...K..-Mi)';~ocrats . agree

Thursday.

I

17,1981

December 17,tm

81

Business Services

'

y~ar

of Republicans

END OF SESSION - Seaate Majority Leader
Howard ·Baker, R·Tean., right, and Senate Minority
Leader Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., speak by telephone to
President Reagan Wednesday evening on Capitol Hill,
following the adjounlment olthe Senate lor the year.

In commenllng earlier on the year, Baler 181d II was a
"controvendal Congress," that umade more fundamental changes in the public policy of this aatlon
than any Congress in decades." (AP Laserpboto).

Snow hits Ohio
By Tbe Associated Press
Southwest Ohio got its first taste of
winter today as an overnight winter
storm dumped four inches of snow
on the Cincinnati area, snarling rush

hour traffic and closing outlying
' schools.
' The National Weather Service
posted winter stonn warnings for

the northern tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the state
and travelers advisories in the

southern third of the State.
Up to six inches of snow were ex·
peeled in the Cincinnati area, which
had gone without an appreciable accumulation until today. Public
schools remained open without
yellow bus service, although many
southwest Ohio school systems were
closed.
The weather Service said about
two inches of snow dusted the
Dayton area at sunrise. The snow
was expected to taper off by mid·
day.
"This is aU happening about a
week too early," said Jerry Lindsay,
weather service specialist at the
Greater Cincinnati International
Airport. "If it was next Thursday

we'd have a White Christmas."
Cincinnati City Manager Sylvester
Murray declared a snow emergency
at 9 a.m. and ordllred cars removed
from designated streets. A
spokesman for the highway depart·
ment said streets were slippery but
passsble in most places.
A Cincinnati police dispatcher,
who asked not to be identified, said
all roads were open but slow. One
major hill ·was clogged briefly with
sliding cars.
'
"Interstate 71 is pretty bad.
People are just leaving their cars
when they get stuck," the dispatcher
said.
Operations at the Greater Cin·
cinnati International Airport were
normal, a spokesman !lllid.
The Weather Service predicted
new snow accumulations of between
four and six inches by sunset over
the northern tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the state,
with four to eight inches possible in
the northeast. Dilly one to three in·
ches of additional snow was ex· ·
peeled in the south, some of it mixed
with rain.

morning of Dec. I, 1976, never left
her kitchen-living room area. She
did testify, on crosg..examination by
Morgan, however, that she did not
know who the knife belonged to.
- Also testifying yesterday were
'

( Conilnued from page I)
The same situation prevailed in
Mason County; and county and Point
Pleasant crews were reported on the
road. It was reported a juror in the
John Edward Young murder re-trial
in Mason County Circuit Court was
unable to leave his· home in Leon
because of the snow and had to be
picked up.
Gallia Local, Gallipolis City,
Meigs Local, Eastern, Southern and
Mason County school districts. were
reported closed today, and athletic
events scheduled at the schools for
tonight have been cancelled.
All districts are urging parents
and children to listen to local radio
stations (WJEH-WYPC, Gallipolis,
and WMPO, Middleport-Pomeroy)
for school cancellations in the morning. T,hey are also llrged not to call
the station, the school o~ their
superintendent's office.

Grulla County rec~~ds 8th
trafficrfatality Wedne~day
A Rt. I, Gallipolis woman became
Gailia County's eighth traffic,
fatality of the year in a car·
pedestrian accident on Georges
Creek Road Wednesday night.
Dead is Melva L. Ward, 40. Cause
of death was listed as internal injuries and hemorrahage, according
to Dr. Donald Warehime, count~
coroner.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Ward was
walking east along the south edge of
Georges Creek, apparently near her
Kelley Drive residen~e at 8 p.m.
when she was passed by a west·

bound water truck.
An eastbound. vehicle driven by
RObert J. Goucher Jr., 19, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, then struck Ward as he
passed the water truck.
The patrol said Ward was dead at
the scene, but she was taken to
Holzer M~dical Center by the Gallia
County Volunteer Emergency
Squad. Her body was later released
to Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
Home in Gallipolls. Final services
imd · burial are scheduled to take
place in Salyersville, Ky., where the
body was to be transferred today.
Goucher and passengers in his

ClEVELAND (AP) - At a rally
in support of the besieged Solidarity
labor movement, Cleveland's
Republican mayor urged President
Reagan to stand up to Soviet leaders
so they'H "know that the United
States wiH not tolerate interll!rence
in Poland."
Speaking to a crowd of 600 comprised of the area's large Polish·
American community and sym-

pathetic labor groups, Mayor
George V. Voinovich said, "I 'pray
this kind of meeting is going to be
repeated aU over the United States."
Voinovich joined more than a

dozen Polish irrunigrant spokesmen,
area politicians and leaders of 12
Eastern European ethnic groups at
·a rally Wednesday night in

Emergency runs

Schools closed

To end marriages

Three emergency runs were made
by local units Wednesday the Meigs
County Emergency Service repor·
ted.
Middleport was caUed al4:36 p.m.
to SOutll Second Ave., for Thomas ·
Justice wbo was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:22
a.m. waa called to the former junior
hieJ! building for Oscar Price who
was taken to Vetel'lll\ll Memorial
Hospital; at · 12•20 a.m. Tuppers
Plans took Geard Barringer to Camden Clark Hospital, Parkersburg.

School in Meigs Local, Eastern
Local and Southern Local were all
closed Thursday due to the heavy
snowfall that hit the area early in the
morning. Driving conditions were
very hazardous.

Two co•Jples have filed for
dissolution and one couple for divorce, in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court. Asking dissolution 11'1!
Jack E. l!forrta and Janet L; Morris,
Route 3, Pomeroy; and Dennis L.
Musser, Route 4, Pomeroy, and
Karen D. Musser, Route I,
Ewington.
Filing for divorce is Leda M. Lee,
Route 4, Pomeroy, from Forest W.
Lee, Route 4. Pomeroy, on grounds ·
of gross neglect of duty and edreme
cruelty.

Veterans Memorill

Postpone open house
The open house scheduled for
today at the multi-purpose building,
located on Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy, has been postponed to
Friday, weatber pennltllng. Hours
will be from 12:30 to 3 p.m.

AdmisSions-Saundra K. Tlllls,
Postpone girls' game
Rulland · Oscar Price, Pomeroy;
The Meig.l girls bultetball game
Patricia' Joyce Cleland, LanpviJJes
scheduled for this evening at
ThomaS J . JUBilee, ~ddleport;
Gallipolls has been postponed unW
Pamela Lee Vaughan,I'CimlrOY·
, Jan. l2.
()!scharges-Glenna M. SoulsbyJ

vehicle were not injured, and the
patrol said no citation was Issued.
His vehicle was moderately
damaged. 11 was the county's first
fatal involving a pedestrian.
The patrol said Brenda M. Whit·
taker, 21, Rt. 2, Patriot, escaped in· '
jury this morning when her car
struck a fepce on Rt. 325.
According to the report, Whittaker •
was northbound at 6:10 a.m. when
she topped a hillcrest, lost co.ntrol,
slid down the embanlur.ent and
struck the fence, causing moderate
damage to her vehicle.

'

thousands of their leaders.
Eyewitl!esses reported that' army
troops backed by armored vehicles
sniashed through the gates of the •
giant Lenin Shipyards In Gdansk,
the birthplace of Solidarity, but were
met by only passive resistance.
As the soldiers marched in,
leaflets signed by "Solidarity members" nuttered down from an upper- •
story window.
"Do not resign. If w.e resign today, •
we'll bury our hopes for freedom for .many years to come," the leaflet
said. "We mastfighlfor the freedom ·
of th011e imprisoned. Several
thousand people cannot destroy 10
million."
Most shipyard workers were '
released and told not to report back
to work unUl Mond8y. They were •
reported debating whether to come ,
back and strike again or return to •·
work and sabotage production.
;

on1o ..:1228, was appolntecJ
E•ecutri• of lhe estate o1
Minnie Louise Jackson,
decused, late of S46 Pearl
45760.
Street, Middleport ,

6lc pack

Tr•il•r

U.Ps &amp; $6.05

specially. Dltcller or
Trench Service.
Gas &amp; Water lines

Open Mon.· Thurs.
6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Open Fri. at 6 a.m.

JIM WCA$_
PH. 742-2753

thru Sunday at 9 p.m.
OPEN 2' HOURS
FRI.·SUN.

We Sell Pepsi, R.c., &amp;

ma.

All
BUILDINGS

These Signs.

12-16·tfc

Si1es start from 30x24"
SMALL

UtHity Bulldlnp
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dag Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

KWB
Scout Camp Rd.
Chester, Oh.
Order Now for
Christmas :
• Gifts for Golfers
*Discount Prices on
Shirts. Windbl:'eakers,
Sweaters, Socks,
Pants, Shoes
• Short game practice
• Prop-Golf le~sons for
all ages
• Repair: Cll!itning,
refinishing, new grips
length change,
weight change
• Fast service
• 6 Free lessons
drawing

Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.'
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-tfc

Meits Co. Area Code

picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies.
scrap· iron and metals.
1 mile west • of Fair·
Now

Gl1'

grounds cin Old Rl. 33.
Mon.·frl. 8:30 to4:00
Ph.99H564

10·12-tfc

I

Public Sah!- &amp;Auction

He is survived by his mother,
Mary Quslls, Pomeroy; 111e son,
Terry Qualls, Jr., Gallipolis; s1x
sisters, Betty Pequese, Detroit;
Hazel Luster, Wilmington, Del.;
Kathryn Parker, and Ellen Meeks,
both of Columbus; Mary K. Blanlul,
and DeMise Qualls, both of
Pomeroy; four brolhera, Randolph
Qualls, and James Qualls, Colum·
bus; Paul Richard Qualla, Pomeroy,
and Robert Qualls, Middleport.
Mr. Qualls was formerly empioyedat Kaiser Aluminum.

l.a·Z·Boy
AND Action

"YOUNG'S
CA-RPENTER
SERVICE"
_Addont .a nd
remodeling
,.......Roofing anCf gutter

-k
_ Concr.t wark
_ PiufT"blng and

electriol work

(Free Estimate1)

V. C. YOONG Ill '
992-4215or992-13"
Pomero,. Ohio

9-:JO.tk.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

SHOWN:

,

La·Z loy lecllner

Lifestyle n.m.RE
fabulous

PWIHitlCG. I UUIDA84r with its deeply
tuftul vinyl seat end bllck cushions, A
lookl

,

J

742-Rutland

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. l12.So per top. Bundled
slab. 110.50 per ton .

458-Leon

Dellvero to Oh io Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs Rd ..

57.-Apple Grove
773-Mason
812-New Haven
ats-Letart
937-Buffa,lo

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. ,.9-2160or 909·2012
7-S·tfc

BOGGS

Pomeroy, 992·2689.

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
NEW PHONE NO. '

9
Syc~~!~.
Middleport, Ohio

9·21-tfc

\

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe

• Excavating
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
eDumpTruck
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pic:~er

PRATER'S
CLEANING
SERVICE

Just
In
Time for
Christmas: Member·
ship Gift Certificates.
Rates
per
visit
available.
Come in &amp; see what we
have to offer.
"Get In Shape for the
Holidilys."
12·11 ·1 mo.

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of your wir·
ing needs.
.Let
George . Miller
check your present elec·
tricat system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Reasonable Rates
, ____.:.______
1
r

!I

•

OLD HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM
MAIN ST., RUTLAND

Tappan Recuperati~e
furnace, Coleman Atr
conditloil'lQ, Arkla ·Ser·.
vel Gas Air COfldition· ·
ing, Sheet Metal Work .
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio
"4-691-6791
11· J6· tfn

Good varle.tv of Chrismtas Items: Toots, Toys,
Games, Radios, Watches, etc. Dealers Welcome.
GOOD FOOD-PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
Sponsored by Rutland Fire Depairtment. Not
responsible for accidents. Terms: Cash or Check
with Positive 1.0.
·
AUCTIONEER: lONNIE NEAL

~

0

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

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

.,

Announcements

Finest Quality ·
Excellent Service·
Fish· Game Head·
Life Size Mounts- Plus
Hide Tanning

PH. 742 · 2225

A"nouncements

3

TRAPPER We have a com·
plele li ne of trapping sup·
plies. Traps, dye, wax, ·and
l ures .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza. 446·8025.

