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                  <text>Pome!oy-Middleport, Ohio

· Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

~-Local

-

'

Friday, Novemj)ar 29. 1986 .·

I("

briefs:--..., Area deaths _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~J~

:-:--:--

EMS answers 12 holiday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports eight calls
Wednesday and four calls Thursday.
Wednesday, at 8:46a.m., Rutland to !Dll St. for carl I:lennlson to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 10:29 a.m. to Owl Hollow
Rd. for Nancy Deem to St. Joseph's Hospital; Pomeroyat11:14a.m:
to I,.ong Hollow Rd. lor Helen Rlghthouse to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 11:29 a.m. to Jividen Hollow for 'Melvin Lonesee to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; TuppersPialnsatl: SO p.m. to48832 Rt.
248 lor Josephine Osborne to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 6: 59 p.m. to Chester Rd. fr John Hunnell to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland Fire Departrnel)t and EMS unit at 10:31
p.m. to a minor fire In HarrisonvUle.
Thursday. at 6:04a.m.. Pomeroy to Union Ave. lor Ethel Shank to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at~: 13 p.m. to 168 Mulberry
lor Robert Canaday to Veterans Memorial Haspltal; Pomeroy at9: 20
p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center lor Abbie Strnuss to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:44 p.m. to Pomeroy Health care
Center lor Robert Rupe to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Church bazaar scheduled
Syracuse First Church of God will have their Chrlstmas Bazaar at
. Kroger'sonMondayandTuesday.

Rhea F. Erick
Rhea F. Elick, 74, of Lancaster,
died Wednesday In Lartcaster
Fairfield Community Haspltal. She
was a retired real estate
saleswoman.
Survivors Include her husband,
CUfton 0. Erick; two sons, Gary
Balles of Lartcaster and Robert
Balles ot Pltoenlx, Ariz.; one
stepdaughter, Mrs. Richard (Virginia) Muck of Lancaster; one
stepson, Clifton Erick dRichmond,
Ind.; one slsler, Mrs. Laurence
(Freda) HeasonotJamestown; one
brother, Paul Baker of Syraclise;
tour grandchlldren, eight step
grandchildren, several nelces and
nephews.

Funeral services will be 1::.J p.m.
·Monday at the Frank E. Smith
Funeral Home In Lancaster with
Rev. Theodore Partrldge officiatIng. Burial wtll be In Maple Grove
Cemetery. Friends may caU from
7-9 p.m. Saturday, frcm 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Sunday and up to the ttme d.
services Monday.

Fire Departments for
Mr. Nlhert was a member ot the John E. Hunnell
several years. ·
' New Life Lutheran Church, vtW
John E. HunneU, 54, of Rt. 2,
Survivors Include his wife, Annie Post 4464, American Legion Post 27, Racine, died Friday . morning at
Mary; one stE~H~aughter, Wanda;
40 et. 8, Disabled American Vete- veter~s Memorial Hospital.
his fosler parents, Ernest A. and rans, and the Fraternal Order of
A retired salesman lor Heiner'~
Maxine Wingett; and several nte- Po~. Hewaspostcommanderof Bakery,hewasbomMarch7,193lln
ces, nephews and cousinS.
AmVets.
Pomeroy to the late John A, and
Following fUneral sevtces at the
Funeral services wW be 10 a.m. Nettle Smith Hunnell. He was a
Gre~~a Funeral Home, 1053 East
Saturday at the New Life Lutheran member of the Baptist Church, the
621ld St., Cleveland, the body will be Church, with Pastor John Jackson Moose Lodge and the Fraternal
brought to the Ewing Funeral Home offtclattng,The body wlll he taken to Order d Eagles.
.
with arrangements for local servl· the church one hour prior to . Surviving are his wife, Edna
ces to be announced later.
services. Burial wlll be In Mound Marte Hunnell; a son and daughter·
Hlll Cemetery. VFW Post 4464 and In-law, John and VIolet Hunnell of
American Legion Post T1 wlll Pomeroy; three daughters, Mrs.
conduct
mllitary services at the Nicholas (Jilebl) !{tng, Mrs•.•Mark
Garland B. Nibert Jr.
graveside. Friends/may call at the (Tam!) Patsons and Velessa Hurt·
Retired GaJUpolls Clly Pollee Wlllls Funeral Home from Z4 p.m. nell; all of Racine; two brothers,
Carl Hunnell ~ r. Columoos and ,
ChlefGarlandB.NibertJr,,58,ot17'7 and 7·9 p.m. today.
Pallbearers wUl be Gene Elliott, Donald HunneU of Pomeroy; al.
Portsmouth Rd1, dled Tuesday at
Keith
Elliott, Jim Franklla, Lonnie sister, Shirley Young of Riverside,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
McGuire,
Wade Henson and Mike calli.·, 10grandchlldre!landseveral
He was born Feb. 16, 1927 to the
FUlks.
·
nieces and nephews.
lateEstherJ. Nlblii'tandGarlandB.
FUneral services will be 2 p.m.
Nibert Sr., who survives. .
SundayattheEwlngFuneraiHO!ftll
.·
He Is survived by his wife Hanna
with
burial
to
be
In
the
Leta.
r
t
Falls
:
(Elliott) Nihert, whom he married Freda Lee Johnston
CemelerY. Friends may call at the ·
May 4, 1970, at Ripley, W.Va; one
fw!eral
home alter 1 p_.m. Saturday, .
Freda Lee Johnston of Rt 1
sen, James, of Columbus; and one
daughter, Barbara Ann, of Ewlngton, died Thursday at H~
Medical Center. She was born Oct.
Youngstown.
Also surviving are four stepsons, 26, 194lln Jeffrey, W.Va., to VerDe
'
'
Roy E. Jarrell Jr. d. Point Pleasant, EudnsChrlstlan otAccovjll, W.Va.,
Veteralls Memorial HoapMal
Gordon S. Jarrell of GalUpolls, ' and the late Ora Christian.
.
Nov.n ·
She Is survived by her husband,
James H. Jarrell, a member of the
~-Iva Upton,~· :
U.S. oAir Force statx&gt;ned In Truman Johnston; two sons, Rl· ville; Ola Smith. Shade; Melvin '
Cheyenne, Wyo. and Robert Lee chard Lee Johnston and Truman Lonesre, Middleport; Estlll Moore,
Harold Johnston Jr., both of Syracuse.
Jarrel~ a member ot the U.S. Navy
stationed In Nofolk, Va.; one Ewlngton; four daughters, Teresa
Dlsdlarp8- None.
stepdaughter, Anna Marie Allen ot Lynn Davidson of VInton, Mrs.
Nov.~
Andover, Kan.; two brothers, Danny !Donna Sue) Mollohan of
Admllllllollll - Ethel Shank,
Donald and MarHn Nibert, both ot Kalamazoo, Mich., Mrs. I:leane Pomeroy; Robert Canaday, P)mle- . ·
Columbus; three sisters, Mrs. (LtSa Car()!) Cole o! Temple, Texas roy; AudraLongstreth, Middleport.
James Nadean SkldmoreofGaiUpo- and Mrs. Ellis (Tammy Renee) . ·Ill8charps-None.
.
lis, Mrs. Richard Reda Myers of Smith of Ewlngton; one sister, Mrs.
Springfield and Martha McRey· Daniel (Delores) Simpkins,' A!:conoIds of Miami, F1.: three grand- vlll, w. Va.; and 10 grandchildren.
chldren and one step grandson.
· She was preceded In death byrne
Today-Cioody. Hlghtnthelower
He was preceded In death by one brother.
Funeral services wW be 1 p.m. 50s. North winds around 10 mph.
step granddaughter.
· Toall'bl- Cloudy. Low 40 to 45.
Sunday at McCoy Moore Funeral Northeast to east winds around 10
Home In VInton with Rev. Wayne mph.
Sexton ofllclatlng. Burial wlll be In
Marcum-Newsome Cemetery,
Satardlly- Cloudy with a chance
·
of rain. Hlil\60 to 65.
That Interview, In Arable, was Ewtngton. Friends may call at the
CbiDce o1 predptlllton _ 10
translated Into English by the CIA funeral home from &amp;-9, p.m. percent today, 20 percent tonight
and distributed to govenunent Saturday.
and40percenfSatutday.
agencies Oct. 7.
·
"a}
Exteailed foreCut for Sunday
The United Arab Emirates abuts
ICI
111rou1b Tueiday- Acbanceofraln
Saudi Arabia to the east. AI-Ittlhad,
SundayandMondayandachaaceof
Its largest ne;~Wpaper,ls ftnanced by
,
snow TUesday. Highs In the 60s
the government and run by an
Sunday cooUng to the 40s Monday
lndepmdent board.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Artl!l·
and to the upper 20s 1o mid :lls
A year earlier, Talas reportedly eta! blood cells made of hemoglobin
Tuesday. Overnight lows In the 40s
told I:ler Spiegel: "If Israel should encased In fat successfully substiSunday cooUng to the :lls Monday
employ nuclear weapons, (Amer- tuted for the real thing In animal
and 15 to 25 Tuesday.
Ica) alone would he responsible. The tests and may be used one day In
Soviet Union has guaranteed It human transfusions, researchers
Lottery winning
would make nuclear weapons say.
available to us with which we could
numbers: 341,7946
Reoean:hers at the University of
reply to such · an annlhllatlng Ca!lfornla-San F'ri!Jiclsco said In a
attack."
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Thursstudy reported Thursday In the
Talas said he was referring to journal Science that the substitute
day's winning Ohio Lottery
ground-to-ground and air-to-ground cells can he stored longer than whole
numbers:
nuclear missiles.
blood, could be given to patients of · Dally Number: 341.
"We'd even rlsk rurllves tooome any blood type and could also he
Ticket sales totaled $919,336.!Xl,
Into possession of a few nuclear used In veterlnacy liurgery.
with a payoff due ot$562,882.
weapons with which we could reach
PICK-4: 79t6.
However, the new product would
Israel," he said. "Can you give me a not be a total substitute for red blood
PICK-4 ticket sates totaled
plausible reason why we shouldn't ceUs, slnee It dupUcates ooly red
$139,663.50 with a payoff due of
do that If Israells the ftrst to deploy cells' QXygen-carrylng capabillty.
$62,940.
nuclear weapons?"
PICK-4 S1stralght bet pays$4,416.
Real red 'cells also remove carbon
PICK-4$1 box bet pays$184.
dioxide from the body.
.-----------------------------'------

· Volunteer

'

kicks off

Christmas

··Page B-1

John E. Wqtgett, 46, a native of
Racine, died · Wednesday at his
horne In CleVeland.
He was born Feb. 16, 19:ll to the
late Eller and Dalphene Morgan
Nelgler.
He was a security guard at the
Cleveland Public Ubrary . at the
time of his death. He was also a
barber In Athe!lsaad had worked as
adeckhandonOhloRiverandGreat
Lakes' boats.
A member of the Racine United
Methodist Church, he was a former
Racine councilman and a memher
of both the Racine Junior and Senior

Dour••• - (Conttnued from page 1)
-------

~I
j

south of Hamilton, the Hocldng
River In Fatrlleld and Hocking
counties, the Scioto River south d
Columbus, and the Tiffin and St.
Joseph rivers In northwest Ohio.
Also, a state of emeraency
remained lneffecttodayforparlsof
Belmont Counly where heavy rains
caused mudslldes that' closed one
state highway.
· The Ohio River at Marietta was
expected to crest this aftel'llj)On at 36
By Unlled Press International
feet - one foot above fiood stage.
Ohioans today got a break from Downstream, the rtver ~ expected
the wet weather they have endured to crest at one foot below flood stage
most of this month, but rainfall was at both Portsmouth and Cincinnati
expected to return to the state during the weekend.
tonight or Saturday, possibly In·
creasing the chances of more
Wills Creek at Cambridge rose to
Oooding In some areas.
about seven feet above flood stage
The National Weather Service early today and was expected to
forecast called lor cloudy skies begin receding.
today · with a chance of rain
The Great Miami River at
developing tonight and rain likely oo Miamitown and the Hocking River
Saturday.
at Enterprise both crested at about
Rain that has plagued the two feet above flood stage early
Buckeye State all month let up today and began slowly falling.
Thursday In most areas, except the
The Scioto River was expected to
extreme southern section along the crest at four feet above flood stage
Ohlo River. More than an Inch of near CirclevUle today. Downstream
rain was recorded at Chesapeake at Piketon, the rtver was forecast to
Thursdlay, the NWS reported.
crest at eight tonlnefeet aboveflood
Meanwhile, flood warnings were stage thls afternoon. Cropland
1n effect today for the Ohio River at flooding was reported In the area but
Marietta, Wills Creek In Guernsey the cily of Piket6n was not affected
County, the Great Miami River by high water.

feet, 5~ feet above the flood level
there of 38 feet. The spokesman
stressed, however, thatthedatawas
for the Jocks and darn (Illy and not
the towns of Racine, Ohto or New I
Havm.
At the Gallipolis locks, the river Is
expected to crest at 46feets,fourfeet
below the flood level rl !XI feets, at 7
a.m. Saturdav.

By NEIL ROlAND
WASHINGTON (UPI) - · The
Syrian defense minister has said In
two published Interviews, one as
recently as last month, that the
Soviet Union has agreed to gtve
Syria nuclear arms If Israel were to
launch a nuclear attack.
A. Sovlet.Syrta nuclear : agreemeat would violate the 1970Nuclear
Non·ProUferatlon Trealy forbidding the transfer of such arms to
countries without them, U.S. and
Soviet &lt;filclals agree.
However, a Soviet otficlal derided
as "sheer nonsenae" the .Syrian
claims, which were made In
separate Interviews published more
than a year apart.
Israel has denied possessing
nuclear weapons but a recent study
by the Carllligle Endowment for
International Peace estimated the
Jewish stat~ Is "likely to have at
least'25 but possibly as many as 140
nuclear weapons."
Lt. Gen. Mustafa Talas, Syria's
chief defense official since 1972,
cited a Soviet "guarantee" of
nuclear weapons In the face of an
Israeli nuclear ·attack In the .Oct. 4
edition of AI-Ittihad, the semiolftclal newspaper of the United
Arab Emirates, and the September
1~ Issue of the West Gennan
magazine I:ler Spiegel.
Talas told AI·Ittlhad that If Israel
were to use U.S.-supplled nuclear
arms, "We have a guarantee from
the Soviet Union that we wBI have
enough means to deter the aggression and the Soviet Union will put
nuclear means In our hands.
"We In Syrla," Talas said. "have
enough courage to press the
button."
·
·

POMEROY - While heavy rains creath1g
backwater and a rising Ohio River caused problems
for many Meigs Countlans, there was a sigh d. rellef
Saturday morning when the rlver faDed to meet the
predicted crest of 48.5, two feet over flood stage.
Pomeroy Vlllage personnel reported that the rlver
crested at 46.7 feet abou.t 2:30 Saturday rrorntng and
at 8: :.J remained at that figure. Pomeroy merchants
were hoping that the recession would starl soon since
the annual parade to welcome In the hoUday season
was postponed Saturday and was set for 1 p.m. today.

...

Fnm Unlled Press
Siaft~

I~ Belmont County doesn't get any
more rain this weekend, work crews
may be able to clear Ohio Route 7 ot
the mud, trees, rocksanddebrlsand
get the highway open to traffic.'
Heavy rains this week pushed
mud and rocks over the highway
along the Ohlol'{lver about25times,
and 38 Ohio Department or Transportatx&gt;n crews and employees of
an excavating firm worked to clean
up the road.
Steve Fought, an spokesman lor
ODOT, said five miles r1'Route ?In
Belmont County hetweenPowhatan
Point and Dllles Bottom wlll open
'late Sunday unless there is more
rain.
"It's unstable," Fought said.
"There are rock outcropplngs and
high bluffs and they are themselves
unstable."
H~ estimated 500 dump-truck
loads cirocks,mud, trees and debris
covered the road.
The situation Is not much better In
Gallla County. Both the State
Highway Patrol and the. Gallla
County Sheriff's I:lepartments said
high water has closed a number rt
state and county roads.
As of I p.m. Saturday, Ohio 7 was
closed at Eureka, Kyger Creek and
Bulaville Addison Road; Ohio 325
was closed from Rio Grande to
Vlnt6n and from VInton to the Meigs
County line; Ohio 554 was closed at
Cheshire and from Bidwell to Rio
Grande; and Ohio 160 at Vinton.
County roads closed Included Allee
Road, Sugar Creek Road, Brick
School Road, Symmes Creek Road,
Little Kyger Road, Oxyer Road,
Glen Summit Road, Tom Glenn
Road and Keystone Road.

blood may
Artifi
One day be available

Ohio got !l)me drizzle early
Saturday, but It was expected to end
untll Saturday night In western Ohlo
where more rain Is forecast. Rain Is
almost certain statewide Sunday
and It could be heavy at times.

Poin~

tntittt
t6 Sections, t42 Pogo• 60 Contr

Pleasant Sunday, December 1, 1985

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Open houses are scheduled from 12 to 5 today at a
creating problems earller In the week.
number or business houses. Pomeroy's Main St. had
Pomeroy's Ea•t Main St. merchants were on the
water In oniyone location and that was at the oorner of · alert all day Friday and had plans to move If it
Sycamore and Main where some three Inches- not
became necessary. One merchant pointed out that 190
enough to hamper traffic - was across the road.
hours ol labor would be required If the move became
However, backwaters were creating problems for
necessary - and that, ol course, does not reflect the
some residents. Some were practically isolated at
loss of business that would have occurred. However,
their homes due to the hackwater. One resident said
since the river crested well below the predicted 48.:;
· "I bet I walked 10 miles this morning to get to town".
feet, moves were not necessary. At 11 a.m. Saturday,
She said It was her first outing since the water started · a report from Pomeroy VIllage Hall Indicated that the
water was beginning to fall slightly.

Meantime, the Ohio State Patrol said Saturday
morning high water has closed a number d. state and ·
county roads. State roads closed included Ohio 124 at
Portland, Forked Run Road, Minersville and
Syracuse; Ohio 388 at Antiquity; Ohio 388 and Ohio 124
at the Ravenswood Bridge; Ohio 7 al Pomeroy; U.S.
33 at Pomeroy; Sycamore and Main Streets In
Pomeroy. County roads closed Included Forest Run
Road, Pine Grove Road Bowman Run Road, Keno
Road and Yellow Bush Road.

High pressure Is north of Ohio
while low·pqessure moving out of ·
the southwestern states will set of!
the rain.
Temperatures wlll start to plunge
Monday behind a cold front thatwlll
reach western Ohio Sunday night.
Temperatures In the mid 40s to mid
50s Monday rooming wlll trobably
he the highs for that day. Highs
TuEsday and W€dnesday will be
only In the 30s while lows are
expected to he around 20 degrees.
Rain ls forecast Monday but there
may be some snow by evening.
Saturday's weather map showed
high p~ure over tile northeastern
partd the country. Also, a high over
western Canada. Low pressure was
over ~rgla With another low over
Utah.
By Sunday morning-, high pres.sure wUl extend from western
Canada Into the Plains states,
feeding cold air lnlo the midsection
of the country. A low will be over
Missouri with a warm .front to
southern Ohio. The low will be over
northern Illinois early Sunday night
with a cold front to the Ohio-Indiana
border.
The cold weather for the flrst of
the month foUows the National
Weather Service's December outPOMEROY - 'l1le "Be811tlful Ohio" -above- took m a mean look
look for Ohio that calls for below
Friday as It continued to rise aci'OSII the parking lots along lbe river bt
normal temperatures, but near
Pomeroy. Friday nlghlllle water edged over Mabt St. at the oomer li
nonnal amounts of IX'eclpltatlon.
Sycamore St., belore creltlng about 2:~ a.m. al46.7 feet pulllnl about
Dally high temperatures In Ohio
three Inches of water across the !!lreet near Carter Healing and
usually decHne from the low or' mid .
Plumbing. Flood stage In Pomeroy Is 46.5. At righl, David Goodwin, who
40s at the first of I:lecemher to the
~ri&lt;s 110111e with the Pomeroy Ponce Department In hMdllng parking
low or mid 30s late In the roonth.
meters,llflsoffa meier head alongtheMabtSi. iilde ol the lower parklnr
Daily lows usually range from the
Jolin Pomeroy Friday afternoon. Although the water was not predlciedto
upper ~ to near :.J on Dec. 1 and
get as high as lbe meter heads, they were removed as a precautionary
dropped to the teens or low 20s by
measure.Meanwhlle,lheObloSiatePatrolsaldSalurdaymomlnrhlgh
Jan.l.
water has closed a number d state aDd county mads. State roads closed
This year's I:lecember outlook
Included Ohio 124 at PorUaad, Forked Run Road; MlnersvDle and
suggests frequent readings In the
Syracuse; Oblo388atAallqulty; Ohlo388andOhlol24attbeRavenswood
teens or low 20s.
Bridge; Ohio 7 at Pomeroy; U.S. 3S a1 Pomeroy; Sycamore and Mala
Precipitation totals normally
SireetslnPomeroy. Cooaiyroadscllll!lldlnckJdetiForesiRunRoad,Pine
range from 2'h to 3 Inches with
Grove Road Bowman Run Road, Keno Road and YeUow Bush Road.
snowfall usually between 4 and 6
Inches In southern counties and
hetween 9 and 12 Inches In the
northern parl ot the state.

. 1• Jni . . . ·..
' .·-.:- -

High water creeps
into Pomeroy

River towns flood fOr secon time in month
PHll..IPPI, W.Va. (UP! ) - Floodwaters from
Than.ksglvtng day downpours rose Friday Into river
towns struggling to reootld from a devastating flood
four weeks ago, and harned famllles and merchants
were forced to return to higher ground. ·
Numerous homes and businesses were swamped In
Buckhannon and water lapped at doorsteps In
Phlllppi and Belington, which were hlt hard by a Nov.
4 flood that killed 38 people In West VIrginia and
caused SnJ mUUon damage. At least 10 people stlll
are missing.
"I've got about 18 Inches In there now," said Neil

Before You Shop Anywhere Eose
•Fine quality Merchandise at a legitimate ·20'/o Savings
•Choose from tfle Widest Selection of Diamond Jewelry in the Area
'
FlEE
FlEE liNG SIZING
LAYAWAYS WELCO.
Prit111

'

DO. IN OUI n011

OPEN SUNDAY 12·5

Thacker, whose Buckhannon gas station was
inundated Nov. 4. "You've got to get used to lt. I'm
going to stay. In a couple ci hours, the water will be
down and w.e'll all be back In business."
Officials said about 200 residents and merchants
were forced to pack up and move belongings'to higher
ground In Phlllppi, Buckhannon and Belington. But
most of the 29 counties declared disaster areas after
the Nov. 4 flood were spared serious damage Friday.
"For a county like Preston that was already
seriously damaged, the wat,er would have to come up

Area jobless
rate in October

Jobless rate falls
in Gallia, Meigs

GIFT WRAPPING

SEE US AFTER .MONDAY'S PARADE

MIDDUPOU

Sports ........................ '' .. C-1·8

Flood waters close
Gallia County roads

Weather .(orecast i ·

LONG AND SHORT SLEEVE

.

Along tile River .............. . B-1-8
Business ... .... ....... ......... .... E·l
Deaths ............................. A-1i
Editorials ......................... A-2

Ohio weather:
rain likely
on Sunday
··Page A-4-·

Water creeps into village; covers some roads

__.ospital De\\,'8 ::

SAVE ON
•GREAT SELECnON OF ARROW DRESS SHIRTS

BAHlS CLOTHIERS

•

Middleport-Pomeroy~Gallipolis

STOREWIDE

OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 6; OPEN MONDAY 9:30 TO 8

Inside:

Take-One ..... ......... .. ... .. Insert

tmts

SAVE 20°/o 10 50°/o
•LONDON FOG ALL WEATHER COATS &amp; JACKETS
•EXCELLENT SELECTION OF LADIES' SWEATERS
•LONDON FOG COATS &amp; JACKETS· FOR LADIES
•LADIES' LEVI BENDOVEi SLACKS
•LADIES SLACKS
•LADIES' JACKETS
•LADIES' SKIRTS &amp; BLOUSES
•LADIES' ROBES
•JANTZEN. SUITS
'LADIES' LEVI DENIMS
eiSOTONER GLOVES &amp; SliPPERS

Fanners.may be taxed on commodity credit loans

•

Soviets to aid Syria
READY -JaueWIIe,~aSal!leraDdllellllleSIIei•,Jefttortpt,
employeesliElbettelclsDepartmeatstoreareplc&amp;uredprepariarforu
open holl!le lobe beldlllllestorefrom 12to5 p.m.Suadaywllhspeclalsale
prices to be In effect. 'l1le three wcmen are worldar In ille camera
department. Elberfelds lsooeofa mmberofstores plaanlagopen llluse
pl0p'111l18forSuaday. '

Jack Anderson discusses a 'lonely outpost of
freedom' - Page A-2

-Page F..l

'

John E. Wingett

Page D-1

Yule shopping season

Parade

1
"

'

GALLIPOLIS - The unemploy·
ment rates In Gallla and Meigs
Counties fell between September
and October, reports the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services,
with both counties posting their
iowl!st figures r1199i.
Acro6s the regton, area counties
throughout southeastern Ohio reported a mixed bag of unemploymmt rate Increases and decreases
In October. The rate fell In three
counties - Gai!Ja, ·Meigs and
Vinton; Increased In two others 'I

Percentage

Lawrence and Jackson; and, beld
steady In Athens County.
GalUa'.s unemployment rate fell
by one-tenth of one percent- from
10 to 9.9 percent - during the
one-month petlod; and,jolnsAtheas
as the only area county with a
jobless rate below double-dlg1ts.
In Meigs County, the uaemptoy.
mentratedecreased by eight-tenths
of one pel'l'ellt. - from 10.8 to 10
percent - between September and ·
October. That eight-tenths of one
(Continued on page A4)
'

"

Athens ........................... 8.8 (8.81
Gallla ...........................9.9 (10.0)
Jackaon .. .... ................ 11.5 (10.8)
Lawrence .................... 1U (11.1)
Melp ......................... 10.0 (10.8)
Vlatoa ......................... 11.9 (1!.2)

JOBLESS RATE - Unemployment ftpres released J!'ri.
doy by the Ohio Bureau d

Employment ServicEs showed a
mtxoo bq of Jobless rate
Increases and decreases

fhrouchoul

tiOUibelllliem Ohio
durlnJ October. (September fig·
uresla ]llnllthesll)

pretty high to hurt anything because the area 's
already wiped out," said Gary Morrls, a spokesman
for the Office of Emergency Services.
The TygartValley River at Phllllpl crested Friday
at nearly 221eet, 4'h feet above flood stage, and the
Buckhannon River ran 2'h feet over Its banks at
Buckhannon.
The National Weather Service predicted flooding in
low lying areas along the Ohio'lver, which rose
Friday along Its entire length In West Virginia. Flood
warnings along the Ohio were expected to continue
until Saturday.

Emergency crews worked to clear !Jood debriS
from dazms ol roads, and forecasters said there was a
chance of more rain through the weekend.
High water stopped just short of Phlllppl Dlscount
Tire store but manager Keith Sturm said he loaded up
his merchandise and closed the business, which was
swamped Nov. 4 by Sleet of wa ter that caused $20,oo:J
damage.
"I lhlnk we're jusl going to stay closed until
Monday," he said. "It's supposed to rain through the
weekend . We'll just hold out and see what happens."

Celeste leads Ohio political
candidates in raising money
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Gov. re-election campaign.
Richard Celeste's campaign comThe governor's warchest far
mittee has more than $1 million In exceeds those of any ol his potential
the bank lor a running start on his challengers. Republicans James
bid for re-election In 1~.
Rhodes and Paul GUtmor reported
The committee reponed Friday balances ot $84,661 and $81,416,
receiving $1.18 mllllon during the respectively.
last year, leavlr)g a balance or
Former Oeveland Mayor I:lennis
$1,025,605 despite $679,6M In expen. Kuclnlch, who has announced his
ditures for p~blic opinion polling and candidacy for the I:lemocratlc
Image-making on hehalf of the gubernatorial nomination, showed
guvernor.
. a balanceol$2.54.
It ltas been estimated that Celeste
The off-year reporls, flied with
Wlll spend $7 mllllon on _ \he Secretary of State Sherrod Brown,

were required rt all political
candidates who raised money
within the last year ended Oct. 31. ·
The only candidates close 10
Celeste' in lund-raising were on the
I:lemocratlc.slde: Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezre Jr. reported a
balance of $1.16 million and sta te
Auditor Thomas Ferguson showed
$821,768. Bqth are expected to seek
re-election.
Celeste's largest single receipt
was a $40,000 oontrlbutlon from
Peter B. Lewls d Mayfield Village.

�.''
Oeqtmber 1. 1986

.,.•·

Commentary and perspective
innh~ ~- - j~ntiucl
A Division of

825 Third Ave., GaiUpolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Execulive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

l.E"'TERS OF OPINIO N :ur " 'f'ko mf'O . lh rv !\hould bf&gt; lt&gt;Ss than 300 words
iOn$!. AIIIPttl' rs ;lr£' subjfft to E'dil\ng a nd mus1 ~ sili!N'd with namr. addrrss a nd
l r l('phonP n'u mlX'rs. No unsl~ n rd lf'Tit'fS v.•IJI bf&gt; publlshNI . LE'Il&lt;'rs should tx&gt; In
l'tood laST(', addl't"sslnJ!' lssuC's. no1 prrsoni.llitl('!&gt; .

World breathes easier
~ result of sunuDit
• Tile summlt Is over and the world is breathlnga Utile easier- not much,

apparently have been resolved . tangible form. These new examin·
One · says "apparently," because ers Will cost the government $600
with computer programs as com· mlllion, but they wtll (rOduce a !let
plex as these ll'Ograms, one never of $!1.6 billion a year. These are the
knows. Egger Is optimistic. As ilr geese that lay the Treasury's
tax reform, the vast majortty of golden eggs.
taxpayers - t!Xlse In lower and
Egger wlll be looking for college
graduates with degrees In accountmiddle Income bra::kets - wUl find
fewer compllcatlons, but other Ing. His personnel people, wtll be
taxpayers will 'find no slmplltica· ra:ruitlng actively on college cam·
tlon at all. Some of the changes _111ses across the nation. He can
approve(! last week by the House offer a beginning tax examiner
Ways and Means Committee, $14,:ll0 a year, a beginning agent
especially those changes affecting $17,880, -plus the oonsiderable fringe
corporate taxes, will keep a l~n benefits of the civil service. He
d CPAs awake for many a long ~knowledges with a sigh that these
night.
are not very lavish salaries, but
Egger is looking forward to 1987, expertence at the IRS can become a
when he ,is promisEd an additional valuable credential later on,
2,:00 examiners. The IRS wtll get
The search for tax evaders has
2,:00 more In 1988, and another 2,~ been vastlY more efficient over the
In 1989. The vanguard of thls past quarter-century, largely heenlarged army actua!Jy will come cause d the data base that
Into the system next year. Four constantly is being enlarged and
years down the road, the benefits to relinEd. By'lntensely audltlng50,0l)
the Treasury wUJ he seen · In randomly selected returns a y~ar,

1:81t a little.
·The two leaders of the superpowers have met and sized up each other.
~ch wUJ have his Own version d the play of evmts. But the reality is that
bOth President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev have a
rElationship now where they can canyon a dialoguewlthoutthe animosity
that has prevailed throughout the Reagan presidency.
·At some point In his admlnlstratlon, Reagan decided to go for a "get
ai.oqualnted" summit and that is what It turned outtohe. Butwlthhopeand
a:,potential lor some achievements, It could be the 1!rst step on a long
journey.

: Both leaders learned a lot In their 15 hours d talks, more than five lnlrs
111 a personal exchange.
':But one wonders wey In the nuclear age it look so long. The reality Is
better late than never.
::·Reagan's conservative supporters are pleased that he did not give an
bich on the tuturtstlc "Star Wars" space defense weapons. The Soviets
maintained their strong oppostllon but mutl!d the rlletortc In the joint
comrnunlque for the sake at putting out a pieced paper.
The whole exerdse was short on accomplishment and big on
atmosphe!ts, which Reagan Is very good at. So Is Gorbachev, since both
are image-men whose personal impact so far has been the most telling
thing about them.
'
·But it was a learning game with both leaders perhaps reaJJzlng that the
world yearns lor true peace and a backlllg df of the nuclear powers with
their capacity to wreak global annihilation.
'
· The summit may have also given Gorbachev a push, perhaps an
opening, to get out of Afghanistan, likened In many ways to Amertca's
Vlelnam, a no-win situation with no end In sight.
Reagan undoubtedly believes that he could only have gone to the summlt
after spending $1 trillion on the nation's arsenal. When he returned home,
he stressed that he wanted to keep Pentagon spending up to its usual par
whlle he has been In office.
But ther;e will be some ~tlol' of cutbllcks with the llJSSlbllity of a
new detente.
.
So far there is no lessening of the arms race and, as New York Times
columnist James ReSton points out, the SOvil!ts will go m trQduclng three
nuclear missiles a day and the United States 2.5 missiles dally.
Other, subjects discussed at the Summit were the Soviet Involvement In
Niearagua, Angola, and Ethk?Pia among others, with the United States
Intensifying ijs demands that -Moscow retreat.
.
~t the same time, when Reagan returned toWashlngton he made it clear
the Unitl!d States reserves the right to support "freedom ftghters" seeking
to Overthrow the governments d Nicaragua and Angola through covert or
avert ald.
!jecreiary of State George Shultz said that is the message, and he hopes
that the Soviets get it.
·
·
So the swnmlt brought about some new understanding between the
Je!Kiers with mclre meetings planned._The major problems remain, but
there ,may be some posslblllty of cooling the rhetortc and opening the cb&gt;r
to new era of U.S.·Sovlet relations.

.

a

Berry's World

11

T0 day

•In hlstory
•
,

Today is Sunday, Dec. 1. the 335th day of 1.98) with ll to follow.
The moon is moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars an d Sa turn.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign d Sagittarius. They Include
detective novelist Rex Stout in 1B86, actress Mary Martin In 1914 (age 71),
comedian·fllmmaker Woody Alien In 19:1i (age 50), golfer Lee Trevino In
1939 (age 46), soul singer Lou Raw,ls In 19li (age 49), comedian-actor
Richard Pryor In 1940 (age45) ,and singer-actress Bette Mldler In 1945 (age
400n)
· thls date in hlstory:

.

1n 1913, the world's first drive-in gasoline ~tation ~ed lor business In
Pittsburgh.
In 1917, Father Edward Flanagan founded Boys Town near Omaha,
Neb.
In 1943, ending a "Big Three" meeting In Tehran, Iran, American
president Franklin D, Roosevelt, British Prtme Minister Winston Churchill
and Russian Premier Josef Stailn pledged a concerted effort to defeat Nazi
Germany,
In 1982, Sen. Edward Kennedy o!Massashusetts announced he would not
seek the Democratic presidential nomination In 1984.

Oecembar 1, 1986
Page'--A-2

the IRS has been able to feed Its·
computers a formula for detecting.
!)lSSible violations. The formula ·
works well; some would sayalannlngly well.
Thus the formula has some..
bullt·ln skepticism about tax sheJ..•
ters. The taxpayer who puts hls
money In some of the far-out, :
Oakier schemes, hoping to reduce
hls tax bill by some subStantial ·
amount, is positively lnviling a •
notice from the ms. These retums:
wlll be audited. In many InStances, ·
when the IRS gets on to a ,
particularly dubious scheme, lnves·
tors are put on notice In advance
that !!they claim a tax benefit, their returns wtll be exarnlned "and ·
adjusted."
Last year the IRS closed 1,250,0))
audits. Of these, about 150,000tnvolved tax-shelter shenanigans. .
Those w1 had unlawfully sought·
shelter
ghed up an average ot.,
$18,000
taxes, Interest ancl ,
penalties, Egger calculates that!or
every dollar spent on examiners for •
these returns, the Treasury got $20
back. And that, he says, is a nice
return oo anyone's Investment. · .
For thls reason, Egger is at a loss
to understand a cut proposed by the
Senate In the IRS. budget for the
eurrent fiscal year. The House has
been wllllng to add $76 mlllion to ·
begin enlargement right now of the
corps of examiners, but the Senate ·
wants to cut $50 mllllol:l from the
president's recommendation. "It·
doesn't make sense to me," says

Slate of ASCS
•
normnees

botched rescue attempt In Febru· And In fact, the regime has
ary 1979, some 10 months before the apparently done nothlng to stop
frequent anti-American demon·
Soviet Invasion.
"The , regime claims that the strations in front dthe ~mbassy. As
United States Is its prtmary enemy in other communist countrtes, such
and threatens us accordingly," demonstrations cannot take ploce
Hurwitz. continued: "Frequently without the government'sooiiusion.
"This hlghly restrictive environlabeled as a nest d spies, the
ment
necessarily puts severe limits
embassy has had four officers
declared persona non grata within · on the goals and objectives of the
embassy," Hurwitz cabled Wathe last two-and-a-half years. Most
embassy staff members are regu. shington. "We have little hope of
larly followed tiy secret llJlice Influencing (Mghan government)
agents, and all rut a lew of our !)lUcy decisions, nor can we
FSNs have been arrested oo perform those commercial or
espionage charges." FSNs, or informational functions whlch are
'.'foreign service nationals," are normally part of an embassy's
Afghan citizens employed In non- portftllio,"
Why stay, then? Hurwitz dissmsitlve I»Sitions by the embassy.
According to U.s. cables obtained agrees with crttics who complain
by our reporter Jenny Cun· that the embassy's continued pres·
nlngham, the Afghan ministry of ence In Kabul gives ta::it recogni·
foreign affairs deliverEd a none-too- lion to the Soviet puppet regime. He
subtle threat to the embassy In also points out that, for all the
September 1983, claiming that It restrictions, the embassy is able to
would be unable to prevent "angry coiiect some Information on the
Mghans from taking action against Ouctuatlng situation In Mghanistan
whlch is valuable to Washington
our building and staff me'mhers."

They gave a party in Oman and to part of the world. What was unusual
my great regret I was unable to was that it was bloodless and not the
attend.
work of anti-Western militanta. Very
To refresh memories, Oman is a much to the countrary.
New Mexico-sized country on the heel The old sultan was packed off to
of the Arabian Peninsula. It is occa- comfortable exile in London and his
sionally on the fringe of the news, British-educated son, Qabus bin Said,
whenever the war between Iran and was installed in his place.
Iraq heats up enough to raiS. fears of A crash modernization program
an interruption in Persian Gulf oil quickly followed, paid for with on revtraffic_
enues, again not unusual in those
Oman, you see, guards the Straits of parts, Oman, however, is not as well
Hormuz, the exit from the gulf favored in that respect as its neighthrough which 40 percent of the non· bors, which may be ita good luck. It
communist world's oil supplies pass. can't afford to squander its more Jim·
But about the party. It \\'BS some- ited income on grandiose but ill-conthing of a big deal, marking the 15th ceived projects. Caution has governed
anniversary of Oman's emergence as.-development policies of the Omanls,
a modem nation, One of tbe com· who have sought to learn from and
plaints lodged against the press in this avoid their neighbors' plentiful miscountry is that good news usually geta takes. Although some erron are lnevsbort shrtft. Well, Oman at t1Us partie· itable, to a possibly surprising degree
ular time in ita long history offen a they appear to be succeeding.
good opportunity to recWy that.
There are hospitals In the larger cit·
Fifteen years ago the country was ies and a nationwide rural health serone of the last bastions on earth of the vice. Some 600 schools have an eqroll·
middle ages. In one of the most dis· ment of more than 200.000. close to
ease-ridden spolll on tbe globe, the hail girls. A national university will
modern medical facilities consisted of open next year.
one small hospital established by On the.surface, Oman would not •~&gt;American missionaries before the pear to have changed as much politi·
turn of the century.
callr,· as it has economically and soThere were only three schools and cia! y. It is still an absolute monarchy
909 studenta, all boys. The equivalent with power vested in the sultan. But
of billh school wu the end of the edu· the structure of an indigenous reprecationalline. Higher studies meant go- sentative system is taking shape.
ing to universities abroad. And most There are now municipal councils in
young Omanis who went abroad re- some 30 major towns. On the national
mained there.
level, a 45-member State Consultative
Oman wu that way because the rul· Council advises the sultan.
ing sultan, Said bin Taimur, wanted it As Oman rapidly becomes part of
that way. But other Omanis increas- the modern world, It has be&amp;un to play
· · lngly had other ideas.
a role in world affairs, A summit
Change came abruptly in 1970 meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Counthrough revolution, not unusual in that 'cil preceded the national day celebra(

L.~~-

!)llicy makers.
The embassy staff is also able to
keep the Soviet aggression 1no '·
Mghanlstan from becoming "the -·
forgotten war" by sending out
Information that can be used by the .
press, which is barred from -· ,
Mghanlstan. Continued world at.... :
tPntton will exert pressure on the
Kremlin to negotiate a settlement, '·
Hurwitz believes.
"A third objective ot. the embassy," he wrote, "is to keep watch
on the non-communist diplomatic ·- •
missions and International organ!· . · ,
zations In Kabul, with a view to ·
preventing or minimizing activities· ,
·which would tend to give support to. · ·
the (Afghan) r~lme or otherwise ·••
work against' U.S. !)lUcy toward
Afghanistan."
Remarkably, Hurwitz reported. ·
that "employee !'TK)rale has generally been high In Kabul, since most '
people have voluntrered for the job
and know what they are getting ·
Into."
· ~~

~

Don Graff ~
lions. The council links Oman and·its
imm«&lt;iate neighbors - Saudi Arabia,
tbe United Arab Emirates, Qatar,
Bahrain and Kuwait - and In the past
has tended to keep something of a low
political profile, staying as clear as

Doonesbury

•
possible of fallout from the Iran-Iraq ~
fracas. But this time the council ex- ~
pressed a bold - lor It - wiilin81li!SS ''
to mediate should the two bloodied ~
combata nts want to call on i~
services.
~

BY GARRY TRUPEAU

Fined for speeding were Carolyn
Anderson, Gallipolis, $24 and costs;
David Corrtveau, Point Pleasant,
w.Va,, $26andcosts; David Nelson,
Ashland, $26 and costs; Ted
HutchinS, Albany, $21 and costs;
Lloyd Cline, Marietta,$22 and costs;
Ronald Null, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
$21 and costs; Phillip Shears,

SENIOR-Harley Briau Say·
lor, fonnerly of Meigs Cow&amp;y,
has been named senior vice
president of the Chubb Ufe

America l118uralice Co;, and Is
residing In ~rd, N.H.

Hubbards Greenhouse

0b1o - Carlos Campbell, Lee
Johnson, Clarence Layne, David A.
Mills, Charles Lee Waugjl.
. Raceoon- Lawrence H. Burdell,
Willard Call, John W. Evans, James
HoWard, George W. Miller.
Spmsfleld - Robert Casto,
James Glassburn, WllliamKemper
Jr., . Haskell Saunders, Herman
Sprague.
'
WaiJIIIt -DonaldBarlow,JohnR.
Brown, Russell Notter, Dan H.
Stewart, Ellis Thornton.
The ASC committee election wlll
be conducted by mall from Nov. 22
until Dec. 2. Eligible ASC voters wlll
receive a secret ballot In the mall
with instructions on how to vote for
candidates of their choice and
return the ballot to the county ASC
office.

Insuran~

Co., and moved to
Concord, N. H. After two years
. there, he was made a regional vice
president and . moved to Orange,
Calif., with a charge of eight states.
However, another office was
established In Orange and his force
reduced tofol!rstates. Ayearagoat
the company's board meeting In
New York Saylor was made senior
vice president and moved back to
Concord, N. H.. He and two other
vice presidents are In cflarge of all
the business activities of Chubb Life
America.

"WE GUARANTEE ITI
If you find a lower priced portrai1 package with the sam&amp;
contents (2(8 x 10s), 3(5 x 7s) and 15 wallets! we will not

,.,,,.H
Ai40'ifll FLORIST
.:JI
7 28 Cedar St.

only m~tch thtlr orftr but glw an lddltlonal 10"' oH.
'mu must present proof of offer (nawspaper ad or
coupon) 10 photographer. Offer must have been
w~hln 2 weekS ol our In-sTore dates.
We seiad rhe posea (21. A 69t deposit ~led lor each p~o package pi~ $1.00 SittinO fee leN
each lddiliooal subj&amp;ct. Additi0t1al porlra1ts can bt purctta&amp;ed .

W~ ~

Ws /n~lfs
You To Affsnd

CORRECTION
In today's insert Xacto
Knife is not available.

Out · Open Houle
Phone 446-9721
Locally

Christmas Bacllground $1.00 additional.

G. C. MURPHY CO.

Sorry, no rain checks.

Sundtg, Os~smh11 111
~~~'~1 P.M. to 5 P.M. ()oo~~~

SPKIIltftKtl, bltck tnd Whitt baetiGrOUndt lnd propiiVIIIIbll onty In Dtl9111' CoiiKtton .
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER SUBJECT.

~.

348 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

Outlet Power Center. item
is incorrectly illustrated,
not exactly as shown.
We are sorry for any inconvenience

WED., DEC. 4 THIU SAT., DEC. 8
Wed., Thurs. &amp; Sat. 10-2 &amp; 2-S
Friday 10-2, 2·5:30, 6-8; Sunday 1-S

~~~&lt;f

Owned By

11~;;;;~;;;;;;~~~~;;;;~;;~;;;;;;~~~

This
Swt, 1:00-5:00; Mon. 9:30-8:00

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costs.
Forfeiting bonds In county court
were Dorothy Neville, Columbus.
$70, no operator's license; Richard
Basham, Portage, Wise., $&amp;); Scott
Hathaway, Parkersburg, W.Va .•
$50.

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

of freedom____ J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os.....!.ep_h~Sp,__e--,-ar·.

WASHINGTON - Confidential
State Department cables provide a
glimpse of the life of Amertc an
diplomats at the U.S. Embassy In
Kabul, the embattled capital r1.
Afghanistan. It's rot a ll'etty
picture,
Fat from prolectlng the Amert·
cans stationed there, the !'bvlet
puppet government of Afghanistan
Inspires and encourages a constant
campaign of denunciation In the
press, "spontaneous" mass denxmstratlons, harassment and threats
of physical violence aimed at our
' diplomats.
With a professional diplomat's
understatement, Charge d' Affalres
Ed Hurwitz noted In one cable to
Washington: "Our relations with
the Democratlc Republic c1. Mgh·
anisian are probably oolder and
more llmlted than with any other
country In which we maintain an
embassy-'' The Unifed States has
never sent a repi&lt;~cement for
Ambassador Adolph Dubs, who
was lddnapped, then killed In a

probation, possessing a deer or
parts of a deer untagged and
unchecked and not legally entitled
to: Robert Sprague, Tuppers
Plains, $50 and costs, three days In
jail with jail time suspended If
operator's license is obtained wlthln
30days, nooperater'sllcense; Mary
Fowler, Coolvllle, $75 and costs,
failure to control; Steven Powell,
Middleport, $75 and costs, ll days In
jail with 25 days suspended, two
years probation, assault; $~ and
costs, disorderlY conduct; Charles
Cade and Velma Cade, Pomeroy, !Kl
days in jail suspended, costs, a year
GALLIPOLIS - Three people probation, resisting arrest; Sherr!
were !reate!! and ~leased at Butcher, Pomery, $100and costs, 10
Veterans Memortal Hospital In days in jail suspended, a year
Pomeroy following a two-car coill· probation, no driver's license; ·$25
sian Friday afternoon on Ohio Gl4, and costs, expired ilcense plate; $2.'i
' about one-halfmilenortho!Ohio143. and costs, possession of marijuana;
The driver of one car, Jimmy L. Donna Miller, Pomeroy, restitution
Derenberger, 28, of 106 Brook St., and costs, passing bad checks;
Pomeroy, and two passtlllgers In hls ' Harold Fetty Jr ,, Langsville, $2.'iand
vehicle, Jerry Derenberger, 15, of costs, failure to control; Mitziann
Rt. 2, Albany, and Chastity Cre- Klaiber, Long Bottom, $10 and costs,
vaild
meens, 7, of Pomeroy, were all failed to
treated lor bruises and released,
hospital officials said.
· The Gallla·Meigs !)lstoltheState
NOW OPEN FOR THE
Highway Patrol said Derenberger
was southbound on 684, when a
CHRISTMAS SEASON
northbound car operated by Albert
.Poilwttia-. ~i~ Balkets, Uvt
F . Dixon, 68, of Rt. 2, Albany,
&amp; Cut Christmas T1111, Holy &amp;
allegedly went left of center and
lut Spruce T1111, Christmas
struck Derenberger's vehicle head·
Cactus, Door Wrea1hs. Candle
on. Dixon then continued off the
Arran!Jiilltntl, FoiDge l'klnts. For
right side of the road and struck a
the lowe! one's !PIIVI lllartets,
mailbox.
c-twv
v~~~~~, Manuntnt Sprays.
- Derenbetger's vehlcle sustained
Open Daly 9-6: Sunday 1-5
heavy damage and Dixon's moder·
ate damage In the 5:30 p.m.
accident, troopers said. Dixon was
charged by the patrol with DWI and
drtvtng left of center.
POMEROY - Twenty-three
cases were processed thls week In
Meigs County CoJrt by Judge
Patrtck O'Brien.
Fined were Robert Arnott, Ra·
cine, $300 and costs, ten days in jail,
120 day license suspension, DWI;
Wayne Cleland, Pomeroy, $250and
c;osts, three days In jail •. 60 day
license suspension, DWI; Earl
Wines Jr., Cheshlre, $150 and costs
with $75 of fine suspended, a year

Three injured in
two-car collision

GALLIPOLIS - The slate of
nominees for the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Ser·
vice has been developed, Dave
McKenzie, county executive director of the Gallla County ASCS,
announces.
The candidates foreachoomrnun·
lty In Gallla County~tre:
· AddJ8on.ateshlre .:.... Alan Boster,
Wendell Bradbury, T.F. Burleson,
Claude Burnett, Roy D. Sprague.
• (lay-Harrison - Joe Collins,
Wayne JMden, L. Paul Martin,
Harold Saunders, Paul Walter. ·
GallijJoJis..Green - G. David
Graham, Conard Hudson, Noel
Massie, Harry Pitchford, Tom
Woodward.
Greenlleld-Perry - Wllllarn E . .
Carter, W.T. Ferguson, Ray D.
Jeffers, Gerald "Jeff" Pope,BUJy
Starcher.
GID'an - Garrett E. Campbell,
John C. Fulks, Ross C. Fulks,
Everett ·Montgomery, James
Swain.
,
-Hillltlnlfolt-Morpn - James
Boggs, Jerry Dee!, Phlilip 1..
Edmlnston, Gonlon 0. Hejduk, Blll

Granted, at some llnite point a·
law of diminishing returns would ·
rome Into play, and more examin·
ers. would not necessartiy produce net additional revmues. That llJint ·
is yet far off. In fairness to an
taxpayers, the IRS h8s an obligation to go relentlesSly after the
willful evaders. Paying our income ·
taxes is no fun, and getting audited ·
offers all the pleasure of a root
rnnal, but Egger is rtght In adding
manpower to hls agency. The more •
he cra::ks dgwn on phony shelterS .
and unreported income, the better
I:Jr everyolle.

Outpo~t

.

·: POMEROY- Aformer Pomeroy resident has been named a
senior Vice president of an InSurance
oompany. ·
He Is Harley Brian (Buzz) Sayler
.who was born In Pomeroy and
resided In the community untO he
was 11. His mother remarrted and
the family moved to the Frost
homestead In Bedford Township
and the lamlly later moved to
Belmont County where Saylor
graduated from CenteJVllle High
School.
At 17 hewas considered too young
for employment and so worked at
odd jobs tO keep busy untU he was
just under 21. At that time he was
employed by the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co. and worked In
Ashland for about four years before
being transferred to Mansfield.
Alter some three more years, he
resigned from Metropolitan and
accepted employment with the
Kemper Insurance Co. and ·was
stationed In Chlcago.
_ .A short time late, he was
employed by the United Life and
Accident Insurance Co., a subs!·
diary ·of Chubb Life American

Egger.

Birthday greetings

"'Rambo ' Weinberger to see the president."

·'

Golden geese______--,-__·J_am_e_sJ_._Ki_lpa_t_ric_k
WASIDNGTON -This has been
a bad year lor the Internal Revenu~
Service. Computers refused to
perform; thousands of refunds
were late; about 25,000 tlmeJy
returns still awaitEd processlllgiast·
week. Next year may be a tough
one too, if a tax reform bill gets
written Into law. But after that,
things should start looking up.
That's the hopeful view d Roscoe
L. Egger Jr., commissioner of the
IRS. If you had sent to Central
Casting for an a::tor to play an
'accoyntant-lawyer In his mid-IDs,
Central Casting would have smt
you Roscoe Egger. A native of
Michlgan, he took hls bachelor's
degree at Indiana University and
hls law degree at George Washing·
ton University. After 25 years at
Prtce Waterhouse, he left the firJll
In l98l to become Reagan's top tax
oollector. He was made for the job.
The oornputer ll'Oblems that
plagued regional offices thls year

23 cases concluded in Meigs Court

Fonner
resident named
.
~ompany vice president

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.

HANDBAGS
TO
MATCH

•PENDANTS FROM $460° SIZS
TO lf2 CT.
*Chains Extra
•I

THE
SHOE CAFE
300 SECOND

$229

Our finest ' table and
floor lamps on special
. sale for your
Christmas shopping.

Register for -16
Tope's· Gift

D.

'Certificates to be
•
gtYen
away on

Dec. 24th.

LIMITED SUPPLY

FURNITURE
GAlLERIES
Jlllllll

eo •CONil AVIIIUI • ....,...,
IIIMII~ -IIICAN tiiiiiOCiiTV

OPEN SUNDAY, DEC. 1
1-S P.M.
Hours: 9:30-S Daily
Monday &amp; Friday til 8
•Free Parlcing
•Free Christmas Deliiv~.ry,

�Page-A-4-The SundBy Times-Sentinel

....---weather:

Unlled Press International
Wreckage from tbe accident was
Ratn, snow and high winds strimg oulfor nearly a mlle.
punished the W~t again Saturday
'!.be accident brings to 32 the
after a winter storm lhallrtggereda numberddeathsacrossthecountry
fatal avalanche In northern Cal!tor- blamed onley road condltloRS since
nta and caused widespread power Sunday.
·
-outages In the southern part o! the
Record lows were shattered In
state.
SI'Ven western and midwestern
Rivers and streams receded In clUes, Including BtSmarck, N.D.,
West Virginia, but forecasters where the mercury dipped to 30
predicted more rain would soak the below. Friday's records followed 11
already drenched state this wee- record lows on Thanksgiving.
kend. Residents who suffered seAn Intense low pres~ure sr.stern·
vere flooding last month were over the Great Basin sp~d rain
forced to flee once again Friday as and snow and created strong wind
heavy rains brought rivers up to the · gusts across much of the West. The
Dood stage.
storm threatened to dump heavy
Bitter cold gripped tbe region snowfall from the western Plains to
from the Rockies to the Plains for a
the upper Mississippi Valley over
12th straight day Friday. lnterna· the weekend.
Ilona! Falls, Minn., endured a
A winter storm warning was
record 28 degrees below zero.
posted
tor parts o1 Montana, wbere
In Colorado. one person was killed
and a dozen others were Injured forecasters predicted sub-zero
Friday night In a chain· reaction temperatures · accompanied by
accident on an lee- slick Interstate gusting winds of up to !ll mph that
highway 5 mlles east of Lovel81)d. would cause near blizzard condl·

MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
A cbance of raln Monday and turning sharPly colder. A chanCe of
snow fluJTies northeast Tuesday, otherwise fair and cold Tuesday
and Wednesday. Lows Moriday mornlng In tbe 40s with
temperatures falling through the day. Lows Tuesday and
'Wednesday In the upper teens and lower :als. Highs Tuesday and
Wednesday In the 30s.

