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TueSdily, Decem't!"lt,1'Jl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·oo rejects

Reagan ready to sign bill ......••
restorzng minimum payment•.
•

LOS ANGELI!lS (AP)- President
Reapn, freah frml an encounter
with the brush and fhewood at Ilia
ranch, was ret11r111J11 to desk duty
today to clear away a )'88Mild plJe
of leglslaUon that Included biiJII on
defense spendlnc, Social Security

HIGH COUNTRV SNOWFALL- This photograph,
lakeu iD lbe mouutaiu hamlet oi MootezUJIUI soolbwest
of Georgelowu, Colo., demoustrates tbe problems lavulved simply In clearing a path lo tbe firewood after a

and foreign ald.
The president was ezpected to
sign most of the meuuns,lncludlng
thGse glvillg the Defenae Department a record •199.7 bllllon and
salvaging lhe •122-a-month
minlmW"d Social Security payment
for some 3 million Americans.
White House officials said Reagan
planned to act on all 311 bills before
him before hiB trip Wednesday lo
Palm Springs for New Year's
fesUvllles at the home of publlsher

heavy mountain snowlaU. The Colorado Mounlaiml
today remslned under a travelers advisory as snow · nenberg.
and former ambaasador Walter Ancontiuued io fall, addiug lo the more than two feel that
Among the other billa awaiting the
has faUeu In maay loeolioos. ( AP Laserpholo 1.
'

Admissions--Keith Aeiker,
Pomeroy ; Albert Blackwell,
Racine; Carol Arnold, Pomeroy;
LuciUe Lewi~. Pomeroy; Adrmn

Roberts, Pomeroy; Rosalee Clarke,
New Haven; Dora Wood, Pomeroy;
Mark Rice, Reedsville; RDnald
Griggs, Reedsville.
Discharges-Edith Manuel, Norma Wilson, Stella O'Brien.
Saturday admissions--Carrie
Roush, Racine; Edith Manuel,
Racine; Lowell Collins, Syracuse;
Buddy Flowers, Letl!rt, W.Va.
Saturday discharges-none.
Sunday admissions- -Stella
O'Brien, Mason; Stella Grueser.

The Meigs Emergency Medical
Service reports that five calla were
answered Monday by area squads.
The first was at 2:43 a.m., wben
the Rutland unit was called to Meigs
Mine No. I, to transporl Charlene
Rhodes to Holzer Medical Center.
At 9:50, the Middleport squad took
Eva Slout from her Page Street
residence to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and the Racine emergency
squad transported Albert Blackwell
from Letarl Falla to Veterans
Memorial at 10:10 a.m.
Pomeroy's unit was called to the
scene of an auto accident at the Intersection of Union Avenue and
State Route 7 at 10:32, laking Carol
Amold to Veterans Memorial
Hospitsl. Pomeroy answered a
second call at 12:15, transporting
Dora Wood from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans.

and CUtters:t:l-34.50.

Veala: rCholce and Prirne) ftf.CI.
Baby CaiVfll; IBy the Hwt,d ) 7~1: By the

PoundU·7fl.
HOG PRICES:
Hogs: (No. 1, Barrows and Gilt!!) 200-230 lb!i.
37-37.8$.

Butcher Sow!l 29.50-35.7~ .
Butcher Soan 2&amp;-26.50.
FeederPig!l : fBytheHead ) 12--24.50.
SHEEPP~ ICES :

Feeder Lambs

~1 . 5(4UO .

No action taken
The Meigs Local School District
Board of Education met in executive
session Monday night to discuss personnel. There were no actions announced following the session.

14 15 10 lG---49
16 10 11 14- 17

Watchnight service
The Alfred United Methodist Church will host a watchnight service
Thursday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Afilm, ' 'Beyond the Cross" will be
shown during the service. The film
depicts the struggles of the Russian
church under Communist oppression. The service wiD Include
readings, singing, testimonies, learning experiences and a fellowship .
hour from 9:30 to 10:30 p.m. The
public is cordially invited to attend.
For furlher infonnation interested
persons may call667-3960.

r-------------------------1

..,._,IM,

...:
'lbe flood of year-end leilllatt~
was highlighted by the mllilalf
spending bill that cleared ConareiB
earlier thll month. It is a.l bllU~
short of Reqan's orlglnll
and .. biJUon below the qrlclnal Vll'lllon voted b, the Senate. Howeveji,
the ~ version is f2 .•
bllUOII above the amount app~ ·
lniUaUy by the Houae.
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req•

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e

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Seeks divorce
Max Wayne Wilson, 402 W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, has filed for divorce in the Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Courl, from Lois Mae Wilson,
Union Terrace, Pomeroy, on grounds of gross neglect of duty. extreme
cruelty, and desertion.

The~a'e a special authority about tht man In
Brown Ducks. Put them on and you're ready
for work. And how theN tngln•ed WOfk
clothH protect you on lheJobl

C.rhartl Is tho complole line of 35 tough,
top quollty work garmonla.
Chooe8 Brown Duck bib overalls, double
knees, copper rtvetl, triple Nama, toof
pockets and elattlc auependera •

oroolll&lt;own Duck IHna. jackoll, c!)all
and coveralls, too. Come In and see
guloy - k outflll that have

IJDIIc give you a lift All COO% cotton.
Pretllrunk. Mochlne Woollablo.

.,._

Clll"het"tt•
-

Woar Tlllrn.

UIIIDn .... ln . . . . .

SALE

PRICES
If! FCI'ION

YOU'Ll.

lfll1liSMDSIZfS
'

MEl'S I lOB' IU'I'. - 111 FU1C11

Pomeroy, Ohio

TRANWIBBRIAN PIPEi.rt-IE

2nd &amp; Brown St.
Mason, w. Va.

St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-3795 ·
618 Main

- Map locating minates with branches In Italy, France, and East and

'the rGUte ol the lriJia.8jberian pipeline which lllarla In WC!IIt Gennany is for use as desired with stories on
Urengoy, 1,450 mllea Northeast of Moscow, and ter- ·President Reagan lrnpofllng trade sanctions on ftu.sl;ia.
'(.u' r-rphoto) .

F:H. 773-9128

.