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair', parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up Bailey's Shoes, Middleport,
Georges Creek Rd . Call will be open Thurs .• Dec. 24
.u.\·0294 ..
&amp; Sat., Dec . 26. Closed for
vacation Dec. 27 to Jan. 3,
Rac ine Ftre Dept . sponsors 1982 .
a Gun Shoot, Sat . nights
6:30 p.m .• Bashan . Factory Stolen Property. Antique
choke 12 guage shotgun.
kitchen safe . Antique

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p m . Factory choke
guns onlv.
we still have plenty of ap·
pieS at Fitzpatrick ·Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 614·
669·3785.

The I zaak Waltqn Club wi II
have a muzzle loading
target shoot Sun., Dec. 21),
Dek. 27 and Jan. 3. Starting
1 p.m. at their farm 3112
miles South of Chester on
Shade River Road . Bench
and off hand shooting.
Prizes. Ham, Bacon and
turkey ,
All
shooters
welcome.
RAW FUR buyer . Beef &amp;
deer h ide·gi nshang. Trap·
ping sup pi ies. George
Buckley, Rt. 2, Arhens. Oh .
614 · 664 · A761.
Open
evenings.

. SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

FRIDAy I DEC. 18 AT 6130 PM

_,,.,, ,
...

RaCine Gun Club dues are
due . $25.00. Must be Paid
before Jan : 1, 1982.

Phone 992·9981

Call742-3195

675-1333

Fpr bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark ,
992·2 181. Pomeroy, Oh.

We will clean any
size business • of·
lice· homes · banks
· etc. No Job Too
Small or Too
Large. We will do it
all.

litE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

992-2156
1n Mason County

u.S. Rt. 5t E.ut
Guysville, Ohio

5-21·tfc

AtJCTION

In Meigs county

446-2342

AuTI\orized John O.ere.
Ne"" HvU&lt;tnd 1 BUUI Hot
Farm Equ•pmettl
De&lt;tler
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
· J- No.l600 Diesl.&gt;l Ford
Trillcfor w/ C&lt;1b
MOD · ~IUO Die~11lJ . D . Tractor
MOO·U3 I Ro"" New ldtil c:orn

Birchfield's Taxiderrny .
Deer heads mounted. East
of Rutland on 124. 614·742·
2178.
Flea
Market .
New
Opening . 7 days a w~ek.
The Heart of Middleport. 21)
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992·6370.

dining room cabinet. Two
rocking chairs. Other
items . Anyone knowing or
seeing th is furniture being
hauled in the vicinity of
' Fiatrbck, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
offered . 675·1302.

4

-----·----

Fluffy brown female dog ,
part Collie, recovered hind
leg Injury, well cared for.
Phone 446·3225.
Reg . bla c k
f e male
Pekinese. Call446·0505.
4 qtts, 6 months old, half
Angora. Nice for Christ·
mas. Call319·2307. If no an·
swer call back after 5: 00
PM.

----·----

Very lovable pup. Male 8
months , good
with
children, stays insid e,
never be big. Don't take
him unless you can feed
him and keep him warm.
992·5S49.
Black gerbil with cage &amp;
lood . Call256·1932 .
Out si de dog.
loves
children . Call446·3005.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011
992·7656

8·20· tfc

water·Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line--Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
septic T•nks

county Certified
Roush L•ne
Cheshire, Oh .

Ph.l6H560

H·l

3 year ol d Carin Terrier .
PhOne 446· 1694 or 446-1503_

601
E. Main

POMEROY,O.
992·22S9

CALL:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614·992·2181

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel . ·
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT.
~~ds.:t::i~e.s.if':

Game
Moun s.
' ldli e
Novelties. Custom Tan·
ning. Fast Delivery.
614-98S· 3833
or 985·3164
· 11·25· 1 mo. pd ..

THIS MAY BE EXA(,
TLY THE RIGHT TIME .
TO BUY A HOME EVEN IF INTEREST
RATES GO DOWN ...
THE
PRICE
OF
HOMES WON ' T! OVER
70 PROPERTIES TO
CHOOSE FROM .
RACINE -4·5 bedroom
home . Approx. v., c31cre
lot. 6 fireplaces, family
room, hardwood floors,
and carpet. $45,000 ..00 .

...

·- -- ------·..._..--.-.-

' PUPPIES lo g'ive away, 2
six week old Col)ie pups. 2
six week old Huskie pup·
pies. 304·458· 1533.
PUPPIES. 6 months old.
pari Beagle. 304-895·3633.
PUPPIES, 6 months old,
part Beagle, 304·895-3633.
Cui Christmas tree to give
away after Dec. 20. Call
·M6·389 1.
RABBIT dog, reddish tan
with white, call 304·675·
2816.

MIDDLEPORT
Reduced price - Out·
standing
value.
3·
bedrooms, 2 story house
on nij:e lot. Sunny
modern kitchen, 11/:l
baths, dining and family
rooms, full basement.
Central air. fully In·
sulated, garage and just
537,500.00.

6 ; .. iOst and- FOund

LANGSVILLE
-3-4
bedroom house. Dining
and family rooms. ap·
proJC . 1 acre lot. Also
rental income from tile
building and garage apt.
$36,000.00,

FOUND Small l ig ht brown
fexale dog, Has 2 collars.
1'92 ·5154.
-·-.
......

IN POME.ROY A
home you won't believe!
Ranch
typef·
2
bedrooms. w.b.f.p., full
basement, carpeting,
garage, ~ central air.
Owner
must sell .
517,500.00.
R .UTLAND
2
bedrooms, w~ acres,
several buildings, gar·
den space, enclosed por·
ch. Assume this V.A.
loan, $2,500 down
payment, 12'&amp; interest
rate, 29 year term. S302
per month Includes
taxes and insurance.
Totall29,500.00.

~··---·-----

·---

FOUND Blue Tick female
pup, 3 mos. old . lndentify &amp;
pay. Caii446·4022.

-···------

LOST Beagle on bulaville
Rd. White, brown &amp; tan.
Reward. Call 367-7224 or
367 ·0233 . .

- ·---,-------· -·--- __

9

__

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur niture and Antiques of al,l
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
256· t967 in the evenings.

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars . Smith
Bulck· Pontlac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282.
BUYING GOlD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped IOK, I4K, l8K and
dental gOld . Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything
stamped
sterling . Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992 ·2054 in Pomeroy I

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson ,
A46·0069.

.

Ratas INIH4 on

1-304-675-6276

3A76.
Welding outfit, tanks ,
guages, torches.· Must be
reasonable . Room size
braided rug. 742·2395.
B·UYING OEER ANO
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hi'1es
Rt. I, Amesv~He, Oh 448·
6747. Buying raw fur after
Dec. 12 . Daily 6 PM to 9
PM. closed Sundays. Also
closed Dec . 2.4 &amp; 25.

Raw furs, hides, scrap
m etals,
batteries,
ra'd iators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Harper·Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300

Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily.
Open
Monday
Friday 1·5 ,:Jm .
Timber or l and, approx . 5
acres or more . 614·289 ·2476
or 614-493 ·2591 .
used pool table, good con·
dition. 675 ·5817 .

Help Wanted

11

NEEDED babysitter in
Thurman · Rio Grande are a
for 2 children . Dayshitt.
Caii286·57Ao.
Over the road tractor
trailer driver, must be 25.'
have two years or over
recent experience, current
physical,
and
driver .
quailfication card . Call 367·
7Sll .
Part t ime secretary. Sendresume
to
Box
501.
Gallipoli~ Daily Tribune,
825 3rd . Ave .• Gal lipolis. Oh
45631 .
Student page' needed for at
least 12 months a t Bossard
Memorial Library after
sc hool ,
weekends,
a.
holidays, $2.35 per hr. In
terest in books &amp; library s
helpful . Basic duties in ·
elude · shelving books ,.·
checking in books. &amp; erran ·
ds. Must be 16 y r s. old ,,
stricT
four
week
probationery period. Ca!l
446· READ.
r--·--

White &amp; black kitten. litter
trained . Needs a good
hom e. Call446-2507 .

---------·-·-

siN/

Gold, si lver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coi ns &amp;
cufrencv. Ed Burkett Bar·
her Shop, Middleport. 992·

Giveaway

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

Female LabadO'r Retriver .
' call Mavis McClain at 446·
7000.

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Buying
Gola.
Silvef,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Dai IV
quotes avaihtble. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale.
Spring
Valley
Trading. Spring Valley
Plaza, A46·8025 or 4-46·8026.
wanted to buy motor for
197~ Honda Civic . Call 256·
6652.

Mason Co., W. Va .
Area Code 304
675-Pt . Pleasant

•Free estlm11tes
•20 Yn. experience

Ph. 99HI'l0

s2gg

Your choice _ol •IIIIer rocker, , ·
recllnerorwaii·IIUflirNCII-. REG.M6S

247-LetArt Falls
94f-R•cint
"7-Coolville

•Remode,lng

Wanted liiuY -

9

342-Portlancl

245-Rio Grande
256-Guy•n Dist.
~3-Arilbia Dist.

•Sidlnt

202'12 E. Main St.

$155

.

:Ill-Vinton

And Home Maintenance
•RODflna of all types

TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS SlUDIO

WALL HUGGER
FROM

· Pamerov
915-Chester

In Gallia Cou'nt.y

ROCKER REWNERS

BOTH

OHIO VAU.EY.ROOfiNG

'"

992-Middlepart

~Galllpall•

,.7-Che&amp;hl,.

1-.:_______""7_+----------+-------'---"""1

WANTED TO BUY
, SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)

-

"timatn, "t-2101 or
....2110.
No Iunday Cell•
3·1Hic

6U

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Dealer. Sell or Rent

JlfE ·.

"l"uflful, Custem
lullt Oaraps"
Clll ,., lrH INIInt

11 ·19·1 mo.

Coca-Cola PrOducts by
the 6 &amp;I Pack and also in
liter bottles .
Authorized Sunflower

Ohio~;::====~===~

Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
(12).17, 2A, 31, 3tc

sites &amp;
tmaiiJobs •

Driveways.

Open 7 Days A Week

80 RECLINERS ON SALE

f

at the hall In Oleater, for members
of the fellowcraft degree.

Court, Ca~ No. 23575, Bet·
251
Lennox Ave., Columbus.

tv Jackson Foresman.

