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14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Nowmber 4, 19.83

.

~.

)

Miller seeks delay on EPA action

Local briefs:
Recenl halloween party success
:

The recellt Halloween party In Racine proved to be a success as

. more than 320 ·area youth, ages ().12 years old, "dressed up" In
•appropriate attire ,to participate In an assortme nt of activities.
':
The event was staged by the Racine Fireme n's auxiliary a nd
,co-llpOIISOfed by the village councll. Prizes were awarded in four
. dlvlalons for the ugliest, pre!tlest, and most original costumes. A host
·of games was provided Including bobbing for apples, pin-the-nose on
.the pumpldn, a fortune teller and other activities: Apple elder,
' cookies, hot dogs, pop and candy were given to those In attendance In
addition to nearly 350 treats prepared by members of the auxiliary.
Live entertainment was provided by Freddy Sayre at the organ.

Hoeflich SEORC honoree
_
Bob Hoeflich ot The Dally Sentinel st~t wtll be one of 12
. IIOUtheastern Ohio men to be honored by the Southeastern Ohio
··: Regional Council at Its annual Persons of the YearAwardsdlnneron
Tueaday, Nov. 17. The banquet will be held atthe OhloUnlverslty Inn

: In Athens.
.'
The distinguished guests represent 10 counties In southeastern
· Ohio and were nominated tor the award by the chambers of
- commerce and business groups In their home counties and
·,communities. According to Evans this will be the 15th annual awards
. meeting and the bono~ Include educators, public officials..
·, professionals and lay persons.
•
Awards by the councll are made on the basis of contributions to
. southeastern Ohio by participation and leadership In community
,, affairs. The Southeastern Ohio Regional Council Is one of the oldest
development and promotion groups In the United States, dating back
to the early 1940s.
The outstanding Individuals are: Dewey Kennedy, New
,
_' Lexington; Fredertck L. Oremus, Nelsonville; Joe Gabrtel, Logan;
• Brandon T. Grover Jr., Athens; Bob Hoeflich, Meigs County;
WUIIam N. Eachus, GaUipolls; Walt Doyle, Ironton; Ralph W.
:· Wisniewski, Portsmouth; Max Way, Pike County; Vernon C.
· Everitt, Jackson; Pearl Kisor, Wellston; and Robert C. Clark,
Vinton County.
The hospitality hour will begin at 5:30p.m. and the dinner at 6:30
p.m. Tickets may be purchaSed locally froin Rhod Mllls,logan Area
; Chamber of Commerce, Nelsonville Board of Trade, Athens Area
,. Chamber of Commerce, BUI Chllds, Bernard Fultz, Pomeroy,
· Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce, Ironton Chamber of Commerce,
· Portsmouth Area Chamber of Commerce, Gary Cooper, Charlie
• Gaskill, Howard Thompson, Jackson Chamber of Commerce,
Elmer Elckelherg, Wellston Chamber of Commerce, The
MUton-Banklng Company, Tate Cline, and Gene Engle.

..

Area deaths
•,

Scott, Baton Rouge, La. , tour
daughters, Betty Duncan and
Luella Alles, both of Columbus;
Patrtcla Detty, Canal Winchester,
and Naomi Bissell of Racine; two
sisters, Laura Scott of Middleport
and Mary Grtes, Columbus; a
brother, Benny Scott, Columbus, 24
grandchildren and 27 greatgrandchildren.
Arrangements for services are
helng made at the 0 . R. Woodyard
Funeral Home, South ijlgh St.,
Columbus.

J, Carl Hawse
: Major Glenna Rummel (ret.)
:salVation Army, received word of
death of her brothe•-ln-law, J.
Carl 'Hawse, 75, at Doylestown,

the

btoo.
:·Surviving are his wife, Alberta
RUmmel Hawse; a son and
a&amp;ughter·ln-law, Larry and Mamie
Hawse of Dltnols and a son-in-law
$ild daughter, Dick and Meredith
Tavemarlsh, Norton, Ohio, and
several grandChildren.
Services wtll be held at lO::Jla.m .
saturday atGossMemorlaiChurch,
13th St., Akron.

Name spea~er
Elder Raleigh (Doc ) Puckett,
Salyersville: Ky., wU! he the guest
speaker at the Morning Star United
Baptist Church, PagevUleSaturday
at 7 p.m. Accompanying Puckett
will be the Harvey family gospel
singers. The public Is invited .

Lodge to meet
Harrtsonvllle Lodge 411 F&amp;AM
will meet Saturday at 7::Jl p.m. at
the temple. There will be election of
officers. AU members are urged to
attend.

Correction
A revival will he held at the
Carleton Church'beglnningSunday,
Nov. 6, not Nov. 5 as was announced.
Services wtll he held through Nov.
1l

19enrolled
Nlneteenpeople-nlneadu)lsand
10youths -arepresentlyenrQUedln
the Jobs Training Propgram Act In
Meigs County, not employed as a
headline stated In the article which
appeared in the N,ov. 2 Sentinel
Issue.
Adults and youths enrolled In the
JTPA are not pald during training

'

Special program
A special program entitled "Is
Your Name Written There" wtll he
presented at 7: :Jl p.m. Saturday
night at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene. On display wtll be a large
glass etching of Cbrlst made by
Richard Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Clark of Rock Springs. The
public Is Invited.