Small Business Owners

ELIIRPILOS
IN .~Y
v

\

Rescuers find, four survivors

HOMEMADE
HAM
SALAD
•••
~~~
kahn's Hickory Grove
Sliced or Center Portion

SMOKED HAM!~7~:~~.!-~.s2.19.•L.b•s2.49
kahn's
CASING
BOLOGNA ••••••••••• ~~;.sl.79
Bar's Chopped
11b. Blue Bonnet
Quarters

. .
BUENA VISTA, Colo. - Rescuers plucked three survivors of a
Christmas Eve plane .crash from a mountain and battled deep snow
early today In a race to get a fourth survivor off before a new storm hit
the Colorado Rockies.
A man, a woman and two teen-age boys were found at midday
Tuesday just as their emergency tracltlng beeper on the wrecked •·
plane was about to die out. The woman 'and the boys were taken away
by Army be'lcopter In a dsring nightllme rescue 'during a break in the
weather.
1r. fOIINI18n rescue team was left behind in the wreckage of the light
plaqe Wtth the remaining survivor.

Allie support not known yet

3Lb.

YELIDW ONIONS ... ~~!I.. 79'
New

CABBAGE.. ........ 2~~~ 29'
10 Lb. Idaho Baking

or MORTON T.V. DINNERS.. ~~~~..99'

WASHINGTON - 'lbere is no sign America's alliea wiD follow .
Preadent Reagan's lead · and bnpooe sanc:tioqs against the Soviet .
Union nor any certainly the U.S. action will prompt MOIICOw to back
down on Poland.
A senior U.S. official who asked not to be identified said Tuesday
that the allies have been asked'to invoke parallel measures and "at the
very least 110110 take aetl0111tto undermine
~lepll. ''
Secrelary of State Aleunder M. Haig Jr. told an audience in San ·
· Francisco that, contrary to press reports, West German Foreign
Minister Hans Dietrich Gen~~cher is "WtaUy supportive" of Reagan's
actions and shares ' 'the concerns of Waahlngton." ·

u-

Heist may hit one million dollars.

163fo oz.

CHEF PIZZA ••••.••••••~~~·:~:::!.~l.89
15 318 oz.

CHEF PIZZA .-•••••••••••••• :~:::~ •.$1.39
5 oz.

kraft .

.,

·CHEESE SPREADS ••••••••••••••••.79*

TROIS RIVIERES, Qn•bec - Police aarcbed today for a gang of
ganmen who IJrtefly held two hoalagea and looled nearly •1 million
frml the warehoule of the A1Uance Bllnde an11onol car company.
'lbe eGIJII*IY, which refused to commenl, lost f2,4 million earlier
thiB year to robbers who drove off In an annored truck left wilh the
. keys In the lgniUon.
.
.
·
Pollee In the city of80,000 people, 88 milas northeast of Montreal,
~bed theTuesdayhelstasa "realprofesaionaljc'lb." .
·
TIJI'e8 armed bandits, -ring maskl and uniforms llimilar to tholle
wom by anDored car gUardl, met Laurier Joty, asadstant manager of
Alliance Bllnde Lid., as he left his boJise early~.
·

16 oz. smuckers

CANDY DIU.S SP.EARS. •••1:!•• s1.79

Winning Ohio lottery number

4 Roll Pack Charm In

TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••. • ••••$1••19'
16 oz. Del Monte

·PEAR HALVES ............ ~ •••• ~ ••••.7f
71ft oz.

CARNATION SPRfAOABLES••••11.19
100LFOIIIf"S

IISlMJ .COfFEE ••••• ~ ••.••• :::. 14.79
tdtaPttstant

POTATOES. ••••••••• ~.·,~. 49'

.

CLEVELAND - 'lbe wi11n1DB illliilller dra111t Tuesday riight in the
Olio Lattery's datlJ 8llll8 .. ..,_Number" wu 4G.
The lottery repositd Cllltlllnp of tUI,Irl frlm the wagering on ita
dlliJ pme. 'lbeeamlnll Clllll on .... of. .,MUO. while holders til
wflllliJCtlelaUare ..... to share M83,21ll.IO,Iottery officisis ald.

·Weather forecas~

. W61HINGTON tAP) - 01111
heavy-equipment manufacturer
didn't fare too well, but most U.S.
companies and thousands of
American farmers will not be affected by President Reagan's new
trade sanCtions against the Soviet
Union.
The most significant steps in .the
administration's (lllckage, announced Tuesday In response to the
milltary crackdown In Poland, was
the cutoff of about • million in annual sales of high technology
products, Including computers and
oil and gas eqUipment.
'lbe biggest loser a!!Parently will
be the Caterpillar Tractor Co. of
Peoria, Ill., which had been given
preliminary approval · earlier thiB
month to !ll!ll 200 pipelayers sophisticated bulldozers - to the
Soviets.
That sale, which company officials · estimated would have
amouned to $110 million, was halted.
But 11 sale ofiOO pipelayers this summer was not affecled becaUSe the
machinery already beeo deUvere&lt;i.
Caterpillar officials said it was too
soon to predict whether the action
will result In fw-ther layoffs by the ·
company, · which already has
furloughed 1,400 workers because of
sluggiBh equipment Sjlles.
The cunpany said the sanctions,
un1esa supported by . u.s. ames,
would "llflt deny pipelayers to the
Soviet Union" but only divert sales
to a Japanese company thlit 'also
·manufaeturers the bulldozers.
. Reagan has said the Soviet Union
"denn. a major share of the .
blame" for marllal law in Poland
and warned last week that the
,Kremlin would face economic
repr11a1a ff the repression continued.
He declared r-tay that the new
Sanc:tions aplnst Moscow were
desiCned "to put powerful doubts in
the mindl of the Soviet and Polish

doub~ in the minds of the Soviet and

Solidarity chief Lecb Walesa has Polish leaden; about thiB continued
agi-eed to b8gin ' negollations with repression."
Poland's marUal law regime, ·a&lt;&gt;Reagan, who blames the Kremlin
cording 11&gt; uncensored reports for the crackdown in Poland, anreaching the West. Military council nounced Tuesday that Soviet air and
members ·contend the country is sea rights within U.S. territorial
calm, "producllon is growing and zones would be suspended as weD as
worker discipline is Increasing."
the ssle of the gas pipeline equipThe government Tuesday . .ment.
.
aclmowledged eight people have
Last week, Reagan suspended
been killed iu clashes since marllal food aid to Poland, cut off fishing
law was declared Dec. 13, according rights and slashed Polish air service
to reporla Tuesday. Earlier official to the United Slates.
reports conceded seven deaths, hut . West German officiais said Polish
unconfinned reports put tbe nw-nher Deputy Prime Minister Mieczyslaw
in the hundreds.
Rakowski arrived in Bonn today to
President Reagan on Tuesday meet with 'Foreign Minister HanbaMed natural gas pipeline equip- Dietl'ich Genscher to discUIIS the
ment to the Soviet Union.as pari of ;.,nctions, which would halt U.S.
trade sanctions "to put powerful cooperation in construction of ~
Soviet gas pipeline to Westem
Europe.
The general feeling in Bonn and
other Westem European capitals involved in the gas deal was that the
Soviets would look elsewhere for
equipment to build the 2,400 mile
pipeline. Rakowski is the first senior
Polish official to travel abroad since
leaden about this continued 1narllal )aw was declared. . ·
Jr ·
·
~,
Pellsh television announced . ln·~tlan olfiCialtl estimated. dlllllrial price hikes heglnniny Jan. 1
the new lrade bani would halt about tor gas, oil, coke and bulldi~g·
$100 miUion in sales of high materials "in line with the econom1c
tecllslaiGIY equl!lment and an ad- refi&gt;nn." The cost of a ton of crude
dlu-1 . . . million worth of oil and oil will go from 164.52 to $432,26, ~he
gas driUiug and lranlmlsslon equip- state-run TelevisiOn .said, addi~g
nenl
·
that the increases "will necessarily
I That represents barely 8 percent
mean a rise in retsil prices."
of annual u.S. exports to the Soviet
Earlier this ~k. the government
Union of t:t. 7 biUion.
.
sa1d meat and butter raltons would
Agricultural products, which be cut.
. make up about 70 percent of U:S.
sai.S to the Soviets, were not
touched by Reagan,,. who criticized
and lifted tbe grain export ban Imposed l!y then-President Carler alter
the Soviet move into A,fghanistan.

Sanctions don't
affect ·f armers
'

g

DINING ROOM ONLY

Crow's Fimi~ --Restaurant

U.. S. S. R.

Come in and have a cup of coffee with us at H&amp;R Block
and discuss the Ia~ consequences of year-end transactions. It could save you money. H&amp;R Block provides
FREE year-end Ia~ assistance at

BRO.NN DlCKS

Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
Roll and Drink

•

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16 oz. kraft American
Singles Sliced
$

__

.......-uon,

_,ljllllll..
•

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Solidarity chief to
•
•
•
nego.tzate sltuatton
I

In cal"''lal"tt

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
BAKED STEAK DINNER

the prabiemlllated In detail" In -u........ ,..
prablema included
forold ·'nl ' .,
overtime, seniority and grlevlllce pi ........
Last month, former Ravawwood WoriJI I P I''
E.T. ~lroade said the planlwu
with other lndllllry planls becauoelt had too n1anJployeesand low productivity.
·

.
enttne

ByTbe ASIOCiated Pftu

atEESE .... r.~.~:. 2.39 POTAlOES ......... ~.~! '1.89

-

~-- """"'" .... eDmlt ......... ..

c a1 ad Nra ubr llardt 11.
·
IIIIer bid llld It -'4 'eonttaue aperatiiJitlle ....
produc:tlao Une ff the~macreecliu pAl 1/ lllr~
lday "to barpln Ia good fallh to find "".......... .

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MARGARINE ...~~:. 7fl

ELBERFELD$

Ivery Wednesday Night At

.......

Vice President George Bulli,
presidential counselor EdwatiJ
Meesa m and the lctlnc ~
security adviMr, Adm. James Nuce. All are 1111111bera of the Spedlil
Situation Group whleh hil beeb
evalualing U.s. options on Paland. :

-·~
d...
ltiJ~rlo&lt;llei10aelb Aid lblt the ehdiM ,
_ ,_
,_·

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Examine the many dlffertniii)'IH of IINvy duly, rlp-ptoof, woar-

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tbil Jltl', llhualng dlllralbree Jll four potnues where
UniluD oslde fjJ COI1Y1I1ed to maltea lllumlnlm.
Allaat 2,111 othar people are employed iD the
fabrleatlon divillan at the factory. 1bey have not t.M
affected by the C'IJiheeb In the other operation.
A CCIIIIpiJI)'
who liked 1lflt to be !denlifted, said about 4,GIO people were eupble to vole on
the contract I eiJegOIIaUon plan. 'lbe total included, he
said, uesrly aD thoae alreldy lmd off In the past year.
In a joint letter mailed last Wednesday, Boyle and

and7to9p.m. Wednesday.
Emergency
runs f~~~i~~~ss~s~~s~~~==i&amp;ii!

Det.S.llll
CATI'LE PRICES: Feeder Steen~ : !Good and
Choil'eiD-500 11::18. tD-65; 500-700 lbll. 4S.5G-OO.
FeederHeiflln: IGood and Choice) m.6001bs.
4&lt;UI:H4.50; $00.700 lba. 36-40.
Feeder BuiW : (Good and Choice ) :J00.500 lbll.
4&lt;1.5&lt;hl3,75; IQ0.7001bo.&lt;2.7.....
Slatq~nter BWW : rOver 1,000 Ibtl.l 38.50-f6.
Slaughter CowH: Utilities 36.25-40; Canners

Middleport; Brett Laudermilt;
Rutland.
Sunday dischargeS-carrie RDush,
'lbe Salvation Army, will have
free clothing dsy Thursday from 10 Clarence Longstreth, Buddy
a.ln. to 12 noon at Its headquarters, Flowers.
115 Buttemut Ave., Pomeroy. All
residents of Meigs County and W ahama loses
surrounding areas are welcome to
Buffalo of Putnam County outattend.
scored Wahama, 41-20 in the second
half Monday night to post a lopsided,
New address given
77-49 victory in the Poca Christmss
Meigs residents feeling they would Tournament.
WAHAMA (491 - , Weaver 18;
be interested in the estabUshment of Gray
10; Lavender 8; Machir 11 ;
an eConomical emergency sen'ice Van Meter
2.
for motor vehicles as reported
BUFFALO (771 - L. Brown 14;
earlier in The Daily Sentinel are to Stover 8; Harris 23; Reed 14;
10; A. Brown 4; Abbott 2;
write II Fisher St., Pomeroy, Ohio Christy
Hill2.
45769, instead of Mil)dleport.
By quarters :

Veterans Memorial

I Wood -a_"
~ ... ' I I I ~ llbout 1,110 people at the plant

Athellli IJweta.tk S.lts

Free clothing day

Two marriage licenses have heen
issued by the Meigs County Probate
Court. The first is to Larry Edward
Richmond, 29, Rutland, and Crystal
Darlene Jones, 'tl, also of Rutland.
The second is to Noel James Miller,
45, and Anns Lou Browning, 45, both
of Middleport.

tbelaW'

r=====:------------:-----·;o':,

brother and her husband, Leo Childs
in 1971.
,
Mrs. Childs was a member of the
Robert Eugene Cleland, 55, for- Middleport Church of Christ and
merly of the Racine area, died Dec. belongs to the Phllatbea Women and
26 at his home in St. Augustine, Fia., the Loyal Women's Class of that
after a lingering illness.
church.
He was a veteran of World War II.
Surviving are a daughter and sonPreceding him in death, Dana and In-law, Virginia and Paul Scott, MidHazel Cleland.
dleport; two granddaughter&amp;, Mrs.
Surviving are a brother, Henry Barbara Scites, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Cleland, Sr., Pomeroy; a sister, Carol Bachtel, Phoenix, Ariz., and
Marcella Baily, Memphis, Tenn., great-grandchildren, Tinuny Scites,
and two nephews, John Baily, and Grayson, Ky.; Eric Scites,
Henry Cleland, Jr., Pomeroy.
Pomeroy; Jeremy and Katie
Memorial services were held in St. Bachtel, Phoenix; a sister, Mrs.
Augustine.
Edith Walker, Princeton, Ind.; a
brother, John Bodkin, Charleston,
W.
Va., and several nieces and
Ida Bodkin Childs
nephews.
Services have been tentatively set
Mrs. Ida M. Bodkin Childs, 78,
for
2 p.m. Thursday at the Rawlings&lt;lied Tuesday morning at her home
Coats-Blower
Funeral Home with
on Headley St. in Middleport.
Mr.
Robert
Melton
officiating.
She was born Aug. 5, 1903 at
will
be
in
Gravel
Hill
Burial
'
Mulden, W. Va., a daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. John Bodkin. She Cemetel'Y, at Cheshire. Friends may
was also preceded in death by a call at the funeral home from 2 to 4

Market report

closes line

Borle Aid tbeJ "clearly jeapardlle the enllre future of

Robert E. Cleland

Meigs County happenings

Marriage licenses

president's signature was one
allocating •11.5 bllllon for foreign
aaslstance, Including f2.2 biDlon for
lllnlel.
Another measure tighlens
eligibility requlreJuenl• for coal
'miner" io te&lt;'P.ive black lw-og
benefits and coubles the tas 011 t;08l
to shore up the fund thai pays the
benefits.
Although Reagan and hiB wife,
Nancy, came to Callfomia for a brief
vacallon, the pressuns of naUonal
business followed the preaident Monday ·- even during a Ql!lct bellcop.
ter visit to hiB hllltcp ranch near
Santa Barbara.
'lbe White Houae press office said
Reagan apant about 211 millutes
receiving a telephone report from

·J

Area deaths

workers - is affected by the cuthack.
"That agency is strictly federally
funded," Stein said, "and this is a
result of a federal budget cut ..."
"This will not affect the unenr
ployment operaUon of the agency.
There wiU be no cuts in unenr
ployment funds,' ' he said.
Nor, he said, would there be cuts
In workers who handle unemployment claims or funds.
.
Stein said the layoffs are stalwide
and that 308 of the 325layoffs will be
among interviewer positions.
He said the agency asked the stste
Controlllng Board for just over f1
million that would have avoided any
layoffs.
0
They gave us nothing, It he said.
"But that's a step we had to go
through to get a cerllfication of a
lack offunds."
•

Wahama
Buffalo

'

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c~e;

•

OBES lays off
325 employees
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The
slate Bureau of Employment Services, citing federal spending cuts~
has laid off 325 workers effective
Jan.l3.
No one involved direcUy with handling unemployment claims or compensation is affected.
Gary Stein, deputy administrator
of OBES, said Monday the layoffs
trace to a f1.7 million cut in federal
funds to the job services division of
the bureau.
Mike Clifford, executive director
of Ohio Public Workers United, said
·his group will handle appeals for any
displaced workers who belong to his
group and who want to appeal their
layoff. He said members must notify
his office they want to appeal.
Stein said only the job services
agency - the branch which seeks to
find employment for laid-off

.·

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•

I

Tbere's no food again/' said a
Polish woman from Katowice who
arrived in Vienna, Austrla'today by
overnight train. "It's terrible."
Price hikes and food llhoiUc• In
the sw-nmer of 1• led to nationwide
strikes that launched Solidarity as
the first union In the Soviet bloc free
of Communist Party conlrol. Tbe
· uni011, was suspended wben Premier
Wojciech Jaruzelaki imposed martial law Dec. 13, endillj! 18 months of
reforms.
Reports quoting a member of
Walesa's fiunily said the union chief
had decided on Christmas Day l8
begin talks with the mllitary reg~ .
The negoUallons were to have hegll(l'
Monday, but it could not be learned ·
if they were underway.
A government source who asked
not to be idenllfied said, "'lbere Ia
room (in Poland's future) for an illdependent trade union, lndependen\
both of the state employer and of
political manipulation.''
·
A senior Solidarity adviser still Jt
large said that any pollllcal solulloo
to the crisis must be made between
·"authenllc Solidarity leaders" and
the government. He said any at-.
tempts to ,..ce, Jlllionlala with
Conununlst Party loyalists would be
unacceptable.
The soul'Ce!l also confirmed that
Walesa had been on a tw«&gt;&lt;&lt;ay
'hunger strike. AI a news conference
Tuesday, government spokesman
Jerzy Urban said Walesa wu In
good health and was li1 COiltact, with
representatives of the gOVI!rnment,
Poland's Roman Catholic Chureh
11

(Conlin~illllpl~ll2)

The administration did say it was
postponing tslks, scheduled to begin
in Janll\lry, on a new grain
agreement. However, that action
will not affect the 23 million tons of
wheat and other grains the Soviets
wiD be allowed to buy this fiscal
year. Even lf a new agreement is not
reached by the tbne the current pact
expires Sept. 30, Agriculture Deparlment officials said graiu sales to the
Soviets could ronlinue unabated.
Adniinlstration officlala insisted
they believe the Soviet Union will he
hurt by the cutoff of high technology
items.
Particularly affected, they Sdid,
would be a 2,400-mile, •15 billion
pipeline the ,Soviets want to build
from western Siberia to supply up to
8 billion cubic feet of natural gas
dally . to customers in six West
European COWJtriea.
Reagan also suspended permission for the Soviet airline
Aeroflot's two trips a week to the
United Slates, lmpcad pew reslri&lt;&gt;-.
lions on Soviet vessels makillj! U.S.
port calla and ordered U.S. olflciala
not to reuew 11 exchange qreements in energy, scietice and technology.

OSP.checks injury accident
An Injury aeddent and another incident .-.allinll iD 1 citation kept the
state lqtnroy patrol occupied

Tueaclay.
. TIJeO.llipolis Pall laid Jeffrey H.
w...-, t7, at. s, VInton. turned left
frlm U.S. II onto Rt. 1• at5:68 p.m.
'lild .,.. llrllclt by • westbound
vehlele driYell .fly ,UCela L. ·Queen,
II, ~Star l\o!lte.
Queen·ln!1lred IJIId taken to
lloller U.Ural c.ter by the Gallla
IililS,. ....... - later treated

llld re'MIIlil '1'111re wu

-er.

.._..loboltwlllcilland Warner

-ciWfwfalllralorteJd.
AG;oa II•

• the

report. • - -

IHJ ........ ~. .,. WUllam
'· ,.,, .. l!dWtll. lurlled left
onto Rt. llfaU:Clp.m.IIJC! llltuck•

vehicle driven by GI'OI'III' C. Ostermeyer, 42, Rt. I, Cheshire, who was
stopped at the 564 atop aign.
·
There was sJiCht damage to both
autos and Fraley was also cited (or
failure to yield.
Robert L. Rarniburg, 211, Rt. 2, .
Pomeroy, escaped Injury at 3 p.m.
Tuesday when lila vehicle went off
the right side of Rt. 218 while eastbouud and llltuck a culvert, causing
moderate damlge to his vehicle.
In Meip County, the patrol said
an lll1known lnllbound velllcle
sidelwlped 1 vehicle driYell by
Nellie J. Kiug, 31, Minersville, on
County Rd. UaU:IOp.m, The other
veblcle continued on and there was
moderatedalnltle'tl! King's vehicle.

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Sentinel-

Eastern p(Jsts 47-37 victory ~

Pa....,_Tfle Dally htltlnel
P0111•u.., Mtddtoeatt. 0111o

Wednnd1y, Dacemlllr ll,lt11

The Bisho,L_p_______lfi_illia_m_P._.-BIM!-·kley_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

. ...

111 c.rt: SlrHt

"-::':l!OIIIo

At the impre181ve chw'dl on the
oulskirt ot Greenwich, COnn., wllh a
choir very nearly u sublime as the
tbeme8 it sings about, wu a viaiting
bishop from Charleaton, !j. C., a
great iJnpoainc figure, with a voice
to match, introduced u tile viaiting
"homllist." Tile bisbop weqihed in
on the subject of "social justice." It
is no wonder that he used the word
"justice" aa ffequently aa he did,
because he sublumed in It virtually
every~ Cluiltian virtue.
For illjl!ance, he 881eVerated, there
can be no love without "justjce."
After a while it became cle!!r that
he did not distinguish between
justice and social justice, using' the
two terms interchangeably·, and
thereby causing some confusion,
because justice is more easily
defined, in and outside theological
diacuasion, than SQ!:ial justice. But
this waa only the begiMlng of the
bishop's confusions.
.
It is not widely known amoog nonCatholics that sermons that touch on
current controversies are extremely
rare. The impre181on Ia widely
reached, that Sunday mornings, for
Catholic conununicants, a.;,e devoted
to homilies on abortion, or on communism, or on civil disobedience, or
on whatever was the issue that
· figures most prominently in the
week's news. It happens that this
isn't so. For instance, I have yet to
he8r a sermon on the' subject of
Ireland - not one. And I have heard
only two on the subject of abortion,
one on the subject of the Vietnam
War.
·
It is generally safe to say that just
as Catholics do not place conununity
song or coounon prayer high in their
liturgical tradition, neither do they
celebrate the sermon. It was not until Vatican II that a general scolding
was given on the subject, the homily
being prescribed as integrai to the
Mass. Daily Masses habituaUy omitted it altogether, and many churches
suspended the sermon altogether
eluting the sununer. It wlls ·thought
rather an accretion, and it does not

DE\'OTED10 ntE INTEREST OF 'I'D MEIGNIASON AREA'

ROBERT L WINGKTT
Pllblhller

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLIOI

.....

A"iilalt PubliK~r/C..........

~~-

DALE R0111GEB, JR.
NN!~Edltur

A. MEMBER uf 11w AIIIIUl'illkd .Pn811, lnlabd Dlllly
Allhl!rlc:u N"'•a-pn Pubihl h~n Ati¥1JChatJoa.

PreQ ANMtM"biU. .....

tk

•re-

LETI'ERS OF OPINION
wek.. med. They llhuuld b, k8ll U.a ,_ wonlll-s. All
• 1~«-:n lll'e IRibjed to editing 11nd muYt be 1lped wid! .-me, •ddrttl 1-.l Wltpltoat
llllmber. Nll llnMI~~ lelk'l'tl will k pubiiMbl!d. Lt'tkl'll ¥hcMIId bt- iD good tlllk, ~lJI
IIIIIU". oot ~f!&gt;IJnaliJU~.

·Turning waste
•
~ mto energy
"It's like brewirtg beer. Il'san art/' says Ron D. James while explaining
his company's business. "If you don't do everything just right, you can end
: up wfth a vat of slop."
James does not, however, work for a brewery producing Budweiser,
~Uer or Coors beer. He is a vice president of Thermonetics Inc., a hightechnology firm based here.
Moreover, James doesn't use any barley, malt or hops in his "brewing"
process. The only raw material that he relies upon js cow manure.
Thermooetics is one of a handful of companies experimenting with a
technology that could transform animal waste into a reliable, 21st century
source of energy for millions of farmers and rural residents throughout the
:country.
In the Oklahoma panhandle community of Guymon, Thermonetics has
Constructed a massive plant with the capacity to transform 600 tons of cattle
: manure a day into 1.6 rniUion cubic feet of methane - that is,. pure natural
. gas.
•
Similar work is being performed on a large-scale commercial basis by
companies in Chicago; Arvada, Colo.; and Bartow, Fla. At Cornell Univer;;ity in lthlca, N. Y., researchers have petfected a small-scale version that
can be economically efficient on a farm with as few as 25 head of cattle.
The conversion of livestock manure into nstural gas through a fe,..:
mentation process is hardly a new coocept. SmaU-scale operations date back
to 1935, but efforts to develop commerciaUy feasible gymptoms in this country are a relatively recent product of the search for inexpensive, renewable
energy.
The most extensive application of the technology is found in the People's
Republic of China, which had only about 100 methane digesters in 19'70 but
today has approximately seven million In operation, including five riiiUion in
Sichuan Province.
As many as 35 million cliinese peasants are being provided with fuel for
cooking, heating and lighting derived .from methane digeslers - air-tight
" underground tanks with removable concrete caps in which natural gas is
· producedafterafour-tosix-weekfermentationperiod.
The far more sophisticated Thennonetics process ut!Uzes massive
digesters, each of which has a capacity of 2.1 million gallons. The methane is
used to provide the plant's heat and to fuel its machinery.
Much of the manure comes from an adjacent conunerciai feed lot, the
largest in Oklahoma. Its 75,000 head of cattle every day produce 7150 tons of
.: manure, wh ose disposa1 had posed a vari ety of pouution and sanitation
. ·· problems.
• The United States hss one of the world's largest herds of cattle, and if aU
the manure produced by those animals were fed into digesters, it would yield
four trillion cubic feet of methane per year- the equivalent of 18 percent of
·· the country's current natural-gas conswnptlon.
Production at that level is highly unlikely, but the Cornell researchers
· have developed a methane digester - an insulated trench with a ftexibie
liner on top used as an air-tight cover- that can be 1ISed on thousands of,fa"'

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y

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"YOII csught me at a bad !tin.. 1 b'- all my
money on softwartt for our homa computer. "

Today in history
.

.

are, In cmlrut with ~
prison facilities, relatively
luxurious, prollldlerl privacy, w.hldl
!If all the requlrementa of
hlllll8Mlnd Ia llll'llly the flnt, after
food and shelter.
Then the bllbap taJted about 8
man who waa let out of prl8oa baYing
. been had up for rape - when the
real offender, years after tile fact,
confessed to the crime. ADd do you
know what that man did, the bllhop
ulted?
He CCllllrniUed suicide. He didn't
have anybody to advise IBm,
becauae he was poor, to sue the
state.
·
The suggests to tile IIIOI'Idly 'wise
that the legal fraternity In South
carolina il .uleep. and that Ia only
half bad, Ull'-'t a ~t deal to
dowithll0jlleiljt1!te.
The~ lliYe been very acUve
of late. Tile Ordinary of Olarleston
having outlawed capital [IUnflh1111111, perblps he wW proceed to
outlaw murder.
cauntry

New boundaries ·m ay
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
drawing of new district boundaries
for Ohio's congressional candidates
might be done quickly or bec&lt;lme a
sticky meas that could drag 011 for
mooths.
The Legislature, which begins Its
1982
seasioncharged
with a skeleton
seasion
Tuesday,
with the respon18
sib"'"'·
~·•

Republicans cootrol the Senate 1815
while
Democrats run the House
56-43,
and that seta the stage fOr a
possible hopelesa deadlock.
However, Senate President Paul

~=..e':'kerRy7..:':.,. ~~ ~~~

O.New BCIIIton, saytheyaretryingto
work out a compnmlse In advance.
Ohio IQSeS two of Its pr-t 23
seals in the U.S. House, and one

game charge in defeating the

Federal HOcking Lancers 47-31 here

Tueeday evening. The' win . booolls
Eastern to :0.1 overaU, while Federal
dropo to HI.
Tim Dill led the Eagles with 15
points,f01lowedbyaaolldl2polntel-.
fort by Mike Bissell. Charlie Ritchie
and big Paul Sprague each l8i1k six,
while P. G. Riffe .added !bur.
Federal Hocking's David Glaas had .
a game· high 18 points to lead aU

scorers.

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possible solution could involve each
seat.
party surrendering
Republicans presently cootrol the
delegation 13-10.
Rep. Terry Tranter, D-Clncinnati,
chalnnan of the House Elections
Committee, · Ia &amp;pOIWOring a biU
which would apportion the 17th
District among surroundlnc districts. It currenUy Is beld by Rep. John
M. Aahbrook, IWolmatown, who is
giving It uptorunfor governor.
Traliter's bill also would eliminate
the :l2nd DiBirict, currently held by
freslunan Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, J&gt;.
Ohio.
·
State officials found one .bright
spot in reviewing Ohio's economic
turmoil of 1981.
The Work Incentive Program

one

.

become~ess
•

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(WIN), operated jointly by the Ohio
Bureau of EmplOyniept Servlcea
and the Welfare Department, reports It found jobs for 20,225 penwns on
welfare roles.
·Officials note t!lat each of the 50
statea has a WIN program, and that
only California's program outranks
Ohio in the number of welfare
recipients put to work.
The average hourly wage received
of those placed In jobe by Ohio's
program wu tU5, and they wiU
earn a combined tauble' income in
1982 of $1~1 million, offlelala said. At
the same· time, the savings in
welfare wiD bet80mllllon, they,said.
James A. Duerk, director of the
Department of Economic and Corn'munity development, says It ap.

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pears the Home Energy Aasistance .
Program (HE!AP) wiD ben.rlt moni

Ohi0811S this winter than It did In
1980-1911.
HEAP, now In Its IIICOIId year, is a
federaUy fWiided JII'OII'UDI which
helps low income 0111011111 J1111 a portion of their home heating biiJs
during the winter lllOIIthl.
Last year, 211.!G hollleholda

received enWauce.
Although the number cerUfted so
far this winter Ia only lii,DO, the
filing deadline is not Willi Jan. 31.
Dllerk, whose departmellt coordinates the 88 county HEAP
programs, said he reviewed 8lgn up
rates and that it a)liiNred most
counUea wiD restater alqher level
of partlcipaUOII tMn ncoNed
during laat winter's program.

we fought him; you caUed ua we have worked up the nerve to say
terrorists, and we coottnued to fight. "rude fellow," what new crime 'wiU
After we attacked his heaclquartera be find?
I agree with Begin that there
in the King David Hotel, Barker
should
be no vlllllll relatiOIIIIdp besaid, 'This race wiD b8.trected only
.
tween
America and llrael. It is
when we hit it In its pockelllodl! ".
astonishing
that Israel, which deals
In that same recent lllatement,
with
1ept
tfve regimes in Africa
Begin attacked the inunor811ty of
and
Latin
America,
hu 8811U111ed the
America's war in VIetnam (whicb
right
to
taU
Ul
we
camot
even talk to
Israel supported) 8J!d the anttSemltt.n In the United Slates the PLO. It is dllgraceful that
another country wants to tell us to
Senate.
Begin - rtsht to recall his gory whom we can sen surveillance craft.
time u a terrorlll. He was an ln- It Ia criminal that it can take our
temaUonal criminal then, and he Ia' money and weapons for ulie in an atone ._. Only his more rteent · tack on clvilianl and in aaaaalta on
crimes make .the earlier ones look International law, and teU Ill! to shill
like peanala. Now be bu jell and · up If we dlsagnle with this use.
lar.ael hla alienated world
rockets to till ctYillana . wtlll. IIIII
course of crime Ia an 1!1C8lati!J8 .,, oplni011; It hu struck deep fear of its
and American disapproval Qb. bellleoalty in responsible leaders
vioualy hu no deterrent elfeclat all. everywhere (as the editor of s
Begin haa· · taken Rlaaan's Japanese newspaper asilured me).
meuure, and each pat 011 the wr11t I t - nothing ~erous in this, but
briDp .. the blcll 08 1U hand. He pers11ts in Its reckiesa and alm081
raided Iraq; we l8id "Ilk Ilk." He Irrational coune. U any other leader
llhraaed. 8Uid lmlbecl Beirut. We had done what Begin has, we would
lllkl "nanaldr nauabtY.'' ud be an- be treaiiDK him 8ll another Moammar Khalady. Why do we submit to
neud tha Golan Jleilhta. New

Cltl wblrla III'GWid

The second period was quite a contrast to the first as the hosts drifted
into a cold streak and didn't score ·
Ulltil the 4:01 mark in the period.
Although both team. didn't produce·
much offense, the Lancers took the
upper hand in the frame, outscoring
EHS 10.4. At the half Eastern went to
thelockerroomwitha22-14lead.
' In the first Quarter Tim Dill netted
10 of his 15 points, ending the first
half with a 12 point total. David
Glass had eight at the half for FH.
During the entire first half all
scoring was the result of field goals
as no foulshc:S were attempted.
In the third period Eastern
regained form, producing a baianced attack to oulacore the Lancers
i2-2. Ironically, no free threes were
onade through three period&amp; of play.
Also the Eagle defense held the Laocer offensive unit to just 16 points
over the three period stretch, to lead
34-16. Mike Bissell had six polnla In
the period.

--Htm

·li'J.'IJIIIU,
(1/T(JN/1

f/1111. \

promiae.

'

nadoes to break the game open.
Wolfe, despite an injured hand,
weaved through the presa and consistenUy hit the open man for a Tornado score.
Wolfe had eight of Southern's I~
assists plus' 18 points of his own.
Great efforla by Jay Rees, .Richard
. Wolfe, and Robert Brown completed
Southern's offensive quartet and
SHS led 52-33 after ihree periods.
After ihe ·dust had settled in the
fourth SIIS owned a 77-62lead and its
sixth straight win of the year.
Southern shot 49 percoent (34 of 89)
from the field and canned nine of 17
from the line for 53 perce~t. Trimble
hit 20 of 59 field goals for 34 percent,
while hitting 12 of 22 from the line for
55 percent.
SHS had 18 turnovers, 19 personal
fouls, and 38 rebounds led by Jay
Rees with II and Robert Brown with
10. Kent Wolfe led the learn with
eight llsSiats.
Trimble cominltted 23 turnovers,
12 fouls, and had 33 rebounqs.
In the exciting reserve contest,
Southern edg~ Trimble 47-43 in an
overtime. Kevin Curfman led the
winners with 21 points, while David
Faires had 20 for the Tomcats.
Southern plays Wahama in Mason
on Saturday, then hosts another
cl'OSS-river foe Point Pleasant
Tuesday.

win.

Eastern canned 21 of 47 from the
field for 45 percent and hit five of 10
for 50 percent from the line. Federal
camed 14 of 50 from the fie)d lor 28
percent, while netting nine of 15
from the charity stripe for 60 per•
cent.
Eastern had 20 turnovers, 17 personal fouls, and 'SI rebounds led by
Tim DiU and P. G. Riffe with eighl
each. Federal had 15 turnovers, 16
team fouls, and 19 rebounds led by
Glass with eight.

Eastern won the reserve tilt 3$-311
in an exciting preliminary cooteat.
Robert Maison led the little Eagles
with eight, while Steve Colllal and
Glem Singer each had six for the
Lancers.