State zone report
West Central, Central fflgblands
Ooudy Saturday with a high near !11. Cloudy Saturday night with a
chance of rain and a low In tbe low 40s.
Rain Sunday with a high b!!twren 50 and 55.
The probability of precipitation was 3!" percent Saturday, 30
percent Saturday nlghJ: and Ill percent Suriday.
Winds were expeCted to be from ~ EBsl at10 to l5 mph Saturday
and from tbe east to southeast around 10 mph Saturday night.
Northeut Inland, E!u1t Central
Cloudy Saturday and Saturday night. Hlgils were expected to be
near 50 and lows In tbe low 40s.
Rain likely Sunday with a high between 00 and 55.
The probablllty of preclplta!Dn was 20 perrent Saturday and
Saturday night and 70 percent Sumay.
Winds were expected to be from tbe mst at 10 to 15 mph Saturday
and from the east to southeast around 10 mph Saturday night.
Central, SoutbWest
Cloudy Saturday with a high near 55. Cloudy Saturday night with a
cbance of rain and a low near 45.
Rain Sunday, heavy at times, and a high near 55.
The probablllty of precipitation was 20 percent Saturday, 30
perrent Saturday night nd Ill percent Sumay.
Winds were expected to be from the southest at 10 to 15 mph
Saturday and from the swtheast at 10 mph or less Saturday night. ·
South Cenlraf
Cloudy Saturday and Saturday night. Highs were expected to be In
tbe uwer 50s and lows In the upper 40s.
Rain likely Sunday, possibly heavy at times. The highs were
expected to be near m.
The probablllty of precipitation was 20 percent Saturday and
' Saturday night and 70 percent Sumay.
Winds were expected to he llghl and from tbe east to southeast
Saturday and from tbe southeast aiiO mph or less Saturday night.

,

.

.-··
....
.."'-..-...
•• •

Visit Our Showroom On lt. 7, Tuppers Plains, Oh.

(U8P IJJ-811)

Our Hours Are Mon.-Fri. 1:30-11:30; Sat. 11·6
Or By Appointment

• I'Ubl~bed •acb Sunday, 82!5 Tbkd A.ve.,
, GaUipolls, Ohio, by the Ohio ValleyPutr

FOI MORE INFOIMATHIN CAll ANntME:

· • llshlng Companyi MWtlmedla, 1nc. Se: cond clau postage pakl at Gallipolis,
&lt;Jlk) e631. Entered as second class
·; maUlng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post
~

Office.

;
•

Membt&gt;r: Unlttd Press Intem~tlonal,
Inland Dally Preu Assoclallon and the

't

&amp;1~6141
r111flrtr

: Fire damages mobile home
'

, GALLIPOLIS - An electrical short In a heater cord was the
· apparent cause of a Friday evening fire that caused approximately
' $2,500 damage to a mobile home occupied by Mlldard Patterson of
' Addlson·Bulavllle Road, according to the Gallipolis Fire
DePartment.
·
Officials said the blaze, reported at 7: Ill p.m. apparently started In
the living room of the 12 xiDfoot structure, with a tolalvalueof$7,500,
owned by Wlnilrd Blankenship of 44 Bell Ave., Gallipolis.
· , Twenty·four firemen answered the call and were at the scene unlll9
p.m. No lnjurtes were ,reported.

Police serve summons

-;,~
,,..• . ... ':-:,..
-~T\

GALLIPOLIS - Watchlllltchalal, 18, of ~shire. was serVed a
summons by ctty poUce Friday charging him with theft. He wll1 face
a hearing In Gallipolis Municipal Court on lite charge.

.

Salvation Army applications

SOLID WOOD FURNITURE
WICKER
CUSTOM FIN.HINQ

i,

·: '·~~~~
~

-.
•

·l

f:

I.

2500 GRAND CENTRAL AVfNUE !
VIENNA, WY 26105
(304j 295-1133
-~

'.r.''

!:

Advertlllng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 73l Third Avenue,

,•
'

New York, New York 10017.

MON. &amp; FRI. 10 TO I
;l
DAILY 10 TO 6, SAT. 10 TO 5;1

'

Diles Hearing Aid Center
326 W. Union St. Athens, Ohio

Dolly 9:30·8:00
Sun. 1:00-5:00

Ill Chrillm.ot

ked Stea

Dinner

HOMETOWN CHRISTMAS

$440

OPEN HOUSE
TODAY!

.

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 8:00

SILVER IRI)GE PLAZA
LUNCH 11·3:30
DltiiER 3:30-1 P.M.

SUIISCIIIPriON R~TES
By Cwrler w Moter Roate

"

!

Bruricard r.\Jsic Inc.

.310 &amp; COURT STS.

•

One Year ................................. $26.00
SINGLE COPY

STAMPS

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where motor carrier, service is
available.

AND WIC
COUPONS

1be Sunday Times-Sentinel will not be
respmslble for advance payments

.•,•

410-20
12 GA.

MAIL SUB8CBIPrSON8
Saaday Oal)'
()ne Year ................. ................ $26 .~

•,.

.,

---OUR JOWN'S FINUf S.UPEI MAIIIIT -_
l1ll

Six months .......... ............... ...... SlJ.OO

•
••

Dally ud SWid&amp;y
MAIL 8UB8CBII'TION8

•
•

26 w..u .................................. m.12

•

Ratet 011lllde Ohio

52 Weeks ........1. ......................~9.00
16 Weeks ........ L .................... $31 .20
13 Weeks .......... ......... ..•........... $15.00

•

•

.
.•

HOW CAN YOU MAKE GOOD MONEY
FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE?

'

•
•'

•

•

•

•

•
•

l.\o'l.l"\l

BUY 2 LBS. OFLUNCH
MEAT AND GET A
LOAF OF HEINER'S
BONUS BUY BREAD

13 Weeks ............... ................. .. Sl4.:i6

•

\....rlUrl~ll

M-7S
SURVIVAL
KNIFE

Southeastern ·Business College
~. .t&lt;.~!t:-t
·HAS THE - ~o4f1~~~Ess
~\
RS
AcoMICRo.
ANSWE
{(.OUNl\~G
WIPfJTER
"
THREE MORNINGS OR THREE EVENINGS A WEEK IS ALL IT
TAKES TO START YOU DOWN THE ROAD TO SUCCESS.
SO IF SUCCESS IS YOUR GOAL
:.
CALL NOW AT 446·4367
J·EFORE YOUR FUTURE BECOMES YOUR PAST
FINANCIAL AID STILL AVAILABLE

FREE
PORK CHOPS
CENTER RIB 11. $169

CHECK OUR
LOW PRICES
FIRST
GIOUND SEVfiAL TilES DAILY

GROUND BEEF
$109
II.

99&lt;

3 LB.

PIG.

FRESH

KAHN'S BACON
$129
LB.

CUBE STEAK
29
II.

(

~~g~E

LB.

SUPEIIOIS

FRANKIES
oz.
PltG.
12

HOlLYWOOD

SP.ARE RIBS

$139

II.

FOLGiRS
ELEC. PERK
IIEG...
3 LB.
CAN

$699
·

529 JACKSON PIKE
IISC Accreditation

. -

.

.

GALLIPOLIS
.... I 75.02-04721

••
'

'

.
.•

1/2

WATCHES

--SWISHER

LOHSE

Pharmacy

ONLY 24
/

CARROTS
4/$100

10• 01 JOIA111AN

APPLES
3 LB.

lAG

79&lt;

u.s. 110. 1
POTATOES
20 LB.
$129
lAG

.1/2 PRICE

l(enntth McCutlougft, fii .Ptt.
Ch..tll Riffle. R.Ptl.
·
Aon.!d H.ntnt. fl , !th •
Mon. thfV ht. 1:00 1.rn. to I p.m.
Sundly 10:30 to 12:30 1M I to I p.m;

PAESCJUPTIONS
·
M1111

' E.

~tJ.~

JINKS
#59 DOE

-69 OOE·IN·RUT
BUCKLURE ·

IN-RUT

REG.
529.88

liNKS

BUCK LURE

$6 97

~:
PRICE

REG. 58.97

-

20°/o
OUR ENTIRE
STOCK

GIFT .WRAP .

FOR IHE KAHN'S
LOOK·A·UIE DUCI TO

" '

REG. 56.97

20°/o

25°/o

OFF

•,

'

OFF
ENTIRE STOCK i
OF

;I

•

CHRISTMAS

TIMEX

1

$2488

OFF

CHRISTMAS
CARDS IN BOXES

FA.IC SOnENER
$ 29

*OIG DEADLINE EXTENDED UNTIL'.NOV. 29, 1985

EXCELLENT JOB PLACEMENT RECORD .

.

Ml.

DOWNEY

COFFEE .

EARRINGS
CHAINS
RINGS
PINS
BRACELETS
NECKLACES

OUR
LOW
PRICE

I
!
I

JEWELRY

. •

89&lt;

!

COMPLOE STOCK

Sl99 :

2% MILK
$ 49
GAL

ADC

BLEACH

•Regular •Beef
.•
•Polish •Country Recipe •:

BATHROOM TISSUE
4 ROll
$ 09
f'I(G.

COKE, TAB, SPRITE
8- 16 OZ. $149 Pt ...
PKG.
Dtpostt

Specials Today Only •!
•!

·:

SMOKED SAUSAGE ::

ENDS &amp; PIECES

-PIE· SliCED

(

KAHN'S

BACON

LOIN END 11. $119

BUnERMILK

i'ricea good thru Dec. 7, 1986 _

$597

OUR
LOW
PRICE

BOX OF 5

;:lVIVlJ"l

''/),., H•nte11 Spultlll

IMkle Ohio
52 Weeks .................................. IM.24

•

IU

_,

$199

LIMIT 6 BOXES PER
CUSTO.I

1111de to carriers.

~

'

1 OZ. HOLLOW POINT
SLUGGER RIFLED
SLUG

Stop in and Register fo.- a FREE 3-Lb. ·
Box of Candy and a '1 1/2 Lb. Box of .
Candy to be given away December 1 No Purchase Necessary.

PRICE

Sunday .. .............................. 50 Cent!

KEEPER BAIT
DEER FORMULA
ATTRACTANT

REMINGTON

.

. SUNDAY, DEC. 1, 10 AM 'TIL 8 PM

446-0617

OneWef'k .. ........ ...... .... ........ 50Cerits

594-3571

STORE HOURS:

OVER 80 REGULAR lltMS

SUNDAY ONLY

onn1e's got 1t.

'
'·
•'

,; Ohio Newspaper Assoclatlon, National

·~
',

POMEROY - The Salvation Army. 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
wll1 be accepting applications for food baskets and toys for the
holiday season on Tuesday and Wednesday from 10 a.m. ki 12 noon
and from Ito 4 p:m.
·

'

•

YOURSELF TO THE BEST PRICES WE HAVE
EYER OFFERED IN OUR........

8iiiih8

•

•

COOLVILLE - Coolville Ele.,,
mentary PI'O Is sponsoring
Christmas Arts and Crafts Fair oq;
Saturday, Pee. 7, from 10 a.m. Ill t
p.m. In the ·school gymnasium!&gt;
Many local craftsmen! wll1 bli
featured. For $1. chUdren 8 and
under can enjoy breakfast wltl(
Santa at 9:30 a.m. Refreshment ,
will be available and doOr prizes w!U,:
be given away. Music by the,;
Rainbow Connection wll1 be fea~ ·
· tured at 2 p.m.
~:

HELP

HOME SA
Tl' SPECIALISTS

SEE THE
Of I'IOGW.ItG AYAUILI AND SIGN UP
NOW TO Will A NEW YEAI'S PIIU WITH A IETAIL V~lUI Of 1120

Otflcerssalda car driven byWlllleR.SmlthJr., OO,ofRt.l, Vinton,
allegedly pulled from O'Dell's Lumber onto VIne and struck a car
operated by John R. Thomas, 64, of &amp;l7 Foorth Ave., In he right side.
No Injuries were reported In the 12:43 p:m. colllslon, which offlcers
said caused moderate damage to Thomas' vehicle and light damage
Ill Smith's. Smith was cUed by pollee for faOure to yield from a
· private drive.

~t:e&amp;aa ;i:a#

$440

Milii.iii"

..

Arts, crafts fair

GALLIPOLIS- AGallla County man was cited Friday afternoon .
by city police following a two-car accident on Vbte Street.

0

Fried Chioken
or
Roast Beef
Dinaer

en.,_..._

..
.,..

In Palm Springs, the wind roared
through the area of posh homes and
exp!IISlve shops "like a freight
traln," one resident said. Trees as
tall as Ill teet were sentcrashlnglnto
brick walls, rooftops andswlmmlng
pools.
·No sertouslnjurtes wererep!!rted.
A travelers advisory also was In
•
effect for tbe mountains of Utah,
•
wbere up to 20 Inches of snow tell
Friday, and forecasters were cal· r;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;t.~
ling for an additional 8 to 12 Inches
~- ......- - · --· Saturday.
Flood warnlngs remained In
effect tor parts ·of Ohio and West
·~~
Virginia, although water levels

LINE OF PENT AX ·
CAMERAS
TAWNEY JEWElERS

Ohio
Rain likely Saturday night. Lows In the 40s. Periods of raln
Sunday. Highs In the 50s and lower Qls.
West VIrginia '
Periods of raln statewide Saturday ~I and Sunday. Lows
Saturday night In the mid 40s to low 50s. Highs Sunday In the mid 00s
to low IDs.

.••.·

s.atd.

..

were receding Friday night. Fore;
casters cautioned that addltlona '
rainfall could cause tbe rivers ki·
rise.
'•

Jobless...

State forecasts

••

oorthem catlfornla. A second skier
dugout immediately was unhurt.
Thousandsofpeoplewerewithout
power Friday night In southern
"Ca!Hornl\1 after hlgh winds that
temporarily stranded a window
washer oo a high· rise perch In Los
Angeles and sunk a J.20.foot sloop In
the Dana Point Harbor, authorities

lions and a wind chill as bw as 00 fi.;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;q;;;~~
degrees below zero.
Higher elevations of the .Sierra
(Continued from page Al)
. Nevada were burled under 10 ki :II
percent decline reflects the largest Inches of snow, andupto3feetof J11!W
drop In the jobless rate of any county
snow was expected there and In the·
In the Immediate area.
Lake Tahoe Basin.
In VInton County, the unemploy·
A skier died after being wrted for
ment rate tell by three-tenths rt. one
more than· 00 minutes In an
percent- from 12.21o 11.9 percent.
avalanche Friday at the Sugar Bowl
Jackson County posted the grea- Ski Resort In tbe Sierra Nevada In
test Increase In unemployment In
.the region, as the rate there moved
up seven-tenths of one percent from 10.8 to 11.5. In Lawrence
SEE OUR COMPLOE
County, the jobless rate rose from
~\
~..\l · SMOIIGASBORO
11.1to 11.4 percent- an increase of
three-tenths o1 one percent between September and October.
In Athens County, the unemploy·
ment rate held steady-forthethird
424 ~ond. G•polis
consecutive month - al8.8 percent.
The bureau reports 1,500 of
Gallla's estimated work force of
1
14,700 without work In October.
In Meigs, 1,200 of thai county's
estimated clvntan work force of
11,700 were listed as unemployed
during tbe month.
Statewide, the jobless rate held
steady at 9 percent during tbe
period. Nationally, the lmemployment rate tell by one-tenth ot one
percent -'- from 6.9 to 6.8 percentbetween September and October.

Winds were expected to be from the EBstat 15toz;ImotsSaturday,
from the east to southeast at l5 to z; knots Saturday night and from
thesoutheastat20 to llknots Sunday. Olance drain Saturday night
and rain Sunday.

;
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Rain, snow, high winds-punish West

Extended Ohio Forecast

LakeErle

December 1, 1981;i

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

·
Frl...dly lerwlce
'
O,.n Nlfhll till

PH , 112·211115

HUNTING
BOWS

'

ALL

SHOTGU.NS
AND

RIFLES

•

1

S·OFT GUN:

IN
STOCK

CASES

·'• Kart you're

POri*OV. Oh .

~------·~~-------~~

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE

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Murphy Smart

�Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel · .

December 1, 198~

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

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December 1, 1985

------Area deaths
John E. Wingett

great-grandchildren; and many
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wUl be at 1: 30
p.m. Monday at Jerry Spears
Funeral Home, 2693 West Broad St.,
Colwnbus. Interment wtll be In
SunsetCemeteiy, Columbus.
Calling hours are from Saturday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. and
Sunday, 2-4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
A Daughters of Amerk:a memor·
ial services will be at 3: 30 p.m.
Sunday.

POMEROY - Graveside servi·

ces for John E. Wingett, who died
Wednesday ·in Cleveland, will be
held 2 p.m. Monday at Letart Falls
Cemetery with Revs. Roger Grace
and Carl Hicks officiating. Catung
hours at Ewing Funeral Home wUl
be from 6 to9 p.m. Sunday.

Myrtle Harrison
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Myrtle
Arizona Harrison, 81, died Friday at
her home on Ash St., In Middleport.
She was born at Portland, a
daughter or the lateJ. J . and Rlnda
Catherine Boyd Ours. She attended
the FreewUl Baptist Church in
Middleport and had worked as a
dispatcher re the Middleport Fire
Department and had earllerbeenan
employe at Bailey's Drive in.
Surviving are three grandsons
and their wives, Richard Lee and
Sharon Wllllarns of Tucson, Ariz.:
MlchaelRayandDorothyWllliams,
Bakersfleld,Callf.;StephenWayne
and Kenda Williams, Rutland; five
great-grandchildren, several nieces
and nephews.

Cami Maloolm

Besides Inher
parents,
she was
preceded
death
by her husband,
Walter Wayne Harrison; a daugh·
ter, Allee Williams Parker; a son,
Lawrence (Toady ) Harrison; three
brothers, three sisters, an Infant
brother and an Infant sister.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Tuesctay at the Rawllngs.Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Rev.
James Keesee offic:latlng. Burial
.will be in the Miles Cemetery,

Localbrie&amp;!.~.----------------------------~
. POMEROY- The Meigs CoQnty "Childrer{s Trust Fund" Board
wtll meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday in the office of the Meigs Juvenile
Coilrt at the courthouse to study guidelines ol a grant which bas been
awarded. The public is invited.

HOLIDAY
CARPET CLEANING
SPECIAL

GALLIPOLIS - Carnl R. (Mac)
Malcobn, ~. of 518 Fifth Ave.,
Gallipolis, died at 10: 30p.m. Friday
in Holzer Medical center.
He was a retired employee of the
Wear-Ever Plant in Chillicothe.
Mr. Malcolm was born Feb. 7,
J9(l),ln Wayne County, W.Va., IOthe
late Mordecai and Mary Hutchinson
Malcolm.
He was twice married, first to
Louise Malcolm, deceased. He
marriedMyrleCooleyln196l.
Five sons survive: Bob, Charles,
Dick, Tom, and Bruce; two daugh·
ters, Paula Carey and Helen
Ramey, alongSusan
with the
following
stepchildren:
Gilliam,
RJo
Grande; Audrey Canaday, GalllpoUs; Marjorie Henry, Addison and
Otis Cooley, Springfield, Ohio.
Nine step grand and three step
great grandchlldren survive.
On~ brother, Lyle Malcolm,
Bradenton, Fla., and one sister,
Mrs. Cleo Eagleston, Ceredo, W.
Va., survive. Three children and one
brotherprecededhlmlndeath.

Coolville;
and, Coolville,
by two daughters,
Tamela Smith,
and Pameta Lowe, Belpre; and, by his
grandchildren.
Services wtll be held at the White
Funeral Home, Coolvlll~. Tuesday,
at 11 a.m., with Rev. Cecil Morrison
olftclatlng. Burial wUl be at Edeo
Cemetery, Reedsvtlle.
Friends may call at the funeral
borne on Monday from 2p.m. untll4
p.m.; and,from7p.m. to9p.m.

SAVE
10% OFF
'

VACUUM CLEANERS

ALL VACCUUM

Offer not good with other coupon1.
, - - - - - - - - --=--~-----------1
1

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I I
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COUPON
I

COUPON

$1995

1

S12995 WHOLE HOUSE

I I

PERROOM

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REGULAR $29 •95

Expires Dec. 31, 1986

I
11
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11
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Expires Dec. 31, 1986

.•

POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Ricky Todd Mtller, 22, and Teresa Lynn ·
Hill, W, both of Ciler, N.C.

POMEROY - Admitted: Abby Strauss, Pomeroy; Robert Rupe,
Pomeroy; Homer Bradshaw, Pomeroy; Roy E. Frecker,
Minersville; Ella Roush, New Haven, W. Va.
Discharged: Gertrude Lehew, William Ward.

EMS answers seven calls

Address ................................................................................................................................... .....................

~!~eJ~e:n~ ~=~~:::~:r::l::;!;~~~ ~~~c~~~~~

Tqwnship .............................................. ................. ...................................................................................... .
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COLOR
Tan
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Gray

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$1900

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prizes. Must be 16 yean old to register. Need not be present· to win.
PH0-·992·5776

I

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A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
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CA'-L (614) 992-2104

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04 675-1144

~· · -~o•• s••••••••• ~ •••••• !
William R. Wfekiine, Meias County Auditor

• •• • • • • • • ' · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : .

••

SATURDAY, DEC. 7 &amp; SUNDAY, DEC. 8
12 NOON TIL S P.M.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
.GENERAL ALLERGIST

JOH~

•
:

\

ON ALL PAnERNS
SELECDONS FROM
OUR MANY
WALLPAPER BOOKS

,-----PHOTO MURALS----.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

I

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•

'• A g e•· sex ·•

WOMEN'S

Br··.. •
•
Hair
' n
II u ,•
Yellow : Lon1
Short : Known :Paid

I

OPEN HOUSE

Painsettios, PoinseHia Hanging Baskets, ChristmasCadus, Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees, Holly TrHs, Blue
Spruce Trees, Door Wreaths, Candle Arrangements,
Failage Plants, Failoge Hanging Baskets. for the
loved ones, Grove Blankets, Cemetery Vases,
Monument Sprays.

Route 684, to Veterans Memorial; Racine at 8; 43 p.m. took Jessica

, ........ •. ., ........•................................................................ &lt;··········· ·······
I

STARTING MONDAY
NOVEMBER 25

Welcome To Our Annual

POMEROY - Seven calls were answered by local units Friday
and Saturday morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reporis.
At 8:36a.m., Middleport was called for Myrtle Harrison, Ash St.;
Pomeroy at 4:25 p.m. took Gladys Taylor from Pomeroy Health

Owner's Name .................................................. ............................................................................................ .

I

30°/o OFF

..

IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE US £THIS HANDY APPLICATIOULANK AND MAIL TO
THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE QlURTHOUS£ NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR FE·
MAL£. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY 11MJ). DOG TAGS WILL ALSO 8£ ON SALE AT THE HUMAN£ SOCIETY LOCATED
AT THE CORNER Of NORTH SECOND ST. AND WALNUT ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760.
Male $2.00
Spayed female $2.00
female $2.DO
Kennel license $10.00

I

End of the Year
'Super Sale

, Veterans Memorial Hospital

THE 19 86 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 2NI)
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASES OF 1986 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY ZOTH. TWO DOLLARS ($2.DO) PENALTV If LICENSE

•

. WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
AND BLIND SHOP

Marriage license issued

I

~~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~.!~L~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~1

· Opal McDennitl

Police probe accident

POMEROY - Teresa M. Drummer, Syracuse,.an!l Gregory E .
~er, Pomeroy, have petitioned Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for a dissolution o1 their marriage.
Keltha D. Whlllatch, Reedsville, was granted a divorce from
Harlan D. Whitlatch, Reedsville, on grounds of gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty . .

FINANCING AYAIIAIII

M-F 10-6; Sat. 10·2

45 State St.

•

meet

Couple files for divorce

*Compact *lail•ow
*Eitctrolux *Hoover
*Kirby
*Eurtka

.PH. 446-7441

&amp;BELTS

to

. Foodland parking lot at 5: 25 p.m. Friday.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driveo by Randy L. Stone, West
Columbia, W. Va., pulled from the lot Into the left hand side of a car
driven by Wayne A. Deot, Middleport, as Dent , headed east,
attempted a lefthand tum onto the ill. Stone was charged with
failure t.o yield and driving while Intoxicated, poll~e said.

SYRACUSE -The Sutton TownshlpTrustees will meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the Syracuse Munclpal Building.

POMEROY - State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reported the·
October distribution of state motor velllcle registration fees totaling
$15,827,597,99 to Ohio courities, cities, tllwnshlps and villages. Meigs
• County's share was $15,670.77.

NEW &amp; USED

SWEEPERS, BAGS

Sutton trustees

Fund distribution reported

Howard R. Smith
COOLVlLLE - Howard R.
Smith, 60, Rte. 2, Coolville, died
early Saturday morning at St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg.
HewasbomatEastLiverpooL the
son of Ray and Golda (Balser)
Smith, Reedsville, wbo survive.
Mr. Smith was a mechanic at the
· Thomas Pont lac Co. for37years.He
was a World War II Army veteran.
He was preceded in de:ith in
September of this year by his wife,
Kathleen. Also preceding him In
deathwasoneson,Joseph,whodied
in March o~thls year.
He is survived by two sons,
WilHam H. and Michael, both of

POINT PLEASANT - Opal A.
Greer McDermitt. 81, Columbus,
Ohio, died Thursday In MI. Carmel
Medical Center, Columbus.
Born Nov. 9, 1904, in Mason
County, she was the daughter c1 the
late H.E. Greer andRhesa Edwards
Greer.
She Is a long-time member of the
Daughters of America and wa~ past
deputy of the HUltop Council No. n .
She was also a inemberofthe United
Brethem Church, Columbus.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Elmer McDermllt, andta
twin sister. Alma Dobbins.
Surviving are sons and daughtersin·law, E .E. (Mac) and Donna,
W.G. (Bill) and Beverly, H.R.
(Dick) andSharonMcDermittanda
daughter and son·ln·law, Ruth Ann
and Lynn Hegele, all of Columbus;
nine grandchildren; and several

Gray from Route 338 to Vet6erans Memorial; Tuppers Plains at 6:48
, p.m. took George Cremeans from Calloway Road to St. Joseph
Hospital In Parkersburg, and Rutland at 11:16 p.m. took umise
Cross from the Will Vance Road to Holzer Medical Center. At6:!Y7
a.m. Saturday the Pomeroy Unit took Mark Tyrt~ from Mechanic
St. t&lt;i Veterans Memorial.

Trust fund board to meet

rr;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
Ii

Rutland. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Monday.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page A-.7

Pomeroy Middleport · Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1. OLD GRIST MILL
2. WILD GEESE
3. D'EER
4. SHUnLE IN ORBIT
REGULAR

~
HOURS: MON.-FRIDAY 9·9; SA1URDAY 9·5

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, 11110

704 GRANO CENTRAL AVE.

3RD &amp; 8TH STREET

VIENNA. W. VA.

HUNnNGTON, W. VA.

Acrou from Kmart

"Across From The Civic (enter

••••

UOH HOU.S:
Daily 9:30·1:DO

S111. 1-5 'til Chri1tme1

' ''Rt1'1l1l1ltl1J1lt1't1't1't1't1'111Jt1't1'1Jt1't1''t1't1't1'1J1mt1't1't1't1'1J1J1m'lf~

~

.

Now Through
December 14, 198511
FREEZER STEAK PACKAGE
PORTERHOUSE, T-BONES AND SIRLOINS
WHOLE BEEF LOINS
CUSTOM CUT. WRAPPED AND QUICK FROZEN

~
~
~

~

~
~
~
~

AIR HOSE

COUPLED WITH BRASS
MALE &amp; FEMALE FlniNGS
1/4" COUPLINGS

'2.67

CHAMPION

16 SPEED FLOOR
DRlLL PRESS ·

~
~
~
~

~&amp;;

~

~

&amp;;
&amp;;
~

OTHER

~
&amp;;

GOLD

DEUVERS 500 ILOWS

PER MINUTE

~

REG. 120.95

REG~
.'169.95
SAVE S 40.00

$1295

1495

~~

DIAMOND

1411 GOLD OVEII.AY

RINGS

20°/o
Off
EVEIYDAY nLL

PHONE-IN ORDERS WELCOME/.

SWAY

c~
DIAMOND BRACELETS

25Ofo 0"

IIOW
MANY TO CHOOSE fiOM

RING OR PENDANT
Earring~ also available

DIAMOND
JACKET
RING

S26995
SAY£ '90.00
MAKES ANY SOLITAIRE
EXCITING AGAIN

-RINGSNOW

20°/o
OFF

'

'

RIMA

~­
•

Sunday, December i
Mr&amp;..ap&gt;: ..DPdicarion 10 a CaUinl("'
Ad,.nl Theme Jnr 1ht Week :
..Chri.•tltuJ/1 i" a time of
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
· December 6, 7 and .8
Ct'ic·brotion Weekttnd: Mwic and

SPEAKERS

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
•

I

ON

FURNITURE, TVs, .YCRs
&amp; MICROWAVES
WITH APPROVED CR

$3495

-

D•riq IIi• IHIOSI o/
joy allrltOOIIfwiU

Sunday, December 1

Hoaor tfte Cltri•t Cllilrl
bv atlurliq tlleee
e,...:ial ltolirlav

Chriuma11 nuuirn l /)r!' .•Nw •d nt
Pint'f' rf'!fl Nur., in/{ Fnf'i lily. 2 p.

Pros••••·

Wednesday, December 4
flnlf'tl

Air/

(fp lfo w• hip Supper).
lli11itin/( Po.~tor, Wend~ll Swll(' r
IJ"f-'IJC:hinK on Sundoy nwminj(

wif h a jl'tlO Wi hip •up~r folloowin!dl

Morning Worship Service&amp;
J0:.10 a. rn ,
(C hilli mr~• fmu ·id,•d
at t•arh S1 • r~ · in • )

A dt~·nl Theme jflr the u~(!k:
..ChrUtnllU i• a tittW of FAITH ..
Sunday, December 15

Cl!urclr .";c ·hunl 9:.'10 a.m .

llnit r&gt;d Methodi..tt BWwp. &amp;l.&gt;l

(Unlt•u fllh C' r Wi111' "'''''II}

A mmon• prt'ttchin,. ThU i.t a

rhurfh Con.tt&gt;cmtinn lff'M;iN&gt;.
l::1reryrmt- i• imilt&gt;d. A jPllaw•hip
n•ct'IJtioo u:ill fnl.lnw tluo .wn •i~Y".
Adwnl l'lwm(' for tlw 1a&gt;t&gt;k:
"Chri11tma.• i~ n rimt• of FA Mil.

nf ' "'' IJ ptJ. nl truli.•.•

OtriMmm pnrt y flllll

Gift

f :.r r lta tl$[1'. IJ t•jlitulinJl nt I p .m .
Chti .d ma ., \t tuim lprt'-"' llfnl ifm
nl Bail _
,. Um tu•l l1 y A.lult ntul
( .'Jrit rf rt&gt;n·~ f.Jwir~. 7:.10 fl .m .

Sunday, Dec . ·s
l·l nnj(ii!J( of I IH• t;,_.,,m . (ull nil''·•
- rldl1f tllrllll/{lt mlult).
lli•j(itlflitiJ( nl fi fl .m . ,

Wednesday, December II

•.

rl1 r idm"~ ll, ~;, .,.,,, _~ t · ntnt irm

nl lr't•M! '""''" ln il t•tf Mt•th,rl i.'lt
f hu rd1. !lif!t,•••/1, l1 v ,. f,Ju/1 nntl
Oti lrlrt·ll ·.~ d wlr.• .

r··

Sunday, Dre. 22
Ch,.; .• tmn.• Adul1 nml f hiltln·n ·.•
C/, rdr11 prf' .•1•ntnliun :
"CI~ri .dmn .t .~ 1HIIf ··.

Thursday, Dc'C. 12

Snr~dtry f't{'nin/(: Chifdn•tl ·,, ( :lwi r

O!rl H I 1tih•rl

"f'.111fty:. f:l1ri11111111.•
Calomity" 7:JO ,,.m. with n 'm td
fJOrt y' JolJo win!f. Adn•nl Tht•mt•
fr~r thf' atrot&gt;k: "Chri11tnvu i.~ a timt•
nf PEACF:-

ll""mllt' fl ·., fltri .• tm ru

prf.'IU'IIInfiflll:

Mt• l hu di.~t

pu,-t y mul
(II ;JW

f{i/f f'Xf'llflf/J{I ' . 7:.1/J
l'n r~mlf/1{1 ' .

A ft

tift• tUt ll/1(1 11 , , ,,

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Tuesday, Dre. :U
ChrUttniJI'I Et,,. CondWlij{ht
Communloo (L01.., froJI/ Jen :in&gt;.
Mt•l..u.lft': "Tiw Way Cod Comr•

.Sh•tw UIIPqualltd

Friday, December 20
Kilt... (nft

fl}{f' • mHI adu lt.• tfJu !)
rom l inl{ nml prm ,v. llt•j(inn inl( nl

~ooe-

6

,,,II/.

OUR NEW LOCATION

Christ United
Methodist Church
'

Lower~ River

Rd., 6 Miles Sowh of Gallipolis

The Reverend Dean K. Bachelor
call the

..

nr . Arlult nn.rl Childn•n:, Clr oir.•.

Jr

!f hnrinl( Friday and So rurdn y
fwl{inraln/( or 6:30

limB SIIIC'IION •CAMEO •SIGlin ·

SEIKO - PULSAR
BULOVA
EVDY DAY
1OO'S ·yo CHOOSE
ROM
20°/o OFF
200fo OFF.

Other Tradition•

Worehip Ser~~ice•

eOI'AU •l.lfeE STAIS .
IIIIIHSTO..S -.soNK

6x9 40 OZ. MAGNET
.

SAVE uoo.oo
YEUOW Da WHITE GOLD

FANCY ·STONE-SET

- 14 Day/2 Event
- 15 Function.
Wirelea Remote
- Cable Ready
- Slow Motion/Search

4WAY$2495

675-5363

HOURS: Monday-Saturday, 9 a.m.· 8 p.m.: Sunday, 1·5 p.m.

MAGNAVOX VCR WITH
. WIRELESS REMOTE

6k9 40 OZ. MAGNET

Monty Williamson, Owner

ISU.Oo

Sl'2995

MEN'S

MAGNAVOX VR8520

BIG

539.500

All MONTHS All AVAIAIIU. APIIL IS
SUGIIlf 11101111. AVAIUIU YEllOW 01
WHm GOLD. FilE . .G SIZING.

CHIInMAS

37" BRASS
PLANT "'·
STAND ~

Diamond

Birthstone
and Diamonds

NO.W

&amp;aaa&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;aasaaaaa&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;aa&amp;a&amp;aaaaaaaaaa!
.I

lAYAWAY NOW

UK

AVAILABLE

WILLIAMSON MEAT MARKET

,.

WAS 159.95 SAVI $20.00
YRIOW 01 WHITE GOlD

All DWIONDS
25'- Off

.MODELS

WE ALSO HAVE PARTY TRAYS AVAILABlE .
FOR YOUR HOl/DA Y PARTY

1506 JEFFERSON

S3995

SJ9

I,

GROUND CHUCK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Sl.351b.
ROUND STEAK ·••••••••• .. •••••••••••••• .... • $1.'9 lb.
HOTEL BACON ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Sl.491b.
WHOLE HOG SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••••••••S1.691b.
KAHN'S BOLOGNA••••••••••••••••••••••••••$1.891b.
LONG HORN CHEESE ·••••••••••••••••••••••$1.991b.
GROUND BEEF PATTIESSib. box •••••••••••$11.00

e

Diamond Necklm

WITH ·4 BITS

i

2s

0/0 OFF

LAD•s

GOLD,
DIAMOND EARRINGS
95
NOW

ALL FOR '49.95
&amp;;

NOW

14~

.AIR HAMMER:

/c CARAT

. 1

A.

WAS 132.95 SAVE 113,00

S6.95 .
$)6995
SO FT.- $9.95

18 LB. GROUND BEEF
5 LB. BUCKET STYLE CUBE STEAK
5 LB . HOTEL BACON
6 LB . #2 3-LB. AVERAGE CHUCK ROAST
6 LB. 2 3·LB . AVERAGE WHOLE or CUT UP
· FRYERS

DIAMOND EARRINGS
NECKLACES

YWOW 01 WHm GOlD

$199

25FT.-

FAMILY BULK PACKAGE

CLUSTER
WAS 19995 SAVE 130.00

SOCKET
SET

50°/o OFF

NEW SHIPMENT

S6995

17 PC. 1/4 DR.

ALL
TIMEX
WATCHES

7 PIAMOND

446-4062

·

�'

'

Sunday nmes-Seutiiel

i Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea.m, W. Va.

December 1, 1986

.. .

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December 1, 1985

t'\ ·~"•

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TELLING THE STORY -

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Section~

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The Christmas story Is more
than Unset and brlghlcy wrapped

~·~

gifts. Members of Good News

c~

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Baptist Church won the most
original Ooat prtre with tJdoi
entry, lettbtg people know Christ
Is an Important part of
Christmas.

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Santa Oaus, parade kick off Christmas season
By LEE ANN WELCH
,•
Tlme&amp;Sentlnel staff
• ' 'i:ALLIPOLJS - Here comes
~ta Claus, here comes Santa
ti,qs right down Second Avenue. .

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•'. It may haveoncy befn Nov.ll,but
' Santa Claus rnade tbe first appearance of the season in the Gallipolis
Christmas parade, sponsored by the
Gallipolis Merchants Association, In
cooperation with the Chamber of

Commerce.

. From the first sighting ol_the city
po~ escort car and . parade
marshal Marianne Camphell right
thoJugh to the jolly old feUow

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hlmself, small chlldren were mesmerized by the holiday glitter whlle
the older ones scrambled lor candy
and bubble ·~m tossed by various
organizations.
Frank Doolittle ot the Merchants
Association announced the winners
or the many categories, centered
around the theme, "Christmas- A
FamUy Tradition."
The Merchants' Award was given
to the Holzer Medical Center
Recreation Department; best
theme float was Fruth Pharmacy;
hest overall Roat wtnnerwa,s Kyger
Creek High School FFA.
Themostrellglousfloatwasglven

to ~ Galllplols Church of Christ in
Christian Union, while most original
float was sponsored by Good News
Baptist Church.
The bestwalkingunttwasa Santa
and Elves, done by Gallla Performing Arts. hest baton group was
Starlight Baton Group.
There was an a.bundance of old
cars in the parade, and best was
Ralph Bennett's Model Afrom 1929.
Tops In equestrian participants was
the pontes and sleigh, sponsored by
John Houck. The most original car
was Chester Roush's 1957
Thunderbbd.
Best marching unit was awarded

to theGalllpolls Veterans ofForetgn
Wars post 4464 Color Guard. Bands
taking part, both being awarded
plaques, were Gallla All-County
Band and tbe Gallla Academy High
School marching band.
Partlclpalng In the parade were:
The GalllpoiiS Clry Pollee dfpartmrnt. VFW po~t
446t, AMVI:J'S. Alnt'r1Can LegiOn Auxlllary Worrrt1 .
GI IUI CooM) Ladlr.! Auxlllal')l PMI 4464, GR. Rio
Grandi!'Collf'gt' R01t' ; WK I Virginia Nlltklnal Guard.
~le fbop. Jol;ynn Dos!M', Gall(Xllls City Schools, .
Ga l!la Crunty Local Schools. Oh]Q Highway Panut
Ga l!la AJl.C'ourll)' band,

Dave McCoy ~ t!IMC'tJp.ry 1, RoRPr Cox 11~7 Cht&gt;vyt.
Elwood Lewis U9'.8 OK.-.oy1, Fran~ Case t196.1
CU"VV:''tel, Ken Netl tl91l Corw11e1, Lot1 Hlwly Utf.t
Ponllfc l, Rlell: S&amp;urw:k&gt;rs !1964 Ponnae Ca talina 1Ca rl

EUII, Old car C~b. Ralph BMIM1

IM~

AI. Gt1'l(&gt;

Myen !Model AI, OlariC's HIVely !l!Ml Ford\, JOI.'
HIVely ll!fi5 Oldsmoblk!-1, Utili' Miss an~ M~lf'r

Gai ii 8 Coonty.
Buck(')" Hills Ca r('('r O&gt;ntrr. Ga l llpol1~ Fin•

[}(lpartmt&gt;m, Ga ll !a Acaoom,v High School rhrerlr&gt;ad·
m , Gallla Acadm\f HI RtiSchOO hOmeromln~qllt"('fl ,
Paper Dolls baton group. Gall Ia Count)' Nursror Hopr
Rhonda Pushkar. Girl Scouts troop l!dl Cirl ~u ts
troop ll ai.
Brown~ Troop %ill.. Cub Scout~ trmp!la, Ill)·Scout.~
troop 200. NIITW')' Clark,

Sup-r ~trultf'fs

baton group.

Gallipolis City Coouh~sk.w&gt;rs. Calli a County Cum·
ml.ss!on, Preskk&gt;Ri of Rl'lllll Ml'f'r lwll.s Dll'k
Maclwruk•. Pn'!lldmt of thr Cbambf'r of Com tTFrrr
Dan Davk&gt;t:, AklGran.., Colk&gt;At&gt; llOmProminRQI.Il'el1.

Rio Grande Ch U(b'(ln 's~atl'r,
Gallla Cllrll'ltian Scl\ool, Soolhwt'St('rn HI lUI SthOOt
r ht&gt;Prltadrrs, Gallipolis [)(&lt;.'rl()!:)ll¥'n tol Crnt rr,
Q\lllpolls Cburrh &lt;1 ChriSt In Cl'lrlstlan Union,
Gallipolis Buslnrssand Professional Women. Glavan·
nrs. Gall!a (bunty stlf'r'lff• Dl&gt;partrrwmt . Gallla
Coonly E:nworgmcy Mf'd~ a l ~~ MIM; Paubt's
IlayCan- Ct'lllt'r ,
.

Gallla Counly Animal W.:trar£&gt; IA'aJ(UC'. Satin Dolls
baton group. GaiUa County F.mt'r!P\&lt;.'}' OU;ast(•r
Servk\&gt;, A.rrl.'rkan ROO Cros ~ bloodmobllt&gt;, Gallla
~In~~: Arl!i, Cm ll'l'vUir Fino Dl&gt;plnm&gt;nl ,
Vinton Fin' Departmeru, Su~ and Sple(&gt; baton

""'''

· Gallipol is E lks. Stylf'l tl's baton fUoop. C'o~1 ll l 1t County
lic'adSiar1 . StarU¢11 batongroo r . G;~llla C'oontyRight

to L.lfr. Gall Ia Mademy iU Ji~h&amp;hool ,il~k' boootrl'!i."
F'nJ lh ·~ Pharml!f)' , 1-lobt&gt;r Mf'dlcu! Cmk'r Rt.&gt;cnoatlon
Dl'pa r1rr'lf'nl,
Ohio Val k&gt;y ('h risllan &amp;hool and hOITil't'Omlna
&lt;"Uur1 , Emandp~~li:mQuren, l9~ Ga lll a CounTy Jur1or
F'lllr ~f'l'n JoEik&gt;n OIJvt'r, Gallta Counry Ladlr!!
Auxiliary, Galllpoi~Stlrtrw&gt; Club,
Good New s BaptiSt 0\u~h . GLiyan Towmhlp Flrr
Dqlarlml!nt, HanMnTrare HlatlSchool PrenchC'Iub,
Hanmn Tra('(' Hl¢1 Sc-hool honYromlng qut'('n,
Hllnlli.lll TrDCr' Junior Hl¢1 C'hrf'ft&gt;id&gt;rs, ,.Jaddt•
Slt•gall. Ky,_.,. ('l'f'('k IIIMh School PHA, Gn&gt;g Miller,
Rl'sldrntlal Wlnd"Jw and Awnlnl(, Ohio Stall'
Champion T~ilrt&gt;r.~.
North f:al lla Hlghkhoot hollll'rnmlnJil quem, Job's
Omaghtffs. DAV, Galllu Ac ack&gt;my HIRfl School band.
Gallla O.:.Unty Shmtf s Dt,:Jartment hDrr unlr . horar
und ~ k&gt;IJ~h b)' .lolln HOLrk, Harry H\Kl'lon pcnlf&gt;s,
liar.,. Cmi'Rl! P&lt;11'6' and WRRY. GaiUa Coonty Rldl n~~:
Club and Santa (']aus.

, IN TID; PARt\DE -: The
CbriiiimM puoade-

a.-.
beld IW1Irclar, 1111111111 1 , t m

. 111ka. At left, memiJen of tile
Ollila Acadenl¥ lOp Scbool
bud mardi don Secoad
Avenue. At rl&amp;b', 8aata Claus
make8 . . llntappeii'Uiceollhe
year, aftlcl.oy klc!dng off lhe
Ou1llmM Below, F'lni
Baptlllt Clun:h ljiOIIIOred 111111
float, ceaterlng on tile parade
lheme, ''ChrWmas - A Family
Tradlllon. tt

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Photos by
Lee Ann Welch

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CLOWNJNGAROUND-membersoltheGatUpoii8ShrlneChabwere
seen clowning around In the annual Christmas parade.

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December 1, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaHipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel ,

New pastor named in Pomeroy
POMEROY- David Wiseman Is
new pastor cl. tre United Faith
Church, Route 7 bypass, Pomeroy,
fllllng the vacancy wben the Rev.
RotErt E. Smith Sr. resigned.
W~an has pastored Free
Metllldlst Churches In Cambridge,
Woodsfield and Uma. He and his
wife are both from the Meigs area
having graduated !rom the former
Rutland High ScllQol. Pastor and
Mrs. Wiseman attended Ohio Unl·
verslty and Ohio State Unlversly.
WtSeman received his training for
the ministry through Ohio Untver·
slty and -tbe DIVIsion of Higher
Education and the mlntstry of the
Free Metbodlst Church of North
' Amerlca, serving 14 years In the
Ohio Conference.
The couple
beeil extensively
Involved In evangellst!c crusades,
music, puwetandchlldrm'smlnlstrtes, serving as dirEctors of
cblldrEII'scarnpsfor six years.
Wiseman Is also employed by the
Ohio University Telecommunications Center as tbe transmission
supervisor. He received his educa·
t!Qn In telecommunications Ellgl·
neerlng through several technical
schools and colleges and has served
as an engineering consultant In the
areas of audio and reUglous
broadcasting for 15 years.
The United Faith Church Is a

~eigs

Blair House, the president's guest Supervised by the DePartment ,.of
house, fronts on Pennsylvania Avenue State, it Is the official residence 'of
northwest of the White House grounds. heads of state who visit Washington.

library
announces
...'hookmo~ile
·-

non-denominational, Bible centered
church, founded In the Wesleyan·
Annlntan tradition. Sunday school
Is held at 9: 30 a.m., morning
~rshlp at 10: 30 a.m. Sunday
evening service at 7: 30; and
Wednesday evening.service at 7: ~
p.m.

..:~ Meigs County Public Ubrary

·~~er contract with tre Ohio Valley
:·,~rea Libraries.
· .
"~' Bookrnoblle Schedule tor Mon·
•lillY Dec. , 2. Carpenter (Laura's
f~&gt;. 3:10-3:40;· Dexter (Church), ·
:t~; i04: 40; Danville (£hurch), 5: 201~'Z!
50; Rutland (Civic Center) , 6:30~(Kl.
• .
:..,. •Bookrnol;lile SchedUle for Thes·
:·.~y. Dec. 3. Portland•(Postort!ce),
· _2ll0-2:40; Letart FaDs (Effie's
:-&amp;staurant),
3: 05.3:! 50; Racine
"",,
~ ~k), 4:35-6:00; Syracuse (Pool),
.6:20-7:50.
·:;' ,Bookmobile Schedule for Wed·
:~day, Dec. 4, Chester (Fire
:jllatlon), 2:15-2: 45; Keno (No. side
:~:Keno Bridge), 3:00.3: :II; Success
- ~ad
_ (near. 39060) , 3:454:15; Long
,.,.,.,uom (P~st DUlce), 4: 25·5: 10;
.'lbiedsvUJe (Reed's Store), 5:20"&amp;: 20; Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's),
7:20-8:00; Baum Addition, 8:25·
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~ =· POMEROY- The Meigs County

"PreHy Secrel"
Seamless sa tin y cups with lace
and spandex trim around cups .

JX&gt;tluck lunch and caroling.
Everyone Is Invited to attEnd.
Registration wW be_ $1. Preregistration Is not necessary.

~ :;&gt;enlor Citizens Center, Mui!J!rry
' :Heights, Pomeroy, has the follow·
•lng activities scheduled for the
, !week of Dec. 2·6:
i. Monday - Square Danre 1·3
•~· Tuesday - Chorus 1·2
· ·
·: Wednesday - Social Securtty
::Jtepresentatlve 10-Noon, Bingo 11,
tjlowllng 1:30, Lou Horvath, Social
•;Securtty Field Representative will
:.apeak at 1 about changes In .soctaJ
::security, Painting Class 1:15 with
•:Lots Pauley, cost $5. .
;~ Thursday - Ceraffitcs 10-Noon,
~ ~arterly Birthday P;arty. smlors
· ;with birthdays In OctQber, No:ivember, and Deceni!Er will IE
::.moored . Entertainment before

Spande)( stretch back and underband . The perlect pretty bra for
the average to ful l l1gure that
needs a trim mer look .

Style H58D, White, ~eige, Black

Rig. $8.75
.
I 34·41, ( 34·44 .. - 5a1t $6.56

Gun Club party
7p.m. tUJla.m.attheRactneLeglon
Hall. Gun Club members are
reminded thai dues should be paid
no later than Dec. 31.

LAST cHANcE FOR cHRISTMAs!

leg. $9.75

81ft List

RACINE - Racine Gun Club
Christmas party will be held Dec. 7,

D34·36 ...................Solt $7.31
leg. 19.75

DOIEl 36·41 Whitt....5alo $7.31

•EstH 'Lauder and Ultima Gift Sets
. •Beautiful Sweaters
•lsotoner Gloves
•Uitrasuede Suits &amp; Coats
•Sportswear
•Lingerie and Robes
•Jackets and Coats

Ideal
Olfts
for
Christmas

FlEE

; 'dinner beginning at 11 a.m.
•:. Friday- Quntlng, cards, games
·; The Senior Nutrttkm Program
; ;menu tlr the week Is:
;•,. Monday- Macaroni and cheese,

Super Support "Circle llll"

Here is tl'le bra that supports your
figure like its never been supported
belore. With special " Bulll ·up·

Gin WIAPPING

straps that do all tM wo rk anr1 1e t you

Open Dally 9:30-1:00
Sunday 1:00· 5:00
300 Second Avenue, LafaytHt Mall
Gallpolls, 011.

.

Style •1459
I Reg. $9.50

{![~
J
134-44, ( 34·46 ..............$7.12
. - .
Reg. $8.25
•
034·41, DD (E 36· 48 ... $11.00
Second ot State, Downtown Gallipolis

992-6684
Place orders within next 7 days to guarantee finished
Christmas.

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Season 's Readings* Season 's Readings* Season 's Readings * Season's Readings
.
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THE BIBLE IS INFALLlBLE

~

Wilfium B. Kughn

-It:

A Mmuge From The Bible.•.

Season's Readings
From The Alcove

~

2:14).

1160 SECOND AVE.

WE REPAIR
STORM WINDOWS
WE DO TABLE TOPS &amp;
CUSTOM MIRRORS

•

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Rill~· ~U11d1l : 31

The Cat
Who Walks
Through
Walls

-·.

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IM llble"

~:

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERnUTY
•Epidural Deiveries
•Tubal Repairs
Office Hours 10:00 AM.-5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday Evenings

675.- 6700
IOCAJIJ): !uih 114 Mtdi&lt;al Offiw

l~lding, at PIHrant ¥alloy Hospital

Imported, direct frot11 Europe, hutdreds of fiM furnishings and colledillles from the Victorian/Edwardian eras. Our inventory incudes
sideboards, hutches, curio cabi..ts, wardrobes, dtKks and muc:h
more. We do our own buying and transporting to elininate the
middlemon. therefore we pass the savings an to you.
Prices further red1Ked up fa 20% for Grand Opening

Saturday arid Sunday, Dec. 7 &amp; 8
Sign up all day Saturday and s... day for tht

GIFT THAT
FROM·

Tope's. Curio Gall•ry

Lay-away for Christmas or adt caaut convenient financing.

Located 'I• mile north of Holiday Inn. Rt. 7. Gallipolis

CAN MAlE A
PEIFECT GIFT.

CHQicl)TM~

l

Mom moth

Vonnegur

I.')

HARDBA CK

118.95

1

16.95

By Garrison
Keillor
HARDBACK

.Ia llf' Hmd1 \

Texas

;( Hll ) !-'( Hll

by James
Michener
H AR 1:1\A(K

I~Wll\

121 .95

,,

SJ 7.95

"

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Secrets

ELVIS

by Daniclle
Steele
HARDflACK

ME

117.95

,\'Jil

~
~.
;:!

Charles

Kuralt
By Charles
Kuralt
HARDBACK

116.95

~

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Jane Brody's
Good Food
Book
by Jane
Brody
HARDBACK
I

19.95

By Prisci lln
Presley
HARDBACK

$16.95

4th ANNIVERSARY .
CELEBRATION

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Yot1 Can
Fool All Of
The People
All Of Th e
Time

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STUDIO QUALITY·
COLOR PORTRAITS

(Two P~ae

16.95
.

SALE

$466

REG . '696 SALE

'466

WOOD •LIGHTED
DELIVERY DECEMBER 24th
aRe1aist·er for 15 FREE Gift

BABIES
CHILDREN
ADULTS
FAMILIES

999

.

5 DAYS ONLYI
WED., THUI., F••, SAT., SUN.; DEC. 4, 5, 6, 7, I
DAILY 10•1; SUN. 12·5

u•ILC..F lOAD

41300

.

Chlftt- llclrground AI No Ext,. CM~ge

I

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DURING THESE HOURS
•REGISTER FOR DRAWINGS
•FREE REFRESHMENTS

Pack~ge)

ltlie*ttonOuarontttcl
The P.,rfoct gin tOt Mom, Dsd. Refatives &amp; Friends

•

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REG. '696

door~ .

Sl 0 CUT &amp; STYLE

TWO 8x10 • TWO Sx7
·10 WALLET SIZE

By 1111
Buchwalk
HARDBACK

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I: SI Lm.

lhelves and wood grill

SPECIAL

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~&amp;C Depolit - Plus $1 .00 ~ancllng charge. Posea our a~ lectlon. Special ellecta poses
~ 1 ,;tra . Limit: One package ptf 1ub)ICI. $1 .00eachaddl_
t•onalaubject lnporlrall, Minors
• mull be accompanitd by an adult. Satln·IIUIIUfed llmsh at no eJ~:tra charg1 .

Dlllr • W.fEH

top and bottom with gt111

28"x13 "x76" PECAN TRADI·
nON AI. CURVED END CURIO.
Curved glen ends. gl...·lhelvet•
ceniltet light. mirrored beck.
bevelled door glm.

.••

....

Radio

CURIO . Mirror-bock, lighted

•
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i'ti.1il lk.W.~ Fl\.-.;.1

Elvis &amp;
Me

OPEN HOUSE

.

FRUITWOOD

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On The
Road With

"''

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..,.

28 " x16"x77"

_ AND'

&lt;;)

~

Days

by Jean
Auel
HARDBOOK
119 95

.,..

s19.95

Lake
Wobegon

Hunters

by Kurt

HARDHACK

117.95

.Slott Hours: Daily 9:30-8:00
Sunday 1-5:00 til Christmas

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Galapagos "'..._ I ·

by Carl
Sag on
HARDBACK

$9.95

HARDBACK

Bible Slltdy

" M-•1• Yron1

' 1

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Contact

Four Easy
Novels by
Stephe n King
PAPERBACK

Heinlein

Wed liNda)':

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·-:---,
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Bachman
Books

by Robert

· 1:to p.m.