{ Leslie Arnold McGrath, 61, of
~ was dead on arrtval at the

CLEVELAND (AP) The
Don l. Wood, 86, Prospect Hill,
winning number drawn Thursday
pomeroy, long-time mail carrter,
night In the Ol)lo Lottery's game,
dloid Thursday at Pomeroy Health . "The Number," was 100.
Care Center.
_
1n the "Pick 4" game, the winning
Mr. Wood was a retired U.S. rum!
.
number was 5900.
mall earlier having served for 39
The lottery reported earnings of
years. HewasbomatCarpenteron
$m,972.00 tram wagering on "The
May25,1897, a sonofthelateGeorge
Number," played dally except
G. M. and Lydia Louisa Willcox
Sunday. Earnings came on sales of
Wood. Besides his parents, he was
$1,165, 751.00, white holders of winpreceded In death by his wile,
ning !lckets were entitled to share
Corinna Nicholson Wood, and one
S8a7.779.00, offlclals said. ·
sister In Infancy.
In the parlmutuel"Pick4" game,
Surviving are a .. daughter and
played Monday through Frtday,
son-In-law, Allegra and Nonnan
sales totaled $157,688.00. Holders of
Will, Rutland; a son and daughter- winning tickets were entitled to 45
In-law, Patrtck and Audrey Wood,
percent, or $71,097.00. Any winning
Pomeroy, five grandchildren and
$1 straight ticket earned $6,216.00,
six greatcgrandchlldren.
and any winning $1 boxed ticket
Mr. WoodservedintheU.S.Army earned $518.00.
during World War I and hewas a life
member of Drew Webster Post 39,
Amerlcan Legion, In Pomeroy.
Services will be held at 2: ~ p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Home with the Rev. William
Admitted - Betty Frtend, Long
Mlddleswarth officiating. Burial Bottom.
wlllbeintheSchoollotCemeteryat · Discharged- Barbara Grover,
Carpenter. Frtends may call at the Avice Frecker, Barbara White,
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Sandy Luckeydoo, Lora Circle,
p.m. Friday.
Gamet Johnston, Naomi Young.

'PieaBant Valley Hospital-Thursday

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;i

•

,Jeremiah Hysell

·-: Jeremiah

Adam Hysell, two
month old son of Larry D. and Pam
lliloore Hysell, 129 New Lima Road.
JJlrtland, died Wednesday evening
l(t the Hysell residence.
• He was born Sept. 2, 1983, at the
Holzer Medical Center In Gallipolis.
i Besides his parents, he Is survived
1iy a sister, Aurumn Lynn, his
Jbaternal grandmother, Mrs.
'nlelma Moore, and paternal grandQan!Dts, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan
~· all of the Rutland area. •
~ · Services will he held at 2 p.m.
~y at the Rutland FreewUI
iapttstChurch with theRev. Leland
.8aley olllclatlng. Burial wtll be In
¥Jie6 Cemetery. Friends may call
ft the Hunter Funeral Horne In
:ctulland frtm 7 to 9 p.m. Saiurday.

Hospital news

'

•••

,.

Leslie McGrath
•
...

~·

·• He was born March 14, 1922, at
butin, W.Va.
~-- He served lntheU.S.Armydurlng
·WorldWarD,andlsamemberofthe
.Jrfuon VFW Post
.J. Surviving are his wile, Susie E.
~rath, of Leon; o~fosterslster,
~Tenill, of Tampa, Fla.
, !~ Funeral services wUI be held
B,atunlay at 1: :ll p.m. at the
J'oglesong Funeral Home In Mason
. 1"'tb Rev. Hennan Jordan offlclattai- Burtal wtll follow In the
bkJand Memortal Garden.
: - Friends may can at the funeral
1atme today from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9

m.

ltJn.

! Graveside
llfld.

mllltary rites will be

....

WE WELCOME YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
ATMOSPHERE

~A. Scott
~ George Allen Scott, '18, Columbus,

iinneri.Y of the Cheshire area, died
:rtwnd&amp;Y at Veterans Memortal
:JIUIIIII8lln Columbus.