.Eastern's nel\1 concert is Tuesday,
January 5 at home against Waterford.
·
Eastern C47J -

Charlie Ritchie )·

4-6; Greg Cole t·0-2; Brian Colllns 00·1; P. G. Riffe0-0·4; Mike Bissell6
0-12; Roger Bissell 1-0·2; Paul
Sprague 3 0-6; Tim Dill7-1-15. Totals
'll -5-47 ..
Federal Hocking (37) - Koker 1- 13; Russeiii ·S-7; Glass 8-2·18; Collins
0·0·0; Thompson 0·1· 1; Tabler 1-0·2;
Bennett 3·0·6. Totals 14-9-37.

Store by quarters :

Eas1ern
FH

1a 4 12 13-47
4 10 2 21- 37

BACK EXERCISE- Eastern's Mike Bissell (3Z) beads hockwanls
for a rebound as two Lancers, David GlaBS ( 12) and Ralllly Russell (11 ),
try to outrehound him. Eastern won the non-league affair, 47-zl. Bissell
had 1% poial8 for Eastern. . .

Kuiper's heart .
•
·ISm Cleveland

,

• 'IWcker photo.

Box score:

ROCK SPRINGS - After slaying
cloae the entire game- Meigs'
Marauders faltered in the later
.tages, dropping a 119-47 Wt to
• viaitinl Waverly in an SEOAL
. buketbaU make-up game here
• Tuelday evening. The lou left Meigs
~in seven declllona (0.7 ).
Wavlll1,y placed three men in
double figdnl to pace Ita potent at- ·
tack. Eric Breltenback led the way
with 17 marbn, while Joe Branum
• and Jerry 1111111' bad dual18 polnt'ef. fri for tho winners. Bob Ashley
• paCed Melp with a game-high 20
' pointa and 13 rebounda. Randy
. Murray had 10 markers for lhe ·
Marauclen.
After Meigs apJn lei the early

pace u in previous games, the
· Marauders began to make coatly
' turncwera which in tum, ahlfted the
lu'
f
momentum In Waver.,.
a avor.
MHS raced to 1111
lead, but

•2

Waverly's Tlpn eland back to
. · t¥e
a 14-11 advlidqe at the Rnt

period buller.

Soulhern 177! - .R. Wolfe6·0·12; J.
Rees 8·0·16; K. Wolfe 7+18; Brown
5·0·10; S. Frederick 1·0·2; Roseberry
3·0·6; Beegle 2·2·6; Brinegar 1·0·7;

Page O+t; Cummins .1·2·4. To.tals
14-9·77.

Trimble 152) -

Moore 6·0·12;

Holbert 2·0·4; Lanning 3·5· 11; Morris·
2·0·4; Koon 2·2-6; Campbell 3· 3·9;

carter 0·2· 2; Echstenkamper 1·0·2.
Totals 20·23·52.

s

By quarters:
14 11 1t 16-."i?

from the line (17 for 37) whicb
proved to be one of the keys in the
game. M~lp had 16 team louts, 20
tiumover., and .23 rebounils led by
Alihley'sl3. Waverly ahol58 percent
from the line (7-13), had 27 fouls and
11 turnovel'!l. No other stats were
available .
Meigs dropped the reserve contea&amp;
. 51-36 81 Robbie Lewis zipped 19 points for Waverly. For Meigs Rldl
Chancey had nine, John'Smlth elcl\t,
and Mike Kennedy six.
Meigs hosta Gallipolis in an
SEOAL cooteat Seturday evening.
Box score:

Melts (471 - Alhley 8·4·20; Riggs
1-H; Kovalchik IJ-2;2; Murray o10; Whaley O·H; Rick Edwards 2-2'
6; Mike Edwards 0-2·2. Tol•ls 15·17·
47
waverly 1691- Brellenbach 8+9;
Joe Brafl11m· 7·2·16; Miller 7·2·16;
Thompson 2·0·4; Preble 0·2-2; Allen
4·0·8; Sabley 2·1J-4; Tim Brellenboch
1·1J-2. Totals31+6f. )
By Qu.rlllrs:
· wo-ly
14 14 16 29-69

l..

career where it started.

.faurlh Cjiilltar,IIU&amp; um.d ttul ......
Ibid COIIIy ~ . . alowlr .u ;:od
le piD atrldi.S-- ..
tartleitNfwln,
11e1p tibal M pen:lll&amp; frn tile
field (11 of G) ud ~ 8 1*01511

&amp;4RGAIH lfATINI!'U ON SAT. SUN
.W. HA1S JUST I UO
ADIII$IIION I!VE"RY TUES~Y 11.10

r: FlriDAY lhru THUIISD14Y 1::1
(DECEMBER 25 thru 31f

~

James L. Schmoll, 0. D.

P. F. Riffe 1311 JGe1 bleb off tbe Door for a jDIIIp shot
agaiDa11•t tllhtdef- provided by Federal Hockliil'• Pat Tabler If4 1.
Ia ~II Eastern's Mike Bissell (3Z) aad the Lancers' David
Glaa (UI. BuleN defeated Federal Hoeldng, t7-zt.

..•

• FRIDAY 5 PM • 9·PM
IIIII UJNIC FACIUlY NEAR ,GIIIIPOUS
CA" -4t6
-· 1217 IN ADVANCE

,

DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

443-C Locust St., Middleport

ANNOUNCEMENT
NIGHT CLINIC
'AT
HOLZER CLINIC LTD.

r~Me;;IOI;;;;;;1;2;4;15;16-;47;1

' NIWWINTII HOUIS1
Optll TIIIL lllru f1rL
tAM. HI I fi.M.
Sat. t A.M. lA I P.M.

-.we--

531 .MCk80N PIKE ·At. 31 WElT

"I was the Indians' elder
statesman," he said. "I came up in
late 1974. Since then, I have never
heard or read my name in a trade
rumor. That is why I was caught
completely by surprise.

.

..,.s eklle In tbe _ , ,.. ol the

"It is funny. I was always totaUy
loyal to the Indians. I felt I started
my career here and I would end it
here. I made Cleveland my home.
When a lot of guys were popping off,
I kept quiet. I wanted to stay here.

He became one of the town's
biggest boosters and most popular .
celebrities, although he was never
well-known outside the area. .
"'What has made me feel best
about the trade has been the comments of a lot of people," Kuiper
said. "They said the Indians didn't
just lose a good player, but the city
lost a fine person. That' is
gratifying."
The trade for Giani&amp; pitcher Ed
Whitson shocked Kuiper, a company
man who had every Intention of
{iniahing his major league basebaU

15 18 19 25--77

T

•

Waverly doubted Its acore in the
nest pround, wblle Umltinl Metp
to jult taur marten. At the half
Melp tralled . .
IM'ICII the third canto bolb clll1l
l1lttlld IIIIJ, ...... at 4Nl......

w.....,

'
CLEVELAND (AP)
Duane
Kuiper, recently Ira~ to the San
Francisco Giants; is l~vlng his
heilrt in Cleveland.
"I'll be loysl to the Giants, but I'm
not going to run out and buy a house
in Sen Francisco," said Kuiper, formerly the starting second baseman
for the American League Indians.
"If I am traded again, I don't want
to be devastated like I was this
time/'
Steadily since his rookie year,
1975, Kuiper has developed into a
team leader and a spokesman for ·
the Indians. A native of Racine,
Wis., he moved to the Cleveland
suburb of Wtuoughby and set up a
public relations business to keep active during the off-season.

EASY LAYtJP - Rl'ellard Wolfe U!) ~- for an -y two poiuter
Tllellday uJchl apiDit Trimble. Wolfe flnlsbed tbe eoateat with 12 polatll.
Southeni po1ted 1111 slxtb 1tn1lglot victory without a '"""• 77-62. Tim

:Marauders lose
seventh contest

attitude~.

there Ia dally undermlnlncany chance for autonomy - and the Golan
aellun is • death lmell. for lhlt

.

In the .third period, Southern
. literally ran the Tomcats off the
· court with ill! effective fast break.
The torrid pace of the game forced
Trimble to press, which in turn
made the situation more lavorabie
for the Tornadoes.
· Southern point guard Kent Wolfe
completely riddled the Tomcat
delense, which enabled the Tor-

Begin's brutality? For us to be iJn.
pllcated in his further crime!~ will
8l!i'V1' neither our honor nor our Interest.
Borne escuse Begin by uying that
the .Holocaust hal coovtncecl hbn
that no one can be trusted, thai Jews
must do everytblng themaelva.
That attitude, no matter how arrived
at, is crazy. ftl!tber than breeding
pride in Jews, It wwld ndiiCe them
to the mentlllty . ~ trapped clop,
biting any ........ u.t CC11111J near
them. Security frolii International Blafllllly, which IUCh an

Othen uy that Begin hu to oeize
the Golan to placate, pt9 emptively,
those who will reallt Ilia IUJTellderlng of the Slnll bi April. But that
preaumea he wm ketp hi,
agreement in April- a big -.mptlon, given the way he hu kept the
agreem1111t 011 aulaloeelf for the
West Bank. His se1t1emeDt policy

.

Jiy SOOI"I' WOLFE
RACINE - The Southern Tornado
express .roUed into victory lane for
the sixth straight time this season by
defeating Trimble's Tomcats, 77-62;
In a non-league basketball contest
here Tueaday evening.
Southern placed 10 men in the
·scoring column with four members
of the perennial powerhouse entering d!)uble figures. · ·
Kent Wolfe paced the attack with
18 points, fOllowed by Jay Rees with
16, Richard Wolfe 12; and Robert
Brown 10. Mike Moore and Steve
Lanning had 12 and II points respeCtively for Trimble.
Southern, utilizing Its speed and
quickness, jumped into a 2-0 lead to
start the game when Richard Wolfe
sallk one of his patented jumpers
from the corner.
Southern maintained Its lead
throughout the game, however,
Trimble stayed close the entire first
half to produce an exciting game.
Southern atormed through the lirst
g().roWid and Trimble. maintained
its pace to stay close 11&gt;-14 at the end
. of the first period.
In the second round Southern had
, built up a 10 point lead and had its
. chance to go. two higher, but .a
missed shot aUowed Trimble to sink
one at the buzzer, cutting the deficit
to eight. Southern led Jt the half 33, . 25.

Begin the terrorist.._·______G_a_rry_Wi_u_~s
When Menachem Begin helped
direct the l!ll8 raid on a non-·
combatant · Arab village, Peir
Yaasin, !twas not an act of war; It
was simple terrorism. Arabs were
being told to ron, or they would be .
slaughtered, aa the 240 civilians of
Deir Yaasin were.
M8ny Jews were rightly ahocked
by Begin's act, and 28 American
Jews - including Albert Elnateln,
•HanJiah Arendt and Sl~ Hook wrote an open letter to The New ·
York Tlmea protesting his villt to
America that year. David BenGurion obaerved: "I have no doubt
that Begill hatea Hitler, bat that
hatred does not prove that he is
unlike him."
Begin recaUed his glory da)'l of
blowing up the King DaVId Hotel in
his public attack on America, in
whicb he likened the Reapn adrninlstrai!OII to the British occupiers
he conquered:
"What did you want to do? To hit
us in the [locketbooll:? Ia 1Jtl an
EngUah genenl named BarUr lived
in this boule. Now I live bere. Wilen

'I'ORIWio..;. Swatbem's Keat'Welfe

FLYiNG

Mike M~ ( 10) tl Trtm1tle darlllg Tuetlday'a pme at RadDe. Southern
-1111 sixth atralgbt pme, 77-52. Tim Tucker photo.

During the first periOd of play
·Eastern shot out of Ita starting
.blocks and set a blistering Jiace,
while defensively ahielding away
any &lt;lffensive punciJ the Lancers
could muster.
•
Eastern grabbed the opening tip,
then notched the firSt score on a goal
by Paul Sprague at the 7:22 mark.
On the next two consecutive trips
down the court Tim Dill powered in
for SCOI'Iis, giving Eastern a S4 verdiet. ·
David Glaas put Federal Hocking

leading 18-4 at the buzzer.

In a slow and deliberate fourth
quarter that 111w nwnerous lrlpa to
the foul line bring the game to a
standstill, FH outscored the hosts 21·
13, but when the final buzzer had
sounded the Eagles owned the 47~.

,Tor11adoes ·post
non-league win .

.

rns. The CorneU.prototype would cost about $15•• to .buUd and tniw~ but .
the value of the fuel produced requires a payllack period Gt en1y five to ieven
and one-half ye11rs. It-can hold 40 tons of I1UIII!ure, a !Cklay supply fnm a ·
herdof50to65cows.
Uke the Thermonetics technology, the corwel'!lion of manure il*l ~aa
- - a mixture of 60 percent methane and 40 percent carbon diOldde - is performed by "anaerobic digestion," a process utilizing becteria !hat thrive in
ihe absence of oxygen.
If this technology can be delivered on a wide scale, it probably is the
most efficient, C&lt;JSt.&lt;!ffective means of generating energy tnday," says
William J. Jewell, an agricultural engineer at Carnell.
,
"It can," he adds, "produce higl&gt;quality fuel for long period&amp; of time with
·; little attention, ensbling farmers to generate much of the energy the country
. needs for itsfoodandfiberproduction."

~. Berry's World

re&amp;ny aurpriae that the greatest · One of the lis, l8id the bllbap, was
homiltat of the ltth century dlacovered )'l!ln later to have been
(Newman) came in from the innocent. This lut datum waa rsEpiscopal Church, and of the 20ib dered In lrlumphailsl acwnta, illcentury (She!!n, Sheed), the first vtting the conduaion that a
achieved his nputation speaking mtacarrialle of justice Is an illover the radio, the III!COnd 88 a dlctement of I jurisprudence, wllich
reasoning Ia of course 88 vulnerable
layman.
But the bisbop of Charleston, S.C., as the asaumplion that a
could be ignored only if one attended mlschievOUI biJhop Ia an Indictment
church wearing one of those Sony of the inatitutlon of the prielthood.
Having then eaUed for lhe
portable ear-to-ear machines Ulled
by joggers and commuters to drown abolition of capital punlalunent on
out distracti0111. Tile bishop an- the ground&amp; that "Its time haa
nounced that the church wu rising passed," and omiltl"'! to· explain
to the challenge of IIOCial justice, and · exactly what It Ia that we now know
about caplta1 'punlslunent that we
he gave two iUustrations.
In his early year. 88 a curate, he didn't know about it at a time when
said, he had served in the death no theological opposition to it !!ad
house at a state penitentiary, and six categorically formulated, the bishop
times he was u close to the man went on to talk about prison conbeing executed "u to this ditions, which he denoullced as
microphone." He deocrlbed the dehumanizing. This Ia of courae
smell of buming Reoh and the true, but it Ia also samething thai
movement of the executioner's ann can be · said about West Point; or
up the voltage ICI!e to "18,000 volts aboat moOt monasteries; and, 88 a
matter of fact, the death cella of this
of death-dealing electricity...

ByiiCOTI'WOLFE
on the board by connecting twice,
EAST MEIGS- !'atem's Eagles · leaving the score at 11-4. From that
jwnped to a ClliiVInclnl 111-4 fin! point on Eastern completely
period lead, then held off a late dominated fi~ quarter play,

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
CHILDREN'S
VISION
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~nd Jan. 1.
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Fri. ·
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Wed. 1:110-5:00

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednadn, December 30,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Kyger Creek claims holiday cage tourney
CHESHIRE-KygerCreekreigns
t~y as the champion of the Gallia
County Holiday Basketball To~
nament following a thr!Ulng, 54-6.'1
victory over arch rival North Gallia
here Tuesday night.
The ch&amp;mpionship was only the
second ever by a Kyger Creek
basketball team in the tournament
which ran from 1924 tm'ough 1973
before being revived this season.
Kyger Creek' s last championship
was in 1967 when · Coach John
Wickline's Bobcats dumped Hannan
Trace, 00-70.
Hannan Trace finished third this
time with a 64-63 win over Southwestern in another nail biting con·
test ·
All four tournament games were
cliffhangers. Monday night, Kyger
Creek advanced with a 60-56 win
over Hannan Trace while North
Gallia stormed-from-behind to
deleatSouthwestern, 62-56.
Kyger Cree~'s Jeff Moles, a &amp;-2
junior forward, who had two out·
standing games, was named the
tournament's Most Valuable Player.
Moles collected 15 points the first
evening and added 211 during
.

those players and team trophies to
the top three teams.

Tuesday's championship game. In
addition, he was cndited with
sever!~~ steaLs and provided Ooor
leadership for Coach Keith Carter's
Bobcats.
Also named to the all tournament
team , chosen by the four par·
ticipating coaches were sophomore
J.D. Bradbury of . Kyger Creek;
seniors Gregg Deel and David
Roberts of North Gallia; Greg Webb
of Hannan Trace and Paul McNeal
of Southwestern.

CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Coach Bruce WilBon's North
Gallia Pirates, trailing most or the
way, knotted the championship
game at 43-43 with five minutes
remaining on one of Greg Deel's
three baskets in tile final period
before Kyger Creek regained the
lead for good:
Following the tying basket, Kyger
Creek's Jeff Moles connected on two
jumpers, Tim Price, lh'l senior for·
ward, added two more and Moles
and senior David Sands connected at
the foul line to put the Bobcats into a
live point lead with a minute and
half remaining ·
Kyger Creek around four timeouts
called during the final frantic three
minutes
began a. slow deliberate
.
passmg game des1gned to eat up the
clock. I\ worked until the 23 second
mark when Sands was fouicd. He.
missed the first half or a one pi,..
situation as North Gallla's 6-6 Malt
Kemper hauled down the rebound.
·
Moments later, Bob Blaekburn,
thesmaUestplayeronthefloor, con·
nected from the corner to s~ce the

During the tournament, Bradbury
collected 19 points while leading the
Bobclit rebounders. Dee! aiBo enjoyed two outstanding scoring
games contribu"•n
20 pol'nts Mo•·
~..,
••
day night and 11 in the championship
tilt. Webb who canned 20 in a losing
ca'"'
,_.. aga 1·nstKygerCreekledHan·
nan Trace's one point victory over
Southwestern with 27 points. MeNeal, who fouled out early Monday
night, had 14 and 18 points reapectivelyin those games.
Dr. Gary Toothsker, GalUa Coun·
ty Superintendent of Schools and
Assistant Superintendent David C.
Campbell presented trophies to
6

Price seven lor the HighWlden
while Webb poured in 121or ~n
Trace.
same.
, ·
1n the fiJial canto Southwestern
1'llll Pirates came down with the collected 18 poinla ~ tied the conrebOUnd on the misaed free throw at· test with 30 seconds remaining.
tempt. With jll81two second left Deel · A basket by Webb and. two foul
connecledmakingthescore54-63.
shoblbyWanghseatedthevictory.
Carter with two Umeouts left, Ulled
Randy Lljyton connected for
onelnsettingupanlnboundsplay.
Southwestern's final basket. at the
When play resumed, Moles passed buzzer.
to Sands as the buzzer sounded.
Southwestern hit 214 of 55 field goal
Kyger ~reek had laken a 1~ lead attempts and 15 of 21 at the foul
at the end 'of the linrt stanza bolhind lines.
Moles' 10 points and five by Price.
Hannan Trace sank six of 14 free
Kyger Creek extended its lead to throws.
32-27 at the half as Clark added eight
Bo• scores i
pointsduringtheperiod.
··
5outhwesternU3J- Baker I·H ;
North. Gallia got back.into the con- 12;
Lewos
3·0·6; Pnce
; Wells
H ·
McNeal
8·2·18 ;3·5·11
Layton
5·0·10.
test nudway through the second Totals 24· 15-63.
period behind the shooting of junior
Hannon Tr~ce CUI- Sheets 3·H;
3· 1· 27 • waugh 3· 3·9• Petrlel·
MikeMays
KemperandDeel
W
ebbl
.
'
·
0-1O; Barnes
1·0-2; Rossiter 1·1-3;
Mays was was forced to sit out the campbell3·0·6. Totals 29-6·64.
third quarter with four personaLs,
By quarters:
12 12 21 1&amp;-,63
had seven points; Kemper canned ~".'::~:'n'1-t:;~.
19 13 20 12-11'
f1veandDeeladdedthree.
North Gallia outscored Kyger
North Gallia 1531- Blackburn 4·2·
Creek in the second half, 26-22.
10; Deel4·3·ll; Holle 3·0·6; Hollings·
hea.d 0·0·0; Kemper 4·1·9; l\&lt;lav• 5-I· According to the charts, Kyger 11 and Roberts 3·0·6. Totals 23+53.
Creek sanl\ 21 of 59 floor attempts
l&lt;yger Creek 1541- Clark 3+10;
and 12 of 21 at the foul circles while Sands l-1 ·3; Martin 0·2·2; Moles 9·2·
NorthGalliaconnectedon23of59at- 20 ; Price 6·1-13; Barr 1+3, and
leadto.M-51.
Another North Gallia was forced
to foul and again the result was the

The

Sentinel

A~~Meel'

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Man...s.t. 11111-io pm

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Grande beats Marietta ~~~:~;;:Tl::~;;harity r;~;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~r·~,;;;;1~~~:~;;:~1;:·~1=~~;!~~!;.F~-~: : ;·;:;:;:;:~:;:;::~::~:~:;:~:;::;J;!!u;~;·
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JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC. 1·
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FRESH PORK

the first period but had to weather

a

Pearod Doeo It
After Rio's Watson McDonald and
Sibley traded buckets to open the ex·
tra period, the Redmen look the lead
for good with 1:331efl when Penrod
netted a pair of free throws to give
Rio a 73-71advantage.
Sibley made good on one of two at
the line to cut the margin to one
point, but Wollenberg and Mowery
each hit a pair at the line to make it
77-72.
,Penrod slipped in a layup and
Wollenberg added two free throws in
the closing seconds to ice the victory.
The 81 points enabled Rio to tie the
tournament's two-day team scoring
mark. Combined with the 122 points
Rio scored in its opening night win
over Kings College, the Redmen
equaled the tourney mark of 203

Marietta hit 45 percent, making 29 of
64.
·
Rio picked off 39 rebounds, the
Pioneers:!&amp;.
The dilfereqce was ut the foul line.
Rio hit 21 of 27 for 78 percent.
marietts hit 14 of 2,4 for 58 percent.
ll&lt;lx score:
RIO GRANO£ 1811 - McDona ld
11 ·4·26; Jutze 3·1·7; Wollenberg 5·4
14; Penrod 6·3·15; Mowery H · l9 ;
MOWERY 30·21 ·81.
MAR lETT A C72 i - Clark H · 1J;
sibley 5·2·12; Williams 8·3· )9 ; Wat·
son 5·0·10; Ross 2·2-6; Stafford 4·2'
to ; Teaford 1-0·2; TOTALS211· 14·72.
Halftime score- Rio 43. Marietta
37.
Regulation- Rlo69, Marietta 69 .

Southwestern, 64-63 in the tournament's co!ISOlation game.
Coach Mike Jenkins' Wildcats
with senior Greg Webb leading the
way, took a 32·24 advantage Into the
lockerroom at the half.
.
During the first two quarters,
Webb collected 12 points; senior
Kelly Petrie added eight, and Mike
WaughhadfivetopaceHTIIS.
Southwestern's offense was led by
M N I d r ~"
h had .
c ea an _,,on W 0
SIX
points each while Scott Lewis and
GaryBakerhadlourpointsapiece.
Both teams enj"yed a good of
u
thi
So •
fensive
'rd quarter as
uthwestern canned 21 points to HT's 20.

'

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EAR, NOSE &amp; ntROAT
GENERAL AU.ERGIST
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ded 13, Sibley 12 and Watson and Jeff
Stafford 10 each.
1
The win marked the third Marie!·
ta title in six years for Rio Grande,
and upped their record to 14-2
overall: The Pioneers of the Ohio
Athletic Conference dropped to 5-5
on the year.
AtTifflnSaturday
Rio Grande will open play in the
Mid-Ohio Conference Saturday at
7:30 p.m. with a game at Tiffin
University.
In Tuesday's consolation game,
King's College edged Christopher
Newport, 60-52. ·
Rio Grande played without the
services or sophomore guard Scott
Burson, who suffered a hand injury
in practice.
The Redmen hit 49 percent from
the floor, sinkin~ 30 of 61 atiempts .

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(ALL (6'14)-992•2104
OF (304~75 1244

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Butt Roasts ...... ~..l

late quarter rally before downing

MARIETTA Rlo Grande points, established by Alderson·
College guards Rick Penrod, Vince Broaddus College in 1976.
Wyllenbefi and Jerry Mowery conMcDoaald MVP
necledforelghtstraightfreethrows
McDonald led all scorerS with 26
in overtime here Tuesday night to points. He picked off 17 rebounds.
give the Redrnen an 81·72 victory McDonald was named the tourover Marietta College.
namenl's most valuable player.
The triiU'IPh eamed Coach John
Rio's Mowery and Penrod were
Lawhorn's Redmen the Marietta also named to the all-tournament
Shrine Holiday Tournament crown
team.
forthesecondyearina row.
Mowery scored !9 points, inRio Grande led 6N6 with I :441eft ' eluding nine in row at the foulline,
in regulation play. Marietta guard
and Penrod added 15 markers.
Rllllln Watson hit from 18 feet out
Wollenberg was also in double
ncl
a
Mike Sibley dropped in a free
ligures with 14 points.
throw to oend the game into overMatt Williams led Marietta's at·
time.
tack with 19 points. Rick Clark ad-

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Cage standings
I

TEAM

ALL GAMES

w L

1
6
6
6

Whe-elersburg

.p OP
0 543 391
1 47S 387
2 442 432
2 624 S07
3 350 308
3 560 556
4 690 626
3 366 362
4. 391 365
4 307 319
7 451 540
7 351 497

Athens
Gallipolis
Portsmouth
Chillicothe
s
Wellston
$
Jack son
s
4
Ironton
Waverly
3
Washington CH
2
I
Logan
Meigs
0
Tuesday's results :
Mifflin 84 Portsmouth 7Q
Wheelersburg 58 South Webster 37
Alexander 75 Wellston 55
Nelsonville· York 57 Logan 56
Circlev ille 63 washington CH 39

J 1
3 1
3 2
2 3
2 3
1 4
0 5

Ironton
Athens
Waverly
Gallipolis
Wellston,
Meigs
Logan

TOTALS

175
179
194
197
192
149
149

lI

1.35
147

I

202
184
229

~t ...'

227

204

I
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t.

, DECEMiER 31,

•

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1981

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The Daily.Sentinel 992·2156

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12 Ol

~

3·/$2

00

,_ .

DOG FOOD

HOT COCOA MIX
12 PAl gg~1 OZ. ENV.
·

25

~B. BAG $329

MIRACLE WHIP
320Z.

99~

I

Per Customer
at Powell's
Jan. !l, 1912

!
•

"

t
.-..-.-.~.,.. ..

.
'

Coffee ••••••••••••••••••••

•••

•• .
I

6

$

''

Point PJeaeant Register 675-1333
f
f
f

.

OFF

HUNfS

•

f·

ONLY

'

:

• "THE BWE
· MUSIC WILJ', BE PROVIDED BY
• • BAND ANJj CONTEMPORARY SOUND GROUP PROM RUN·
TINGTON, 1••110 PER COUPLE, INCLUDES FJIU ldl£aAL
· LEGAL BEVERAGE AT MIDNIGHT, PARTY FAVORS, BRIWC• F ASr Bt1Jl7ET IN BANQUET ROOM, FOR YOUR OONVENiiliNCE
DOUBlE
ROOMS- WILL BE AVAILABIE FOR f]I.IIO
THE
WilL
I 'OZ, N.Y. STJUP

STEAK J'OK

l'

t

9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.

:

'

Point Pleasant t
IS HAVING A
t

NEW YEAR'S
EVE PARTY

..

SIICI

50~

~

"Located In The Scottish Inn"

t
t
t

Margarme... !~~~.2/

•
'
•'

\

MIDDLEPORT

KRAFT MIR~

l
I

1

115 N. 2nd AVE.

SEOAL RESERVES
w L p OP
TEAM
s 0 245 152
Jackson

Carrots..............!~ 2

•'•
\

Tuesday' s results :
Waverl y 69 M eigs 47

r

,•I

19 19 1480 1480
Tuesday's result :
Waverly 51 Meigs 36
Tonight's game:
Portsmouth at Athens
Saturday's games :
Wellston at Waverly
Athens at Jackson
Gallipolis at Meigs
Ironton at Logan

SEOAL VARSITY
W. L p OP
TEAM
Gall ipolis
s 0 295 264
3 I 278 218
Athens
J 2 351 304
Ja'ckson
Well ston
3 2 336 340
Ironton
2 2 219 199
Waverly
2 3 278 259
L ogan
1 4 26S 323
Meigs
0 5 241 356
19 19 2263 2263
TOTALS

f
f

I

Per customer
at Powell's
Jan. 2, 1912

Limit One Per Cuslomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 2, 1982

25' OFF
12 OZ. PKG. SUPERIOR

FRANKIE
WIENERS
Limit one Per Customer

Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 2, 1912

�· Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Decepber 30,1911

•

Wednesday, December 30,1981

'

Meigs
•

IIJWDIG.....,
AP Cwa

~

•

announcements

J •

••

pad1at

Reservatio111 lor the dinner-dance
to be held at the Rutland American ·
Legion ball on New Year's Eve are
to be made with Dennis McKiMey,
742•2279 or at Eyelyn's Grocery, 9923947. Admission is $$a person or $10
a couple and the event is open to the

Women teMis players are the most affluent of all female athletes, but
Julle Anthony thinks she's found their choking price - $1 million.
"That's enough to shake up anybndy's concentration," said Anthony,
director of the Playtex Challenge, a $1 million pot for the player who can win
four specified tournaments on four different surfaces.
It's the largest single money prize in any sport except boxing where guys
like heavyweight champion Larry Holmes and challenger Gerry Cooney can
sign for $10 million each for a single evening's work.
,

. .,
..
' .
•: •!
•

High school scores
Tiffin Calvc11 64. Old Fore ~7
Tiffin Colwnbhw 52. F03lUrill ·H

Tol. Dt&gt;Vilblss 76, Tul. Ubbt&gt;v

·sr,

Tol. Mal'otnber -41. Ct'!ina tO.
To!. Woodward 61, Tol. Sblrt 33

Toronto 64, B!:!l:lver I.A&gt;cal Sf
TrotwooU-Madison SJ, G~nville

45

TuSl'ar~wm; Cath. 61. Mo~t~don! GJ

Th.shtw 67, Akrun Munl'ilt!.!ltt!r 60 20T
Upper Scioto Val. 62, RivenWI~ 'a7

Van Wt!rl 57, Sl. Mu rys 56
Vcwtialia-Bullt!r 61 , Troy

I

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•ltr"'S

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10

•YC:1•1 ...hd•ldblfl lo• WIP. .n e.t~::t-1 ' 'OVt'' $10•e e•cepl as
!JPI'I.~ ,._,t8:1 wl l't-. «' t1 -Me 00 "'" wt nf an ~
Mit tl ~e• vo.... .ou• .:t&gt;Oo(:t' ot d co..-.o.r.:tDI .. ''""'
......,.., .t~.t,t.lbot&gt; ' " ''l!'l:l •"'o:JI"t' wme !ioh on g~ Or a •arnch«:l
........ ,..,.. ..,. ,11 df' l &lt;lte vouiO PutC I'Idle ! toe oii"Vt't1•se&lt;l '' ~at the
ill.h ..
lO Ooilon

.,..,.. , t

.,,M&lt;t1 "''' .. ..,,,..,,

le

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
!(roger '' guardnti!f!O lut ~uu• tO t.ll
~• t st.,,' '''" reyo~rcltlll6 · ot rnanutacturar ll ¥0u a•t' not wi•s

NO PLACE TO GO- Indiana forward .Ted Kltehe1 (301 finds that he
has little room to maneuver thank• to tbe tight defeoiae of Kansas eenter
Jeff Dlllbmao (Ztl), in tile ftnt half of the consolatloa ·game of the ECAC
Holiday Festival at New York'• Madison Square Garden Tuesday llight.
Kansas upsetlllh-l'llllked Illdiana, 71-81. (AP Laserpbotol.
'

ht'l'\.11w&gt; l-l ~o,, bv'o dl

!~I IO, •nyl!f· "' 'II '"1)id&lt;.:t' ~Ou&lt; ''If"' o\lolh !hi! s.dfllt' l.IFdl l&lt;l ()f
b••nd or relu'1Cl ~Our purc fll .. PIICI!

Pork Loin

ol

coml)drdto&lt;t'

'$·

COPYRIGHT "II . THE KIOGEI CO . ITEMS AND PRICES

GOOO SUNDAY DICEMIEit 27 THitOUGH SATURDAY
)ANUAIIIV 2 1912 IN

POMEROY AND GALLifOLIS STORES

Voun~ .

H

Mooney 69•. YoUI~ . Wilson 00

Vuun11.. Suulh 89, Pilt.sbu.-r.:h (Pu .l Boylt·
Voun~~..

Ur:~ulint' 66,

Brookfield t,7

Bucks face Navy tonight
;in Liberty Bowl contest
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sporls Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - George
WA!lsh, the winnlngest coach in Navy
f®tball history, will guide the Midsl!lpmen for the final tUlle in the
Uberty Bowl tonight.
And Eddie Meyers, Navy's recordsetting tailback, says that may be
. the psychological edge the Midshipmen, 7-3-1, need to upset Ohio
SCale, 11-3-0.
..At first, it was very depresstng
when we learned Coach was leaving
lqr Vlrglnla.lt was a shock. But then
we reall2ed we still bave a job to do.
The mood now Is intense. It could
give us the edge we need," said
Meyers, the nation's fifth-leading
rusher this fall with 1,318 yards.
Welsh, ~1 In hls nine Navy
seasOIIB, 88Bumas the job of
~ding Virginia football in 1982.
Coach Earle Bruce lan't sure how
Welsh's lame duck status will affect
hla players.
·But Bruce recalled a premature
announcement af hla Iowa Slate ap~ It almoat COlli hla Tampa
teiuu a Tqerlne Bowl victory over
Kent Slate In 19'12.
"l've never announced another

\

(

job before a bowl. I've been in a
Ohio State and Navy played .one
situation where someone else an- corrunon opponent In 11181. The
nounced it. It was announced at hall- Buckeyes trinuned Michigan 14-9 af.
lime by the press to my players. .ter the Wolverines bad nipped the
They got them coming off the field," Midshipmen 21-16 eafUer in · tlie
he said.
·. season.
"The score was 21~ Tampa at
halftime. The final was 21-18 Tam. "The Michigan game gives ua
pa/' said BruCe.
some comparison, at least for our
Oddsmakers have established the . players," Welsh said.
Despite an Ohio State secondary
Big Ten Conference co-champions
that
leaked for more than 3,000 yaras 14-ilOint favorites to end a fourds
and
20 tauchdowns in 11 games,
game bowl losing streak in their loth
Navy
hall
no plans to unleash a
straight post-season appearance.
passing
barrage.
"We're such a youllg tear'n that
"We'll throw the ball mayba IJ
shouldn't bother us," Bruce said. "If
it does, we'll going to change people times, which WOII!d be a lot ror us.
early, see who can go full throttle for We're certalnly·not going to throw 60
limes," Welsh said.
60 minutes."r
· Art Schlichter, Ohio State'a·senior
quarterback · making his 48th
straight start, predlcla the Buckeyes
mUst have a balanced attack.
"If we just run the ball and are not
throwing the ball well, we're In
trouble," he predicted.
Schlichter hall accounted for IOf
yards and four touchdOWIII pusb!g·
carousel eaaflctlonlly
in Ohio Stata's loues In the Gator,
Ph."2·6M2
Rose and Fiesta bowla In the lut
)17 N. 2nd
Middleport
three seasons.

DECORAtED CAKES

FOR All OCCASIONS

Vegas Holiday Classic 87-76 over
Texas AXM; Marquette beat
Arizona State 7~ · to win the
Milwaukee . Classic; Vanderbilt
defeated Alaska-Anchorage 72-611 in
the championship game ofthe Music
City Invitational, and American
University edged South Alabama 7().
66 to capture the senior Bowl tour-

Bttts ..

MYRTIS KArS

ICIOGEit

1-.Q
J,fJ!
I"' /,y

BEAUTY SALON
0

a"'-..)
1\_?~

101 W. 2nd (Ground FlctOr)
omeroy (formerly LaMar'~)

I

OPeN TUES. thru SAT.
8:00 to 5:00

:

For Appointments Call:
992-7800

Ii

k

owner: Myrtis Kay Par er

•

'1 00.00 ,REWARD ·.
OFFERED

.' ' ·
., · ·

1

$189
20-ot.
·

1

.

I
LIMIT 3 PKCS: WITK COUPON . . f
LIMIT ONI COUPON PIR fAMILY
I
1' · I
ccuPo~ cooc su~ Dlt n lUI r~•u su JAil 2 1912
SUII!CT TO IPPUCIIU STATE &amp; tom

nus

··----············
OF

·

..

INCWDING CONNIE, YOYO'S

PRICE
'

MEN'S DRESS AND SPORT SHOES

U.S.D .A. INSPECTED .
fROZEN

•

~ROUP CLINIC

Shoulder Roast .... lb.

CONNIE
DEXTER

Cutter

Boneless
Pot Roast .....

'•; , -Gal,

6% Egg Nog

tb .

U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE . TAIL·LEibSS.

KROGER SANDWICH OR

. c1n.

. . ..

VAC PAK

•

Kroger Coffee

3-tb .
Can

12-oz.
Pkg.

3

20-oz.$
lvs.

1?.9

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream

S579

$ 78

$159

59
e
Parkay Margarine ~~~:

QUARTERS

k ~;·

I

' I r
• f'

!

'

(2-PAK. "C" OR "D" SIZE OR

IVUEADY' I~ERGIZER

I·P~K

••
-.•• •
...
.....'
~

PRICE

'

.'' .

SJ29

NURSE SHOES
! I•
% 'P~ICE
40% OFF
! !·------~-~--~------· .................

Deluxe Piua

Pak

Salad
Tomatoes ·

Cheese Pizza
NEW YORK

FRESH MADE . Pli"PERONI .

White
Cabbage .......

Sausage Piua

MUSHIIOOM 011

lb.

FlESH

Roasted Peanuts
F~ESH

.

.

111.

·I ·Pound

Mushrooms .. ..... carton
For

'

Ill, • : , •
• 1 •

r

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T

.

:I:• •
'

99e
$149

6
·
9
9
c
8
c
99
Lemons .......... .

16$ SIZE FRESH

.

lb.

flESH MADl

Fresh Limes .....

GROUP WOMEN'S
WESTERN BOOTS

$2 89

FRESH MADE

..-.

HANDBAGS

""'

SliCED FlU

Battertes .. .. ... .....

.-.

0011

Ham
9·VOLT.
.

Far

Shells . . . . ~-~
KIOOEI FROZEN

Whip
I · OI .

o

·ropp1ng ... ""'
AVONOAU

Tomato

Juice ..

···01

, . , Can

JIOZIN ICitOGU

....

1 ·01 .

;::; CUTTER

Frosting · "~~·:·

, .,.,,$319
Plua

69

c

a:;:~i~~~··::~. $149
"•·

Manhmallol'l.•,
Creme .
,.,

B;l;;dc

rub•

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49

GOlD CIEST

..

Colgate
.Toothpaste ...

Pie

Chips

'

5·0Z. REGULAR OR 4.l·OZ. GEL

orl .

KROGER

Pkg.

$199

..

4

1·01.

FROZEN MROGlft (10·01.

Pot
Pies

Frozen
'Jerio's
$109
•
,
12 .5-ot.
PIZZI

$299

T-Bone Steaks .....
2
s1
09
•
B
10-ot .
W1ener uns ..... Pka•·
Bread ... .. .

10·· 14-LB. AVG .

. KROGER

''

AVONDALE

Vanilla
FIavorlng ...

', ~ '' !
•.•
...

PRICE

'

ca"

I

Kraft Cheese .......

GROUP CHILDREN'S
STRIDE RITE &amp;
HUSH PUPPIES

'

$399

KIOGII

KROGER BUTTERMILK

Young Turkeys .... lb.

PRICE

~

1

AMERICAN SINGLES

'

·~

:!~~~n . ·~::·

Mixed
Fryer Parts ... · lb.

j • '

45e
~~·
,. ..99 e
.._paragus . .
~~~~tr
~~· 79C ·