Wol'!lhlp 11::111

purchm ol $1.00 Of 1111111 111 fr•h
candy and nuts. Supplies in !lock lor '
your holiday candy makin'
PH. 446- 21 34

HANDBAGS

~ -

Bulavllle Road • P .. 0 . Box 308
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8•11Uy Evealwr:
Wonhlp 1:11

Thurs .. Dec. 5. 12. 19; S1t., Dec. 7
Demos at 10: 1.m.. 12 111on. 2 p.m.
!·free Mold, $1.95 VIIUI, wllh any

beautiful antique striking mantel clack to be ginn
away Sunday at 4:00 P.M.

~

Chapel Hiil Church of Christ
Sund•y :\'iornln,t: ,

Sprln' Valley Ptuo

YOU'RE IN VITE
TO OUR

Prl•ote lnterptelallons
Oftentimes you hear it said, "Everyone has his own interpretation of
the scriptures." This is not so, acrording to the truth for "no prophecy
of the scripture iJ of any priwue interpretation " (2 Pet. 1:20). "Pro·
pher:y of scripture " includes all ~rophecy or the counsel of God in both
the Old and New Teuaments. 'Is' comes from the Greek verb which
means "to become or spring into being." "Private" refen to "that
which il one 's own. ·· "/nt~rpretation " means "an exflanation." Peter

U nclentandtna Tho Bible
You have heard it said. "We cannot all understand the Bible alike."
Thi,, too. is not according to truth. and discredits the capabilities of
God. "Far God is not ,!he author of con/uJion, but of peac~. "" i~ ull
churches of the sainu (I Cor. 14:33). the peace of God IS obtamed
through the knowledge of God that reveals unto us all things "!hot'?!"'
wi11 ro life and godliness ...who hath called us to glory und vtrtue (2
· Pet. 1; I·J). He calls us by the gospel " Whereunto he called you by our
RIISpe/. to rht obtaining of the' glory of our Lord Juw ChriJt" (I Thess.
2: 14). The gospe l by which He calls us rontains His power to save (Rm.
1; I h). Wou ld God give us something upon which our peace and ~now·
ledge pertai ning to life and godliness, our calling to glory and vtnue,
and our salvation depend that would be impossible for us to all under·
stand. creating confusion ·and division in the religious world? Satan,
through the doctrines of men , causes division and confusion in the relia
gious world. not God! We can all be one by accepting the "onefuith " of
the "word of rruth." believing on the Lord ihrough the ~ords of the
apostlcs(Jno. J7: 17.20).
For Free Bible Cormpondence Count, Write ...

Song
"I'll Meet
You in the
Rapture"
s·unday
Dec:. 1r
7:00 p.m.

SELECnON OF

l"'O

thoughts. and doctrines of men.

ChUrCh
Of
God
Special Singer
Charles Feltner

FREE CANDY DEMOS

OUR

*.

_..

is then affirming that the speaking forth of God s counsel in the
•rripture did not become or spring into existence by man unfolding his
innermost thoughts by giving his own explanation. The prophecy or
counsel of God "come not by the will of men " but "b1 the Holy Ghwt"';
therefore , the scripture is of no ''private interP.retlmon. ·· The sc~~ture
i' God' s interpreter, and must be kept unmtxed from the optmons,

R0 dney

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

Britannia Bygones International

(I

~ross(Co l .

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446-4423

'

God. who cannot lie (Tit. I:2) and with whom it is impossible to lie
Thess. 2: 13), does not vary from the truth by changing His _position so
as to cast a shadow upon it by turning Uas. I ; 17 ,18). Christtanity rests
upon "the Bible" as the only source of divine authority, receiving it as
the infallible word of God in all things.
The second division of the Bible, the New Testament, is the will of
Christ that is binding upon us today (Heb. 9:15,16). Christ fulfilled the
Old Testament Law (Mt. 5:17). taki ng it out of the way, nailing it to the

~r

Orand Opening-Grand Opening

Super Styles ...
Super Prices

[·

r---:r.:==:===,---r.:====::::=;::=::=~

Kazatms.

IRVIN'S AUTO

GLASS

:land recreation department wU
• 1,resume
swlmnastl~ on Tuesday,
.
, •and youth swim lesslons Thursday
•l t the GDC actJv!ty center. Open
!'swim will not be held Dec. 5 and 12
•:llue to make-up cl~ses. ·Fitness
)W1m continues through Dec. 14, 1to
'5p.m.

* Season's Readings

Mickey Smith, Detroit, Mich., and
Darrell Smith, Orlando, Fla., lxlth
brothers of tbe groom.
The mother or tre bride wore a
noor length dress or burgan~ •
while the groom's mother was In
aqua.
Jackie Darst, sister-In-law of the
brtde, registered guests.
A reception was held In the
church fellowship room. The
brtde's table featured a thrre-tler
wedding cake \Opped wltha mlna·
ture bride and groom. A stlVEf
service which had belonged to the
bride's grandmotrer was used.
Serving guests were Lelsa Taylor, cousin of tre bride , Mary Ann
Mulford and Julie Cottlngjm.
The couple resides at P.O. Box ·
187, Turkey Creek, Ky.

r~M~onda~~y~lh~ro~u~glt~Frl~d~a~v._ _ _~-~::::::::::::::"':i•:t:"'"::'":"t:,w:·:Y~a.:2:S5:so~::::~::::::~

:swimnastics
..
:t GAlliPOLIS.- G~llpolls parks

lortab le !or you .

venise lace. The full skirt cascaded
Into a cathedral length train. The
veil, fashioned by tre bride's
mother, was oo a two t!erQiara cap
with English Illusion accented with
lace and seed pe&lt;\rls. She carried a
white Bible and a cascade of ral
roses. baby's brooth, mint carna·
Thurman Smith •
lion and stepbonltls. The bride word
a rtng which had belonged to her
great great grandmother and
In Mongolia, 75 percent of the peo· grandmother.
pie are Kbalkha Mongols, 8 percent . Sheila summers, NewJX&gt;rl, Ohio
are Mongols and 5 percent are was maid of bonor; Joan Cornelius,

broccoli, stewed toma-:-:
toe
"'s,...,=
p ~·
Thesday - Ftsh sandwich,
browned potatoes. tossed salad
cherry cheesecake
Wednesday- Beet Stew, plneap·
pte and cottage cheese, cornbread;
· cookie
Thursday - Meattalls, masred
1»tatoes, Harvard beets, birthday
cake
Frtday - Pork steak, escalloped
.!»\Sloes, Uma beans, applesause
Choice or milk, coffee, tea, or
juice available with meals.
The Center'.s Craft Store and
Ceramic Shop have a variety or
Items for Christmas gifts.
The center Ls open to the J'.lbllc
for sbopplng from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,

••

choose the adjustm en t most co m·

SALE ENDS DECEMBER 24th

Two Letter Styles-Finish of Your Choice
These beautiful Desk Plaques may be
ordered by calling Meigs Industries

Mr. and Mrs.

:Meigs Senior Citizens
~me weekly activities

·Home for holidays program in Meigs
POMEROY - Meigs County
CooperatiVe Extension Service Is
sponsoring a "Home for the
Holldayf program on Wednesday,
Dec. 4, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.
The program wm feature displays
and exhibits from area businesses
and craftsmen. Anyone In teres ted
In having an exhibit should contact
Cindy Oliveri at 992-Bi.
Several guest speakerS are also
planned for the day along with a

.

~:55.

David Wiseman

3 ceremony weds Judy ·Dar~t, Thurman Smith .

CHESHIRE -In a reremony at , Cheshire, sister of tiE bride, Linda
the Cheshire Baptist Church, Aug. lngle, WeavervUle, N.C., sister of
3, Jucy Lynn Darst, daughter of Mr. the groom and Gtorta Westfall,
and Mrs. Dale Darst, O!eshlre and Addison, were brtdesmalds.
Thurman Smith son or Mrs. Verdle
The attEndants wore floor·lengl h
Smith and the late W!llle Smith, dresses of daphne rose luster-glo
McVeigh, Ky., exchango?d wedding strtpe over tuster·glo solid . Each
vows. The Rev. Steve Fuller carried a single long stemmed rose
perfo rm ed the doubl e-ri n g with baby's breath.
ceremony.
Jennifer Cornelius, niece or the
Music was presEnted by Mrs. bride. was flower girl. Joseph
Gertrude Hysell aganlst, and CorneUus, nephew or tre lrlde, was
Steven and .)'ennUer Darst, brotlilr rtng bearer.
and slster·ln·law of tre bride,
The flower girl wore a white floor
vocalists.
length dress with hoop skirt and
Given In marriage by her parents carried a white wicker basket filled
and escorted to the alter by lilr with red rose petals.
fath!!r. the bride wore a gown of
Lynn Smith, brother . of the
organza with schlftlllace and sred groom, Stone, Ky ., was best man
pearls, with a sheer yoke, wedding and ushers were Mark Darst,
band neckline and tre lll)!ded silk Cheshire, brothe r or tre bride,
venlse lace bodice. It also featured
full victortan sleeves with silk

••

. ornltled.

'

-'"'K·

~' J&gt;OMEROY - Bookmoblle ser·
i'\llce In Meigs County Is brought by

has

ANNIVERSARY SEI' - A reception honoring Gene and lilcy
: Earwood on their 48th weddlng anniversary will he mid Suaday, Dec. 8,
· Zlo4p.m. allheFirsiChlln!holllil NIIZBI'I!De, FellowsNp Hall. II will he
· hoMed by Joan Wood and Madge Neal. The couple requ..., gifts he

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-3

1985

POMEIOY

OF THE
STAIRS
•

serv1ce
.
lll W. 2nd
992--6120
Pomeroy, OH.
MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
HOURS •• .CALL
FOR. AN APPOINTMENT
·-Trudy Marahell, Suun Sluon, Mary Powell
. Tanning, Sheila Powell
Brenda

60"x16"x82 "
,
COLLECTOR'S CAB! NET
Rhaoatate controlled light .
REG . ' 1237
SALE

$988

HALF
CURIO
P.ecan with ash burla,
REG . '1220

20 DIFFERENT CURIOS 'IN STOCK
From S299 to $988
FURNITURE
GAllERIES
IN GALliPOliS

•FINE FURNITURE
•CARPET
•CUSTOM t;lRAPERY

•INTERIOR DESIGN

�Ohio-Point

December 1, 1

W. Va.

Job Bank offers seniors work
GALLIPOLIS - Malllre em·
ployees have shown therns~:lves to
• be experienced and dependable
workers. Their talents and skills
can be utllized In many areas In the
Community.
Health studies show the bnger
people are employed Ue better
their overall health remains.

'

1, 1985

The Sunday Times-Sentinei..:.:Page- B-6"0

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,
W. Va.
.

'

'

AT

·BALL FURNITURE
EUREKA
DIAL-A-NAP
UPRIGHT

How did the mountains of the moon moon's surface in the mid ·1600s. His
get their names? Johannes Hevelius, a names for many of the geographic
German astronomer, mapped the sites are still in use.

EUREKA mini mite·
Cordleu Rtchi!VIIblt
Hand Vac

IALE

Del Monte

Give.flowers in a
Christmas gift.

LIST '99.95

CATSUP
12-32 oz. btls.

SALE DATES: Dec. 2nd &amp; 3nl, 1985

.. Tt~ltac:oping Nouie gell Into ~lrcl-to­

reacn areas.

HOURS: 9:00 am to 6:00 pm

• Easy empty dutt cup ~ no bags

CASE

Convenient charging 118nd

Open House
'

.

~mber

Eureka December Sale

The Job Bank at the SeniOr
Citizens Center welcomes employ·
ers to seek qualified employees who
are registered with the Job Bank..
These people are 50 years of age
and older and have a variety of
skllls and talents.
CaD 446-1000 lor rmre lnforrna·
tlon.

·. Easy carry ho!e-ln-hlndle grip.
· Ferlect for gifi·idetls

l elghtl ' Dull EOGE KLEENER '

• CIAL·A-NAP •dJusts to varlout.Cirptt

Thorofare

' Whole Komal or C"'am Style

• Famou1 top-fill big ayatem keePI

auction strong.

Mr. and Mrs. Terry S. Hili
DEI,UXE
ESP UPRIGHT
. WITH

Paula H. Booth becomes bride
of Terry S. Hill in ceremony
VINTON - The wedding of
.Paula H. Booth, daughter of Louise
Nickels, Vinton, and Terry S. Hill,
son of Homer and Ethel Hilt of
Bidwell, took place July '!f.
The wedding was performed by
Don Saxton at VInton Baptist
Church. The bride was glv"' in
marriage by her mother, uncle.
Ronald Booth of Louisville. Ky.
The bride wore a gown made by
her grandmother Hazel Clark. It
was made d. lace and taffeta, was
an d.f.the·shoukler, with net Insert,
and high collar neckline with an
Insert d. a lace cameo In the bodice.
The catherdral train was of tulle
and connected to a cap of taffeta,
ttimmed wflh pearls.
She wore an antique brooch atthe
collar, belonging to her late great·
great grandmother, Annie
Lambert.
She carried a cascade bouquet ct.
silk red sweetheart roses and
baby's breath. All wedding filwers

carried a oosket of sllk flower
petals.
The mother of the bride wore a
street lengthdressofpurpleongrey
stripes, sheath cut with blouson,
tied at sides.
The mother of the groom wore a
sUk jersey street-length dress of
eggshell white. Both mothers wore
mrsages of white roses.
Best man was Ronnie Hill,
brother of the groom. Ushers were
Lee Booth, brother of the brtde,
Jackie and Scott Pickens.
Rlngbearer was Travis HUI, who
carried a satin pllow.
A reception followed the wedding
in the church. The two-lfer cake
was made by Wanda Neal, sister d.
the groom. The cake was decorated
In red and pink roses and was
topped with the traditional bride
and groom.
Serving at the reception were
Wanda Neal and Debbie HHL
Following the reception, a coo·

were made by the brides cousin,
Michelle MCWhorter
·
Mald-of·honor Lucille Harris,
Columbus, wore a Door-length of

koutsupperwasglvenatthehome
of Rick and Debbie HOI.
The .couple reside In Keene,
Texas.

She carried a bouquet of pink and
pink organza with layers of ruffles.
blue flowers.

single white rose. Sisters of the
bride. Hope, wore a yellow full·
length gown and Susan wore a deep
pink gown. Each carried ma tching
roses. their dresses were of taffeta
and tulle.
·Flower girl, Susie Hlll, wore a
floor-length pink flowered gown of
batiste, with lace at the ruffles. She

•Compact

List •t89.95

24-10314 oz. cans

ESP MODEL 2&lt;161

CASE

..' -

$7995

Store made

SAUSAGE
5 lb. pkg.

· Unrivaled ciHnlng performance wl1h
huge 6.5 AMP motor..
• Chrome-plated steel VIBRAGROOMER II hll 7 beeler bart lo

ight
·Dual EDGEheadl
KLEENER
·

POMEROY
flOWER SHOP

deep clean •• ntitt' before poulble.

BALL FURNITURE

~2 • 20 ~;'~;'· Oft.

220 THIRD AVE.

GALliPOUS

IENERS
5-'l2 oz, pkgs.

S
THE
LARGEST

ATERBED
GALLERY

Bookcase
King ,
Oueen or
Supe r Single

Amarillo
All You Add
11 WatrJr!

. . . . . . . . . . . . $29900

I You Add

.'s W1rer !

•King
•Queen
•Super Single

ra• Ill 'III'ATIII.ATTIUd• U.II TY llllll • IlliG Hll ~~f'l'l'"fMIH •1MllllilllfTAT, ~l Mil. MlATIII •ll•II•GICllllf
•PlDtiTAliiUIIT1• "'IUIITAll.ul

•

·-

LUNCH
MEATS
5-1 lb. pkgs.

BACON

'
•

..

•King
•Queen
•Super
Single

WATERBED

.~~e~~~~.

• COMFORTER ·

• 2 SHEETS

•King •Queen

• 2 PILLOW CASES

Reg.
1

15~~

MATTRESS
PADS

PRINCESS
PEDESTALS

:'
.

ITEM

Martha While

Joan at An:

• • KIDNEY BEANS

w/MEAT SAUCE

5911

2911

'1

FLOUR

24·2 02 .
pkgo.

24-16 Ol.

cant

24-15 oz.
cans

Robin hood

ACCEPTED

675-1371

STOR~ HOURS: Monday thru Friday,' a.m.·8 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.·$ p.m.; Cl~$ed Sunday.
' Gallipolis Ferry, wv~
·····-~······t-!11111··--1-!lllll•••••••i'
••••l•l•l•ll•••••••---------·---------~
'"
1'
,,
"'

.5 miles from Silver Bridge on Rt. 2 South

.......--••

Jiffy

1

s 8.00 s 4.00 PIZZA CRUST MIX
Seaside

'10.00

I

5.00 BiJTTERBEANS
·Chet-Boy-Ar-Oee

s 9.50 s 4.75 BEEFARONI

24 - 16

oz.

""'
12- 40 oz.
Clnl

10-5 lb.
bags

S

8.00

I

SPAGHETTI
4.00 MEAT BALLS

8.110 ' ·4.00 CORN MUFFIN MIX
Jiffy

112.00

I

6.00 PIE CRUST MfX
Cametlon

'23.00 '11.50 EVAPORATED MILK
Assorted

12--40 oz .
CIPI

, 23.00 111.50 OODLES OF NOODLES

24-1 0.2:.
pk{ll.

Thorofa"'
I

5.34

I

2.6'7 PORK &amp; BEANS
G"'al Northern

24-0 oz.
ptlgt.

I

2ol-12 OJ .
ctnt

'12.110 ' 6.00 BEANS

24-3 oz.
pk{ll.

8.00 ' 4.00 BEANS
Pinta

oz.

24-15

I

9.50

I

4.75

jars

I

9.00

I

4.50

6-48 oz.
jars

I

9.00

I

4.50

I

9.50

I

4.75

Clftl

8- 48

oz.

Sliver Fleeee

I

5.00

I

2.50 SAUERKRAUT

1----+--+--+-+~-=--t---+---t-1-----+-t-+--t-----r--+-+---i ~.

'

.

· '

MUSHROOMS

24-4 oz.
cans

Aeguter or Diet

2 liter

COKE
Cheory

•

I

VISA ond•MASTERCARO

ITEM

cans

Chet-Boy·A•-Dee

Aoblnhood

Pieces and Sloma

Reg. $2995 Reg.$1400 $19995
FLAIR FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
1

·ITEM

ITEM

QUANTITY FULL HALF
QUANTITY FULL
HALF
QUANTITY FULL
HALF
~
QUANTITY :~
~~
CASE CASE
CASE
CASE
CASE
CASE
· ~~~~--~~~------~---r~--+-------+-~--+--r------~--T--r~
.-· ~
Chef-Boy-Ar- Dee
Thooofa"'
StOve Top-Chic. or Herb
Pllhobilry Fudge
24-15 oz.
12-41 oz.
SPAGHETTI
DINNER 11-19tn 01.
12 -21YI 01.
,.... 114.00 . I 7.00
ptigl.
'10.00 ' 5.00 GREEN LIMA BEANS
'11.88 s 5.94
*28.IIO , 14_00 STUFFING
BROWNIE MIX

$
WATERBED
DillON

5 lb. pkg.

-$449

• • . Thorofare

'Mr1u•PACKS

69C

BACON
ENDS
2-3 lb. boxes

APPLESAUCE

"''

$599

LINK6 SAUSAGE·
lb. pkg.

Tho rote"'

11

SLAB BACON

51b.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . box

Crispy Serve

SPUD FLAKES

•Mlii ..IDIIIOIIA ""'' MU.OIOAIIID • fUI fl,_
'III'ATIIIMATTIIIII• WITTUIIIII•IOLitfllll 'IIAMI
• TIIIIIMSTAf • Ul Alf. NUTtll•lt . .II•IUIIII
•NHITfll l ... lft •NDIJTIIL Mat

Sliced

S1Q89

•

•King
•Queen

lb.S189

Superior:

bOIIII

BASIC 5
BOARD

CH EESE ..........................................

Fresh

'•

LAY·AWAY
NOW
•

,. 95C

1

Ballards

,,

Fancy Mirror
With Tulip
Lamp

King ,
Queen or
Super Single

$92 9

'

~

Dark Ponderosa Pine Hea1l-l
:board and Frame! Fancy Mirror!
~=='==~F~ree Installation!

.

BOLOGNA ........................................ lb.

..

,,

IN THE
AREA
fOR CHRISTMAS#

~uu,

.

Whole or Half Sticks
"

Solid Dark Pine
Headboard With
Decorative Mirror!
Divided

Ballards

9

Frankies

..

GROUND BEEF

for

Flsli . . ;........................................ ~~~ S599

On lho 111111

·=

CASE

Fresh Regular .

PIZZA ........ . .............. ................. 2 saoo
SAUSAGE PATTIES ................... ~~~·

••

Wlde-~no

~

SfiOO $300

'

LIST $109.95

31eleflom·

The Teleflora Music Box
1 1 'I
Bouquet - a beauti U Sl ver·
plated pear tree that plays
"The Twelve Days of Christmas," and will remain a
family tradition for many
106
Christmases to come.

~roMATO SOUP

$12995

&amp; Carry
SAY. E 26O/10 · Caoh
S101day Only

CASE

. Thorofare

SALE

The Teleflora Hurricane
Lamp Bouquet - a holiday
lavorite in fine , French
sculptured glassware that
will remain a shining tradi·
tion for many Christmases
to come.
Call or Vtl&gt;tl for local' delivery, or we can wire it
anyWhere.

~

SfiOO $300.

s~,~~
~
POWIR

·'

Gallia
Seniors
announce
calendar

~

CASE

•Powaful •Portable

F
•
&amp;
D
TY/
b
d
.,....,.,r urntture .
esign "at'er e s

::e,~ln~~;~~~-:~e~~r~u~

1

CORN
24-16 oz. cans

EUREKA MIGHTY
MITE

~;:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~9~9~2~·5;7~21~;;~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~;.;r.;~~~:~

Bridesmaids were l!vlna Do-

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus for the week of Dec. 2
through Dec. Gat the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, are as
follows :
Monday - Ceramics Class.
9:00-ooon; Cho rus, 1·3 p.m.
Tuesday - Mystery Trip ;
S.T.O.P./Physlcal Fitness, 10:30
a.m.
· Wednesday - Crown Oty Blood
Pressure Check, 1 p.m.; VInton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games, 1
p.m.; American Literature Class, 1
p.m.
Thursday - Bible Study, 11
a.m.-noon; Christmas Dance, 7:30
p.m.
Friday - Art Class, 1·3 p.m.;
Craft Mini-Course, 1·3 p.m.; Open
Activities, 7-10 p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Kraut and wetners,
mashed potatoes. wreat bread,
butterscotch pucX!Ing with graham
cracker topping.
Tuesday - Beef stew, cheese
sticks, cole slaw, corn bread, jello
with fruit.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
mashed pota lnes, grren beans, hot
rolls, pears.
Thursday- Beeftlps with gravy,
noodles, beets, wheat bread, Ice
cream.
' Friday. - Fish, crromed peas,
rice wtih cream of mushroom soup,
wheat bread, fruit cocktall.
Choice ot beverage served with
each meal. "

The
Centerpiece
Bouquet - beautiful flowers
in a sculptured glassware
bowl from France. Later, it's
perfect for
candy.

LIST '39.95

20ft. Cord .•

\

Vz CASE

$1200 SfiOO

· THf lfTTfR HANO VACI

SUNDAY, D£C. 1st
11 A.M. til 5 P.M•

.I
'

.

COKE

bil .

6-12

oi.

ttns

.'

•

•

GREEN BEANS

I

6.00 TOMATOES

24-tl oz.
e~na

24-18 02 .
CIPI

IND.-' .99

IND ....s 1.59

ASPARAGUS

I

4.00 HOT ROLL MIX
College Inn

• 8.00 s 4.00 CHICKEN BROTH

' 9.50 ' 4.75 PINK SALMON

24- 15'h DZ.

can a

12- 15 oz.
Clftl

12-18 oz .
ptigt.

Vegetable

'12.00 1 6.00 SHORTENING
For A Quick Meal

'13.00 ' 6.50 MACARONI &amp;CHEESE
Scalloped or Aug"'tln

'12.1111 ' 6.1111 POTATOES

Thooolo"'

*42.00 121.00 SPINACH
Domino

Sib.
jar

• 8.50 • 4.25 PEANUT BUTTER

TOMATO JUICE
ThoroloiW

Sno.Time

C"'amy or Crunchy

Thorota"'

s 8.00

PEAS
ThoroII"'
FIWnch Style or Cut

'12.1111

Plllobury

Thoro to"'
•

Loyalty

12- 3 lb.

cans

24

~~·

12-5 oz.
pk{lo.

IND. - s 4.95

SUGAR
r..ty Gold

'21.00 '10.50 MARGARINE
BIIIIRI
· '

6.1111 ' 3.110 BISCUITS
Small

' 8.1111 ' 4.00 EGGS

24- 11 ...
cent

25 lb.
bag

&amp;-31b.

t*ll•·

8-4 Cl.

plova.

3

-Joz.

114.110

I

7.00

IND. · I 9.95

' 9.50

I

4.75

5.00

I

2.50

I

IND. - I 1.89

�'

GatewoodShaw

----Meals for hunters----

'

CROWN CITY - ' Mr. and Mrs.

~ard

.,

LONG BOTTOM- LongBottom
CommunitY As8oclatlon wW smre
evening meflls to deer hunters
beginning Monday and contlnulng
through Dec. 6. Meals will be served
from 41D8p.m, at the LongBottom
Community Bu1ldlng at a cost d $2.

.

'

.

INVITES YOU TO OUR

2~~NUAL

CHRISTMAS '

OPEN HOU

Lori Ann Pickett
David M. Bingham

14K GOLD SALE

. AND
00

.SALE $349 ~... ~.·
Recllno·Rocker• recliner
This £uropeon inspired detign Is

HAINS· CHARMS·

contsmpo~ory, on ottroclive
oddition to your decor. And !he plush
cushion• ,.gt you &gt;~~~ry comfonob l)'l

bold end

. O~ER $250,000.00 IN GOLD

This is the sale you've heard about. Our Fac·
foiJ ltprtMntatiYt will 1M in our store for I
day only with his entire gold line aH at

..,.--~----' _

60°/o OH Retail Price

DON'T MI$S THIS SALE II

.

"Atherton"

Reolna·Roct&lt;tr recliner

rvf...:l wod•norool c~or
odd\ d•~torn:II OO 10 your d.cor

5 Mills South of Point "--l
Store"-" Mon.·Fri. 9 a.ro.·~

l/3

20% Off eEarrings 20% Off
•Watches 20'1o OH •Add-A-Beads 25% Off

COME ·

6 P.M. TO 9 P.M.

TO SEE

THE PARADE

.

ONE GROUP
WOMEN'S

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
THOM MeAN &amp;
POLL PARROT

CASUAL ·
SHOES

1/2 PRICE

$3 19

1112

TO 4

Dingo Boots
•

40°/o

•

OFF

MEN'S
thom MeAn &amp; land

ONE GROUP
BOYS' &amp; MEN'S

SHOES

Hiker Boots

SLIPPERS

1/2 PRICE

$2 $5

$1 s

IIOKEN
SIZES

•

...'•:
..

.
•

•

'

115

1/4
1/3

All NIKE AND
CONVERSE

$3,'tA '9

SHIRTS
1/2 ~ICE

$3 99
•

ALL CHILDREN'S

KANGAROOS
AND PONYS

lf2
PRICE
ONE GROUP NICE
CHilDREN'S 'lz PRICE

to

ALL NON-LEATHER

•

SUNDAY AIJ~ DAY

j

AD·You-Can-Eat CoUiltry-style Fish Dinner

$3 99

htrifa_gt •nOU$t

•
'·•

..

30°/o OFF
NIKE • CONVERSE

..

BROOKS • PONY

Sffll

"-

•
•

n

.,

.•
•.
•
'

'

•

-·-&lt;!&gt;
CMIIM I"'

WIIITII.III.

•Paii\IIIIIN

•••

15 quart
rug

·-·z n ,

(fr~)

:~ Corduroy

Pants

LADIES

LADIES PLUS SIZE

CHECKMATES

JOG SUITS

BROKEN SIZES

REG. $6.59

S7°0

MARAUDERS
TOBO'GGANS

$288

SAlE

SIZE 38-44

$288

REG. '23.99

INFANT

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IN RED 8t BLUE
IN MONTH SIZES

REG.

·-·

ONE RACII

JACKETS

.......

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2 5°/o

VALUE TO •17.99

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ONE GROUP MEN'S

•

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ONE RACK MEN'S
WRANGLER SWEATERS, INIT SHillS,
LONG SLEEVE PLAID SPORT SHIRTS
REDUCED
TO

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MEIGS

Ole

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PACKAGE Of 3

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$199
$299
$399
$499 .
$749 '
$1,299 .

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

:·•'

i!••'

1/10
1/7
1/5
1/4

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BOYS

ATHLQIC
SHOES

*MORE ATHLDIC SHOES AT SLASHED PRICES! COME
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CT.

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$549
$949

112

ONE GROUP
WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

'

MONDAY ~AY ALLDAYSPBlAL

.

SIZES

SHOES
11:2
PRICE

GROUP CHILDREN'S
WOMEN'S &amp; MEN'S

I

LOW PRICE

CTW.
1/10
1/7

: MIDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin C. Milliron, Middleport,
ijoute 1, announce the engagement
o_!thelrdijughter, Tammy Theresa,
to David Andrew Blake, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joho E. Blake, Pomeroy.
.:The bride-elect Is a graduate ol
!)1elgs High School and Is empoyed
at Woodland Centers Head Start.
::Blake Is also a graduate of Meigs
litgh School. He Is a !tending Devey
l(li;tttute, Columbus, and Is also
employed at Hughes·Peters, Inc.,
Columbus.
:An open church wedding wUJ be
f1ild at the Bradford Church ol
Qlirlst on Dec. 28 at 6: .Jl p.m. A
~lion wUJ IaDow the wedding.

UNTIL 9 P.M.

t.Of.~\ REFRESHMENTS .
T"'
CIDER &amp; DONUTS

PENDANTS

EARRINGS

MONDAY, DECEMBER 25th

&amp;~

rf-4

W'/1

••

Specially breaded, country-style fish fillets, naturakut french fries, fresh
slaw,
hush puppies and 1a1t1r sauce.

IL J•d'

',~ ,

Model

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.

-~

-

•

Each dinner includes: 2 golden brown fish fillets, naturaJ.cut french
fries, fresh cole slaw and 2 hush puppies.

$549 ;
$699 ;
$949 ;
$1,499 .

-~

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LOW PRICE

-

: ) Tarmny Theresa Milliron ·

Three tender baked fish fillets on a bed of rice. Served with garden green
beans, freshly made cole slaw, hush puppies and a lemon wedge.

CT.
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1/4
1/3
1/2

$199
$299
$399
$499
5749
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eKremenh

wv.

BAKED FISH DlNNER

LOW PRICE

; •1/2

...

An extra large serving of delicious bite-size fried shrimp
served with the Captain's special cocktail sauce, natural-cut
frenc~ fries, fresh cole slaw, and tWo So\lthem-style hush
pupptes.
·

MARQUISE

ROUND

- OTHER SPlCIALS -

~ l'lriJ,
p.IIL, Sat. 9 Liii.·S p.IIL, (ietlll .s.Moy. '

·

14K SOLITAIRE ENGAGEMENT RINGS

STOP BY AND SAY HELLO

FLAIR FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
675-1371

9:00 A.M. - ????

l/5

1st 25 PEOPLE RECEIVE A FREE
KREMENTZ PIN
26th PERSON FREE 14K GOLD CHAIN
DOOR PRIZES EVERY 2 HOURS

R.c ~ l~

'

1/4

FUN ...;.REFRESHMENTSReollna·Rocker· recliner

MOnday, December 2nd, 1985

1/10
1/7

LAYAWAYS ARE WELCOME FOR CHRISTMAS -

"Donbury"

MIDDLEPORT -TOPS OH 5111
Christmas party has been scheduled for Nov. 10. Reservations are
to be made at 992·m4 by Tuesday.

m

; POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert G. Pickett, Pomeroy. are
~ounclng the engagement and
;pproachlng marriage o1 their
(laughter, Lori Ann, to David M.
1\ingham 111, son of David M.
J3ingham Jr. and Laurie E.
flingham, TaUahassee, F1a.
• The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Is employed
Svith American Express In Fort
f.auderdale. Fla.
• Bingham Is a graduate of Godby
Htgh School in Tallahassee, and Is
~mpioyed with the Florida Depart·
!fl"Dt d Natural Resources.
: ~ wedding date will be
announced.

60°/o :::

"The Dreamer"

Party planned

.

ONE DAYONLY

( eurostyle collecHon)

usher, and JasoD Riley, ring bearer.
Matron of honor will be Penny
Burge, "'ith Julie Hysell as a
bridesmaid and Charla Burge as the
flower girL Music will be perfonned
by Judy Riley.

:Pickett•
jBingham

SUNDAY, DEC. 1st, 198
11 :00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.

...

Tickets are stUI
.ivailable for a &lt;Unner·theater pro·
ductJon of The Best Christmas
tageant Ever to be held 6: .Jl p.m.
!lee. 7 at Eastern Hlgh Shcool.
:ftckets are$5 for adultsand$2.!'illor
~:~:~under~ 12. For lnfurmatlon
ta
High at 98SJ329.

Hysell - Barnette

MIDDLEPORT - Final plans
have been completed for the
'weddlngo!BrendaHysell,daugltter
of Ms. Rosemary Hysell, Middleport, to Eddie Barnette, son of Mr.
and Mrs. George R. Barnett,
GallipoDs.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday, Dec. 7, at 6:30p.m. at the
Gospel Ugltthouse Church, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. TheceremonywUl
be performed by the Rev. Bobby
Woods. Atu,tdanls will be Eric
Barnette, best man, Brad Young,

IN POMEROY

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE

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

pinner-theater
iickets
available
...

.The Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei-Page- 8-7 ·

department.

PAGEVn.LE -Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department Ladles AuxUtacy
will be serving meals for deer
hunters Dec. 2 tHrough Dec. 7at the
PagevUle ToWJlSllouse. Serving
tlnles wUI be: breakfast, 5 to 7;
lunch, 11:30 to 1: .Jl; dinner, 5 to 7.
Proceeds will go to the fire

Melvin Gatewood o1 Crown City
announce lbe engagelll"'lt and
!rtlnlmlng marriage
their
dfiugltter, Jill GateWOG.
Louls·
Wlne, Ky., and Douglas E. Shaw of
dlutsvUJe, Ky., !lln fl. Mr. and Mrs.
Shaw of Dawson, Penn.
~· G!!tewood Is a graduate of ll
OaUta Acadenzy High School and
~d State University, where
!he eerned an Associate ol Applled
lfuslness degree and was a
~ber of Sigma . Sigma Sigma
ao.rortty. She cornpleted a Bachelor
Ot Science degree In Bllslness
&amp;!ministration from tbe University
l1! Louisville. She Is employed as
ll!'51stant ID the president of Ste~·s, division of Associated Dry
~of New York.
·•Shaw Is a graduate of tbe
tlniverslty of Cincinnati with a
~chelor of Arts In Psychology and
~lology, and completed a gradu·
tte cert1!1cate In Psychiatric Reha·
llilltatlon from Kent State Unlver·
![ly. Shaw also earned a Masters o1
:t4ucatton In Psychology and Couniittng from Xavier University and
~Masters of Business Admlnlstra·
~n In Hospital Administration
Qiom Xavier University. He Is
~ployed as Chief Operating CJ.
t"er of Jewish Hospital, LoulsvUie.
MJaw Is a member fl. The A~n&gt;rlcan
College of Hospital Executives, a
Jbember of The American Psycho~al Association, president of the
lJospltal CouncU of Metro Louis·
~e. vice chairman ol tbe Louis·
~ ~mergency Medical Services
.MOaro, and president o1 Metro
.Clwanls.
·
" The wedding wUI be held June 7,
~. at St. Paul United Methodist
~urch In Louisville. The couple
lfm reside at 7919 Barlx&gt;ur Manor
~e. Louisville.

.•••POMEROY -

Ohio-Poin~ Plea141nt, W. Va.

Di:leember 1. 1985

December 1, 1985 :

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Saving Place•

SHOP MIDDLEPORT FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS NEEDSI
I

'••

•• J

I'

'

.•

,

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

Sport

Commumty
SUNDAY

- RODNEY - Special singing by
: Charles Feltner. Rodney Church rt
: God, Sunday, 7 p.m.

..

; GALLIPOLIS - Get Acquainted
:.Sunday, Faith Bapllst Church,
~Sunday 10:40 a.m. Potluck dinner
;:following services with new pastor.
;

!· EUREKA - Grubb Family
;:Slngers will be at Eureka Church of
~·Sunday, 7 p.m.
· EUREKA - Eureka Church of
;God wlll have state overseer
·speaking, Sunday.
~ POMEROY - Hysell Run Holl·

:-ness Church will have Sll"ve Manley
·Speaking Sunday morning and
:evenllig services.
'

:: LECfA-Rev.ErnestBakerwUI
:beat Walnut RidgeChurch,Sunday,

-~-

7:30p.m.

Rlverby. GAHS madrigals to sing.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Gun
Club sponsors a slug shoot, Sunday,
lp.m.

POMEROY - Meigs Coonty
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, wDihave
a Christmas dinner at Trtntty
Church, Monday, 6:30 p.m. Take
things for baskets for two famllles .
All money from fUnd· ralslng projects Is to be turned !nat the meeting.

MONDAY

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Christian School band and ~holr
Chrls!nfas Concert, Monday, 7:30
p.m., auditorium of First Baptist
Church. Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS- GaliipollsJunlor
Woman 's Club meets Monday, new
members6:45p.m. , oldmembers. 7
p.m., Woodland Centers.
GALLIPOLIS - DAR meets
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home rl
Mrs. Charles Murray, Christmas
party.SpeakerMrs. Warren Sheets.
GALLIPOLIS - AAUW meets
Monday, 7:15p.m., tasting party at

LONG BO'ITOM - Rockland
Branch of the Pythlan Sisters wW
meet 8 p.m. Monday-at the umg
Bottom Community Bulldlng.

---

POMEORY - Southern Local
School ~ wUI meet ln special
session Monday, :7:00 p.m., at the
high school.
POMEROY- Meigs Band Boosters meet Monday, 7 p.m., band
room at high school.
PAGEVILLE- Scioto Volunteer

In the service----

:LeMaster
·-

Airman Tlm:lthy E. LeMaster,
:SOn d Boonie F. LeMaster d «J165
Devenny Road , Pomeroy, and Ed
.LeMaster d Rural Route3, Albany,
has been assigned to Keesler Air
·Force Base, Miss., after complet.
lng Air Force basic training.
During the six weeks atLackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
.studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
-received special training In human
relations.
In addition, airmen who oomplete
·has~ training earn credits toward
'an associate degree ln applied
science through the Community
College d. the Air Force.
· The airman will row receive
speclallzed Instruction In the
~mmunlcations-eiectronlcs sys·
terns field.
He Is a 1985 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy.

Patterson

specialist wlth the 59th Ordnanre
Brigade.
He Is a 1963 graduate of Southern
Local High School, Racine.

Rorrer
Ronald W. Rorrer, s:&gt;n d Mr. and
Mrs. WIUiam L. Rorrer of 22181\lt.
Vernon Ave .. Pt. Pleasant, W.Va,
has entered onto active duty with
the Unite:! States Air Force accord·
lng to SSgt. John McGuire, Air
Force Recruiter In Gallipolis.
Rorrer Is a l98l graduate of Pt.
Pleasant High School. ,
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week haste milltary
course at Lackland AFB, Texas, he
will receive training In the Administrative Career Field.
He will be earning credits
towards an associate degree
through the Community College d
the Air Force whlle attending basic
training and other Air force
technical training scllools.

Achievement Medal In West
Germany.
The Achievement Medal Is
awarded to soldiers for rneritorjous
service, acts of courage, or other
accomplishments.
Patterson Is a military police

.t......

a---:-...

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DIAWING DEC. 24th

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Ohio
•

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 of the American Legion wW ·
havethetrrumuaiChrisbnasdlniler,
Tuesday evening, 7 p.m., at the post
oome.

SPRiftG VAllEY PLAZA
CAll AHEAD 446-TACO
SUNDAY &amp; THUIS. 11 A.M.-11 :30 P.M.
FRIDAY. &amp; SAT. 11 A.M.-12:30 P.M.

~;====================!

.. .....

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CH . STMAS

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SUNDAyI DECEb'BER 1
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0\1

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) ~ Four
Wright State players Including
Mark Vest and Grant Marion,
reached double figures In the
Raider's ll1-61 cakewalk over Lake

Superior Saturday.
Akron 90, Bowling Green 83
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (UPI)
-A 10-point scoring spurt late ln the
second half boosted the Akron z;ps
past Bowling Green Saturday 00-?&gt;.

CAPE'85
Division4
champion

..

FOR CHRISTMAS

WSU Ill, Lake Superior 61

Haw keyes Triumph
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!) -If the
Iowa Hawkeyes area team without
a star, Coach George Raveling
better explaln that to freshman Roy
Marble.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Clnclnnatl
Academy of Physical Education
(CAPE), behind the running of
Carlos Snow and an overwhelming
defense, routed defendlng champion LoulsvWe St. Thomas Aquinas
27-0 Saturday afternoon In the finals
of the Dlvlslon 4 stale high school
football playoffs.
'1'\le Crusaders, In only their
fourth season of varsity football,
completely dominate:! the Knights,
who had only one first down In the
opening halt and wound up with 106
yards of total offense against the
qu~ker · CAPE defense, which
allowed only one touchdown Its last
eight games.
DESPERATION ATmMPT- cardinal Maoaey's dum~ Saturday's Dlvll!llon D Ohio high sdJool
After an early exchange of
Dave Coleman (22) makes a despende 41vlng champlonohlp game In OSU Stad~•m. Gallon woo, &amp;0.
turnovers, CAPE started a drive on
.
•
lll&amp;empl at a taclde on Gallon's Rob Monnett (32) . (Ul'l).
Its 20 with 8: 18 left In the first
quarter.It ended 14 playslaterwhen
Tracy Dula dove over from the one
on fourth down to make It 7-0. That
was the first TD scored against
Aquinas In four playoff games.
CAPE-, · which finished- 14-Q,quickly made lt 14-0 after Derek
from Johnson to Rob Monnett.
a fourth down pass from Pellni to Partlowe recovered a lumble by
By GENE CADDES '
Once the Tigers reached the Devlin Cullivercameupsoortd the Aquinas quarterback Joe Fisher on
UPI Sports Writer
Mooney :al, Johnson canied four of needed first down yardage on the the Crusader 49.
On the second play, Snow. a 5-B,
COLUMBUS (UPI)-Quarter· the ne;xt six plays for 6, 6, 3 and Gallon27.
196-pound
junior speedster, took a
finally
1
yard
for
the
Dave
Nelson's &lt;ther field goal miss
back Carl Johnson smashed over
pitch
from
quarterback Enoch
·from a yard out with 3: 36!eft In the Weittunan's conversion attempt hit came with only six seconds left In the
Fitzhugh,
broke
a couple of tackles
game Saturday to give Gallon a 6-0 the light upright and bounded back half after the Cardinals moved to the
Gallon 18 on the passing combo of near the Une of scrimmage and
win over Youngstown Cardinal onto the field.
outraced the Aquinas defenders into
The
t!rst
half
was
scoreless
with
Pellni to Dascenzo.
Mooney In the Division 2champion·
the end zone on a 51-yard touchdown
threeunsuccessfultleldgoals,
two
of
Mooney,
a
3-time
fonner
champ
ship game of the state high school
'
them
by
Mooney'sPat
Nelson,
were
woo finished this season wlthan ll-2 ' run.
football playoffs.
CAPE
went
up
17-0
when
Mark
record, never really threatened In
Johnson, a 6-foot, 191-pound the only scoring opportunities.
Mooney put together 14-play the second half, although the Allton kicked a 31-yard field goal
senior, guided the Tigers, woo
finished the season wlth a 14-0 drives on its first two possessions. Cardinals got to the Gallon 34 after with 2:23 to play In the half after
another CAPE drtvewas halted by a
record, on a 17-piay, 00-yard drive One stalled on the Gallon 25 and Monnett fumbled a punt on his 47.
resulted
ln
a
missed
42·
yard
Nelson
That
drive,
however,
ended
when
bobbled pltchout.
which used up more than eight
field goal.
Pat Delahunty fumbled and it was
minutes d the fourth quarter.
Gallon,
on
Its
only
!Irs!·
quarter
recovered by Gallon's Blll Price on Miami romps 58-7
The drive started on the Gallon :al
drove
from
Its
:al
to
the
possession
the
Gallon 40.
,after · four Mooney players let a
Mooney
two.
But,
on
fourth
down,
The
title was the first lbr Gallon,
MIAMI - Mlaml, Fla., humbled
Cardinal punt trtckle into the end
Mooney's
Dan
Dascenzo
b!ocked
a
which
qualified
for the playoffs on Notre Dame, 58-7 here Saturday
zone for a touchback.
Key plays In the drive were a 19-yard field attempt by the Tigers' the final week d the regular season afternoon. It was the final game for
with a win rNer )reviously unbeaten
Irish Coach Gerry Faust.
19-yard pass from Johnson to Jeff Dave Weithman.
Mooney's
other
drive
ended
when
Tiffin
Columbian.
Remey and another passof27 yards

Lat~ score gives Galion 6-0

win, Division II state crown

Gift Ideas
;~~·9

GALLIPOUS - GaWpolls Uons

meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Oscar's.

·PO.ROY, OHIO

...: ~349

REGISTER TO WIN

UPI Sports Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Maas. (UP!) Antoine Joubert scored 21 points,
Including a pair of crucial free'
throws In the final minute Saturday,
to lilt No. 1 Michigan to a 4944
victory over No. 2 Georgia Tech
Saturday In the seventh annual
Tlp-oH Classic.

MARGUERITE
SHOES
"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"

SaleS288
A

By FREDERICK WATERMAN

THRU DEC. 7th, 1985

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary meets ·Tuesday, 6 p.m., Down ·
Under.

- · --

Michigan edges Tech
in cage classic tip-off

Layaway Now For Christmas

Christmas Parade Specials-Tonight 5-8 P.M.

,..,.,•.

POP~

wltH PURCHASE OF ANY
.LARGE PIZZA.

LECfA - Bible study at Walnut
Ridge Church with Rev. Earl
Hinkle.

Ofl Db WIDtiDI

Section
-

- ·""FREE"";........--

~AY

..........

Scott D. Dark, son d Mrs. Mary
V. Clark ri Route 4, Gallipolis, and
Robert D. Dark of Ashland, Ohio,
has entered onto active duty wlth
the Unite:! States Air Force accord·
ing to SSgt John McGuire, Air
Force Recruiter In Gallipolis.
Clark Is a 1984 graduated GaUia

WE'VE SLASHED PRICES
. ONLY SJ7900 HERE'S YOUR CHANCE
EARLY HOliDAY SHOPPERS

2LITER

KYGER - Cheshire Twp trustees m~t Tuesday. 6p.m., township
hall, Kyger.

,._IIIOIOWI

Clark

iimes- ientin~t

December 1, 1985

Force~s
six-week basic
meets- Tuesday
p.m.,
Upon graduation
from mllltary
the Air , ClluncU
RUTLAND
Rutland 7Vlllage
course at Lackland AFB, Texas, he Rutland Civic Center.
wW receive training In the Jet
.------..,..........,__ _ __ ,
Engine Mechanic specialty.
Clark will be earning cre:!its
towards an associate degree
through the Community College d
the Air Force whlle- attending baste
training and other Air Force
technical training schools.

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

Model ML·10

will serve breakfast, lunch and
dinner meals to deer hunters
Monday through Dec. 7 at the
Pagevwe townhouse. ·Proceeds to
the fire department.

Academy HJgh SchooL

Spec. 4 Terry S. Patterson. s:&gt;n of

James B. and Linda L. Patterson of
!il329 Nease Hollow Road, Racine,
has been decorated with the Army

Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary

ro.

BAKER DRIVES -Meigs' Shawn Baker (SS) .
hoop in
this Keith Wlllooup photo durin~ Friday nlghl's TVC eiiCOUIIIer. Meigs '
won to Improve lis record to 2-0. In background Is MilS piQmaker lUck
Wise (11).

Meigs rolls over
Miller five, 7 5-44
HEMLOCK - Meigs placed 12
men In the scoring-oolumn led by
Rick WlseandMikeChanceywith19
each as the Marauders rolled over
Miller 7!&gt;44 here Friday.
The 2-0 Marauders outscored the
Falcons In every quarter, but put the
game on Ice with an 1~edgeduring
the third quarter. That upped a37-23
halftime margin to55-29tobegin the
final eight minutes.
The 6-5 Chancey dominated the
smaller Falcons Inside as the Meigs
senior grabbed a game-high 11
rebounds to go with his 19 points plus
three blocked shots.
Wise, whohad43polntslntheNov.
22 Meigs opener at Athens, again
ruled the backcourt. The 5-7 Meigs
playmaker consistently led the fast
break and played a strong defensive
game.
Rick Nichols led the Falcons with
11 whlle Rusty Craig added 10 in
Miller's season opener. The game
marked the coaching debut of the
Falcons' Greg Gossman.
Despite the one-sided score,

Coach Greg Drummer thought the
Marauders lacked cOnsistency.
"We played well in spurts. We'dplay
good for two minutes, then have a
badtwomlnutes.ltwasagoodgame
to win on the road. Chancey looked
good and hlt the boards well. Brad '
Robinson had a good game and hit
some key baskets In the third period
to get us going," commented the
Meigs coach.
Shawn Baker had his second'
straight 10-point performance,,
again drawing praise from the
Meigs'. coaches. Six-foot-six Lee
Powell added five rebounds whlle
Wise followed with another four.
Muter, outreoounded 34-26, was led
by Robbie Peyton with seven whlle
· Keith Roberts added six.
Meigs made 29 of 58 from the field
ror 50 per cent but could cash In on
only 17 of 271oulshots (63percent).
Miller made 17of52from the field for
33 per cent and 10 of 18 tree throws
tor 55 percent
Continued on C-2

Cleveland opposition 'guessing' Nicklaus early leader
By DAVE RAFFO
UPISpcms Wrller
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UPI) - Uke so many ~ponents of
the Oeveland Browns thls year, the
New York Giants are guessing who
they wtll face at quarterback
Sunday.
Through 12 games, rookie Bernie
Kosar and nine-year veteran Gary
Danielson have each started six.
Danielson Is the present starter of
record, provided his sore shoulder
enables him to play. He Is listed as
questionable.
Giants ooach B111 Parcells
expects Danielson to play In a

meeting of dubs tied for their rushing yards and Earnest Byner
dlvlslon lead, but will try to get his has 728 yards. They both have six.
team ready for Kosar as well.
rushing touchdowns and are on pace
"They use a llttlemoreplayactlon to become the Browns' first pair of
with Danielson, but! don't think they 1,®yard rushers In the same
change their offense appreciably," . season.
Parcells said. "But Danielson Is
"People have brought that to oor
smart and he has ablllty. You don't attention and It's something that
stay In this leaguenineyearsunless we'd both welcome," Mack said.
you can do something."
"That's why we challenge each
For all the fuss about Oeveland's other to get as many yards with the
quarterback, It's the guys who line game plan. Weseewhatthecoaches
up behind them who do most of the have In mind and try to figure out
Browns' offensive damage. Kevin who's going to get the ball more.
Mack, a rookie wlth USFL expe"It's not really a rtvalry, more
rience, Is third In the AFC with 892 that we challenge each other to do a

better job. "
The Giants' and Browns' defenses
- among the NFL's best - wlll be
challenging each other Sunday.
New York, S4 andtledwithDallas In
the NFC East, and Cleveland, 6-6
and tied with Pittsburgh In the AFC
Central, are on top of their divisions
because of defense.
"You don't like to get shown up by
the other team's defense," said
Giants defensive end George Martin, who had three sacks and
returned an Interception 56 yards In
last week's J4.3 victory over St.
Louis for his sixth career TD.

MURRIE'l'TA, CaW. (UPI)- Jack Nicklaus- taking advantage
of a mls8ed tap-in by Arnold Palmer - and 'l'llm Watson each
collected $15,000 Saturday lhrough three holes of the me,ooo Skins

Game.
On tile finlt green, Palmer mlsaed just left with a 15-foot birdie putt
that would have eamed him the prize. The Ill- yeaN!Id then stariled
lhe gallery by Dubbing a one-looter comlng back, and Nicklaus holed
hl8 pull for par and the day's first !ll!ln'1 gut a !lllle careless and jumped a lillie bit," said Palmer. "I
should have ball- marked."
Added Nicklaus: "I didn't expect to make that for lhe WIN."
Watson then evened lhe soore when hls slx·IOOI!lJ!t on No.2 an1ed
In lor a birdie and $15,000.
Fuzzy Zoeller, lbe fourth member d the Skins Game, had a hogey
and two pars thn111gh three holes.
The lblrd annual event is sdJeduled to conchode Sunday with the
back nine, beginning at noon FST.
·

Cincinnati in 'do or die' situation today with Houston squad
By RICK .VAN SANT
Uplted Preoa International
CINCINNATI - Proud to be part of a dlvlslon
stomping out the sports cliche of "must win" games,
the Clncinnatl Bengals and Houston Oilers meet
Sunday In a game that probably neither team must
win to stay In the race.
It really doesn't matter how many Urnes you lose in
the AFC Central, you just can't fall too far behind In a
division race (crawl?) among·four tortoises. No team
In the division has a winning record.
Both Cinclnnatl and Hooston are 5-7 and it's very
(JOIIIIlble that Sunday's loser wlll remain only one
game out of first place. Co-leaders Cleveland and
Pittsburgh, with 6-6 records, face tough ~ponents In
Denver and the New York Giants.
"Everybody ln the division keeps !mocking each
other df," says Houston coach Hugh Campbell. "The
dlvlskln title Is there for anybody to grab."
"Fout~~e!)ds I~ and It can be anybody," echoes

Clnclnnati coach Sam Wyche. "We .dan win It as well
as anyone, but aU we can do right ooW ls worry about
Houston."
And the Ollers give Cincinnati plenty to worry
about. Six weeks ago in Houston the Oilers destroyed
the Ben gals 44-27.
"They're very much Improved over last season and
they've already shown us howgoodtheycanbe," says
Wyche.
The quarterback who directed that gusher, Warren
Moon, won't be starting Sunday, though. Moon sttll
Isn't completely healed from a hlp pointer, so Ollver
Luck wlll be making only his second start In two
years.
But Luck ls coming off the best gamed his llmlted
four- year NFL career. Last Sunday, the 'ex-West
Virginia University star hit 24 of 42 passes for 286
,yards and a toochdown In the Ollers' 37-.li win rNer
San Diego.
Clnclnnatl quarterback Boomer Eslason also
•

suffered a hlp pointer last weekend and was !mocked
out of the 24.Ji loss to Cleveland, but he has healed
enough to start this Sunday.
U Eslason can't get the Bengals rolling!:(; halftime,
though, It's possible he eould be relieved by either
Turk Schonerl or Ken Anderson. Cincinnati hasn't
scored a touchdown In Its last two games and Wyche
Is anxious for "the offense to get back on track."
Likewise, U Luck can't sp~e up the dten-sluggilsh
Houston offense, Campbell says he won't hesitate to
bring on Moon, even U he Isn' t 100 percent mobile.
Campbell is In his second year of rebuilding the
Oilers and admits he's surprised to have a shot at the
division title.
"U s'ClllEOIIe had told me before the season that with
four'games to play we'd only be one game out, I would
have been happy," he said. "We're stU! a vecy young
team ln the beginning stages of rebullding.
"But, as I'm sure the Bengals saw when they
studied fllms of us, we're hustlln~- I've been real

happy with our offensive line lately. I think they're
working much better as a group than earUer In the
season."
The Bengals have changed their defense since
' being blown out by the Oilers Ocl. Wand Campbell
laughs. "We thlnk tt's a dirty u·lck."
In recent weeks, Clnlnnatl has been using a "Bear"
defense (bunching more defenders at the Unc of
scrimmage) and It 's been working more times tharr
not.
Oltenslvely, despite no touchdowns In eight straight
quarters, Wyche hasn't made any wholesale changes.
He believes his offense just' hit a slump In Its last two
games against tough defensive clubs, the Raiders and
Browns.
"I don't think they 'vesabandoned anything,''
observes Campbell. "Their offense was unstoppable
for most teams and they moved the ball on us a lot.
They have an exciting, entertaining offense. They can
run with power and finesse you."