.- /t. l'dllelt of Columbus for a

~ofyears,Mr.Scottwasboni

.lRarcb

18, JJm. a aon of the late
~ s. and SarahPhllilps Scott,
,e:JwMre. He was also preoeded In
'jllatll by two trothen, Jake Scott, '
, . •llepcrt,. and CbarUe Scott,
~.and a sister, Nellie Scott

~~~ 9w'YIVtng are a

.. .
-.,.

son, Robert A.

Following a two-vehicle accident
on S.R. 681 In Olive Township
Thursday, the Gailla-Melgs post of

Meigs Band Boosters will meet b)
the band room at the high school
Monday at 7 p.m. The bands' trtp to
Georgia wlll be discussed. All
parents are urged to atteild.

Open door session
slated Wednesday r;;:::::;;;:;:::;;;:;:::;;;:;:::;;;:;:::;;;:;=:::;
REMEMBER
On Wednesday, Nov. 9, a representatlve from Congressman ClarWITH fLOWERS

ence Mlller:s office will coilduct an
open door session from 10 a.m.noon In the Courthouse In Pomeroy.
It anyone has any questions
concerning the Federal Govern-

Longenette's vehicle received

ment, please stop by to discuss

MEN'S Values to 130.00

Meigs Alumni who wtll not he able
to attend a meeting Sunday, Nov. 6,
at 1 p.m. at Middleport Stadium In
regard to a Meigs Alumni Fooltball
game are asked to call George
Nesselroad at 992-5881 or Wally
Hattleld at 992-5669.

-n. ..

lf'n .4mrrirn .'irnolo

lA&gt;·~·"

MEN'S STRAIGHT LEG-BOOT CUT

Levi ~!~1!r:!~:. . . . . . . . . .
LADIES

Now

$1888

$1788

$}988

Coats ............. ,Reduced

30(1//0

LADIES

Blouses
Reduced .

•

20%

'

LADIES LEVI

Bendover. Skirts - Slacks
·Blazers

steady; cows tt50 to S4 lower.
Feeder Steers: Good arxl Choice 250 to ;m
lqs. 54-58; lXllo 400 lbs. 49.'i0-61.50; 400 zo 500
ltE. ~1-61: flllto &amp;:n lbs. 5l!iQ..!it50; GOO to 700
Ills. 49-56,50; 100 lo !DJ Ills. 48-53.50; !DJ and

47.51).54.
Feeder llell.,..: Good and Choice 250 lOlXJ
lbs. 41.50-45.!();
to 400 lbs. 40-43.50; 400 to

~

:m

500 lbs. 38.0046.50: 500 to tmlbs. 39-47; 600 to
100lbs. 4043.50: 700 tolllltbs. J9.42.1S; imand
over 37-CH.
Feeder Bulls: GoC.J and Oiolre 250 to lXJ
Ills. 50-56; .nt to 400 lbs. 48-58; tOO to m lbs.
49-!16.50: ~to 600 lbs. tS.53.50; WJ to 700 lbs.
44.50-51; 700 to !:lXI lbs. 4147; Em and over

uced

20%

•

..'

Suits - Slacks Skirts- Blouses

Bulls 1.000 lbs. and up ll-4S·.
Slaughter CaNs: utUittes J.l.J6.25; canners
1---

.r Reduced
•

20%

ELBERFELDS · IN POMEROY
•

SUPER SALE PRICES THIS WEEK'E ND ON:

5-10
----._,..~--·

NOW SE-RVING A NEW LUNCH, MENU

...... .....-!'.------LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT
~-

"DEACON GILESV

•

r-----------------------,

1 NOW BOOKING BANQUETS AND PARTIES
FOR THE HOLJDA Y SEASON
I
I CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE
I

I
I
I
I

I

I

992-3629

·-----------------------~

. NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Children's Hats &amp; Gloves
Boys' Sweat Shirts
Carhartt Work Clothes
Children's Coats
&amp; Snowsuits
-Hang-Ten""'Pa nts
Men's Sweat Shirts
Angel Tread Slippers
Blankets
Men's Flannel Shirts
Women's Blazers
-.

SHOP TONIGHT
'TIL 8:00

Miami, Fla . ... ... ... .. 12 .
East Carolina .......... 7

•

•

•

•

enttnt

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipoli-Point Pleasant

13 Secttom, 90 pages 3 5 Ce nts
A Multimedi a Int. fiewspaper

Sunday, November 6, 1983

By KEVIN KELLY
Two other tax Issues are on the
'J:bnes.Sentlae Staff
ballot - a 4-mtnbond Issue to bulld
GALLlPOllS - A half-percent
two new elementary schools and
Increase In the county sales tax tor
finance Improvements to others In
construction of a new courthouse
the Gallla Comly Local School
wtll be decided by Gallla County
Dlstrtct, and renewal of a threevoters Tuesdax.
tenths of a mill levy ·for the county
' Proponents of the Increase say the
health department.
Increase, to last three years or the
Backers of the bond Issue have hit
length of time !twill take to finish the
home !he point that decreasll\g tax
courthouse, say It's the most rapid
revenue frtm the Kyger Creek and
and equitable means of paying for
Gavin power plants may not raise
the courthouse.
enough funds to do lmp~ts
Bot a referendum committee of on a large scale.
.
GaUipolls merchants that ortglnally
. Proposals include a cOmbined
opposed plliclng the Increase on
buildlngforCadmusandCentervtlle
consumers said In a statement
and new l}ulldlngs for VInton and
issued Frtday that the Increase' Bidwell-Porter. .
would give the colinty a higher sales
The health department renewal
tax rate than those In surrounding wtll continue several operations the
counties.
department has Instituted since
The county borrowed more than
1973, such as Women, Infants and
$1 mtUion from three Gallipolis
Children (WIC), lrrumunlzations
banks In February to finance the
and Inspections.
courthouse construction. The comThree Incumbents on the Gallla