$129

Spo.light
Bean C~Hee

....

Including Leather and Suede

40%

LAMB

U.S . GOV'T . GUDED CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

T

CLINIC

WOMEN'S CASUALS AND CLOGS

AVONDALE

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

FOOlW()RKS

PRICE

lb .

Butterfly Shrimp .. :i.;~·

fteWSpaper rack.

.
'

69e

U.S .D.A. CHOICE FRESH AMERICAN

J

'

ChIFrltl ... •·••·
'"'

$13 9

Quarter Pork Loin

$

for more Information.

&lt;••

M. .schlno

tb.

SLICED INTO CHOPS , FlESH,

•

Con.t act this paper

. ...sse

HIUCIEST

FROZEN FRES·SHORE, BREADED

..

CONN,IE

FOOTNOTES

·PICniCS .. .. . .

'

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES WOMEN'S SPORT SHOES .' '

f001WORKS

Whole
• • Smoked.

Halves ..

;. '

WITH INFLATION FIGHTING PiiCES

HUSH PUPPIES

Pear

......
...

SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

FOOlWORKS

4 . .'7.LI . AVG.

breaking Into any Sentinel
·

~:: SJ45

AYONDALI

'

Pkg.

.

12

Buzz Buttered
Beef Patties

"Next To Elberfeld$ In Pomeroy"

•

GRIZZLIES
PEDWIN
HUSH PUPP,IES

.

. c...

Apple
Juice ...

.

'

If Y0 U prOVlde 1nfo rma tlOn·
leading tO the arrest of
anyone tampa' ring With Or

I
I
I
1

. . . 33e

AVONDAll

Cut

RE-OPENING OF

r~niam;;e;nt;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~ij
'

.

II

SOlO TO DE AlliS .

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

Willou~ hby S, 67, M'aplt! His. 60

Xenia 62. Day. Bt'Jlmimt S8

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited a
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Gene Evans, Gallipolis.