Cartons

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

I~

A:rea deaths

Dr. brown nylon velvet

Special meeting set
The Shade River Lode• wU1 hold a
spedalmeellnt thfl Mnlnt at 7:30

N
~

"'

Meigs County happenings

lhe Meigs Countv Probale

Cigarettes

276

•

I

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 10, 1981, in

••

-'

Ohioans rally Solidarity support

CneHo.US75

•

Polish workers, protesters. •
threatened· by new .regime -

~----------------

, PRO'IATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF MINNIE
LDUIII!
JACkSON,
DECEASED

It

••

By The Associated Press
ditions of imprisonment, for we
Poland's martiai·law regime, bat- know of nwneroas excesses contUng the workers with troop IIBBaults cernlng the imprisorunent of certain
__________
on sit·in strikers and mass arrests, people in cold places without warm
·threatened "severe punishment" for clothing."
Deputy Gene Benson who was at the ning but proceedings were moved anyone taking part in demonReports from Poland said the
scene of the murder on Dec. I, 1976, back until 1 p.m. when a juror was strations today 011 the anniversary of church was engaged In high-level
and Dr. Joho Grubb who was unable to get to the courthouse due a1970 labor rebellion.
talks with the Communist regime
questioned abOut the possible effects to the Inclement weather conditions.
Warsaw Radio broadcast war- aimed at resolving the crisis.
of drugs and alcohol on an in· Attorneys are expected to give
nlngs Wednesday night and. again
Pope Joho Paul II appealed for a
dividual.
·
closing statements in the trial, this morning against taking part in "return tO the road ol renewal" in
Court was to reconvene this mor· which began with jury seleclion last mass meetings it said were planned his nalive Poland, and said "the forTuesday, on Friday.
for the anniversary of the 1970 food ce and the authority of power is exriots in Gdansk.
pressed in dialogue and not through
The army newSpaper Zolnierz the use of violence."
Woinosci warned that violations of
Although a government blackoul
the
martial-law
ban
on
public
on
communlcalions continued to
Cleveland's Alliance of Poles erupted as Voinovich told the crowd
gatherings
would
bring
severe
restrict
information on the situation
Auditorium.
that Americans walked away from
in
Poland,
reports from various
punishment,
the
government
radio
Zbigniew Piotrowski, a Pole and Iron Curtain nations in need after
said
in
a
broadcast
monitored
in
sources
made
plain that troops and
Solidarity member temporarily World II.
London.
riot
police
were
invading major inresiding in Cleveland, told the
The
leader
of
Poland's
powerful
dustrial
plants
held by sit·iun
·gathering he sent a telegram WedRoman
Catholic
Church,
breaking
strikers
protesting
the suspension of
nesday to Reagan. The telegram
his
silence
on
the
Communist
goverSolidarity
Sunday
and
the .....est of
said, in part:
nment's
military
crackdown,
ac"Mr. President, you .have inInvestigate B&amp;E
cused the regime of terrorizing the
dicated your support for Polish
nation.
,
society in this situation. Do not leave
Meigs County sheriff's deputies.
"Our
suffering
Is
that
of
the
entire
alone the heroic Polish people in are is investigating the breaking and
their need. Lack of reaction will only entering of a trailer owned by Don nation, tel'l'1lrized by IJliUtary for- Terry Qualls
increase the wave of terror and the Sayre, located in Charter Oak ce," said a statement isaued by Ar·
chblshop JCYU!f Glemp, the Polish
Funeral services for Terry Qualls,
nwnber of further arrests."
Hollow at Enterprise. Entry was primate, according to reports from
2t,
wbo died Monday at St. Mary's
At the end of the tw&lt;&gt;-hour raliy , made through a window sometune
Poland.
Hospital will be held Saturday at 1
elderly irruni~rants, shaken by even- between Saturday, Dec. 5, , and
Martial law "constitutea a blow ...
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with
ts in Poland, tearfully sang their for- Saturday, Dec. 12, and the trailer
to the bopes and expectations of the Rev. Edward Buffington of.
mer. nation's national . anthem. was ransacked. The home was unocsociety," said the statement. "The ficlating. Burial wU1 be in MinerRaucous clapping and cheering cupied at the time of the incident.
uncertainty and powerlessness of . sville Cemetery. Friends may call at
the
workers have caused emotions,
'
the funeral home Friday from 2 to 4
bittel'llesll, diagust."
and7to8.
.The statement said that prisoners
Mr. Qualls was.preceded In death
should be freed and that untO they
by his father; Jcihn Qualls, and a
'- are, "they sh~ have human consister, Patty Qualls.

Staterests~r~eo=nt=in=ued=-~-m~~~g~e~ll
when he arrived at her home on the

TriCounty

SIDING

Our Specialties

eluding II¥! largest income tax victories to Reagan again and again.
reduction In history, deep cuts in
Because of its concen~Uon on
govenunent spending and a record major economic measures,
Pill bllllon defense budget.
congress produced fewer billa this
Reagan also scored an important year than in any recent seuion foreign policy victory this fall when less than 100 this year compared to
Congress went a~ with his plan to 42111n 19111.
sell AWACS .--dar planes and other
Delayed until nell year were a
weapons to Saudi mbia.
variety of social issues dear to cop"The Senate compiled a signal servatives .... Including abortion,
record of aecompUshments in school prayer and busing. But
domestic and foreign affairs," said Congress may be as preoccupied
Senate Republican leader Howard with the budget as i\ was this year.
H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, as the
Despite the Reagan-led effort to
Senate closed out its first year of sia•h spending, the government
Republican dominance since 1954.
faces a $11111 billion deficit and a
But Democratic Whip Sen. Alan national debt that recenUy inched
Cranston, ().Calif., claimed: "Every past the $1 'lrillion mark.
victory for Ronald Reagan has been · Reagan is expected to have a ·
a defeat for the American people. tougher time winning approval for
America has lost a year - a year more budget cuts, with even some of
has gone by as America has slipped his' GOP backers suggesting tbey
backwards illstead of forward."
don't have the stomach for another ,
And while the House remained un- round of deep reductions In social
der formal Democratic control, the programs - esJil!clally in what will
fate of major legislation rested with be an election year for ontHhird of
a coalition of Republicans and con- the Senate and the entire 43$.
""rvative Southern Democrals memberHouse.
the "boll weevils" - able to deliver

WASHINGTON fAP) - Wllat
Republicans see as a "signal record
of accomplishments," Democrats
call a lost year. Bul both sides lW""
that the GOP-dominated 19111 sesalon
of Congress produced an lmpreuive
string of victories for President
Reagan.
"We lost. One can't argue with the
arithmetic," said a vanquished
Senate Democratic leader Robert C.
Byrd of West Virginia.
In the House, where a Democ.--tic
majority didJi't keep members from
voting with Republicans on all
major Reagan-supported economic
bills, Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.
declaced, "We have given the
president of the United States
everYtrung he wanted."
Congress concluded a session
Wednesday in which economic
legislation was the principal order of
basin...,. It returns Jan. 25, the day
before the president's scheduled
state of the Union address.
Sillce convening last January, the
97th Congress has ratified nearly
everything Reagan requested ..!. in·

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

CERTlFIED GAS
Public Notice

(

l:lawwified 1Nif(f'8 l'IIVt'r the
ft~llmmirtlf tele11hone exf'hllnf(f'/1, ••
G•lliil Co. Area Code

•

•

Ohio

BEDS· IRON, B1RASS , old
furniture. gold , silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households.
Write : M.D. M i ller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or992·7760.

--------

Someone part-time to help
with a home care patient .
Some
aide
t raining
Preferred,
but
no t
necessary . Call446· 1200.
GE T VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good mon~y plus
some great gifts as a 'Sen·
tinel route carri er . Phone
us right away and ger on
the elig ibili ty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

----·

·-----

RN's - lPN's NEEDED
NOW to fulfill requiremen·
ts of LC .F . CerTification.
Salary commensurate with
training and experience ·
Extensive benef i ts in ·
paid
e lu ding .
hospitalization, r et irement
program, no penalty sick
leave. 3 week vacation to
sta r:f. More. Contact Per·
sonnet Director (304) 675·
3230 or
write
L akin
Hospita l, LaKin. WV 25250.

RN's immediate opening
day shi'ft parf.time I. V.
nurse team, expe ri ence not
necessarY. . Call Veteran
Memorial Pharmacy . 992 ·
6297. E .O . E .
.. . _ _ ,

___ ----- -·· -

R.N.'s· L. P .N.' s NE EOED
NOW to fulfill requiremen ·
ts of I. C. F . Certification .
· Salary commensurate with
training &lt;;~nd experience ·
Exlensive benefits in ·
eluding
paid
hospitla i zation, retirement
proQr am. no penalty sick
leave. 3 week vacation to
start . More. Contact Per ·
sonnel Director (304) 675 ·
3230 or
write
Lakin
Hospitai. Lilkin WV 25250 .·

DEPENDABLE babysitter
to care for smal l child, 1
day week, in my home, 304 ·
675·6275.
12

·-

·---

SituaJion!.~ante~

Elderly lady would like to
have an elderly lady to l ive
with and share expenses .
Call367· 7196 .

13
• 1!1S,Y~C! ... _
SANOY AND BEAVER In•
surance Co. has offered
services for f i re insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century .'
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are .,
available to meet in ·
dividual needs. Con tact
Kail Burleson agent . Phone
A46-2921.
AUTOMOBilE
IN ·
SURANCE
been
can
celled?
Lost
your
operator's License? P-hone··
992·2143

�I

,..age-14- The Daily ser111ne1

wlnlid iOD.- ---

1~ ::.- -

autcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing.
Call W.-2851, Gallipolis,
Oh.

TV service calls. Call 992·
203•. Also used color TV for

sate.
WOULD like to lake care of
elderly woman or couple in
Pt. Pleasnat from 8·.( 304·

675· 1054.

fiREETIN6$
·1-

TRI -STATE MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobi-le homes . CAI.L.
446·1512.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35,-PHONE U6·38U.

Money to Loan

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Fi nan-

cing loan Rep. Cookie
Krauller (30•)675-3473.
Professional
Services

2l

Piano Tuning-Let your
piano sound pretty for the
holidays, only $30.00. Call
Bill Wo(d, 446·4312.

C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dividuals.
Carol Neal446·3862
$5 discount for pianos tuned
before Christmas. Call Bob
Grubb, 446-45251
M &amp; M Electric. All electric
work guar.:tnteed &amp; bonded .
304·675·2236.

31

For more information call

446·0511 .

For rent or sale .. 2 story, 3
bdr. house , fireplace, in
Vinton, large lot, garage,
no inside pet!?. sec . dep. &amp;
ref . required . Call 388·8795.
Or rent -3 beclroom fur·
nished home on Bud Chat·
t in Road on big level lot .
576·2711.
THREE bedroom home. s
acres ground. 10 miles
from Pt. Pleasant, 304·675·
6597.
House-Meadowbrook Ad·
dition . 3 bedrooms, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement. 304·675·
1542.
6 ROOM house, 1 acre
along Kanauga River at Pt.
Pleasant, 1-614·263·8322 or

263·2669.
FULL Modular ·housesFarmers Home Approved·
Also bank financing with
low ctown payments. we
sell the very b~st in 24' ·26' ·
28' wide homes. Ranch, 2
story, bi-level, trHevel .
Full modular home on
ctisplay at Sisson's Modular
Homes, ~ ipley, WV . Phone
30 4 - 372 · 9371 .
FULL Modular houses·
Farmers Home Approved·
Also bank financing with
low down payments . We
sell the very best in 2~' · 26' ·
28' wide homes. Ranch, 2
story, bi ·level. lrl·level.
Full modular home on
displaY at Sisson's Modular
Homes, Ripley, WV . Phone
304 · 372
9371 .
Mobile Homes
for Sale

1974 12x60 2 bedroom com·
pletely furnished and set
up. Also washer, dryer &amp;
awn ing. 992·7479.
1971 Oar lan 12 X 65, 3
bedroom s. 1972 ·crown
Haven, 1A x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Nashau. 14
xs60, 2 bedrooms. B v.. S
Sales. Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . Pleasant, wv .
Phone 675·44:24.
1973 3 bedroom 1-i x 70, un·
derpinned. 675·4064.
Priced to sell. Three used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at 0 and W
Estates, formerly K and K,
Rt. 62 north, Pt. Pleasant,

Lots &amp; Acreal!__

2. 1 acre house lots. on ss•.
low downpayment, land

• sew ...c

contract,

Bright and cheery
greeting• to all of
you from all of us.

rural

water,

Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 2.56 - ~13, 12
p.m. to9p.m .

25 acres. Nice
CR25, Pomeroy .
7284.
35

Lolsli Acreage

20 ACRES in F't. Pleasant,
no down payment, phone 1·
6)•·263-8322 ~r 263·2669.
Level

lot, Apple Grove,

wv. 576·2386.
NICE river lot at Glenwood
with 14x60 all electric
trai ler. work shop, $18,.500,
304-576·21166.

ReRtals

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER : 4 bdr .. split·
level. living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat-in
kitchen. lc. family rm ., 2
112 baths, located in Tara
Estates. Club house and
~ool
pri"'vileges, S75,000
firm. Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt .
D"4Y ca ll 446·9403 .

32

setup, includes cement
blocks &amp; skirting. $.1,800.