�~

Page-C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

llomeroy-Middleport-Gallipoli&amp;, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

· December 1. 198&amp;;..

Tvc;~dings Trimble nips Federal-Hocking
W L Pts 0p

TEAM

Meigs
2
Warren Local
1
Belpre
1
Trimble
1
VInton County
•. 1
Wellston
0
o
Alexander
Federal-Hocking o
Miller
o
Ne)sohvUle-York o
TVC

o 168

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2

STEWART - Trimble's Tee
Morrtsonhitarofooteratthefourth
quarter buzzer to force an overtime
and his two free throws tn the extra
perkld))elpt'dtheTomcatstoa53-50
win over Federal-Hocking here
Friday.
In other TVC action, Warren
edged Ale~ander 68-&amp;1, VInton
County nipped Nelsonville-York In
overtime 47-46, Belpre held off
Wellston 79-67, and Meigs pounded
Mlller 75-44 (see story).
In Warren's win, the Warriors
placed all five starters In double
ftguresasDougHuffmanledwith15

1fu

126 125
126 119
120 125
105 109
67 79
64 68
50 53
44 75
90 !18

Team

W L Pts Opp
1 0 79 67
Belpre
1 0 75 44
Meigs
1 0 68 64
Warren Local
105350
Trimble
Vinton County
I 0 47 46
Wellston
o 1 67 79
Alexander
0 1 64 68
Federal-Hocking 015053
Nelsonville-York 0 1 46 47
0 1 44 75
Mtller
........
•v'l
results:
,.,.....,
Meigs 75 Miller 44
VInton County 47 NelsonvilleYork 46 (OT)
Trimble 53 Federal-Hocking 50
(OT)

. Belpre 79 Wellston 67
Warren Loca168 Alexander 64
Non-Le~~~Ue Results
Meigs 93 Athens 59
Marietta 61 Warren Local 58
Marietta 52 Belpre 47
'I'Uesday'sgames

• • • ·Nelsonville-York at Meigs
;.. • W list
AI
de
.- • e on at exan r
;:~ : ; Federal-Hocking at Belpre
"'. · • VInton County at Warren Local
: Millerat Trimble
~· ~

• ,, •

Miller committed 28 tumo'vers
and Meigs 19. Meigs was whistled
for 16 fouls and Miller 21.
Junior Huey Eason came ctf the
blinch to score six points for the
Marauders while two-year starter
Roberts added eight tallies lor the
Falcons.
Meigs plays their home opener
Tuesday against Nelsonville-York.
Mlller goes to Trhnble.
Mike Bart rum hit the front end of
a one-and-one foul shot after time
had expired to 11tt the Meigs
reserves to a tlght42-41 wtnoverthe
Miller reserves here Friday.
Coach Mlck Childs' Utile Marau""rs had tocom~-·behlnd to
'-"'
.. .,...
nlp the Utile Falcons, who battled
Meigs to a see-saw fourth period.
After tying the score with nine
seconds left at 41-41, Bartrum was

0 49 47
0 46 42
0 42 41
0 38 36
...,. Wenstoo
o 1 48 55
..,..Alexander
o 1 47 49
:;: N!llsonvllle-York o 1 42 46
~· Miller
0 I 41 42
., :TI-tmble
0 1 36 36
. ; •
Friday's resuls:
;:;' ;Meigs 42 Mlller41
.,., Belpre 55 Wellston 48
:;: :Federal-Hocking 38 Trimble 36
:;:. :Warren Loca149 Alexan&lt;ler 47
;;·; Vinton County 46 Nelsonvlll~
.•,York42
·

buzzer sounded. Bartrum, who led
Meigs In scoring with 12 points, sank
the first Shot lor the wtn.
Scott Wllltams followed wtthelght
points whlle Chris Smith and Don
Dorst added six each for the
winners. Freslunan Tom Dutlelled
Mlller with 16 points while Jim
Dishon added 10. ·
·
Meigs was 12 ci 23 at the foulllne
while committing 23 fouls. Miller
made 15 or 25 at the charity stripe
and was called for ro fouls.

MJIIer ,.................... .... 8 15

r·

'

'"

6 15

42

Jm!I'RYJIS

Ml!IG8 (42) - Wllllarnl ~8, Bartrum
f.f-12, S,ruth 3-0-6, Dorst 1+l;, llmthers 1-H,

Meltm 2-1-5, Snyder 0.0.0, Tracey 0-1-L
rorALS1~&gt;~

MILLER (41) -C. Dutlo11-~~ Edwar~
1-6-8. Dishon :H-1!, T. Dutlel7-2-lli, Newman
1-0-2, Humphrey 0-0-ll 'l'OI'AL811o1Hl.
IIJquWn:
Meigs ................. ...... .... 15 5 11 11 42
MJIIer ........................... 9 9 () Ll 41

Rock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored granites.
Whatever •your requirements may be, complete satisfaction -is assUred
llith Rock of A,es.
MON., TUES., JIIUI. &amp; Fill. 9 A.M. TIL 4:30

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS

MONUMENTS
·
Gallipolis, OH .