mittee said borrowing money for
County Local Board of Educationmajor Improvements "has become
Fred J. Dee!, Bllley L. Halley and
a way of life for us" and noted that
Claudia M. Lyon - are seeking
the 6.9 percent Interest rate on the
reelection. Dee! and Halley are alter
loan and budget cuts made by the
their second terms, while Mrs. Lyon
commissioners should give them
Is running for the unexpired term of
"no difficulty paying this debt
the late Bruce Stout.
without further taxes."
Dee! and Halley are opposed by B.
Commlsslonen pointed out at the
Howell Laslleter and WUllam D .
tlme the loaDs,were made the banks Conley, while Mrs. Lyon Is facing
allowed the county a :10-year payoff
opposition from Fred McNeal and
period. P......ige ot the sales tax
Ronnie Silvers.
Increase, according to propoi1ellts,
No contest eXIsts lit the Ga!Upolis
wtll end that Indebtedness sooner.
City Board ot Education election,
The Increase wt11 be removed when . where three seals are open.lncumconstruction of the ~story
lti!nt James N.M. Davis filed tor
structure, ndw underway, Is
reelection ,In the June _primary,
complete.
(Continued on page A3)

CAREFUL WORK - Frank Mlneru, owner ol Swiss Craft
Professional Painters, Jack.!ionvllle, Fla., makes hb way carefully
lhrough a mesh of scaffolding and steel whUe preparing to [l8i!lt one of
lhe catwalks at the Gallipolis bocks and Dam. Painting on lhe walks Is

done every four or five years, said Clyde Bell, a construction
representative for the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers, who added lhal
Swiss Craft wtll palnl the rollers In spring. (Times-8entlnel phow by
Kevin KeDy) .

Meigs CQunty _voters
go
to
polls
Tuesday
-. .
.

ByBOBHOP'UCH
'l'lmes-Selllln1 staff
POMEROY -With otflclals'to he,
elected In 101&gt;11Shlps and villages,
plus seats on boards of education to
he filled, Meigs Countlans will have
several reasons to go to the polls In
Tuesday's fall election.
Voting precincts of Meigs County
wtll he open from 6: :Jl a.m. unlil 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday.
In townshiPs of the county, there
.
.
are races In all but one, Scipio,
where only ·one candidate has filed
tor trustee and one tor clerk. They
are Donald H. Weaver. trustee, and
Betty J. BishOp, clerk. One trustee
and the clerk wUI be elected In each
township with the exception of
Lebanon where In addition to the full
"U we only had 50 percent turnout
tenn trustee and clerk, therewtll he
By JOHN CHALFANT
A.....,•P'I...._Wrller .
we'd lose for sure. But as we get up
an uneX)linld trustee term ruled.
Candidates tor the full . term
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Oppo- Into the 54 percent and 55 percent
trustee
spot In Lebanon Township
nents cit two anti-tax measures on range, there our chances start to
measureably
Improve,"
he
said.
are
Elson
R. Dailey and Morris E .
Tuesday's ballot plan to have 12,00l
Curt Steiner, spokesman for
Teaford aild Guy A. Rose has flled
people working statewide election
for election for the unelQllred term.
day In an attempt to spark a big Ohioans to Stop Excessive Taxation
Harry W. Richard Is a wrtte-ln
VIJter turnout they say wtu benefit - the group which won ballot spots
them. (See related story on A-3) .
for Issues 2 and 3 - also favored a. candidate for the unelQ)Ired term.· ·
Candidates for ihe one trustee
The Committee For Ohio - the large turnout.
"We want as many people to vote
post and the clerk's wst In the other
group SPearheading the drtve to
townships Included: '
defeat'lssues 2 and 3 - expects on 'this Issue as possible. I think our
teachers, publlc employee uitlon last-minute advertising Is an Indica- . Bedford - Stanford Stockton,
members, state workers on their tion that we are trying to get a big · Runald L. Wood, for trustee; Jane
M . Frymyer and Brenda S. Roush,
time ott and others to get out the turnout," Steiner said.
forclerk.
'
vote, dlst:i-tbute literature near
He acknoWledged that the propoUing places &amp;ncl stat! telephones. . repeal forces do not have the means
Chelter VlcWI' A. Bahr,
"We're trying for a large tur- ot coordinating such an effort.
Bernard D. GOkey, George A. Wolfe
nout," Rich Murray, committee
"We do not Jtave any phone banks. ·and Gary Lynn Nelson, tor trustee;
campaign manager, said.
We don't have any plans to drtve
B. Darlene Newell, William Michael
"We try to target precincts where people to the polls. We don't have the
Wlli and Elmer G. Young for clerk.
we knOw there's a probabWty of type of get-out-the-vote mechanism
Columbia - Jimmy C. Haning,
them yotlng for us," he said.
that our Opposition does," Stetner ·Gay F . Johnson, William R.
·
Murray Sl!ld polls show a large said.
Lawson, Gordon N. Perry and
VIctor Perry, tor truslee; Glorta