JS

41

Houses for Rent

New 3 bdr. hOme with 11/2
bath &amp; garage. Between
Gallipolis &amp; hospital. Call
446·0390 or 446·7100.
New 3 bdr . home wlfh I 1/2
bath &amp; garage benNeen
Gallipolis &amp; hospital. Call
446·0390 or 44il·7100.
2 bedroom well insulated
house near Rio Grande
College, $225 per month
plus utilities and $100
refundable deposit .
References required. Call
245-9325 or 245-5360.
3 or 4 bedroom home In
town, gOOd location, $300
mo .•· 3 bedroom ranch w-6
acres, Kyger Creek Schools
S2SO mo.; 2 bedroom home
on Lower River Rd ., L3
ac., $250 mo.; 3 bedroom
home w·famlly room In
Northup 275 mo .; 4
bedroom brick in Rio Gran·
de, very nite, $350 mo.; 3
bedroom home in Rio
Grande, S19S mo. ; 3
bedroom home w· l700 sq.
ft . and fam. rm .• $350 mo.
Call the Wiseman Agency
446-3643.
Modern 3 bedroom home,

garage, 6 ac . wooded lot, 6
mile town 3 mi. Holzer(
$250.00. Extra nice 3 or A
bedroom, 1 1/2 baths,
basement, garage, quiet
location edge of town,
$300.00. Wiseman Real
Estate. 500 2nd. Gallipolis,
446·3644.

bdr..

104 4th Ave,
Small 2
Gallipolis. Suitable for
couple only. Call446·2957 .
5 room house for rent, 3
bdr. &amp; bath. 3 miles from
Gallipotis. Call446·0997.

2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available
Nov. 15. Caii61H49-2849.

2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave., Pomeroy. Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6,
S195. month not Including
utilities. 992-2288.
Unfurnishe&lt;l very nice 2
bedroom house. St. Rt . 248.
985-4244.
Beautiful country home for
sale or rent to qualified
persons.
2 or
more
bedrooms.
deposit
required. l..ocated In FIat·
woods area . Phone 614·:446·
2359.
3 Bedroom, 5 room house
and bath and utility room,
Nice and clean . .«6· 1519,
992·2430.
House and apartments.
Call Cleland Realty. 992·

2~59.

wv.

1973 GRANVILLE 14x70, 3
bedroom, mobile home,
partially furnished or un·
furnished , 304-882·3433.
USED MOBILE HOMES
'1978 Holly Park , 3
bedroom, 2 baths; total
electric. 1976 Salem, 2
bedroom. tota I electric,
1974 Buddy, 3 bedroom, l'h
bath. tip out room . 1973
C:amaron, 2 bedroom. 1978
Georgetown Nobility, 3
bedroom, garden tub, Iota I
electric . 1978 Georgetown,
24x60
double
wide ,
aluminum siding . Sisson's
Mobi te Homes. ·South Chur·
ch st.. Ripley, WV. Phone
304·372-9371 '
USED MOBILE HOMES
19 79 Holly Park, 3
bedroom, 2 baths, total
electric . 1976 Salem, 2
bedroom, total electric.
1
1970 Buddy. 3 bedroom. 1 h
bath, tip out room . 1973
camaron, 2 bedroom . 1978
Georgetown Nobility, 3
bedroom. garden tub. total
electric . 1978 GeorgelowJI,
double
wlde.
24 •60
aluminum Siding. Sinon's
MObile Homes. SOUth Chur·
ch St .. Ripley, WV. Phone
304-372·9371 '

VERY nice two bedroom
house with furnace heat,
range and refrigerator fur·
nished. l..ocated 2 miles
from downtown
Gallipolis.
$275.
month. Oeposll
and
reference required. 30~·675-

3655.
CLEAN. 3 room, furnished
coM age utilities furnished,
adults, no pets, deposit,
304-675-2812 or 675·1580.
42

Mobile Homes
. for Rent

Construction · workers
frailer for three. Phone 30..·
773·5651, Mason.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "' I
2 dOWnstairs apartment,
626 west. 3rd, Pomeroy .
Completely remodeled.
Floor coverings. drapes,
heaters. parking. 4 room,
Ptrtly furn, 5 room un·
furnished.
Ref ,
dep.
required. No children or
pets. 992-2878.

Q - ....... - .

-lt

25.22 DEC'8:1

From all of us at
Gallipolis Daily Trlbune
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Regisler

I~;:::::;:;::;;,::::;:~~::='
42

Mobile Homes
for ~ent

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call"-16·0175.
House trailer adults only,
no pets, 322 3rd. Ave. Call
W.-3748 or 256-1903.
Modern 2 bclr. furl')ished.
12x70 trailer. Convenient
location. sec. dep. &amp; ref.
required, utilities paid ex·
cept electric. Call 446·8558
after 5.
Look! 14x70 mobile home, 3
bedroom, Rodney area.
Call collect 1·304-736- 1411.
Trailer in city limits, S250,
uti I ities paid, security
deposit, couple only, ref.
required, no pets. Call 446·
8252, after 5 446·2491 .
2 bdr. mobile home, 5 miles
from hospital at Rodney,
will accept children &amp; pets.
Call"-16·0157.
Mobile home for re('lt. Call
446·0508.
2 bdr. trailer in city, adults
only. no pets. S150 security
deposit &amp; SlSO month. Pay
all utilities. Caii446·40S1.
1 bdr. trailer 2 miles from
Holzer Hasp. off 35. Call
446-7525.
44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished
room
$85,
utilities pd., single male,
range, refrig. share bath .
446·4416 after 7PM.
Mobile home in city central
air and heat, adults only,'
dep. 446·0338.

Attractive 4 rm . and beth
apartment, over double
garage n Middleport.
Newly decorated, · car·
peted, fully Insulated .
Adults only . No pets,
security deposit required.
$190 mo. 992 ·5292.
Small 3 room furnished
opl. Pomeroy. Short walk
from cente·r of town.
Responsible person only.
992·2588 ..

Apartments ~

61S·SS. .

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·"6-8221 or 61045-94114.

Ir~========::=r;;::;~~~~;;;;~1
51

Mobile home with ac, com·
pletely furnished. washer
and dryer, tarpet. on
private lot In Mason. No
pel$. 773·9520 or 773-5751.
ONE bedroom trailer, fur·
niMed, adults only, you
pay utilities. Phone JIW-675-

2535.

54

. Household Goods

Couch for $ale, excellent
condlfion. Phone 446·3945
after 5 p.m.

53

Antiques

2 bedroom twin single in
Pt. Pleasant ol 205 Poplar
Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1-61•·263-8322 or
61H63-2669.

Antique Home · Comfort
woodburning cook stove,
white porcelain. Phone 245·
9201.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV . 773-5651 .

s·:;4;=~M7.·,:'sc='.~M~e:;r:;:c:;;ho:;n:;d;;i;:.ce;=
Lump Coal $32 per ton.

Twin single, large rooms
and yard. Pl. Pleasaftl.
DepOsit and references: 1·
614-263·8322 or 1·614-263·
2669.
For rent 3· room turn. apt.,
adults only, no pets. Call
675·2453.
I bedroom

apartment In
Henderson, partially furnished. 675-1972.

4,5___:F_,u"-r"
n"
is~h~
ed=
R~
oo~m=•-SLEEP! NG ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central HoteL

4'

Space lor Rent

Private home lot close to
town . Call after 5:30, 446·
2266.
Trailer space private lots
in Centenary . Call «6-4053 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots~" Cali
992-7479.
MOBILE home lots, water
&amp; sewef furnished, Everet·
te Schwartz, phone 30..·675·
1076.

s1

Household Goods

Jlvldenls Farm Equip·
mont. See the hay equipo
men! IJI lhe future. , _
from Vermwr··olso a lull
line of equlpmll1f from
Long~ kuhn, Kelley •
many others. With your
selection of parts &amp; corn·
pleteservlc. Uoed Hydro70
IH tractor (like new), I o1o45
Long tractor, 2 rakes,
hayblnd, New Holland
round bater, bus·hoO, disk
&amp; cultivators. Check our
prices 11o compare. Coll446·
1675.

Registered Quarter Horse
filly ,
Registered
Ap·
paloosa, • yrs. old and gOOd
biOO&lt;I'Iine. Call 256·6013, 12
p. m. to9p .m .

I

In Middleport, 2 room efficlen&lt;Y apt . Coli 304-882·
2566 .

Farm Equipment

Livestock

Zinn Coal Co., Inc. Call «6·
1408 bet\veen 9 and 5.

15% discount on wood &amp;
coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block Co.•
123 112 Pine St., 446·2783.
FirewOOd. 1 load $35, 4
loads $100, 10 loads $200.
Call 256·1471 or 614-886·
6624.
Firewood-seasoned har·
dwood , S35 pickup load
delivered. Call446·4176.

Misc. Merchandlc'

Christmas Trees for sale
cut your own S5.00:"Call3670135.
'

LaFont wOOd splitter, ~5
HP engine, battery start,
trailer mounted, split logs
in five pieces. Ph 2.t5·5478.
Exercycle with pep units
with cushioned seat, brand
new, $1,200. Call 614-446·
3912.
1980 Coleman camper, 1977
harley Davidson 1200, AKC
Springer Spaniels liver &amp;
while. Call446·8234.
New buildings at factory
all parts accounted for. Ail
structural steel, carries
tull factory guarantee.
Buildings 10,000 sq. ft. to
the smallest 1,200 sq. ft .
Must sell immediately .
Will sell cheap. Call toll
free 1·800·248-0065 or 1-800·
248·0321 ext . 777 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
2 BEDROOM apartment, Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
kitchen furnished, HUO toman, 3 tables, $.500. Sofa,
program, utilities paid, If chair and loveseat, $275.
qualified. 304·675·5104 or Sofas and chairs priced
304-675-7364.
from $285. to $795. Tables,
S38 and up to $109. Hide·a · For Sale Kitchen table and
Small furnished house, beds,l340. , queen size, S380. 2 chairs, $25. See at 769
Recliners. 1175. to 1295., Brownell Ave .• Middleport.
adults only . Call446-0338.
Lampo from 118. to $65. 5
pc:, dlleltes from $79., to Partially 1 new Lowery
3 rooms with private bath. 5385. 7 pc: .• $189. and up.
8A5 Second Ave. Phone ~46· Wood table with 4 chairs, piano·console, Buesher 400
alto saxaphone, ·and par·
2215.
S219 up to $495. Desk 1110. ta'bte
Underwood
Hutches, SlOO. and S375., typewriter .. Call-«6·0541.
Furnished Apt. 1st floor, maple or pine finish.
utilities furnished . ~ef . Bedroom suites · Bassett
New wood stove, half price,
required. No pets. Adults Oak, 5675 .. Bassett Cherry,
preferred. Call at 631 4th $795. Bunk bed complete never used, $350. Can con·
Ave.
with mottreSieS. S250. and vert to furnance. Call 256·
up to $350. Captain's beds, 1216, Galllpolls.
2nd. floor furnisned el· $275. &lt;omplete. Baby beds,
fiency apt. 729 2nd. Ave., S99. Mattresses or box For Sale : Bearcat pocket
Gallipolis. Call '"6·0957. springs, full or twin. sse .• scanner, battery powered,
firm. 568. and $78. Queen 5 crystals inctude'd, $100 . 00~
Adults only, no pets.
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests. $.19. Call446-9303.
4 dr. chests, $.12. Bed
3 &amp; 4 room apt. rent par· frames, S20.and $25 .. 10 gun
fially furnished, adults · Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet· Whirlpool washer 18 lb .
only . Call 446·3733, evening te choirs $20. and $25. Gas tub, real ni~e. SllO .
446-0171 .
or electric ranges, $295. Or· Frigidaire dryer, A · l
lhopedlc super firm, $'15, shape, guaranteed. $90.
baby malresses, $25 &amp; 535, 446·8181.
Apartment for rent. Call
bed frames $20$25, &amp;· 530.
446-0390.
Electric fireplace, gun Hardback &amp; paperback
cabinet, Living room suite, books (In good condition).
2 bdr. apt., 2nd Ave., large wood
table &amp; A chairs.
records, 1 dog house. 2
living room, kitchen, bath~
Used,
Ranges, fans. Call446-3710 after 5.
completely furn., all elec ·
refrigerators, and TV's,
tric. newly decorated,
3
miles out Bulaville Rd.
deposit &amp; ref. required,
Stamp Shop .
Open
9am to 7pm, Mon. Rubber
$225 month. Call 446·2581 or thru Fri
Us'usally one or two days
..
9am
to5pm,
Sat.
·46·2236.
service. Dismuke's, 405
olol6·0322
2nd. Ave., Gallipolis, .u&amp;·
0474.
Apartments for rE-nt. 614·
GOOD
USED
AP 992-5908.
PLIANCES - washers,
dryers,
refrigerators, 10)(2_. heavy gauge
3 bedroom apt. in Mid ·
rang'es.
Skaggs
Ap · aluminum awning . Phone
dieport. $150. month. 992·
pllances, 1918 Eastern 446' 7483 alter 5PM.
5692 .
Ave.,.w6·1398.
~=========:.JL.::;::;::;:.::.::.::.::.::~ 200
Mercedes
dl.esel
engine,
18 HP
Evenrude
outtx&gt;ord.
1 steel chainsaw. Call ~9638 •
They'll- Do It' Every Time
1·65,000 BTU electric fur·
nance &amp; duct work, goocl
shape, $100. l old cast Iron
bath tub, good shape, $25. 1·
u• plow $150. 1 new heavy
duty holst retails 11.978
asking 1150. Caii36H878.
Firewood . Stacked
delivered. Call245·9260.

e.