352 Third Ave.

PH. 446-2327

•

BoX scores:
vARSD'Y
IIIEIGS 171) -Wise
8-~19 . Roblnsoo 148,

Chanaoy !H-19, BakB" U-10, L. Powen 1-1-J.
Kttch.,.0-2·2, KennedyQ-1-1. EasonJ-0.6. King
1.().2, S. 1'11ovell o-2-2. BeckB" ~ MUS88'
1.0.2. Howard o-1-1. 'lUI'ALII 5-17·75.
MILLER 141) - Ro-.. 3-2-8, Harvey
~.
Crawl:lr&lt;l 1-0-2. Craig 4-2-10, Tlllrrpson
~~~~~-m
McLean 1-0-2. Tok11-0-l rorALS 17-11-tt
~,~

..".
~·''

[!!!!J.. ..
.

'

'

'

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t'Yied. ~
IUPfeiMfy lndiYicNctl, ~It
consol-e will odd con-

For those times that you can't foresee the
future . ..

URGENT
CARE CENTER

m.

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Weekends &amp; Holidays
1:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.

_
_
where they reside, and certified
disabled veterans who are exempt
frompurchaslngadeerpermitmust
attach a tag IEarlngthelrnameand
address andthe dateand time kUled
1o the dead deer where It falls. The
tag may IE made of any material
but the Information written on U
must be legible. A tag should be
prepared before going Into tl)e field
andthehuntershouldhaveastrong
ptece of string or wire ready for
attachtngtttothedeer.
All deer must IE taken to an
official deer checking station for
Inspection and final tagging. Only

Coll~ol

'"""'l

whh lemo..
leatur• (Mod.!

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lonR·Iife dependability.

40 MONTH

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RIDENOUR-S ·
985-3307

.~

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HIGH EFFICIENCY
GAS .FURNACE

MGM FARM CITY, INC. Ms., I

•-t~J:.- East Main St.

=...•,:r

614.99 2. 2111

P-ray, OH.

:r..-i!f~FP

~

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t•unu~

mo.• lo "-1\' olll\1
roll&lt;t· hltmo.• Arnt.on. ~ · ~ nun\tol.'l' " "''d\ lln "''" .m..t ~
1M' r.JfT\' ~·""'' Jlk•n I NJo.~•·• • '''"' ,, o'"'J••n .. , t ' " '
,..., ' " " " 110.1r In•· t-.11 .on.! .~.a· n

';;

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I

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l~.'fn-mt..f , 1\ llti• ·J Nil !h.ll loll' ~" 'l\'

:·
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0

0

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••

I depart
promO!ment
ions clai
ming so-called
I
1
storeswith ad&gt;and
1·
'di..:ounts"
w
h&gt;ch
are
so
eKaggerated
I
1

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I
Wast hemerchandiseever reallysold II

II

1•• 00 SUNDAY
·
DECEMBER 1

COMPLETE AUTO GLASS
FREE MOBILE SERVICE
SEE US FOR ALL S

OF GALLIPOLIS
For further details call 446·9416,
We'll 'be happy to answer any questions on this in·
novatlwe ldta In gas heating.
.

"regular" or "fonner" or

"reference" price quoted?
Or,was the merchandise

' CHISTII
:;
•
•

.'.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

I

I legit•mat ediscounts ... wearcagainst

I

-

985-3308

I deceptive pricing. You owe 11 to
I yourself to shop arou ndand compare I

I!~~~~Y JEWELE~,~d~£:1

I quality and service as welt as price. I

ANTIFREEZE/

COOLANT
SALE PRICE

_.jjal\
iiJTEIIIY.
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399

5

....~
-.- ...

LIMIT 4AT
SALE PRICE

SOMO. UPT0440*CCA .... 34 .89
60MO. UPT0530*CCA ..... 39.89
IIEWI HIGII TICII
70MO. UPT0700'CCA ..... 59.89

---·-·-·
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WITH!XCHAHG£

PIRGALLON

AffiRMfG .
REBATE WI

0.Kendall

IKRACOI
NO . lGl-10 1

MOTOIOIL
IOW-30, IOW-40

• !OWAmPSI
CHANN!L
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• 5I'!AKfR FADEII
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• AUTO STOP SYSTEM

fQUALIZ!A

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CHANNEL
• COMPACT DESIGN

JET-SPlAY

AC·DELCO

OIIGINAL EQUIPMENT
FilE liNG SPAll PLUGS

CAR!IURETOR AND
CHOKE CLEANER

35,000 BTU
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.J~

NON·RESISTOR

1984 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED

GAUGE HEAlll

99

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DIYGAS

) 't

: 4 door , V·8, tilt wheel. cruise control. AM·FM stereo , rear win·
: dow defroster, power locks, power- windows, power driver's
~ seat , dual remote mirrors, full vinyl top, wire wheel&amp; and only
•27,000 miles! Beautiful Burgundy Auto! Check The Book I
•

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PIJROtASI Of
2 GALLONS

QT.

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'CCA •COLD WNKIHG AM PI

YOUICHOIQI

JACK ROUSH SALE PRICE

.:J.;;,;·I)'

~

3

FOR

$1

599

SGALLON
IIIOSENE
CAN

11&gt;. wn

'10,800

~ $12,125

WASHER/SOLVENT

1984 BUICK
RIVIERA

1985 CHRYSLER
5th AVENUE
door.' V-8, till, cruise, AM·
FM stereo, power windows~

••

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power locks, power seat. rear

window defog, Landau top,
wire wheels. and 011ty 16,000

r;~·:s'
Price

.

•12 875
I

Front wheel drive, V-8, air ,
AM -FM stereo, power windows, power locks, power

driver's seat, rear window

defog, tilt, cruise, wire
wheels. Super Sharp!
.
Book Price
Our Prin

13 500 '12,500

5

Open Sunday 1 p.m. To 5 p.m.

IU-236

IU-'2 U

PIESTONE SUPER FLUSH
OR SUPEI SEALER

STAI!TING FLUID OR

• , 2'
• 10 GA.

29

DE·ICER WITH SCRAPER

99

TOP
YOUR
CHOICE I

PROTECTS
T0·20'
lflOW
ZERO

SALE

1.99

675-5045

Point Pleasant

YOUR
I

.- Jack Roush Motor Car, Inc.
11 V'11nd Street

I

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I fictit.iously priced.to lure )'(\U into
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There&lt;noth~ngwrong w•th

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BENNm'S ENVIRONMENTAL
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~

WIJ
The
public
is
being
bombarded by I
1
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I

Are they rt:a lly true discounts ?

1160 SE.COND AVE.

89

CHESTER

And it's available in the area, only from:

'V '• '

I

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446-4423

UP TO 370* CCA

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
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Second Ave.
Gallipolis

~
· .,

AUTO
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Krlzaj edged second-placeltalian
Robert Ertacher, winner of the
Wednesday giant slalom, by :B100ths of a second.

MAINTENANCE FREE
BAmiiES

Colubmbia Gas Co.

.

SES'IRIERE, Italy (UP!) BhoojanndedKrflzaj of Yugoslavia reu
rom a poor morning start
Friday to win the men's slalom at
the •ld World.Serles.

41\0'
"Off"••• I
u ·,o
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1
I "Off"of~· ....a""t"?.· ~ ·
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i •

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24

llllP YOU SIUCT 11IIIIGIIT lAnDY fOI TOUI WI
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'

pd . up ,,

OVEN SALE

ATHENS - Athens ootscored leading the Bulldog triumph while Fa irland.
Wheelersburg 12·2 In the third Eddie Scott's 17 points and 18
Score by quarters:
quarter Friday night enroute to a rebounds topped the Pirates, now Wheelers burg 14 16 2 15 47
54-47 non-league victory at Athens ()-1,
Athens.. __ .. .. .. 23 10 12 9 54
high school.
The Bulldogs shot 44.7 percent m
The teams were locked Into a 7· 7 21 of 47, made 12 of frre throws, 6-~:,~~:r.o-t~•bBI~~i'io:~.,::
tie In the first period IEfore AHS and snagged 33 rebounds.
Raso i-0-2; AndyRase2-1-5; Randy Hall 2if4;
1'-'2: David N&lt;'W sorre tn1 ;
emerged on top of a 23-14 lead. The
Wheelersburg finished with 32 Bill
Thack&lt;r
Roach
Cray 1·0.2.
TfJI'M..S lf.Nl'.
Bulldogs then posted quarter scores percent on 19 of 59, conve-ted nine
1\THENS IHI - T.J. Lyons ~~ 10: Thaden
of 33-ll and 45-32 In running their r1 17 ai the nne. and claimed 33 3-0-6;
B"""t 2M:
Man Jordan HU: Tlm Ada ms
Steve Maccombs 4·6-14. 'J"'rALS
2
k
to
1
season mar
··
rebounds.
21- ~M.
Steve Maccombs pipped ·In 14
The Pirates wffit alter their ftrst . . - - - - - - - - - - points and grabbed 17 rebounds In season victory Saturday night at r••••-•••••••••-,
- - - - - - - Kriza
. claims title - - - - - - - I

r-r;;;;.;;,;~;;;;;;::::;;;;:~===========-r======----

,~·~

--------MICROWAVE

Ms.,

Athens defeats Wheelersburg, 5447

:ATHENS - Ohio's 1985 deer gun
Protector or call HOO·POACHER.
Sllason opens Dec. 2 and extends
In many areas, Illegal activities
have posed a threat to Inhabited
tl!rough Dec. 7. Deer may be hunted
dweltin=
tn rural areas.
only with a shotgun using a single
b..
Omvlctlon
under the shining law
bcill or rUled slug, or with a single
Is
a
third
degreemlsdemeanorwtth
sttot mll2Zieloadlng rlfie of .38
callber or larger.
a maximum nne of fiOO and or m
- :Hunting hours are 7 a .m. 1o 5: :W
days In jaU.
p,ln. Thellmlt lsonedeerperhunter
Hunting deer during any of the
~r llcense year (Sept. 1 through
deer gun seasons, Including the
Aug. 31) regardless of method of
Januacy statewide primitive weapons season and the primitive
take. Deer hunters are required to
h4ve a hUnting license and a deer
weapons season on three special
areas, 1s unlawful unless the hunler
~rmlt when hunting deer on lands
Continued on C-4
other than their own. Dogs shall not
be used to hunt deer and handguns
tn;IY not be ·carried while hunting the person who kills the deer ts
permitted to transpport that deer to
deer.
·
beer Zone 2 hunters may take a thechecl&lt;tngstatlontorpermanent
II
PJ
b\jck only (5 ln. antler minimum) taggin g. Dee rmust be tagged lnthe
u'!less hunting with an anterless county where killed or In an
permit In those counties where adjacent county in the same deer
zone.
ariterless permits were Issued.
lrglnla
All hunters should refer to
:Ibose cpuntles o! Wlld111e District
I\1 which fall within the deer Zone 2 Publication 85, "1985 Hunting and
1
are Pike, Scioto and Lawrence. Of Trapping Regulations," and Publl·
86
1985
PHONE
446-6225
these wuntles, anterless pennlts cation • .''
Ohio Deer Hunting
1115 EASTERN AVE.
were Issued for Pike and Lawrence Law Digest and Checking Stations'
~ntles only.
for additional
GALUPOLIS. OHIO
:: Those hunters seeking deer tn
~r Zone 4 may harvest a deer of
All persons are reminded c1 the I
«i\ther sex.
"no shining'' law which became ~
~ Wildlife District IV wuntles effective Aug. 31, 1976.
klcaled within deer Zone 4 are
Ohio Revise&lt;! Code 1533.161 pro~hocton, ' Belmont, Guernsey, hibits the use of a·spotlight or any
Musklngum, Noble, Monroe, Wa- artificial light Including headlights
!#llngton, Morgan, Perry, Hocking, !rom any vehicle at anytime for the
1iJiens, Meigs, Vinton and Gallla.
purpose of locating wild animals. In
;:All hunters aer reminded that addition, It Is Illegal to use an
eyery hunter who kills a deer In Ohio artificial light while having a
'!'list attach a temporary tag to the hunting device In a vehicle.
qead deer at the place where It falls.
Wildlife officers have been and
li'j)r those hunters purchasing a deer will be pat:ro!Hng areas where
t$g, a temporary tag Is furnished poaching Is a continuing problem
\f.ith the regular deer hunting iutd airplanes are IE!ng used for
p'i\rmit. Tlte temporary tagmust rot surveillance.
~ detached from the deer hunting
Anyooe seeing · lights beamed
l!ennlt untll a deer Is killed.
from a vehicle near buildings or Into .
~Landowners, ·their chlldren, te- !ann fields or woods should tmm~
managers hunting on lands dlatety contact a State Game

It , ltichlyt"~iMd I'KIIfl flnlth . Alto

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

446-5287

Hunting rules for five day
deer season Dec. 2 thru 7

o~l'ld

OWIIIGW.

The Sunday limes-Sentinel Page C·3

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, W.Va.

~~1\1~~:,"

S6502P
. . , . Mouty to

December 1, 1985

.NeeJ So•ething
Eleetrl cal?
west v· . .
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:%; !;&amp;18, Shepberd 7-2-16, Pattl!fSCIII 4-0-8,
• ~ 2-5-9, Meadows 1-1-3. M. Panmoo
.,; -t-0-2. 'l'OI'ALII 11-1MI.
-. OM BILL ($1) - Hale 8-0-16. Faye!48.
:! WaBs 4-1-9, Crablrt'&lt; 2.()4, Brown Q-2-2.' Bigs
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In Trimble's wtn, Chris Karnes
added to Morrison's game-high 17
points with 10 markers. Keith
Barnhart led the Lancers wtth 21
while Jay Ethridge added L'l.
Belpre led only 56-53 going Into the
llnal period after Wellston's Shawn
Jenkins put In four straight baskets,
but the Eagles warmed up wtth ·23
fourth perkld pointS.
Chris Newbeny put 1n 29 points to
lead Belpre while Brian Greene and
Roger White added 16 each. Scott
Bragg led the Rockets with 18 while
Jenkins added 12.

.
~fo;uled;;;;;;ne;ar;;;th;e;hoo;;;;p;;;as;the;;;;;finai;;;;;;;;Metss;;;;--;--·;--·;--·;

1
1
1
1

....

i.

M e~gs
• ..·-------:-------------Continued !rom C-1

TVCRESERVES
;,; 'lEarn
W L Pts Opp II
0:,: flelpre
1 0 55 48
""* Warren Local
..-. VJnton County
t-. Mel&amp;!;
t:.l Federai-Hocklng

.while Kenny Alkire had 14, Scott
~h 13, and Joe Anderson and
BrtanRauchlleach. JayMartlnled
Alexander with 18 while Joe
McClain and Brian Wilson had 14
each to leild the Spartans.
Vinton County trailed most of the
fourth period, but rallied to take the
lead for good In the.flnalmlnute. The
Buckeyes had a 34-.'lllead going Into
the final stanza, but were outscored
17-12 by the VIkings. Randy Mace
ledV!ntonCountywtth 17 and Mark
Saunderswtth14. Dennis Howell led
N·Y with 15 and Chuck Walters
added 11.

t •.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA -PH. 446-9335

�"

,,..

.

·Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

SEO.standings
(ALLGMWI)

D~mber

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1, 1985-

DeSales, Newark earn Class AA and A crowns
.
without the seJVIces of 6-foot-2

TEAM ........ ..... W L Pis Opp
Marietta .. .. .. ...... ....2 0 113 105
Northwest .. .... ... ... 2 0 113 94
Greenfield .......... .. 1 0 46 26
Logan ...... .... .. ... ... 1 0 71 49
Waverly ..... .. ..... ... 1 0 72 69
Southern .. .... ... ..... 1 o 65 60
i\.thms .. ............... .2 1 176 198
RockHlll .. ........ .. .. O 1 53 74
Wheelersbu rg ... .... o 1 47 54
Gallipolls .. ... ... ...... o o o o
Portsmouth '..... .. .. . 0 0
Jackson ....... ........ o o o o
Pt. Pleasant. ..... .... O o _o o
Nov. 22 resu11s:
Meigs 93Athens 59
Northwest 64 Portsmouth ND 47
Marietta 6161 Warren Local 58
NDY. 23 n!SI!IIs:
Athens 63 VInton County 58
Greentleld46PaintValley:!i
waverly 72 Chillicothe 69

.

o o

Localhowling

satdTipton , "butltcame downto~

turnovers.
•
"We didn't k:lstbecauseofalack oC
effort," added Tipton, "rut alack of.,
execution."
~
Orrvllle, which lost to Columbus "
ReadY Jn the Division 4 ftnals two ·'.
years ago, finished at 12-2 with the ~
loss.
·

•

Athens at Gallipolis
Marietta at Logan
Jackson, open
Oak Hlll at Southern
Washington CHat Greenfteld
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Northwest at Lucasville
South Point at Russell
Portsmouth at Greenup
Minford at Wheelersburg

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Dec. 7pmes:
Chesapeake at Gallipolis
Greenfield at Little Miami
Jackson at Wheelersburg
Logan at WUmlngton
Rock HW at Peebles

PUot did not deteet
any trouble, feds say
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP!) - An
Iowa State University pilot did not
detect any trouble aboard his plane
untn 28 seconds before It crashed
Monday, kUling all seven aboard,
according to federal Investigators.
The Federal Aviation Administration Friday released tapes and
transcripts of the final conversation
betwEen pilot Burton Watkins and
Des Moines alr traffic controllers
before the plane - carrying
members and coaches !i the Iowa
State women's CfOSS-(Xlllnlly team
-crashed Jn a residential netghborlw:Jod on Des Moines' west side.

1985 deer season will begin
in Buckeye State on Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Monday marks
the opening of the 1985 deer gun
. season In Ohio. Ohio's deer population continues to grow. The Buck· ·
eye State has a strong and healt]IY
herd numbering over 125,000
animals.
Last year 56,438 deer were taken
during the W!l!k long shotgun
season. The top rountles were
Musklngum, 3,Jl2; Coshocton,
3,077; Athens, 3,017 and Gue-nsey,
·2,1&gt;l8. These counties can most
likely be expected to produce the
highest harvest for the 1985 season.
Last years flgureslndude anterless
deer which were taken during the
shotgun season. .
Ohio permits the use of shotguns,
ftrlng one single ball cr rtlled slug,
or single shot muzzleloaders of' .:I!
caliber or larger t&gt;r deer hunting.
Shotguns are very etlectlve close
range weapons lor deer. Most deer
are usually taken at a rang~&gt; 11100
yards or less In the Buckeye State.
This makes a ·shotgun loaded with
rifled slugs very appropriate as
their Effective range would he
around the 100 yard mark.
Hunting hours are 7:00 a.m. to

!llcGulres. 581 by K. Pancake waj.l~~'',~~:
. lorTrl~ounly . tl9by8. Ward was
lor McGulres.

5: Jl p.m . and hunter orange Is
required Jn the form of a bat, vest,
or Jacket. ·
l'!lg racks have becomesynonomous with Ohio. Our ruckeye !Ig
rucks have drawn national attention. Most national hunting magazines have at one time cr another
run articles about Ohio's big rucks .
Ohio even has It's CMTil "big bucks"
club.
The southeastern hill SECtion of
the state contains most 11 the deer.
Much hunting Is done on private
property. Remember to g~&gt;l permls·
ston !rom the landowner before
hunting. Once permission Is
granted he sure to respect his
property so you wlll be welcome to
return again.
The Wayne National Forest Is
located In southeastern Ohio and
contains thousands ri acres d
prime deer habitat. Coal companIes and timber outfits also have
respectable amounts of land where
bunting privileges will be granted
Just for the asking.
Gauta county lies within deer
Zone 4 where anterless deer are
legal lor '&amp;5.

--···

. : IIII)NIMY NII'EOWLS

SKYUNE JANES

Teom
Pto.
-ell's Super Vatu ..................... ......... Ill
Phamlacy North .................... ...... ...... ... oo
Whaley's Used Cars ........................... ... 51
Robbins &amp; Myers ............................, .. ... Ill
Caseys... .... ........... ... ........ ............. ...... .48
Miers Trucking &amp; Exc .. .. ...................... !!
Gallery !fa~ Ans ................ &gt;................. 42
J &amp; T Suppliers ............................. ........ 31

Redman Inn ........... ......... ........... ........ ..28
. Ind. Game - Laurie Betzlng, II~
Margaret Neel, 180: Sandy Folmer, t79. 1nd.

Series - Debbie Thomas, 489; Sandy Folmer,
448; Sarah Johnsm, 443. Team Game Je!ters Trucking i&lt;E=vaUng, tm; Powell's
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Team Series - Powell's Super Valu, lBZJ;
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general ooe of promoting good
fellowship and sportsmanship
among Ohlo'sdeer hunters.
Perhaps the best criterion of the
relative stzeofOhlo deer is the large
number which havequallfled for the
North American Big Game Awards
Program record hook, the blhle c1
big game hunters. Presently there
are 17 typical and 13 non-typical
trophies listed in the record hook.
This total ranks Ohio high among
the states.
Many states have copied the Big
Bucks Club system to achieve the
same results which Ohio has
enJoyed. The Buckeye Big Bucks
CLub has worked In Ohio as Is shown
by the 11ne trophy deer which are
brought to recognition each year;

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Hunting..._______ ___:c;.;.;no;;;;;tm;;;;u;;;:ed.::.trom=c"-'~'--------Is vlslbly wearing a ha~ cap, vest or est in thesportsmenafleld,aswellas
Jacket.thattscolored llmterorange. the family at home.
The emergency radio service Is
~ccessfUI hunters who are assist·
1ng other hunters are required to being provided with the oooperatton
properly display their hunting 11 the readioslationsandothernews
license and carry their deer permit media throughout Ohio Including
WMPO In Middleport, 1400 AM and
with them.
92.0FM.
'
~ccessfUI hunters are prohibited
The radio stations wUI broadcast
from carrying any eype !i hunting
lmplemellt while assisting other the emergency message during
afterooon news broadcasts !rom
!lmters.
The use of permanent type tree Dec. 2 through Dec. 7.
Should you be lruntlng ln Ohio, the
stands em public hunting areas Is
prohibited. Landowner's written following emergency number wlll
permission Is required to use such apply, (614) 949-2211.
Ohio's unique and original Buck·
stands em private property.
Obtain the landowner's written eye J.3tg Bucks Oub was started Jn
permission and respect private 195~ 'tn bring more trophy quality
property when hunting. By obseJV- deer heads to p!blic attention.
lit was founded by Merrill C.
lng the law and hunting safety, Ol)lo
GllfUian,
Ohio Department c1 Natu·
hunters should have a rewarding
raJ
Resources
writer and fonner
and pleasant hunting trip.
Three evenly spaced shots are a deer biologist for the Division of
distress signal. The ri!ply Is two well WUdUfe, after one year of scoring
experience. The formal organizaspaced shots.
As a seiVIce to the sportsmen d tion was completed after the nrst
Ohio during the deergunseason, the Big Buck award dinner Jn Columoos
Ohio Department ot Natural Re- In Febroary 1958.
PuqJOSes of the ocgantzatlon are
sources, Division of Wildlife, Is
providing an emergency contact to Increase appreciation of the
service for hunters away from eastern white-tailed deer In Ohio, to
encourage trophy hunting by Ohio
home.
With approximately 200,000 hun· hunters, to establish and maintain a
ters afield during the deer gun permanent ra:ord of Oblo trophy
season and numerous calls of deer, and to foster sound manageemergencies at rome, the DiVIsion ment c1 the Ohio deer herd. To these
of Wildlife expresses special Inter- objectives mlght be added the

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Tri-Counly Sports won eight points

!,; ••

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C.5

.=:--B-R-OA
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"They played bettertllan wedld," ;

=:..~··::: ::::::: :: ::::::::: :::::::::::1: ~ ~~~43~0~Stc~ond~~Av~e~.~~~· ~44~6~-~01~4~0~==~~G=a=lli~po~li~s,.~OH:.~

Dec.lpmes:

~

L

•

,,•

w. Va.

•

:::::::::

Wildlife news

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

.

Pusateri, "so we had to go 'to the
outside."
That meant going away from
Jamey Cua, normally Pusateri's
top running back, andgtvJngtheball
to Haynes, wbowaslnJuredthestxth
game oftheseasonandplayedonly
defense after that.
OrJVllle's Mo Tipton, whose
teams now have lost in a championship game two of the past three

ByGENECADDES
de!ense the final nve games of the
UPISports WrMer 2~pouod fullback Matt Closson; ' regular season, roshedfor149 yards
COLUMBUS.Oblo(UP)) - Does
"rile way we played.'' said toleadtheway.
Newark Catholic Coach J.D. Gra- Graham. "I don't feel their great
Haynes scored the nrst DeSales
ham have the latest high school running back would have been a . IDona 16-yard run and set up the
football dynasty Jn Ohio? Based oo lactor what9:leller."
second with a 40- yard scalt1ll'r to
Friday'sperlonnancebytheGreen
Graham, who had to' replace 20 theOrJVWetwo. ·
Wave Jn theJJna ls ol the Division 5 starters !rom last year's champion"The kids told me they (Orrville)
state high school playoffs, the ship team, satdthekeytothegame were Uylng to take away the
answer whould bearesoundlngyes. was a 52-yard passearlyinthethlrd middle," said DeSales Coach Tony
The Irish, behind the passing of quarter from Kubik to Danker Bill
sentorquarterbackAndy Kublkand Franks,whocaughttheballafterlt
a smothering defense, blanked lxlunced off the hands of Delphos
prevtously unbea tenDelphosJeffer- defender Jay DeWitt.
MONDAY NIGHT ME'I'S
HANIJICAP I&amp;GUE
son, 19-0, lor their second collS€CuThat set up a one-yard TD run by
Slaa.a.plor
tlve small school slate title and Kubik that gave the Green Wave a
November •• 1181
Team
WL
fourth overall.
12-0 lead.
Friday's first game In Ohio
The Irish tacked onanotherTD Jn NapperTrucklng ...............................73 31
Sparkle Supply ... .. .. .. .........................'KI 31
Stadium saw Columbus DeSales the ftnal period OJ) a 00- yard drive,
Jenkins Concrete ........... .. ..................63 41
Toler lrouranoe ,.,, ............................00 ~ ·
complete a 14·0 season·wtth a 21-13 with Joe Bell scoring from the two.
Firestone ................... .... ..................00 &gt;11
wJn over Orrvllle in the Division 3
Delphos'onlyscoringopportunlty G&amp;J Auto Parts ............ .. .................5&amp; 4
title game.
'came on its first possession, when
: :: :::::::~:
NO\', :116 resulls:
For Newark, which fought off an DeWitt raced61yardstotheNewark ~-g~;~~;~:::::::::
Jericho Inn .................. .. ...............54 Ill
Soothern 65 Eastern 60
early• scoring threat by Jefferson Catholic ftve yard line. But three
Mason Furnlture ....... .. ......... .. ...... .... !illl
Northwest 49 Oay 47
and then completely stymied the plays lost the Wildcats three yards
=~= ~~ :
Marietta 52 Belpre 47
WUdcats the rest olthe way, the wJn and Blll Evans of the Irish blocked a
was the 14th ln a rowtblsseasonand 21-yard field goal attempt.
'
Green 73Rock Hill 54
Jenkins Concrete and People's Bank tied
NDY. %'/result:
27th overall.
"If we could have gotten that first
J.tth foor points apiece. High boWler lor
Logan 71 Nelsonvllle-York 44
"I didn't feel we could shut them one," said Jefferson Coach Kevin
Jenkins was R. Spence wlth!!64.J . Wade with
512 was high tx...Jer fa People's Bank.
Nov. 2flresulls:
out," said Graham, "but 11'\Y Fell, "things might have been
'
Sparl&lt;le Supply won eight points from
Gallipolis at Southern, ppnd, reset assistants did a great Job of different. We played hard, but made
Carroll Norm Dodge. R. Sextcxt' with !76 was
high roller lor Sparkle. R, Wllllamsm wlth!140
: feb. g
preparing us for them."
some crucial mlstakesoffensively."
was liglt bowler lor Carroll f&lt;on1s.
.Athens 54 Wheelersburg 47
Delphos, which finished with a
Delphos quarterback Scot Boggs
Flrestooewon six JDints from.Cen,tral Trust
Raceland at Rock HOI, ppnd, reset . 13-1 record, twlceduringthereg)Jlar had i'our passes lntercept'ed; two !i
Bank 531 by H. Clatw«thy wu ti(lhscorefor
Flre6Cooe. 525 byC. Longwasliglt lorCentral
Dec. l4
seasonhadscored80ormorepoints them setting up Ne wark
Trust.
Dec. 3 games:
in a game.
touchdowns.
.
Tolt'l' Insurance and Masm F~ture spilt
wtth four points each. Toler..s IIIah bowler
, Southern at Kyger Creek
In Jefferson's defense, however,
For DeSales, · Paul Haynes, a
was J . Tyree with 003. K. White With~.,
- lilorthwest at Rock Hill
the Wildcats were forced to play junior tailback who played only
high sarer fer Masoo.
•·
1\lcQe Lodge l"'t elghJ points to Jerlcllo
Portsmouth at Chllllcothe
Inn. High llOwler t&gt;r Jerl&lt;ho was M.Grate
Minford at Jackson
with 632. '!'he blind w1111iglt with m ror 111e

_{_December 1 , 1985

1999

UPPER
ROUTE 7
KANAUGA
NEXT TO
RIVER FRONT HONDA
••

�December 1, 1985

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

2

North Carolina, Kansas and
Duke continue winning ways
- 2-of- 15 - and flnl$ed with 5
points.
For Duke, 4-0, Dawkins scored 20
points while David Hender9Jn had
16 and Mark Alarie 15. The Blue
Devtls played without injured
center Jay Btlas; Sbelton Jones
grabbed 13 rebounds for the
Redmen, 2-1.
Bercy, despite frequent h1ple
coverage, shot 154-21, finishing
With a career-hlgh and half his
team's total points. He did miss
4-of-5 free . throws In the last 6';!1
minutes.
In the Top 20, No. JNorthCarottna
downed Missouri 84-63, No. 6
Syracuse lipped Southern Cal
102-Q!, :-lo. J8 Nevada-Las Vegas
dropped Villanova 6149 and No. 20
UCLA routed St. Macy's (Calli.!
91-62.
At Anchorage, Alaska , Brad
Daugherty hit for 22 points to lead
North Carottna In the qMintng round
of the Great Alaska Shootout. Dan
Bingl!nhelmer of Missouri had 21
points. The Tarheels, 3-0, met
Purdue Saturday.
At Syracuse, N.Y ., Wendell Alexls
scored 22 points and Rafel Addison

By FRED LIEF
UPJ Sporis Writer

In New York's garment district
• Friday night , No.4 Kansas and No.5
: Duke proved they are cut from some
: especially fine material.
' Semifinals of the preseason
National Invitation Tournament at
Madison Square Garden hlgiJ]Ighted college basketball's first tuU
weekend of tournament activity.
The Jayhawks defeated No. 10
Louisville &amp;3-78 behind 25 points by
Calvin Thompson and 20 by Ron
Kellogg, and the Blue DevtlsbeatSt.
John's 71-70 on a jumper by
All-America Johnny Dawkins with
21 seconds left, offsetting a 35-polnt
assault by Walter Berry.
Duke meets Kansas for the
ehampionsh!p Sunday night.
The Jayhawks, 3-0, learned they
could handle Louisville's pressure
defense. Cedric Hunter ran the point
and iln!shed with 9 assists, and 7foot-1 Greg Dreiling grabbed 11
rebou nds.
Louisville, 2-1, received 18 points
each from Billy Thompson and
freshman Pervls Ellison. Star
guard Mllt Wagner shot dreadfully

;Rio drops 69-68 tilt
mazoo IB-55 and Malone edged
Findlay 8!-77 at the Heidelberg
Tournament; Marietta edged Wilmington 71-75 in overtime and
Walsh squeezed by Georgetown
(Ky.) 73-72 In the Wilmington
Tournament.

By Unttro Press lnlemallonal

Heidelberg, Musklngum and
Baldwin Wallace stood a pretty good
chance of winning their own
tournaments last night.
Those three teams each won
first-round games Friday night to

·~:~:lone

~· Friday's high school
! basketball

20 for the Orangemen, 3-0. USC, 1-2,
committed 25 turnovers and was
sparked by freshman TomLewls'16
points.
At Anchorage, Alaska, Freddie
Banks scored 19 points to carey
UNLV, 3-0, past the defending
NCAA champs In the Great Alaska
Shootout. Harold Pressley led
VU!anova, 2-2, with 16 points.
Saturday, UNLV played Arizona.
At Los Angeles, Reggie Mlller
provided :1! points on 12-of-17
shooting as UCLA regrouped after
its opening loss to North Carolina.
Paul Robertson led St. Mary's, 3-1,
with 15 points.

Meet team night
held by boosters

loll

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CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE- WE CARRY OUR O~N ACCOUNTS

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Please send me FREE booklets showing memorials
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GAlLIA COUNJY DISPLAY)' AID
JAMES 0. BUSH, MANAGER
PHONE 388·8603

POMEROY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNIY YAID NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
LEO L VAUGHAN, MGR.

'-...... _

EYECARE PLUS EYEWEAR
Dr. Robert Terry. Optometrist

548 Jeckson'Pb. Gallipolis, 614-448-1780
Mon. 111 Fri . 9 -6: Tu01. Ill Thurs. 9-7:30: Sat . 9-3: Closed Wed.

~
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tux light sensiUvity

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f'liday'IIIW.
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Arcltb:Jid ,Sl, SUyker 49
Bryan 40, Paulding 28
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El'unswltk 40
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G-Metric Radial

• Wh ite balance

• 5-turictlon wired remote

~i~~~~~~s'~:,:~:

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0

P155/00R12

Blackwdll

drtve

With old ti re

$4995

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Unoque cnsscross
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supenor trac110n
• Double steel belts
help protect
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and road haza rds
• Long term m11eage

Pt55/80R I3
BJackwall

capabri1 IY

With old lire .

• Complete ran ge of SIZC,s for
u S cars an cl 1mports

ao.tooll
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992-6910

CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE

Whitewall
Size

12:30-5:30

Tiempo

1st 20 CUSTOMERS GET A
FREE COOKBOOK VALUED AT $3.00

'32'5

Radial
P155 /80A13
Whitewall

W!lh Old 11/e

: AMBROSIA MERCHANS CHOCOLATE

PI 85/BOR1 3
P185/75ft14
P195/75R14
P205/75ft14
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/75R1 5
P23li/75ft15
~

$2995

.

978-13

Power

$139

Streak II

'3J60
A78·13
Wh1fewal!

H78 ·15

With old tire

EagleST
Radial

31 .00
34.00
36.00
36.00
38.00
40.00
42.00
44.00

078-14
E78·14
F78·14
G78-14
G78 ·15
l18·15

B78-13
C78-l4
078-14
E78-l4
F78-14
G78 -14
G78-15
H78-15
l78-15

Mud &amp; Snow
Polyester

41.95
45 .95
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56.95
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wtoH..otl

WE ARE YOUR CANDYMAKING HEADQUARTERS

• 82 channel tuner
• Channel up/down
• 5 function wired remote
• One toucP'l record with 4 hour standby
• Scan, still, frame advance, slow motion (Sl.Pt
• Picture sharpness control

Now you'll save on La-Z-aoy• chairs,
famous lor super comfort. These handsome
stytes rock and recline, so you can relax two
waysl Quality crafted to enjoy lor years.

• 4uto tewlnd
• Counter With memory

Model RLE368PE
• Broadcast stereo ready
• Dark·Ute 100 picture tube
• E...t900 Superset chaaalt with comb filter
• A.utomatlc COlor Circuitry
• Random access digital tuning with bi-directional
programmable soan
• 152 channel capability
• 17 pushbutton IR remote control with Ouk:k VIew
• • willa pot channel at 1% THO hvm 1DOH\2CIIcHz
• Buill·ln stereo decoder and speaker system
• Treble, bass, balance controls
• Expanded audio switch
• Audio ou tput jack
• Room light moni tor
• Compact Traditional Pecan veneer cabinet on
concealed castors

If you can't forget
last winter, don't
forget to insulate.

_.SALE $399
-

SYLVANIA 25" DIAGONAL SUPERSET

995

Sale
Price .

32 .95
29.96
29.95
39 .95
41 .96
43 .95
'4 3 .95
46 .95
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Raised White

letter Size

Eveoyday
low Price

P195/70R l3
Pl95/70Rl4
P205/70RI4
P215/70RI4
P225/70RI4
P225/70Rl5
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64.00
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$449

LET US CHECK YOUR CAR NOW FOR WINTER
IT COULD SAVE YOU . A BIG REPAIR BILL lATER ON

reg. •s39

CUSTOM

WHEELS

( eurostyte collection)
SYLVANIA 25' DIAGONAL

"The Dreamer"
Recline-Rocker- recliner

MOdel CLE235PE
• Carte-Uta 100 picture tube

• E-2000 cha~tsls
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Ona knob electronic tuning - 82 cha nnel
A.utomatlc line tuning
Highly efficient •• )( 6" speaker
TradiUonal cabinet with concealed caatora
Pecan finish on wood and non-wood oroclueu

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SYLVANIA 25' DIAGONAL

Model RLE344HP
tOO picture tube

• E·200l Chassis

$539

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conserve precious energy, cut heat
loss and save a pile of monet ~Y
adding 6 to 12 inches of o_ur Ptnk
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Model RLE335PE

• Dari\·Ute 100 plctuJe t~be
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' . Oerti:·Lita 100 picture tube
• E·2000 chassis
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decoder and hOme stereo system)
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• Tone control
• Tradit ional cabinet on concealed castors
• Pecan llnlsh on wood and non-wood producta

Qwens-~orning .

with C..lck VIew
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ASALE$399 "~·

• Traditional eetHnet with concealed castors

• Pecan flnlah on WOOd and non-wood

$5

29

Upper Rt. 7
Ka111uga, Ohio

"Danbury"
Reclino-Rocker recliner

"Atherton"
Recllna-Rockel" recliner

"The Avenger"
Reclina-Rocker recliner

Richly luftecl trodioional choir

Classic . .. comfortable ... ll's !he

odds distinction to your decor.

most popular seat In the hOuse!

Modern e~o:citement, with o soh,
pampering triple -pillow bocl.

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IUTLAND

" 1o1M t1 Waltlo, Whtrt WeAN lttttr ""'• We"'" lo h ."

742-2211

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0111 MOST POPULAR BAT.
TfRY EIIO 40 MONTH,
MA..JtNANCE fREE. I'IIETS
ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT SPE.
(ffCAnDNS FOR MOIST
IXCH. DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED
SAvt '20 YEHKLfS. filE£ TEST.

$3695

ANCO WIPER
, Highway
BLADEdirtINSERTS
and wealhtr

~UBE,

OIL
CHANGE &amp; FILTER

1

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,. ani driw and hot ...,
can mab wiper blades old
in a hwry. Wt1111'11all now
bla• mom whill you
waH . ..... onailoble.

BAnERY

Lubricate ct.ui1. drain oil and

$1195
MDSI
YDII(lll

mill wi:h up to S qts. of now

Valvolino 10W30 fir 10W40
All Clinolt Motor Oil, insloll
new filltr. Fnt tire rotation if
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New front dise
pad s, repack front
wheel bearincs . resuffaee front ro·

tors, conventional

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1nsped all 4 ttres.

correcta~r

cambar ind toe to proper al ·

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rarts extra i needed.
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rear wheel drive. If
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add $14.00.

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ABSORBERS

INCIUSl IIACnON !HIS
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American Express, Carte Blanche, D1ners Club,
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675·1160

$495

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SNOW TIRE
CHANGE OVER

BRAKE SERVICE

RAIN CHECK -If we sell out ot your size we will issue you a rain
check, assuring future delivery at the advertised PriCe

MEIGS TIRE"-CENTER·
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• Use with Irant or rear wheel

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Values from

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•REFIESHMINTS Will BE SERVED
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• DetacP'lable 2-nour battery pack (Included)

Girls srores

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Upp Sdo Val i!, K!;outon fJ
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Olt'nlangy 72, l.J)nMn n jJot)
On tarD 'l9, Sparta Highland 66
Ottawa Glan&lt;bl M, Lima CC !l!
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Sandy Va!lf!Y l.il, Tw!law Ill
Spring S '12, Dlly Mf'adowdale 51

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HUltop 3'1, F..dgt&gt;rton l2
Obl&gt;rlln F'lrelands :D New LonOOn 2!1

Madison 67, Ashtab.lla ~2
MaNem 64, lnd Val N ol8
Manct'IE'!iter 62, Ripley ~
Mans Petm T.l, MollJ'OC'VUit' 63
Hl.'i fll. Wllbufthb)•S 54

I
_____________
,I
·

·

Kmton Rl~l' 46, Oark NW 42
l..akerldgt&gt; Acad 100, Enterpri.Sl' Chr !Q
l..anc Flsii'r 79, BernP Union 56
l..t't'Sbui"R F'alrDcld 73, Maron E tfi

"'

Please send me details about mausoleums without
obligation.
I

I
I Name
I
I Street or Route
I
1 City or Town

lnd Val S 41. Ft F1')'t" J9 toO
Jack!!M Mlltm 93, F,'arrrJngtoo 28
Jotulstwn 47, Hell'on l..ak("oo'OOO 46
Johnstown N'rldge 69, Uck Vu ll 61
J onathan Alder 56, Marysville 54

.J

representative call at my ome .

I10

H~I·Loldon 72, Bc11sv11r 43

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

.

Greeoon 61, Bellefontaine.&gt; 51
He111h 93, UtiCa 44
Holgatl&gt; tR, UI:Pny Cm tf.'r 11

I

Meigs 75. MU~r 4t
Mldd Madi5ori IJ7, Twill Val S67
Mlllenpm !8, Lkltlng Hgta 61
Milton Unkl n 00. Miami E 51
Mineral Ridge !l\ Lordstown 53
M1 Gilead 63, Crt'StUne 61
N Cantoo 57. Can !On GlenOalc ffi
N~·

can S 59, Alliance 47
· Canal Win 73, Tuys Vallt&gt;Y 93
Canfteld £1, Nil£'11 ~
•
Call!)• 00, Sycamore Mohawk 5J
Ca.rrollton 7£, Unlomown Lake S:!
Cle E TJ, Clf.' E Ted! 03
CoiiWady 13. Hllllanl 54
Col Werhlt fll. Col Cen tt&gt;nnliil 52
COl. N'slciE&gt; Chr 51, Ind Hllls Ctlr 46
Colollf.'l Crawford 55, Wynford 51
Columb Crrst~ ?2, Ber Wan RP.I M!
CO!Ibocton 47, Zant'livl lle 45 tol l

CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAL and SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Christian School Boosters sponsored a "Meet the Squad" night
recently.
MembersoftheNbasketbailand
varsity cheerleaders, varsity volleyball and varsity basketball
squads were introduced.
The Defenders open their 198:&gt;86
campalgn Dec. 3, at home against
Briscoe Run.
Annu al membership drive
winners were Jill McCarty, third
grade, most memberships and Mat
Toler, !lrst grade, most money.
Best class membership honors
went to the second grade and most
money honors to the,llrst graders.

.w

Brookfteld 60, LaBrae 44
Bldeyt&gt; W ~. Bellaire StJohn 62 1011
CampbPII Mernortal 59. Hubbard 51

I

The Andenon Moliument 11 macle of the hlth"t quality erey eronlte available. Thl1
companion memarlall1 d"ltnecl with a flo-r•va~e for addecl beauty.

Mass Perry ID, Mass Jackton 62

Athens M, Whfelersburg 47
Avon 71, Obllltt&gt;d Fal.l9 4.1
EleiJlft' 79, Wt"llston 67
BeiC l('y Ill. N Unlon 83
IIJ Wallllit 6.1, W .Jeff 00
Blac;k River 7~. w Salem NW 46
Bolildman 73, Poland ~

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.
~~

AJcr E ~. Akr Hoban 49

Allt&gt;n E 6Z. Rl~nt 57
Anthoey Wa)'ne ff1, Ot~ 61
A.thl Edgewwooo 47 Ash! Harbor

ROOM

scores
Marietta Chr ;,, Llckillg Co Chr 91
Marllngton 71, Louisville m
Mar1lrui Ferry Sl, Toronto 46

By Unlled Pnu
Ji'ridtr'• R..uls

•

-

GALLIA OPTICAL CENTER

1

...,_.loaal

om mjlh SchDal "ul:r'be!l

~:===;::;;:;;::;~:::=::=:;;::::=:=.:::.::::::===:j

regular game on
Friday night's Ohio coilegl! SCh!'dule, Wittenberg downed Oberttn
81-54 behind Steve lannarlo's 35
points. It was Wittenberg's second
win without a loss.
Adrian 91 Rio Grande Ill
In tournament action: Baldwin·
Wallace downed Hiram 72· 53 and
Frostburg State (Md.) edged John
Carroll Ill~ In the Baldwin-Wallace
Tournament; Musklngum rolled
over Penn Stat!'-Behrend 72.J4 and
Adrian (Mich.) edged Rio. Grande
00-Gl In the Musklngum Tournament : Heidelberg defeated Kala-

1, 1985 .

OHN FULTZ

992-2101

•

�,.

December 1, 1985

Ohio-Point. Plea11111t, W.Va.

Gallia County SVAC 1985-86 basketball schedules
~-

.
_.,,.,
........ ..

NFL results

Ut&gt;h

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-

!'to'Y JMs
"'W£nll:

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8 f
3 9
2 10
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Miami

ln\tlpls
Bu1falo

0 .667
0 .G67
O.BJ
0 .167

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219~

5 7

:116270

Bt
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6 6
57

O.f£1 27f26l
0 ~ S7244
0 .417 319~

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1 50 E:!WlJJ
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210 0 .167 218~

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NYR

:n. New York JE-1111
oauas·:fl. St. 1.w1s n

[)E'trolt

sw.iqt Glll'lrM (AI 'l1mel DTl
Cll'\•l'land 111NY Glul!s, 1 p.m.
DmYI.'f at Plt~Sbw'l~tl, 1 p.m.

Mntrt

Xl "t 3 l1 89.

712317 8283

Butrl

12 10 1 25 8f, 13

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11101

lllO 0

c.nowc-

415

Edmn

San Frandsro at Washington. 4 p.m.
Buffalo at San I)Wogo. t p.m.
Kanw; Cl!y at Sfoanle, 4 p.m.
LA Raldt'n at AtW\11. 4 p.m.

Wn'ft
~.~

Chk::¥ at Ml.vnl, 9 p.m.
9111t11,y, Dee. I
Atlanta at Kan!ali City. I p.m.
Dallas at Clrlctnnltl. 1 p.m.
Deiroll at N"""' England, I p.m.
Indianapolis at Chkqo. 1 p.m.

NY

~

.._

l!wlaa.apoia Matt 8l:ll..lu fmn
Pllbburah F'hnk Polllt"aY:

---

Dec. 71- Gallbi Cwnty HollcSayToumament

(Aihrns Convt:tl!lllon Cet!lf'T'I

Jan. 11- At SoU.t.ttwHI!m
.JMn. 18- At Porttrrlwth Noti'P Dame

_

Dec. 28- At Ross Southl&gt;astC'I"n
Jan. J - At Symnx&gt;s VaiP;
Jan . 4- At Wahama, W.Va.
.Jan. 10- At Eastt&gt;rn
Jan. 14 - KYI!t'l" Cl'('('k

Feb. 14 - At Norill Gallla

.......

Adlv1ted widf m:oelver
pl.at'td w tkibid: 0tr1s

,

Jan. 11- AI Dak Hill
Jlln. :24 - North Gallla
Jan.~- At Ravmswood. W.Va.

Dec. 6- At JUnnan 1'rac:-e
Dfe. 10 - K~· ecr Crt'dt
Dec. 13- A.! Southwt~IN'n
(}(o(&gt;. ~- Syrnrnes Valley
l)(lc, 21 - Fecl&gt;raJ Hockin~

.Jan.~- Wlhama , W.Va.
Jan. 3l - Rlnnan 'l'tact

Feb. 7- At SoutlJI'•l'!ilern
Feb. l f - Synvnes Vall~

W L Pd.
1

o um

1 o um
1 0 1.(00
1 0 ).(IX)

o1
o1
o1
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ax

OhioColl~

m-

14

Nev.· Jersy

108!ltl5
88J006
610.J75 8
I 13 %IS 10\1

.em
.em
.em
.em

'Tis the season to give a Honda!
And we've got abag of gilt ideas
that are special in every
Come in and look over ,
multitude of specials .•. many more
than we can list here. See our .
complete line of safety equipment:
helmets, jackets and other
accessories that mak~ the perfect
gilt for that special person.
also have convenient plans
easy purchase, including layaway.

FREE 1986 poelteNii~l ·1

calendar just

BONDA

' 0

•One per CUAtcJ'ntr wtlilt supply luis. No purchase necessary.

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

-..-

Malcft!O, Flttdloy 11
Hf'ldl!ibrorJ 8&amp; Kalamuoo z

Opener postponed

-

Martelli '1'7. WllnUtp;Jn 15 Cot 1
Walsh 13, ~~~~ 1KYI 12'

!i

7 12 .3fl! 6lh
3 13 .lltl 9
cace

RACINE'- Friday al&amp;bl's U8HI
Hball Cllllll!lt Ww6&amp;1 Glllllp&amp;llllllldSoldbernn~ JtCIIIp 11111!4, due'
tollilb WI!Mr. The ~ DMl!lt bM beeD
reedledi•Jed lor SMurday, Feb. 8.
B Wll to · bave beeD Gallpnlls'
opeeer. Sualbmlll1.0 Clllbe yell.

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

b

Mustin8'1m 72, Pet.! St-&amp;fRnd 3f
Adrian CMkhl

Mt~twsow.-

'72, Hlnm 5)
F'to!lbur&amp; (Md:) •· Jom Carrol a:i

.106 6 .667 'h

WEDNmlMY NIGHr

PINSPUI1'l!IIS

-..oNavomberl8,111111
WL

Central Supply .. ................ ................71 %l
Jaymar Coal Co ................................62 31
Rkhanls Elec ...................................Ill :t;
t1
6

II
M
S.

Canaday Rlelty ....................... .........U 5I
City Ins ................................... ........ .38 !II
11th Frame .. ' .................................. .:M m
Fireside .... .......... ............................ .32 61
Warehlll"le Clinic and Canaday Realty Ued
w!1h four polnt!i Mrh. Hlfh b:lwler for

m

High OOwler for Canaday Really wasFrarK'el

Wood with 42!1.
Central Suwly took all etght polnts from
lith Fr.ure. High lxMk.'r for Central &amp;lpply
wa.s Elaint- Ryan wUh ~- High bowler b"
U!h Frame was Jennifer Harris with 5:8.

six pjnta from

ror Toler lnsuranc.
wllh 4111. H1ih iuwter t&gt;r
SmJth wUb e .

e, RIO Cr.df II

BI~Wdlao

~

Warehime Cllnic was Sue Holley with

Ironton has an qlE!Il
football date Clll Aug. 29, 1986. Area
teams whiling to play the Tigers
shoukl contact Burcham at high
school.

Wlr.eftberJ 81. Obfrlln 51

126 .667 1
8 lO .tf4 5

Warehime Clinic ............... ............... .52
WOOlen' s Lourtji!;e ........................... ... !li
Sparkle Supply ............... ................ ...11
Toll&gt;r Insuran('(' ................................ G
DooUttle's ..... ............................... .. ...~

Ironton Athletic

Director Mike Burtham Saturday

-c....
..._NI
... -

146.100!i)(].J75

ffiONTON -

RldlardsEI&lt;ctr1catiHeatlngtookaUeliltt
poktts from Flre!lde. High luwlor for
Rldlards Ei«trrcll II&lt; lleotlng was Daisy
Allen with 11"18. lll&amp;ft bowie!' t&gt;r neotcle wu
Panl RuleD with IE6.
Jaymar Coal Co. look all elgltt polnll from
City IIIIW1U1Ce. High bowie!' lor JaymarCoal
Co. was Sharon Pa18' wllh 5!10. High luwter
lor City lnsur...,. was PhyU~ Fergusm with

el.
WOOlen's I..ounao look all elgltl polniJ from
Sporkle Supply. High bowler l&gt;r WOOlen's
l..oull8" was Lois Monme wlih :1111. Hilllt
bowlel'l!r Sparkle Supply waa BevCaslowllh

477.

DliPIJni!S bowled: Elllne Ryan, 22.1: Daisy
ADl'll,
f'raJIIIt.. Dlnaon, 212: Sharon
·
:m
and 221; Suey Ulcltlleld, 110; and
Lois M.....,., 218 and :101.
DJ -lxMied: Sue HOOey, 1m: JennUer
· 519: E1llne Ryan, Sl6: Daisy ADm,
l'l!e 11tomu 11)3; f'raJIIIt..llullatn, 511;
Sharon - · l!IO; Suey Utchlleld, 528:
" " - Mmroo, !117; and Lois Monroe, !119.
~ conve1et;1: Delphine Slll'lln8. J.lll;
Doris Slewll'!, ~Ill: Mary Raub, ~lO and
J.lll; 1"1 'lblmu.JJO; FronldeDuncan, J.IO
and 2-1: O.V CUto, ~7: and Lois Mooroe,

:m:

m:

Slit
Wn,l•f .

WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Higher
prices for cattle, poultry and corn to
feed those animals raised prices
fanners receive for raw · fann
prOducts by 2.4 pei'cent In November,'posting the largest month·
1 : tO-month hike since January 1984.
: The November Increase reported
• Friday followed a 1. 7 percent rise In
: Pctober prices. Bulin spite of those
; sizable back-to-hack hikes, the
: Agr~ulture Depariment's Index of
•farm prices was 7.4 percent below a
•
.year
ago.

..

wUJ be faced by construction crews
In the early 1900s when the
pennanenily manned Ainerlcan
space station is butlt.
Ross and Spring sailed tllrough
their tasks Friday, running up to an
hour ahead of schedule at tlmes,and
early on Spring said: "How many
space stations do you want buUt?"
Today, the spacewaikersplanned
to recharge the batteries and life
support systems In their $2-mllllon
spacesuits and to relax before
venturing Into space again Surxlay
to continue their orbital ronstruc·
tionwork.
Their crewrnates are com·
mancler Brewster Shaw, co-pUot
Bryan O'CoMOr, Mary Cleave,
Rodolfo Nerl of Mexico and Charles
Walker, an engineer with McDonnell J:loui!Jas Astronautics Co.
Along with pulllng off the first
spacewalk In grand fashion, the
crew has successfully launched
three communications satellltes
owned by Mexico, Australia and
RCA American Communications

•

..•

••
•

By DON MULlEN
the day as Christmas shoppers
crowded Into the nation's stores on
the first day of present -buying
sprees shortened to less than lbur
weeks because of a late Thanksglv·
ing holiday.
Stores, decked rut In their Hnety
and Dashing cut-rate prices, reporle!l a run on games, Sw~tch
Watches, electronic audloandvldeo
gear, robOt bears, Cabbage Patch
dolls and personal accessories for
both sexes.
NelmaM Marcus In Dallas re. poi:ted notakerssolarforltsannual
hls·and·her gift, a $2 million set of
matched dlamoilds•
For junior with a Daddy Warbucks parent, FAO Schwarz was
offering a toy Lamborghlnl, onethird the size d the famed Italian
race car, for $12,500.
Paisley Is back for men, with
stores reporting paisley pants,
suspenders, belts, ties and scarfs.

1

CHEVROLET
CELEBRITY
CLAS-SIC

'•
'
'

,

'

•

•

8

•

CHEVROLET
S-10
BLAZERS
4

•
•
•

.,•

5 CHEVROLET

5·10

•

••

~~·

Free ~ifts for first 30 purchaaes- Tote Bag1forWomen
or Children - Toboggans for children.
·

SAVE 5°/o TO 40°/o ON
OPEN HOUSE GIFT PURCHASES

CHAP

SHO.
E
S
NEXT YO ELIEIFELDS IN POMEIOY

.•'·.'
•

HOLIDAYSJIOPPING-Amlsollbegmsual*rofholldaysboppen
'swann to local i!hopplng centenllke the Tabor C4!nter Millin Denver.
'1"'eChrlslmiiS i!hopplngseason olftclally began Friday. (UI'I)
'•

THOSE UNITS MUST GO BEFORE
DEC. 31, 1985 TO MAKE ROOM
FOI MORE 1986 MODELS.

:Filipinos bum effigi~

GMAC &amp; BANI Financing at competitive rates.
'

With Gift Envelopes From Our Christmas Stltctioll ·

Cleveland "godfather," that having
Presser elected would add prestige
to the Cleveland family because It
would be lnrontrol of the lEad oft he
Teamsters, the report salp.
Lonardo and Licavou · then got
suppori for Presser from Salerno,
and Presserwaselected by securing
delegate votes, Lonardo told the
FBI.
Ucavo!l, who was found guUtyof
racketeering charges In coMectlon
with a mob war In the late 1970s, died
last week In a Wisconsin hospital,
near tbe federal prison where he
was seiVIng a 17-year sentence.

,Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.
1616 EAStERN AYE.
446-3672

,,

CONSTRUCTION WORKERS- AlltmnaulaJenoy
11oM (left) 8lld Sherwood Spring test 8JIIII'A! ota&amp;km
COII!IIruetlon methocl!i 230 miles above lheearlhdurlng

the fourth dll.f of Atlantl!' !Ughl. The 'construdlon
wodcers' are laking the day off In preparidlon for
anolherwaikSunday. (UPI)
•

recent ·igrlcultural outlook-repor) between October and mid·
that projected the .food price ' bul were 0.6 percent lower than a
year ago. The Novem!Er Increase
Increase for the year.
The Agriculture Department said was due to higher feed and feeder
higher prices for cattle, broiler livestock costs, the same factors
chickens, corn, strawberries and that raised the Index of prices
orang('s led the November !ann received by fanners.
The Novem!Er · index or farm
price hike, which would have been
larger were It mt !Or dfsettlng prices was 126, wlth 100 equal to
prices In 1977. The &lt;kto!Er Index
~Jines for lemons, hogs and
grapefruit.
was 123 and the November, 1984
An Index that measures Uvestock Index was 136.
Agriculture said fanners' exprices separately went up 3 percent
0

penses rose0.6 percent In November'
November.
Cattle prices rose f.l.OO to $55 per
100 pounds, olfset somewhat by a
'l().cent decline In hog prices
averaging $42.40 per 100 pounds.
Broiler chicken Jrlces rose4.I cents
through mid· Novem!Er to average
31.8 cents per pound.
Ct?rn prices rose 10 cents to $2.22
per bushel. The separate crop price
Index, ofwhichcorn Is a part, rose2.7
percent through mid-November.

At Henri Bendel, a posh boutique a.m. and soopplng has been very
In New York, one of the biggest strong ... a lot d them are looking lor
items was a $:00 gold lame "body Cabbage Patch kids, especially the
wrap," a cape-like item "big enough accessories.''
Miami shoppers basked In 80·
to be a cape but Dexible enough to be
a scarf,'' said spokeswoman Nancy degree weather as they packed
Dadeland Mall for early Christmas
Anglello.
markdowns,
like ~ percent on
"Wecan't keep them In the store,"
lamps and 25 percent off men's
she said.
Many stores fudged on the holiday clothing.
A big seller was "Scruples," the
open!ngbecauseofthe late Thanksgiving, putting on their Christmas game of moral dilemmas, this
year's challenge to Trlv tal Pursuit's
finery days ago.
But Friday, helped by ·a semi· success.
Boston store managers, In addl·
holiday for many workers, and
despite dreary weather that spread lion to trying to lure customers on a
snow, sleet and rain acl'll6S much rt cold, snow- swept day, were forced
the country, the shoppers were to dler special Incentives to attract
workers for hurxli'Eds d temporary
waiting for the doors to open.
"The crowds are a lot larger than Christmas jobs.
they were the day atterThanksglv· , Stores offered the,lr regular eming last year,'' said Nelson Forrest, ployees bonuses for bringing In
president of the Merchants Assocla· applicants, who were promised 15 to
tton of Chicago's "Magnificent 20-percent discounts on merchandise, pay above the minimum wage
Mtle."
In Houst.on, Target Store man- and flexible oours.
ager Sara Mldman, said, "Things
One of New York City's attracare going great. "We opened at 8

tlons was t!F F AOSchwarz toy store
where crowds gat IE red to look at the
Intricate animated Christmas win·
dow displays.
This year's No. l selling Item is
"Teddy Ruxpln," a 12-ln ch talking
teddy bear with a cassette recorder
Inside his body. Price: $89.95. Each,
additional cassette, with a book togo
wlth It, sells for$13.%.
'
At Foley's In Houston, manager
Kathy Knott said Barbie Dolls and
Master's of the Universe are big
sellers, "but the Swatch Watch lsrur
single best selling Item."
At Macy's, the Manhattan store
that seems to have Invented
Thanksgiving as a Christmas adver·
Using gimmick, tiE day after the
parade was a good one, with
shoppers packing the gtgant lc store.
Store spokeswoman Judy Cohn
reminded those who hate to shop
that Macy'swould IE glad to dolt for
I hem. "U you have a Macy'scredlt
card all you have to do Is call the
store," she said ch£'1'rfu ily.

U.S. scolds Israel about spy investigation

PICKUPS

2-0LDSMOBILE DELTA 88's
LAST OF THE BIG ONES!

Throughouttll! Olght, Walker has
been operating a drug refinery his
company hopes wUI produce large
quantttles r1 a honnone to help
anemia sufferers, and Nert, the first
Mexican to fiy In space, has
conducted a series of medical and
liologtcal experiments designed by
scientists In Mexico.
The 23rd shuttle mission Is
scheduled to end Tuesday with
landlngatEdwardsA!rForceBase,
Calli.
During their spacewalk Sunday,
Spring and Ross wW simulatespace
station maintenance j:IOO!dures.
After buDding nine d the tower's
10 snap-together sections, Ross wUI
climb on til! end of the shuttle's
50-foot robot ann wll!re he wUI
complete the ·lOth section from
above Instead dbelow. '
After trading places with Ross on
the mechanical arm, Sprtng wUI
practice more simulated repair
work that Involves removing and
reinstalling various struts.

Unlled Prelllnlematlonal
Glltz and splash were til! order r1

'

CHEVETTES

,-'

States Pension Fund.
Lonardo said the deal was then
arranged with reputed Chicago
Mafia leader Jackie Cerone and
with the reputed boss of the
Genovese· family In New York,
Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno.
Williams, however, Irked mob
leaders after his election by refusing
to make Presser the head of the
pension furxl, Lonardo said.
The problem was solved In 19&amp;1
when Williams was convicted of
attempting to bribe Nevada Sen.
Howard Cannon.
Rockman oonvlncedLonardoand
James "Jack Whlte" Licavoll, the

Shortened Yule shopping season ~gins

•

Close Out Sale on 19 85 Models In Stock!'

6

elected to the national post, the
magazine reported.
MaiShe Rockman, ooe of the
reputed mobsters on trial tn Kansas
City, told Lonardo that rtggtng the
election in favor ot Willlams could
benefit ttl! mJb through Presser,
the report said.
Lonardo said he learned from
Rockman that Williams could be
talked intocooperatingwtth the mob
to benefit all the famllles In the
United States.
The report said Presser was to get
Wllllams delegate votes In Cleveland In exchange i&gt;r helng named
the head rt the Teamsters' Central

Inc.

Breaking the overall Index-down ...November-Increase:
Into Its components, an Index of
The recent increases In the !arm
livestock prices was 3.5 percent less price Index will show up at the
than a year ago and an Index d crop supmnarket, but 19lfi retaU food
prices . was down 12 percent from prices are expected to go up only a
little more than 2percent above last
last November.
. The &lt;ktober hike had been the year.
The Increase In the cost of food
first monthly Increase since July
1984. For this year, prices were eaten at home wUI rise only about 1
un~hanged In January ~d Febru· percent.
"The !ann value ot food has
ary and floated downward from
dropped
about 7 percent this year,
March through September. StatisU·
clans had to go back to a 3.6 percent keeping the retail price rise mod·
hike in January 1984 to suq&gt;as's the est,'" the government said In a

0

'

F111

! Will Bt
! Atmd•d

"JimmyFrattannowasacaptaln.
Joseph Valachi was a mere soldier.
Lonardo is toFrattannoand Valacbl
what the president of General
Motors is to a foreman and an
assembly line worker."
Contacted by United Press International, Griffln said he could not
comment on the report. Presser
could I)Jt be reached for comment,
nor could his public relations finn.
Lonardo told the FBI that he
learned rt the Mafia's Intention to
rJg the Teamsters presidential
electim In favor rt Williams late In
19111, about stx months belbre the
Kansas City Teamster leader was

Raw farm pljces increase for second cons~cutive month

I

\

.

By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer
CAPECANAVERAL,Fia. (UPl)
- With one milestone spacewalk
behind them, the shuttle astronauts
rested trxlay for a second orbital
-excursion Surday to bulld prototype
-space station structures and practice make-believe repairs.
A:;tronauts Jerry Ross and Sherwood Sprtng spent more than five
hburs Friday working In Atlantis's
ilpen payload bay assembling and
t&amp;klng apart a truss-like 45-foot
tower an!i . building a pyramid
structure·12 feet on a side to lay the
grourxlwork for futul1' large· scale
~pace cons!ruction.
. "You guys do. good work,"
a$tronaut David Leestma said from
: . mission control in Houston.
:.. "It all worked as advertised/'
rwlled Ross as the spacewalk was
winding down shortly after 10 p.m.
EST.
The ground-breaking work is
: expected to help ~ASA gain a better
• understanding of the challenges that

'I

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
HOUIS: 9·7 M-SAT.
PH. 446·2240

UNHEARD OF PIICES ON REMAINING
1985 CHEVROLETS &amp; OLDSMOBILES
-No Reasonable Offer Refused .....

CHAPMAN SHOES

B
BOm p·m11

433 PilE ST.

NEX1 TO BOi'S ELECliONICS

AT

12:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.

River Front Honda

New Shipment of
All Terrain Vehicles
AND Off Rocid ·Apparel

HOLIDAY OPEN HO.USE
SUNDAY, DE(EMIER 1

of operating a $00 million a year
narcotics ring and sentenced to 103
years In prison.
In addition to testifying at the
Kansas City trtal, Lonardo is
expected to be the keywttnessatthe
upcoming trial In New York City of
the reputed bosses of the five New
York Mafia families.
The magazine reported that It
obtained the "Lonardo, Papers"
from a federal InvestigatOr.
. "He is the highest ranking Matta
defector In FBI history," Joseph
Griffln, •peclal agent In charge d
the Cleveland FBI office, said In the
report.

Shuttle 'construction workers'
ready for second space~alk

annooi)Ced

DlrtmCIUh - F\rfod hNd foofbtU COitb
JorYukn.

I

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
elections of Roy Williams and
Jackie Presser as president of the
Teamsters union were rigged by the
Mafia, a former Cleveland mob
chieftain told the FBI
Cleveland magazine, In Its De- '
cember Issue, said Angelo "Big
Ange" Lonardo, fonner Cleveland ·
"underboss" and a key witness In
the current Las Vegas skinuntng
trtal In Kansas City, discussed the
mob's ties tp the Teamsters In a
series of conversations after he
became a protected federal witness
more than a year ago.
Lonardo, 81, wasconvlctedln1983

Dec. 3- At Kyger trt'tk
Dec. 6- Oak HILl
Dec. ltJ - At North Ga Uia
Dec. 13 -.At Hannan Tratt
Dec. :20- Swthwntem
Dec. 27 - Pet&gt;bk&gt;s

Jan. :n - At E&amp;~rn
Ffob. t - Wahama. W.V&amp;

Dl&gt;c'. J - Nor111 Gallla

Lonardo says Mafia ftxed Teamsters elections

F\&gt;b. 8- Wahama. W.Va.
Ffb. 14 - Ollk Hill

Dec. 28 - Galllll Coonry Holiday Toumamfnl
Jan. 3 - North Gallla
JIUI. W- Hannan 'n"acfo
.Jan. 11- At. Wahama, W.Va.
Jan. l4 - At Oak Hill
Jat1. 17 -'}(yger Cret'k

'D

~imts- itadiaut Section~
·
December 1, 1985

.

~b. 7 -At Symmel Vii\~

Ironton needa game ·

AttMted ~ ftett.oer
the 1n,tu l!'d I'Hfi"W! l!Jt.

~·

""'""-

~
~

Dec. 10- At S:)'rnnk&gt;s Valkoy
Dec. 13- Eastfrn
Dec. 17- At Cross l.ant'9, W.Va.
Dec. ~ -At Soolhforn

Southern at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at Southwestern
Hannan Trace at Symmes valley

Transactions

lhsto n

Dooll111f'S

Soulllwt*n m..-c~en
Det. 3- c;Jak Hill
Dtoc. 6- AI K)'ll'!' CN!ek

Taellday's pmes
North GaUia at Eastern

5, W•shqton 2

Brown o• -.furtd ~-

Team

Ky~rCreek

-·-

.tdllltk . . . .
W L P«. G8

" Gill'MI

n"'

· Southwestern
OakHW

at blon, nJaht
Plllladrtpfb II W~ nletl
Calpry at Edm::lnton. ~

NAmNAL 11.\SD:IBALL ASSOC.

Doollllk&gt;'s.

331111118

North Gallla
Symmes Valley
Eastern

Nf'll' Jt!IW)'

NBA results

Toler

74 1!1
3 21 101 !!
6 II 81 !ll
4 l6 74 WJ
3 n '16 101

FPb. 14 - Hannan Trace

Feb. 7- Soothern

State/ ational

SVAC

Team
Hannan Trace
Southern

Klrtbd 5. VIIX'CtlotW!' 4

LA Rams at San Franctla:l , 9 p.m.

1:2
12

Southwestern
OakHW
Kyger Creek

Feb. 7 - AI Oat l-Ull

Jan. 28 - cross Lanes, W.Va.

J&amp;n. II! - lb1h CoUll
Jali. l4 - ·At SOUt!tera

L Pet.

Feb.l - AI Cnm Lanes. W.Va.

Jan. ~ - Symml'!l Va!koy

Dtrc. ID - At Eutforn
Pee. l3- ., """""'Valley
0... l l - Oak IIJU
Dec. B- AI Wahlml, W.Va .
Dec. If- Gallll Cou~ Holldq Tournament
Pee. 18- GaWo C.. my Holiday """""""'I
Jan. 3 - AI Han..n 1ilce
Jan. 7 -WahlmL W.VI

1 o uro
1 o uro
1 0 ].(IX)
1 0 1.(0)
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0 1 .em
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NorthGallla
Symmes Valley
Eastern

NY lsllndrrl4, WlnftM 1
PhllldPipNa •• Mklrnot• 1
Dftrolt 5, St. LoU 3

-......

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21

w

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Hannan Trace
Soutllern

72 81

._,,_

Ptttst»rgll at San 0~. 9 p.m

Dm\'ff

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---

0

Dec. 'l1 _ Holiday Toumumoot
'[)@c. 28 - Ho!kiay TournameR1
Jan, 3- AI Oak Hill
Jan. 10- Southern
Jan. U - AI North Ga!Ua
Jan. 17 - Hannan Trace
Jan. 21- ParllrnlllU'I cW.Va.! cathOliC
Jan. ~ - At Kyger Creek
Jan. ll - Soothwestt&gt;rn
Feb. 4 - AI Fl!dl'ral Hocking

~•n . ll - Eastern
Jan. 31 - Symmes Valll')'

M::lntr8J 5, Butl"alo.2

WashlnKton at PhlladP!plta, 1 p.m
Miami at Gl'ffi\ Bly. l p.m.
NE-w Orluns at St. l.D.IIa. l p.m.
NY Jets at 8\dfalo, 1 p.m.
Ck'".'tiand a"t Sranlt&gt;, 4 p.m.
LA Raldm at Denwr. t p.m.
NY Chants 111 Houston, 4 p.m.
Tampa Bay at MIMl'IOtl, 4 p.m.

-.....cA

22

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2'1 96 "
2:1 102107
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" 22 18 ,. "'
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Jan.ZI--.Ky.
JaQ. 3l - Oak lUll
Feb. 4.- AI .\stuM, Ky.• HolylFunqy
f\&gt;b. T.,.. At Hallr1111 'rna&gt;
hb. li - Soultl'lffRrn

Qo&lt;.l - -

ALLGAMJ!8

""1174268915

Jan. 17- At Sylnnft Vallfy
Jan. If- At Souttwn

'Del::. 6- Soillhwfltern

SVAC

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Oer. 10 - Soullll!rn
Dec:. U- At OU.Hm
Do&lt;. II - " ' - 'l'no&lt;o
0... 21 - AI R.oooll04 Ky.
Dl!t. fl- Gallll Oltrty ~ Tournament
Dec.• - GaUia Cwnty, ~ Twmamt'lll
Jan, 3 - At SOutlftlrfteern
Jan. 10- At Kytl!l" c::tto8
Jan. 11- Alhllod, Ky., HolY FomUY
.r.n. 14 ,... Euwrn

lronton Sl. Joe

Dfoto. J- At Eastlern

910119 -7 319

612

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Phllodtlph
Washlngtn
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New England atlndlanapk)is. 1 p.m.

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net. 11- A.! Nartll GIIUia
Dt&lt;-. 'l1 - Galtla Coonty Holldi.Y Toumament
O.C. 28- Gallla Coun;y HolkSiy TOW"MMT\IM
Jan. J - KYifl' C'rMI
Ju. 7 - At FalrtMd
Jan. lO - At Soutlnrtellelll
J&amp;n. H - .,....,.. Valley
Jan. 17- Ai · Eu~rn
J4n. :n - ~ake
Jan. :H- Oak Hill
Jan. 31 -AI Southtrn
Feb. 4 - Fairland
f\&gt;b. 7 -North C.IU.

I cace

910

HCilston at Clnek\natt I p.m.
LA Rain! at N~ Orlfw, I p.m.

By UUe41,.,_ lllki

Dec. U-S..t!Bn

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NHL results

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Prlofnlk 1216, fkalston UO
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'

MANILA, Philippines (UP!) Thousands of Flllptnos matthed on
the presidential palace and massed
at the gates ot a u.s. air base today,
'burning efftgtes of President Ferdl·
, nand Marcos and President Reagan
~ a national day of protest .
J The demonstrations - held on
:Andres Bonifacio Day, a hoUday
J:l:lmmemoratlng the revolutionary
who called for a revolt against
Spanish colonizers in 1896- passed
Wti\19Ut Incident.
I

The PrOtests also coinCided with
an announcement by 'a newly
tonned opposltloit alliance It had .
drafted Corazon Aquino, the widow
of· munlered opposition leader
Benigno Aquino, torunforpresldent
against Marcos.
Mrs. Aquino, who has rejected
prior overtures to run, Is expected to
announce whether she wUI run
shortly and Marcos Is expected to
sign legislation Monday that sets a
special presidential election Feb. 7.
I

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Reagan administration, publicly
scolding a close ally, accused JsrBI'I
dfalllngtomeetanend·d·the-week
deadline for assisting an InveStigation of a Navy employee charged
with spying for the Jewish state.
The State Department Frklay ·
rebuked Israel for not making good
on promises to return doc;uments

allegedly stolen by Jonathan Pol·
lard or to allow U.s. investigators to

question ' two Israeli diplomats
lmpllcated in the case.
"The Israeli authorities have
assured us of their willingness to
cooperate. However, they have not
yet provided the full and prompt
cooperation we requested a week
ago,"StateiJwartmentspokesman
Charles Redman said.
·

The unusual public statement Congress expressed I he fear that the
followed more than a week oC secret case ma y th reaten lawmakers'
contacts with the Isr aeli proposal lo increase by as much as
$700 mU!Ion the administration's.
government .
Redman. saying the government current request for $3.75 billion In
was "dismayed" that the two Israeli U.S. aid to Israel.
diplomats wel1' recalled after
Redman repeated earlier stalE'
Israeli olflclals pledged coopera· ments from White House officials,
tlon, lett open the posslblllty that saying tiE fundamental relation·
other Jsraelles could be involved .
ship between the two countries has
Meanwhile, Israeli supporters In not been been chang('d by the case.

Doctor happy with heart-lung. tr~nsplant:
ByEDWARDB.HAVENS
TOCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - The
head of a team of surgeons who
transplanted the heartandlungs of a
Nevada suicide victim Into a man
who waited a year for the operation
says he is "pleased" witb the
~ry but remains cautious about
the nextfew days. ·
Dr. JackG.Copeland led a team of

doctors Friday in the 6- hour
transptani operation perfomied on
Terry May, 32, of Tempe, who was
summoned to surgery at the
University of Arizona Medical
Center by a televised emergency
message durtng a Thanksgiving
•
Football game.
"I am pleased with the way the
surgery went,'' Copeland said. "The

next few days, however, wUI be brain dead after shoot lng herself
critical In seeing how he does , how Wednesday at her home. Her body
bls body responds to the new heart was flown .. to Tucson for the .
operation.
and lungs."
May, who suffered from a
"We did It to help others.
degenerative lung condition that Something good has come out o~
causes heart !allure, was Usted In something very tragic," Jor.dan·
critical condition Frklay. .
said. "She was a very logical person
HerecelvedtheorgansofKathryn . and It didn't make sense to bury a
Jordan, 38, a castnocashterwho was precious gift !Ike her organs."

\

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 1, 1986