AND RESUME NORMAL HOURS

~~~~~·~~~~~-~~~ ·

Watcrfonl 63, Hebron Lakewood ~
Waverly 69, M t'i~s 47
W. Branch 1fl. Aquinas U
W. Muskingum a1, l.kkin11. Val. 42:

Gibson.

• Open New Year's Day
January 1, at 9am

.
•

&gt;

points from
MikeMaryland.
l!anders in the
Brulns'
romp over
· Seven-foot center Akeem· Abdul
Olajuwon scored 13 of his 20 points in
the final seven minutes to· lead
Houston over LSU.
Unranked Teams
Elsewhere, undefeated Lamar
defeated Rhnde Island fl.'l.{j! to win
the All-College tournament; Toledo
whipped Illinois 71-61 in the title
game of ·the Blade-Glass City
Classic; undefea"'!Jidabo won the
Far West Classic, beating Oregon 81·
· 62; Nevada-Las Vegas won the Las

Wadsworth :i7, Wooskr 00

Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Welsh and Ms.

'

,.''

Wichita State, San Francisco upset in classic

point
by John
second-half
Pinone's deficit
34 points,
to three
cutanlate
Illin the game. No.ll Indiana lost the
consolation game to KanSas as
David Magley scored 32 points lor
the Jayhawks.
Eddie Phillips scored 14 points and
Cliff · Windham 12 as Alabama
breezed past Maine, Oregon State
took third place in tbe Far West
ClaSsic over Portland as Charlie Sitton scored 14 points and A.C. Green
added 13, while UCLA scored the first 11 points of the game and got 23

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple visited a
lew days with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Brown, Ray, Ohio and also called on
Mrs. Eva Schriber and sister Edith
recently.

Leatha Cowen are spending a few
months in Florida.
Joe Sayre who had heart attack on
way to Florida, is slowly Ullprovinlj.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson,
Maryland and daughter Gay LyM of
Columbus spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas and Lana

• Open Regular Hours ·Until
6pm Thursday, December 31,
·
New Year's Eve

WE IUSUVI THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTifiES , NONI

Ewing and guard Eric Floyd both
scored 14 points to lead the Hoyas,
now 9-2 .with an eight-game winning
streak.
St.John's won the Holiday Festival
at Madison Square Garden as Billy
Goodwin scored 20 points and hit
some crucial free throws down the
stretch as 19th-ranked ViUanova,led

Mr. and Mrs. Millard Christian
spent Thanksgiving with daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Harmon, Long Bottom.

.' •-

• .
'

"It's not all that improbable," Julie said, during a stopover in New York.
" Martina has an abundance of talent, more than any other player, but she often is inclined to lose confidence and not play to her full potential.
'' Personally, I think Chris Evert (Uoyd) has the best chance in the three
remaining tournaments. She has the necessary mental glue- she and Tracy
Austin. I have never seen Tracy give up on a point."
·
A player, failing to win all four or the events, can still collect $500,000 by
taking three. The prize will be up for grabs every year.

just hall the game to lead Virginia,
unbeaten in nine games, past Richmond.
No.tre Dame, one of two teams to
employ a slowdown against ranked
opposition, fell to 2-5 dedspite
keeping the balll ball away from .
Kentucky.
Kentucky partisans at Freedom
Hall in Loulsville hooted derisively
at Notre Dame's tactics, which saw
only 46 points scored in regulation
time. Wildcats Coach Joe B. Hall,
however, thought Notre Dame's
Digger Phelps did the right thing.
Trent'Tucker scored 21 points, 17
of them in the first hall when Minnesota built a 37-24 lead over Arizona
en route to the Pillsbury Iitle.
Tucker was named MVP of the tournament.
Seeand Teo
Georgetown, ted by 7-foot c-enter
Pat Ewing, induced Columbia;
whose tallest player is 6-7, to hold
the ball for as many as three
minutes at a lime before laking a
shot. It was the lowest-scoring game
in the 19-year history of the
Rochester Classic tournament, in
wliich no team had ever scored less
than 50 points.

Election of officers will be held
when the Eastern Local Athletic
Boosters meet at 8 p.m. Monday at

The Ecclesia Fellowship, located
at 121 Mill St., Mldilleport, will start
services on Saturday, Jan. 2, 7 p.m.
The pastor of the fellowship is Chuck
McPherson who invites the public to
attend or to contact him at 99U081
for information · on the new
organization.

Harrisonville Social News

...•.

"Martina already.has a leg up on the $1 million," Anthony said, explaining
the onetime Czech had won the U.S. Women's Indoor Championship on Oct.
4. .
The tournament was played on a carpet turf. Now all Navratilova has to do
is follow that with a victory in the Family Circle Cup in Hilton Head, S.C.,
April :;..11, on clay (Har-Tru ); Wimbledon on grass in July and the U.S. Open
on hard court in September.

From AP Wires
think we've ever won a game like
When the nation's second and this,'' said Rice CoaCh Tommy Suiteighth ranked college basketball Is, whose Owls improved to 7-4.
teams are ups~t on the same night
"It's a difficult game for the San
i\'s big news. When its happens in a . Francisco Dons to accept, but it simdoubleheader in the same building ply wasn't meant to be," said Coach
it's downright shocking.
Pete Barry, whose Club fell to Ill-!.
But a championship showdown
Rice was led by Renaldo O'Neal
tonight between 20th-ranked North with 24 points while Ricky Pierce adCarolina State and unranked Rice is . ded 15. San Francisco watsed a senthe .surprising res ult of the former's sational 39-point performance by
6ll-48 beating of No. 2 Wichita State Quintin DaileY..
and the latter's 7~ victory over
In other games involving ranked
No. 8 San Francisco in the Rainbow teams, No.I North Carolina ripped
Classic.
Santa Clara 76-57 in the Cable Car
And in \he true spirit of DaviJ and Classic final; No. 3 Virginia routed
Gofiath, it was N.C. State's little Richmond 74-43 in the Timesmen who prevailed · and the Dispatch Invitational at Richmond:
Shockers' big men who fell before a No. 4 Kentucky took Notre Dame in
stunned crowd at the Blaisdel Center overtime 34-28; No.9 Minnesota
Arena in Honolu)u.
crushed Arizona 91~2 in the final.of
"There is no question that our the Pillsbury Classic at Mingliards (Dereck Whittenburg and neapolis; No.ll Indiana lost 7Hl to
Sydney Lowe) did it for us again Kansas in the consolation game of
tonight, " Wolfpack Coach Jim the Holiday Festival in New York;
v'alvano said or his team's victory 12th-ranked Alabama beat Maine 77oiter Wichita State. "We wanted 61 in the Best Holiday Classk in PortiM,m to control the tempo and when tland, Maine; 15th-ranked Oregon
we got the lead, they were to spread State beat Portland 61-M in the con-.
the court out. They did it well."
solation game of the Far West
:"When we started to play good Classic; 16th-ranked UCLA smashed
defense in the second half, but we Maryland 90-57, No. 17 Georgetown
cOuldn't get any offense going," said beat Columbia 33-26; No.IB Houston
Wichita State Coach Gene Smithson. defeated Louisiana Slate 7U9 in the
"';We just couldn't stick it in the hole, Sugar Bowl tournament and 19thesP.,cially from the outside when ranked Villanova lost 94-89 to St.
. N.C. State packed the zone."
John's in the Holiday Festival final . •
Forward Thurl Bailey with 23
Other Top Teo
points, Whittenburg with 22 and
Top-ranked North Carolina,
Lowe, who quarterbacked the of- playing without injured center Sam
fense, were the keys to the victory
Perkins, got 21 points from Michael
by the Wolfpack, ~.
Jordan and 19 from James Worthy to
NC State employed a tight 2-3 zone defeat Santa Clara. Jordan, a freshthe whole game to effectively shut man guard, also had 10 rebounds for
down the Shockers big front wall of the Tar Heels, now 8-(), Perkins, a 6-9
Antoine Carr, Jay Jackson and Cliff sophomore, sat out the game with a
Levingstpn. Levingston had 11 poin- sprained ankle.
ts and Cayr 10.
. All-America Ralph Sampson
"That was probably the biggest scored 12 points, got 13 rebounds and
game in our school's history. I don't blocked three shots while playing

The Middleport Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary still has
some lrultcakes remaining lor
sale. The cakes are $3 each, and
purchases may be arranged by
calling 992-7571 any time.

Eastern High School. All members
and residents interested in joining
are invited.

YOUR FRIENOL Y KROGER STORES

Anthony's project covers a 12-month span and two continents, but if Martina Navratllova, Chris Evert Uoyd, Tracy Austin or any of the pig-tailed
teen-age wonders can score the sweep, she collecta li cool million, just like
that.
"Women are making daily advances in politics, the arll!, business and
everywhere - now they are making a tremendous step In tennis," said the
enterprising project director, herself a former ranking player on the toui', .a
PhD out of UCLA who allio has the role of team psychologist for the
Philadelphia Flyers hockey team - .the first woman to bold such a position.

REPELLED - Ohio State center Granville Walters (13) , left,
blocks a shot by Washington State forward Rowlie Joyner (13) In first
hall action Tuesday nlghl Walters gets some help from teammate
BFyant Johnson 144). Ohio State went on to win the game 63-S4. lAP
L:iserphoto).

public. Activity will begin at 9 p.m.
and conclude at I a.m.

Racine chapter 124, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
Dues are payable.

Todsy's

Sports World

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

age .

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Pag-1-The Daily sentinel

Community Corner Merchants take
part in derby

ByCIIARLENEHOEFUCH
Settlillelalaff
Fllllily gatherings, always a
higbllght of the
holidays, marked
the social scene in
Meigs County
over the Christ·
mas weekend.
Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell
of Route 2,
.
Racine, spent the CHAJP..ENE
holiday weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman (Kenda
Russell), and their daughters,
Shelly and Kimberly at
Pickerington. they were joined
there Christmas night by Marine
captain and Mrs. Karl Russell
and children, Melissa and Kenneth, of Scotts Depot, W.Va.
The holiday houseguests of
Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz were her
daughter and son-in-law, Bob and
Elnora Wells of Warsaw, and
their children, Lynn and Kay,
also of Warsaw, and Kim of
Cbicago, Ill.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Weber of Keno for Christmas
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Strauss, Mahala, John and Steve
of Fleming, Brenda Ingraham,
Byron and Brad, Debbie
Wiliams, Danny and Denny, The
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill,
Williamstown, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. John Hayes, Chester; and
Mrs. Violet Smith and Norman
McCain, Reedsville. Mrs. Robert
White was also a holiday visitor.
Mr. and Mrs. James Disbong
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Van
Nest of Athens were .Christmas
diMer guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Hoeflich and Jayne. On
Christmas Eve, the Hoefliches
were joined by Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Shuster. Early holiday
visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hammer and grandson, Steve
Martin, Columbus.
Mrs. James (Barhara) Hegler
and son, Matthew, of South
carolina returned home Sunday
after a holiday visit here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson
Jones. Mrs. Jones remains a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Gail Buck entertained Christllllls Eve with a
family dinner attended by Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Wallace, Natalie,
Buck and Rebekah, canal Winchester, Mr. and Mrs. Jon Buck,
Middleport, and Mrs. Beatrice
Buck, Pomeroy. The Bruce
Wallace family also visited over
the holiday with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Mid·
dleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks,
Middleport, had as their holiday
gilests, captain Gene Crooks, his
wife, and children, John and
Mark, of Annapolis, Md. They

were joined for Chrislmas dinner
by Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomu,
Danny and Kathy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Crooks, Pam, Cindy and Eddie. On Slinday Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Rossi, .roint Pleaaant,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Crooks.
.
Christmas Eve dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. William Childs
were Mr. and Mrs. Mlck Childs,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Harris and
Jamie, Mrs. Martha Childs, and
Mr; and Mrs. Virgil Brown.
Joining Mrs. Nilra Houdashelt,
Syracuse, for a pre-holiday dinner party were Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Houdashelt and Tracy,
Grove City; Mark Parkey,
Columbus; Marie Houdashelt,
Athens. Christmas Day dinner
guests.were Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Houdashelt, Jon and Julie, Mr.
and Mrs. John Hobbs and JOdi,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Houdashelt, Minersville; and
Miss Marie Houdashelt, Athens.
Five generations of the Ra,.
dolph family gathered at the
Reedaville home of Mrs. Bertha
Randolph for Christmas. There
for the observance were Mrs.
Randolph's daughters, Levanchis cain, and Clarestine Randolph; Mrs. cain's son-in-law and
daughter, Mr and Mrs. Marvin
Keebaugh, and the Keebaughs'
sons-in-law and daughters, Mr.
and Mrs. Jason Davis and
children, Stacy and Trenton, and
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Buck, Jermlfer,
Julie and Jackie. The Buck
family enjoyed Christmas with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fritz
Buck, belore going to Reedaville.
Mrs. Dorothy McGulfin, Debbie and Steve, Middleport, spent
the Christmas holiday in Moundsville with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
MeG ullin and family, Tabitha
and Heather.
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Wolle,
Columbus, and Mrs. -Chester Erwin, Middleport, joined Mr. and
Mrs. Don Erwin and family for
Christmas dinner.
Guests of Mrs. A. E. Erwin for
a Christmas night dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Erwin, New
Haven, W. Va.; Mr: and Mrs.
Melvin Hood and son, Tim Hood,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Davidson, Jr., Columbus, and
Mrs. Chester Erwin.
D~rla Kelly flew to HollywOOd,
Fla. for a holiday visit with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Kelly, and her brother. and hill
family, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Kelly.
Joining Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Eichinger lor Christmas dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Eichinger, Paula and Tanuny,
Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinger,
Becky, Max, Jr. and Scott, and
Byron Hysell and Olive Reyer,
Lancaster.

Area residents

celebrate hol!day

Holiday visitors at the home of
Mrs. Alien Brewer and David, .
Stiversville, were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer· and Kenneth II and
Teresa of Columbus; Mrs. M'aruyn
Beall, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Close and Roy, Waterford;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Garrett, (jQ!umbus; Mrs. Emma Lee Simeral and
Tisha, Reynoldab ; Mrs. Joann

Dobbins, Columbus; Bill Daniel,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Brewer, Long Bottom; Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Brewer and Dennis Dobbins, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Kerry
Dobbins, Portland; Mrs. Ronald
Beegle, Racine. Miss Ronda Beall .
telephoned the family · froril Huntington Besch, calif.

Astrograph
December 31, 1111
It's quite possible that in the year follOWing your birthday you'll be
doing more traveling than you've done for some time. Your trips may
not be long ones, but they'll produce many pleuant memories.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2%-.laa. 19) There's a good chance of bearing
from someone today who is important to your plana. Once you
establish communications, things begin to click.
AQUARIUS (JiliL ~Feb. It) Your insights and huoches today are
worthy of serious consideration. You may be able to derive intuitively
~thing you've logically overlooked.
1
PISCES (Feb. ZO.Mard!IG) Larger crowda hold more appeal for
you today than being with a small, intimate group. You'D want to be
out where all the bright lights and people are glowing wannly.
. ARIES (Miirch Zl·AprillJ) In areas where you'd like to attract at·
tention, you'll gain more by underplaying what you can d,o. Othere wiD
then trumpet your abilities and accompllllunents.
TAURUS (April ZD-May 18) By bein8 friendly and cordial to all
today, you can elicit a greater warmth than you esude. Don't spare
even an ounce of charm.
' GEMINI (MIIy ZI-June 20) Your chances for succes.s today are
very good. You knl&gt;w, instinctively, to save your trump card for the
critical trick.
.
CANCER (JIIIe ZI·July ZZ) Kaowing J10W to deal with people on a
~ buia is the secret of your ~ today. You make
ft151i011e feel they can diacuu anything with you.
· LillO (Jaly 21-Aac- ZZI There's a chance aomeone will be inton lied In teaming With you because of a talent or sldll you ptllseu. It
could be. gOOd opportunity.
VIRGO CAlli- ZNept. ZZ) An Image of falrneu emanates 11'11111
you 1Gda7, drawinll othen to you with the warmth of frtendahlp. PtaetldnC the golden rule lB your ISOUI'ce.
.
I DR 4 (Sept za.Gd. Jl) Sometbing beneficial you can do for IJie
Wilily IDlY I* 11 rt illalf today. Because you don't treat ita • chon,
It wiD tum out to be fun.
IUIRPIOCOd.JloNov.ZZ) YouareespeclallycharlamaUctodly.
Ytlll .,., call attelltlon to your person by doing anything ao ~
- · -,Jiutjllltbybelllgyoarself.
.
UGnT.diVII (fWr, IN!ec:. U) In llltuPtiNII lllday wbn
.,.....,..., of Vllue'a at llab, your
Ia quite ..._ You
_
....... In ..... .,._ Ol'per-.fOUI'Ci!IIIDitwal'lellle.
.

Twenty-five Big Bend merchants
will take part in the 1982first.baby of
the year contest In Meigs County.
The contest is sponsored by The
Daily Sentinel and provides through
the merchants a number of gifts for
the parents and the first baby of.the
yesr.
Parents must be officially residents of Meigs County although the
father may be serving -out of the
country in the armed forces. Con-·
tenders must ·submit a doctor's
statement showing the date and Ume
of birth to The Daily Sentinel, 1t1
. Court St., Pomeroy, by Jan. 12.
Businesses taking part in this
year's contest and !heir gin Include:
Pomeroy Wine Store, bottle of cham·
pagne for the parents; Meigs Inn, a
free meal for the parents; Pomeroy
Landlllllrk, a baby bunting; Febric
Shop, $3 gift certificate for the
mother; Kiddie Shoppe, $5 gift cer·.
tificate for baby: Powell's Super

Valu, $10 gift certificate for the
parents; Ciow's Fllllily Res~aurant,
a meal for the parents; Hartley
Shoes, pair of baby shoes; J&lt;rogen,
case of canned mlllt; Mark V, case
of haby food; Racine Home Natlollal
Bank, $10 savings account; VIllage
Pharmacy, $5 gift certificate for
baby gooda; River View IGA, pack
of dlapen; Heritage House, $5 gift
certificate; Francis Florist, baby
planter; Bank One of Pcimeroy, $10
savings account, K. &amp; C. Jewelers,
three piece feeder set; Waid Cross
and Sons, ~ cases of baby food;
Swisher and Lohse, three boxes of
pampers; Pomeroy Flower Shop, a
baby planter; Stiffler's, package of
dlapel'll; R. C. Bottling Co., two
toboggans and two cases of Royal
Crown; Vaughan's cardinal, case of
baby milk; Central Trust Co., $10
savings acrount; Elberfeld's, $10
gift certificate.

Social Calendar
Wednesday

School fl'lllll9 p.m. until1:30 a.m.
Music will be by the Good Ole
Boys, and admission is $l:l per
t'Ouple.

THE OHIO Valley Commandery . No. 24 ,.JVill confer the
Order of the Temple Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. Ali Sir Knights are
invited.
.

FREEDOM Gospel Mission
will hold a special. New Year's·
Eve watch service beglnnlng at
7:30 p.m. at the church, located
on County Road 31. Speaker wiD
be 0. G. McKinney, and the service will feature a love feast, foot
washing, communion, and ·
special singing. The public is invited.

THE LONG BOTTOM
Association will be having its annual Christmas dinner on Wed·
nesday at 6 p.m. There will be a
·gift eschange of a $2 Item, and
the men-are uked to take a gift
suitable for a man, and the
women to take a gift suitable for
a woman.

THE SEMI-ANNUAL inWATCH NIGHT services· will
stallation of officers for Bethel62,
be held at the· MI. Union Baptist
International Order of Job's
Church beginning af8 p.m. wit!J
Daughters, will be held at 7:30
Steve Wallace as 'the guest
Wednesday night at the Midspeaker. There will be a potluck
dleport Masonic Temple. The insupper at9 p.m. to be foliclwed by
stallation Is open by Invitation.
special singing from the Stevens
Amy Sisson will be installed as ' · family and C)ther singers. The
honored queen.
public is invited to attend by Tom
Dooley, pastor.

Thursday

What's
Cooking? · ·

will be held Thursday at 9 a.m. at
the Chester town hall. Dl.scussion
•Will be on the spending of the
Federal Reserve-sharing money.
A NEW YEAR'S Eve watch
service will be held at the Zion
Freewill Baptist Church. There
will be guest speakers and
· singers. A reviv,al will also begin
that evening at 7:30 p.m. with
special singers to be featured
each evening.

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New Year's Eve is ·almost here
and company is coming! You're out
of time, low pn energy, tired of
Christmas cookies and short oo new
ideas. Help!
If your company likes snacks, !hen
try one of these quick and easy
ideas:

- Saucy Ho4; Dogs - Cut one
pound regular hot dogs in ~
fourths Inch slices. Cook until puffy
in boiling water. Drain. Add one
omall jar of qUince jelly to the hot
dog slices. Heat and serve with
toothpicks.
·
- Easy Meatballs - combine one
cup grape jelly and one cup chill
sauce (or just two cups grape jelly).
Heat until ·boiling. Combine one
pound very lean ground beef (I use
ground round), salt and pepper.
Form meat Into little balls and plop
directly Into the hot jelly mixture.
Cook until . meat balls are done,
about JG-15 tninutes. Serve with
toothpicks.

-Quick Cheese Spread- Mix one
eight ounce block of cream. cheese
with one-fourth cup (or more, depending on your taste) chopped green
olives. Add a little chopped onion
and about two tablespoons milk, or
enough to Jllllke the spread creamy:
Serve with veggies or crackers.
- Easy ClleeSil Ball - Combine
one eight ounce package shredded
sharp cheddar cheese, one eight ounc~ block cream cheese, one
tablespoon Worcestershire sauce,
tw9 tablespoons chopped onion, onefourth teaspoon garlic salt, two
tablespoons ripe olives, one
tablespoon parsley and one-hail cup

chopped pecans. Form into a baD
and roll in additional chopped
pecans.
.
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- Herb Vegetable Dip' - Check
packages of herb salad ~g
mixes that require you to add mlllt
and mayonnailie. Some of these
dresaing mixes can be Berved as
"dunks" for vegetables as well aa
' dressings.
If your pocketbook is a Jittle low
but you need lots of food to fill up
hungry hordes, try popcorn! Crisp
popcorn is wonderful by itself or
lig~y buttered, hat combined with
cheese, it's true party fare. To poppeel corn, add a small amqunt, of
melted butter, tossing lightly.
Sprinkle on a small amount of parmesan cheese and 'a little salt. It's
deliciouS!
If your popcorn jtull won't pop, it
could be that the popcorn has 1"1'1
some of Its moisture content. What
to do? Fill a jar with unpopped popcom and add one teaspoon water for
every cup of popcorn kernels. Cover
and ·shake frequently until the :water
has. been absorbed. In about two to
four days, the popcorn will be ready
for popping. Store popcorn in tightly
· covered, air-tighl containers. ·
To make popcorn extra-crispy,
place popped com in a flat pan ·In a
warm (300 degrees) oven for five-10
minutes. Especially during humid
weather, this trick makes popcorn
crisp rather than gummy.
For your free copy of a recipe for
Beef and Cheese Log, contact the
Meigs County Exteusion Office at
99U696.

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WATCH NIGHT Bervice, 8 p.m.
until midnight Thursday at
Alfred United Methodist Church;
public invited.
A NEW YEAR'S EVE party
will be held at the Senior Citizens

Center, Mulberry Heights, 8·p.m.
to 12 midnight. There will be
music, dancing, and refreshments. The public lB Invited.

SUTTON

Township
Truatees will meet 'lbunday,
Dec. 31, at 1 p.m. at the SyraCUie
Municipal Building to conclude
busineu for 1181. The
organlzatlanal meeting lor 1982
will be held at 10 a.m. on Jan. I at
the home of Delbert Smith.

Friday
A REVIVAL will beglit Friday
at the Zion Freewm Church,
RllUte 112, Lower Plains, and continue throush Jan. ' 10 with services at 7:30 each evening. The
Rev. Eddie Boyer will be the
speaker and there will be specl8l
singing each even1na.

EU DENNrsoN POST No. 467,
American Legion of Rutland, will
hold a NewYear'sEvedanceand
buffet at the legion post. Admislllon 1.8 $18 per couple, qe 16
and older. ReaervatiCIIII can be
made by contacting Bob
, , Snowden, 742-3061, or Drexel

THE POMEROY WESLEYAN

H'*- Olurdl, loclled Cll Slate

RIUe 141, Harrl8oavtUe .Road,
wiU be bavlnla
service
Fritll7 ~ Sunday wllll
11-'l .....,... u 1111 8111111
1111u.r. lllrvlcll will belln at
7:. p.m. ~ will Ill! 8piCial
......... niiMlJ. The a.v. ....
Flelda, putor, invllel tile public.

•••kead

Lambert, 742-211'18.
POMEROY Volunle« Fire
~I will lpOIIIIOI' Ill an. U1 New Ylll'a Eve S.U. to be
helclat die PGmeroy Elellllllllry

Case No. 11036
NOTICE
General Board Of

The

':

Trustees, Churct1es Of
Christ In Christian Union

·petitioner

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The Unknown per,ons, who lo!Ch•ii Praceti&lt;uFei:

'

have a vested, contingent

••••,,

or reversion;ary interest in
the real est1te known as

••••'

the HUand Chapel Churches Of Christ In christian

p bll N0 11
u c
ce

Union,

0 b

.

SalistMJry

Town-

ship, Meigs County, Ohio,

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Couple celebrates 25th -

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Defendants
Plaintiff has brought this
action naming you as
defendants in the above
named Court by fllina its
Petition on Novemb;er 2.S.
1981.
The object of the Petition
is the sale, under the
provisions of Section
1715.1.. of the Ohio Revised
Code of the· following
described real estate
known as the Hiland
Chapel, Churches Of Christ
In
Christian
Union,
Situated in the County of
Meigs, in the State of Ohio
and In the Township of
Salisbury and bounded and
described as follows:
The following parcel of
land, naf'Qely seven rOds
square. bounded ·on the
State Road, on the west
side of said Road, and on
the west side of the Creek.
near the, South east corner
of Fraction No. 32, Range
No. 13, Township No.2. The
above descr.bed real
estate, being in Salisbury
Township, Meigs County
and Stare of Ohio.
Last Transfer: Deed
Record Volume 189, Page
261
Said premises being also
known as Hiland Chapel,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Petitioner is The General
Soard of Trustees of The
Churches Of Christ In
Christian Union. T~e
Hiland Cha~f,lj' Churches
Of Christ In Christian
Union is a regularly ad·
ml"ed member Of the
South Central District of
the Churches Of Christ In
Christian Union. Said
Hiland · Chapel, Churches
Of Christ ~n Christian
Union. having become ex·
tinct, Petitioner seeks ( 1)
the sa lEt of the . above

(12) 2. 2, 16, 23, 30 ( 11 6, 6tc:

R INANCE
N~

An Ordinance ta establish
Village Jobs and ' W~ge
Rates, and establishing
ie1 ai holidays, vacations
arid sick leave.
Be it ordained by tho
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows;
Sec. I. That the following
wage scale is hereby adop·
ted for employees of the
VIllage of MiddlepOrt:
Ch'1 f 0 f p 0 11
5975
· ~
ce.
per
month
Regular Patrolman ·.
Over 1 year Of service,
s~ . 54 per hour
Less than 1 year of ser·
vice, s~.J2 per hour
Part time patrolman~
s...32 per hour
Part time patrolman .
(probatlona~y), $3.89 per
hour
.
Street Employees:
Over 1 year of service,
S3.81 per hour
Less than 1 year of ser·
vice, $3 .35 per hour
Pool and Park Director,
00 per month
lfeguards, S2.25 per

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A NEW YEAR'S EVE watcb.
service will be held at the Zion
Freewill Baptist Church, Route
682, Lower Plains, Thursday
evening, 7: 30 p.m.

NORMAN · TAYLOR, Joe
Gwinn, and Ronnie Lemley will
be speaken al the New Year's
Service to be held at the Aah
Street Freewill Baptist Baptiat
Church In Middleport. Dan
Hayman and the Country Hymntimers will provide special
music. The Bervice will begin at
7:30p.m.

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.Mr. and Mrs. DeMoss

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The children of Mr. and Mrs.• the 25th wedding anniversary of
Richard DeMoos will host a dinner their parents.
party on Jan. 2 at tlie Kyger Creek
Relatives and frienda are Invited
Employees Club in observance of · to call between the open n!C!1plion
hoursof4to8p.m.
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Recitations and songs highlighted
the annual Chrlstmaa program at
the Heath United Methodill Church
, planned by Mary Wise and Donna
Byer.
The congregation opened the
pl'Ogi'8JTI by slnglq "Joy to the
World," and prayer by the Rev.
Robert Robinson. 'nlen were duets,
"Silver Bella" and "Sileat-Nighl" by
•Jean and Paula Norton, 'liDd a lklt
under the direcllan of Julie. Byer,
nursery teacber, who made the
C08Iumall lor the children. Tlklng
part were Amy Lucker.doo, the gift;
Susan Houc:IPs, the bell; Mary

Byer, lhe Christmas carol; Frank :
Blake, snow; Chris George, 'I candy !
cane; Lee Luckeydoo, a candle; .. :
Marll&amp;\"l!t Georle, a star; Abby ;
Blake, a Chrlllmas Card; and . I
Came Ingels, an angel.
,;
There waa a chalk talk ·about the •
nativity by Joan Robinson-with a ' ;
medley_· of _caroll providing the 1
lli!ckground.
I '
Donl1a Byer presented a gift to the
Rev. and Mn. R.oblnson, and the
benediction wu followed by a party •
In the social room with a visit from
Santll. Punch and cookies Were aerved by Margie Blake and Helen
Dyer.
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Rutland Furnibn Carpet Shop
END Of YEAR CLOIIOU"t

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Curb Inflation lI
Pay Cash for 1
Claulfleds and

Public Notice

hour
Secretary to Mayor,
s.m .110 per month
Extra ~lerical Helt:~,

for any unused por,t lon
vacation at their prevailing
wage. rate at the time ·of
payment. If at the end of
any year anv such em ~
ployee has any accrued and
unused vacation time, the
Clerk shall make payment
to the employee for such
unused time within thirty
days (30) after fhe end of
the
vacation veaL
vacation time shall mean
each ·12 • month period

Clerk,
.Cemetery
TrusteeS, $109.00 per month
Volunteer · Fireman,
$34.00 per year
Council,
$8 .00
per
meeting (241
President of Council.
$10.110 per meeting (241
Board of Public Affairs,
s.t.oo per month (12)
Clerk. Board of Public
Affair:&amp;. S663.00 per month
Resident Dispatcher,
$143.110 per month.
Clerk, Water Depart·
ment, tess than 6 months
service, $558 .00 l)er month
Clerk, Water Depart·
ment, over 6 months ser·
vice~ $635.00 per month
Water and Sewage Supt..
ss.oo per hour
( 11f2 times over ~o hours),
S7 ..50perhour
Water and sewaQe Ass' t
Supt., $4.07 per hour
Meter Reader, ~ - u per
·
hour
Water and Sewage Dept,,
Extra Help:
Over 1 year service, $3 .81
per hour
Less than 1 year service,
$3 .35 per hour
Mechanic, S4.66 per hour
Cemetery:
Over 1 year service, $3.81
per hour
Less than 1 year service,
S3.35 per hour
Relief Dispatcher, $3.62
per hour
Swimming, Instructor,
$3.25 per hour
Custodian. $50 .00 per
month
Office of Community
Development:
E)(ecutive Secretary,
$4.00 per hour
(All extra hours for
hourlY employees will be at
the hourly rate.)
'
SEC. 11. That secretarial,
clerlqtl and/or book ·

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Phon•----------~----

t-In "'-morlem

J-Announc.ments

ti-Hetp wan ltd
l~lifultiOfl

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)Wonted
)For Sole
) Announcement
)For Rent

WentHI

1)-IIIIIWIIIIU
14-lusiMSt Tnifting
11-SCIMIOIIInllrMctlon
lt-lledlo, TV,
I CIRapalr
It-Win,_ To Do

These cash rates
Include discount

eFINANCtAL
1 7 . - - - - --,
18.
19, _ _ _ _ _
~

20. _ _ _ _ __

2t-luliMU
o..ortunlty
H-MOMy M LUft
2J-~tnt..alllftll
StrviCH

•REAL ESTATE

21. . , . - - - - - - 22.· - - - -- 23. _ _ _ __

U-Mobll• HorN•

24.-----25. _ _ _ __

J+-luslnen lulldinll
31-l.OIS &amp; ACrH. .