Insert, heiVY
114' steel plate, with
blower. Requires opening
32'. Wide, 20' dlep. Only
1hree lo sell at 1400. ee.
OUtdoor Equlpmll1t Sales,
Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis.
Ph. 416·3670. Clooed Dec. 22
till Jan. 4.

1S

Bau boll!, aluminum, 40 ,
LP Nwtrc. 0/B tournament ;:
equlped. 12.850. Call 446- ...
tdewnlngaafttr6:00 .
:
-====::::~ii'::~====
•,
:::
"
Auto P1rh
· ,

Bell and . Howell 8 mm
Sound,
color
movie
camera. Carrying case &amp;
accessories. $225. 992·7274,
992-729 •.
One wheel trailer for sale,
$35.'00. Coli 985-3852 or 9927165, before 9:00AM or bet·
ween4:00-5:00 PM.

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

Yashlca 3S mm carmera,
telephoto, wide angle, excu lusive view finder, elec·
tronlc flash, $250. 61 Mill,
Chanucey,
797 · 2423
aLlytime.
LIKE new. Savage .308
lever action rifle . .C&gt;e scope,
sling and case. $210.00 call
304-675·6628.

SNOW

blade for John
Deere riding mower, like
new, 30H95·3465.

-----------

------~--·-,..-·-·

55
Bultding~!!~Bullding materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245·5121 .
56 ~-

PetSfGrSale --

PoooLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
---~--------

ORAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERV · KENNEL . AKC
Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
384A after A p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg, Dober·
mans. Call-446·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
Gordon setters.
A Kc
Englisn Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.

- -- ----- -·--

Reg. Quarter Horses ' for
sales, boarding, training,
English &amp; Western lessons.
Oaf Beam, Gallipolis, .«60183.

AKC Reg . Labrador
Retriever
puppies,
9
Weeks, shots, wormed,
S125 . Exc. tem~rment,
614-682·7•77 .
Two ACK Reg. Doberman
pups, 1 black, I red, wor:·
med &amp; shor.. Call 388-98411
before 3.

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies.
Everything
imaginable ln horse equip·
men!. Also belts. boots. 698 ·
3290. Ruth Reeves.
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon ..
Thurs., I Fri . 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed .• I Sot. 11 to • · Check
our Fish Special.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian anq Poodle
pupo, i!OH95-3958.
AKC Dobermans, red &amp;
ton, 304·675-6916.

FINCHE.,S and Golden
Pheoson,., 304-895·3972.

--··---·----

61
Firm Equipment
International 1066, Oliver
1850, JOhn Deere 40-20, Now
Sale lor month of Oec. MaUlt FetGUIOII 285, JOhn
Mblle h o m t - burner, Deere wino disc, JOhn
$459. Through the Will In· Detre 4 &amp; 5 boltom piOW1, 4
sulated vent klt, 1149. HOI· row lllentwa end other
point ltuvy duly WNIW mechlnery. Ruu llrotltor't
end dryer, SSf9. J&lt;lllltlbury Farm Machinery, 6 mil"
Pertt and Acc:eMorl", Rt. South a1 Jack110n on St. Rt.
124, Minersville, Ohio.
139. Caii2B6·2731. ·

•
•
VIewmg

l

,

•
,..

---

'fliUIIIDAY
IIIC. 11, 1111

!

~

.

"

2-13" Armstrong Rac:liat :
Studded Snow Tires. Used :
one winter. 175.00. 992·2770, ~

·l

' '

motor and'
72 vw
automatic transmissiort
and body perts. 304-882·'.

81

71

kM

YHtOfdoy·o

e:OO

ClfUIIIIIAft

l!llno.)

C1J NAnDHAL G!OOIIAPIIC

~II; MORII AND -DY

ii'IJI'!IiiiAIINUII, P.l. A
beautiful f11hlon dHianer .who

haa rlaen to lhe top of her
profeeeiO:n hire I Magnum to
protiiCt her when one of her two
· ptrtnereln 1 clothing firm Ia

ANNIE

'!ll!'cll!red. (8011inl.)
INUK PIII!VI!WI

ll) CD)

lit! ~6111e ALIIM

Ctlllco Gont Slo~olond R011or
Ebert reviiWtM....,.etmovlea
In town, Including: 'Abaenct ot
MiliCI' storDig8ollyflolctond
P.tul Newman; 'Aollov~r·
fteturlng Jene Fonda; ·and
'Buddy, Buddy.' 1 comedy
reuniting Jaok Lemmon and
WJiter MIIHhlu.

WITH U6, AHHIE- ne'l'll!
TIE (Jt(lEI640f rJ'

CMLIZATIOtt ..

8:05 CIJ PIIIIT ANNUAL TUftN!R

!!MilLY HOUDAI' GIII!IITIHG
8:30 (!) IIOYl! •IDIIAIIA) •••

'.:M!le_.._ Mow" 1171

(l)I!I).II!ITOI'THI WEST
Elvira decidtl to leave Sam
when he ne• unexpected
reward money to bu~ a new

.

HARTS used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 Jess expensive cars in
stock.

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawf
882-2079.

SURPLUS CARS, JEEPS.
AND TRUCKS
now
available thru local gover·
nment sates. call 1· 714·569·
0241 for your directory on
how to purchase. Open 2.C
hours.

RON'S Television ServiceJ'
Specializing in Zenith ana
Motorola, · Quazar, and
hoUse calls. Phone 576-2398
or446·2454.

NOVA 304-675-6445.

Ford Truck, 250 camper
special, with new stake bed
ana clual wheels. Call 256·
6413,12p. m, to9p.m .

IIOVla o(IIUSICALI •• 10
"F--floel'' 1 -

ll)

o'LIEYOOP

8:58

V:OO
•

RINGLES'S SERVICE e••
perlenced mason, rooter~
carpenter , electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 30.C-675·
2088 or 675-4560 .

of an epartiMIIt butklna where
helivea !lkiM In lie batement
with hlecet. Although heclnbe
rough at timtl, hi OOM out on .
Chrietmta Eve end encounte;ra
marvelolll Chrlltmaa expar·
11 touch hiolllo.
8:30
G111MI! A BIIEAK
TAXI
8:311
NBAIIAIIII!TIIALLAtlanta
ttl\tlll..l..l Otn'lllr Nugget•
10:00 CIJ.WHILLSTIII!I!T8LUES
The
eraument
•

'

I,l'

11=

Experienced carpenter
available for home or
business remodeling or
new structures . Free
estimates. References . 304·
675·2440.

'

.

615·3898 .
78 JEEP Renegade~
phone 304·675·3628.

$4soo,

1975 DODGE powerwogon.
••4. $1.800. 304·675·664ol.
1975 Chevy Van, '4 ton, ps,
pb, at, 350· 4bbl, good
mechanical
condition,
needs lillie body work. 895·
:U72 after 6 pm .

-

-~ ·

WINNIE

.

71 FORO Slep \/on, 6 cyl.,
automatic, goad condition,
right hand drive, small,
304·576-21(p6.
79 JEEP Renegade, hard
top, 29000 mllet, 304·576·
2325.

NORTH
tt

'AUNt'

ANJ7 THEY'LL 60 VP

BEFORE TH!Y
COMe POWN.1

•t •
--~efril!!r!!ion _ ; ,;
SEWING Machine repal~ ··
service. Authorized Singer="':
Sales &amp; Servl&lt;e\ Sharpeil. ·!
S&lt;Jssors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2274.

.
11:21
1 1:30

biUir lrjlmpo be wOuld blve
bid liz IIMi1l. With two of
tbe tbNe · - llaDan (liD
to
lfliN
·
IIi 11DJ IDOl. South II In
llll1 IIIUtl. Be 1riDI lbe ella·
moad lead In thmuaY and
llll:f.l die deuce of liearta.
Elit plap the five 1111d now
comet tlie oafetl' olay. South
m,.t eover wltlllbe .lb: and
not olay tbe aee or kiDa.
1111 Ollly ~ II a f.O
tnanp brUk. Tbe play of the

=::i'Norlh woUld

TOO

~Docr0111N1MI! HOUII!
UPDAftNI!WI

THITONICIHT8HOW

Guool: Devld Stolnborg. (eo
na.}

ANOTHIII UFI!

MN~~:'t..'movtE

Quincy, M.E.: 'Vallevview'
Quincy tuapeola that 1 mercy
kilter 11 retponelble for the
deethi of two htlpleaa end
tormlnollyllpotlonlo. (R-t)
Tho 8olnl: 'Tho Double Ta-o' A

AFTER A BIG

SUPPER

por~doulllolo

Gentrll H1ullng

JONES BOYS WATER ~'
SERVICE. Coli 367-7471 or. c
367·0591.
• ,_

11:10
11:111
11:00

675-4154,

P-

tt

pp-

PPU.
P-

..
p-

pp. .

Mo "
3+

6NT

..

Openiq lead: flO

·
tO live bll partner a ruff aful
Mia clnc:b contract.
Polllble, but a 7·1 ella·
1IIOIId break Is a S percent
cbance; a f.O truinp break a

10 percent one.

lor THOMAS JOSEPH
41Heavy blow
ACR088
(al.)
I Infant
5 Justification DOWN
10 Novelist
1 Rathbone

Seton

ZBryant

llMescal

3 Violently

cactus

4Devour
5 "Rockford

lZ Screen
13 Jacket

...
Files"

14Samln

Yeslerdlly'a " -

CHtar

"Quincy''
15 Jordanian

I Sailor's

7 AD being

liWoodcore
17 Fekrty

8 Detail

It Tenth ol

tMore

poalble

b:anqull
llSusceptible

15 Present
18 Argot
Zl Salubrious
ZZ Layer
ol roclt

za Allen
or Guthrie
ZISpread

l11el'l'lmellt
18Bold-

Z3 llallan dty 31Dance ...

UCoak

za &lt;11aplal~

IIJap&amp;MM

-.e

tr-t--t--

Sl Candlenut

tree

sz Pl1em
3S Old nate
1M IAtbargy
18Qcatrls
S1Nat
auembled
18 Dolest

18 Havinl
great bulk,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A:IYDLIAAXI
II LONGFELLOW

0.. letler oimply olllldl lor another. Ill this sample A Is
IIHd lor tbe three L'a, X for tbe two O's, etc. Slllllt Jetton,
apoetroiJIMI, the len)flb and formation of the wonb ore ell .
blgll.l!faeb day tbe code l~tten ore dltfer~nt.
CaYPTOQUOTBS

~

PS, AM·FM, 21000 mlleo,
r.g. vas. good thepe, c.,l
JIW-773-5150.

z+

J\f

a,,.,..,.,.,

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; llme&amp;tone for driveways.
Call for esliii)Otes 367-7101.

..,..·7133or olol6·1133.