Catholic Church will never abolish divorce ban, U.S ..bishops say
I

lng, the practice.
Because celibacy is a disciplinary, not doctrinal, requirement of
the church, it theoretically could be
changed, Malone said. But he said
the "only circumstance" he could
foresee for changing tbe rule would
he lnareascltheworldwhereclergy

review the liberalizing reforms of
PAUIABUT1'1JRINJ
VATICAN CITY (UPI) - The the Second Vatican CouncU.
The two-week synod, whlcli
Roman Catholic Church, "not free
opened
Nov. 25, marked the :!lth
to change what Jesus said," will
anniversary
of tbe council.
never abolish Its total ban on divorce
All lour U.S. clerics suworted
and is unlikely to allow women
prtests or a fl1llrrted clergy, lour standard church teaching on three
controversial topics - divorce.
U.S. bishops have affirmed.
"The church is not free to women's ord!naUori and marrted
accommodate itself by a practical prtests.
approach to the modern world,"
Each acknowledged they sympaBishop John May of St. Louis said at thized with divorced and remarried
a news conference Friday.
Catholics, who by church law are
"It is not free to change what forbidden from receiving communJesus said."
ion. But, none could foresee any
May, who referred to Roman theological basis for re-admitting
Catholicism' sstrtct teachings on tbe them to the sacraments, a move
absolute !ndisoolub!Uty of mar- suggested by an Austrtan bisho!)
riage, said the church's ban on earlier this week.
divorce could never be relaxed
"As long as they remain In a
because it came directly from marriage state that Is judged
Christ's teaching.
unlawful,! do mt know how we can
The U.S. bishops - May, Boston find a way to admit them ID the
Cardinal Bernard Law, U.S. bi- sacraments," Dearden said.
shops' conference President James
On tbe issue of priestly celibacy.
Malone and retired Detroit Archbi- Malone said he had asked that the
shop John Dearden - are partici- synod examine the question but
pating In a worldwide bishops synod stressed he made the move with the
· called by Pope Jolm Paul II to Intent of reenforcing, not ellm!nat-

By JANE TAYLOR
MIAMI (UP!) - Seven tropical
twisters k!lled 146 people, caused
$4.45 billion In damages and chased
a mUl1on people from their homes,
making the 1985 hurricane season,
which ended yesterday, the worst In
69years.
Six hurricanes and one tropical
storm came ashore In the United
States during the AtlanticCaribbean hu!T!cane season, which
began June 1. That Is the greatest
number since l916, the National
Hu!T!cane Center reported Friday.
"I've had enough hunicanes to
last me through the winter," said
Mlles Lawrence, one of six humcane !01-ecasters at the center.
There were 11 named tropical
cyclones durtng tbe season. Four
were tropical storms - Ana,
Fabian, Henrt and Isabel. Seven
others~ to hunicanestrengthBob, Claudette, Danny, Elena,
Glorta, Juan and Kate.
In an average year, there are four
tropical storms and six hu!T!canes.
"It's not the number of storms
that made this a busy year. It's the
track and location," Lawrence sald.
"'To have one or two make landfaU
would be mrrnal."
The storms claimed 36llves In the
United States,1001nPuerto Rico and
10 In Cllba.
Hurrtcane Danny blitzed through
Louisiana In August, kUling three
people. Elena Dooded the Gulf coast
from west Florida to Mississippi In
early September and took four Uves.

The ldng oft he PACs continued to
be tbe controversial National Conservative Political Action Commitlee, which spent much of Its $19.3
mUllon on negative advertising
opposing liberal Incumbents.
Second was tbe Fund for a
ConseiVatlve Majortty, with $5.4
million, and third was the National
Congressional Club, organized by
conservative Sen. Jesse Helms,
R·N.C., with$5.3 mUI!on.
Those big PACs spent much of
their money Independently. The
biggest contrtbutorto congressional
candidates was the Realtors PAC,
with $2.4 mtllion; followed by the
American Medical Association,
with $1.8 m!lllon; the National
Association ct Home Builders, with
$1.6 million; the Nation Education
Association. with $1.5 rntJUon. and
the United Auto Workers, with $1.4
m!ll!on.
Corporations continued to outspend big labor when It came to
giving money to congressional
candidates. Corporate PACs gave
$.1!.2 miU!on, whlle labor gave $25.8
mUllan. Trade organizations gave
$28.1 million.
ln addition to congressional
candidates, presidenllal candidates
received $1.5 million from PACs
durtng the election cycle.

Glorta struck tbe outer banks of
North Carolina, then moved over
Lcng Island and Into New England
In !ate September, kUllngll people.
The deadliest storm cl all, Isabel,
never ~ to hurricane strength,
but brought Dash Doods and
mudslides that ldiJed more than 100
people In Puerto Rico as it formed In
early
October, stalled In the Gulf
HurrtcaneJuan
for several days In late October,
flooding the Louisiana coast, damaging clfshore (jl rtgs and killing 12
people.
Hurricane Kate raced across
Cuba, kUling 10 people, then

ravished the Flortda Panhandle.
Georgia and South Carolina on Nov.
21. The storm killed six people In

from being ordained to the priestMalone has spoken out seve~al
hood because the prtest "Images times In the United States on tlle
Christ Jesus who was a male,"
Malone said,
"It's the position that's been the .
tradition of the Catholic Church," '
May said. "We don't see any sign
that that would bechanged."

needfortheRornanCathollcChureh
to affirm the "rtghts and dlgnity"jJf
women In the church and to !urtJtr
"their advancement to pos!tlon5of
lead~rshlp and decision-making.'!
:.

.

United States and ended a ll hopes
that the fragile oyster beds of
Apalachicola Bay would soon rec-

MIA excavation
called 'successful'
By TED CHAN
YEN THUONG, Vietnam (UPI)
- Bone fragments recovered from
an American bomber shot down
near Hanoi In 1972 are unlikely to.
provide forensics experts with
enough evidence to ldenuty the dead
crewmen, a U.S. m!lltary officlal
said Saturday.
"As a prelirntnal')l opinion I don't
think the outlook is positive for an
ldentU!catlon from the remains that
we've recovered at this point, " said
Col. Joe Harvey, head of the
American contingent of a joint
U.S.-Vletnarnese team investigatIng the crash site.
Harvey said aJ bone fragmentsthe largest 6 Inches long - have
been recovered from thecrashsite9
rntJes north of Hanoi, probably
leaving Investigators too llttle
evidence to identify the remains.
Despite the poor prospects for
klentlflcation Harvey said the
excavation- the first such cooperative effort between VIetnam and the
United States - has been

narn's account rJ. the crash.
U.S. records show the bomber
was one of three that took c:lf from
Utapao Alrbase in Thatland to
attack a railroad yard. Two
Soviet -made SAM missil es
smashed Into the plane, exploding It
at ll,Wl feet, Harvey said.
VIetnamese officials say their
records indicate the copUot and
navigator c1 the excavateil bomber,
Lt. Paul L. Granger and Capt.
ThomasJ . Klomann, parachuted to
safety, were taken prisoner and
released In 1973.
The excavation is part of a
two-year plan totl')IIDdet~rm!nethe
fate of more than l,700 Americans
listed as missing In action In
Vietnam.
The U.S. team was to continue
work untU Wednesday, when It will
return to Hawaii with the bone
fragments found at the site and with
the remains believed to be of seven
other American servicemen found
In VIetnam by villagers.
The remains wUI be examined at
"successful." ·
the U.S. Army's Central Casualty
Harvey said the team or U.S. Identification Laboratory in
experts and VIetnamese laborers Hawaii.
found .two of the B-52 bomber's
U.S. officials were similarly
engines, fi!ght manuals, landing pessimistic about Identifying restruts and a IHe raft but have been mains after a joint U.S.-Lao
unable to Identify the plane.
excavation last February in southwHe said evidence at the crash site est Laos, but all 13 members were
Indicates the plane was one c1 two eventlally identified from the rebombers shot down Dec. al, 1972. mains found In the wreckage c1 a
The date is consistent with Viet- Clll gunship.
'

Public Notice

over from Elena's destruction.
Kate's ferocious winds knocked
out so many power lines and uttllty
poles that thousands of ~rth
Flortda residents were stlll withOut
electrtclty on Thanksgiving.
Elena and Juan were the two most
costly storms with $1.5 blrnOn
damage each. Both stalled In the
Gulf of Mexico, then turned In
circles that caused new evacuation
orders to be !!&gt;sued almost as soon as
the previous ones were lifted.
"It gets a little crazy," Lawreric;e
said. "The raising of warnings Is the
difficult part.
"Our job is to be a warning
.system, and we're always going to
be overwarnlng. Our ab!llty to
predict the motional a storm doesn't
allow us to he precise enough to just
evacuate those people that are going
to be hit by the storm. T6 be sateyau
have to move out an awful lot of
people.''

Parades
rescheduled.

Santa Claus. A number of bliidnesses will hold open howies from
mon to 5 p.m. with special features
in conjunctiOn wHh the parade. . ~

Middleport's parade will ~
underway IIi 6:30 p.m. MonllaY,.
Businesses there will. have IIIO!Mt
ligh&amp; sales In conjunllon with lhe

festlvlll,es.

:

'•

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~ $36 95
Delli holM and

"'"'
oumo•••~'~
""
''"
system
Up to 2 gallons

l

$2450'

1

1

01 co01an1
•
With COUj)OrltiiPM'• 12114185

ALL BRANDS FOR $10 :,_.
MICH.LIN ftre$tone
GOOD/fEAR
"Wirh approved cred/1. See dealer lor delalls.

• N!tw pads • New Mill! • Turn rotors

Tho touch of your hind
· Soma day we olll bl toptlltr
In Httvtn's lind.
Sadly missal ~ wilt,
Josephina. tho ch1hlrlll,
lfllldchlldtlll!ld
cr•t-pllldclolldr•.

MEMORIAL OBITUARY
lllzit Lillie Roush, - to « the latl IIMilll llld
lilly (~) Dll1t. Willlom
II Cheslirt, Ohio, .lln!IIIY &amp;,
1196 111d olepMIIItlilllft in
liollll lledical Ctnttr, Gill~
polis, on NDVII!Iblr 22. 1915
II the .... 89 ~. 10
llllnlhs llld 16 dip. On JanUII'f 7, 1914 she nitrried Ill·
11r Dale ~blush, who pncllllli
he! in dtllh Oft Damblr Z7 •
1978. To tlis 111ion MSIIom
tint IIIYiYin&amp; dlu-lwl:

«

.....,., "" ssgss
Reo

H 'il 95

12/IA/85
w1111 oouoon

MORE nRES • MORE SERVICE • MORE SAVINGS
'OieCOUnts baled on Uniroyal base pnce Hot April 1985.

l I ..

-.1'!'

.•

car care ce•
If you don't,.. you r 1ize, coli u1 .

RUTLAND
TIRE SALES

RIO nRE
EXCHANGE

ar-..

Main St., lutla.nd, Oh.

204 ltortfl .......

PH. 742-3011
Open 1·6 Men.·Sa·t.; Fri. I

••
011.
.Pk. 245-5131

CALL

JJW '

z

WE SERVICE ALL NATIONAL ACCOUNTS, AU. BRANDS

•

ohn.
'
She was precllied in death

by her twin sist•. lilly Ettie
Olrst: her sister. Stella
(Darst) Werner. l!ld ' five
brolhn: 111. Ross. lllltow,
Willden 111d Ct•ence Dlrst.
lllzit WIS I loYinl wife,
wortin&amp; by her IIJsblnd's
· almost sixty·liYt WillS,
elmo dllys wllltl
died. Slit Wll I
mother - alnys
; ::::.; ir ltld cloln&amp; thlor h• dlu;tttrs lf!d
111111111$, Iovin&amp; l!ld
or her lOllto ~~~~=::much
~ they hid bHn

nout ~-

"'·

Stvlour'' love Is pillstill.
told to Cllt all our
upon Him.
carllh for ••·

992~5740

9

Wanted To Buy

LOST:tong haired block cot. clean· used C!lrs.
Jim Mink Chov .- Oidslnc.
Bill Gena Johnson

Dark gray and white femate

minilture Schnauzer lolt in
Mulberry Ave. ar•. Re·

word. Call 6t4-992-7663.

'

Wanted to buy· guns. knives
8t coins, paying in cash, will

------Giiiiipoiii--------&amp;Vicinity
Friday-

boob, lott of. nice clothes.

No huntlngortreiPIUing on
Roymond Smith pooporty.

334B2.

Ft.

Pierce, FL

Brick &amp; block mooon'a e•po olonced .· Call tor lntorvlow.
614-836-6333.

8Jlcellent patient care for our
residents who are very IPI·
'· A
1
10 1
11

Guard hu vacancies for
qualified prior HNice lndl·

ware, old coins, ·large currency. Top prices. Ed. Bur-

If you are 66 yra of ege or

Nursing care in priv1te
home . Room fQr two pe-

liento . e500. o month. Call
614 _992 _3895.
1
116
Schools
Instruction

-=========

boby cradle a. mite. 9 till I

Golllpolia. Oh 46631 .

time, prefer age 26 end up,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Public
&amp; Auction

160

in Vinton, Oft. (Nut to

Post

Office)

TRUCKLOADS OF NEW MERCHANDISE
Late Christmas Shoppers, Come

Spend This Evening

With

Us.

AUCnONEER: Finis Isaac

614-388-9370

"

I llitt.,l to glvo -•Y· Call
81 4-742·2488.
Elkhound ond collie to glvo
owoy. 8 -ko old. Coli
114·988-4312.
3 purebred Oormon Shephard pupa. No popera. 8
w•ka old. lall ch111co.
614-992·1123.
2 ml•od Collie pupplea,
304-175-4883 .
3 Announcements

2131, ext. 239.

We havun Immediate OPI!IIn&amp;ln our Gallipolis , OH manutac turinc facility for 1 llanuflcturlnc Encineer seeking a dial ·
ltn&amp;inc po1ition with &amp;rolflh potllllill. A BS degree in
lleclllnicll !nlineerlnc with 3-5 yttrs or manufacturing en aineerlnaexparitnce In 1 metal workinc envilonmant Is re quired.

MOVING SAl£

715 3rcl Ave.
Mondly, Dec:. 2-7
9 to 4P.M. ·
,.._. .... ciNit rln , =OMdllnl, lllhdtN.

• ..,
(llol1d ....~ old
hill, ... 10011 - . loit

......... ;:: ...... ,
•wicka'. 3
quiH tcpt, sdlool i. tNot, •C
pap illlhtl. wtlitl onltlt
.... loatlll pllllts. pictrnl,
llintlan. 2 loldiol dot..
_., roltlr 1111ttr sla 10, nobc.

...

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
CHRISTMAS AUCTION

Thursday, December 5. 1985 at 7:00 P.M.
All New M,rcllandise-llmitlll Gu1nnteeOn all Items.
PARTIAL LISTING : Lamps, ~welry , dol~. pocket watches,
brass hall trees, brass cusjlido1, Colonial phones, brass ler n
stands, big va riety of toys, Cabbage Patch oolls, FM/AMradios with cassette, AM /FM in-dash with cassette, banks.
pitcher &amp; bowls. variety clocks , &amp; much, much mo1e.
SomethillJ lor Everyone
DOOR PRIZE: $100.00
The easitst way to Chri1tmas shop is at tht Patriot Auction Bam. We've cot Stvinp on Ill your ftvorite
Christmas &amp;ills .
Shop with us on Oecembtr 5, 1985 11 7:00 P.ll.
One of the ltrpst auctions In th• ~rea!!
PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
From Gallipolis. take Rt. 141. 111m left onto Rt. 775. turn
riaht onto Patriot Cldmus Road . Watch tor sips.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER - AUCnONEER

614-245-5152 - 388-8249

Equal Opportunity Employer

MANUFACTURING
ENGINEER

We are 1 succmful Fortune 500 cooq~tfly with muni-natlonal optr1tion1 whicll m111uf1cturs tfld distribute 1 Wide
varlet)' of pnclsion part1 for tho pnerat industri1l, aerospace. f1rm 111d con1tructlon oqMiprnent. truck .,d automotlvt indultriH, IS wtllll replactmlllt marksts . !his New
York Stocl: hciiiiiP tlrm optrlll$ «l pil!lts, more than 50
distribu11on centers and 5 rtSNrcll facilities.
To nctlvt conlldtntlll con1idarltion for this po1ition, wbmit re1ume lncludlna stillY history and roquirtmtflts to :
Pertonnel Monoger. Federal-Mogul "Corporation,
Precision Forged Products Dlvltlon. 2t60 Eastern
Avenue. Golllpolia. OH 46631 . INo agencies.
ple111.)

FEDERAL-MOGUL
All !qual Opportunlty/Aiflrntlvt Action £mployer

For Hie by owner 79

mobl~

home 14x70, front porch,
underpinning, new c1rpet, 2

bdr .. 2 botha, gordon tub,
fireplace. all melnt.nance
tree. 1 acre M·l . rural w.t•.

119.000 firm. Colt todoy
304-875-6600 or 676 - 614-256-6702.
3824.

86 acrea plu1 beautiful atone

end cador home. Ovortook-

Rr.al Estate

ing back· up water of Hock·
ing River. Reduced from

1169.000. to tt25,000.
Muat •• to appreciate. Call

H omas for Sate

31

614-167-6180 oflor 9:30
a.m. or 7 :30p.m.

Home for sale In Rutland.
lntuleted and ptrtiallyremo'l.

deled. 4 bodrooma. kitchen,
living room, dil'!ing room.

both with ahowor, utility

room. we1htr &amp; dryer hook·

up. Carpoo1. Iorge beck yard

with ttorage building. Priced

133,600 . Call 614-7422436.
Small down payment and

balance like rent, 6 rooma

lbeth and utility!. Nice lot,
304-675-3030 or 676 3431 .

8

6 room house with beth wHh
1'II ocroa naor Mlddtopoi1 •
Pomeroy. 614-992-7483.
Exterior complltl Interior

raody to comploto. All brick,
energy offlclont. th- bodroom rancher litting on one
acre. Priced on lnapectlon

ontv (3041675-2961.
Roduced - Will tall on lond
contract . 5 roome. beth,

utility, 10 ocres lond. 304675-3030: 304-675-3431 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ANTIOUE
AUCTION
JACKSTIN AUCTION HOUSE
•

JACKSON, OHIO
Br 1985 at 11:00 A.M.
LAST DAY OF YEAR
Rt. 788 Nelli to Daniel's Truckine Co.
2oak covered glass china cabinets: oak 2piece slant lronl bookcase

Sun., Dec.

dining room chairs; ~ce old douglo bo•; 4stack oak lx&gt;okcase: 6old
lrunks. 2 camel back; 2 oak highboy cheSIS: noce wocker chair &amp;
settee; 2 nice mahogany chest. one highbaoy with mirror: cherry
drop-leaf server: 1 oorner desk, t~ne; I n1ce mahogany china cup·

lx&gt;ard: 2 morble lop dressers: 1mild'soak desk: I d! ild's high ch11r;
I pottychair: 2 mahogany slant front bJokcasesttretary : 1Victorian

walnul Joboary lable: 1 Viclorian walnul cl!sk; 2 J~rge oak kegs; 1in·
cubalor; l'laoge mahogany Dun can Phyle doning room table; I large
Duncan Phyle drum lable: I square 3 shel oak d!ino cabinet: 4
woou~l 110n wicker d!airs: 1 "''I walnul marble 1011 lom p table: 1
oak kotchen cabonet; I 811dseye maple hoghboy chesl: 1~•boy B11d·

seye maple dresser: rice walnul washstand side towel bar; nice oak

4 drawer lole cabinet; 2 lady~s· Spinet desks;nice 2~ece pine stepback cupboord. 12 panes: noce Victooion BIWI walnul night table;
wickeJ sewing stand: several wicker baskets: pine wash sttnd;

wicker lloweo ~anler: walnul drop·leol Duncan Phyle table; "'"n
stool: Birdseye maple chosl: 3 od lurnong ~ow s; old was~ng
machine: old cook stove: 10 oak mosc. chaors: sevml leaded glass
windows: I baby bed; I youlh bed; several noce poclu oe tramos: l

marble to Burl walnut wash stand: 2 nee oak washstands; J oak 2

door bookcase: I large 11on bed; I mahogany halllable: 1 oak llat·
wall cupboard: 1Jaoaeoak drop.Jeal 51eg !able: I railroad Slantern;

lnteretted persons. certified

Giveaway

Piano tuning and repair, tune
up lor tho holldoyl, 1peciol
delivery. Ward's Keyboard.

comber, 1985. Dlocountlor
cosh. will flnonce . Colt 114286-6110.

secretary ; cherry 4 drawer dlest. verr nice; real nice cak side board
with be'.'eled mirror: nice etagere fu ll mirror; 6 matchm 11 mahcaan·r

Galllpollt Community Pool.

R.N.S.

614-742-2961 . Aloo: Boby

Grand Piano for tale. Free
de~ivery and tuning.

retlng. For confidential in·

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

twimming seuon at rhe

Considerinf a career chanae or returning to your
profession
'
Come to an atmosphere of high quality patient care
with a friendly supportive nursi!l&amp; ADMINISTRATION .
Positions availlble in tnlny 1reas. Extensive persnllized orientltion . Flexible staffina: Choose your
own schedule, ut 1bout ou1 Availability Pool. Salllry bl•d on education 1nd experience.
For more infottnltion, contact Nursing Administration, Men:y Hospi!ll, Portsmouth. Ohio (614) 353-

Piano Tuning . Line Daniell,

good Np&lt;itotlon ond credit

THURSDAY, DEC. 5, 1985
On

walking di1tance from North

family neighborhood. Move·
in condition. Avellebl• De-

Professional
Services

hnow m1nutactuNr need•

ristmas Auction

Instructors and Ufeguardt
are needed for the 1986

Lonoty. • dotal Maet
01 uncertified, ~re urged to
thot opecloloomeono todoyl RICK PEARSON AUCTIO- contM:t the Golllpolla RoCotl Dotetlme totl-trao 1- NEER SERVICE . Eatoll, crNtion Department. 618
800-972· 7171 onytlme dey firm. ontlquo, llquldlllo~ Second Ave .. Go!llpolia. Oh
or night.
talea. Llcenaod Ohio ond 46631 , ph. 614·446 -1789.
Watt Vlrglnlo. 304-773· axt. 24 lor doto ilo ond jo b
SINGLES. MEET THAT 5785 or 304-773-5430.
deacrlptlon .
SPECIAL PERSON! Call or
wrho for oppllcotlon. Par11 Help Wanted
oonot Touch lntroductlona,
304-744-44811. P. 0 . Box
8531, Cheriolton, W. Vo .
211302.

23

locelsal11 and aer.oice repre·

IO&lt;VIew oand to Bo• T1010
unlimited opportunity, 7:00 In corl of Golllpolla Deity
PM, Tuaa, Dec. 3, New Tribuna, 826 Third Ava ..
Hovan Municipal Building.
Goltipotlo, Oh 46631 .

8

By owner. Mu1t Mil-moved.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends

In own bulineM. Mult have

Job opportunity, part or lull

Horne a for Sale

3 bdr. rench. one cer garage.

older. a resident of Moton aont.tlvo. On-the-jobtrolngCounty, like to tlah, entoy lng : Excellent baneflu.
woo1clng outalde. Inquire Pt. Would prefer peraon who
P~ . Job Service, 226 Sixth
haa raised livestock or bun

Help Wonted: Water Setety

8

Opportunity

laam to drive e ~ami rig .
Jonee Drivea School. Call

lory ronge : $21,840 to
$36,684. Wrlto Adminiotro- 21
Business
tor, Lokln Hoapltol, Lakin,
Opportunity
46769 or cell 614-992 - WV 26260 or phono 3047780.
676-3230. WE ARE AN
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Moorman FNd Business
Buying dolly gold, tllvor EMPLLOYER .
Opportunity . Notlonotly
coins. rings, jawalry.ttarling

St.. Point Pleasant .

31

Business

viduola. Call 304· 675-3960
614-379-2328 .
or 1-800-642-3619.

atate of West Virginia. Sa-

Pt1z1 , 203 Jackson Pike,

21

Gollia High Schoot. Raducod
to U9,900. Coli 814-388that you do buslneaa with 8711 .
people you know, orid NOT
to 11nd money through the Government hamel from
mail until you have lnvatti- $1 . (U-ropoirj. Atao datln·
quent tax pt'operty. Cell
ptod the offering.
806·687 -6000 ext. GH 101891or Information.
22 Money to Loan
Small3 bdr. In town. ell new
corpot 8o paint. new oldlng.
new· furnace &amp;: centre! air.
HOME
OWNERS-Refinance
Private care tor elderly per·
to low fixed rete. U11 equity ••captlonol buy.· t28.000.
lOR in mv home. Room &amp;
for
any purpoae. leader Coll614-448-2459 ..
board. good care . On Rt.
Mortgage
Co.. 6 t 4-682218, Crown City. Coll6143 bedroom home with atf·
268-6609.
. 3061 '
ached garage. Nice lot-good

Part time R.N.a. 3:00- Yoconcy for the elderly in
11 :00, 11 :00-7:00. Willing our home . Trained and fif .
to work In lang term care. teen yeen; experMtnce. Call
Must be able to coordinate 614-992-7314.

chests, baaketl, diahes,
atone jars. antiques. gold
and silver . Write-M . O.
Miller, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Ohio

Soturdoy-SuMoy. Nov. 29,
chine repair. parts. and 30 a. Dec. 1. Toya. toola. kelt Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava.
oupplleo.
Pick up ond dolta, collectables. · croftt, Mlddloport, Oh. 614-992delivery, Davia Vacuum etactronlca ot 'Tho Gollipolla 3476 .
Cluiner, one hatf mile up Flee Moo1cet' thlt areu Mly
Georgu Creek Rd . Call v•r round. every week-end, STANDING TIMBER . AI
indoor-outdoor flea merkat. Tromm. Col! : 614 -742614-4441·0294.
Open BAM to 6 PM In aide 2328 .
Roclno Gun Shoot IPOn- tho Iormor Tholor Ford buildeorod bv Roclna Gun Club. Ing, naot to Fruth's. Routoo Buying Raw Fur .. Bilel and
E-v Sundov. beginning ot 36 8o 160. Frae door prl101 Deer hidet . Selling-trapping
1:00 p.m. Fectory Choke 12 otol11ng Sol. Doc. 7th. Atoo auppllea. Whoal and nlto
leern how to win 1 m1jor lltea. George Buckley, 614 IJUIIVO ohotguna.
opptience by Chrlatmoa. At- 884-4781 . Houra:12-9 p.m.
No hunting ortreapolling on tention dealers : tome space
John Clonch's property, for- ovollablo bulllmitad. Now it
Emplovmenl
merly the R. M. Furot the time. Frae odmlulon to
property ot the .,d or Hyutl tho public. 614-446-7037.
S m1ce s
Run Rood . Violotoro wWI be
Heotad
Goroge
Salo.
Dec.
ptOIICUiod.
2-7th. Dobby Dr.. McGuire 1- - - - - - - - , - No hunting or trlll)llllngon Subdlvilion . LR suite , bdr. 11 H 1 W t d
__a_ n_ e_ _
tho Bill Clonch'• propany.., auHao, twin bods. dlnotto 1 _ _ _e_P
aet. Iota more . Coil 814- o·
Hyutl Run Rood .
No hunting or traapauing, 441-3918.
One certified Medical Tech doy or night on the Chorlaa
E. Yoot Forma. VIole tors will Garogo Sole behind Bidwell nologist. weekdays. Sand
be proltcutod .
P.O. Dec. 2.3.4,6. Toys, resume or apply 10 Medical
No huntingortreipaulngon

Help Wanted

pick up. Call 614-446-3449
Loot - Shocking Collor. or 614 -446-2799.
VIcinity McClintock $26.
Join the Walt Vlrglnlo Army
Raword. 304-875-1249.
lnveator wishet to buy prof- National Guard. You rtcelve 18 Wanted to Do
itoblo goo station, with or o monthly paycheck, life F--------LOST dog, 6 yaor old temele wlthout convenience store Insurance, educational op·
Golden Rotrlvor, pao1 of tail on major hlghwey or tho · ponunitlea, retirement pey
missing, anawera to Ashley, ooughfare in Galllo County. ond other outllonding be- Profe11ional Santa Ntking
Bualntll or
REWARD , 304-876-1222. Reapond to Box T-2020 in nefita .' Call 304·676-3980 employment.
tomily Chrillmos poo11ea.
core ol the Gallipolis Doily or 1-B00-642-3619.
304-875-7748 with
LOST or otolln Iorge Pit Bull Tribuna, 826 3rd . Ave .. 1-----~--­ Colt
one wnk notice for
dog, Hartford oreo , RE- Galtlpollo. Oh 46631 .
To toll Avon. coll304-876- booking.
WARD, 304·882-3288.
1429 .
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron, PHYSICIAN'S ASSISTANT
hllrlll Ciol l
wood , cupboards, chairs. "A" Licensed to practice in
7
Yard Sale

SWEEPER ond oewlng me-

the O.C. 8o Noncy Gilpin
form on Sucx:oos Rd .. Ohio .
VloiotorawMI bo proaecuted .

prise Rd.

e peopM. ccept ng opp catlono Mon . through Fri. ot
SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd.
Pomeroy
8o Olivo St. Gallipolis. Coil tor.
E.O.E.Health Care Cen614-446-3159.
Don 't lei your mllltory tkilla
Barbie Dream House. good go to waste. The West
cond. Call 614-388-9858 . Virginia Army National

"'ood 8t coal heaters .

LOST:4·month-otd malo
puppy. Ught tan with llg~t
feet. Loot on CR. 46 8o SR.
248. Catl814-667-8101 .

Chriatmaa Sale.

)up, btut CDiinrl

1

Lost and Found

Male. Medium sin . Green
ey11. Anawers to Pumpkin.

3 Announcements

«

10, lovtd ond ..,.,

ASK FOR KIM OR RANDY
·•

IS~~- ptll-pllllfchldnn
111d two step pllt.prothil·

,..t

AND ALL OTHER SERVICES NEEDED BY
MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS

t~ Oi rn

and llrs. Harold (Belly)
ltlltw. all « Gllipolis.
llazie 111d list« llvtd on
alarm II Cheshill until they
llllvllilo Glllipolls in 1970.
lillie was blptiztd 111d 111Ciml I llllllbtr of Old
K)llt' free Will lllptist
Church April. 1912. wlicli
would ltrlt 1!11111 Iter. It !Itt
ti!ll of her dtltll.lht old Ill
nln&amp; member. She llld Ill·
· hr were la~hful !limbers
111til they 1!11¥111 ID Gllli·
polis, wh«t they attltldtd
First Baptist Church.
lllzit has 0!11 IU!Vivln&amp;
brott., 111'1. Budd 01111. of
a.tolrt. She also 1 - •
lllllpllldcUihn: huiBrldbury, Alan Scott. AlliiOII
Scott. Ricflad Scott. Randy
Scott, hull (WIIklr) Sllis·
bury 111d Litty (WIIklr)
Wi~is , all «Gtllipolis,IIWIII

stomped onvo!opo: ELAN
VITAL-6847 3418 EnterWe pay cash for late model

peed -.y llei:. 1. 1984.

,II mill your smila

oi her tall!ltl seemed
hllpir&amp; ea-1 for sick
t: .......... or her llmily, and
her
joy In help
J: otli... llazll Sptnt liiUcil
the lord. !lidand she IOYIII

• Road tell • Rep&amp;ct b'!IM.:$

Semt.tl'ltlalhc pam
e1tra Most

In loving memory ol George
Neualrood, Sr.. who paaod
owoy 16 yMro ago . Sodly
miiMCI by fomlly.

t

6. Free Delivery and Pickup
7. Same Day Service

FRONT OR REAR
BRAKES

In Memoriam

In Memoriam

Irs. Clyde (Ethel) llhdlllly.
llrs. lewis (GtnM) Scott,

1. Billing for All Pati~nts
2. 24 Hour Emergency Call
3. Qualified &amp; Experienced Personnel
4. Access to Over 2,000 Homecare Supplies
S. We Accept Assignment on

• sleel-belled all
season radial

2

IN MEMORY
In lovi11 memoiY of VltJil
· - L (Bitdlllollty who

payment. No
1ale1. Detail•
send self - addra118d
experlence~ No

614-446 -9672
Latt INn In the Sugar Run
orN. Howard . 814-992WANTED TO BUY used
6990.

DEC.1

console our hearts, wettwnk

EDICAL
.
EQUIP ENT, I C.
&amp;

WE OFFER A WIDE VARIETY OF DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUCH AS HOSPITAL BEDS, WHEELCHAIRS, WALKERS,
•.
BEDSIDE COMODES, OXYGEN EQUIPMENT, nc.

-·---

Otothlre Townohlp Truat-

Clrda. Whatever you did to

·.

---·---~

-~---

Bralblr/.
Vorgl Womtloy

deepalt oppreclotlon to oil
· lho11 who helpad uo during
the loll of our tovod one.The
funeral dlrectora, the pallboarara, Pootor Kelly Mid
lomily, oil who ltopped by to
- r worda of comfort, otl
tho11 who preponod the
mony dltheo of food, ond to
oil vvho tent flowen Mid

..

:taed

Mlchool R. Conkle,

1 Card of Thanks

' :
'lbe rainy weather has foroed tiie
postpomnent of the annual Chrl!ltrnas parades in both Pomeroy arid
Mlddlepot1.
.
•
Pomeroy's holiday season y.111
officially begin IIi 1 p.m. today wHb
the ChrBtmas parade r~ruig

MONDAY, DEC. 2nd, 1985

..':'R!£EG___
SA_L_E
66.50 38.88
----·--70.74 39.88
72.21 39.88
75.11 42.88
80.62 44.88
- 84.44 47.8!._

w-

11

Eaoy Anembty Workl
$600.00 per 100. Guaran- RN'o •ppllcotlont now being
teed Payment. No E•pa- ICCepted fQr pert•tlme em·
rlence . No ' Sales. Detail a ployment. Cell Pteoaont Vatoond aolf -addroued ley Hoopkol. Peroonnol dopt.
stamped Mvelope: Elan Vi- 304-1175-4340 ext. 308. ·
tal -716 34t8 Entorprlsa
Rd, Ft. Pierce, FL 33482.
12
Situations
Easy A11embly , Work!
Wanted
$600.00 par 100. Guoron-

Court of Com·

Card of Thanks

'

waok . Call 614-446-0696.

mon Ploot ol GoHio County,
Ohio, boilg ea- No. Mile.
92 on the Dodcat Of sold Court.
utcklg !hat 1120.700.00 bo
tr••faood 11om tho General
Ftrod to tho Rood .,d Bridge
Ftrod. • IIIO'IIdod by law, lor
the '""""" 101 forth i1 lllid
podUon; ond thet lllid porrition
Wil bo for '-ilg M the 9th
day of Docembor, 1986. at
6
8:66A.M.

Annou nr: emen Is

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S27!~! ~

podUon In tho

Help Wanted

Babylitt&amp;i.in my home *40

-Y

DEC. t

1

11

NOTICE OF flUNG
OF PETITION FOR
'IIIANSFER OF RJ NOS
NOtice lo
givon 1hat
on tho 22M cloY a! N,__,
1911&amp;. Tho lloood al Truol Chothlre Townahlp, the
Undenliguod petitioner, - o

We wlah to expreu our

Is Proud to Announce The
Opening Of Our New Branch
Office At
220 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

All SEASON
S',.,.,.TE~:EI BELTED RADIAL

Public Notice

NOTICE OF RUNG
.
OF PEllTION FOR
· - · 111ANSFER OF RJ NOS
' · Notlc:e lo honby a1vtn 1hot
.' on tho 22M cloy 01 NOvomllot,
1986, The Boonl of Townlhlp
'.' Tru- a1 Add.., To...,. lhip, the Undonlgnod potitionor. 0 polltiori In 11o
--Court of Conmon Pleu of
Gllllo County, Ohio, bolng
''liauoo No. Mile. 91 M f1o
"' Dcx:ket of ooid C.Ur, Ollci1g
..!hat *16,000.00 botnnflom the Gen... F101d to tho
"Roat ond Blldge F101d, •
providod bv low. tor 1he
......,. Mt tenth In lllid
podtion: ond thetlllid pritlon
witt bo for heorilg .., the 9th
day of Dacambof. 1811&amp;. ot
8:66A.M.
R-H-.o.
Rlchonl Siuon,
Chaotoo Marm,
• Addloon Townlhip Tru-.
.tooeph L. Cain, P..,a. Atty.
· Goltia County, Ohio

••

SIZE _
P18:1eoA13
• Excellent
P20:170R13
trochon 1n
Pt85175A14
ram or snow
P195!75R14
• Respons1 ve P20:175R14
handhng
P20:175R15 • Blac kwalls
P21
-- 5175Rl5

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

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ETIGER PAW PLUS

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va.

l

Busy hurricane season kills 146

Special interests spend
$113 million
By ClAY F. WCIIARDS
UP1 Pollilclil Wrller
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Special
Interests poured a record $113
mUllan Into the 1983-84 election
cycle, with most of it going to
incumbent members of Congress,
the Federal Election Commission
reported Saturday.
Senate and House members
seeking re-election received $8!.6
million, or 70 percent of all the
money contrtbuted by special
Interest political action committees.
By compartson, challengers received only 16 percent, and candidates In open seat elections got 11
percent.
.
A$ a group, House Democrats got
the biggest chunk-$38.8 mtll!on. or
,34 percent c1 the totaL
PAC contrtbutkms by special
Interests have been a growing
concern because of allegations the
corporations, unions and groups
giving the money have undue
Influence on the votes of members of
Congress. Tuesday tbe Senate wUI
vote on a measure to lbn!t tbe
amount of PAC money a congres; slonal candidate can accept.
j PAC contrtbutlons In the last
•electk&gt;n cycle jumped from the$87.6
.. million spent two years earlier. The
FEC said Its report reviewed 4.347
PACs.

are lnextraord!narUy short supply.
"The shortage or clergy In the
United States is not In · the same
categol')l as my supposition of a
great need," Malone quickly added.
All four prelates said they stnodby
church teaching thattorbidswomen

1, 1986

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From Gallipolis. tate Route 141, turn left onto
Route 775 , turn right onto P1triot Cldmus Road
Watch lor sicns.
·
Lookinalor merchandise? '" the Pa~lot Auction Barn!
We hlvaaU types of new and uud mlrcfl~ndise-IPPii ·
ances, fum1ture. antlques1nd collectors items. Somtthona for everyonel
SATUR~AY, DECEMBER 7, 1985 at 7:00P.M.
Partlll lostina: Good wood &amp; coal cook slove washer &amp;
dryers, gas cook stove. electrical cook stove.' heatilator.
roffee table, end tables, 2 ton jacks, tables, sofa &amp; chair,
cha 11s, p1tchers &amp; bowls , toys, tools, collectors dishes, what·
nots &amp; much , much more.
5 Truckloads Used &amp;Antiques to Unload
SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
Door Prizes Giwn Wttkly
Consianmtnls ICCaptld from 1:00-5:00 p.m. .., Saturday.
Han somtthin&amp; you want to stll? Conttc:t Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer. Arratl&amp;elllltltl for plcbrp servlctavoi-

albla.

Barn end Auctioneer available lor Public Auctions on con tract. Co~trtc:t Includes htullnl and tr111sportin1 all
merchl!ldlll.
Reshltnt and Business Auction Service lito mll1la.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCHONEER

614/245-5152 - 614/388-8249

several pieces gramte ware: 2 gateleg tables: 2 oak dressers, '.'ery

noce: 2 poe crusl tablos; 2A.P. DonaghhoP.W.Va.1ars: I stone1u~ £.
W. Scarlet! Brothe rs, West Pithy; several stoneware pieces: misc.

stands &amp; /able chairs: 25 pes. Roseville &amp; Weller !llMery; several

pes. pressed &amp;depression glass; ginerbreaed man1el cock: very nice
depress1on glass: Bavar1an ware.

licensed 111d Bonded
Coleman Bell1my- Owner (614) 286- ~65
Rick Pearson-Auctio- (304)-m -5430-{304) 733-5785
Lunch '!Viii Be Served
·

ESTATE AUCTION

. MONDAY, DEC. 2, 1985
10:00 A.M.

The Estate of Reno Lind will be sold at the resi dence located at 245 Condor Street, in Pomeroy, Ohio. Condor Street is located behind
MGM Farm City, inc .
1980 Volkswagen pickup, Masser ferguson snowmobile, Ar·
tic Cal snow mobile, Ski Wh iz tra iler. llat bed utilily trailer.

TOOlS

Brick sa w &amp; stand , masonry tools. sca llold bucks. mortar
bo x, Forney welder, air comp1essor, grmder, several lool ·
chests full of hand tools, ben ch vise , extensoon &amp;step ladders from 5 ft. to 30ft., Bolen lawn mower, 2 lawnboy mowers. lawn roller, plu s many more olems.
CHILDREN 'S IOOLS
The toys belonged lo Mr . lind 's son and are probaby about
30 to 40 yea rs old .
HOUSEHOLD
Maytag washer &amp; d1yer, Frlgodaor1 Slde·by-sode relrogerator
freezer, F1igodaore elec tri c range, table &amp; 4 chaors, 3 cabonets. misc. kitchen appliances. 1ound table &amp; 4 chairs,
hulch. chesl. maple desk, Zenith 1'1 console, couch , recliner.
slereo, 1ecord ca binet fireplace equop., 2·3 piece bedroom
suites. clothes chest, 5" Quasar TV, G.E. sweeper. Hoover
upright sweeper, Bissell vacuum cleaner, misc. stands,
lamps, chairs. records. 2 trunks, linens. dishes. ~ lv erwm
and other misc. hou sehold items.
Auctioneer's Note: The items b•in&amp; oflerlli1r1 cl11n 111d
of hiah qual ity. In thl mnt thlt the Sll$ continues lor I
second d1y. the truck &amp; snowmobiles will bt sold on lionday. Dec. 2. The slit may be postponed II thl weather is
bad.
Case. No. 24950

James F. Butcher, Executor
of Reno Lind Estate

Cash Day of Sale

Lunch Available

JIM CARNAHAN. AUCTIONEER
949-2708
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property.

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Ohio- Point
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

41

Houses for Rent

64 Misc. Merchandise

3 hornet, 2·3 bedroomt.
Stutet Real Eatate, 614-

' NEW 'AND USED MQBILE
'HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 614 -4467274.

304-676· 3100 or 675 6609.

FrQm souffle
to end play

14•70 Groywood. 3 bdr.,

Two bedroom houae for rent

By James Jacoby

11h bath, newly remodeled,

underpinning. needs fini1h

work, S8,600. Coli 614446 -3040.

446·4206.
Efficiency collage. t56.00
week, utilities paid, phone

Large house end apartment,

unfurniohed . 304-6751385.

derpinning, new drapes.
exc . cond .• Lot 8t Garage can
be bought or rented alto.

In Maaon. house, 2 br.
Reference• and deposit re-

quired . 304· 773·5934.

U&amp;OO . Call 61 4-379 ·
2748.
14•70 Flootwood. 3 bdr.,
11h baths. large kitchen and
Nparate utility room. All
,appliances including washer
a dryer. Woodbumer with
heerth. Totel electric. All
underpinning , atormwin dowa and 3 decka. Extrl

nicol Muot oell. $10,800.
S:•ll 81 4-2&amp;6-65B7.
·1977 14• 70 Kajn mobile
"ome. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathe,
~odburner, 1Ox20 awning, &amp; ell underpinning. Cell

814-379-2798.

.1974 Hlllcroot 12•58, 2
bedroomt , Plrtially 1ur·

"lshod. Good cond. $4000.
)iluot ooll. Call 614-9928263.

~ 984 trtilor. 3 bodrooms, 2
batho. furnlohed or unfurftlohod. &amp;1 4·949·2653.
'1972 12x65 Schuhz mobile
{lome with 7x11 expando.
woodburner, 1ir condition,
Wather end dryer, ell appliance•. furnithed, two
1)orchea, underpenning ,

Farms for Sale

"pple Grove 1 00 aeret,

largo born 120x28. 1.30011
frontage on Jerry'• Run

Roll(l, 5 .mileo from Gooityear Plant. Mineral rightl.
Went otter. Clyde Bowen.
~r. 304·576-2336.

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

.

farm for 1118: no houte. 2
1Mrn1. county water&amp; aeptic

iank . Call 614-379-2268.

&amp; acres

¥rith 2 seperete
11110bile home Iota with underground utilitiet and 2
it•rv nice mobile homea.
Rental Income exceed•
•400. per month or live in

44

Apartment
for Rent

J'ACKSON ' esTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal

and Cable TV available,
oHice hours 11 potsible 10
em to 4 pmand7pmto 9 pm

utilitiet, no petl, references.

School&amp; neer Heniaonville.

Re nt als

•
41

Houses for Rent

Trailer 1ot. 100•100 at Ga11i·
polia Ferry. total electric.

city woter. cell 304-676·
3216.
3 bedroom double wide
moti'Ue home , on large
corner lot, partly furnished,
AC, wood .burner, garage,
no petl, re1rences required.

304·875-4308 altar 7 :00.
44

Apartment
for Rant

Just availlble furniahed apt.

Deluxe 2 bdr. downtown,
complete kitchen. all carpet,
waaher, dryer, electric heat

llo AC . Dop. required . Coli
days 81 4-448·4383. eve. e.
weokonds 614-446-0139.
Furnished apt .. 1 bdr ..
$236, utilitiet paid. 7 Neil

Nice 2 bdr. homo, 2 full Avo.. Golllpolio. Coli 446·
botho, V. bl. from Wash . 4416 after 7pm.
~lem ., 8325. ref. req. Call
Furnished apt., 4 rooms l
11 4-446·21 58.
bath, no pets, adultt. Aveil a·

) bedroom with attached
•r•ge . Well intulated.
,eautlfully decorated in·
Cluding curtaina. 8326 per

l

bla Dec. 1. Coil 814-446·
1619 .

4th, Gallipoli1, 8196 water

paid. Call 448·4416 after
7PM.
.
New efficiency 1pt. Cell

814-446 -0390,
740V. Second AVa. 3 bdr ..
$190 mo ., dep . requ ired.

Call 614 -446 -4222 botwoon 9 &amp; 5.
Furnithed apt. , 3 rooma. &amp;
bath, newly decorated, no

pots, adulto. Coli 814-4481619.

l-:-c::--::---:-:,-,...,--

bedroom in country, 7
IICJII will Mil on land

Large 6 room upsteira apt ...
furnished kitchen, $200mo.
plus utilities, 238 ht. Ave.

Contract, no money down. Call 814·448·4926 .
Call 61 4·448·4864 or 61 4- 1- - - - - - - - 886· 7909.
2 bedroom aportments .
New Heven, WVa. Newly

Furnished houtt, 241 Jock· remodtled . In 1own. 814·
jon Pika. Galllpolio. 1200 _9_9 2_·_7_4_B_1_.- - - - woter paid, 2 bdr . Coli 1
2 bd.room furniahed Apt.
448-4418. after 7PM .

.

Momea for rent. EaiY to
hilt, 3 bdr ., family room

and light house keeping
roomt. Park Central Hotel.

Call 814-446·0758.
Housekeeping room, range,
refrig .. ahara ba•h. male
proferrod. util~lu pd . •1 26.

Call 446·441 6 alter 7pm.
46 Space for Rent

+76 S

SOUTH
.A 7
• K Q 10 9 7 6

ts 3

61 Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofooand chairor.;lced from
8286. to t896. obloo. 860
end up to $125. Hldt·l·
bodo, 8380. end up to
$650., oolo bodo •145,
Roclinoro. t225. to •376.,
Lomps from $28. 10 •125.
pc. dlnottoo from t109 .. to
435. 7 pc. $189 and up.
Wood ttblo whh II• cholro
t285 to 1746. Oook t110
up to t226. Hutchto, t550.
Bunk bod complete w~h

Real nice. Adult&amp; only. No
pets. Rl. 124. Min~raville ,

t395.

Mattrea..a or box springa,

miles out Bulaville Rd. Open

9om to 5pm, Mon. thru Sot.
814-446·0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathen. dryera, rlfrigera·
tora. ranges . Skaggt Appliance~, Upper River Rd .

booldo Stone Croll Motel.
614·446· 739B.
County Applianc1, Inc .
Good uud appliance• and
TV otto. Open BAM to 8PM.

Man thru Sot. 614-448·
1 699, 627 3rd. Avo. Gofll·
polls, OH.

Valley Fumiture, new &amp;
uoed . Lorge ooctlon of quality furniture . 1216 Eaatem

Avo.. Gallipolis.

ooito required . Wlumon
Rool Eototo Agency, 614-

~

., 48

. 3 644 .

a.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Parle, Route 33, North of buying coal &amp; wood otovto.
Ponntroy. Lorge loll. Coli I-Co~ll:6~1;4;-44::;8~-3:1;&amp;:8:.
814·992· 7479.
I.
62 CB,TV, Radio
Trailer 1paces. Small childEquipment
ren accepted. Out Rt. 1.
· Locuot Rood. bock of K&amp;K.
Bearcat Ill 8 channel
1-304-676·1076.
Scanner (8 crystal• in·
eluded). Coli 814-992·
7689.

==:.

Merchan di se

64 Misc . Merchandi88
61 Household Goods

e210.00 por month, adults
only. no poto, 304·6763788 otter 6:00.
- - -- - - - - Muon Aponmonto now ac·
applications for new
:i btdroom ronch homo, 2 captlng
mllu from Rutland . 8276. 2 bedroom apartments.
lie• month. Socurity dopoolt Featuring air cond end
and rtferencet required. laundry facilities. boso rent
Hobottttor Realty. 814- of e199 .00. Phone 304·
675·6834.
142-3092.

grade.

Oh. 614-446 -0840 .

King woodburnor, f250 .
Call 614-379-2162 after 6 .
Ml•od hordwoodolabs, 112.
par bundle, containing approx.. 1Y.t ton, fob . Ohio

7. 4'x8'k\4" proflnlohod mo·

SPUT LEVR HOUSE wHh ~

8 . Bruthed eluminum key
entl'tlnce lockt 4.99 ee.

dinin1 room, livinc room ind'
. lqe rwutllioll rootn. Lo. cited on 8 acns. IM&amp;t farm

Dook - and chair, stonding
paneling aecondt
orgon with llool, twin bod· · aonite
3.89
an
up.
room 1uite complete ,
waaher and dryer set. RCA
rv·and Itand with computer

9. Interior prehung door'o
go mu, call bttwoon 10:00 IIIOrted
AM and 4:00PM. 814·448- 29.9&amp;. 1i11'1 lf1 finithll
B803 .
tO. 48" ook vonity with 8
grodo
top 199.00.
4•8 It pool table. 4 otlcko. Penn 'smarble
Werehouae, Wtll·
bridge, boll set. rock, pill oton. Ohio.
Coli 614-384·
box. bruah and cover, 3145.
8150.00. 304-675-69&amp;&amp;.
Block, brick, mortar and
26 in Ouaaar color TV, · matonry suppliet . Mountain
remote control. axe

Block, Rt. 33. New
cond.8126.00, 304· 675- Stott
Hoven. W. Va. 304-882·
2815.
2222.

white e&amp;5, · electric range
white •&amp;&amp;, electric range
side refrigerator t175, avo·

scoth pine live X·maa tr••

bolltd &amp; burlaptd 132,60.

pluo motchlng Auotrlon val·
oncos. llko now. Cro11buck

atormdoor and colonial

roclttr lovnootntwly uphol·
otored. Call 614-387-710,1.
Country otylo ook furnlturo,
hand crof!od and llnlohod,
antique reproducllons . Poul
Conkel , Rt . 7, Tuppin
Plains.

1---------

Couch, chair In floral prlnl .

Coffoo and 2 tnd ttblto.
Groen racliner. Good cor&gt;dllion. Call 814·992·5524.

Firewood opllt llockod &amp;
deliv ...d. large loodo t38
local. t40 out of town. Call
814·446-7983 or614·446·
8&amp;3&amp; .
l-3-pc-.-f-lo_rt_l_ll_v_in_g-roo_m_ou_ita
e300, 6 pc. pint rtck·room
ouhe t200. King wood
burner 1250. Call 814·4463988.
Chlnon Super 8 movloo .. mara end projector, ••• now,
f150. Call 114-441-8330
after 4:00.

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•
, 3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOiiE
on 3 lots in Syrmse.
OLDER HOUSE wilh 3 btd·
rooms on corner lot in Syr·
CUSI.

HOME NATIONAL

BANK
949·2210

Matching couch. lov1111t. ···
304· 676· 1035 or 8754568.
58

Pets for Sale

Snowmobile, good cond,

BriarpatCh Kennett All·
brted grooming. Gordon
Setter female obedience

couchet, one Early Amari·
can with matching chair.

trained . Englioh CockorSpa·
nlala. 388-9790.

wing bock choir. 304-876·
6951 after 6:00.

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·

ntl. CFA Hlmolayon. Porolon
Picken• Uaed Furniture. and Slameto khtens. AKC
cedar cheat. o1k china ckla•t Chow pupploo. Coli 446with claw feet, 9 pc. dining 3844 after 7PM .
room au it, old oak rocker.

kida camouftege all sizea.
Sam Somervii ie, Eut Ravenswood junction lnde·

pondtnco Rood-Old Rt. 21 ,
Fri. Sot, Sun, 1'00 -7:00

PM. (open evenings after 5

PMI Free dolivory Point
Ploooant oroo . 304· 675·
3334.
66 Building Supplies
Building Materlols
Block , brick, sewer pipet,
windowt . lintalt , etc .
Cleudt Win1ere, Rio Grandi.

0. Call614-246 -6121 .

Kentucky Lump , Ohio Lump,
Ohio Stoker. Yord or dtllvery.

cemenl

blocka and

•20 for round.

Sovogo ;ul·30 Old Action
Chriltmoo gift. 1160. Coli
6t4-742·2502 .

1111·111

hard -

wood. •25 ~you pick It up or
$36 por pick-up food dell ·
vertd. Coli 814 -985-3567.

Musical
lnlltruments

puppiet.

7

weeka

old .

Wormed . Working otock.
&amp;14-985-4296.
4 puppi&lt;to. port Collie. Will
bt largo dogo. 814-9853916.

With Option To luy
LARGE AIRY CALFORNIA BRICK RANCH
3 bedrooms, 21h ceramic baths. lg. living room,
dining room , family room, new kitchen. patio
with gas grill.

REFERENCES NECESSARY AND
ONE MONTH RENTAL DEPOSIT REQUIRED
Rent Reduced From $510 to $500 With Deposit
1 Yoar Minimum I••

Uvelltock

.HUFFMAN
I'. ~

304-876-4831 .

~ui
I .· M~GHEE
~

.

~ ~ ~~

698·8111
IIALTOI
Home Phone

BMR 452 - NEW USTING- Ow net -'!101g to finanll! for quaifioo buyer
litis 31jR house oW14 LNice clean honJl with 18'x40' above groond potj.
Call ktr details. Priced at $28.1XX1.

992-3535 ..
42 ACRES WITH MOBILE
HOlE - Has bam , several
buildings, farm equ~ ., pond,
a! acres wooded, 5 acres
fenced. $50,000.
THREE BEDROOM BRICK IN
LANGSVILE - Approx. 4
acres, modern kitchen, I ~
balhs, family room, base·
menl, fenced for cattle or
horses. 50's.
THRE BEDROOM HOlE IN
RUTLAND - Has large fam ·
ily room with fireplace, 2
balhs, deck, garage. SO' s.

A GOOD BUY - 3 BED·
ROO I HOME - I\\ bath s,

BMR 451- NEW USTING - 3 BRhome on large ~I includes lg lomg
room wi1tt wb fireplace, dining room,2baths (one indudes set-in tub ~us a
·~~le si&gt;:tWer) . Yoo must see lhiS one inside' Priced at $42.900.
BMR - HEW ISIIIIG- Alittle over 6a:res oith 3bedroomhome.Wo·

kin base'""'t features bmi~ room r.ilh fireplace. ~lchen, d1n1ng area.

LR and knchen u!&gt;lair~ 1~ baths, 2t&gt;r deta:hed garage wrth side slor·
age and overhead coo~ be rrode into apartment Asong $6~1XIIl

COMPLETE AUCTION SER~ICE
MEIGS COUNTY LISTINGS
IIMR 569 lovely 2sttrY oo~mal home wih '""vow. Situate:! on ~ acre
litis i'otre tearures lamit room, ditog 1oom. eat-it k~dt\!JI , ~ baml!lt
G~ssed-it front pordt. located in S)l!cuse. Asking $39,500.

IIIIR 573 - Prill!d lo 581. Th ~ honJl in lltmeroy Ills 2 il!drooms, lamt,
room. ~lity . Owner "'oos a qutck sao so our !l'&lt;e is ON LY $15.1XX1.
IIMR 570- 125 acre f!lm , 2!Jtrns, eQUipment s~ 3 b!drooms ~illle
home.localed on St RL 124 it Lanf111lo. ·

IIIIR 571 - Th• oozy 11Edro\Y11 home• Mtddoporti;it A·Ishape Take
a nice f..t illfne. Checlt if oot $27.500.

m-

New lima Rd.. Rutland. 3 bedroom lrillle home. fuN
-ent . NICE!!S.ualedonI acre Sens at $36,500.Owner will consM!er

IIIII

lump houte coel, deliver any

TEAFORD

S.ve 60 per ctntll Flashing
arrow olgno 127911 Lighted .
non-arrow '269 . Unlighted
1209. (Free letters) Stt
local;y . 1(B00)423· 01 63
!Aioo Indoor LED ltlel).

Reol Estate

•

LIBERTY - 2 bedrooms,
tub, siXJtm. Total
eleclric - also f~ed for wooclbumer. All carpeloo, immedilte
~esslln. Beautiul b~e and whle - like ne¥~ nside. E!cellent
buy at $7.190. See I now.

lf640

LEADINGHAM lEAL ESTATE-446-7699

388-9676

Real Estate Gener~t

LORAN NOLAN

Battery Sale
COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BATTERIES

AGRI BOSS

12 VOLT-6 VOLT
3 YEAR WARRANTY

MGM Farm City
Service Station
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
6 A.M. TO II P.M.
PHONE 614·992·9932

PRICE REDUCED- Here is a
real bargain , really nice 2
slory home 1n Pomeroy.
Owner must sacrifice &amp; has
roouced pr;ce lo $23.000.00.
Call n1111 for your shaN~ g.
HAN DYMAII SPECIAL - ·
Owner wanls to sell &amp;ha s re·
du ced this ome in Middle·port to $12,500.00. Full lot
tvaluoo at $7 ,5001 that only
leaves a $5,000 value on
this two story home. Needs
repairs. Call foday.
COUNTRY ESTATE -Over 4
acres of ground wrth a beautiful new home. I ~ story
home, full basemen!, 2 car
garage, in-ground JX)ol and
many other fealu res. Callloday. S64.:xJO

oo.

LANGSVILLE - Over one
acre in the counlry and a
li ke new 3 bedroom ranch
lype house with 2 garage.
Equipped kilchen, all '"
good condition. $41 ,900.00 .
. We have several investr111nt
properties that are priced to
sell. II you want a rtrltal
unit to repair we hava several cood deals. Call &amp; we
can tell you how tl mah
money wnh a rental.
NEW IISTIN - Racine Need a build ing lot? I acre lot
wilh all utilities on !te plus
septic. 28'x44' block basement already constructed.
$10,000.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 915-4466

For Meigs Co. Listings
Cheryl Lemler - 742-3171

IB
lllliO!

~iot

•

$1°0 LB.

$3995

NEW liSTING - Nur Pomeroy - A neat ittle two
bedroom home on small lot
Gas heal, city water, garage.
{}tly $8,500.00.

216 E, 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141-992-3325 ••

Saara Corning top electric
range, ul1-cleanlng oven
and microwave after 5 p.m .

ONLY
ALL SIZES IN STOCK

Call:

NEW USTING ..:. Spacious brick andlfrari1e trl·lev~
a~ res of rolling pasl~re and crop ground . Very nee home
srde With .large kitchen, living room, 3 BRs Iexira large master BR Wtlh walk·ln closet and full balh), unfinished lower
le.vel l45x30) and 2\1 car Jtrage. Owners have bealthe elec·
trrc company Wtlh 2 woodburners and lots ol in sulalion .
Plenly of yard for practically anylhing. Call for more in forma :
t11on.

WISEMAN lEAL

- 446-3643

NEW LISTING - 6 qu~(
acres and mob~e home
!11lod pavoo road. New
shop/garage and drilloo well,• 1•
$22,000
MIDDLEPORT - Mulb•mv•l
Ave., sits this good
hou se Storm windows. oak
floors, hot waler II! at &amp; walk:
to the stores. Ony $28,000 .·
SOUTHERN - 2 houses &amp;

acres near

SYRACUSE frame being rem,odellec
level lots. Asking •n•,wu.,
MIDDLEPORT room•
one floor home near groc-.
ery, gas heat. carpeting &amp;,
small lot for $18,000.
,
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
type home, 2 BRs, lull
menl &amp; formal dihin
garage apt. Near the
i
ness section .
,
HANDYIAN - 2 hou ses,~
one needs work, but one just
rernodelro, in Middleport ·
On ly $25,000. .
·•
ONE FlOOR - In Rustic Hil~.
Stove, refrigeralor, washer
dryer, office plus 6 rms. Ve~
good carpet1n g Family
12x 19 &amp; chain ink fence!
yard.
FREE PARKING
I Roush,
&amp; Bruce.

m

Judy DeWitt-Broker-388-8155
J. Merrill Carter-Realtor-379 -2184
Becky Lene - Realtor-446-0458
Jim Cochran-Realtor- 446· 7881
Virginia Smith-Reeltor- 38B-8826
Phyllis Loveday- Realtor-446 -2230
Liz Long-Realtor- 675-3968

1969 Pontiac Cattllne ru~o
groot, mull ooll, t350 or
bolt offer. Call 614-245·

offer.

omount. 304-875-7397 or
875-1247.

GRAIN FED
FREEZER BEEF

Broker-Auctioneor
Call 446·0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245·9507
Steye McGhee
446·1255

BMR 550 - NEW USTING - 1~2 acres m/1 ~ Perry Twp. Nice
retrodeled home includes 3BRs, 2 ball1s, I~ lo~IIE&lt;t with dining area. Call
lor d~!lls.
.

Linda L Riffle

-=R-ea~I~E~s-ta~t-e~G~e-ne_r_a_l l

gunamith work, f11t •rvice,

greet fuel

Real Estate General

(

onPut
our
Number 1to work for yoU:
SOUTHERN-HILLS R.~., INC.

446~6610

REALTOR•

Otter 1ng CENGUAAO'• IMuran ce Serv 1ce~

IIIEOIATE POSSESSION - $49,000 buys thi;
attracti;e 3 OOdroom cedar ij.ievelthatrearuresalllfge
family room, 2 balhs, nee kichen. garage, plls
delathM WO'IGI!Jp. All siluatoo on over 1 acre.
Possibfe loan assumpliln.

.. ' ..
.
IN TliO IDeATION -You have lo sre till insi:le to
appreciate this 2 OOdroom oome, all nk:e size roof1'6,
beautiful carpet thmu~ spttk58 clean. Beautfful
~ ·grourrl pool wlh proacy lence. Landscapoo. Take a
look. You11be impressoo.
NI004

NATURE PAINTS AMASTERPIECE ri~t rutile yrur
wildow. Ascene ~ acre wooded yard IXlldemg on
Raccoon Creek. An attractive custom built bridt 111d
cooar ranch with a cozy firep~ce. lamily room,dililg
room and 2 car 111rag~ Nee tWap-aroorrl deck 111d
creek front oilh boat dock. $55,000.
U97

SIAU FARM - 2 story rrodern filfm rome,

CASH NOT

NEW Ll5nNG - ATTMCTIV£ WOODlD SETTING
NEAR EVERGREEN - 10 veer old bock illd frame
bi-level wittl I Y, baths, 3 OOdrOOms, large Mellen,
fami~ room, garage. NO! garden spols. Possibfe loan
il$umption $53.000.

power windows-door klckt.

AC, cruloo control, good

Raal Estate General

''

1974 Mercury Coprlco
e400 or boot offer. Coli
814-448-8516.

1978 Plymouth Valiant 1-9_1_5_7_.- - - - - - Scomp. 2 dr .. groon, V-8 . 1981 Ctmoro Z28, 3&amp;0
318 motor. good rodloltiroo, outo, good cond, 304·578·
rodio. AC . Call 614-245· 2119 .
9
__6_9_8_· - - - - - - For 1110 1989 Plymouth
1976 Impala 3&amp;0 engine. 4 Fury V· 8, automallc,
dr .. outo, PS, PB, '\C, very 44,000 actutl mlloo. Coli
good cond.. 8960. Coil 814·448·8806 .
Fmn Su pplir. s
614-446-3400 or 614·446·
2662.
&amp; l iV I:~ tu ck
1979 Monte Carlo. VB, ps.
pb, oir. he . Cond. 81 41976 Cordobo t398. Coli 982-2849.
61 Farm Equipment 614·446·4703
or 814-2586672.
1883 . Chtv. c 'lmaro .Z28
CROSS&amp;. SONS
T-Top. Fully loodlld. 305
U.S .. 36 Wost, Jockson,
1984 Renault Encore . cron-flre Injection. Call
Ohio. 814-288 -6451.
lotded. 5 opd., highwoy 614· 949·2048 after 5:00
Melley Fergueon, New
mileage . great eond, book p.m.
.
·;Hollend,8.. hHogSoles&amp; value $4, 800 . osklng
Strvlco. Over 40 uoad
84,000. Coli 614·446 · 1973 VW (Thing) very good
·! rector• to chooae from &amp; 2646 .
Nnning cond. flborglaoo top.
complttellno of now &amp; 1- - - - - - - - - 8750 . Call 814-992 -6188
ulld equipment. Lorgelt btra clean 1982 Cutlau after 4PM wookdoya.
·oolectlon In S .E. Ohio.
Slera 42 ,000 mlleo. one
Sptclal1011 dlocounl on ell driver, e6,800. Call 814·
pano for cuh ttlto only, 446·21 23.
Real Estate General
until Nov. 15.
1978 Pinto 4 cyl., 4 opd ..
9N Ford !rtclor whh equip- now point, runs good, 1800.
riient, . buoh hog , plows, Coli 814-448·4482 .
"'torhoo. honia, end boom 1- - - - - - - - f!Oie. Coll614·286·6622. 1977 Mullong auto on
.~• Livtllock Trallaro. Hur· floor, 2 dr .. low mlleogo . Coli
rlcone, WV. 304-767-6644 _61_4_-44_6_-7_4_1_9_._ __
1
or 757·8399 .
1983 Oldomobllo dluol
Doltt Royale 62.000 mllao.

GrMt looking Beefolo bull, 7 clutch auombly), new point
months old. Alklng t325 . 84. runo groat. t1 ,900. See
W'hltefac•· Holatein mixed ot 81ue Fountain Mottl. 161
bull, 8 mo . old. 8276 . Upper River Rd , Coli 614·
448·0243, Golllpollo, Oh.
814-742-3033.

~ · . ~,.

1978 Datsun. 1978 Por\tioc
Grand Pri•· roody lor wlnler.
1978 Muotang . Roooonoblo
oflero conoldertd. Calll1 4379-2851 '

:Ounrovln Fruit Form will
c!ou for ~aon Decembe'
8th. Utility gredo opples
,d :50 bushol. No. 1 opplei
)10 bushol. 581 S.E. of
•Aibtny. Ohio. Hro. lOAM to
·~:30PM dolly.

{new tirea, battery, starter,

close to town, needs some
work, owner has relocated,
needs to sell, low 30's.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS ,
hot dip rebluelng. oH typll of

model ., d newer Uled cars.

Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Etotem Ave.. Gallipolio. Ctll
814·446· 2282.

boo Borotud. Call614-286· 77 Mulltng Cobra 114opd..
J02 engine, recant tune up,
66,22.

tvoe ua" .

AKC regiatered German

TOP CASH paid for '80

OUat1er mare , bred to Sunny

•

Autos for Sale

1980 block Toyota Calico
G2. lift-bock, 111n roof, 6
opd .. air, ••c. cond. t4,200.
1877 Oldo Omogo
Good olfolfo. orchard gro11 Broughom, 4 dr., email Y·B,
hoy. 11 .76 ptr bolo. Coli auto trent, 2 IWW tiree. good
814-742-2348.
cond .. t1,200. Coli 614·
388-9081 or 814· 3888230.

w.v•.

' ;;:=:=~==
68
Fruit
a. Vagetebles

71

The

Lorge hoy boleo. 820. Con
deliver. 814·992-7401 .

condition,

0' I' I

AK C Lhua Apto pups.
maloo only. 20 chomplonsin
podlgroa, gontlt, quiet ond
loving do go. 304-875-6537
or875·2223. "toooouoloto

Hay &amp; Grain

Tr ansll orI at i 011
10 GRAND PIANOS, tpaltmont olze to Conctrt Grand
from t2,395.00 - Coli now
304-453·1153 . Dan Forgu- -::::-'- : - - - - - - oon Muolc, Rt. 60 , Ceredo. 7 1
Autos for Sale

Pure bred Englslh shophlrd

oquoro boloo of hoy. • 1 ,00
~quare ,

67

64

Morgon mare. 3 yooro economy- 36 MPG , new
tireo, priced to ooll. $6,000.
1&gt;1d. Coll614· 379·2586.
.Coli 814-448-0840 or 8148 v•r ofd Rog. oorrotl 446·1429.

with buoh hog . Both in groot

Dloh Satellite lor ulo. Call
614-843-5346.

Pure bred Englolh ohophord
p~pploo. 7 wooko old .
Wormed. Working otock.
M 4·98&amp;·4295.

Otlio- l:'oint Pleasant. W. Va.

~og .

AKC Reg. Doberman pup·
plu. 8 waeko old. block llo
lin, $76. Coli 614· 388·
9364.

ehape . Alao round and
for

Pets for Sale

63

old oak bod, 304· 676 -8483 Live Teddy 8oan.. AKC Reg.
Chow Chow pupploo. Coli
or 875-1460 .
814· 256· 1271.
Boby btd whh maltrou and
bumper ptdl 835 .00. Garmon wlnt· holred P,Ointor
Hobby horoo I 6.00. Call pupploo, versotlla huf\ling
dogo. uc. pots .&amp;. lolml!y
304·676·2680.
protection. Chomplon olra
SURPLUS regular army ca- from top winning stock whh
mouflage, denim clolhing. hunting background. Coli
boota, pecka, accessorte1. 614-388-8720.

John DHre Tractor 830

truck load •100. 2-t180.
Pickup food, you haul 116.
HEAP tccopted. Coli 614·
245 -6804.

Firewood t40 PU loed dtllvored. Bork mulch ohredad,
UO PU lood dtllvortd . e ft.

pond. Radnt ••.

chair. •280 .00. exc cond,

Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio. building material. Gtlllpollo Shophord pupplto, ohots
Phona 814-982-8481 .
.Block Co .. Pine St.. Galllpo· and w:ormed, rsady Nov . 28,
llo, Ohio Coli 614-448· 1988. 304-458 -1&amp;28 ofter
1· 10 ln. Snro Croftomon 2783.
4:00.
tablt saw. EC. 814· 742·
2777.

304· 773-5758.

1408.

becmns. 2 compllll .

9ecember 1, 1.
66

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

Firewood-cutup alabs. 1

recliner llo bidding. Corbin I
Snyder, 965 2nd. Ave .
814·446·1171 .

VIne St. All electric, fully
lnoulated. fully carpeted.
ooble hook up . Coli 81 4·
,48-2948 lor appointment.

jewelry: 14K &amp; 10K wedding oot ottnlng t85. btautiful clullors 25% off. botu·
tlful Hloctlon of oototo
jewelry, group of 14K &amp; 10K
wedding bo'\d• your choice
e40, old pocket wttchos
14K gold. now &amp; proownod
jewelry. Fronk'o PawnShop,

Firewood 1or

Ptnny dropoo. h. wMion Co11814-441·9648.
:J bd.room house for rent. In Nice 1 ond 2 br oportmtnls
grMn 100x84 &amp; 160x84 1- - - - - - - - Pomeroy, cloae to town.

~n

you are 11rlou1 about liVing
money, then you mutt meek
out our aelection of fine

&amp; used wood-coal atovu, 6

llvingroom auitea
t 1SS-e 599 • Iampo, 1110

gorogo. Rei. &amp; Dop. 8221 .
Ired . Call 814-446 - - - - - - - - - 2 br aponmentoln Hondor·
oon . 304-676·1972.

Furnlahed 1 bedroom apt,
include•
all · utilitiea,
2 bedroom home In Recine

JEWELRY SALE
Docombor 2 thru December
7. If jowolry is on your
shopping 1111 for X-mu and

Cob honey. Call 614-949·
2176 .

New

Get range, 6 pc. dinette

0

compound bow and accea-

SWAIN .
AUCTION I FURNITURE
62 Olivo St.. Gallipolis. Now

&amp; Nail, Gallipolis. Cell 448 e . room tuitet, ranget,
4418 after SPM .
wnnglt' washera,
ahoet.

. unfurnilhed houn end Gallipolis . 614· 448-

r);m.

64 colibor Ronegode muzzle
loadllr and acctuoriao • 150
tnd a boor Whltttoll huntor

Rifle. New, neverfirad. Nice

codo refrigerator 2 dr. $125. 1- - - - - - - - Maytag wringer wather Callahon 's Used Tiro Shop.
Mlddlopon duple•. 1 bod- 896, ponoblo dlshwoohor Over 1.000 tlroo, olzn 12.
room opt. •110. plus utili· $76. upright freezer 896 . 13,14, 15, 16, 18.6. 8mllto
t~l . Alao 2 bedroom, 11t. Skoggo Applianceo. Upper out Rt. 218 . Call814-268floor opt. 8190. plus utill- River Rd . 6 t 4-446-7398.
6261 .
tloo. Ctll614-992-7177.
Now living room ou~e . Call Turkey• &amp; Kennlbec poll·
APARTMENTS , mobile 614-448-4880.
tooo. Cel( 814-387-7230.
homet. houaes. Pt. Pleaunt 1-----:...____

e275 . per month plus dop· downtown . 304-676-2218
8-8
oalt. 814-892·6130 oft. 4

price t299, now t129. Call
collect 614-386-8025 oloo
hove Ntechl machlnoo reg.
prico 1&amp;29, now 8249.

E-Z Credit Mollohan Furniture, Rt. 7 North of Gallipollo. Coll814-448 -7444.

Houu coal. Lump &amp; lloker.
harvest gold e125, oido by · Zinn Cool Co. Ca11614·448·

FR . DR. eat-in kitchen.
~eluded . References &amp;dep-

gram. overcut, aatin ttltch,
makeabutton holet, mending, blind hem, darns, 11ws
on bunont Sa rnnre. Reg.

Ulld Furniture· · DNIHr, •
bed. metal office duka. 3 . 430 Second Ave .. Gallipolis,

cea. family room. garage. 4
bdra.; 2 bathl, f1mily room, One and two bedroom fur·
~ fh•places, walking dil- niahed 1pt1. for rent in

Qc&gt;untry otmoophoro, easy to
bOot. 4 bdro .. 3 botho, largo

equipped to zig-zeg, mono-

oorloo 176. Call 614-258Baby bodo, •110. 6027 or 6t4-266-6545 .

W11har IVOCidO t160,
dryor ovocado t96, GE
woshor white 1150, dryar

fanca to town. 2 bdr. Middleport area . All utllitlu
troploco. full booomant, gar- paid. Call 814-992·5084.

64 Misc. Merchandise

mattrltHt, *276. and up to

Oh. 814-992-3324.
jtllth woodburner, garage. 4 1- - - - - -- - bdr.. 3 botho, 2 family 5 roomo •unfurnished opt ..
roomo, 2 flroplacoo. privacy. Call 814-992·5434 or 304·
~ bdr. brick with 2 firopla· 8B2·2586.

18•· 3 bdr .. 1 car glrage.

.

Maplo dinette set. 2

pc wood LR ouho 1399,
bunk btdo t199. ontron
Mobile home lot, 12'x50' or recliners 899 , now 1 uood
smaller, $75 wotarpold, 4th b d

Garage apt., furnished. 1

rr10nth, •200 deposit. Avail- bdr.. 29 Nail, 8235 mo.
able Jan. 1, 1988. Coli utilitioo paid. Coll448-4418
114· 288 -5110 ref , req . after 7PM .
with proof of employment. 1- - - - - - - - -

l

+Q8 32

b4if&amp;lssp;a;;;c;efoi~;;rt""""=

;i

t97 2

home. eff. apt .. central air
and heat in city. eduha only.

tho othlf. A

111 4· 742 -3033.

• Q J 10 8

•n

lull or twin, •&amp;3., firm, t13.
end t83 . Queen toto. t225.
4 dr. cheoto, $49. 5 dr.
Call 614-446-0338.
2 bdr .. one or two edultt, no
cholto, t69. Bod framoo.
peta. Deposit It referencea. Redecorated apt ., 2 bdr .. S20.ond e26., 10 gun · Gun
Call 814 -387·7743.
S160 to 8250. Coli 304· cabinets. t350. Gu ar
676· 5104 or 304-675 - olec!ric ran goo •376. Baby
3 bd .rooms. Completly fur· 5388 or 304-675-789B.
moltreosoo. 125 &amp; t36 , bod
niohad . No pall. 614-949lromos $20, t25, • t30.
2253 .
Upstairs unfurnlahed apt. , king fromo e&amp;o. Good oeltccarpeted. all utilitln paid, no tlon ol bodroom ouitoo.
3 bedroom mobile home. On children, no pelt.' Call 614- rockera. metll cabineta .
Rt. 143, near Pomeroy or 446·1837.
haodboordo t38 &amp; up to
Middlopon. Call 614-992·
865.
5858.
Furniohed opt. 2 bdr .. 131 '11
Coli 614-388-8664.

utillties paid, 1235 mo . Call 14_6_F_u_r_n_is_h_a_d_ R_o_o_m
_s
,.
greet inveltment at 614·448-9244.
For rant Sleeping Roome
f27,600 . Meigs Local

l&gt;n• and rent

.&amp;

White aewing machines:

deposit . Call 614 -388· Monday-Friday, Coli 614 9060.
446 - 2745 or letvo
3 bdr., 2 room built on, $1 50 _m_8_ 1_10_:g:_•_·- -- - - mo.. plus eso dep.. pluo Nicely furniahed mobile

1981 Carolina, 2 bedroom.
::Z bolht. 8 It patio ,door, oil

EAST
.108132

$475.00. Phone 304-11823376 otter 5:00 PM .

Nice. fu rniahed, 2 bdr ..
adults, married, no children
or pets, 8176 mo .• plua

:12•60 mobile homo. excel··
Jent ohtpa. Great Buy. Cell
.ofter 5:30. 304-675-5972.

WEST

• KJ 9 &amp;

Three hearts was a strong response·

Housing Opporlunityl

:782~.

~3

Bridge teacher D.J . Cook is the author of "Cook and Deal." a book combining recipes and brid ge hands. Since
rm dieting this fall . rn skip the reci·
pes. but some of the bridge deals are
interesling. If you have an apoelite for
a basic end play. try today·s deal.

14•70 3 bdr., portly fur· monthly ront llartl at t 169
nlohod In Centenary t226 for 1 bedroom tnd 8204 for
mo. plus utilitiet. Call 61 4· 2 bodroom. doposh *200,
446-4292.
loca1ed near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodlond, pool

offer raluoed, 304-676-

tntured. reatonable retu,

+K 10 I

2 bedroom mobile home .
Located within city limita.

ref.. Coli 814-448-1409.

bedrOom, 1 VJ batha, allelec,
Ur,derpenning, good cond,
mual nil, no reasonable

!:all 304-676-2336

• AJ82
t AK 6 4

--------

2 bdr. furnished , gat haa1,
new Cllrp81. in Gallipolis.

-1980 Tidwell. 14•70. 3

li·IG·II

66 Building Supplies

Pool table. % In. olott. BUILDERS SUPPLIES
Stondllrd olzt. UOO. 814SUBJECT - Retiil spac. :
843 -5346.
Surplut aatvq1 cloaeouta.
located at 42 Court Street, ·
1.
8"•7·18
"x18'
prime
laleyllte IIIII, Gallipolis , .
Uood Sttolllto Syottm, hordboord tiding 20.00
Ohio. Sqnre footace of
Unlden 1.000 rocolvor. 730 pr.oq or 1.75 pr. ploco .
actuttor. 9 ft. dish, fully 2, Em balled wood grain
1.157 sellin1 space arid·.
rtmote control, large I ft. tlumlnum oldlng whh foom
227 square feet of storqe
projection TV. Coli aftlf I bock In color 39.86 oq .
space on the ncond floor
1
p.m., 304-811· 1940. ·
3. 4'•8' on 4'x9'x7-18 . of the lafayette Mall.
ttucco to Matonite akting I'
Call 614-446-7&amp;53
8.98 on 13.85 pc. ·
9:30 'til 1:00
·4 . VJ" and %"' exterior !1 Monday thru Saturday
plywood with llbargltll
reinforced • - old11 8' wide
14'8" long 35.00 eo .
Troy Built gerden tractor like
. 12 pte: ottol inoulotod
Reel Estate General
now. $650.00. 1936 Dodge 5prohung
8 ponel. 8
Coupe, t3.000.00. 304· panel or door'l,
fluoh 2·8 or 3·0,
882-2081 76.00 eo . S lnglto 88 .95 eo.
6. Durhalm oak rMIOnite
Chrlotmas holf price sale. poneling
4'x8'x'il' 5.99 or
Cabbage Potch dolls, Mr. T Woodfield
chutnut B.
dollo, 304·675-6480.

+AJ9
to one no-trump . What then was four
2 bedroom home Burdette
diamonds'
North
could
bid
three
no·
Street, fenced yard, dapoait ·
Vulnerable: Both
trump . raise 10 four· hearts. or bid
required. 304-875-7207.
Dealer: North
something else. Bidding something
else showed strength in that sui t. of
Nortb EaSI
West
42 Mobile Homes
course, but it also implied hearl sup·
I NT
Pass
for Rent
It
Pass
Pass
pori and a good hand . That was enough
Pass
S•
Pass
for South to ask for aces and bid a
Pass
Pass
Pass
small slam.
Furnished, AC , cable, no city
' Afte• declarer has won lhe opening
taxes. beautiful river view in
Opening lead: • Q
lead.
he should draw trumps. play his
Keneuge. Fotters Mobile
other diamond winner and ruff a dia ·
Home Pork. Call 614·446mond. return to dummy with a heart
1802.
and trump the last diamond. He can
2 bdr . 2 miles from Holzer
now try to guess who has the queen of
__
I
Hospital at Evergreen .
clubs. but it is much easier simply to
Alter all . North might have the club
Children accepted. Call
play the spade ace and then another queon rather than the king. and now
614·446·3697 or614-246spade. Now the opponents are forced slam would be on a finesse. Further·
5223.
to play the club suit, and 12 tricks are more. if the diamond kmg were the
Spotlell 2 bdr., 12x80.
easily made.
queen. slam would require two fi·
kitchen applitncos. furWhat if Norlh bids only four hearts nesses. even though North would still
nishad, large private lot. 1'11
over three hearts? That would show a · have a one no· trump opening hand of
mi. from town, •200 mo .
plua sec. whh referenceo .
minimum one no-trump
(with
15 points.
Coll 61 4-446· 2236 or 614· ._..,h..,ea..,r..,t.;.su;,;p;.;po;,;.;.rt;;;l·;,;a;;;n.;.d.;;So.;.u;;;t;;;h+;.;....;,P•;;;•.;,s.; ..._ _,_,.,.;'.N.EW•s•Pt'P.E;.;,".;;,•N..,T;,;E;.;,RP.;.R.;;,ts.•;;,;.;,'";;;N....____
r
446-2581 .

Heat furnished . Coli 614·
446-1232.

, 7.000. 304-882 -2888.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED:

NORTH
.Q6

in Jericho area. Call 304·

675-6483 after 8 PM .

1975 14X70 Vindolo, 3 bdr,
CA. ref.. range, ttept, un·

41ectric, good cond, down.,.yment and 111ume loan .
:Can be teen Hogg and
Zuspan trailer perk, Front
!Jt., Mason, W. Va .

December 1 1986 .

picturesque settil&amp; Bam. tobacal base and 17 acres
rl clean ~nd in grass and a~a~a seedng, 3 acre
wooded lol Thi; ~ nice. Make us an life&lt;.
·

Hf75

OON'T OVERLOOK litiS llliE - $49,500. The
outsde ~ !11lr~. but l1l\J will absolrte~ klve the
10term. Beautifully decoral8f, everythng looks new.
Excelent klchen with allatest convenienoos. Th~ 3
bedroom, 2 bath oome has allo bem Jfrlessilnalt;
~ndscapal. All at a pri:e yru can afford.
MI002

PURCHASE TIUS HOME -

Except enru~ for a klw down payment Seller warlls to
do the filanc~g for the buyer when lhey ~~Jrchase too
3 bedroom ranch. Remodeled kitchen, large lflilg
room. bat~ utility room, 1.4 acre lawn. mb~e oorne
space, rural water. WRh~ N mie oftaNn.City schools.
Ont,o $26.000.
.
N1035
BEAT liiE COMfORT AIID PRICE - Throo roof1'1iand
bath in ely oo40'x120' ktVrnylsdilg, stJrm windows
and doors. Roof, hut waler heater recertlly rep~cet.
Shaded backyard, pkls much more Ont,o $11,000.

Hill

COMFORT AIID WARIITH RMIIATE TIIIOUIItOUT
- Jackson Pike Cllarmilg 3 lx!dro:m, bath, cozy
famill room, natural gas heat city waler, sewer.
Excenent 2 car garage Olaillnk fence. landscapBl
l&lt;i
11993

CAII1 BEAT litE PA ICE - 3 OOdroom home, bath.

HUNTER'S HEAVEN - 54 acres r1 land locatoo in
Huntilgton Twp. 42 acres woiXfed and 12 acres
bottom land. Pricoo to sell at $16,000.