36- R... IIstat.Wantlld

:u. ______

3t-Ho_..farlale
lor ill•

u-Farms.., Silo.

...

,_ ,.....

27.:------

21. ' - - - - - - 29.
30. _ _ _ __ _
3 1 . - - - -- 32. -~--'---

- - - ----C

33. _ _ _ _ __
SA.
35. _ _ __

:
I

I

;
'

.,.

_

Business Services
t;:========::;lr=====::==:;-r;:=========itr===~~===~

OHIO VAllEY
ROOfiNG .

C, R, MASH
CONSTRUCTION

AndHomeMaintenanc;e
•Roofing of all types
•Sidlnt

C t
k'
d
us om 1tchenso1n apptiances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plum bin, electric, and
heating.

. •Remodeling
•Free estimates

•20 Yrs. experience

TOM
•:

FREE
ESTIMATES

HOSKINS

..:

Ph. 949·2160 or 9411-2482
J-5-tfc

MDI'I$'f' 2:10 Oft SlfUrdly
Tuhcll., ltll'\1 Fr.. ly l:tl ... M.

"""" ...,.,, ....lei .....
SUMI'f'ii.P.M. Frllllr

·

SKATE-Away
~nn

Open Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7:30Ti1110':00
Sundayl:OOto4 : 3D
New Year's Eve
7 : 30 to 1 :OO
Private Parties
Available
PH. 985·3929

or 985.. 9996

J&amp;f
NG
CONTRACT!

I

~

,•

,•

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Ll~os
eOumpTruck

·'
•

.d'
•'
I

- '\

Licensed &amp; Bonded

, ..:

12·16· 1 mo.

\

.

P&amp;s

Rt. 3, Box 54 ·
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6·15·1fc

AREIITIOI
Real Estate

General

~~Jl~~-~~~~;~~YJ~~~{~
VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

~~

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale .
NEW PHONE NO .

Phone
1-( 614)·992·3325

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992-2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery ol
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICm RIGHT.

LAND CONTRACT- 3
level lots for house. Obi.
wide or trailer. Electric,
and Leading Crk. water
available.
Sl,500.00
down, 1~% interest, 60
payments of $81 .45 .
WILL TAKE TRADEr
3 bedroom frame home
in excellent repair.
Basement, kitchen has
range, refrigerator and
birch cabinets. Large·
lot with city water and
~er .
,
LAND CONTRACT NIce S room home in
Tuppers Pla~ ns . Forced
~lr furance, , carpeting,
TP water, large level
acre . Garage ~2x36 on
Rl. 7. Only 32,500.
340 ACRES - 10 room
home, 2 full baths, free
gas ,
furnace,
5
bedrooms, large famlly
room, and 2 large por·
ches. May sell just the
house, and one acre, or
trade·.
3 ACRES - On good
country road. Will sell
one or all.
HOT WATER HEATYou can't beat this one
for price or condition .
Also has 2 incomes, 3
bedroort)s, insulated,
cedar
closet,
nice
c arpeting, 2 f.ull baths,
full basement, formal
dining and garage . Ask·
·ing $69 ,900.00 . Offer
welcomed. Can move
right in.

Headquarters
Real Estate

General

eRENTALS
lor R•nt

47- WantedtoRont

4,_ForLHt•

eMERCHANDISE

51-HoUI•holdGooch

52--CI, T'/, Rldio EI!Uipm•nt
J:t-Antiq~~es

54-MIIC, MerCftiMis•
55-llulldlng Suppliu

H- P•ts tor Site
J7-Mvskallnltrum4ftl
56-FrUits&amp; Y...fl.ltl

It-For Sal•orTred•

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
•• - ' " " ' Elluillm•nr

•2-Wanttcl to luy
Q-LIVHtOCJc

....

....-Hey &amp; Grain
tt-Sncl&amp; Fertlll1•r

e TRANSPORTATION
11-AuiOI for Silo
n - Trt.cks tor Sat•
J:t-VIIIt&amp;4W.O.
J4-Metercyct"
15-INti&amp;M...rs .
16-Auto Plrtl I
AccettOrlfli

n-Autt•_,.,,

Jt-Camptqlquip... fftt

1t-H..,•I m~ttcuot•ments

a H•atklg

D-l•uvatlnt
114-lltclfiCII&amp;

. •..,...,...loft

a-qentrll Meullng
tt-M.H . . . . .Ir
11-U .......tery

Rates and Other I nformatlon

992-v"259

276 Sycamore St:
Middleport, Ohio
• 9·21 -tfc

Memb~r -

ship Gift Certllicates.
Rates
per
visIt
available.
come In &amp; see what we
have to offer.
"Get in Shape for the
. Holidays."
12· 11 · 1 mo.

SUNRISE
HEATING
COOUNG&amp;
.
Tappan Recupera 1we
Furnace, Coleman Air
conditloing, Arkla ·Ser· ·
vel Gas Air Co'1dition·k
ing, Sheet Me tat Wor ·
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rl. 2, Albany, Ohio
614·698-6791

'

E.Moin.,
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
•
STATELY - 2 story, 3
bedroom home
in
Racine. l lf2 biiths, full
basement. Perma stone
exterior . 2 car garage ..
$49 ,900 .00.
SYRACUS~ Ranch
type 7 room house with
basement, 3 beclrooms,
bath, dining room, 1 car
garage .
!..large lot .
Beautiful
condition .
S39,900.00.

'

MIDDLEPORT 2
bedroom home, con·
venient to shopping.
Nice lot. $19,7.50.00.
SOUTHERN OtSTRICT
- Approx . 13 acres of
vacant wooded land
with electric and gas
available. $8,000.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
Approx . 2112 acres
land with 2 bedroom
mobile homo . $11,000 .00.
OVER 6 acies of vacant
land with a drilled well
In .lho Melg• S&lt;:hool
District. 511,0110.00.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, JR.,
G.R . I.
992·61f1
Oettle &amp; Roeer: Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell 949-WD
Office
992·2259

"Be1utlful, Custom .
Built G1r1111"
Coil lor lr.. siding
tlllmotos, 949-2101 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Coils

I

.. . '

' '·
·.~ ~

. . I

•• I

•'

'

I

:

\

I

3· 11·11&lt;

PULliNS
EXCAVATING
• Dozers
.-eackhoes
• Dump Trucks
• Lo Boy
e Trencher
• water • sewer

Lines
•eGas
Septic Systems
Large or small Jobs

PH .992·2478
12. 20 _, mo . pd.

11 ·)6·tf-n

•

-~

~l

...: 1,
. :

. .· ,

1

: ;
,. f
~.
\
" ~
·~

..,

- ~
•· '
'
'• t
~

~===~E~~~------~.,:
MILlER ElECTRIC 3 Announcements ·: ~
"YOUNG'S
cARPENTER
SERVICE
SWEEPER and sewing ·; I
machine repair, parts. and t
SERVICE"

_Addonsond
remodeling
_ Roofing onCI gutter
work

:._concret work
_ Plumbing and
eledrlol work ·
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6115 or IJ'n.7.11&lt;1
Pom.ro.,-. Ohio

9 -)0.th: .

For all of y;,ur wiring !leeds,

Let
George
Miller
check your present electrical system .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742·3195
2·B·tfc

~=~=~=~==~1=========~
1
HANDCRAfTED

J.

Keep This A. d lor

Futur• Reference

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Ken Young

For Fost Service
PARTS ANO SERVICE
AU MAKES
•Washers
•Dryers

•Ranges
•Disposals
'•Di1hwashen
•Hot Water Tanks

~ ·5- tfc

Q.OCKS
FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Available
Made from
Cedar .
Cypress, Walnut &amp;
Cherry .
From $34.95
TQ $79. 95
PH . 992-3269
12·3· 1 mo. pd.

' FAIRPLAIN TRACTOR
SALES, INC.

•

Massey Ferguson Industrial Equipment.
we seu the best and sor·
vice the rest.
onRI. JJW.
Ripley, W.Va .
Ph. (304) 372·987S
or (304) 372·S479
12·18·1 mo.

sut:~plles.

Pick up and1 ""' t
delivery , Davis vacuum · '
Cleaner, one haiL m ile up;
Georges Creek Rd. Call.
446·0294 ..

Complete line of Muzzle •( '~
Loading Guns and Sup· ... 1
plies.
Spring
Valley ·
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.
poetry?
like to .•,
Do youWould
writeyou modern'
get together with others for : :
sharing &amp; evaluation? Call ,
446 2439
.
.
'
Bridge
player
with,
medium experience would
like to find 3 others in ·
terested in playing bridge. "'
Call446·2439.
For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

,.'
··

------··

Gun Shoot Racine Gun· ..
c•ub. Every Sun. starting .•
at 1 p.m . Factory choke ,
gunsonly.
.. ,

HOIJStilg

41 -HOfl .. lor Rtnt
41-MGIHte Hom•s

a-Ptumltlng

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

'·

Reupholstery
SPECIAL
Bai- Stools
S2S.OO
Truck Seats
s100.00
Labor &amp; Material'
Effective Dec . 15th
Thru Jan. 15th ·

5NODGRA 55 .
UPHOLSTERY

&amp; Tr Im Shop
Racine, ott.
PH. 949·2202

12·15· 1 mo .

-------

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors · · :
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights .r·
6: 30p.m ., Bashan. Factory
choke 12 guageshotgun.
Flea
Mar~ket .
New
Opening . 1 days a week .
The Heart of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992·6370.
S
Bailey's hoes, Middleport,
will be open Thurs., Dec . 24
&amp; Sat .• Dec. 26. Closed for

~~======~=~~=========~ - - ·

1982.
Vacation Dec. 27 to Jan. 3,

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

water·Sewer-E lectrlc
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Oh .

BOGGS

SALES

&amp; S~RVICE

U.S. Rl. so East

Guysville, Ohio
Authorized ,John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm EquiP111enf
Parts &amp; Serv,ice

4___

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who ha•
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.
Nice 3 112 yr. old m ixed
breed spaded female w ith
all shots. Loves chlldr~n .
Free to a good home. Call
388·9302 .

away I Calico k i t·
I;~~=====~~~~~p~~~§~~~~~To
ten .give
Call446·2316.

CERnFIED GAS
~Our SpeciaHies
Cigarettes
62c pack
Cartons
15.95 &amp; SS.8S
Open 1 Days A Week
Open Mon.· Thurs.
6a.m.to10p,m.
OpetfFri. au a.m .
thru Sunday at 9 p.m.
OPEN 24 HOURS
FRL-SUN.
we Sell Pepsi, R .C., &amp;
Coca·Cola Products by
the 6 &amp;8 Pack and aiso in
liter bottles.
·
Autllorlzed Sunflower
DNitr. Sell or Rent
These Signs.
12· 16·1fc

lHE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

4 puppies for a good home .
Call .446·3797 .
would like to give away 3
male puppies. Inquire at 70
Riverv iew Dr., Middleport.
one· half mountain Bl\.te
Tick coon hound . 667·3762.
PUPPIES,8weeksold,c atl
after 5, 304-67S·6426.

1

------- - -

BEAI:ITIFUL white killen .
8 Months old, has had
shots. 304-675·3274 . •
Finest Quality
Excellent Service
Fish· Game HeadLite Size Mounts- Plus
Hkle Tanning

6 · - LOSt and Found
LOST Male Red Dober·
man . Lost In area of Rae ·
coon Rd. Christmas Eve.
Phone 256·1556.

PH. 742·2225

l

.-

8-20-tfc

GET·

SERVICES
wont·Ad ·Advertislng
oeodtl!lll

PH. 992-6011
992-7656

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36 .
Insulated Dog Houses
BUILDINGS

4f-iiiiii!MIIent lor hnt~

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•

~

7-YI,..Site
t-Publk Sal•

t-Went.cl to luy

"•

\

._lost Hd Foultd
I Auctton

'

&lt;

\

..__.,.rtm•nts for REnt
45-Fun•IIIMd ROCHns
46-Snu for R•nt

4-GhtNWIY
5-HIHYAdl

I

/

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
.ANNOUNCEMENTS

'
. 'I'

\

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 court St., Pomeroy, Qh. 45769

t-cerG of Thelltc"s

~

are scheduled fO enact such Attest;
an ordinance.
Jon Buck
SEC . XV. This Or· Clerk
dirtance shatl take effect
M . L. Kelly
a~d be in force from ana
President of
Council
after January 1, 1982
Passed the 14th day of
( 12l 3o. (I) 6, 21c
December 1981

I

PHONE 992-2156

1

1

)

if~~~~~i,i';:•~;.~t~~~o~~Tt\~'l~:

1

' i

Ph. ' 992-7201 ' ;
. ''
dinance.
r
the effective date of this or· I ~=========fr=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;,~~
::
•
All STEB.
TOP OF THE STAIRS
Vlnvls~:11 ~~ 1 num
..
..
·
Size~~~~!~2~4" fl~!~~~ ;~~~~Q
BISSEU
•
99
"
'
Just Pth~ \t~~ for
SIDING
CO,
Util .itySMBAul~ings
Christmas:
'~ ~

Day; Thanksgiving
Christmas
Day: Day;
em· li
ptoyee's
birthday;
Veterans Day.
SEC. IV . That said
salaries will be in effect on
and after January 1, 1982.
SEC. v. Each full time
employee of the Village
shall be entitled to sick
leave In the amount of one
and one·fourth (1 11'! ) days
per month, and sha 11 be en:
titled to ac:crue said sick
leave up to one hundred
twenty (120) days.
SEC. VI : Each !uti lime
employee of the Village, in·
eluding full time hourly
rate employees, shall be
entitled during each year
alter the·,first year to two
weeks vaCation, e)(cluding
legal holidays, with pay.
Employees with fifteen or
more years service shall be
entitled to three weeks
vacation with pay each .
year.
SEC. Vtl: Each em·
ployee of the Village en ·
tilled to vacation $hall use
the vacation time in year of
entitlement or shall be paid

A~~reut--------------~

~-

of
employment.
following
me first full year
SEC. VIII: That a group
hospital and medical In·
surance plan be provided
for all full·time ~mployees
of the Village of Middleport
who elect, in writ,·ng, to
participate in the ume.
and that the premium
therefore be paid bv the
Village up to the amount of
the premium quoted ~or the
present contract.
SEC. IX: That all full ·
time employees desiring to
p"articipate in 't ho plan shall
file an elej:tlon with the
. ·
Clerk w1thm ten days ·auer

WANT AD .INFORMAnON

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

.'
),
_.,,

Public Notict

keeping
hourly employees
record ·keeping
be em·
ployed at a maximum of 35
hours per week, except for
an emergency that shall
arise, said emergency of !wag,,.
extra hours to be approved
by Council.
SEC. til. The following
a~ hereby declared as
legal hOlidays for the em ·
_ployees of the Village of
Middleport : New Year's
Dav; Memorial Day; In·
dependence Day; Labor 1h•• ~··•~

S~veJJJ

Nam•·-----------------

•

Heath Church holds program ' •'.'•

Smiths announce-birth
f

Public Notice

$4.22 per hour

A SPECIAL MEETING of the
Meigs Local Board of Education
will be held at 12 noop Thursday
at the Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport.
·

FREE CLOTIDNGday, IOa.m.
to 12 noon Thursday at Salvation
Army, 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, for all area residents
needing clothing.

Notice

Home~

l'

RACINE Post 602, American
Legion, will have an "adults
only" New Year's Eve party at
the hall. Admission is 'f&amp; per
couple. There will both live and
taped muaic from 8 p.m. to I a.m.
Food and other refreslunenta will.
be served.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By DALE M. STOLL
Melpc-ty E:dal...

*•web

.

Wednelday, December 30,1981

·s mall investment, large _return. Sentinel Want Ads

A WATCH SERVICE will be
held on New Year'a Eve at 8 p.m.
at the Eagle Ridge Community
Church. There will be special
singing by Harmony. Rev. Carl
Hicks extends an invitation to the
public.

'
THE FINAL 1981 meeting
of
the Cllester T~p Trustees

THE

..-....

Wednesday, December 30,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, !)hio

;

..

.

�Homet for Sale
31
House on Broadrun Road,
will take half down and rest
by month . Call Lucy
Kaylor 882-2.007.

l:l11stci{ied fJ/1/(eN mver the
followinK telephone e:rchllli/(ell ...
614
992-Middleport

614

11146-Gallipolis
367-Cheshlre
381-Vinton
245-RioGrande

.

for Sale

Pomeroy

985-Chester

256-Guyan Oist.
643- Arabia Dist ..

TRI - STATE
MOB ILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Year

end sale, price reduced,

TO PL ACE AN AD CALL

In Gallia County

In Meigs County

446-2342

992·2156
Mason County

675·1333
6---~Losi and Found

Yard Sale

GARAGE sale, furniture &amp;
washer. dryer. Wednesday
&amp; Thursday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
504 Kathnor Lane, Pt.
Pleasant.
9

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
256· 1967 in the even ings.
CASH PAt D for Clean, tate
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAl lipolis,
Ohio. Call446-2282.

BUYING GOLD 8. SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped 10K, UK, 18K and
dental gOld. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything stamped
sterling. ClarkS Jewelry
Store . Gallipolis -446·2691 Or,
992-205-4 in Pdmeroyl
Buying
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
r ings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale . Spring
Valley
Trading, · Spring Valley
Plaza, 4-46-8025 or 4-46-8026.

We pay cash tor late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069 .
BEDS-IRON, BRASS; old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, woOd ice boxes,
stone jars. antiques, etc.,
complete
households .
Write: M .D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or992-7760.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton . Bundled
slab . S10.50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd .,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.

I

Help wanted

Need extra money for
hOliday bills? Art·Craft
con(epts now seeking
counselors, training now.
start In January. No in·
vestment, no delivery. no
collecting. Call 256·6572.

Babysitter ROdney area.
Reference r.eQuired. Phone
2-IS-9520.
GET VALUABLE training
as a youno business person
and earn good money plus
some great gIlls as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right awaY and get on
the ollglbllltv list at 99221~or992-2157.

1979 Dodge Ram Charger
4X4, 25,000 miles, eXcellent
condition. Ca11446-1675.

Weekly rates Svallable $60
and up In Circles MoteL
Call 446·2501.

"I tell you it's a regular
junsle out there, sOn ... "

79 DOpGE powerwagi)n, 4wheel·drlve, 29,000 miles, a
cyl. (Ill after 3 p..m. lOA675-3898.

Traller lot for rent. Call
446-4265.

INTERNATIONAL Travel·
All, 4 wheel drive, 4 speed,
34 ton, air ·conditioned/ PS,
PB, 37,000 miles. First
$26,000 takes It, call 304-6756628.

For more information call

446·0511.
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home . Set up with 2
or "' lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
cing available. Phone 4461294.

Positions open for front end
alignment-brake mechanic
and tire changer . Send
resume tO Bo)( 729-P, c·o
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769.

Priced to sell. Three used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at D and W
Estates, formerly K and K,
Rt . 62 north, Pt. Pleasant,
wv.
.

RESPONSIBLE woman to
live in with elderly lady, in
Ravenswood. Call 304-2734216 after 6 p.m . or wee ken·
ds.

Have vacancies In · boarding home for elderly, one
private . room and one
double room . 614·992·6022 .
Have vacancy in my home
for elderly. Man or·woman.
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 614667·3402 .

13

Insurance

SANOY ANO BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
ser.vices for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet individual needs. contact
Kail Burleson agent . Phone
446·2921.

1973 GRANVILLE 14x70, 3
bedroom, mobile· home,
assume toan, 30.4-882-3433.
1974 CAMERON
$5000 .. 304-675·2560.

12x60,

1972 mobile home, furnished, 2 bdr., like new,
675-3741.

12x60 CAMERON,
3
bedroom. partially fur·
nished. extras, 30-4·675·1424.
3S

Lots &amp; Acreage

2, 1 acre house lots. on 554,
low downpayment.. land
contract, rural water,
Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256-6413, 12
p.m. to9p.m .

Reatals
Houses for Rent

41

'
2 bedroom well insulated
ho\,lse near Rio Grande
College, $225 per month
plus utilities and $100
refundable
deposit.
References required . Call
245·9325 or 24.5·5364.

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
canSURANCE
been
celled?
Lost
your · House 5 rms. and bath,
operator's ~icense? Phone newly remodeled inside.
nice garden space, located
992·2143
110 4th Ave., Gallipolis .
1s -~S!'ch,.o.,o-,l._s_,_,!n"'s'-'1'-'r..
u c,_,t"'io_,n, _ Cal/446·3870.
GU 1TAR
lessons ,
in- LOCATED in Qak Hjll . 5
dividual classes, personal rm. house, vedry nice. Call
attention, modest prices, 682·6010.
call 304·675· 3734.
Wanted to Do

Butcher's Sho,)pe Custom
butchering &amp; processing.
Call 446-2851, Galt ipolis,
Oh.
T'w' service calls. Call 992·
2034.'Aiso used color TV for
sale.
·
Wi ll do babysitting in my
home or housework . Full or
part time. 675·7827.
Babysitting in my home .
Rolling Acres area. 6"755563.

22

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Finan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
Krautter (304)675-3.473.

31

Mobile homes for rent in
Gallipolis and pt. Pleasant
areas. Call 446·0682 and 6753000. K &amp; K Mobfle Homes.
room
house with
basement on Bulaville Rd.
Phone 446-3437.

6

Two bedroom house carpeted and good neighborhood. Deposit and
references required. Call
446·2419 or 446·3949.
9 room house for rent in rio

Grande. Call446-3485.
2 bedroom all electric ranch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available
Nov. 15. Call 614-949·2849.

Money to Loan

Gold , silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
Professional
currency . Ed Burkett Bar- 23
Services
ber ShOp, Middleport. 992- 3~76 .
Piano Tuning-Let your
piano sound pretty for the
BUYING DEER AND
halida.,-s, only $30.00. Cali
BEEF J-:IIOES. Gene Hines
Bill Ward, 446·.4372.
Rt. L Amesville, Oh 448·
6747. Buying raw fur after
c &amp; L Bookkeeping. ComDec. 12. Daily 6 PM to 9 plete bookkeeping and tax
PM, closed Sundays. Also service for business and inclosed Dec . 24 &amp; 25 .
dividuals.
Carol Neal446·3s62
Rew furs, hides, scrap
metals ,
batteries,
HARPER Adult Care Cenradiators, ginseng, yellow ter-providing the personail
root, and merchandise care your elderly need in a
brokerlng. Harper-Halste- home like atmosphere.
ad Salvage Company, 300 Vacancies now avallible.
Eleventh Street. 675-sua. caii30H75·1293.
Also Flea Market open
dally . Open
Monday M &amp; M Electric. All electric
Friday 1-5 pm .
work guaranteed &amp; bonded.
304·675-2236. .

11

2 bdr. trailer in city, adults
only, no pets, $150 security
deposit &amp; SlSO month. Pay
all utilities. Ca11446·4051 .

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned. 615·406.4.

18
Wanted to buy motor tor
1976 Honda Civic. Call 2.566652 .

1965 General mobile home
12x65, completely ready for
setup, includes cement
blocks &amp; skirting. $4,800.

Taking Bar Applications.
992·3860.

12
Situations Wanted
STRAYED or stolen. 1
Polled Hereford ball calf, · Tree trimming &amp; removal.
about 400 lbs. with a bran· Free estimates. 949·2129,
ded 'W' on hip. 304·895·3621. 992·6040.

7

4;;;2- -M=o"'
b•"''le:-;-;
H-::om
= es, - - for Rent

Help Wanted
1972 Skyline 1 bedroom fur RN's immediate opening nished. good condition .
day shift part·time 1. v. Park lot can be rented. 992nurse team, experience not 7479.
necessary . Call Veteran
Memorial Pharmacy. 992- Tra iter for sale or rent. 992 6297. E.O.E .
3860.

Red tick male coon dog .
Ball Run. John Koehler.
992·5056 or 949·2657.

LOST-Foxhound, female,
white with black . spots.
may have collar &amp; chain
w ith "Blankenship" on it;
vicinity of Lakin &amp; W:est
Columbia. S50 reward. 304773·5066 .

For Sl'le 197'1 Jeep CJ -7, II·
1, excellent con91tlon. A lot
extras. Call..u6·2«5.

Furnlsheci'Rooms

11

LOST : Blue tick &amp; Walker
mixed dog . Harrisonville
area. Reward . 7.42-2264.

LOST Red Irish Setter. 1
1&amp;2 year·old, in vincinity of
Owl Hollow Rd. and Sandhill R:d . Reward offered,
family pet. Pearl Cole, 6755397.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE -446-3868.

The Dally Sentinel-Page- II

vans &amp; 4 W. D.

73

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt .•
Park Central Hotel .

used mobile homes. CALL
446-7572.

667-Coolville

Mason Co., W. Va .
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
173-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Letarl
937- Buffalo

45

Pomeroy-N\itldleport. Ohio

Trucks lor S.le

72

1967 Ford cklmp truck. 576·
2612 aft.r 5 pm.

Mobile Homes

32

343-Portland
247-Letart Fa lis
949-Racine
742-Rutland

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

5 r'oom ap~rtment, yard,
stove and refrigerator. Pt.
Pleasant. 1-6U-263-8322 or
1·614· 263·2669.

Meigs Co. Are11 Code

Gall Ia Co. Area Code

· In

-=-

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Slle

3 or A bedroom house with
·bath In country. On 3.2
lllcres. Storm windows .
rural water, gara&lt;~el lots of
storage space. Close to a113
mines. Price reduced for
quick sale. $15,500. 614-7~22502.
Or re-nt-3 bedroom fur·
nlshed hOme on Bud Chattin Road on big level lot.
576·2711.

House-Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon. 3 !*~rooms, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, bi!Mment. 304-6751542.

2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave., Pomeroy. Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6.
$195. month not including
utilities. 992-2288.
·
Unfurnished very nice 2
bedroom house. St. Rt. 248.
985-4244.
Furnished house. 614·992·
7706.
House, 3 rooms and bath,
Pt. Pleasant. Nice neighborhood. Reasonable rent.
Adults. Phone 615·3052.
SIX room house. located
Lincoln Ave., Pt. Pleasant.
Cal/304-675· 1301.
42

Mabile Hames
for A:ent

Construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 30.4773-5651. Mason.
'
2 bedroom , furnished, all
electric. $125 pius utilities
and deposit. 675-4088.
V

.K

Furnished 2 bedroom
mobile home, close to Pt.
Pleasant. $125 month alld
care taking of property .
Write PO Box 587, Pt.
Pleasant, wv 25550.
12X65 TRAiLER near Leon.
WV. partiallY furnished.
Deposit
&amp; . reference
requireQ, ,30.4·458·1978 after

5.
FURNISHED 1 bedroom
mobile home, all utilities
paid, outskirts of Henderson. $230 rnonth. 304- ~756730 .
44

Apartmemt
far Rent

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

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, ·rocker, ot·
taman. J tables. $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas ·and chairs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables.
S38 and up to S109. Hide-a·
b~ .. .,,$3.40 .. queen size, $380.
Recliners. $175. to S295.,
Lamps from '$18. to $65 . 5
pc . difettes from S79 ., to
$385. 7 pc .. $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375 .,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
5795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
to S350. Captain's. beds,
complete. Baby beds.
. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, S68. and 578. Queen
.sets, S195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
:4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frame!!, S20.and $25 ., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, S350., dinette chairs $20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Orthopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames S2Q $25, &amp; $30 .
Elec-tric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room sUite,
wood table ·&amp; .4 chairs.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri.,9am to5pm, Sat.
446·0322

3 rooms with private bath,
845. Second Ave. Phone 4-46·
2215.

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators.
Ska_ggs
Ap Furnished Apt. 1st floor. ran_ges .
utilities furnished. Ref. pliances, Upper River Rd.,
required. No pets. Adults beside Stone Crest Motel.
preferred . Call at 631 4th 446·7398 .
Ave.
One year · old frostfree
2nd. floor furnished ef· refrigerator ~nd stove. in
fiency apt. 729 2nd. Ave., good condition. $600. for
Gallipolis. Call 446-0957. both or $350. for ref. &amp; $250.
for stove. ca II 446-0562.
Adults only, no pets.
Automatic washer &amp; dryer,
couch, two chairs, desk and
chest freezer. Call256·6236.

Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.
2·2 bdr. unfurnished, apts.
in Vinton . Hookup for
woodburner or fuel oil.
refr.ig. &amp; stovE' furnished .
Call 245·5818 .
2 room furnished apt .•
adults, private entrance.
Call 446·0168.
Apartments for rent. 614992-5908 .
3 bedroom apt. in Mid·
dleport. $150. month. 9925692.
Apartments. 675-55-48 .

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis .
614·446·8221 or 614·245'9484.

Upright freezer 15 cu.ft.
like new $195, frost. free
refrigerators·5 to choose
from avo, copper, &amp; white.
2 space heaters 56,000 BTU
$95 ea .• Hoover portable
dryer $95, refrigerators not
frost tree-6 to choose from
starting at $50. Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper· River- Rd.
446·7398.
Moving out of state. Must
sell immediately. SOfa and
loveseat, queen size bed
with frame , chrome and
glass dinette set, 4 pc
stereo unit with 4 speakers.
antique dresser, drum set.
electric synthesizer. 675·
6750.
52

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

Efficiency i'ooms by the
week on Main Street.
Mason, wv . 773·5651.

RCA TV. console model,
B/W, excellent condition.
Call 446·7013.

Twin single, large rooms
and yard. Pt. ' . ~leasant .
Deposit and references. 1614· 263·8322 or 1·614·263·
2669.

54

Misc. MerChandice

Lump Coal S32 per ton.
linn Coal Co., Inc. Call-4-46·
1408 between 9 and 5.

For rent 3 room turn. apt..
adults only, no pets. Call
675·2453.

Firewood-seasoned har ·
dwood, $35 pickup load
delivered. Call-"'6-4176.

MT. Vernon Ave., 1 &amp; 2
bedroom
apartments.
Newly decoraed, wall to
wall carpet, washer &amp;
dryer hook-up, excellent
condition. Reference and
deposit required. Call 304·
675·1962.

3· 8 ft. showcases with
lights, 1 · large bedroom
suite, double dresser and
chest, 2 antiQue clocks, 1
meat slicer and misc.
grocery store equipment.
Call 256-6413, 12 p. m . to '
p.m.

They'll Do It Every Time

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Cal/446·0175.
House trailer adults only,
no pets 1 322 3rd. Ave. Call.
446-37.al Dl' 256·1903.

15% discount on wood &amp;
coal stoves while supply
last. Gallipolis Block Co.,
123112 Pine St., 446-2783.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC
Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call -U638~after-4p . m .

For Sale Kitchen tlllble and
2 chairs. $25. See at 769
Brownell Ave .. Middleport.
New wobd st~we, half price;
never used, S3SO. Can con·
vert to furnance. Call 2561216, Gallipolis.
Complete front axle for vw
Beetle, $35. Long royal blue
velvet evening dress worn 2
times. S15. Call 30H58·
1997.
Ping Pong table with net &amp;
paddles, $50 . Ca11446-0562.
"fubular fin#place grate
with blower attachment.
Used only 3 months. Selling
because of move. $50.00.
c a II 446-0562 .
For sale fuel oil furnance, 3
years old. Heats 5 rooms,
$150 . Call ~45· 5542 after 6.
For sate Silent Flame
fireplace Insert or can be
used as {.. free standing
stove. Used only 2, months.
Phone 256·1378 after 5PM.
For sale Franklin fireplace
with a heatalator, $200. Call
388·8701 .

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds. clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg, Dober·
mans. Call 446-7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and groOming.
AKC Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call 388·9790.

For sale black short haired
Labador &amp; pups 8 weeks
old. Call 446·1888. ·

Ac:;K English Springer
Spaniels. Liver &amp; white, all
shots and wormed, $IS. $20
will hold. Call 446-1234.
HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies.
Everything
imaginable In horse equip·
ment. ~!so bells, boots. 6_98·
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 Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.

63
Livestock
3 piece bedr., sprl"'ll &amp; Registered Quarter Horse
mattress, 3/A bed fr1me lillY.
Registered
Apwith springs &amp; mattress, paloosa. 4 yrs. old and gOOd
desk, rocker. small dinette blood line. Call 256·6413, 12
set, gas cookstove. Caii-U6· p. m. to9p.m.
7013.
For sale Purebred Polled
Whirlpool auto washer $90, Hereford bull calf. Call 2-IS·
Frigidaire dryer $90, both 5424.
in ex. conct. Call-4-46-8181.

Registered
Polled
Firewood $30.00 pickup Hereford bull, gentle.
load. foor loads $100., Prime at three years old,
delivered. Cal/388·9823.
proven
breeder,
will
deliver $750. 304-736·-4398.
1974 Chevy pickup, $750.
1977 Harl~y Davidson, Purebred Short Horned
S3,750. 1980 Coleman cam· bull (alf, snow white. Extra
per; $1850. Ca11446·82J.4.
gOOd blOOd line. Born in
July. 378·6152.
FireWood $35 truck load,
$55 a CDI'd. 843·2933 or 8-43- Two registered H_ereford
.al31.
Bulls. 2lf2 years old. One
Gurnsey milk cow. 614-698·
Mixed hardwoods, lh cord 6134.
$40. 1 cord $75. 2 cords $130.
Split and delivered. Con- ONE. gOOd gentle riding
tact John Wise ~I 614-742- horse, 30H37·2205.
2131 or David Price at 61~992·3556.
BUTCHENING
HOGS.
Larry Sayre. 895-3319.
30" electric range, Coppertone. Exc. cond. 992=~
~: :~: ~::.:,
5439.

:,:

7_,_1_ __,A"u,.t,o"t_,o,__r_,S,.al,ec.__

69 Volkswaoon Bug with
BAJA kit, new tires, Jlllck·
AMANA
rada 'range man wheels, new paint and
microwave oven. Sawmill, stripes, bUcket seats, rou
excellent condition, 3 bar, AM- FM cassette stero.
block. Rollerskates, brand excellent coridltlon. Call
new. Cal/304-576-2'/40.
256·141.

THEIR &amp;RAINS T' UNT,
WHY STICK 'US

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Auto glass, Insurance claims welcome,
Free
mobile
serVIce
available. Call446· 1011.

r~rP4YE!l5

TH' TAB.

Auto Repair

77

OualltY Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Insurance · work
welcome. Sunroofs In·
stalled from $200·$230. Auto
Trim Center, 446·1968.
GIDFRV! A GUY COULD
QT KILLED DOIN' 'tHIS

FOR A. LMN'l

11

fl~twood,
after ~

76Mustang 22 MPG, asking
U50. 302 engine, automatic
in the floor, crushed velvet.
interior perfect. Call .u6Lighted large advertising 1523.
sign with sliding le'Hers on
stand. $400. PhOne ~76 · 2602 . 76 Malibu 4 dr.', PS, f&gt;B,
AC, 3.50 2 barren, new tires
WALKING, jogging, exer· &amp; paint, 61,000 miles, $1900.
clser, Sears, new, $75. Call 446·2888 anytime.
phOne 304·576·2196.
1%9 Plymooth wagon. 318
TEN fl. baseboa~d heater, auto. 98HJ.46.
glass fireplace doors with
screen, Seats heat ex- HARTS Used Cars, New
cahnger for fireplace. JO,.il- Haven West 1/lrillnla. Over
882·2425.
20 tess expensive cars In