Puo
p-

,.

n Rlnll•rblter
za Arouled

I

ME

r

Upholtltry
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Ave.. Gallipolis

•QtOU
871U
+11
SOVTB
tAXI
.A Kilt
8JI
+ltQS
Vw-Able: Both
Dealer: South
Will N - But ~

.!JOU4
I""Je75

11- Alto,
Calif.

111'.58
ti:OO

Etectrlcll

REFRIGERATION___&amp; 1:
major househotd appliance J:
repair
service.
Also 1'
authorized Westinghouse
service dealer. Call qty \
Furniture between 9·6, 304· .."
675-2608. After 6, 614·446·
1295.
i:

~au ~u

I!···· .

~
.. ~~~lbowed poor ~ lth

U More abject
ZS R111 alang

M
ROL'M11terof
Ceremonlta, Rich Liltlt. II
joined bV top lmpreulonlltl tor
thlt holiday apeciel b11ed on
the claaalc Chtrltl Dicken•

PAW At.WAVS
STReTCHES OUT

_ tAI412

•sment

10:28
10:30

THEPOWN

JACKS REFRIGERATIO···:.
N. air condition service. -~:
commercial, Industrial. ,,
Phone 882·2079.
·'•

.J?SI
tAKQ

South'l jump to five
nolrllmD wu a lnodern Yllr·
·l,ion of lbe l!'lnd slam force.
. He knew tbat bla P..lrtnet::
bad cue bid dlamolidl and
South waated to be Ia aevea
u ~ caald i1bow

lib: (lliardt apinlt tblil.
SallllWI tliat Wilt held all
four·~ ID tbat cue
Eut
ve llbown out.
South "
play bll kina
IIDd lead toWard dammy'i
blck.
SUflll'll'! tbat West bid led
from a leftDoCal'd diamond
llljt IIDd eould pt In with the
qu"''D. 10 or nine of trumpo

1J.17.at

ZZDnml1

t:JVTlftAt5EOiJS••.

COfle, UP WITH

1910 CHEVY SCotllclale, 'Ill

1011. 4-Whlll·drlyt, 4lfi"CI,

Modern grand slam force

ltale

BfSII'eS. FUEL AN17
UTILITY ~A~S A~!!

WHI!N I SQJGHT
THI5 PLACE FROM
l

IS

BRIDGE

II Sollcltude
Zl Coudy

PAYMENT/

79 DOOGE powerwagon.•wheel·drive~ 29,000 miles, 8
cyi. call after 3 p. m. 304·

J u -: CROAK BAKED DAMAGE JOCUND
: Cracked when h'o h-d-A JOKE

111111

1981 Oatsu~ pickup. SHort
bed, air, 5 !speed, am·fm
radio, trim package. Wi It
take $8.50. &amp; tbe over
payments or will trade as
down payment. 992 · 78~1.

Vans &amp; 4W.O.

J

mountain

---::----::-:-'&amp;:..:.:H"'el=.l,ln,g. _____ . '
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Ph9ne 446·3888 or 416·4ol77

84

IIAIMr.~lothocuolodltn

·

GASOIJNE ALlEY

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps sales and Servl&lt;e. ,
304-895-3802.

8~2====~P~Iu~m~b~in=g=====

~-I' MILLER . ·
(lilj KNarl LANDINO

1:05 CIJ 1111. J&lt;MII!III!R'I CIIIIIST·

MY H()ti9E TO

73

Dtff'rut~!l

Untwarelhtt hla health club
haatpolleyofraclaldlacrimklt·
tlon, Drummond lnvttea Arnold
tndWIUisto-hlmthore.but
·" Whtnthey arrtvethty tre tumtd
oy . (Cioood·Copllonod}

JOHN CALLAWAY INTEIIVI!WI'iord lleoth' Fonner
·Prime Mi Iter Eward Heath
titke to
n Callaway about
thotuturorolotlonohlpbetwoon
Oreal Britain tnd the Common
MJrt&lt;et. (80 .....,

1977 Chevy pickup, standard trnns, PS, PB, 7.c2273.41 '

1977 Hell ton · Ford FlOO.,
power steering, new tires,
$2300. 304-675·5147.

111.-f~!RS
_
UPDAft . .WI

l

•

Trucks for Sale

!!21'H-

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

'

72

goolod by

•ws

CIIIPI-UNTS:
lli'ICHILLAIIDWOODa-

twolomo&lt;momblraofPooch't
tngala become underco'ller
deteottftt. thltr flrat ualgnmen1ia to toNe the elaytng of • .
gigolo who traveled with •ome
very un11vory cheractera. (80

.

1978 PLYMOUTH Salon, 4
door sedan, 318 cu. engine,
e)(Celient, clean, phone 304·
675·1296.

1onn lho ourprloo - · u ....

!NTIRTAINI!eNT

•rn

7-18

1.;

SALE or trade·1966 El
Camino, 6 cyi. standard,
new engine, new paint, nPw
Interior. $1500.304-576-2865.

_ _ ... _ _ 10

7:36 m()IIDAIIDIOH

Home

1973 Mercury Capri, new PAINTING · interior and ··:::
paint, $1,100 or best offer. exterior. plumbing , •·
Call446-1692.
rooting. some remodeling. · ;:
20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652.
, ,
1977 Cutlass Supreme
'
Salon. PS. PW,
PB, French City Painting.
reclining buckets, T· Top, Residential, commercial, ... ;.
velour inferior. Like new. interior, exterior, paper •'
$.1150. 614-992-6362.
hanging, and texured ::
ceilings. Ph, 367·7784 or 367· J.t•'
1980 Oldsmobile Toronado 7160.
:.
Brougham Coupe. Real
:J.
leather interior., Ziebart Call 446·2801 for termite, ::
protected. many extras.
bird, rodent, spider,~~ :
Will' sell for less than roach,
and fle.as control. Free f 1•
wholesale if cahs deal or estimates.sBill Thomas . ' ~·
will consider trade. 992·
-~
3491.
GENES
CARPEl' ··,.
Cleaning. Special rates for r-'
1969 Plymouth wagon. 318 Nov. and Dec. only . Call
auto. 985·4346.
now and save. 61-4·992·6309.

73MERCURY,6cyl .. stan·
dard transmission, $200.
304-675·1643.

tx J tho--·
·r r ]"

rI I I I 1 1 l I X

I
contl
•peclalemphatll on olt•trl••g
and correcting the contr11t on

1979 AMC Concord stationWagon, A speed trans.,
22,997 mi 1~. low mileage, STUCCO PLASTERING
A-1 COndition. Call245-5294 . textured ceilings com·
mercial and residential;·
free estimates. Call 256·
1976 Malibu. 4 dr.. p.s .. 1182.
p. b., a .c .. 350 2 bbl, new
tires and point, 61,000 mi.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car.''
St900. 446·2888 anytime.
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom ·
58 Jeep, metal top, runs Carqets. Free estimates.
gOOd. $750.00. 256-6769.
Call446· 21~7 .

12 CHEVY Chevellewagon,
gOOd condition, $550., 350 V·
8, automatic, 304-576·21166.

.......

(AMwerl tomorrow)

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
. U6·42118

1968 Olds. S150. Call 675·
1724.

I LATUF
I [)

t~CTIPP
I I

1mprovements

Auto for Sale

""" l1ldlnlly-

tAHNRAGj
·
) I r I I

srl~
~

..........

21

IKWONNj
(] J t j

'

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

--·tn

.................. Ju:

-~,-

WINDSHIELD &amp; fronlfen·::
der for Plymovth Ouster
304·675-3135.

~-------------

Grave Blankets. 992·7320 or
949·2493.

Television

---:2&amp;~A?cc,•~··~r':l"~:;:- ~

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE ·
Auto pariS. auto reJ!8Ir,
wrecker service, 'buy
automobiles, radiators an~
7717
~t1eries . .c..66·
·

s

The

•

I'
Polled Charolols bulls. 9 2502.
mo. old reo. purebred, ex· ~::--:-:::-::------;---~ ~
cellent potled Jives. George FOUR 13" Crager ·rlms.. t
WoodWard . Call379-2597.
with 2 wide tires on back·1
ones. $1150. 304-675·1189.
Purebred Short Horned
o===:==.~:;::==·
77
Auto Repair
good
bull coli,
blood
snowline.
white.
Born
E•tra
in
Ouality Autobody &amp; Point 1
July. 378-6152.
work . Insurance work '
welcome. sunroofs in·
ONE 5 year old Registered stalled from $200·$230. Auto •
Angus caw. Rebred ar· Trim Center, 446·1968 • . • '
tifically, 1100# plus, $600.
firm: 304-675·2902.

Piano in storage, respon·
sible party may take on low
monthly payments. Call
credit manager collect 614·
6&lt;2·5180.
'

3- 8 ft. showcases with
lights, 1 .Jarge bedroo,n Men's hiking boots, $39.95
suite, double dresser and pr ., Boy's, $33.95. Bailey's
chest, 2 antique clocks, 1 Shoes, Middleport.
meat slicer , and misc.
grocery store equipment. Firewood $35 truck load,
Call 256·6413, 12 p.m . to 9 $55 a cord. 843·2933 or 843·
p.m.
4831 .

Flrepl~e

Furnished 1 Dedroom
mobile home, all ulillles
paid, outskirts of Hen·
derson. $230 month. 675·
6730.

61

1n Middleport 2 bdr. furnished apartment, one
small child . 1-30-.&amp;82-2566.

1965 General mobile home
12X65, completely ready for

U

Thu'rsday, December 1_7, 1981

. Pom.,.oy-Middleport, Ohio

OPAYGYA,
·

CP

QKGY

OYJAM

UXKTD.

QKGYM

CEJC

EY

TYGYA

SKQQKJH

ZYTT

~t~:"~, Ut/:olstery Rl.
•

• ..ant. 304·

y I ~I QIIIIIEYERYDAYINIJFEISALEAJI'IN
YOUR
.-AIWIPROVERB
·
'(I

I.

•

'

I
'

�Thursday,

e·

;.

•

ELBERFELDS IN .

CHRI

EROY ·)
• r

•

•

'

By Tile A•ulatedPraa
With IICCIIII1IIIatl• 11111 iDdlea or
more IIIII III10iber 11s lnchelln the
l'olecaol, Ohlo'a'III!Ow belt Jived up to
ita as the state Bolita tint bill
. storm Ill the winter.
.
The Nail~ Weather Service
predicted II10W Ourrlel over the enUre state today IIIII i8lued 1 heavy
II10W Wlll'llinll fGr the II10W bell seclion of not'thea8tern Qbio.
The only other appreciable accumulaliona wiU be In northcenlral
IIIII nortllea&amp;tern counties, downwind from the relaUve1y wann
waters of the Great Lakei.
New snow accumulations al two to
thn!e inchea by eVening are expeeled there, with lis lnchel or more
In the snow belt -th of Lake Erie.
Early~- deptl1s today
ransed from eight lncbes In the
&lt;leveland area to lis 1nc:.'H!• In Clnci1U181i IIIII ~ to lhr~ to five
iDdlea elsewber&lt;L
A lOw pr 1 ure center moved off
the coaslnear New York. City early
this morniflll. A large high pressure

&lt;

EVERY DEPARTMENT - VISIT EVERY FLOOR AND OUR
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STRin - HURitY IN FOR
BEST .SELECTIONS

ON
BLANKETS
Buy blankets for gifts this
year and save on any
blanket in our stock - including electric · blankets.
All sizes.

REDUCED 20%

MEN'S MATCHED

REG. $439.00
G.E.

ChOose work trousers in tan, nevy, char·
coal, olive or forest green. Sizes 29 to .tO
waist.
14lf:~ to 20. A practical gift for him.