turnout wDI benefit his group's
SecretaryofStateSherrodBrown
anti-repeal effort.
has predicted a near-record high
Hutton for clerk.
"As we get above 50 percent of voter registration wtll yield a
Letari --::~C. Hlli, Herschel
D. Norris;' Christopher Tad Wolfe,
turnout we start to Improve In terms larger-than-normal turnout
fortrustee; 'JoyceM . Whlte,JuneH.
of numbers of 'no' votes . cast," · Tuesday.
Murray said:
(Continued on page A3)

Expect 3.2 million a.t Ohio polls

LADIES JANTZEN

:ro to fD) lbs.

and rutters 33 down.
Veal Calves choice and prime, 190 to~lbs .
61-'12,50.
Baby Calves im5.
Springer Cattle 375 down.
Cows and Calves Combination 411'1 down.
Top~ 210 lo Ul !110. 37.!5().38,5(},
Boars :lS-26.
Sows 400 lbs. and up 32.50-34.
Pigs by the Head 12-Zl .
Fall Feeder Calt and Yearling Sales all
treed!! . Nov. 15, cal! and yearling. Sale Hme
7:Jlp.m. CattlewWbered!lvedfrom8a.m. to
Jp.m. on the day of the sale.

.

Levi .Denlms ..................... Now

OIHV.... ~Co.
· -Report
Salwday, Oct. •• 118S
Trends: Veal calves !leady; feeder cattle

37.50-42.

.

Cordurory Pants.............Now

IMarket reports

37-44.50.
Holstein Steen and Bulls

0
2%

.

&amp;. Sport Coats..Reduced

The Voices ot Liberty wUI hold a
practice session Monday, Nov. 7, at
7: 15 p.m. at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport.

Clemson ......... ....... 16
North Caroliria ..... .'.. 3

·Gallia voters will
decide local races,.
issues Tuesday .

. 'NOV-EMBER SAVINGS! ·

To practice Monday

Missouri .......... :..... 10
Oklahoma ............... 0

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

: I

Alumni notice

Ohio University .... ~ 1-7
Miami ...... ~ .......-..... 14

,Copyrighlol! 1983 .

CLERK
CHEST.ER TOWNSHIP
Pd. PoL Ad. By Cand.
NOV. 8, 1983

Suits

Toledo .. .. ....... ....... 20
Western Michigan .16

Val. II No. 36

''M'"'

CANDIDATE FOR

.

Michigan ............... 42
Purdue ....... .... ....... 10

Tu"" nd ~

~~u11 fu1 1r ~~·~ned
"""'"~"'·
iu" (oil m .,,i!

MIKE WILL ·

MEN'S

West Virginia·........ 27
Temple ... ..................9

tmts

Your Vote &amp;Support Will Be Greatly Appreciated

.A $7 ,OOJ suit was tued' In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Verlln Butler, Jr. and Yvonne
Butler, Glenwood, W. Va., against
Randolph Fraley, Rt. !, Cheshire for
amount due on a promissory note.

Ohio State ............. 56
Indiana ................. 17

•

f~th;e~m~wi~th~t~he~rep~re~se~nt;a~Uv~e~.;;;;d~~:~~~"'~"~"'~'"~"~"~'·~·n~o;:·

Tag day Saturday
Meigs High School Marching
Band wtll hold tag day Saturday In
Rutland, Middleport and Pomeroy.
They wtll present several selections
In all three vUiages. They wUI also
hold a bake sale at New York
Clothing House In Pomeroy and
Sears Store ·m Middleport on
Saturday.

Band boosters meet

emissions control program at this

the Ohio Highway Patrol cited a
ReedsvUle man for Improper
passing.
Elmer E. Kaylor, fir, Rt. 1, was
given the citatiOn. Kaylor passed
over a double line and struck a
vehicle driven by Gary l . Lon·
La
geneIte, 26, Lang Bottom.
n·
genette was heading west and
slowed to make a left ium prior to
the4: 58p.m. acctdent.
moderate
The
vehicie had damage.
light damage
. Kaylor

time.
.
"The high cost of the proposed
acid rain proposals would he an
extemely heavy burden tor Ohio to
bear ... our miners, consumers and
the general eronomlc climate In
Ohio would he severely banned by
such action," Miller maintained.

Anniversary Sale

.....,,"'*...........

'

Motorist cited

the basis of research conducted to
this point would be Inconclusive and
based onllttiemorethanronJecture,
Mlller underscored the damaging
economic Impact "haStily c.oncelved remedial measures" could
have on Southeastern Ohio - and,
the region in general.
Labeling any action by the EPA at
this juncture as purely speculative,
Miller charged EPA would be
"putungthecart before the horse" If
It persisted In going forward with an

ll9TH

NEW DINNER HOURS
TUESDAY· THURSDAY
·,
5-9
FRIDAY-SATURDAY

------~

The lOth District lawmaker
appealed for a delay In the
Implementation of any substantive
action on the part of the EPA on the
grounds that the research being
conducted on the subject Is sUll far
from complete.
Arguing that any action taken on

Coriunon pleas court

Lottery winners

Don Wood

•••

Calling proposed EPA remedies
for the acid rain problem "poten. !Ially ruinous to the economy of
Southeastern Ohio," lOih Dlstrtct
Congressman Clarence Miller met
this week with Environmental
. Protection Agency Administrator
William Ruckelshaus.
Miller challenged the adminlstra tlon's contention that coal burning
power plants of the Midwestern
In dust rial states are prlrnartly
responsible tor the problem of acid