~~~~~~~~~ls_t~_k_.
_ _ _ _ ___
';'Md
tires.
Tires on Lucas
67S· 74 VOLKSWAGEN for sale
7360.
or trade, 304-675-6153.

Home
l~provements

STANLEY STEEMER
carpet Cleaning
446·4208 •
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 2561182.
CAPTAIN STEEME R Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Heffeit Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call 446·2107.
PAINTING - Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652. ·

8iq sales
and no

profits?
' . .J- •

French City Painting
Residential. commercial,
interior. exterior, paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367-7784 or 3677160.
Call -446-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
esttmates,sBIII Thomas.

A$ ntOUGH WE ~'T. HAVE
ENOi/6/f PR08LEM'5! NOW IT'$
A ~N MAIN A~D A

BtU/

CELEB~ATE WITH THE

.

COMPANY IN SUCH
17/R£ F!NAI&lt;CIAL

F &amp;
~lump

K Tree Trimming,
removal. 675· 1331 :

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perlencecl mason, ropfer,
carpenter , electrician,
general
repairs and
remOdeling. Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675--1560.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895·3802.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
812-2079.

WEDNESDAY
DEC. -:10, 11fJ2
!VINING

e:oo Cll • ClJ I1J Ill ®l W Iii

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3118 or 446-4477
83

6:015
8 :30

6:35
6:5.8
7:00

EXCI¥1ting

Gall/poll~

Diversified con•
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
18rl'll rates. Call us for free
estimates. ~-A-440.

84

"BI.I,ekSI•IIIon"11171

7:05

m

CAROl BURNETt AND
FRIENDS Guest a: Ken Berry .
g_dLeGorme .
7:30 (21. YOU ASKED FOR IT

' t~ :r~~~tvEiiEUD

tTl LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY

JII.CKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air (011dltlon service,
commercial, Industrial .
Phone 112·2079.

IS

7:35
7:58
8 :00

m

ti l
IJ'ITERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
-..1J HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
IIJ(T1 nCTACDOUGH
' t l ft1J MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
1.11 NEWS
.121.
MUPPET SHOW

Electrical
&amp; R etrlgerotlon

SEW! NG Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sates &amp; Servlce1 Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric ShoP,
Pomeroy. 992·2274.

(CONTINUE~

FROM DAVTIMEI'Santa Fe
Pnssege ' 1959 John Payne .
Faolh Oome1gue .
4 ~ MOYIE ·(DOCUMENTARY)
••• "The Hone Wllh TP••
Fl~lltf Tall" IQ61
II ' ABC NEWS
' 11 SESAME STREET
111 OY!R EASY ' Edu ca llon ·
Host a ~ Ma1y Martin and Jim
Harlz
(Closed -CAPTIONED·
U.S.A.)
! 5 1 ANDYGR"FITHSHOW
' 2 1 e it ~ NBCNEWS
·3'
PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
, I J MUPPIT SHOW
IJI (l) ~ CaS NEWS
'111 LILIAS, 'YOGA A.ND'VOU
ltaJCI) ABC NEWS
WINNER&amp;
l :il 'C_BNUPDATENEWS
r Zl D PM MAGAZINE
' ! 1 THE NEW BIBLE. BAFFLE
SHOW
.
', -t1 MOVIEJr(~O,Y.ENTURE) •••

AND COMPANY
9
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPOfiT
10\
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
,t)J QUILTING
'121
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
5 1 SANFORD AND SON
3 ) CBN UPDATE ~EWS
121D mfiE ALPIOPLIAvieil
w11h IJ Honolulu disco dentil!.l : a
Mmne:sola man who hae epe111
I B yeius build i ng his own
IIIOf'IWDY. Purcelltearnslo fly al
anA11 F orcebaee inMichlqa n: a
v1!11t toll school tor America n
lnd•ans 111 Monnesota i and Me1k
A us s cl t "" po st - e I e c t ion
Washington. D.C. (Repeel . 60
m1naJ
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J , NATION.O.L GEOGRAPHIC
SPECJAL
a Lr1t1Q)UBERTY BOWLNavy
vs Ohoo Slate lrom Memph is.
Tennet ....
O r1 1(10) MR.MERLINZe cbuys
a van so he ca n jo in soma older
guys In a van,club . but soo nlinds
he 's d1ilitngawav from his best
lr 1end. leo.
' l l JOYOP' BAC:HThls interna•
l •onal aalute 10 composer
Johann Seba911an Bachcov.ers
h•s life a nd c&amp;re~H . and !he
appreciation h1s gen1us enjoy~
toda~ on concert h a ll s .
chu1cnes and even discos . (60
n11ne .}
11 RAMII.IN '
18) MOYIE -~WESTERN) •• •,
" Winchestsf 73" 1817
WKRPrNCINCINNATI
Wllh I he apirit ot Chrlstmnln
tho a11 am~ bonus t1me drawing
CIOSI'l , 11 lOOkS 3S if ArthUI
Carlson is go1ng lo rema in h1s
Scrooge -like sell end sHII the
st11t. (Rep8al]
10) WKRP IN CINCINNATI

at

NEWS

11_) . MOYIE

f&gt;lumbing
&amp; Htatl!IQ

8 :0!
8:30

8 :58
9:00

8 :30
10:00

.(1)

M o mma Carlso n h1res a 1adio
con sultanl with an ulle1ior
moh~e who also I urns out to be
an old budd~ ol Andy ' s.
ITl CBN UPeATE NEWS
2 )1JC'1 : TH!FACTSOFLIFE
When Blair's cousin Geri wialle
I he Eastland School, the girls
ure conc erned about getTing
hc1 a dale lo1 an upco.ming
sOCial ewent
3 700CLUB
~"i) MOVIE •(DRAMA) •••
· · From The Lifo 01 The
Mo~rlonettea " 1880
D (f)~ CIS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Sen•G r T1ip'
1981 Slars: ScotT Ba1o, Faye
G1an1 , Randy Brooks.
9 ' ' 11~ GIULINI CONCERTS
Los Angeles Philharmonic
B 1cen t c n n1a I Celeb r atl o n ·
M&lt;1ust oo Carlo Mar •II Gulllni
oil er s his un1q ue insights on
c o mp osursa nd the a't o f
co nduc 11ng 111 a p ro gram
tll\,lhllghted by a pertormanceol
Beethoven' s S~mphonv No. 2.
(60 mma; ,)
' 2~
(1 1 LOIIE , SIDNEY
.' ~ 1 8 f ' l NBC WHITE PAP~R
· The Pres1denc_y And The
N auon· Anchorman Roger
Mudd iS •JOo ned by NBC News
{,QII espondents John Hall ,
Mo rw•n Kalb and Judy Woo drull
ro r an in-depth e~~:e m i nalion of
the t.rsl year oil he Reagan
Pre&amp;lctency . (60 mms .)
9 SKATINGSPECTACULAA
1980 Th e themelorthishour is
·aro und lhe ~~otorld on fee ' and II
t a at ure s Lisa Marla Allen .
Elame Zyack, Pete1 and Kilty
Ca~ruthen, and Judy Blumbtu'lt.' (60 mms .)
11 NEWS

D

10:05 (J) TBSEV!NINGNEWS
10:28 3 \ CBNUPOATENEWS
10:30 3 I SING OUT AMIRICA
11!
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PRESENTS
10:58 ' 3 J CBNUPDATENEWS
'i J II (l)f1l iJi ri111~W iil
NEWS
LlJ NASHVILLE RFD
' ~ 1 1981 AMERICAN BODY·
BUILDING CHAMPIONSHIPS
Greg L ew1s hosh this sports
s pecoal taped at Caesar's
Palace 10 L11s Vegu where top
bo dybuilders compele for I he
M1 Un1V ~1se' ti!l e .
9 DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
11:05 ' 51 ALLIN THE FAMILY
11 :28 :0: ' CBNUPOATENEWS
t 1:30 !.2ll )[t) THETONIGHTSHOW
Guest : MtHim !dull . (60 mins .)
l ANOTHER LIFE
11 1 BENNY HILL SHOW
,.
O l a' CBSLATEM0VtEWKRP
In C1nc1 nnalo ·Baby . If You've
Ever Wonde 1ed ' Fo1 the firs I
t 1me m seve n year&amp; , 1he1a1ings
ha ve gone up and eve1yone is
c tJiebra11ng ucepiiOr Andy .
(Repea l) ' The Sw1ss Conspir·
ii(; Y 1 9713 S I.IIIIS, David
JMssen. Ray M1lland . A former
Dv panment ot Justice
lnvc stiQOIOIIshired by a Swiss
Odn ll when l 1ve o ltheir
dCpO SI!OfS&amp;Ie th1ea1ened wilh
blackma ol . (Repeal)
t ABC CA.PTIONED NEWS
101MOVIE ·(COMEDY]••~,;
" Where Angele Go , TrOuble
Followe" 1968

,,oo

Upholstery

74 CHEIIY 'I• ton pickup MOWREYS Upflolstery Rt,
truck, 1950. Phone :JOH75·
3157.
.
.

1 Bo~ 12~. Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675-4154.

· 12 'Cilt ABCNEWSNIGHTLINE
AnchOifll:l by Ted Koppal.
11 :35 (~ MOYIE ·(MUSICAL) •• 111
'' Hollywood Hotel'' IQ37
12:00 '11 BURNS AND ALLEN
4 MOVIE - (FANTA.SY') ••
·· xanadu" ,1880
I ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
Anchored by Ted Koppel.
, 12 ID LOWE BOAT
12 :30 (1'1 8 (TJ
TOMORROW
COAST-To-CqAST
. _t.; JACK BENNY
a LOYEBOAT
12:58 f! l C:BNSPORTSREPORT
1:00 3 1 UFE OF RILEY
1: 10 '121m NEWS
1:30 ' 3 ) MY LITTLE MARGIE
1:40 ' 4' MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••
1
" Breaking Glue" HtBO
1145 ( f) MOYIE -(DRAMA) •••
' ' ThreeonaMatch '' 1932
2:00 r·:t l BACHELOR FA THEA
1 NEWS
10, I BELIEVE
2:30 (1') BURNSANOALLEN
3:00 3 JA.CI( BENNY
3 : 15 tTl MOYIE •( MUSICAL)•• · ~
" AU TNt Jau" 1879
3l30 ( 1) LIFE OF RILEV
1
3 :58 31 CBNSPORTSREPORT
4:00 ' a \- PollY LITTLE MARGIE
4:30 ' ) 1 BACHELOR FATHER
4 :45 ' S1. MISSIONIMPOSSIBLE
5:00 1 3 1 ROSSBAGLEYSHOW
5:20 ' 41 THE CANDID CANDID
CAMERA Alan Funltravals all
ove r the counl rv lo c alch the
uns uspecllng 1n very preca r·
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5:30 r 31 ANOTHER LIFE

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1 Giacomini, e.g.
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5 Floating
! Eat into
10 Pa. city
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t Novelist,
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II Poem
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15 Intimate
i Pallid
16 Ht~~pict!
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17 Victor
8 Tall\ ol
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the town
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19 Dutch
factory
township
II Climb
~ E&lt;perl
15 Type size
21 Growl
18 Helen Keller's
22 Islamic
teacher
,.,...-.:-,.--r;holy city
25 Wllil fervor
2&amp; Paris suburb
27 Needlefish
28 ''OdeNightingale"

21 Vidal
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23 caustic
24 Mesterwork
25 Moss 27 Overeat
29 Elegant

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38 Carplike !ish

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29 Heavy·
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30 Jerry,
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31 Bums mate
32 On weUare
17 Actress

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Gener11 Hauunv ·

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. ~ve .', Gallipolis.
446· 7133 or 446·1833.

Furnished mobile home,
dryer, air, biO
yard, adults preferred, fuel
oil, outside pott. 446·3911.

JAM!i:/

Even-i ng television listings _____,_--~-----------

CARPENTRY
&amp;
remOdeling, electrical and
plumbing: 304-576·2'189 or
576-2587.

17

washer,

A6Ptll..

RON'S Television Service.
Speciallzirlg , in zenith and
Motorola, Quaz-ar, · and
house calls. Phone 516·2398
9r 446·24.54.

NOW HAULING house COli
&amp; limestone for driVeways,
Call for estimates 367· 7101.

Centenary: 2 bdr., private
lot. adults, rtf. &amp; dep.
Eureka: Riverfront lot, 1
bdr .. ackllls, rtf. &amp; deposit.
Caiii-614-UI-2644.

A FULl.

STOMIICH.

WELL ... AT THIS
POINT, I SEE
ONLY ON.t'
OASIS ON OU~
8LEAK HORIZON
. .. tlf(AR

STI?IIITSr

JONES . BOXS WATER
SERIIICE. Call 367-7471 or
367-0591 .

Attractive and modern 2
bdr. Skyline, furnished,
nice location on Rt. 7 above
bypass. Call 2-IS-.5111.

IF~&amp; WILL
' STIMULATE 'SOME
Cl1fATIVE FINANCING,
IT'S ON THE HOUSE,
i!liRD!E-'

l ALWAYS
THINK
!!ETTEI': ON

""(JULVI SOME~ 12'.41'5
EVE_ I Hat./ CAN I

P£l/NQUENT WIITCR

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec. only. Call
now and save. 614·992·6309.

12
SEASONED oak
call 304-675·2757
p.m.

COL.T · Python
magnum.'" barrel, ·
plated, with holsteri IJi•&gt;.IJO 1 Ford Truck, 250 -camper
304,·675·6621 .'
special, with ne'N stake bed
and dual wheels. Call 2566413,12 p.m. to9 p.m.
55
Building Supplln

Modern 2 bdr. furn!S/led,
12x70 trailer. Convenient
location/ sec. dep. &amp; ref.
rectuired, utilities paid ex·
cept electric. Call 446-1551
after 5.

SUC!U:R&amp; I'IA~HI\ TURM

AKC Reg. Boxer puppies, 8
wksold, $125. Ca11446·3870.

1972 Ford ~x4 360 with
headers, S97S. 1 Harris cut·
ling torch and hose &amp;
gauge. Call 446·,638.

FIREWOOD-split oak, $-40
a rick, $70. a cord, call 3C).4675·3137 anytime.

51JKE
DOI'E LEGIIL.IF THESE

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 30,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

32 court cases end·in Meigs County'
Thirty-two court cases were terminated Tuesday and last week in
Meigs County.
Eleven defendents forfeited bends
Tuesday in Pomeroy mayor's court,
presided over by mayor Clarence
Andrews.
Forfeiting bends were Leta Fetty,
Langsville, $32, speedipg; Ronald H.
Rickard, Jr., New Haven, $163,
reckless operation; Kenneth AI
Reed, Middleport, $37, speeding;
Joseph M. Donahoe, Middleport, $37,
speeding; Timothy T. Thomas, Middleport, $63, running red ~ght ; Linda K. Grim, Mason, $43, illegal left
turn ; Marvin E. Craig, Pomeroy,

$163, reckless operation; David
Crow, Racine, $32, speeding ;
Clayton A. Ausmundson, Euclid, $31,
speeding; Bernard H. Bennett,
Reedsville, $32, speeding; Richard
J . Gibnore, Pomeroy, $363, driving
while ·intoxicated, $163, reckless

operation.
One defendent forfeited bOnd and
eight were fined Tuesday in the
court of Middleport mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting bend was Arnold Priddy, Rutland, $40, speeding.
Paying fines were Gale Wolfe,
Reedsville, $250 and costs, p)us three
days confinement, driving while intoxicated; William Imboden, Mid·
dleport, $100 and costs, disorderly
manner, and $300 and costs,
resiSting arrest; Cindy Mayle,
Rutland, $25 and costs, running stop
sign, and $100 and costs, fleeing an
officer; . George McDaniel, Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly
manner; Charles Boyles, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; Charlie Geary, Middleport,
$50 and costs, disorderly manner;
Ruth Lewis, Middleport, $100 and
costs, disorderly manner: Tom Far-

·Area deaths
.•

Jamie Lee Ridenour

Coolville, and several uncles and
aunts.
Officiating at the service was the

Graveside rites for Jamie Lee
Ridenour, stillborn at Camden-Clark Rev. Marvin Paxton.
Hospital, Parkersburg, Tuesday,
were held at 3:30 toda~ at the
Ida Bodkin Childs
Chester Cemetery.
SUrviving are the parents, James
Services for Mrs. Ida M. Bodkin
L. and Jean Elaine Ridenour,
Childs,
78, who died at her MidChester; two half-brothers, Lowell
residence Tuesday, have
·dleport
Allen Rider.our and John Leslie
· Ridenour, Chester; the palernal heen set for 2 p.m. Thursday at the
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Buel K. Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Ridenour, Chester; the maternal Home. Officiating will he Mr. Robert
grandmother, Mrs. Mattie Pullins, Melton and Mr. Scott Saltsman.

Meigs County happenings
Steer weigh in
date announced
Any bey or girl plam.ing on
carrying a steer project in 4-H or

FF A in 1982 ,is reminded that the
steer weigh in will he held on Saturday, Jan. 2, at Royal Oak Fann near
Five Points, from 10 a.m. until 12
noon.

All steer. must be identified and
weighed and all steers will be freeze
branded. Steers must be castrated
and dehorned. If weather is bad,
listen to WMPO for cancellation. If it
·is cancelled, it will automatically he
reschc'lluied for January 9.

Ho{lpital news
Veterans Mt~morial
Admissions-Roger Moore Jr.,
Haydenville; Charles Warth Jr.,
Pomeroy; Walter Haggy, Rutland ;
Inez Ash, Racinej Nellie Price, Middleport.
Discharges-Ellen Couch, Brett
Laudermilt, Roger Moore Jr.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC. 29
Bobby Bennett II, Rebecca Birchfield, Sandra Clemens, Mrs.
David Delaney and daughter, Hattie
Fewell, Jennifer Friend, Jeannette
Gabler, Susan Gray, Russell Johnson, Alice Kautz, Twin sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Knox, Joaquin
Legorreta, Sandra Mills, ' . ~ascom
Owens, MrS. Brian Reavis and son,

Gregory Roderick, Christopher
Toler.
BIRTHS
Mr. and M.,. Charles Kelley, son:

Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Van
Meter, daughter, Mason; Mr. and
Mrs. !)aniel Wolfe, son, Point
Pleasant.

No action taken
The Meigs County Board of Com-·
missioners met Tuesday to continue
work on U!e -1982 county budget. No
other actions were taken by the
board.

Jan.

1l

Real. estate tax books in Meigs
County will not open w1tii Jan. 11 ,
Meigs County Treasurer George
Collins announced today.