PRICE RWUct:D TO $59.900 - CARRHllfT LDCaled on state highway. Cheshie Twp. Equipment
and invenlory included in sale. Owner is IJ)ilg South
and is ready to deaL

11988
PRICE REDUCED TO SIUXl - lUST SEE TO
APPRECIATE - Extra nice roobile oome 14'x 70'. 2
acres with pond. rural waler. situated on slate hW!way.'
Owners say sell

COMMERCIAL - INVESTMENT - Coolmercill
build~gand 40 acres moreorlesslevelland,loca!M at
SR 35 and SR 7. Natural gas and rural water.Presenlly
ilrome producing property.

n ACRES lORE/LESS -

Approx. 60 acres JJSiure
and woods. Some ti~ble . Older 2 bedroom oome in
need ol repaw. Includes fenci1g bam, pond, tobacm
lllse. several springo;, well. Locatoo I mile off Rt.·7.
$28.1XXJ.

large li;ilgroom , dilng r~m. kichm, beautiful famly
room \lith fi:ep~ce. Looltout your \Iindow and see the
woods behild Nat gas, cent ai:, carport, storage.
Priced at $39.900. Awrox. ll mile frum city.

*1031

!I'm

NEW USTING - FIESTA - Thafs till na111e of lhis
well kept mobile oome. 1975 14x70 wit h 3 lx!droo11'1i,
2 baths, formal dililg a1ea. carpel, drapes, eleclre
heat located in a mobile homesle.Ownerfilillcilgto.
qual~ied buyer.

H9115

NI047

BRAND NEW - $42,000 - Belhe frltto maketh6 3
bedroom. l'b bath beaut'j your oome. Charmilg and
affordab~. Srtuated on one acre wooded lot

NEW LISTING - OHIO RIVER IINI FARI - Jl
acres m/l Approx. 3l acres ~nab~ balance in pasture.
Partial~ rernodeiOO 3 bedroom oorne. land Is split by
Rl 7 wnh roild leadng to a sandy beach. E.tt~ for
mrmltg, recrealiln or homesies. $65,000.

11999

11912

IDVELY 2 STORY HOME - Fealures 4 bedrooms. den ,
oak hardwood fklors, oak staircase, large klchen, utility
room. You also get 135 acres rllilld, tobacco base,
~rge barn, mineral r~hts .
NJ022
NEW USTlNG -MOBILE HOME AND 1.4 ACRESOwner anxious for ~~k sale 1971 12'xffi' 'Mnds«
home with 3 lx!drooms, I\\ bath, equip{Bf kichen.
GJod localiln on SR 160 near oow Jade sdlool SmaH
orchard, shade trees, storage buidng
#913

JUST USTEO - BUILDING SITE WITH lDCATION ,
IDCATION,IDCATION- Wlthil2\\ miles oft1111n.Two
5 acre tracts. W~h one having Vf!ll ~ rwer. Proate,
rural water available, Ideal hornesrtes. Owner fnancitg
to ~alll!d buyer.
HI034

OWNERS WANT OFFER 011 OOUBLE WIDE - 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs, ~ads ~ Sjlate. extra large
living room, d~ilg room. Also trailer hookup wlh
eleclr~ and waler . l ocatoo on Ke~.fletl'el Rd.

COMMERCIAL GARNlE -Large metal buildilg with
1200 sq. ft. and concrete ftlor. Buildng has been stale
approved. lot size 55 by 110, second lot ~i:Jnal.
lnclu!Ed in sale ~ 1968 lnternatoilal wrecker lruck
and a 19751-ton wrecker truck. locatm wlhil lhecily
lmits.
HIOJ7

tOlE AMONG THE TT!EES with 2.8 acres. only
milules lrom lown. lovely la111 ill room with !r eplace, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. loing room, eal·in ktchen illd full
r11ished basement large deck oo back witf1 sceni:
view .
NJOlO

SOUTHWESTERN ARfA - Charming 4 yr. ad bri:k
and ~n~ 3 bedroom ranch. Forrml dil~ g area.
Locatoo at a deadend road. Priced to selL

style oome. 3 bedr0011'1i, famiy

NEW U5nNG IN OiESHIRE -G:Iodlocaliln near old
school and tennis courts. Total ~ remodel!d 3OOdroom
home. Vil~ sif~g natural gas l'ea~ recertlly rep~ced
carpet. wiring ceililg and walls. Nk:e shadoo yard.
Pri::ed at ontt $25,1ro.

.

NI033

81037

a

11931

IMNERS HAVE REDUCED THE PI! ICE of lhis ranch
10001 Wlh bu~-in
bookshe~es. equip{Bf ktchen, natural fli!S real ~rge
well mailtainoo lawn.City school s~tem , on~ mnutes
from lown.

~1026

EDGE Of TOWTI - 4 OOdroom modern oome, good
cond!i:Jn, full basement, central ai:, gas FA heat. city
sewer, klw ma~tenance. ow utilnies. .65 acre lot.
Market pr~ed $33,1XXJ.

RENTAL PROPER!l - Locatoo at Lower Rl 7 rEar
Clay School. 2 OOdrooms. bath, livilg room, knchen,
alum. ~d~g carpet, washer and dryer tookup. Rural
water. lot approx. \\ a cr~
11981

GREAT FARM LAND - 62 acres ri file clean land. 2
ponds, some timber. good well, county water, roobie
home hookup, new t!nce.
NJ016

BUILDING lOT - Restrictoo to protect your property.
This nice corner kJt i; klcatM in CteatView Estates with
lhe beaut'j of lhe outtllors all around.Close to Racroon
Creek oilh l ish ~ g and campilg priiileges. Prk:ed al
$5,000.

81046

STUTES
REAL
ESTATE
BONNIE STUTES, BROKER

AUTUMN SPL£NOOR - 6 acres su~ruoo this
beaut~ul brick chaleau. Mail level has compl)te
kitchen, li;ilg room. dililg area with fi'ep~ce. 2
OOdrooms. bath. Top level has master bedroom, bath,
balrony. Full d~ldoo basement
fl023
NEW LISTING - lllME WITH EXTRA IDT - 3
bedroom frame with knchen. livll g room, bath, gas
. reat dril~ well.l ocatoo near sltoppilg cenler.Priced
in tl'e 20s.
fl040

4-46-4206
Brick Homt&gt; - Entry hall adjacent fn~m:al LR. bow winddw. ~ormal
dininl' ro om w! wain.t coatln/{ &amp; beoutrful waU tex. Modern k&amp;r che n.
famil y room, w.b. fir eplacr and patio door.t. back potio. 4 bedroom.t.2
j 11 &amp;; ij both.t. FinUkcd ba•tmtent w/ rec. room . 2 car goragl! . 2 land•·
C:pttd loll. Immaculate cared f or cu1tmh built home. Ci ty •choob.
Pouiblc loan auumprion!
MiU• Jlillas~- Lor• of Jlow.P n, ,hrubt~ large pine tre~··· pluaa very well
dellilfn.-d home. Fratures a formollivm~ room. famcl y room • .34 be'd·
roomtl, Hi ba1hs, complete kit ch en w/ dishwa.ther, .ttove &amp; refrcserawr.
Finithed ba,emenr w/ carpet , 2 car go rage and •eparar,e wood ·• hop. a
large covered back porch. ~m heat . Wa•hirl,cton Elemenrary.

buil with qualty
basement, 3 bedrooms,
cuslom drapes, !replace,
eat·in kitchen, city schoo~. Extr~~eiJ
welrome oome.

FAMILY OIIIEIITm HOlE - $69,9JO. Exc. settil~
4~ acres, br~k and cooar lr&gt;level home. 4BR. 3 llllhs,
klVet,o oountry krtchen, family room ~h fireplace, good
garden area, proacy.
N1065

NEW USTING - HOIIIY FARIIRS DELIGHT - 31
acres of roHilg cropbnd for that part ~me farfrEr. 4
bedroom rf!Rodeled oome. roo~~ oome space, road
frontage, cme tochurches. schools, fXlSt offO! Ow ner
would consider trad~g for smaller homes.
N1051

Rio Grand.P A rf'tJ - 9ocrt&gt;J. mnre or leu. J BR 2 stnry h ome. ~ellar,.tt&lt;!r·
b 'ld '
new shPd/or mUff' or ho ne•. NwP Jen cr•. Fruat trt-e.t. ctty
• Dflhe ula p'"~· d r'n .; o~ Ownn wou ld co n•ider rradinJC propertie.t!
~c oo "·
nee
., · ·
·Attention New lywed• - Ho me comple rely Jurni.thed. New microwave,·
remot e contro l color TV, d el!p Jree:;e and bed.t, wfa•.lamp•. end.to.ble.

OJld dini•H and lor • of orlwr thing•. 4 bed•oamo, 2 bath•. LR, danang,
moder n kitchen. /'liCf! fen ced back yard, Package deal. only UO,OOO.
$8,,000 _ Taru Est"tes - Po.ol and ciNbhONH! privileget
1977 Modular home, 3 bedroom•, living room. formal din inK room, r: ~.,
2 full barlu, modem ~itchcn wl•i.U.-by-.rid. rejriJ!erator, 2 overu, duhwtu~r &amp;: di.tpo•al· Built -in china cabinet. A. rent ed lot . Cou ld be moved.
Low

20'~.

J4.8J A ere• More or Leu - Green Twp. Large J-4 ~dr?om home. Ex&lt;ef·
tent view and locaaion. PRICED REDVCED - an 70 •·

SEE litiS ONE - You111DYe tlis nee! 2 OOdroom
ranch oilh lllfge l~ng room \Qh !replace. Ntached
gtirage. caaport, fu! lllsemml, central ar mrrlli:Jnilg, ,
2 IIIIIs, mce lot and oome is in milt mnctmn. !'.'
miles from lll'lrt

CAU FOR APRIVATE SIOWIIIG - 62 acres. limed,
fertilize!( grass f~lds. . Almost all surroun!Ed by
IJ)Ytilnment forest. 1978 modu~r. 12' d~meter 1'1
disc. Free gas vtd S!Jritg devebpment, modem bam.
Slab~ Approx. mile from mail road. Secllded.

#943

UNBEATABLE $12,500 - With a Ill~ w11kthil hme
1,. story oome roukl be a dol house. Spacklus rooms
throuftjlut large treed lawn Garren area. Great
investment Jloperly.

11992

81015
- '
Cl11185 Century 21Realllt!ate eo,....uan u truA100 for tltt NAF. (IJt llld"- tradtmatb ol Century 21 Real E5iate CorPoration. Printed In U.S.A. Equ•l HoU!ing Opportunitytil

BACJ! OFI'ICB IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPEKATEil ·

�•

71

72

Autos for Sale

Trucks for Sale

1982 Cutllll Supreme 1985 Chevy P.U. truck. Po,
Broughom, outo, V-8, po, pb, V-1. outo, 18000. 814·
pb, olr, cruise. VGC. 614· 948-2UO.
992·&amp;660 doya, Of 614·
1981 Dodge p.iJ .. llont e. 4
992·3817.
op., overdrive, IOJIPer, tlld·
1973 BLick Appollo. 360 lng wlndowo. oxtroo. 114·
eutomotic, PS, PB, new 742-2788.
drot, good cond, 1660.00.
304-1711-3392.
73 Vans Itt 4 W.O.
1979 vo•owogen Robbil,
excellent condition. 304·
871· 7479 or 304-171·
1940.

~

ftl}l.\.ft fj}~ j'ia THAT ICRIWLUI WOAD GAME 81

~ ~ ~~·

b y - Arnold ond Bob Lit

Unacremlllel-lourJ...-_
one letlerlo NCh - t o 1o1m
foor onllfliiY - .

82

IAREPPA
I
I V 'l

A1ca car p1na for uta 111

~02~r Novo 70. 304-171·

74 Motorcycles

mull aell; runs •nd look,l

a. H..tlng

SAW SUPPLY

RT. 2, VINTON, OH.
KOONTZ-SAILOR RD.
Waugh'• Water Service.

H!15 NOT THI5,
Nowarrangotheclrolodlet1lflto
lcrmtneeurprtoun-.u -

JIM'S PLUM liNG a HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, lox 315, Golll·
polio. Coli 114·387·0171.

'74 Monte Corio 1100.00.1-------- 1 LJ--lf..~J1-...L~.....J gooted by 1111 lboYI cartoon.

CHILDERS

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING '
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpolla, Ohio ·
Phono 114-441··3888 or
114-441-44n

ON .A.N"('THINS

11 •.188.00, goodahopo.

Wella. claterna, paola. F11t,
rolloblo aervlco. Coli 814·218-1240 or 814-268·
1130. Rouoneblo rotH.
Umeotono, houae cool. Coli
614-367-n&amp;o

87

Upholstery

HUSGWARNA ECHO
CHAIN SAWS
OREGON CHAIN
USED SAWS 150.00

ro sao.oo

TOYOSTOYE IIA lEIS
REPAIR WORK

REALTOR•

76

l'ode. 304·176·4181.

..

HRS.: 8 AM.-6 ~.M.
. WEEK DAYS

87

Upholatary

REAL ESTATE

1982 Hondo XR 80. VGC.
1410.00. 114·992-7288.

19i&amp; Chevy S.W.B .. I cyl. 3
• opted, 11.100.00. Sole or

IB

SINCE 1943

1'

groot, phone 3".4·8t11·
34~0. . . i .. , _,.,.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

86 · General Hauling

Home
Improvements

llooldontlol Wlndowa a
Awning, 20 Pet. oft on
lnouloted naploooment win·
- · vinyl ond lldlng.
401 Moln St. -..eown Pt.
Ploollnt. 304·871-11212.

r.

'78 Dodge Aopin wogon.

1, 1985

.

1'--=r:....:..::;;.:.,r-t-,r-

I I

~pmber

December 1 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

REALTOR

B011t1 and
Motors for Sale

81

Home

Improvements

81
1981 y, .,n Chevy, PU, now . 76 Auto Parts
point, -In• : 1..- 1over·
•
hlult&lt;#.' 13.1!&amp;: C.ll 114·
Itt Acceuor1ea
441·2123 .•
1972 GMC truck V-8, PS, , New anow tlraa with otuda.
PI, long wide bod. prico ! 78x15, 146.00 nch, 304·
1160. Coll304-468·1997. 1 175-7771.

------

86

UKE NEW! - 5 yr old. well planned, qualify bu1tt 3
BR, I~ bath home. 6 rooms in all. Firep~ce heat
pump, l2x24 pool. Over \\ ac. 1n all wnh good garden
area, lklwer beds, !run trees. level lawn. Clay Grade
School and Gampol~ High School. \\\JUid ronsde1
mobi~ home in trade Assumab~ 1111rtgage. Pr~ed at

llle Wiseman - 446-3796
B. J . Hairston - 446-4240
.Ctyda B. Walker - 246-5276
David E. Wiseman - 446-9556

J.A.R. Conatruotlon Co.,
Rutlond, Oh. 114-742 2803. lo11monta. Footora,
Concmo work. loc:khoo'o,
Dorer a Dkchor, Dump
truclio. • ·wollr·a••-r·
electricol llnll.
••
·

Home
Improvements

70 Chevy PU, 3 opd.. 350 Four 16 Inch Kovttone
onglno, 182&amp; or boat ollor. Chrome wheela to fit 8 lug
chev pickup.B It truck
Coli 814·448-1912.
IDpper. 304-676-1489.
1918 Chevy PU \lz ton
lhort-1 boM,IIeplidO. 8
cvl .. 3 apd, Coli 814·268· 79 Motors Homes
1778 otter &amp;PM.
Campers
19n Chevy 4x4 outo, PS,
PB, .,... tlrH. now point, tih
wheel. 310 ong. n. 100.
1970 Sh11to 13 foot pull·
Coli 114·379·2798.
type comper ·w~h refrlgero·
79 Ford F-160 plcltup, XLT tvr ond otove {with ovenJ.
Lorio!, outo, PS, PI, oir, 2 Good ·cond~lon. 1171. Coli
tonka. thorp. 13.900. Coli 814·742-2410.
614.-448-1908.
--------

446-3644

Dorer Work lond cloorlng,
lond-plng. ate. FrH ootl·
MillO. 'Coli 114·441-8038
or 814·112· 71 Ul onytlme.

$59,500.

#326

General Hauling

a.

witll Coptoln Stoomor,luml·

10'h or 11ft. •lf·cont•ined
trudc cemper. Very good

1972 ford P.U. 302 ong.
With topper. •zoo. 614·
949·2272.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Got your carpal in ohlp ohlpe

ACROSS

WHY

FOI 'IIWIIG T1ll WHOU
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TEll 1HI
WHOU WOILD?

Ilk Y.......Ulhls Quelliad-'llllnllst Wilh lh
•Willis T.leodinghom. Reoltor, Ph. Home 446·9639 ·

PH. OFFICE 446·7699

COUNTRY HOME
l.ocatsi on Stale Hijlway 160
dose to h~ sd1ool. Nice front
porch, ooik~n catmets and
dbl s/ silk in klchen, bath
will1 sillwer. Lois of shade
trees and lru~ trees. Garden
space, .84 acre of land.
Blown-in insulaoon, 8rooms, 4
bedroOms. Must sell. Phone
row Wlr an appointment Pri:ed
at $26.000.

l'h SlOIY HOW
PliJS 6\\ M:RES Ill
8 rooms-\ bedrliCIIM, 1 lllth
piJs sillwer II besaTimt, nral
water system, Jlill'lge. All 11
IJ)Otlrondum, 81! acres MIL
Lois of space. REDUCED! You
can buy this home and acres
lllr on~ $29.~ now.

-

FINISH IT I'OURSB.F

And save money. Thll 6 rooms, 4 bedroom oobn~l home in the

country with approx. 81! acres. Groot pace to raiseyllJr chidren
Small farm pond stocked w~h bass 111d bu~bacco l:llse. loiS
of Imber. POOne n(JI¥ for an appoillrrenl. · · at $29,000.
N634

lOW DOWN PAYIEIIT - OWNER FINANaNG
Areylll klokiltfor 2 bedroom overklokilg the ())o River with JI!Mi
'!13mlenance. Begimer horre or retirement home. We have it

mo

111•

1979 14'x56' lUlL£
UBERTY- 2 bedrooms. bath, gardenlub, sllower. Total elec. Also
f~ed . for woodlumer. _All carpeted, immediate pa;sessiln.
~~lui btle and while, hke new ilsile. Ext buy at$7 , 190. See~

11&amp;10

SOMEO E WANTS YOUR HOM£
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND .THAT SOMEONE. CALL USII
3 B£01001 HO• ...: $19,110

1 Large
6 Performer
. 11 Barter
16 Inanimate object
21 Dog chain
22 Loop
23 Swill
24 Artist's stand
25 Grain
26 King of birds
28 Tranqullily
30 MOhammedan
prlesl
32 Proceed
33 Commercial
34 Entire
35 King topper
36 Asterisk
37 Obstacle
38 Son of Odin
40 W&amp;lcome
42 Perform
43 Indigent
44 Urn
45 Anger
47 Liquor
49 Bartlett. e.g.
50 Orlnk slowly
51 Iterate
54 Jog
55 Winglike
56 Declares
59 Native metal
10 Taller
62 Three-base hits
64 Drudge
85 Indian mulberry
86 Either
61 Knock
89 Water wheel
70 Couple
7.1 Time gone by
72 Soak up
7~ Strip of leather
78 Short sleep
77 Nobleman
78 Allowance for
wasle
79 Encroeches
82 Longs for
84 Listens 10
85 Ballow
86 Break suddenly

"-

88 Soli
89 Scorch
90 Blouse
92 Oar
94 Practices for a
play
98 Rod
99 Sinks in middle
100 Hall!
102 Secluded valleys
103 Gratuity
104 Bitter vetch
105 Palh
106 Part of fishing line
108 River, in Spain
109 Nickel symbol
110 Equally
111 Dlslance measure
112 Fall back
114 In addition
116 Teacher's favorite
117 Meal
119 Prohlblls
120 Musical
lnstrumenl
122 Surgical slilch
124 Pismire
125 Small amount
126 Sel ol games
128 Neither
129 Addllional
131 Doom
132 Metal faslener
133 Boundaries
135 Antlered animal
138 Morsel
139 Sharpen
140 Unit ol Latvian
currency
14 t Follows Fri.
142 Three-toed sloth
143 Hypothelicel
Ioree
144 Harbor
145 Contended wilh
147 Wall painting
149 Wheel track
150 Scorches
152 Depart
154 Cognlzanl ot
156 Wear away
158 Fungous disease
of rye
159 Go In
160 Apportions
161 Lock of hair

DOWN

·~

1

·I

I
1
I
I ACREAGE:
.
·
I
I 46 ACRES. adiacelt to lity of Galpolis ................ $ 21,:00.00 I
68 ACRES below Eureka ...................................:13,500.00 .
30 ACRES. lower R1ver Rd ......... .-....................110,000.00 I
·4 ACRES, lower Rwer Rd . .............................. 50,000.00 I
8 ACRES. 2 brr aae Jots. adi to dty .................6,000.00 ee. I
16 ACRES. Rt. 554. near Cheshire ................... lO,OOO.OO
• 311DRM 1M w/ 6 acres, Grah1111 ScJro Rd.......$30,&lt;bl I
I FOR RENT- Two 2bedroom apts. Overlooking Gallipolis 1
11
1 Golf Course. From $.175.00 per month.
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SEWNCi"YOUI REAL ESTATE IS IIG IU~Nm ...." •
NEW USTING -Commercial lot located at the corner of
Second Ave. and Sycamore St. Good location for most
any business.

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• . CALl AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY

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SALESPERSON

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#308

M229

1 Look steadlastly
2 Prepared
3 Dine
4 Ancient Roman
weigh I
5 Arllcle
6 Corners
7 Amass
8 Pedal digit
9 Bone
10 Corded cloth
11 Pamphlet
12 Speed contest
13 Simian
14 Roman gods
15 Newspaper
execullve
16 Rend
17 Cut ol meal
18 Exists
19 Wine drink
20 The earlh
27 Swiss river
29 Every
3 t Detace
36 Floalln air
37 Transported wllh
delight
39 Mature
40 Wheelloolh
4t Civil injury
42 Thing done
43 Edible seeds
44 Small boUle
46 Concerning
48 Ripped
49 Entreaty
50 Mix
51 Perch
52 Mlslaka
53 lntracllble person
55 Wing-looted
58 Dlrl
57 Ardenl
58 Narrow openings
61 Long, slender
fish: pl.
63 Appeal
64 Dlsligures
68 Aisle
70 Leopard
71 Biblical mountain
73 Dangers

74 Quarrel

.BEAUnFUL CEDAR HOME -This stylish chalet rome
on alarge nice~ landscaped lot offers contemwary
INing on 31eve~.lncludes 3B"', wife designllf k~chen
.nth dinette, loing room, Jamiy room and rec. room
and a bath on each level. Extra features such as
woodburner•. wet bar, wrap-arourd deck 111erklokilg
private 16x32 ine-ound pool. Very comfortabe and
Jiveb~ home. Priced at $79,900.

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1:; Awaits setllement
7t Transgressed
78 Oolong and
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pekoe
80 Painful
81 Mournlul
83 Ventilate
84 Belonging to thai
87
89
90
91
92
93
95
96
97

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of 6 room modem hotre on 1.:. ~
mostly flatland very su~ble for aarden and lawn.Nice
shade trees. Wood stove in besaTI1111 alongwithlueloil
Wlrced air furnace. aay Grille School and Gal!iJolis
High School
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#341

Small shrubs
Drawing rooms ' ,•
Lance
••
Q,uadruped
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Sheel of glass
Wilhoul end
Lamb's pen name
Seagoing vessel
Malice
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99 Seasoning
.,
101 Football team
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105 Rosier
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106 Wllhered
107 Den
111 Horse's neck hair
112 Evaluale
113 Labor
115 Presses for
payment
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116 Unadulteraled
118 Separale
119 Clench wilh teelh ~ ·
121 Convenience
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123 As far as
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125 Cloak
126 Locallon
127 Traps
129 Anllered an'imal
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130 Command
•l ~:;.
131 In place of
··~
132 Document
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134 Schad. abbr.
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136 Praises
137 Hawks
139 Vast throng
140 Aftectlon
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144 In tavor of
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145 Household pel
t46 Obstruct
147 Small rug
148 Permit
· 149 Fish eggs
151 Sliver symbol
t •'.
153 Printer's measure :·
155 You and me
157 Railroad: abbr.

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M215
ASPECIAL HOME ON 1st AVENUE- Your ~eam of

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INilg on "lsi Avenue and having the river at your back
door can now come true. We have the privlege of
offerilg you this extraordllary opportunly. The view
from the library and living room of this turn of the
century home will pr~Wide you w!h many hoors of
quiet peaceful enpymenl.lnci.Jdes alarge INilgroom
w~h woorlburnilg fiep~ce. A formal entrance with
center hal~ lllrmal dilil~ kitchen and balhon lslfklor
wnh 4 redrooms, astudy or illbby room and bath on
the 2nd fklor. There is a partial basemml and 2 car
garage. You must actual~ gel rut and see lhil meto
apprec~te ~- Has one of the largest useabe l:llckyartl;
along the rr-eron 1st Avenue. You maydeciJelobtryn
111 the sJXII since there ~ 111 more like ~ illhis IIJI'In.

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MilO

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YOU'VE NEVER SEEN A HOME LIKE THIS!!!
Uni:[ue~ shaped round home offers oorrlortab~ livil&amp;
3 BRs, 2 full ball-6, INing room, den or mmily room,
eat-in k~chen and full l:llsemenl. 2 wonderful
wrap-arrund decks off each fklor werilokilg 1.:.
wooded lot Must see to apprec~te. $59.000.

.

mo

HOW CAN YOU RESIST the idea of owning this 4 BR
brick and lrame house wnh 2 l:lllhs, large FR. ear~
Amer~an OR pklseal·in k~chen, 2firepijces.Gas heal
lith C/A $59,500.
#! 28
266 AC. M/ l FARM. Well located on Rodney·
Harrisburg Road. large ol:ler bricl: and frame home.
Three large barns for hay and tobacco (base of 2228
lbs.). Very good water SUPfl~ of sprilgs, llream and
ponds. Rural water avai~b~. Good crop area, pasture.
wooded area. Call for more llformaliln. Mking ·
$125.000.

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#344

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EVERYBODY'S GOT TO START SOIIWHERE - Come
see this 2·3 BR. 1 bath hOme. You WIH enpy the large
k~chen and utilily room with workbendl and sheK
area. Nice back yard l~rden and play area.Ou1slle
stllllge buildin~ $29, ·
#llO.

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1\1 SlllRY HO• PLUS 6'h M:REll Ill

1 bam. Chester Twp. in MeiiiS County, IPPfOJC. 38 acres
tillable-some woods. approx. 12 acres. Some f111ci1' lov~ sle
to build horne away from everyone ebe.l'llone and be 1t1e first to
see and buy thil plot cJ lt11d.

WAREHOUSE FOR SALE - 2.story masoory bui~llg
with 7,563 sq. ft. on lfsl fklor. lnckldes mside rlxi,
small office and ramp to the 2nd foo.locatsi 1n lilltll
industrial zone on Sycamore Street. Excellllt lor
mov~gand stora~e, rnachilesltlp, factory,garage and
etc. Pr~ed at $4 ,500.
1142
4 N: . Mil. including convenent 1111dern, energy
effie~! home. Good g;rrden area. woods, pasture.
Priced to sell al $24.~.

M311

BUIAVILlE-PORT£11 IliAD - ASSIJINL£ LOM
6 rooms. 3 bedrooms. basemmt front porch, blck svndedl,
eleclrk: and/or wood burner, FA furnace. whte Sl!elsilil&amp; Sllellile
dish. Rural Wlller system. 12'x20' ivilg room, 6 acre lei SmaA
down payment. lake ~Wer loan. See it and get all delait mw.
.
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11643

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#404

!liLY $1,990.00-VM:AIIT LAIID
\l acre apprax.ll sectiJn 5ol Green Twp.lll ~ Hwy.!il8,
2 miles from Gallip(js. Vbll last long allhi; IJice.
N6lllll

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CAPTIVATING CAPE COD -loveab~4 BR deCOrated
in Ear~ American charm.Shady ~wn runs tolhe rwer.
Fantastic view. $75.100
#I0 3
PRODUCTIVE FARM UNIT - 147 acres klartoo in
good farmilg rommunity 111 Gage-l'alrot ftlad.
Modern II yr. old 4 BR, 2oolhhorne. 4,000sq.ft.bam
area for tobacco. hay and l~estock. Pond, sprllgs,
small creek. Good deep well for horne and county water
avai~ble. 50 acres lays well for crops (22 ac. n!JI'I ~
excel~nt alfaKa stand], &lt;10 ac. improved pasture. 50 ac.
woods, good cross renee aroond pasture and masllile
fence new around pasture. 1625 lb. looocoo base.
Good home. IJ)Otl bam, JX'oduciNe ~nd. All well
located. ,Ill lor $118,000.
#342
HIDDEN LOCATION- WHAT ANICE SURPRISE! Yoo11 enjoy comilg home to I hi! very clean 3BR home
every lime. Yoo might appreciate I he 1.3 .:re lot and
country surroordilgs the ma;t, or maybe the well
p~nned layout ol 2000 plus sq. ft. ollwing space will
appeal to you mast. It indudes 2 tJn baths. k!dlen
large enough for 3rooks, ~rge family room (presenltt
u nlin~hed. but owner will comp~leloyllJrsalilfacliln
at cost of materia~) . dll~g room and 2 car Jllrage.
located in Green lownship, \\ mi~ from Rl. 141.
Owner d ~gusled ~ hasn1 sold. WiH hell finance. On~
asking $59,00l. lO assurnab~ mortg;rge (ba~nce
approx. $4l.OflOl.
#Jl3

4 BR HOllE FOil EXPAIIOING FAMILY - Large
l5x24 lR wnh firep~ce, 12xll FR. Slell-Savmg
kl:chen, DR with patio cblrs and part wal5 fn5hed 1n
weathered bam sidilg. Refllshed large bal~new
carpet and vanly ~arge mirror).Cherry wood cabnets.

MO~IJJ HOME ON 3.5ACRES - 3BR home inckldes

1\l "lliths, kitchen appliances, washer and dryer,
woodburner 111d furniture large g;rrden space.
Hannan Trace schools. On~ $16.000.

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NICE MODERN HOlE IN COUNTRY - 2 yr.old, 3BR
~on 11 \l ac., l mile off U.S. 35 near Doxol p~nt .
1,750 sq. ft. of well insulated Jollg space. Andersen
thermo windows. Nice kilchm. 248 lb. tobacco base .
$50.00l. In a hurry to sell.

Ml26

WHAT A BEGINNING! - Quiet, neijlbor~
surround1nes, low traffic and thi; class~ bi-level.
Features 3 BRs, 2 baths, large eal·in Uchm d~ilg
area. HUGE family room, l car R;~rage and wOOd deck.
Ea~~ affordab~ at $55,9l0.

Ml23

209 AC . M/l FARM located on ST. Rt. 325 join~gland '
of Southwestern High School and Jla'l grade school
buildil~ Excellent road ~anlage for buildilg aklng St.
Rt. 325 and Roosh Road. Also good sies u off road
deveklprnenl 80.90 ac. of crop area, 100 a~ of
pasture. 1400 lb. lobacco base. 8 mom !arm house
With lllldern features. Farm building; for crops,
INestock and equiJrrent stll'age Very good water
SUPfl~. a~o county water.Will s~! on land coolracl with
sizeable down pay trent and reasonable terms. Hoking
at $160,000.
#209
NEW usnNG - Convenenl locatlln in town.
Affordable hOme for starters" filishers.Old lime wood
work in good oond~kln and interesting l a~e Jronloo
house make Ihi; 3 BR oome amost a ooileclor's ~em .
One bilck from grade school. $33.900.
#105

m6

FREIICII COLONIAL RANCH? - (Is there such a
lhilg~ Yes, and we have illllr ~ - Mm Jealures:
'lluge f1111ily room," "big view," "e•cellenlmndliln".
lnckJdes 3BRs. 2 fullllllhs, lorrnal dllil~ ll's all brick,
has new roof. Quiet screened porch for mlllju~p time.

LIVESTOCK BONANZA - Second to Nona - 380
acres m/1, 100 ac. crop, 150 ac. pasture, 130 ac.
woods and mi;c., 6500' road !rootage. «100' m/1new
fence. Excellent hilkop view ~om presenl oorre. Could
~~be dNided mlo three or more srraler units.Total
askng price for entre unit $294,000.
#335
SUPER LOCATION TO·START - You \\On11Jl wroog
with lhis 3 BR home .nth malllenance free sidilg
Great location Hyru like the aJUnlry but still want afew
~bors. Nice k!chen. l car garage Nice f~t yard

#107
CAPTURE VIEW WITH I'OUR OWN EYES - Miles
upon mies ol autumn splendor. Part Time farm - 79
ac. Excetlenllocati:m to Ilie. Beaut~ul view ~000 ft.
elv). Good 7 yr. o~ IJick ranch, 4 BRs, heal jlllfll,
country klchen with woodburner, fuH'Illsernenl2 car
garag~ 20 ac. meadow (JJod wass). balance in WllOds.
large 7 yr. old barn, tobacco base. 25 iJoducing Jru~
trees. All away from the noise of busy h~hway and still
on good access road. Will s~l 2 ac. m/1, and horne lor
$69,000, or all for $110,000.
#350

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#206

$69.~.

remodeled in ~d taste. 7 rooms in all. Well insulaloo
with new Windows. part~! oosemml. I ~ baln.
Excellent garden area. 2 ~orage buiklill!l. I car
garage. 15 miles from Gallipolis. Priced al $53.000.

#309

#308

m:sT BUY ON fA liTH IS EARTH! - 7 acres llckldes
small woods, cree~ ellcellenl road frontage and plenty
ofllal ~nd for your new hOme. Graham School Rd.
$10.:00.

JfS JUST AS AOORABLE ON THE INSIDE! -located
m Mitchell Road. Yoo'vt admilll thi; klg cabil every
lime yoo've driven by 4 BRs in al~ I ool~ beautiful
country kitchen and large stme lieplace highligh~ this
home. Very easy to heal and cool 0.5 acre lot Oon1 let
yoor curilsity drNeJOU crazy, g~e us acal we'llove to
show this home. $59.000.

CLOSE TO ME!r,S MINES - An older. well kept 2
story, 3 BR home on 18 Vt1lOded acres. Has a large
work5illp. woodburning ~we, ~n water supp~
located near Fairp~y Church, N. ol 325. Sa~m
T(J!YnshiJ, Meigs Coonty. Price roouced lo $29.!jJO.
11430

TIP TOP TRI-LEVEL - Shiles iOih list IJI'Iner 11iJe.
features 3 large BRs, 2 baths, oorT"Illele Joilchen.
L·shaped FR w~h brick !replace. 2 car garage. Tree
studded 1.2 ac. $79.~ .

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~241

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U·FINISH home on 30 acres with 24.:. creek blllom.
Many yoong frun trees and grapeviles. Perfect 11r the
part time farmer. Priced to se~ at $22,000.

1330

lllUSE 'N' HALF - Attractive 4-6 BR, 2 \lory on
corner 1o1 in downtown Gallipolis. Addli:mal 6 rooms
could IE 111111 for professkmal lffices or
mother-in-law's su~es. $120,000.

Ml36

11227

20 ACRES BARE WID - Exoolenl bUildllgsienear
Rio Grande and Southwestern Hil!h School. lnci.Jdes

erop land and woods wrth plenty of good road trorcage.
$17.000.
1140
ARE YOU READY FOR WINTER?- Yoo~ apprac~te
the Wlrm heal aBuck stove insert can produce from
the f~~nily room of this clean 38R btlevel.lnci.Jdes I
ful and 2 haH baths. nice liYilg room and spacilus
eal·in kitchen. Plso, I \l car 111r1ge and large covered
palo. Super nice flat yard. Rl. 160. excelent u mal
m~ers. Mid 50s.
8207

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COOL. SHADED. LEVEL lAWN. quality older home

NEW UsnNG IN CITY - Oho H5t!Jical Society
Record. 8 room 2 story hotre on 65x 125 kl! near
schools and downi!JI'In area. t.mein condllln. Pr~ed
to sell at $49.900.

11237

..""...

redecorated. Excellent oordmn tiTou~out. lncludes
l11rge bright INing room, formal dllll&amp; family room .
Exceplilnal~ nice k~chm. 2 ful ball-6. 3 BRs. ltilily
room and basement 2\l car carport Deep lot. This is a
home thai you will real~ enjoy and be iJilld of.
Reduced to $114,000.

ATlRACTIVE 4 BR HOME - 3 Jevet;, city util~ies,
energy efficient, located near city. Good Jocalim lo
schoot;, 005p~l and sillpph1g area. Nice yard for
g;rrden and play ground. New 8x l2 storage buildil&amp;
Well cared lllr ~ condtilned home. Buyer's
Pmection Plan.

M349

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228 1st AVENUE- Very desirab~ home. Rebuitt and

Shop building 20x24 r:eiled and concreted lklor. l8xli
rnachile shed and 2 other structures. All on alroosl 2
ac. II fertile land for l!ilrden, JlO\' and livestock.Central
local~n to Oak Hill. Jacksoo, Rkl Gran IE and Gal!&gt;ol5.
Priced to sell at $39,000.
H3l7

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SCENIC HillS &amp; VALlEY AR~ - 158 ac. m/1 of
mostlY pasture lt11d.lols of road frontage abng rid!!'!
area wlh several good build~gsles . Has 12x8l 1111~le
illrne with l2x3f addition .Wng Ill bath, 4BRs, ~ce
family room wnh wood stwe and amllil new Ntchen
cabilels. Has barn and two other buikl~es ~ci.Jdilg
otJ log house. Mk~g $70,000.

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lOOKING FOR REIITAL PROPERm - Then lei Ill
sillw you this home cklse to t(J!Yn for yw 10 a&gt;nsider.
H~use has 2bedrooms, k~chen with dnilgarea, ~rge
INin~ room. partial basement lots ol shade trees, (Jliel
neighborhood. paved street. $18,000.

NEW LISTING - Commercial building in downi!JI'In
buslless district. Super locaoon in Galipoli!. 44 ft.
frontage includes 2 new store fronts. One $de
extensr-e~ remodeled. loads and loads of storage
space in rear. Ful baselilml and 2 ~her ll1oo l:ir
additional Slllrage. Newer gas furnace. Acroos ~om
public parking lot

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11245

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1.55 acres in country, front porch. 5rilornhome, one bath, country
liidl111, 16'x22' outside Slllrage lllild~' AIJ)Otl begilner illme
for lillse who want a home in the country.

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cloonlng--ter dlmogo
work, 304-1711-2295. .

condkion. can 814-985·
3839.

DUTCH COLONIAL HOW - 2 or 31Edroom, conveni·
ently located across from new cour1house. WBfP. cent.
AC , par1 finished basement. Nice garage with par~ing in
rear.
.

RURAL LIVING- 3 BR brick ranch offers full diviJed
basemml. Heat pump. 24xll garage and work5illp.
'located on BulaviiJe.Addison Road. $59,9l0.

THIS IS YOUR CHANCE- To own af~e 2story hol!"f.
3·BRs, I blill\ ~rge IR, Dfl and equipped k~chen \lith
eat·in bar. 2 car garage. Hu~ v.t"ap-around oorch.
14x18 outbuilding l ac. lot. BPP. $39.900. ·
#200

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.INVESTIIENT OI'PORTUNITY - Three rll'llai unrts 1n
city. Two hooses plus garage apartment Two slory m
2nd Ave. hOme has 5BRs,2lllths- could be divided .
Single story tst Ave. home ~ modern 2 BR. firep~ce.
FR &amp; OR. Gas heat. garage (2 car) apartment has
modern k~chen wtth range and refrigeratll', I BR,Iarge
IR. All gas forced air with cmtral aw. Cail lor showing
t11d add~klnal informallln.
#343
BUYER BEWARE - Th5 4 BR home 1s 1rres5!1b~!
Features ~rge FR. large IR, 3 baths. formal l~ il&amp;
basernml with rec room. 2car garage Perfect sett~g
111 a 1.55 ac. klt. $94.fXJO
#104

Q

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M306

VACATION CAIP BY IWE lAKE
Owner lilancll&amp; sundeck, rural walet, septic sysjem, eleclr~
! with camping trailer or wilillul.Concrete pad. Greatlihil~
and move righl in.

1 j1

@1115 United

Feenn Syndk:at•

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�Montana schedules buffalo hunting .season

Community Corner

Home for the holidays .
By Charleoe Hoelllch
'l'ln-sealloel Slaff
H your spirit Is
what

saggmg,

. with the hustle of
getting the house
cleaned and
d!Mer on the Ia·
ble Thanksgiving
Day, you might
get a little spurt of
new en~ and
,
holiday excitement by attending
: the "Home for the Holidays"
' program Wednesday.
, It's annually sponsored by the
Meigs County Extension Servtce
· and again this year will be held at
:st. Paul's Lutheran Church. Cost is
just a doUar and a covered dish for
.the potluck dinner. Be sure to take
· your own table service.
· And do practtce up on your
· slnglng-..:arollng is on the agenda.
Act!vltles get underway at 10
: a.m. and end about .1 In the
. afternoon, allowing just enough
time for parents to get horne ahead
of the kils.
· This year Cindy Oliver! has
planned a variety of actlvltles and
· guest speakers. There will he
segments on fun with wreaths,
unktue and special gifts whlch can
·be created In :ll minutes or less, tips
· for care of holklay plants. creative
Ideas for the holidays, weavtng
magic, unique holiday table cover·
·lngs, exhlblts, and my favorite,
' time management.
. Hey, look at the decorations of
. the Rutland Branch of Bank One!
: All done by a garden club as a
, civic beautlf!catlon project and
. they're beautifuL
: The newly organized Friends and
"Flowers Garden Club of Rutland

Decemb$r 1, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Page D-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

along with some school children
created allldnds of things to use In
decorating the bank In the theme
"An Old Fashioned Christmas."
The RuUand kindergarten and
Salem Center and Harrisonville
:Blementary School children made
attractive paper decorations for the
tree, along with some colorful
chains and the garden club
members did the rest.
Wreaths of greeney are featured
on the doors, and highllghtlng the
walls inside are grapevine wreaths
with comhusk nativity scenes.
Rings of greenery surround candles
at each of the teller's stations, and a
swag of evergreen adorns the
driveup window. The Victorian
theme with dried flowers and tare ts
used throughout
Alter decorating the tree with the
ornaments created by the children,
the garden clubmembersarranged
old fashioned toys under the tree.
Such a nlce project and the
members who are being direCted In
their new club activities by Janet
Bolln and Judy Snowden are to be
commended.
Chester Brownies are busy
being "good guys" for tbe season
by collecting used toys and
canned food for the Salvation
Army.
They've set Dec. 14 as the
collection day from 12 to 1: ll p.m.
at the Chester Fire Department and
are asking residents to help out by
contributing. Anyone with items
which they would like to have
picked up may call either Mary
Dempsey at 985-4282. orLinda Well,
9&amp;J..J5ffi.
Have a nlce week!

also has been criticized by some
ranchers and wtklllfe offlcjais.
"I can't see why anyone would
want to shoot a bisOn," said Leonard
Sargent, a · Park County rancher:
''Any resemblance to sport·ls purely
coincidental."
Rancher Ed Francis, whose fields
are frequently visited by his hoofed
neighborS from Yellowstone, said
buffalo are defenseless and hunting
them Is "m sport. They just stand
there and die."
Some ranchers say there Is no
need for the hunting seasoJt. They
say professional hunters should he
hlred to klll errant buffalo, as was
done last year when thestatepald to
have 88 wandering buffalo killed.
Animal rights activists are partie·
ularly Incensed. Television critic
Cleveland Amory, of New York,
president of Ire Fund for Animals,
has said members of his group and
otrer animal defenders may try to
disrupt the hunt by scaring the
animals away from the hunters'
bullets.
The threat brought a warrtlng
from state wlldllfe spokesman Joe
Egan.
"I hope he.doesn't run Into some
guy from Greasy Bow, Montana,
who just drove ~ miles through a
blizzard to kill a buffalo and finds It's
been scared off by Cleveland
Amory," Egan said. "He might get
some lumps."
Montana wildlife authorities received applications from 1,600
hunters to take part In the hunt. The
number was pa'red by random
se)ectlon to 000. From that nst, 100
hunters will be called-one at a time
-tt buffalo cross the j)ark boundary
Into Montana.
A hunter Is aUowed 36 hours tO
reach the area, buy a license and
shoot. Ucenses cost $:n:l lor
Montana residents and Sl,OOJ lor
ron-residents.
Those picked for tre hunt will be

By WILiJAMHANSON
.
HELENA, Mont. (l:JPI)- Shoot·
tng buffalo Is hunting's answer to
taking candy from a baby, or
catching ftsh In a barrel. The doclle
beasts of!er no resistance before
crumpllng to the ground under the
Ioree of a large caliber bullet.
For that reason, and because tre
species Is nearlyexllnct,huntlngthe
American bison Is widely criticized.
Nonetheless, Montana opensitsflrst
buffalo hunting season Sunday. relgnltlng a century-old dispute on the
propriety of slaughtering this
stalely but tractable beast.
The relentless drive that depleted
America's onre vast bison hetds
was fueled by greed. But now,
backers of Montana's bison hunt say
it Is the buffalo that has become the
aggressor.
In giving hunters the go. ahead,
the Montana Fish, Wlldllfe and
Parks Department has rot declared
· open season on buffalo.
Rather, only the animals that
stray from their protected confines
In Yellowstone National Park and
onto private "Cattle ranches In
Montana may be shot.
The buffalo that have straggled
out of the park In recent years wnen
snow became too deep for them to
graze are often Infected with
brucellosis, a disease that can be
transmitted to cattle and causes
cows to abort.
·
. Also called Bangs DiSease, bru·
rellosls can strtke humans, causing
undulant fever, a condition charac·
terlzed by swe.atlng, fever and pain
in the joints, health au thorilles say.
Pressured by eager hunters and
by ranchers who fear brucellosis
could wipe out thew herds, the
Legislature this year added the
American Bison to its list of big
game animals - creatures Ilia t
may he hunted.
Predictably, the decision aroosed
the Ire of animal rights activists. It

responsible for field dressing their
kill and disposing of,the 9rcass-:- a
forrnldable task because a buffalo
can weigh up to ooe ton.
The hunters will be advised to ·
wear protective gloves to ward off

the brua!Uosls bacteiia, bUt

South African
•
•
nots continue
PRETORIA (UPI)
- A whlte
I
opposition legislator accused pollee
Saturday of a he! !copter· 'illlome
assault on 50,00J black protestors In
Mamelodl last week that killed 13
people and Injured dozens more.
The charges came a day after
pollee killed two men In black
communities outside Cape Town. ,
Peter Soal, a Progressive Federal
Party parllarnentarlan, released
copies of sworn statements from
witnesses to the pantc-stricken
stampede in Mamelodl, a black
township outside Pretoria.
He told reporters a judlclat
comn)lsslon should investigate the
Mamelodl incidents. "It Is lmpor·
lanl that conflicting clalms be
examined and the truth of what
happened ... be determined." he
said.
Hls report and the affldavtts he
collected, had "not been tested by
any competent judicial process,"
Soal said.
Last week a pollee spokesman
said the Incident was being Invest!·
gated ancj thatSoal'sclalms that riot
pollee at Mamelodl were Improperly equipped to deal with a riot were
"untrue. unfair and malicious."
Oupa Kambule. one of the
witnesses, said in his statement,
"the hellcopter above fired tear

gas. Bullets also carne from the
helicopter. Those (poUce) on )he
ground started to shoot. We started
to run. Some of our parents and
youths started to die. The pollee
started to shoot at people running
from their homes, Innocent people."
Another wttness, Callla Stna
Mahlre, said the crowd had been
given three second to stop singing.
"Tre people In front stopped but
those far ~way couldn't hear."
A black poUre Interpreter called
through a bullhorn: "ll you don't
keep quiet in three seconds we are
golng to start shooting," sre said.
"Then tear gas was dropped from
tre rellcopter werread, at the blck
d. the crowd, and people started
1'\lMing.
"I was trampled to the ground and
knocked unconscious. When I came
roundtrerewasadeadwomanlytng
next tome, bleedlngfromthemse. I
could still hear shooting In the
dlstanre. When I lett I saw another
body of a young boy, a teenager,"
she said.
Friday's deaths occurred when
aAoout 1,&lt;XXJ soldiers and pollee
sealed off the Crossroads SQI!atter
camp- where some l50,00J people
live- and for three hours mounted a
"c{lme prevention. operatkm" that
Included searches for weapons.

:Seaway closed again
yALLEYFIELD. Quebec (UP!)
- Repair work ts to start soon on a
St. Lawrence Seaway drawbrklge
. that collapsed Friday after It was
rammed by an lndlan freighter.
Offlclals were unable to say how
· long the Seaway will remain closed
· to more than 100 ships waiting to
·pass through before the winter
: treezeup.

: "We have awarded a contract to
·'Dominion Bridge to secure tlv'
movable span of the lift bridge," 'a
Seaway o!flclal said. "We're walt·
ing tor the technical evalua tlon."
1be accident occulTed just before
11 a.m., when the 532· foot freighter
JalagOOa.varl, carrying a cargo of
steel to New York• .missed the
entrance to pass under the llft span
of the St. LouisdeGonzague Bridge,
40 miles southwest o( Mootreal.
It crashed throogh two steel
abutments that protect the bridge's
pillars and plowed into the fixed
structure of the bridge, collapslng a
60-foot section. Conditions were
clear at the tlme.
Several veblcles tumbled into the
Beauharnols Canal portion oft he St.
Lawrenre RIVer when the bridge

collapsed.
i
There were no known deaths.
Pollee divers rescued "five or six
people" from four veblcles thrown
into the :rl degree Fahrenrettwater,
Quebec Pollee Force spokesman
Ronilld Brunet said.
Two of those rescued were tl!ken
to the Valleyfleld Hospital wl_lere
they were reported In very good
condltlon. suffering from
hypotrermia.
"The vessel appeared to be
pelectly normal as It approached
the bridge," St. Lawrenre Seaway
spokesman Ron Marcotte said. "All
or a sudden. It made a srear to its
starooard side and struck the fixed
st!'lcture ri tre bridge, completely ·
wiping out two mid· sections where
vehicle and lraln traffic is."
The llftspan !1 the bridge. which
remained In place. Is the part that
engineers must secure to anow
Seaway traffic to resume. The rest
d. the bridge would he rehuut after
the shipping season ends.

Vl1lf U1 Todsg Fo1 Some
CANDLE SALE

011
E1tiM ttH• ol Em,Hr
A•l Cilllf•• C.llll1

'"" ,,,,/

Red, Whitt, Grun
And Manr Others

Aclt•tCCHKin

STOCK UP NOW

after Ire Seaway reopened after a
25-day closure caused by a ruptured
wall in the Weiland Canal.

20°/o OFF

Christmas Open House
SUNDAY, DEC. 1st, 12·5

MIDDLEPORT CHRISTMAS PARADE

WE WILL BE OPEN AFTER THIS
PARADE
WITH SALE PRICES•IN EFFECT
BOTH DAYS

LADIES' PANTY SALE

RIG. Sl9.99

NOW

•

~
,,,,,,

•Boys' Wrangler Denim Jeans
NOW

Sitts 8-16 REG. l14,99

St/t

•1 Group of ,~en's Lee Je~ns

S1199
•1 Group of Men's D.C. flannel Shirts
· Mostlr Small Sizes

Reg. SJ2.99

IN THE

,

,

NOW

AN'S

$6 99

MASONIC BUILDING

friend" ~tnd family no.r and far g. IIf 1
Hallmark. Chrislmlt!\ Clrd.Hell ,M. ,:~ch ·~l.ltJIJI

W1th

(::In

how you fncl.

from Hallmark you

m~glc year aft or year!

;-' ' .

Set the mood when you sell he

table wllh our fcsllve C"rlslm••

parlyware. ChOOse from a. variety
()r atyles that meke holiday perU..

flrkr!. eott. and

Acetall 111 Sim 4 10 10.
Rea. 11.50 to 14.50

se Ate On Ssle

Share tho love and warmth olChrislmas wilh

Choose from Briel$. Flare

\!111""-r-'fl

$999

*CEDAR CHESTS
*DINING ROOMS
*MAnRESSES
*WOOD ROCKERS
*HASSOCKS
*COSCO PRODUCTS
*MIRRORS
*GRANDFATHER CLOCKS

A'll ~Ptodu~fl
.
Fot Out Open Hou~el

Step-ins. Hip fluatr$,
Band lea styles 1M Bi·

--~ tinis.

NOW
NOW

Sizes 4-6 REG. $13.99
Sim 7-14 REG. ll8.99

,,

LL~NE

$1399

•Girls' Lee &amp; Levi Basic Jeans

*RECliNERS
*TABLES
*LAMPS
*SOFAS
*BEDROOMS
*PICTURES
*LOVE SEATS
*HIDE-A-BEDS

w

Op11 Hi•"
St/t p,le,

NOW

•:Student Lee Jeans

14 ofF

SAlE APPIJES TO STOCK IIEMS-3RD ROOR Fti11N1URE DfPT.

•Jr. Levi Super Straights
RIG. S22.9S

ALL FURNITURE

Colors With
Wlllllotful Sctnh
MANf, MANf SIZES
10 Inch •..t 12 ln&lt;h ,.,.,.
ld and 2111 a7'11 Rounds

Themlshapocrurredthreewre~

MON., DEC. 2nd, 6:30 P.M.

.

Open Hou~e Ssle

%OFF

fun

1nd

eaif'Y·==':I~i[::f

ALL HALLMARI&lt;

Ou1 Ch,l1t11111 Cllt $1/~ . Cot1flt1ue~ Da1in1 Out Opetl Hou~e.
$ps~l~l S1le p,s~, ot1 M1t1g, M1t1g ltemt Thtougbou# The Stole.

ELBERFELDS

POMEROY ·

·ness

till!

meat from a brurellosls·lntected
buffalo lssaletoeatbecausecooklrig
destrOys tre bacteria.
About 100 buffalo may be killed
before tre lnmUng season ends JUly
1,1986.

'I

lim~- tentinel Sect

C &amp; S Bank promotes three

Electronic prices
to go up in 1986
By KATSUMIMATSUBARA
NEW 'VORK (UP!) -The U.S.
consumer electron!cs market, used
to falling prices, is Hkely to see same
Increases next year.
Spokesmen for most market
· leaders say they are planning to
raise prices for color television sets,
videocassette recorders and other
consumer electronics tomakeupfor
import cost Increases resulting
fioom the U.S. doUar's large decllne
against the Japanese yen.
They see the currency change as
an opportunity to halt the devastat·
lng prlre war whlch has seriously
affected their profltablllty.
Of three U.S. TVandVCRmarket
leaders, zentth Electrontcs Co. has
announced a plan to rals.e prices
next year.
Spokesman John Taylor said
Zenith plans to recommend general
price increases for both color TV
sets and VCRs with its new product
Introduction In May in order to cope
with the dollar decline and improve
prolltablllty hurt by the price war.
General Electric Co. VIce Pres!·
dent Jacques Robinson said GE Is
"In the process of conslderlng" with
the same reasons in mind.
''Sooner or later, lt we (consumer
electronics concerns) don't raise
prices, we will be In severe financial
dlfflcultles," he said.
Spokesman Charles Smith said
RCA Is "sludylng the situ a tlon."
Donald Johnstone, president of
North Amertcan PhUips Consumer
Electronics Co., a unit of the
Netherlands' N.Y. Phlllps, said
NAPCE will make Us decision by
early December to raise prices by
"at least a couple of percentage
points,'' effective Jan.l,19!1i.
The dollar's decline against the
yen exerts cost pressure on the four
non-Japanese ftrms which Import
all VCRs and many TV components
from Japan.
RCA purchases VCRs from
Hitachi Ltd. on an ortgtnal equtp.
ment manufacturing basts. zenith
from VIctor Co. of Japan, and GE
and NAPCE from Matsushita
Electric 1ndustrtal Co. GE plans to

GALLIPOLIS - A Ga!UpoUss
resident has been named Vtce
President and Comptroller of the
Commercial and Savings Bank,
according to President and Chief
Executive Officer Donald L.
Crance.
Allee K. Stover of 24 Grape St has
been with the bank since January
1964. She was pro!noted to Assistant
Cashier In January 1974 and to
Assistant Vice President In June
1981. She currently heads tre
Accounting and Personnel Depart·
ments and has been a teller and has
worked In the hookeeplng and proof
departments.
She has taken accounting courses

import TVs as well from MatSushita
next year and discontinue produc·
tlon In the United States.
Among Japan~ concerns, Sony
Corp. of Amertca has specltled a
price boost of 5 to 12 percent for Its
electronics products effective In
January.
Sony spokesman Tom Sugiyama
said the rough range Is based on
October's dollar exchange rate
between 210 and 220 yen and could
change depending on the dollar's
future moves. ThedollarhassUpped
below 210 yen.
Spokesmen"lbr Matsushita's Pa·
nasonJc Co. division, SanyoEiectrlc
Inc., Hitachi Sales Corp. of America
and Shalll Electronics Corp. said
they cannot help raising prices due
to the dollar's sharp depreciation
· against the yen.
Hitachi Sales Corp. of America
Vice President Katsuml Onaka
said, "at least 5percentrlsesmay be
required." but Toshiba America
Inc. President Ryojl Suzuki sounded
r~trer cautious. "We must take Into
consideration the U.S. market
situation as well as the currency
change," he said.
The yen's appreciation, coupled
with Japan-U.S. trade tensions,
could prompt tltese Japanese ftrrns
to Increase production In the United
States.
The ten firms account for more
than '10 percentoftreU.S.colorTV
and VCR markets.
RCA, Zenlth, NAPCEandMatsu· .
shlta are cited as top color TV
market leaders by Television Dig·
est, a trade ~bllcation, which has.
estlmated their respective market
shares at 18, 16.5, 9.7 and 8 percel!l
tor the 1985 model year ended last
June. NAPCE Includes Magnavox,
Sylvania and Phllco, and Matsu·
shlta the Panasonlc and Quasar
brands.
Top VCR market leaders for
calendar 1984 were Matsushita with
19 percent, RCA 16 percent and
Sanyo 12.3 percent Including both
the Sanyo and Ftsrer brands,
according to tre trade ~bllcaUon.

Teachers seminar
set for Rio Grande

'

'

~Farmers may be·taXed on
Conunodity Credit loans
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Farmers borrowing money from
the Commodity Credit Corp: against
their crops may need to pay Income
tax on some of that money, a farm
management specialist says.
Darrel Acker. an agricultural
economist at Ohio State University,
points out that when farmers
receive their 'first CCC loan, they
have the option to treat the loan
either as Income or as they would
any other Joan.
Normally, such money Is not
considered as Income for tax
purposes. because the repayment
equals the amount received .
CCC loans, however, are special
cases.
"When farmers elect to treat the
CCC loan as income, they are locked

tnto reporting all such loans In
following years as Income unless
they receive persmlsslon from the
IRS to change their reporting
status," Acker says. ''However, lt
they treat the initial money as a loan,
they can change and report It as
lncome-1 without getting IRS
approval."
H fanners treat the loan as
Income, they pay taxes on that
money in the year they receive the
loan and on any profit they make
beyood tre amount d. the loan when
they sell trelr graln.Itthey treat tre
money as a loan, the farmer's
taxable Income Is equal to lhe prtce
of the grain wren It's sold.
Acker adds, "Amther key Is that
they must treat loans for dlfferent

grains thehsame. A farmer can't,
tor example, treat a soybean loan as
Income whle treating a loan for corn
as a regular loan."
Several factors can help decide
whether to report the loans as such
or as Income, he says.
"Deciding which way Is best
depends m tre tndtvldual situation.
You have to consider how much
taXable Income you're going to have
and what year you're selllng the
crop ln." he says.
"You could be seillng 1981's crop
In 1916, so you should conskler your
grain marketing plans when decld·.
lng how to treat your CCC loan. It
depends a lot on which year you
want to report the taxable Income."

Home heating oil use shrinks
By ROZ LI!TON
UPI Bulllnes&amp; Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Homeheattng oil use plummeted 40
percent tn the United States and siX
other Western nations between 1972
and 1983 following the two OPEC
price shocks and at least half the
decline 1s permanent, University of
Callfornla researchers say.
Conservation efforts, fuel· switch·
tng and turning down thermostats
saved abOUt 1.2 million barrels of oil
a daydurtngthell·year period In the
United States, Canada, Denmaark,
France, Norway, Sweden, and West
Germany according to a study
~bllshed' In Science magazine by
Lee Schipper and Andre Ketoff d.
International Energy Studies at
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
"We found that at least haHof thls
reduction 1s virtUally permanent
and unnkely to iurn around." Ketoff
told UPI "Even lt oil prices were to
drop sha~ly. only abOUt haH would
tum tooU."
reconversion to other fuels, technl·
caltmprovements tn heating equtp.
ment, and upgrading the housing
stock are trreverslblemeasures, the
researchers said.
• But behavioral changes. such as
uVIng with lower Indoor tempera·
tures using less hot water and
sub&amp;tltutlng wood or electricity for
u could wen be abandoned if oil
~arne a bargain fuel again.
Schipper said 'by ~ homes '
accounted for only about al percent
of the oil burned tn OECDcountries,
~

where the appetite for all petroleum
products had shrunk by roughly 4
mUUon barrels day since 1973.
"Housing Is the most sensitive to
eriergy savings, but the residential
sector ts not well understood,"
Schlpper said. "Houslng takes a
·targer part of tre consumer budget
titan cars."
The study concluded that onetltlrd of the savings In the seven
countries stemmed from a decline
1n the number a homes heated with
oil andtherestfromareductloninoll
consumption In households stlll
using the fuel.
Each country was stung by steep
prlre hikes for reattng oll In the
aftermath of the 1973-1974 Arab oil
embargo and tre 1979- J9ll) Iranian
revolution, causing a.otght to otrer
fuels and spartan heating habits.
Sweden, which has the most
energy·efflclent homes In the West,
led the energy savers with a 48
percent drop in percaplta heatlngoU
useln thel9T.H983span. The United
States, Canada and Denmark cut
usage 44 percent.
Germany showed the smallest
savlrigs r4 11 pera!nt because the
number of homes heated wltlt on
rose more than al percel\1 as new
dwelllngs Installed central reatlng.
Before 1973 oU was tre most
frequent fuel choice in new hOmes
everywhere except In North Amer·
lea, the study said. But after the
J973.1974ollprlceshock,naturalgas,
and electrll!lty rapidly Increased
the !I' share In the United States and

a

RIO GRANDE -A workshop for
teachers on "Building Self·
Esteem" in chlldren will be con·
dueled at Rio Grande College on
Friday and Saturday Dec. 6 and 7.
The workshop will stress the
Importance !1 self-esteem In help·
lng tEochers to manage students
posltlvely. ChUdren ex tress their
need tor seH-esteem in · many
different ways. This presentation
will help teachers recognize these
exJresslons and provide trem with
ways to respond appropriately.
The presentatiOn will include a
blend ri them·; and Jractlce,
leaving participants with an In·
· depth understanding of seH-esteem
which will serve well oothln ~lplng
students and tre.melves to grow In
self-esteem.
Instructors will be Carl Adotta,
M.S., and Susan Arlotta, M.S. Is a
psychologist and · human relations
Instructor, IEBcher and trainer tor
head·start programs, experienced
"Bulldlng SeH-Esteem" workshop
presenter and Director of Counsel·
lng and Placement at Jefferson
Technlcal College In Stuebenvllle.
The workshop registration wUI he
Friday, Dec. 6 from 5::ll p.m. t16
p.m. In the Callege's Technical
Center student lounge. Program
times are Friday, Dec. 6 from 6
p.m. to 9::Jl p.m. and Saturday,
Dec. 7 from 9 a.m. to 3: :Jl p.m. with
an sessions conductal In Room 138
If tl!e \I'ac!mlcal Careen Centll!l'.
One "'al1er hour of graduate credit
will be awarded. Thefeelssetat$75
· ($37.50 audit).
For more lnt&gt;rmatlon, contact
tre School of Education, Rio
Grande College at (614) 245-5353 cr
Ohio toll·free at 1·1JXl.282·'1lm.

Canada at the expenseofoll. Sweden
and Norway Immediately turned to
wood and electricity as an
alternative.
By 1982 the Unlted States and
Norway were the leastdependentoo
ou among the countries studied and
relied on the fuel for less than :ll
percent ci. their home energy needs.
"The U.S. achievement Is noteworthy,"Schippersald, polntingout
that conversions from oil to natural
gas and reductions in on use per
household were equally responsible
for the heating oil decline in the
U~!led States.
In anotrer oU emergency the
United States will no longer be the
mostat·rlskcountry," hesatd.
Even though the United States Is
uslngme·lhlrd less heatlngoll than
in 1973, Schipper said the drop Is
"deceptive" because many Amerl·
cans have supplemented oll·heatlng
systems with wood or electric
heaters and could easily revert back
to It In anal prlresllde.
"Much of the reaction to the oil
price shocka has been qU!~k and
dirty soort-term measures, Ketoff
said.
Schipper warned that Americans
stillarereluctanttolnvestreavUyln
.upgrading the energy efficiency of
housing and heating equipment.
"The challenge of the l98ls may
be to convert the qulcksavlngsci.the
last few years Into permanent
savings- hlghercomfortwlthless
oil-- throughlmprovementofour
homes," the study said.

FAA develops an
airborne computer
warning system
By FRANK T. CSONGOS
WASHINGI'ON (UP!) - The
Federal Aviation Administration
has developed an airborne computer system that warns pilots ct.
potential ln·fllght collisions and
gives directions on how to avokl
them.
FAA officials said the Traffic
Alert and Collision Avoidance
System would make the skies safer
when Installed by commercial
carriers on their jetllners tn the
coming years.
The government does not plan to
order the airlines to make the
Installation but expects major
carriers to do tt on their own. Early
next year, PledmontAirllneswllltly
the first aircraft In commercial
servlpe to be equipped with the
collision avoklance system.
The system is estimated to cost
between $50,00l and $1o,&lt;XXJ per
aircraft, considered a small invest·
ment tn helping , protect
multlmilllon-ctonar alllllanes.
The alrllnes and the government
have Invested heavlly to perfect the
devlce, which uses ttme, not
distance, as ltmeasuresthetltreatof
coillslon between two aircraft.
A cockpit computer tracks all
transponder-equipped planes that
are nearby and projects lite time
that It would take for each to collide
with the aircraft. An commercial
airCraft and most other planes are
equipped with transponders, devl·
ces that receive signals and send
back responses on cruclallnforrna·
lion regarding airplane locations.
Just «l seconds before a threat ct
an ln·flight crash, the collision
avoidance system gives out a loud
beep In the.cockpit and advises the
pUot with a synthetic voice to either
ctimb or desrend to avoid an
accident. Tre warrtlng is repeated a
few seconds later and Ire beep stays
oo unless tre pilot executes the
change In altitude.
li'he FAA demonstrated the
system earlier this month to a sman
group of reporters aboard a plane
whose ~ caretuUy executed
several planned near In-flight
collisions.

at Rio Grande Conege through the, Adrnlnlstrator. From 1982-1981. she
Arnerlcan Institute of Banking and was assigned special duty as Senior
has attended seminars for data Regional Auditor tor The First
National Cincinnati Corporation
processing, accounting and the with specific responslbilltles for
Automatic Clearing House, which audits of the First National Bank ci.
dealswlthdtrectdeposlt:· '
Ironton, JThe Commercial and
A member of lite Amertcan 'Savings Bank and The Portsmouth
lnstltute of Banking, she has been Banking Company of PortsmOuth.
past treasurer of the National
Coleman has been named Assist·
Association of Bank Women and ant Cashier and Loan Officer. She
past secretary and treasurer of the was employed by tre oonk In 1974 as
GaillpoUs Business and Profes· apart·timetellerworkingln roth the
sional Womens Club.
main office and the Sliver Bridge
The bank has made two other brand! and has been with Ire bank
fuU-ttme since August 1982. She has
promottlins, Cranre said.
·worked
as the ATM CO«ddnator,ln
Connie S. Freeman has been
named VIce President and Cashler tre InstallmaentLoan Department,
and Barbra F. Coleman has been as MasterCard Co-ordinator and
named Assistant Cashier and Loan was recently tn chargl! ct. the
Collection Department.
Ofllcer.
She has attended Rio Grande·
Freeman joined ,the bank Oct 15
Community
College, taking courses
after coming trom Tre First
National Bank d. Ironton where she !11'ered ·through the American
was Vice President and Branch Institute of Banking.

Business Briefs:-----.
LPN entrance exam scheduled
RIO GRANDE - The pre-entrance test for the Buckeye Hllls
Career Center School 01 Practical Nursing has been scheduled tor
~l
.
The program lasts one year with classes heglnntng each October.
Following completion of the program, students must pass a state
board exam to become Ucensed Pract!cal Nurses.
Buckeye HUla also otters an LPN testing preparation class at no
cl,large to help prepare tor the pre-entrance test. Preparation classes
will begin Dec. 9 to prepare for tre January exam.
For an application or fUrther information, contact the school office
at 245-5334. ext. ali\.

City native named vice president
TARRYTOWN, N.Y. - A Gautpons native has been named
Insurana! Arbitration Forums' Vice President of Operations and
Finance.
E. Duston Saunders, son of James w. and Louise L. Saunders,
joined lAF!n~as Us Controller. Prior tojolnlnglAF, Saunders was
a management Consultant In Newburgh. HehasaMasterci.Sclenreln
Business Administration from Boston University and a MBA from
Long Island University.
lAF is a national arbitration organization, with its home ci.flce In
Tarrytown, was formed more than «l years ago. The organization Is
responsible tor the management and admlnlstratlon d a variety of.
forums directed at tre resolution of lnsuranre related disputes
thrulgh arbitration or mediation.
. .

.'

'

"

OVEC honors three
CHESHIRE - Three em~loyees of the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant recently received the company's
l).year annJversary award.
Charles R Eads joined OVEC on Nov. 8, 1955 as a laborer. One
montlt later, he became a maintenance helper where he advanred to
Maintenance Mechanlc·A In May 1973.
Calvin R. McDaniel was employed on Nov. 15, 1955 as a laborer. In
December 1955, he became a malntenanre helper, where he
advanoe,l to Maintenance Mechantc·Ain At;rlll979.
Rtchard L. Lewis joined OVEC on Nov. 22, 1955 as a laborer. He
became a maintenance helper four months later and ws named a
Maintenance Mechanlc·B In August 19ffi.

K mart to provide spree
GALLIPOLIS - At !Past :ll needy area chUdren will be able to do
some of their Christmas shopping, courtesy d. theGautpollsK mart on
Dec.14.
The children will each be given S'll to but presents In the store,
beginning at 8 a.m. They will also be treated to breakfast at K mart
and will receive a gttt-wrapped present.
"K mart Is aware that there are some chUdren In our community
who are unable to parllclpatelnChrlstmasactlvltles,'' Store Manager
Roger Buck said. "Helping some of trese children with trelr
Christmas shopptna Is our way ct. makingtlis holiday season happier
for them."
TheGalUpoUs K mart is oneof2,100stores nationwide participating
In the shopping spree for needy chUdren.

AMC ends production
ofJeepCJ
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - As tlv'
Jeep C.J, a vehicle that cameoutc1
World War II, rides out into the
sunset early next year, some 740
empklyees who helped make that
workhorse at an Arnerlcan Motors
Colll. plant in Toledo are wondering
If they'll have a job.
AMC spokesman Uoyd Northard
said Wednesday he expects some
layoffs of the 700 hourly and 40
salaried workers Involved in production of the JeEp CJ·5 and CJ-7
models at its JeEp plant In Toledo,
Ohio, but was rot abletosayexactly
how many.
CJ stands lor avillan Jeep.
''We don't know what our man·
ntng requirements wW be by
Febrllary," Nol'lhl\rd said.
The highly profitable 'Toledo plant
employs about B,lm hourly and
salaried workers who aiJO bulld the
JeEp Cherokee, Pioneer, Comanche
and Grand Wagoneer upt trucks
and plcku)l6.
Northard said AMC will buDd an
all·new JeEp model at its existing
plant In Brampton, Onatrto, In the
spring of 1911i. Although no delalls
have been relaesed on the new
oo~~ '

model, it Is expected thalltwillbean
open-air model like theCJ series.
Salesd.tlv'JeepCJ rrodels, which
Include a CJ-6 for foreign export,
dropped from a high In 1mct.79,296
units to just 39,547 last year. Only
:ll,623 were sold during the first 10
rnontll9 ct. 1985.
Sales of otrer Jeep models.
however, have steadily increased.
Last year 114,254 units were sold,
excluding CJ', .compared with
107,289 through October 1985.
Not counting CJs, Northard said
1985 Jeep sales soould be about
134,1ro Wilts.
"Jeeps have been selllng at a
record pace tor sometime," hesatd.
AMC, ~ percent-ov.lnect by
French carmaker Renault since
1979, purchased tre JeEp operations
from Kaller In 19'10 t&gt;r$70.2 mutton.
More than 1.5 mUUon CJs have
been bUDt since the model l!rst
appeared In :1945. Tre mllltary JeEp,
lromwhichtreCJwasderlved, was
first designed by WWysCorp.tnl940
and was selected by the Army over
other models to serve the war !!fort.
More than 585,00JJeeps were buUt
durlni tl)ewar

I

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�•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

December 1, 1986

Page-E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Siloam has senred its day
and will Jive in history

December 1, 1986 :

W.Va.

Meigs County

Extension
notes••.
BY JOHN C. RICE
~TENSION AGENI';
AGRICULTURE
POMEROY - The Crystal
Ball.... 1986 Predictions and Why.
· Volume d. ex]X&gt;rts to increase Is
not likely. U.S. Department d.
Agriculture has lost Its competitiveness In world markets since 1981.
The value of the dollar has been
high which discourages the competItive edge rl. oor pfOducts.
Statements about wr general
economy Wollld say that overall,
people are reasonably optimistic
about the ~nomy because (1)
consumer confidence has been
QQ!te high; •(2) unemployment has
drUted .down to a reasonably
comfortable level; and (3) Inflation
bas behaved better than most
IJE!Oille ~xpected.
-There are some trouble spots In
the ecoaorny - Imports continue to
~w; exports continue to weaken;
the federal government continues
to' borrow vast sums to oover
o~atlng deficit; real Interest
r~tes remain near record high
JeoJels; and agriculture debt Is a
gnr.~t problem.
.
Declining land values have
played havoc with our farm credit
system. Land values are almost off
one-third from the peak r1. J98J and
are expected to decrease another 5
to 8 percent In 19~.
Farm Commodity Polley for 19~
- to reduce both production and
cost to the federal treasury. An
almost Impossible task to accomp·
llsh both goals.
Milk productlon Is Increasing per
cow and In quantity. Since the milk
diversion program ende.d In March
we have had a 4.5",1, Increase In the
supply of milk. The milk-feed ratio
Is favorable which Insures more
trouble ahead. Price support will
IJ'Obably remain at $1l.QJ fllr ~rost
d. 19@6.
.
Consumption of beef and pork
(red meats) Is not likely to Increase.
People are eating salads, fish, and
poultry. ·
·
Pork Is being hampered by
Imports from Canada.
Feeder cattle prices may avErage $63 to $69/cwl. for 19~.
Corn prices for 19£6-~ to average
$2.ll to $2.55. A harvest low of $2.01
was recorded In October. Prices
sbould begin to trend upward. Ohio
corn growers should realize a
modest profit In 19£6 for those
participating in the 1985 government program.
Price of soybean meal should be
around $150 pert on by early spring.
The economy may be very tlghl
for agriculture for 3-4 years. To
have enough Income to meet
expenses here are some stratEgies
to consider: postpone any uMecessary farm and family exJEndltures,
hold the tine on borrowing, delay
capital exJEndltures where possl- ·
ble, consider selling land, custom
hire, or cull livestock. Reduce or
ellm!nate marginal enterprises.
Optimize productkin etnclency.

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

COUNTY

· STORt HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM ~ 10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,• OH,
DEC. 7, 1985

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATU

$

.

Chuck Roast •••• !~ •.

9
2
1

$_ 99
Round Steak ••••• .t~·. 1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

$

FRESH PORK BUTT

•
$1'
39
L
Pork o1n ••••••••

1/4

9
Steaks/Roasts •••~. 1°

BALLARD'S 12 OZ. LINK or LB. ROLL

Sausage ............;•• S1 ~ 9
SUPERIOR
.
$ 29.
Lunch ·Meats •••••••• 1 .

'·
'.,

LB.

'

.

.,

·'

•

[In the senrice

·'-

.,

.,

Kincaid

8Qnanas •• ~ •••••••.L:.•••• 2S(

Army Private Shane M. Kincaid ,
son d. Michael R. and Charlotte A.
Kincaid of :»150 McKenzie Ridge
Road, Racine, has arrived for duty
with the U.S. Army Garrison,
Japan.
Kincaid, a vehicle driver, was
previously assigned at Fort Dix,
N.J .
He Is a 19£6 graduate of Racine
Southern High School.

"

J

· Siloam was organized In 1800 by
tl)e Rev. John A. Davies who had

years. After Its closing In 1914, the
CentervUie Schools used the church

KRAFT Ar.\[RICAN, PIMENTO &amp; SWISS IND. SLICES

49
Cheese ••••• ~·······~·~z•. $1
$

DAIRY LANE

Ice
Cream
••••••
~~~~..
99
Peanut Butter .':.~~. S1
MAXWELL HOUSE
.
,
$ 29 RHODES 2 PK. LB. PKG. ·
Coffee ........... ~!~.c:~. .6 White Bread •••••••••