- 11)1)% SOlid State Chassis

- Custom Picture Control

Tuner
CHRISTMAS 't38ft00
SPECIAL
.
.,.-Plus-Service After The Sale!
Mechanic St. warehouse
~ VHF · UHF

MEN'S SHIRTS
oUr

Big sa"ings on all of
men's shirts In·
eluding Van Heusen Dress Shirts . Potv

Cotton Westerns · Western Flannels · Sport
Shirts · Velour Shirts· Knits.
·
·
You ' ll like the selections - the savings
Sites S. M, L, XL
.
,

Men's $9.95 Shirts . ...... .. $7.85
Men's$11.95 Shirts . .. . . ..• $9.45
Men's 516.95 Shirts . ....•• S13.40
Men's 519.95 Shirts • ..... . $15.75

Men's Winter Vests
Sizes 5, M, L and XL in nylon
quilted styles, suede looks and
denims. · Very popular for cold
weather wear.

SALE PRICES

CHRISTMAS SALE
WOMEN'S WINTER WEIGHT

Velvet dresses, jogging suits, dressy pant ·
suits,. poly/cotton dresses and bib overall
outfits.
Sizes Newborn to 24 mos., 2 to inc..

Long styles of 100% cotton flannel
or' brushed tricot In sizes Petite ·
thru XXXL. ·
REG. $8.00 ..•... • •• SALE $6.79
REG. $12.00 .. . ...... SALE $10.19
REG. $19.00 ........ SALE $16.19
REG. $26.00 ... ,
. SALE $22.09

REG. $10.00 • ...•••• SALE $7.99
. REG.$14.00 ........ SALE $11.19
REG, $22.00 ........ SALE $17.59
REG.
.. .... ..

Sh ou ld er b ags, clutches and hand·
bags in leather, canvas and nylon.

:~~-:~S0~ ·· .. · · ••· SALE$7.19

0

REG.
· · .. .. · .. ~:LE $11.99
REG · 520 ·00 ····.--·· SALE$15.99
536 00
•.
Gl FT SALE!

All of our jeans

Prints and solid colcrs. In flannels, knits
and brushed fleece.
Gowns, robes, pajamas and sleepers.
Complete range of children's sizes.

Sizes 36 to 50 in a big selection of
styles and colors that are sure to
please. All of our men's dress
coats and all weather coats are in·
eluded.

REG. $5.00 •••...... SALE $3.99
REG. $9.00 . .. ...... SALE $7.19
REG. $14.00 ........ SALE $11.19
REG. $19.00 .... .• .. SALE $15.19

. SALE
WOMEN'S

denims and corduroys. Regular, slim or
husk v sizes 8 to 18 . Student waist si:z:es 26 to ·
30, lengths 30 to 36.

BOYS$12.95JEANS
BOYS$14.95 JEANS
BOYS $16.95 JEANS
BOYS $19.95 JEANS

.... ..
... ...
.... .•
.... ..

$10.68
$12.28
$13.88
$16.38

CHRISTMAS SALE!
MEN'S AND BOYS'

Great gilts at Christmas Sale prices! Mit·
REG.$4.00 . . ....... SALE ,$3.19
REG. $7.00 • i ....... SALE $5.59
REG.$11.00 ........ S~LE$8.79

Men's$12.95Pajamas .... 510.13
Men's $13.95 Pajamas .. .. $11.00
Men's$15.00Pajamas .• .'. 511.85

tens. gloves, scarves, hats and sets.

gift.

Boys sizes 7 to 11. Men~s 9 to 15.
Big selection of colors. Made by
Springloot. For that extra gift.

Sll9

LADIES'

SWEATER SALE

j •

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BLUE JEANS

CHRISTMAS SALE

REG. $8.50 · ........- SALE $7.19
REG.$15.00 ........ SALE$12.79
R

.said.
St. Joaepl)'s Hllapital.spokeswOiJWI J0811 Cllne,ldenlifled the third
victim u Elmer Ball, lit, of l.Graln. Ball died WIIIDiday Iller live
daya In the inllnalve care ward. The other five Injured men were
treated at the hospital lor pslnllalatioalllll releadled.
U.S.- Steel eflldala aald lhil week that the accldenl wu believed to
have been caudled by eacapli!R 11J11e8 from a blast fumace, which wu
being routinely examined by the workez"ll.

........ SALE $30.59

-

CHRISTMAS SALE

Holiday sale prices on . our
entire s•ock of misses
half size dresses.

Reagan lights Christmas tree

t't~~~&gt;:".l

WASHJNGTON- For the flnt time in thn!e yean, lflere is a fully
lillbled Nallanal CbriBtmsa Tree llil the EWpee - t h e lltreet from
the White House.
.
The SMOGI Douglas fir was eaaulfed in red, white IIIII blue lights
Thunclay nlghlu President Reagan, IRIITOUIIded by children in the
Ealt Room, pr e ed a buttOn en a _switchbox used by Presldert
Coolidge to u,hl the flrlt national tree In 1923.
. Presidents usually go oulslde lor the cerenlOII)', but Rellan
remained In the White House because of Increased leCUrlty ...Wiinll
from reports of I.Jbyan assassination teams allempllnjj to Infiltrate
the United Ststea.

'

Sizes S, M, L and XL. Very well
made with two pockets· full tails .
colorful plaids. A truly sensible
gift for him. Sale priced.

.

\

Nice Mlecllon of quality spartsweer In pre-

teen sizes.

Sweaters, leans. lockets, skirts, corduroys
and tops.
REG. $7.00 ........ , SALE $s."
RI;G. $11.00 •••••.•• SALE $9.39
REG. $17.00 ••..•.•• SALE $14.49
REG.
.. ... SALU19.59

Holiday sale prices on warm win·
ter coats and snow suits for little
boys and girls.
.. ..

atRISJMAS SALE PRICES

(CLOSED SUNDAY)

ELBERFELD$ .IN POMEROY
.
.

~·

.FlANNEL WORK SHIRTS
Includn popular Alaskan Flannel. Full
with long tolls · two pockets · tolortul
plaid•. Mr. ~~~~gund Ely brands.
MEN'S $15.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S $11.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S $19.95 SHIRTS
MEN's S20.95 SHIRTS

•.•.
..••
.•••
••••

$12.60
$14.90
$15.70
$16.50

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VAN HEUSEN

PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR

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u.s.

Inlured Bill othen lui Friday at the
Steel CGrp.lMaiD Worb bas
claimed the Ufe afAIUie aldie Injured vlctirDI, I balpltallijiOke&amp;WCAliiD

MEN'S HEAVY WEIGHT

MEN'S WRANGLER

WINTER COATS

SHOP EVERY NIGHT Tll18:00

-

American General kidnap victim

Basi&lt; styles In Wh ·ounce prewashed blue denim. Walstslzes 27 to
42 · lengths 30 to 36. .Straight leg or
bOo! flare. Buy oow for gifts or lor
yourself.

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1()95 Flannel Shirts

Holiday sale prices on
quality and fashionable
coats in Junior, Misses and
Half Sizes.

CHRISTMAS SALE
CHILDREN'S

· Men's $18.95 Sweaters •... $14.90
Men's 121.95 Sweaters ...• .517.30
Men's $24.95 Sweaters • , .. $19.70
Men's $29.95 Sweaters

Aeeidenl
cJaims. third vidiJn.. - .
.
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LORAIN, Oillo -0\Diuldul&amp;rlti aci:ldent lhalldlled two WGiilerl and

Bradley, Levi, OouglasMarc. Devon, Dottv Mann and Trissl.
AverafjJE' and petite sites 6 thru 20.

5

COAT SALE

' ...

You'll please him with a sweater · gift.
Choose from cardigans · slipovers · or
sweater vests. Big selection of styles and
colors in si:z:es small {34·361. medium C38·
«n.large (42·44}. extra Iaroe (46·48L
'

MISSES' SPORTSWEAR

CHRISJ'~AS

Sizes 29 to 42 waist.
fortable stretch fit.
western style
Special sale.

MEN'S SWEATERS

•''

BOYS $8.95 SHIRTS ....... $7.60
BOYS $10.95 SHIRTS ..... : $9.30
BOYS $12.95 SHIRTS ...•. $11.00
BOYS $16.95 SHIRTS ... ~. $14.40

. STREitH DENIM JEANS

EXCELLENT GIFT!

.

Velours, westerns, Flannels,
Knits, Sweat Shirt Looks.

Sale prices on the entire Carhartt
line of Brown Duck. Insulated
coveralls · bib overalls - jackets
and coats- vests - hoods. All sizes.

Sale Priced
From Only

'·
sti.9l
S14.91
$16.41
$18.71

Excellent selection In sizes ato 20.

Sizes S, M, Land XL. Colorful plaid patterns
2
pockets. Full length shirt
tails. Made by Ely.

WRANGER 119.95

Beautiful colors and styles.
Cardigans, pullovers and
sweater vests.
Misses sizes S·M·L and extra
sizes40 to46.

111

BOYS' SHIRTS
This sale is on all our boys shirts.

SALE PRICES

Pair

Solid colors and neat patterns. Regular
and extra large sizes. Most all are 100%
polyester fabrics. Good selection.

·-·~...s •2 .,.~••, ..,.:R~E~G;.~S~24~·:"~·-·····~-·-~j·.·,:S~A~L~E~$~2:0.~3~9

MEN'S $11.95

WORK CLOTHES

1 Tube Socks

Mum CountJ Circuit Coul't for the
Dec. 1, 19'1t llabbfDI! dellb of Mary
Lucille Berry, toall tbe wiU.SIIand
Thursday to testify In hla own defense.
Delplte lestlmony heard earlier
from his nephew, Terry Brainard ..-----..,.'---..,.---__:_---__:_--------. · who was allagedly with Younc In the
Berry home whell Mary Bent was
murdered, who said Young admitted
to him IIIII other members of his
family thai he killed her, Young told
the jury be did not "break IIIII enter
Mary Berry's bouse on l,)ec. 1, 1976
and ltab her to death."
On en. examlnalion, however,
Younc said he c:ould not say for cez-.
lain whether he did or did not kiD
Mrs. Berry.
Raymond G. ~ve and James
WINTER WONDII'.IILAND, FQR 110MB - Pill a ,....W IWia
brl41 1 Olrll (left) aad Rlellle J~ el Cot. . . . K)'. wd wD tllelr
llfttllla p - eoa•edDena Puk Ia Cot......,1111Uu II)'_.._
Aalll'IJ' m llluiC _,.. left lle an.ter Cl••l II - b'a• &amp;e4l
witll ,_ IDehellll · - · - - l'lllh !soar tnlflc ...... (AI' ~
plloto),

CHRISTMAS SALE

This sale includes all of our men's
paJamas in broadcloth or flannel. NoM
~!terns . Sizes A. B, C and D. Excellent

I

VEJWNA.llalY - Four men posing aa plwnben tldnappecl Brill·
Gen. J - I.. bozier, the highest·ranldnll u.s. AnD)' . . . . In
southern Europe. froiD IU!pne in this northern Italian GI,J"ftwaclay
nll!hi. NA'l'Oafl!r!ele reported.
.
·
Pollee said !hey Juspaet 'the abduclora '"!fe Red Br1pcles
ternlrlats.

·Shortly after tba kldnapplrlg, an aoonymous caller t.ld the Ilaban
news agency ANSA in Milan: "This is the Red Brigade~. We bave tidnapped Brill· Gen. 1 - J:lomer, in Verooa, Via Lunco Mile I. A
communique wiD follow. n
·
The kldnappillll took place at about 8 p.m. llOildllll'l' dlr rbler's .
escort left him at the till of hla day at the Marby NATO hue, w11er!!
the general has belen lllitloiled llirlce June 11180.

.

ROIQ and IIMONOS
Sizes S, M, L and XL In knee

Winning Ohio lottery number

length or ankle length wrap·
around styles. Solid colors.

SAL£ PJICES
SMTAWIL1BE
IN.HS18RE,
and 'FRIDAY

2·3 P.M.
SAlUiMY &amp;• 7:30

.

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Weather forecast .

t$,':~':~=-=
~· allie llnal wltDiii h1 t6e trl81
whicb bepn with JUI'J eelecllon 011
~.Dec.

a.

County Pr'l1lecutlllll AI·
tomey Demon B. MOI1*D Jr. and the
.W.. lawyen wire meeflnll with
Judl!e Clarence Wall this JD0r11in1! to
~

Hay~s

.

today.