Property transfers
Floyd Cummins, Addie Cummins
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way ,
Meigs.
Ronald C. Grady to Ollie G.
McKinney, Winnie McKinni e, Par&lt;'els, Sutton.
~ Lydia DeLong, Harriett Thompson to Royal Petrolewn Prop., Inc.,
·
Easement, Salisbury.
Earl E. Frecker, Lilah I. Frecker
to Royal Petroleum Prop., Inc.,
Easement, Salisbury.
Vivienne M. Waddell to Charlotte
Middleton, Patricia S. Miles, Robert
M. Chambers, Pt. Lot, Middleport.
Elizabeth F. Proffitt, Robert W.
Proffitt fDet.'11), Mfidavit, Sutton.
Clifford Hall, deed., to Gertrude
Hall, Cert. ofTrans.,Syracuse.
Clifford Hall, deed., to Gertrude
Hall, Cert. ofTrans., Syracuse.
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to Connie
· A. Swisher, .950acre, Salisbury.
Harry Leslie Cheshire, deed., io
Jenevee Chesher, Cert. of Trans.,
Middleport.
Rodney Howery, Marilyn Howery
to Daniel R. Ellis, Lots 1,2,
Pageville, Scipio.
David Matthews, Maxine Matthews to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Rutland.
Stephen K. Henders, Sandra I.
Henderson, Helen Williams to
Herald Oil·and Gas Co., Inc., Ease.,
Meigs.

, nsworth, Middleport, $300 and rosts,
resistiug arrest, and $100 and costs,
disorderly manner.
Meanwhile, .12 dcfcndents were
fined and five forfdted bonds last
week in Meigs County Court,
presided over i)y ' Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Paying fines ~ere Thomas Perry,
Athens, •-peeding, $22 and costs; Anna Slater, St. Albans, W. va:,
•-peeding, $26 and costs; Wanda Fetty, Pomero~ , speeding, $20 and
costs; Randy Wilson, Rodney,
speeding, $21 and costs; Kathy
Williams, Langsville, failure to
maintain assured clear diStance, $10
and costs; David E. Ellis, Rutland,
driving while intoxicated, no

con~

te•1, $200 and costs, three days confinement, 30 days license suspension; Michael Trent, Racine, driving
while intoxicated, $150 and rosts,
three days confinement, 30 days

license 'sWipellllion; George J. Ratcliff, Middleport, driving while intoxicated, no contest, $150 and costS,
three days confinement, 31 days ·
. lu:ense suspelllliiln; Max Geary,
Middleport, unsafe vehicle, $15 and ·
costs; Donald J. Steirunetz Rutland
' and 20
no operators license, coats
days confinement; Jeffrey L.
Sellers, Route 2, Racine, illegal
license to hunt, $25 and coats and no
deer penni!, $50 and costs;' Dennis
Hart, Middleport, failure to check in
deer for tagging, $50 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Robert
Painter, Route 3, Pomeroy, driving
while intoxicated, $370.50;
Christopher Taylor, Middleport,
stop sign violation, $45.50; Rick
Sadolf, Charleston, W. Va.,
speeding, $39.50; Curtia Hayes,
Paden City, W. Va., speeding,
$42.50; David Lee Malone, St.
Mary's, W. Va, speeding, $38.

.

Columbia Gas plans
development program
Added drilling incentives and new
c'Oiltracts have led Columbia Gas of .
Ohio to invest approximately $105
million in Ohio for the development
of new gas reserves and construction of service facilities.
· "Natural gas supplies are abundant and we're taking steps .to ensure they will continue to be abundant," Columbia's Gallia-Meigs office manager, John- M. (Jakel
Koebrl said.
"The Colwnbia system has a large
supply of known gas reserves plus
potential supplies well beyond the
ne!d 50 · years," he continued.
"Natural gas will remain not only
the most dependable home heating
supply, bot the hest buy as well."
In a release issued today, Colwn·
bia said it has a construction budget
of $58.4 million for 1982, and the new
year's expenditures will include
$17.1 million for CWitomer service
extension.
Much of the remaining budget is
for improvement of Columbia's
existing 14,000-mile gas delivery
system in Ohio, including
relocations due to local, state or
federal construction projects,
The finn said an additional $26
million has heen appropriated for
. the facility inspections, personnel
training, pipeline repajrs and other
functions.
Colum6ia Gas Transmission
Corp. , the firm's Charleston, W.Va.based principal gas supplier, plans
to spet)d $21 million for new gas
development projects in 1982, in addition to another $26 million for

maintenance and improvement of

its high-pressure pipeline system
and

underground

gas

storage

facilities in lhe state.
Colwnbia credits passage of the
1978 Natural Gas Policy Act
INGPA) for the spurt of activity in
drilling and development. NGPA
supplies incentives to producers to
develop new areas where development was considered risky or ex~
pensive, and is considered the

reason why tloere have been few
natural gas shortages since it went
into effect.
Colwnbia Transmission is curren-

tly l'Ornpleting work on four major
projects in Ohio, estimated to yield
154 billion cubic feet of reserves.
Contracts for gas from more than
1,700 new gas wells in the state were
negotiated by the transmission firm
in 1981, bringing to 10,700 the total
wells from which it obtains Ohio gas.
These new projects, budgeted at
$19 million this year, are: ·
-A $5 million program in T11!1nbu11, Mahoning and Colwnbiana
c'OUIIties, where 75 wells have been
drilled by indepepdent producers
and another 750 are expected by

•

January 1983.
- A $868,000 project in Washington
County with some 16 billion cubic
feet of gas developed from 318 wells.
-A $1.6 million effort in Coshocton
County, in which 10 billion cubic feet
of gas are expected to he extracted
from 107 wells. Columbia said 75
welts are now complete.
-In Vinton County, $316,000 iS
being spent to attach more than 11
billion cubic feet of reserves. According to Colwnbia, 37 wells have
been drilled and deliveries are expected to start soon.

Solidarity
(Continued from page 1) .
and his family, acc(lrding to reports.
The rnu•-tachioed union leader was
not under arrest, Urban claimed:
"He is in Warsaw because that's
where the government wants him."

PreviOWI reports from Warsaw
have said Walesa was held at the
headquarters of the anny general
staff. Walesa's current whereabouts
could not he independently confirmed.
Nonnal corrununications were cut

in Poland when martial law was
declared and cell/lorship imposed.
Reliable news reports from within
Polaqd have been few and Western'
news , organizations

must

piece

together information from
travelers, diplomatic sources and
others.
Solidarity 15 the only independent
union in the Soviet bloc free of.Com-·
monist Party control.
The same government source said
Jaruzelski, an army' general, will
unveil a social, economic and
political program in early January
thah.t hwill include guidelines under
W IC
a union
along the lines of
Solidarity
could operate.
Shurtly after martial law was imposed, there were reports of industrial sabotage and protest strikes'
by thousands of workers from the
Baltic shipyards to the coal mines in

SileSia.ButonTuesday, adispatch
filed by AP correspondent Thomas
W.Netter and subject to censorship,
quoted government officials as
saying the country was calm.
"Today is the first day in Poland
that there are no strikes, or other
forms of tension," said Gen.
Tadeusz S.acillo, a member of the
ruling military l'Ouncil.

e
JACK WHITE

Two Coolville residents, Jack
White .and Annie Laurie Walden,
were hooored for conununity service at a recent meeting of Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp 10900.
· White, owner of White Funeral
Home; Coolville, is a former Athens
County Commissioner, and now ser~
ves as a trustee of Athens County
Regional Health Foundstion.
He was praised for hiS support of
conununity endeavors to improve
economic growth and soCial enrich~
rneflt for the area, as well as hisser\'ice to Boy Scouts of America, churches; schools, senior citizens, and
other civic organizations. ..
Miss Walden, a :etired registered
nurse, who resides in the 150-year~
old home in which she was born, was

dted · for Iter deep concern and
willing assistance to people. in her
hometown as well as at her place of
employment.

I

fants. She served 25 years at St. ·
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersborg, as
head nurse in charge of newborn and
premature nursing. A 5(1-year member of Ohio Nurses Association, she
retired in 1974.
The invocation was given by Nina
·Robinson, Alfred, and the Pledge of
Allegiance was led by Frank Kercel,
Coolville. M. H. Elliott, Pomeroy, .
led in singing "America"; C. Lee
Henderson, Alfred, led the Group
recitation of the Woodmen Creed.
Wilbur Robinson, Alfred, received. a
25-year membership pin, and Tiffany Johnson, Coolville, and Jessica
Pennington, Reedsville, were

By The Associated Press
Poland's martial law chief, Gen.
Wojciech Jaruzelski, is expected to
unveil a program in early January
that ''would amount to a new model
for social, political and economic life
in Poland," a goverrunent official
was quoted as saying in an un~

censored dispatch from Poland.
But the report, which reached the
West Wednesday night, said political
observers in Warsaw were skeptical
that any political solution put forth
by Jaruzelski can win wide public
support.
The observers .said the martial
law regime faced a fundamental
dilemma: How to create a climate of
national reconciliation at the same
lime as it maintains sufficient Con~
trol to prevent unrest.
The uncensored reports quoted
sources in Warsaw as saying
Jaruzelski has set up at least three
panels headed by top Communist
Party leaders to revamp the country's social, economic and political

welcomed as new members. Modern

Woodmen of America Scholarship
Awards were discussed, and members were encouraged to
disseminate

information "' about

them. A letter of thanks was
received from the Garrett Christy
During her 57-year nursing
family, Grove City.
career, Miss Walden is credited with
Marjorie Malone, Coolville, led
providing care for. 30,000 new in- carol singing with the autoharp, and
all enjoyed, "Up Orl The Housetop"
sung by the small tots. Adonation of
$30 was made by camp members for
the Salvation Army to help needy
The Meigs Emergency Medical families in the area, and Santa
Service Headquarters reports three brought treats to the children.
calls were . answered Tuesday by
Officet:S for 1982 are Freda Morris,
area·emergency squads
Athens, watchman; C. W. HenThe first was at 6:30a.m. , when der.on, counsel; W. H. Carr, adthe Rutland squad was called to visor; Hobart Swartz, escort; G. c.
Meigs Mine No: I for Dati Euman, Griffin, C. Lee Henderson, and Nina
who was taken to Holzer Medical . Robinson, Alfred, ti'UJitees; Vernon
Center. At. 10:47 a.m., tbe Mid- (l. Swartz, sentry, and R. C. Hendleport unit transported Nellie Price derson, secretary, Coolville.
from her home on NQl'lh Second Ave. .-------~----­
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Rutland team was called out a
NOWtN
second time at 11:41, laking Sylvian
NEW LOCATION
Cleland from her residence to
Veterans Memorial.
CAKE

Emergency runs

I
Office c nsing

All Middleport village offices will
clo.se al noon on Thursday, Dec ..31;
and remain closed Friday jn order
that employees may observe the
New Year's holiday . Normal
business' hours will reswnc Monday,
Jan. 4.

Tuppers Plains
Call667·6485

• · Playland

Armed forces seize operations
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast - The apn_ed forces have seized power in
the West African nation of Ghana after overthrowing the gov ernmen~
of President Hilla Limann late Wednesday, Accra Radio said today in
a broadcast monitored here.
There was no inunedlate infonnation on the political makeup of the
new military government ruling the first black African territory to
achieve independence in the post World War II era.
It was fonned in March !957 by a consolidation of the former British
colony of the Gold Coast and the former U.N. trust territory of British
Togoland.
. .
It was the fifth coup d'etat since Ule country gained independence.

20% OFF

JEANS
EVERYTHING ElSE
'

KIDDIE SHOPPE.

Toxic shock syndrome victim

111 w :-2nd " Pomeor'l, Oh.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MEN'S ·SHIRT SALE

Winning Ohio lottery nunher

Includes all of our men's dress shirts - sport shirts
velour shirts - sweaters - dress and sport type flannels
knit shirts- westerns. Sizes s, M, Land XL .

-

•

tile .,..Un and

pboto).

mao ~~~jared lllree olllen. (AP Luer-

-

Rain over the entire stale today, except snow or freezing rain continuing northwest. Snow or rain changing to snow north tonight an.d
rain changing to snow flurries south.
"":

4

CLOSED fRIDAY, JAN. 111 AND SAT., JAN. 2nd

1be esteDded lorecut tllrouP Moadlly caU. for lair Saturday aod
SWiday. RaiD or oaow Moaday. Hlglll Saturday IUid Saiaday llllbe 3111
a1111 Moaday bl lbe tGI. LoWI 111 lbe Zls Saturday aod Sunday aDd Ill the
. . Moaday.

ELDS IN
(

The lottery reported earnings of $6&amp;1,965.50 from the wagering on its
daily game..,The earnings came on sales of $960,713.50, while holders of
winning tickets are entltled to share $276,748,lottery officials said.

Weather forecast

OPEN JHURSDA Y 9130 A.M. TO 5100 P.M.

ldell boom bodr fl Wllllalll Jadu, Jl..y-. eld frem

ClEVELAND - The winning number drawn Wednesday night in ·

•

,_

Gllfanl, Jl'la., II Jlfted aft tile...., ,_traetlea .,_ ol
tile Sa Ceve ~ llere Tllelday. Jadan aDd

~

the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnher" was 398.

SALE - PRICES
..
two . . - -an died .._. tile ..... ~ at iiC1IIII
erue IIND1, Ilion left ... rflll&amp;__., •.A I . tl •

.

ClEVELAND - A 12-year-old girl who underwent surgery for a
fractured nose later died of toxic shock syndrome, doctors say after
studying laboratory tests.
Leigh Anne Salvi of suburban Bedlord died Oct. 22 at Rainbew
Babies' aa.1 Children's Hospilal three days after undergoing surgery
at Suburban Conununity Hospital in Warrensville Heights.
Toxic shock syndrome is associated with mem.1ruating women, but
the girl was not menstruating, her doctors said.

•

CRANE BOOM OOUAPSI!II- "'-.,_.Ill tile

not

and ·c onunissars with questions and

''At

least

pas:;ive

resistance

against the enemy iS stlll 'possible,"
said a leaflet circulated with the
name of Rural Solidsrity said,
I

Susie Soulsby
Pomeroy Homemaker
"I wish more parents would get
Involved with their children's activities In the coming year,
b«ause It c:reates a closer
relationship between children
and their parents. From experlenee, I know It gives you a
good feeling and your children, a
feeling of your love and interest.
Then, when they grow up, both
you and your children wlll have
wonderful memories to look back

,.

!

equalize

district

populations, always finds each
political party looking out for its own
particular interests.
"It's just one of those things you
can't do anything abeut. It's
inherently political," Gilbnor said.
The possibility of compromise
arose after it was learned that Ohio
lose two of its present 23 seats in
the House. The idea was that each
party would give up the district of
one incumbent.
Rep. Terry M. Tranter, [).
Cincinnati, introduced the House
measure which calls for elimination
of districts represented by
Republican Rep. John M. Ashbrook
of Johnstown (17th) and Democratic
Rep. DeMis E. Eckart of Euclid
(22nd).
Ashbrook is leaving the U.S.
House next year to make a bid for
the GOP nomination for governor.
Eckart was the newest Ohio member.of Congress at the time Tranter
drafted his measure.
However, since that time, Rep.
Michael G. Oxley, R-Findlay, has
been elected to serve out tbe unexpired term of the late Rep. Tennyson
Guyer, R-Findlay, in the 4th
District.
The DaUy Seatlael will not be
plabU.bed Friday Ia order that
employee~ DillY observe New
Years Day. PubUcaUon wlll

resUJDe Sllllday.

Involved with the education ol our
children to upgrade the quality of
schools locally. Though the
schools have many fine points, I
feel there is roon1 for improvement in everything and

everyone, including myself.
"Also, I wouldlike to see Kaiser
Aluminum get back on its fe et
again, to boost tbe area's
economy."

I

will

see a group effort from everyone

.•.

Gillmor said he wasn't ruling out
the possibility of an agreement of
some sort with Riffe.
But he said redistricting, which is.
done in the year after each decennial
to

OU Elementary
Education Major
"In the coming year, I hope.to

problems."

' '

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - Battle
lines are being drawn for a heated
donnybrook in the Legislature over
the mapping of new congressional
districts in Ohio.
Leaders had said hrlier they
were hoping for a negotiated compromise between the GOP·
controlled Senate and the
Democratic House.
But Senate President Paul E.
Gilbnor, R-Port Clinton, indicated
. Wednesday he thinks this now iS
unlikely.
He disclosed for the first lime that
Senate Republicans are working on
their own bill and expect to in1roduce it, and perhaps start
hearings on it, next week.
Earlier, he and Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr. , [).New Boston, tentatively
agreed that a measure already pending in the House would he the

census

Gerald Shuster
Retired Pomeroy Resident
" In 1982, I hope to see a drop in
inflation and Improvement of the
nation's economy, as weD as a
decrease In unemployment. I
wish President Reagan aod the
rest of our government tbe best of
luck In dealing wltb tbese

on."

redistricting vehicle.

ALL

..,,....

has

.pretend to be a half-wit."

Battle
lines.
drawn

WASHINGTON - For the first time since 1978, the dawning of the
new year will not mean an automatic pay boost for the approximately
5 million Americans being paid the minimum wage.
·
Not only that, no efforts are afoot either within the Reagan administration or on Capitol Hill to increase minimwn wage rates. Thus,
the $3.33-an-hour minimum will be frozen indefinitely.
With the economy in a worsening recession, traditional labor allies
have expressed concern that any upward pressure on the minimum
wage •could cost thousands of people their jobs as businesses cut back
the number of employees to keep their Iaber costs stable.

50% -0FF

•

generation

The government, in an apparent
attempt to stem the tide of such
leaflets, has banned the sale of
Cording to sources in Warsaw.
paper, according to a Solidarity
Economic reforms are like!&gt;' to in- pub~cation. Authorities outlawed
clude autonomy for factol'les and private possession of duplicating
other enterprises, but not the worker machines and distribution of antiself-management proposed by government materials shortly after
Solidarity, the sources said.
martial law was declared.
Tht• nnr·e-•1:sored dispatch from
Solidarity chief Lech Walesa,
Pol aw;
Hl the now-banned reportedly under house arrest since
1
Solidarit; l&lt;:~hl~r mwcment was cir- the start of the military crackdown,
culating a bulletin urging its mem- was said to have agreed to negotiate
bers to resist what it described as "a· with the martial law regime. It was
·StaliniSt version of local terror not known if the talks had started.

Minimum wage won't get boost

January Clearance ·S ale
SNOWSUITS' COATS &amp; .
au
· NTINGS' BY· Tinv ,Tots&amp;

STOREWIDE
30% OFF

previously experienced."
'fhe bulletin, dated Dec. 28, told
members to 41 WOryt slowly, complain
about the mess and the inefficiency
of your superiors. Flood the army

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Petroleum Marketers Association
reports the sale of taxable motor vehicle fuel declined by 100,524,000
gallo,ns in the first seve_!l months of the year over the same 1980 period.
The agency said 3,117,835,000 gallons of laxable motor vehicle fuel
were used the first seven months of this year, compared with
3,218,359,000 gallons in the same period lao;! year.

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

'

which

One of the panels reportedly
proposed scrapping the tattered
Polish United Workers Party - the
Coffimunist Party - and replacing it
with a new party incorporating
Roman Catholic Church and
Solidarity union representatives.
The Communist Party has been
reported in disarray since martial
law was declared Dec. 13.
Another committee, headed by
Communist Party hard-liner Stefan
Olszowski, reportedly ' proposed
decentralization of the economy
within tight political limits, ac-

' Motor vehicle fuel sales down

Rl. 7,.01d VFW Hall

'

our

What are the hopes of '82?

programs.

. . . ...,_

ANN'S
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

2 Secti ons, 16 Pages
1S Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 31 ,1981

Observers skeptical
about- neW program

•

•

entine

at

Voi .30,No.182
copvrighted 1981

ANNIE L. WAWEN

Coolville residents
•
• •
gzven recognztton

Tret' pirk up !it'l
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
announc-ed today that the annual
free. pickup of Christmas trees will
be held in the village on Monday,
J&amp;n. 4. Residents. are asked to
deposit their trees at the curb· in
front of their home and they will be
. picked up by the street department
free of c~rge.

•

\
Mike Gerlach
Meigs High History Teacher
"This year, let us he of good
cheer, remembering that the
misfortunes hardest to bear are
those which never happen. Let us
so endeavor to live that when we
come to die, even the undertaker
will be sorry. And never let us
forge! that Mark Twain wrote
these gems of wisdom ."

Patrick H. O'Brien
Meigs .County Court Judge
"I would like to see the people
of Meigs County take more pride
In our county by taking an active
role in supporting a revitalization
program by repairing or
removing the vacant and run

down buildings In the respective
towns to accommodate new
businesses and new families, and
to make this area a better and
more appealing place In which to
live."

Bruce Reed
Farmers Bank Employee
"First of all, I wish everyone a
happy and prosperoos new year.
I hope to see an upswing in the
economy, especially in the local
area. Also, I would like to see a
rejuvenation program started in
Pomeroy to clean and spruce up
the town."

•

Tax·cut won't show up until July
WASffiNGTON (AP) - Federal
income taxes on the average $20,000a-year American family will drop by
about $4 a week starting Friday, but
the extra money won't start showing
up in paychecks until July.
Until then, a 2tk:ent-per-week increase in Social Security taxes will
make the same family's take-home
pay a little smaller.
Higher-earning taxpayers will get
a larger cut in income taxes but
most also will turn over a bigger
share to Social Security.
The across-the-board cut in individual income-tax rates will
average about 8.75 percent and is the
second slage of the biggest tax
reduction in history - approved by
Congress last August as part of
President Reagan' p economiC
program.
The Social Security tax increase
was enacted in 1977.
In addition to lower income-tax
rates, the new year brings a new tax
deduction to. offset part of the
"inarriage penaltyu on working

couples ; a chance for 40 million
workers already covered by pension
plans to have a tax-deferred In-

dividual Retirement Account ; a
liberalized deduction for job-related
child-care expenses, and sharp cuts
in estate taxes.

•

Although the reduced income-tax
rates take ef:ect Friday, new
withholding tabh ,s will not he used
until July I, 'vh•.n they will drop by
10 percent. Withholding rates were
reduced an average of more than 5
percent last Oct. I.
While the withholding tables
detennine the periodic take-home •
pay of most workers, it is the total
withheld over the entire year that
counts at tax return time. And the
new tables are calculated to make
the total tax withheld more-or-less
equa) the tax owed.
For the wage earner, the effect of
delaying the change in withholding
is to concentrate the tax break in the
last six months of the year.
For the goverrunent, it enables the
Treasury to retain more cash during
the first half of calendar 1982 and
thus run a smaller deficit during the
latter part of fiscal19ll2 than it would
if new tables were used for the entire
year.

While the tax year runs from

January to January, the government's bookkeeping year runs from
October to October.
Taxpayers who qualify for the new
"marriage penalty" deduction or a

tax-deferred IRA may obtain a W-4
form from their employer and have
less money withheld to refl ect those
changes.
The cut in income-tax rates will

mean a 1982 tax cut of $185 for a
tyrical sin~h~ person ear ning
$1i1 ,000. A typ1 cal one-ea rner couple
with $20,000 in come a nd two chil llrcn
will pay $203 less than in 1981· the
$40,000 family of four with one ~,1 ge
earner will gel a $560 tax cut.

•

The nation's savings rate·

15

ex-

pected to increase as a result of the ·
more-Jib~ral

retirement aecounts .

The IRA account allows a worker to
set aside with a financial institution
up to $2,000 a year and pay no tax until retirement on the deposits or interest they earn . A person with an

unemployed spouse also may
deposat$250 ma n IRA for !he spouse.
Similar c hanges ttre taking dfect
in retirement provisions for selr-

employed work ers. ·

Gunman wo!!'t release his. hostage
•

MARION, Ohio (AP) - A. man
holding a woman hostage in a drug
store refused , to surrender early
today after being sun;ounded by
police for hours, even though police
brought the man's wife, baby,
mother, a clergyman and the man's
•dog to see him, pollee said.
"We are still conununicating,"

·'

Pollee Chief Robert Exley said at a
·news conference in below-freezing

weather. "Right now it iS indecision
on what he wants to do. We will
wait."

Marion County Sheriff John ButteJ'W(lrth identified the alleged gunman as DenniS Pounds of the Bar.berton area, believed to be in his late

30s.
Pounds' wife

~nd

child li ve in

Marion Couhty .

Butterworth declined to say
whether Pounds hod made any
demands.
Exley said police talked to the
woman hostage , identified as Cathy
Swartz, in her early 20s an employee of the·drug store. '

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