rain affecting the Northeastern
United States and Canada .

Hallmark Christmas
Ornaments
Metal Cabinets
Curtains and Drapes
Ladies' Flannel Sleepwear
Jr:-I:H Shirts '&amp; Cord's
Men'.s Winter Coats
Wintuck Yarn
Ladies' Cords
Men's Sweaters

·Repeal ~pponents
seek big tum~ut

'

Win.ter approaches •..B-1

Inside today...

.

'

The Berlin Wall•••E-5

•

a

I

oonoooOuoonOOuoouoo o o o F r l

'n.tte ...................... D-1-7
Collllm-'n" .•••••.••.. :....••• r..n

................................... A...
Jr.dl&amp;orl.a ... ~ ••••••••••••••.••••••• A-1
FarDl ............................... £.!
l.ocll ............................. A-t-8

&amp;Porte

'

memorial, where the ceremony will take place. 1t MD
be In conjunction with area ve~ran's groups. The
observances this year take on special significance
wllh !be lnvolvemenl of !he United State's Anned
Forces overseas In Lebanon and Grenada.

North Gallla reserve squad
members Van Ellis,. Paul Lee
and Jim Jenkins raise their
Dngers for the No . 1 symbol at·
the close of Friday's game
between NG and Kyger Creek
tor the SVAC championship. The
Plralal cinched their secOnd
~e league title with a
a-7 win. For more details, see
c-2 of today's edition.

Alaellbe Rlver ............... B-i-8

Anderson on Grenada. ••A-2
FREE
PARKING

PREPARATIONS FOR VETERAN'S DAY- The
annual Veteran's Day observance In Galllpnlls wiD be
Friday, Nov. 11, 11 a.m., In the city park. Here, a city
worker takes care ollbe leavesiii'OUild the Doughboy

••u••oo•••oooou o o ou oooo o oC.I-8

Wellherooooooooooo\eooo•oonooooooA..J

"'&lt;·

.

~,

,..

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,

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I

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Comment

and perspective
Grenada; the ·p oint

.:\. Division of

\1825 Third Ave., Galllpolls, Ohk•
(614 ) 44G-2M2

111 fo ur1 S~ .• Pom('r03'· Ohio

(614) 992-2156

'

ROBERT L. WIJ\GETT
Publis h&lt;'!'
HOBART WlLSON JR
.Executjve Editor

.

'

P AT WHITEHEAD
.Assis tant

Publl~ht&gt;r -Cont roller

A MEMBER of Ttlf' As.•;odahod l' r1oss. ~nland Uaih · f'rt'S)o ,\ ..sodat iun and lht'

American NewspaPer Puhll.,lwrs i\..~·iatlon.

'

LETTER..~ OF 0Pii\10S an• wt&gt;h.:o nwd. lht&gt;y shOLdd ht• Jt&gt;S.o;lhan :JOihvor~ Jon a;. ,\U
letteni are subjl:!t.1 lo editing and nUL..a hl' siJ:llt-'fl with name, addrt'!'isund K&gt;lt&gt;phonf' nunlber. No urwlgned letters wlll tx&gt; publl"'htod. LNtf'f!.. shmald ht' In W)od rt\'llt&gt;, a ddrl'Ssi njif is~.

not persunaUties.

Problems for the
•
great communicator

There Is an upwardly mobile
c liche going the round . to "1t that
WC' should not resort to force excepr
as the' last resorT .
The trouble with that doct rine. if
stricti)' applil'd. is that it can lead to
a can ror action at a moment when
the ohiecti\'P ha "' bccomC" very
near!\' impregnable. AI that ' point
eit her you proceed or you do nnt
pro('('('(j . If )'Ou do. tho cost can be
very grPat . If ~: ou do not, then you
end up ace&lt;&gt;pting that which you

ha lf-hearted attempt to ·move, and

even then It was too late. Too late

for the effort we were willing to put
Into it. To take out Cuba today, a
senior military stratetlst reports,
"would be on the order of taking out
Okinawa in World War II." Assuming/ of course, no nuc1 ea r
Interference.
The New York Times, which
would have argued against using
force to take Bunker Hlll, expresses
Its dismay over the rationale for
moving against Cuban-dominated
began b~· ass umi ng i t s
Grenada by saying, " What, in any
unacceptabllity.
case, couJd Cubans have done !rom
Consider, for instance, Cuba. It is,
Grenada that they cannot do better
quite simply, t ~e one great strafrom Cuba•" Quite apart from the
tegic foothold ol the Soviet entermUltary fatuity of the observation
prise in this hemisphere. It Is a
700-mile-tong staging base for · ("What, ln fact, can Americans do
from Guantanamo that they cannot
Soviet operations In Latin America.
do better from Miami?" " What in
But for Cuba thcrewouldnot now be
fact can the Russians do from
the pmbtem of Nicaragua, let atone
Afghanistan that they cannot do
Grenada. So when does it become
better from Russia• "), what . Is
relevant to take Cuba out by force?
precisely left unanswered Is what
Twenty·two years ago we made a

Page A-2

November 6, 1983

doesn't run risks of that sort. We ·
know that there were arms enough ·
in Grenada to equip five divisions. ·
Those arms were presumably :
designed to aim at people other
than the Cubans who brought them
in.
Why are they so appalled wben' •
the United States makes an intelll· ':
gent move on the world scene?
Would you believe the Harvard law
professors who cabled the White
House their protest against the