When ask~ by CaBey to tell the
Jury what he remembered doing on
Nov. 30, 19'16, the day before Mary
Berry's body was found In bed at her
home In Mason, Young laid he was
"somewhere" drinklflll with Terry
Brainard.
Although he could not'recall where
the two started out that day, the
defendant did say II was in the early
afternoon and claimed they were
drinking 100 proof whiskey and
taking Llbrlum, a drug he described
as 1 "downer." He further claimed
ibat they had ~ly 100
Librltiln plllaiD'iliir ll\ll&amp;l!sslon and
testified upon CI'CIHDI1llnalion ·
later thai those dnigs belonged to
him but said thai he could not not
remember how lliiiiiY he look.
On direct examlnalion, Young
contlriued to say thai sometime after

Jack Daly, his press secretary,
said the governor left Ohio today for
his home In Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Hayes said the Jackson branch,
for which funds are Included In the
recently-enacted capital improvements bill, is designed to be a
training center for workers In
existing and new manufaclurlflll
plants.
He said il is an attempt to work
with industry In helping to alleviate
the region's chronically high unemployment.
Haye8 conceded that Rio Grande ·
would welcome a donation of
Rhodes' papers If the govemOI'
madethe9f(er.
·
"I'd Jove to have his papers. I

charge,~

consuming the alcohol and pills he en Nov. 30, 19'16 and clalma thai the
and Brainard decided to go to the next thing he remembered was
home of Brainard's mother waiting up In the Mei@s County Jail
Young's sislllr - who lives near the in Pomeroy where he asswned he
Brenda Collin's apartment on the had been arrested for public Inoutskirts of Mason where Young was tosicaUon.
living at the time.
When shown the plaid shirt, blue
Young said he could not recall jeans and knife which were iden- ·
going to· his sister's house, but lified by policemen earlier In the · ,.
claimed he and Brainard did stop by trial as items ·recovered fl'lllll a
a niece's home and then went back creek near Chauncey, Ohio, Young
to the apartment Young ahared with denied they were his. He did,
CoWns.
.
however, identify arl orange shirt
Young said he recaJJed that at one round with the other items lls one
point during the evening .Brainard which could possibly have belonged
left the apartmenty but that he to him. The knife, Young added,
doesn't know where he went and If looked like a ltillfe one of his
he had an)'lhinl! with him when he brothers had owned but he said that
retumed nearly an hour later.
he had never borrowed it.
Terry Brainard 1\'ld the jury
Brainard had testified earlier in
the week that he went to Pomeroy earlier in the week that those clothes
and got Thunderbird wine and a were worn by John Lewis Young at
marijuana cigarette _which· he _"'_MaJ1 . Berry'sJ)O!ne; ill the early
shared with YOUII(I. Young said he morning hours of Dec. 1, 19'16 and
can't recall drinll the wine or thai the knife was the one Young had
smoking the "jOint" but said he wilh him then.
probably did have some beer.
Furthennore; Young claime4, the
Young said he passed out boot lace which had apparently
sometime after dark - after con- bound Mrs. Berry'• hands could not
swning the alcohol and Ubriwn (Conllnued on page 10)

nlent.

think any college would," Hayes
said. But -he said
more Ukely
location than the Jackson ~ranch
would be the tibrary on the school's
main campus.
Hayes said plans for the propooed
center were generated by the
college.
.
"If the govern.. had any idea 011

a

this I really don't know about
ii,"Hayes said. "(But) I'm sure the
governor didn't object to it or we
woultln'lhavehadll."
'·
Hayes said the Jackson faciiily
would be a onMtory buildir.g with
IJOlllllnar rooms and classrooms. He
said ofticlals hope It l'QII eventually
serve as many.asiOO aludenta.

Robb~ry

suspects
held in Columbus
Two auspec+.a In the Novl!lllber iMl
armed robbery of Vance's SlaUon,
HarrisonviUe, are beinll held Ia the
Franklin County Jail, and a third
suspect is being sought, according to
Meigs COlUIIy Sherlff.James J. Prof·
flU.
I&gt;oulllas Starcher and Richard
Clyde Adkins are both being beld oo
chal'llea ol auravated rabbet y.
Melp County 'W8ITIIIIII are also
ll1ed aplnat the pair, as weli as a
fhmJ man whole 1111111 II belnl
wltllheld until he llappnbaDded.
A 'bnH' In the case ~Y occurntl the nlgbl of the robbery,
when PclrdiiN)' palrtllmaD Harry
~provided.
plate num... of • 'NIIIde ba had ollflel ved llll

u-

tile llllldal. IK wlllch ecir reap ., 11M
to the 'til IJUIII of the ptaway

Jluletb=::

CIIDI

LJCIII

d ~---'IF.

iiltfiiN...
bt • . . . .

(

temoon IIIII closlnll argwnents by
both the State and the defense were
expected to be concluded, meaning
that jury deliberations could begin

proposed branch campus at Jackson
as a r~y for his gubernatorial
papel'll.
"
Paul C. 1flyea said he had not
talked with Rbodea about the
school's planned t2 million facility
or about what the pemor will do
with his papers and memorabilia af·
ter leavln&amp; office next year..
"There's ab8olutely nothing to
that. I think lhal'a purely
fabrication," Hayeuald.
Jackson is near Rhodes' birthplace of Coalton•
One news report today uld
Riiodea had set Into motion • plan
for establiahinl! the llrandl campus
near his Jackson County homestead.
The report 1181d the governor might

•
..:an•••
.Coullr

.

dlscull motions and inslrucUons.
Inltruclionl as the to law were to
be pna ["fed to the Jury this af·

use the facility as a future repository
for his personal papers and
memorabilia.
Rhodes was l!DilVailable'for com-

f'llddl;

zs.

,llfUw, the
Dlplrtmlnt

llllee

011

•

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - 1·ne
president ol Rio Grinde Community
Collese clllmlaed u ''a myth"
ThunJday apecalalion that Gov.
James A. Rlladel lillght choose a

..

I1

2 Sections, 14 PitH
IS Ctt1ll
' A Multillledlo Inc. N-1111'

says report 'pure fabrication'

lilt* a flllt af I Y

A

I

extended from Canada -th state. Soutlnlatem Ohio CI"D' Thl11'8daY.
Cinclnnali City Muager Sylveoler
the Plalno stales to eastern llllllen, wbo ....... hours late ThurTI!UL
sday ~uae ol the unexpected Mumoy Invoked Jl . . - emergency
Npr1herly winds between the two soowf.U, faced aliother problem In IJld pollee lolftd away 7$ cara
.....thor eyllems are pouriJIB arctic today-lee.
porked 011 major tboroulltanl.
Temperatures plunpd 1&lt;&gt; the low
air Into the eastern half of the
Meemrhlle,llllburban FClnll Part
ll11i011.
·
teens and were freezing slush and Fire Olief DoD Hoffman credited
Northeut Ohio realdenta, more mehectSIIOW.
S~MM plow driver Mark Rainey, 24,
"We did not expect the heavy with uvlng a woman from a fire
8CCUIIomed to heavy amwfalla than
ClhiMM from the IOUthem part of · snowfall," said Bob Everetts, Cin- that gutted her home 11lunday.
the state, expetlenced the first cinnati Highway Maintenance
!!)Okesman, expiiiJniJ1II why the · "I got so excited 1 couldn'l
heavy 8I10W of the wlnlllr with 8J'IIce.
department had failed to install remember what the name of the
Larry Allen, supervisor of snow plows on the salt truck~! before street was so I ran down to the corner to check the sign," said Rainey.
Cleveland's Operalien Snowbird, Thun!day.
~d city trucks were out In force and
As the snow continued, the ull He used his truck radio IQ swnm011
o£ruggled to keep the main streets had little effect but Everetts kept help then ran into the house.
Rainey said he had to drag the
IIIII Shoreway rampa clear. He said trucks out without plowa even
he could not guess when the trucks thoul!h he said it was a "no win woman from the house because she
didn't believe the fire 1!'88 extensive.
would 11et to llide streela.
sitaation."
The frelh anow helped ClnciMali
The snow did not hamper
Cincinnati police, facing
qlel'Biions at Cleveland Hopkins nwnerous traffic accidents, told pollee nab one burglar and thn!e
Municipal Airport and there were no motorists to eichafllle losurance holdup men. Pollee followed loot· unusual traffic problems under the company infonnaUon and go about s'.epo In the anow to catch an Ill-yearold and charge him with burglary.
clrcwnstances, several officials their business.
Police compared Ure prints In the
said.
No serious accidents were reporTbe weather service Issued ted. Long delays were reported on . snow at a gasoline station robber.· to
travelers' ·advisories across the all expressways at ramp!! and hills nab th;·ee men for the holdup.

John . Leiria YOUDII, on lrlal in

MEN'S DRESS SlACKS

Men's $15.95 Slacks .......
Men's 519.95 Slacks ....•••
Men's$21.95 Slacks .•......
Men's $24.95 Slacks .. : ...•

enttne

Young denies murder,robbery

llliDAY sALE PRICES

MEN'S. PAJAMAS

KNIT ACCESSORIES

Carha rtt Brown Duck

5 59

Girls' blouses, turtle necks, knit
tops and velours.
Little boys' flannel shirts, knit
tops,
western
shirts · and
pullovers.

CHR

FLANNEL SHIRTS

for boys included - blue

atll.DREN'S WINTER lOPS ·

CHR

Children's Sleepwear

JACKETS AND COATS

~'R'~--~·~~·~~.~··~·~-~··~·~···•L1~E, 1S~2181 7•9•~i••R1•E•G•.:B$ 1 14•.0~0~.~·-..8 .,.1•..1~SA:_;L:E~S;~111 ~.1~9:_.j. 1~M~~e:~n~·s~$~16~.~00Pajamas

BOYS' JEANS

CHRISTMAS SALE

CHRISTMAS SALE

· MEN'S WINTER

SALE PRICES

LADIES' HANDBAGS

Boys' sizes 8 to 20. You'll like all
the styles and colors In this selection .. Let us help you find the right
iacketfor your gift.

SALE PRICES

DRESSES and OUTFITS GOWNS AND ROBES

CHRISTMAS SALE

JACKETS &amp; VESTS

SALE PRICES

CHRI
SALE
LITTLE GIRLS'

CHRISTMAS SALE!

WINTER

WORK UNIFORMS

19" Color Television

y

.at

Heavy snow hits Ohio·.

•

GIFT SALE
.. ,

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•

Pomeroy:;Middtep«t, Ohio, Friday, December 11,1911

SAVINGS ARE GREAT ALL OVER THE STORE- SHOP

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Page-16--The Daily Sentinel

us II!

answered the descripUon of ~e
getaway car and matched the license plate number as given by Officer
Lyons.. 'ftle vehicle was ImpOunded
on Monday and It was searched purauant to an Athens County search

warren!.

~

from Harrisonville
ldealllled the automobile as the one
seen lellvln&amp; the night of the robbery.

. .

Melp alftt:iall questioned several
I'Qoei'Oy

Nlldentl,

using evi~

oblained lrGm the veblcle, and from
lnlormaliOn pined, lied the 8IIIJIIC"
11 Into ievenlps statiOn robberies
In the OolauDbul .,.. 'l1lis · was
relayed to the Hilliard Pollee Dlparllnenl, the Franklin County Sheriff's
llruplrtrUld. and the Clllumbua
Nee DtlpiJ1IIIIIIl.
It wiD be tlmt befare Meigs
01ia1tJ olldall will be able to
..-ute tilt pecll due to tbe
chltpl .. hgt Ibn Ia Prar*lin
Oaanty. Tbe ..... Cowltywuranta,
t.ow..er, wiD be 111111• dltalnen.

.
PROVIDES BLANKET- '111andar._..., pnMded a blalaket .. !be
perfeet ~IeDer 1•1111 •Mill cl wwuuw,lllie IIlia - . w111e11 1trmdl MUiy elll'l feet 1111. Plelllied wldlllle
- Ill eteaten, •
tile left, Lila N - - , ud a 1M r!pl, her ...... "-f. J1e6 .,...._
the dnll'fen"' Rev.... Mn. ....... Newmu, .._...,,

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