JIF

Staats

f

•

• '

••

•

' : SHURFINE SUGAR

;A~· $139
Limit I Ptr Customor
Good Only AI Powell's S.,.rmarbt

••• I

•

I

I

•••

••
• •o
•
:

$4

Umil I Per Customer
Good Only AI Powtll's Suptrmarbt
Offer ExpirH sat. Dec. 7, 1915

••

.

..'
.

CARNAnON

"

TOILET TISSUE

HOT COCOA MIX

')

.

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

•

PKG~

99;
I

~

Limit I Ptr Customer
Good Only At Pawtll's Suplrmarbt
ciiftr Explm Sat. Dtc. 7, 1915

12 ENV ..

1

~ 09

Limit I p., Customer
Good Only At Powell's SUfMrmarltet
Offer Expires Sat., De&lt;, 7, 1.. 5 •

"

'

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:

Centenary. There have been . at least ftve Wehlt Congregational
churches mGaDia fumty, the most notable hebtg those al Nebo and
Tyn Rllos.
.

!

Jewell to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperadce, Inc., Right d. Way,
Rutland.
Kevin L. Doul!ltty, Teresa K.
Doughty to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooprative, Inc, Right of Way,
Scipio
RaymQnd H. Taylor, 5andra
Taylor to Franklin Real Estate Co.,
Parcels Sec.3 T4 N Rl2W, Orange
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
David L. Chadwell, Sandra O!ad·
well, Parcels Sec. 3 T4N R12W,
Orange
Paul L. ·BroWII, Clovle Edith
Brown to Marvelea Louise PEn·
n!ngton, Parcels Sec. 31, Salem

IM:III:IIIM!C!lMllfiii:IIIJIIJJIIJMlllliiJIIIIMMM•lllli-•••1

The Christmas Card

ill
n
ill

J
~

No One Ever

II

Throws Away

II

=

ill

Memberships
For Christmas

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;wi ~~Give lOll\

I

~

THIS COUPON WORTH $1 00.00

SPA

·

~

'

~

ON ANY
PUICHASED
OR LAY IT AWAY FO.R CHRISTMAS

WAREHOUSE SALES/DISCOUNT PRICES

11

~

lA

AS LOW AS S132 500 WITH COUPON
HOLIDAY POOLS, INC. 429-4 78 8

!
ill

ONLY
$20

n

Ask Us!

ill

1
I
II
In

•

I Gallipolis
ll
ill

360 Second Ave '' Gallipolis
446-0699

\- \ r - - i

•

I

Air Force Master Sgt. Gunther R.
Swecker, son d. Hubert E. and
Martha Swecker d. 2120 Wesley
Drive, Columbus, Ga., has arrived
for duty with the AJr Force
Communications Command,
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base,
Ohio.
Swecker, a personnel technician,
was prevlously assigned at Scott
Air Force Base, Ill.
His wife, Peggy, Is the daughter
or Floyd R. Ftlllnge~ ofRural Route
1, Crown City, and Pauline M. Moss
of 745 Curdsville Road , Harrodsburg, Ky.
He Is a 1972 graduate of Ba~er
High School, Columbus.
Ronald B. Denny, son d Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Denny of 738 S. 4th St.,
Middleport, has enllsted In the U.S.
Air Force's Delayed enlistment
Program, according to SSgt. John
McGuire, Air Force RecruitEr.
Denny Is a 1984 graduateofMe!gs
High School.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week basic mllltary
tratntng course at Lackland AFB,
Texas, he will receive training Ill
the Mechanical Career Field.
He wlll be earning credits
towards .an associate degree
through the Community College d
the Air Force while attendln~ basic
. training and other AJr 'Force
technical training schools .
Denny Is scheduled for enUstment In the Regular Air Force In
May.

i

E8 I
1

!
~
r~Croo=kli=v=ille~,-O~hlo=-43=7~31~----_j~~~-~~~2~·~7~3~PI~E;DM~O~N~T~I~D~.,~H~T~GN~.~·~WY~.~~~~~~~~llft~Mi~lllll~lllli~l'li\~l'lii~M~I'Ii\
.~llllil~l'li\~l'lii~JIIJ~M~IIII~l'lil~llll~llfill~llfiii~M~liii~M~M~M~,J

"We are more than just a bank ..."
We're nine thousand people working to do things a little better for you
every day ... some of us behind the scenes, the rest of us behind the smiles.
Giving you our best is a BANK ONE tradition. It's also a promise, from
each and every one of us. We're going to keep l l T. '
•
making banking better .. . to help things happen
for the special people who are our customers in
Akron, Alliance, Ash land, Athens, Cambridge,
Cleveland, Columbus, Coshocton, Dayton, Dover,
Eastern Ohio, Fremont, Lima, Mansfield, Marion,

nine
tOOusand.

vve re

Denny

CHARMIN
4 ROLL

0

••

·,

I

• TIDE DETERGENT
~~o~z.
99

"

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....COO Mi. .••......
••
• •
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years before

CENTENARY UNfi'ED Methodsl Clurch has had several
lmproveritetttsand addltlo118 !Iince the maw sanctuary was buill In 1868.
After the closing In H,.lhe Siloam WehhConvegationaiChurch, the
Centenary Church moved the Siloam buDding
and auached It to
.

You can,
If you
wish, Buckeye,
write to
James
Sands,
:!1 North

In along
1866 atheframe
structure
built
Portsmouth
Roadwas
by
carpenters John B. Jones and John
L. Lewis who were residents of the
Slloam community having ~roved
there from Tyn Rhos.
In 18'77-78 ,Siloam .Church was
taken down and reassembled, using
parts or the l&amp;i6 church at a place
Ci!lled Waterloo Bridge. The carpenters ri this project were John D.
Jones, John L. Lewis, and Jllm
Griffiths. Here the church remained untll 1945:
IRONICALLY THE church to
which Siloam would be joined
(Centenary) was also built In 1866
on land donated by Henry Blazer.
Centenary goes way back to 1822
when Jacob Delay organl7ed his
thtrd Methodist Eplsoopal O!urch
In Green Township.
When organl7ed In lB60 SUoam
had 19 members: the Rev. J .A.
Davis, Thomas H. Davis, EUzabeth
N. Jones, John J. Owens, Catherine
Owens, Eleanor Davis, Marla
Jones, D.J. Evans, Anna Evans,
Mary Evans, Esther Evans, Mrs.
EUzabeth H. Davis, Evan J. Evans,
Henry Davis, Annie H. Davis,
EUzabeth N. Jones, AIUlle Evans,
DavldJ. Morgan, and Mrs. MaryJ.
Morgan.
Stloam Church never had an
otnclal graveyard though there Is a
oorying place known as SiloamJones Cemetery near State Route
141. Most of the persons who were
active members at Siloam were
burled at Nebo m Tyn Rhos.
According to the closing ceremonies held In 1945, only three JErsons
~?o~er had their funerals In the
Siloam church - Mr. and Mrs .
Jenkin Jones, and Mrs. Ann
Cochran. Strangely Jenkin and
Catherine Jones are burled at
Nebo: Catherine Jones died In 1865
and Jenkin Jones In 1867.
A PERU!AL OF the slightly
more than a dozen tombstones at
the Siloam-Jones Cemetery gives a
glimpse into the dangers or early
childhood. Seven of the stones
belong to persons who died before
the ageof4. In l872 a son of J .N.and
M. Jones died at age 1. In 1867 twins
of the same couple died at birth.

Swecker

2% Milk ••••••••••~'!-•• $1 49 .

Army Chief Warrant Officer
Larry L . Bourne, son or Margaret
L. Bourne or 428 N. Wood St.,
Fostoria , Ohio, has arrived lor duty
with the U . S. Army
Communications-Electronics command, Fort Monmouth, N.J .
Bourne, a logistics assistance
representative, was previously assigned In West Germany.
His wife, Jane, Is the daughter of
Edward and Ruby A. Baer of '1£7
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
He received as associate degree
In I9Sl from Ohio University,
Athens.

I

1§73. Nathaniel Jones died In 1866 at

:ho-: ~':!~~ ~~,;:-"Y

lin the service

·~~HOUGHTON'S

Bomne

Airman Robert S. Staats, son or
Cheryl and Kenneth Lee of «!2 W.
Main St., Pomeroy, has graduated
from the U.S. AJr Force munitions
maintenance course at Lowry Air
Force Base, Colo.
Durling the course, students were
taught to Inspect, assemble and
dispose .of explosive munitions.
'!'hey also earned credits toward an
as.ioclate degree through the Community College d. the AJr Force.
Staats Is scheduled to serve with
the 93rd Munitlons Maintenance
Squadron at Castle Air Face Base,
.Calli.
He Is a 19£6 graduate of Meigs
, High School, Pomeroy. ._

"

Edith Teaford, Ernest H. Teaford, Earl Q. Teaford, Mildred
Karr, Juanita \ Davis, VIrgil B.
Teaford, Dorothy E. Bentz, John W.
Teaford, Cecil w. Teaford, Harold
Teaford to Gordon Bruce Teaford,
Guardian's Deed, Sutton
Grant E. Young, Deborah J.
Young to Olen aka Olin Young,
Josephine Young, :l2A F.31 T4 Rlll ,
Olive
Sherwood L. Meredith. Mildred
L. Meredith, to Roy H. Holter,
Patricia Holter, Roy Alan Holter.
Edward Holter, 78A S34 1'3 Rl2,
Chester
Pearlle F. Jewell Jr., Judy A.

EUzabeth canJhan died at age 1 In .

agel.IssacJone!d!edlnl87latage
1 Lincoln Jane! died at age 4 In
1892. ·
ln the late llDls Siloam a..urch
had over lOOscholarseniQlledln the
Sunday School program, but as
happened to many of the Welsh
churches In Gallla County the
second and third generations
moved to other denominations or to
other parts d. the country. The
small Welsh churches declined. In
the 19:ns and 19lls Siloam was part
of a five point charge of Welsh
Congregational churches that besldes Siloam Jnc1uded: Ty n Rhos,
Nebo, Brynhfryd and Oak HDI, the
latter t~ro belngln Jackson·County.
THE WEUIH MVSEUM In Oak
HUIIslocatedfntheformerOakHUI
Welsh Congregational O.urch.
From 1850 untll1914 there was a
Welsh congregational Church in
CentervUie 'with D.O. Thomas,
1\bram
Edwards,
and T.J.
WUIIams as the
leadtngftgures
for many

similar
to the
church'
that sits
next to the
Tynlog
Rhos
Cemetery.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Property transfers

BY oMMES !lANDS
GALLIPOLIS - In lM5 the
Siloam Welsh C~:~~o~:~:~
Church located In Perry
cloSed Its doors
with these words:
"Siloam O.urch
.
has served ·as a
.
strong tower for
tliat whichlsgood
Ill the communlty. It has served
Its day and wUI take 'Its place In the.
history of the oommuntty."
That same year Stloam Church
was bought by the Centenary
. Methodist Church, moved to Centenary
, , and attacbed to ft s bulldln g. It
Is still there today.
Siloam Church was of the same
denomination as Tyn Rhos and -.
Nebo. At one time there were also
Welsh Congregational churches at
Penlel and Centerville. Today Nebo
in the only Clle of the group that has
regular services, though Tyn Rhos
!susedmanytimesdurlngtheyear
lor special occasions.

~:-=rch~s~~~

The

:

BANK£0NE.
Nine thousand people who carr!.

BANK ONE. ATHENS, NA., Ahnl. Ohio

MtmberFOIC

,,

·'

�.

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
•PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1 THRU SATURDAY ,
DECEMBER 7, 1985•USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED
•NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS.

NOW AVAILABLE
HOLIDAY
FRUIT BASKETS

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

USDA revises '85 Burley price support and assesment
•

GALLIPOLJS - The U.S. IJe.
partment , Of Agriculture today

reduced the jrlce support levellbr
the l9S5 crop burley tobacco !rom

I Property Transfers
•

BUSH'S

'.

Cilfiord · Whlttlngton, Barbara
Whittington to Herald oO &amp; Gas Co.,
Right of Way. Rutland
Frances R. Brewington, dec. to
James E. Brewington, Cert rl.
trans, Middleport,
Louise F. NoO, Marjorie F.
Baker. Josphlne F. Shinn, Charles
H. Shinn, Jeanne F. Karr to Janrs
E. Diddle, Right of Way, Lebanon
Delmer Baum, Kathryn I. Baum,
David G. Smith, Nancy B. Smith,
Martie Baum. Tim Baum to James
e. Diddle, Right of Way, Chester
Olin A. Bailey, Mabel M. Bailey,.
John W. BaUey, . Henreltta L.
BaUey, to James E. Diddle, Right rl.
Way, Chester.
. Raymond H. Boatright to James
E. Diddle, Right of Way, 9Jlester
James L. Ryan 1D WOeyT. Ryan,
Sharon K. Ryan, Y,A S.22 T3 Rll,
Lebanon

~.

Pinto Beans
and .Hominy
....

vm.

.. ·"'""..
~ CI.#II

•

'

-

. FRESH • SLICED FREE

Whole
Pork Loins

5 L~. BoniiHI Chalco Shoulder English ROatll, 5lb.
......... Cholco Chuck Roooto, 5 lb. Frooh Ground
-

· 5 Lb. -

Cubld CCMJnlry Slyle Buckel SINkl,'

5 lb. PGflc ShCMIIdlf SINko, 5 lb. 12 Oz. Pkg.
Tencllfblll Wlonlfs, 5 Lb. 12 Oz. Pkg. Tendorblol

·'ft'Q&gt;

........... '

16 oz.
CANS
FREEZER SALE
FAMILY MEAL PLANNING

.

SliCED 9-11 CHOPS

QUAITEI LOINS ·11.

BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS

$15 9
• DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET OR REGULAR

'

PEPSI COLA

8
16

'

'

39
.'

oz.

'

Plus

BTLS.

Deposit
Limit 2

GALLIPOLIS - Ray Wheeler,
Rt. 1. Crown City. brought ma gtant
turnip from his gar!En last week.It
ll'nlst have welghecJ.around three or
more,pounds and was more than six
,IJ.I;ches jn circumference.

EOsworth GOkey for the CivO War
· medal of Ira ll GOkey." Another .
letter from Armstrong offers congratulations to Mrs. GUkey for ber
Oling the claim lor tbe medal and
"the documentation submitted on
behalf of your claim for his medal."

59
5 LB.
BOX

FLAKED

I
I

I
I1

$ ...
60 LB.

BAG

F·o lger's
Coffee

I
I

OFF
·

·---·

I

'

·

ON ANY DINNER AT

..

D~LE'S

SMORGASBORD

(One Coupon Per Penon)

(OUPON EXPIRES NOV. 30, 1985

I
II

39

---------------------·

U.S. NO. I

REG.•HOT &amp; SPICY

Potatoes

Banquet
Fried Chicken

~.

49 t

"I AM WRITING this claim you
submitted in behalf of Jerry

Reg. Sept~rete 1tem1 1298.95
Low AI $46 Per Month on Cltlllnu
IBM® PC compatiblellncludes versatile S..in·1
DeskMate® software. *25-1000/1021

,.,.. ... MEAT SALE
FALTER'S

Deli Bol.ogna
...
......'

WHOLE

STIU
'
'

••
•

Save

'29995

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

Patrolman®SW-60 by Realistic

.·'

'40 Off

....
..
....'·
.·.r..'.·
....•• '
.

@@

•

•

LB.

69(

HAll STICK...:.1b. 79'
'
$ 89
BRATWURST ...........................~..... 1
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IAUIIn. SAUSAGE ................l ... Sl

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lie will be earning credits
towards an associate degree
tbrough the Community College rl.
die Air Force while attmdlng basic
training .and other Air Force
technical training schools.
·WIDiamson Is scheduled tor
enlistment In the Regular Air Force
In January.
,,,

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recently completed his Navy Basic
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He is currently receiving training
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The Olive Twp.
Vol_unteer Fire Dept.
.would like to thank all
those who voted to
support our fire levy.

VIrginia which gave Ira H. GOkey
his.honorable discharge lor service
1861-65. A letter from Frederick H.
Annstrong, associate director d.
the West VIrginia Department ol
CUlture and History. Annstrong's
letter starts thus:

.

I

"U" (unsound), "W" (wet),

.

LB.

~·----------------------------,
I
I
.~ .
I
II '~""'
SMOIIGASBO~O
I

legislation signed into law today by
President Reagan. The legislation
requires a reduction of the assessment which producers contribute to
a m-net-cost tobacco account from
ll rents per pound to not more than
4 cents. per pound for this year's
crop• .
Everett Rank, executive· vicepresident of USDA's Commodity

Most Stores Open Late Nlgh1s Until Chrisbnasl

rr WAS ALSO the State ol West

Top
rloin Steak

Olarles E . Hall, Dorothy Hall to
Monogahela Power Co., Ease,
oove
Marion A. Hall to Monongahela
Power Co., Ease, Olive.
Dottle S. Turner, Hel\IY E.
Cleland Jr., Kathleen M. Cleland to
Leadlng Creek Consv. Dlst., Right
ol Way, Scipio
Mildred MOler, Allen Jarvis,
Dolly Seaboda , Antlllny Seahoda,
Louise Miller David Miller, Leeroy
Javls, Bonnie Jarvis, Darrell W.
Jarvis, Susie Jatvls, Sherman
Jarvis, Ada Jarvis, Frank Jatvls,
Joyce Jarvis, June Lambert, ·
James P. Lambert, Arthur Jatvis,
Sharon Jrvls, to Willa D: Morris,
lA. Scipio
Earl W. Cl~k. Patricia A. Cleek t
Abert C. Criddle. Jr., VIola G.
Criddle, S.S T2 Rll, Lebanon

EDfi'H GILKEY, the widow of
Dale C. GOkey, appears in a
photograph which shows ~r to be
.'-&gt;ldlng a letter and a medal. The
',tter is from tbe Department of
quiture and History of the State Qt
· .West VIrginia. The medal ts•tlll ·
•: 'Slate's medal of honor.
• ,.!" ••
, -•
• •
'&lt;, DALE'S GRANDFATIIER, Ira
H. GOkey, died May 9, 19:Ji, and it
was Ira will won till medal of moor
!Qr CivO War heroism. Dale himself
died Q;t. 22, 19fi5, after years of
leadership in Kiwanis and amatEur
baSEball in the Ohio River vaOey
coverlng an area !rom Huntington
to Parkersburg.
'•

BONELESS

This action was autlllrlzed under

Credit Corporation. said that individual grade loan rates for 1985crop tobacco will range from 23
cents to 29 cents below 11*14 rates.
The tobacco grower cooperative
associations are also permitted to
deduct l cent per pound from those
rates to help cover overhead costs
of the .tobacco program.
Only the Drlglnal producer Is
eligible for price support under the
program. CCC will oot accept loans
on tobacco graded N2L. N2R, N2G,

Talk to a neighbor who's with State Farm
and compare. Then give me a call.

Posthumou$ award of medal
goes to late Ir;~ H. Gilkey

LB.$111

TOTAL
POUND
PACKAGE

•
EDrrH GILKEY holds leiter and medJoJ beloaglng to ber late
· JI'BRdfather,ln-Jaw. 'Die !alter reads, In pari: "Ibis medal belatedly
bestoWed upoli )our ucestor tlr lbe service be .gave to West VIrginia
ud tbe Union Army In defense ~ the mUon and to the benelll of the
fo~n ~ the stale." Slgnlnglllllalter was Fn!clerlck.H. Armatroag,
IIIIOCiate director of jhe West Vlrpnia Department of Archives 1111d ,
,11181ory.

Peeps. a Gallipolis Diary

.a-.

99

.

.

$1.788 per pound to $1.488 per pound
and reduced the oo-net-cost assessments to 4 cents per pound.

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PI'UCES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

41

No-

�.

.

Page-E-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 1, 1985

December 1 1985

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W Va.

Op1n Dally 10-41; Sunday 12·6

Orl Sale S&amp;in., Dec. 1nvu
Tues., Dec. 3
Regular Prlcel May Yay 1J ~
SloNI Due To Local CCNnpetlllcoo

•
•
II

~
Sale
Price
Twin-size 111ctrlc blanket. COmes with single c~l!ol.
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•

�Page- E-8-The .Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi9-Point Pleesant, W. Va.

'De:cember 1, 1986

Inside:
By the llelld , ............ Page 4
Claalllfteds ....... Pages 8, 9, 10

r..onui.TV ............. Paae 11
Deab ................,. .. Pagel2
Edllorial ................. Page 2
Sports ..................... Pages

DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

Treat YourseH
·to Luxury

AGolden Edition
Refrigerator.

... --.-au.•-

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Ftcoi'Ciolt S)llom

••Enorgy~S)IIom

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• COrwlitlt&amp; R--aii:M Doorl
• SOtfhru Crioporund Doily Door1l

2·=Door·~. FtiWidl&gt; F - • E'*IIY s- Swich

:=.:::= S59aoS I
•••

Vol.3ii. ·No.159
Copy!luhtod 1986 •

,........ ...... 1.

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FREE

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NOW

S16 9' 5

OYER 20 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROJM
BRASS FRAMES &amp; LEADED GLASS .RRORS

OELI~ERY

r··--------------------~
10 STYLES TO

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STARTING AT

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COFFEE AND END TABLES ·
STARliN~ AT $7 8 EACH

Steel aI
Purchase

I
I!

REG. S499. 95
ONLY

s2aa.oo !

!
II
I
I

•I

10 GUN

LAIGE SELECDON OF

LARGE SELECTION OF STYLES IN STOCK

CHOSE FROM I

I
II

Pomeroy has
Yule parade,
' Middleport's
I£ t set tonight

Modtl FH11!1112

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II
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$52800 I

~----------------------'
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REGULAR $299.95

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1 Section , 12 Pagoo , 25 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, 'Ohio, Monday, December 2, 1985

...
.,...,

grand manner with lhe golden

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$219 95

With a flooding Ohio River as a
backdrop, the annual Ch.rlstmas
parade of lhe Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce was staged
In Pomeroy Sunday afternoon.
Due to the Doodlngwhich brought
from two to lhree Inches of water
onto Main St.. at lite corner of
~. rr:~,; 111 Sycamore and Main, the parade
originapy scheduled for Saturday
morning was postponed to Sunday
I
aflernoon.
repUcas of lyplcal Clirlstmas holiday figures In Pomeroy's annual
MEMBERS of Rutland Brownie Troop 1293 carried colorful cutout
The turnout of viewers was far
holiday parade held Sunday.
under the normal crowd on hand for
the paradP probably due to the Wgh
water wWch still had some resldenls
of the counly blocked off.
The slowly receding water had
moved from Main St. · Sunday to
allow the parade to lake plaee but
slayed on Ihe lwo lots along the Ohio
River whieh are generally jampacked wltiJ cars when th~ parade is
held. Pomeroy firemen were out at
By United Pr.a International
6:ll a.m. Sunday hosing East Main
and as ,much of the two lots as
pb$ibte~~ By • Mpnday Jl)drntng, ·
teens and20sand forecasters Issued · water had receded off oflhelwo klts.
Wgh wind and \\'Inter storm A cold snap Monday morning was
warnings and travelers advisories considered also a plus faclor In
for OWo today as an Intense winter &lt;!Paling with the river, stU! swollen
stonn moved In lhelhe Great Lakes with flood water.
area.
Anumber of merchanls held open
A high wind warning was il! eflecl houses on Sunday offering refresh for the northern third of the state
whlle a lravelers advisory was In
el!ecllorthe northeast third oiOhlo.
A winter stonn warning also wa~ In
effect lor the extreme northeast
comer dthe state.
The warnings and advisories By United Pret;s International
A triple-fatality accldenl in Cincome on the heels of flooding In
cinnati
Sunday boosted Ohio's
GaUia and Meigs Counties that
Thanksgiving
hoUday weekend trafclosed state wtd counly roads
ficdeathtoU
to15,
the state Highway
lhrougholit the area over the
Patrol
reported
today.
weekend. Officials with the GalUa·
There were lhree deaths Sunday,
Meigs post of the patrol said this
six
Saturday, four Friday and lwo
morning that all roads closed by
Wednesday
night. The victims,
Wgh water over the weekend had
Including
two
pedestrians, died In 13
been reopened.
accidents,
which
occurred belween
Officials wilh the Nallonal
6
p.m.
Wednesday
and midnight
Weather Service at Tri-State Air·
port In Huntington, W.Va., said the Sunday.
Among the victims were three
Ohio River Is expected to fall more
suburban
Columbus residents who
than llfeet by Wednesday morning.
died
In
a
two-car
crash on lnterstale
Predicu:d levels tor Huntington are
46.5 feel al7 a.m. today, 42 feet at 7 711n Cincinnati Sunday.
Kllledwere:
a.m. Tuesday and 35 feet by 7 a.m.
Sunday
Wednesday.
Cincinnati:
Michael Martin, 28;
· More than 6.6 Inches of rain was
Betty
Jo
Martin,
31; and Rebecca
·recorded In November al the East
Perun,
12,
all
rl
Reynoldsburg,
In a
Gallipolis weather station, breaking
a record set 40 years ago. The 6.63 Jw&lt;&gt;car · accident on 1-71 In
Inches of rain topped the 6.29 inches Clnclnnali.
Satunlay
MOST POPULAitFIGURE- Sanla again p-aved hlmseU a . mos1 popular fellow when he appeared
reconled In November 1945, but did
Sunday in Pomeroy's annual holiday parade.
Clnclnnali: Lee E. VanordPr, 39,
not come close to breaking the
••
all·tlme record of 11.20 Inches In Columbus. wb&gt;n his tractor· !railer
ov.ertumed oo I·Z75 near Clnclnnall
January 1937.
In Hamill on County.
Cleveland: Joseph Mlllclc, 39,
Very cold air poured across Ohio
Cleveland,
in aone-carcrashon 1·90
today, sending temperatures plum·
in
Cleveland.
CLEVELAND (UP!) -AColum· meting. Along with general snow
bus medlcalllim receives $!00,!Xll a corning from the lowpressljl'e, very
month from lhe state to care for cold air rrovlng across the warm
12,!Xll welfare recipients despite waters of Lake Erie was expecled to
reports that It does a poor job ri cause b&gt;avy snow SqUalls to develop
serving the patients, the Cleveland in the Snow Belt or nortb&gt;ast Ohio,
where rrore than six lncl)es ci. snow
Plain Dealer reports today.
Jury selection began 9 a. m.
An audit commiSsioned by the was !orecasl. .
Monday·
morning In Meigs County
The very strong winds were
state last year found thai Heallh
Common
Pleas Court in the State of
PowerotColumbus Inc. wasdolnga expected lo add grt'll tly t&gt; the wind
Ohio's
case
against 40-year-old
poor job. but state officials Ignored chiD effect of the air. making It le!!l
Joseph C. Taylor of Long Boll om.
the resulls, the newspaperreported. much coldPr than the actual
Taylor Is charged with aggra·
Bernard F. Master, head of the Jemperature reedings.
vated murder In Ihe July 21 shooting
firm and a supporter of Gov.
The extended forecast for Ohio ' &lt;!Path of his wife, Mar llyn Timmons
Richard F. Celeste. was given a
Taylor.
$25,00! gran I a lew months later to caUs lor' lair weather Wednesday
Following the shooting Incident,
help Wm expand to Dayton and through Friday. Highs are expected Mrs. Taylor died at Veterans
to range from tb&gt; upper al to low lls
Cincinnati.
'
WednesdaY and Thl1rsday, rlloder· Memorial Hospital as a result of a
ating to the low to mid 40s Friday. single gun shol to the neck.
A .22 caliber handgun , believed to
"lam very. very concerned about Lows will be In the upper teens to
be
the weapon used In the shoollng al
the money," said state Medicaid low!'!' ~Wednesday and Tbul,'sday
Dlreclor Paul Offner d the $13 and In the mid als to low 30s early the Taylor residence on the Bald
KnoirStlversvllle Rd., was reco·
l,mllllon paid to Health Power since Friday.
1164.
The wlnlry weather spreading vered from the scene.
The charge agalnsl Taylor, as
aver the state sl»uld bring a halt to
"II you're asking II we slkluld be the flood Ureal. Sunday's small contained In the indictment, carries
NEAT Ot1J'DOOK SCJI;NE - '1111s neat outdoor \Wiler ecene
concerned about how Health Power rumunts or rain, followed by a firearms specUicatlon. I!Taylorls
llf&amp;ldflhted by 1D old·r.JIIoned W.., poR Willi lite floal miry of lite
Is spending our (payments) ,I tWnk. well·beklw freezing lemperatutes convicled or pleads guilty lo the
charg!' before Wm , tWs speclftca·
ae.. Store In Pometay'B Chrllinuui parade Sunday.
the wtswer Is yes."
should slOp any significant l'ilnoff.

Water
•
•
situation
eases

HMO contract
questioned

MAGAZINE RACK

LETTER &amp;KEY RACKS
APERFECT CHRISTMAS OIFT

Middleport's Toallftt

·

Middleport will welcome In the
holiday season tWs evening. A
wade will form at the Fruth,Sears
parking lot at 6 and Is scheduled to
move at 6: ll p.m. Following the
parade Santa wUI be on hand with
treats for the younger set and
merchants wlll slage a moonlight
sale with special prices as a part d
lhe Christmas season activily.

Fifteen Ohioans· killed

..

TOWEL HOLDERS

ments, door prizes, free gifts and
favors plus specially priced mer·
chandlse. Attendance was good for
the mosl pari but business was not
as brisk as last year when theevents
were slaged under more favorable
weather conditions.
Sunday's parade had "somelhlng
for everyone"--vehicles, floats,
marching units, dancers. balon
units and more.
'
TropWes were scheduled to be
presented Immediately following
lhe parade near the Pomeroy Fire
Deparlmenl Slatton. However, jusl
as the parade ended a do'Mlpour of
heavy rain took place and the
presenlalions were not made. A
spokesperson for the Pomeroy
Chamber said late tWsmomingthat
she had stlll not been advisEd of lite
trophy winners or a listing of the
parade participants.

Dayton: Roy Lee Cornelius, 21,
!)pylon. In a one-car accident on a
Dayton s(reel.
Lima: Mildred A. Johnson, 63,
Clnclnnall. In a one-car accident on
1·751n Allen County.
Akron: Gary W. Gebhard!, 40,
Akron, In a one-car accident on
Jnt erslate 76111 Summit County.
Johnstown: Russeil E. Rowley
Jr., 21, Johnstown, In a one-car
accldenl on a stl'!.'l'l In this Licking
County community.
Friday
Ashtabula: Hazel M.Silliman, 75.
Geneva, In a lhree-car atcident on
an Ashtabula County road .
Toledo: Mildred l. Cru tes. 81,
Cridersvllle. In a 'four·car accldenl
on 1·751n Lucas County.
Andover: Daniel L. Winne. 19,
{)()rset. when struck by a car along
U.S. 61n Ashlabula County .
Columbus: William H. Smith, ID.
Columbus, when struck ~a car on a
suburban Whitehall streel.
Wednesday night
Dllyton: Daniel Cadc. :}), Dayton,
in a two -vehic le accldPnt on a
Dayton street.
Fairfield: .Jamie Hainblln, 14,
Falrlleld,ln a two-car accident 011 a
Falrlield city sl rl'l.'t.

Jury selection begins

25 IN.

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lion would require a prison lerrn cl
lhree years prior 10 the addition of
any oilEr penalty.
If convicled of aggravated
murder, Taylor faces the possibllty
of life Imprisonment. a maximum
fine or $25,(00 or ooth. with no
possibility of proballon.
Taylor, represcnled by Altomey
Herman Carson, Athens. has entered a plea of nol guilty lo lhe
aggravaled murder. charge.
Meigs County Prosecu llng Atlorney Fred W. Crow m, assisted by
Attorney Rob&gt;rt Toy, Athens, Is
represE!IIlng I he state.
Judge ChariE&gt;S Knight will be
presiding over the proceedings
which are expecto:l to last about a
week. ·
The court expected to pave a jury
d 12 seated by aboul 2 p.m. this
afternoon.

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