rescue opera tlon bn the grounds
that " It seems one more Incident in
the history of American suppres·
slon of progressive movements? "
You tell me that lt ls progressive to
stage a military coup, Imprison,
tort ure and execute the opposition,
tum the Island tribe Into an armed
fortress, and I'll send you to
Harvard to teach law .
If we reflect on lt, lt ls
discouraging that so many voices
are raised to say the most
irrelevant things. Rather like ask·
ing whether the lifeguard who
rescued the drowning swimmer
was correctly attired. Yes, lt ls true
that on the whole ~ewant the press
to cover our military operations.
Yes. lt Is true that there Is a
presumption again$! the landing of
the Marines to straighten out local
messes. Yes, It Is true that our
students were not yet hostages. But
surely the sali~nt point Is that
without minimum loss of life we
have rescued a little Island in the
Caribbean from a monstrous ty·
ranny whose script . was being
written In Moscow and Havana,
that we obliged that Island 's
neighbors who were obviously
targeted for subversion, and that
we have the manliest gratitude not
only of the American studenls. but
of the pupulatlon of Grenada. Isn't
that, really, the point?

were "prepOsterous."

Letter to the editor
'What a con t ras t ... '

•

;A recent news release states tha t
tlie P UCO has allowed C&amp;SOE to
I&lt;!lin m oney to customers for the
purpose of winterizing their ho mes
to conserve energy . How thoughtfu I
o(the m . Of course they wil l make
pfi&gt;flts from the eight percent
Interest charges. Maybe, this is a
flne plan in Itself. Let's look at it
fi;PI)'I another point of ~ iew .
·!n October. 1982, rural C&amp;SOE
cUstomers and would-be customers
~gan a battle aga inst thecomp.gny
f&lt;!l" not complying with the existing
POCO regulations that .apply to
1'1lral line extensions. The tariffs
ptfJvlde monthly payment arrange·
. ments for consumers to pay for the
h~Mreds and thousands of dollars
we'.re being overcharged for e lectrl~ hook-up ln the first place.
c&amp;SOE reps were insisting the only
wilY they accepted payment for line
exlenslons was cash up-front before
ru)Y construct ion began. Therefore
we: have many fami lies losing
prXwerty or being forced to live
without electric sei'VIce.
'fr. the fall of '82, when C&amp;SOE

.·..

.

reps attended our puollc meeilng.
which was an honest effort on our

pari to find answers to our
questions. lhe reps told us. " We are
not a lending institution. You'll have
to OOrrow your money elsewhere,
then call us ." My, what a contrast
we have here! How Ironic that
C&amp;SOE would be more concerned
about conserving energy (han
caring whether fa milies even· had
electric serviCe ln their homes at
a ll.
I feet this circumstance proves a
puint about big businesses and
utilities. My advice from past
experience ls for consumers to
explore all company r~gu tattons
before hastily accepting such
offers . Obviously, companies are
cashing In on the Ignorance of
customers. Remember, the PUCO
Is there to answer questions and lt
would pay to do a little research
before letting someone else spend
your hard earned dollars.
Phyllls Casto
Paul and Barb Hupp
Rt. 1, Box 240B
Coolville, Ohio 45723

foday in history
'roday is Sunday. Nov. 6, the 310th day of ll*lJ. There are 55 days lefi ln the

•

YIW'·

:J.'oday's highlight in history:
pn Nov.-6, 1800, a fanner one-tenn DllnolS congressman, Abraham
Ullcoln, beat U.S. Sen. Stephen Douglas ofllllnol$ for the presidency of the
Olilted States.
pn this date:
In JBQI, the first offlciallntercolleglate football game was played in New
BRmswick, N.J. Rutgers beat Princeton &amp;4.
·
In 1929, the first etectiic slgn flasher went into operation on the New York
TlpleS building, reporting electlori returns.
In 1962, Edward Kennedy was elected U.S. senator from Massachusetts.
In 1968, the Vietnam peace talks began ln Parts.
1n1972, the last of the Apollo moon mlsslons began with the launching of ·
AII!DllO XVll.
·~

•

I \ ") SnowQ
ShowersD Flu
Rain

William F. Buckley Jr.:

~!dent Reagan's staff members. reflecting the skills of a president
they like to call "the great communi~a tor," are adept at getting out the
administration's side of any story.
But, when they turned over their Grenada problem to the Pentagon, they
also turned over a good deal of the initial job of keeping the public informed. ·
Now, they iiJ'e running into some new problems.
Much of the information made ava ilable at the White House, through
spokesmen speaking on the record and through senior officials speaking
with the understanding that they would not be quoted by name, came from
the Pentagon. The Pentagon was relaying information provided by
commanders with the Grenada invasion task force .
i.ast week. disputes over the decision to bar reporter s, as well as the lack
of Information at t he White House, erupted into bitter confrontations
between White House 'spokesmen and journalists.
The troubles began before the invas ion on Oct. 25. On the night before,
White House spokesmen, on the advice of National Security Council
officials, told reporters who asked about an invasion that their questions

At the State Department, shortly before the invasion. reporters were told
that normal air traffic had been cut off at Pearls Airport in Grenada. That
suggested anyone who might want to leave had been stranded. That turned
out to be not exactly the case.
Robert J. Myers. an administration official, flew out on a chartered
plane on the day the administration said it could not evacuate stranded
Americans. A reason given by Reagan for the invasion was to rescue 600
American stude nts. The flight that carried Myers out was oneoffour small
charter flig hts carrying 30 people. he has said.
He told The New York Times that he had no trouble leaving the island
and that. he had been told other flights left, too.
·
;an Monday, one week later, Larry Speakes, a White House spokesman,
said several flights did leave Grenada just before the invasion.
:Then there has been the question ol civlllan,casualtles. On Oct. Ti, just
hilurs before Reagan spoke on television, one of Ills most senior advisers
tqld reporters at the White House that there had been no civilia n casualties.
He made that statement two days after a U.S. air attack hit a mental
llOspltal near a military fort on Grenada. ·
: On Monday, one week tater and after Maclean's, a Canadian magazine,
Cfported that the attack cost 47 lives, the admlnlstration acknowledged
that the hospital had been hit.
: "It was in an area tha t was designated a combat area and it was an
al:cident," Speakes said. The delay in making the information about the
·attack available was said to have been the result of the White House not
Retting a report about it until the morning of Oct. 31.
, 'The senior White House offlclal who said there had been no casualties,
&gt;(ccording to Speakes, made the statem ent because "he was not aware of
,
that (hospital) incident ... at that time."
:As for Reagan's vlew of the information he has been getting from the
i!entagon, Speakes said: " I don't think he has any quarrel with lt."

r----- Weather:-----, Ohioans appear confused on state issues:

The Sunday nmH-S.ntlnel

we are gOing to do about Cuba.
Unanswered because the answer Is
unanimously affirmed.
What we are going to do about
Cuba ls nothing. Why? Because we
waited until a resort to force would
have required too much of lt; and
when that happens, the will to use
force has a way of atrophying. ·
. Notiee also that critics o f the
Grenada operation are telling us
that there was no Indication thai our
students In Grenada were going to
be detained. Well, there was no
Indication that our embassy staff In
Iran was ·going to be detained. The
suggestion that tqe detention of
American personnel was a step
General Austin was too civilized to
resort to requires us to say that the
same man who shot tn cold blood his
predecessor and most members of
'Ills Cabinet would have been too
squeamish to take 500 Americans
hostage. Thanks. but most of us
prefer a commander In chief who

\

Grenada chastens Marxist
WASHINGTON - The· U.S.
assault on the communist regime in
Grenada has chastened one of the
two surviving Marxist dictators in
the Caribbean region: Lt. Col.
Deysl Bouterse of Sut1nam.
Citing ~&lt;concern over events in
Grenada," Bouterse last week
abruptly ordered diplomatic relations with Cuba downgraded to the
charge d'affaires level. He gave
Fidel Castro's ambassador six days
to leave the former Dutch colony on
the north~ast' coast of South
America.
This Indignity was another blow
to Castro's prestige In the Caribbean. He clearly had hopes of
making Surinam a Cuban client . II
was to be his "first South American
beachhead since the fall of Allende
In Chile," as one State Department
official put it.
&amp;iuterse seems to have gotten
the message from the recent

"events in Grenada." Bouterse
acted quickly to avoid the Cuban·
Soviet bear hug that proved fatal to
Ills friend and fellow Marxist, ' the
tate Prime Minister Maurice Bl·
shop of Grenada. The Surinamese
strong man clearly does not want to
provoke the wrath of Ronald
Reagan.
My roving reporter Jon Lee
Anderson flew to Surinam a few
weeks ago and found the U.S.·
Soviet rivalry being conducted by
surrogates: Cuba lor the Krell)lln.
Brazil for the White House.
The key to Surinam's situation is
money: It doesn't have any.
The price of its main source of
income - bauxit e - Is depresSed
on the world market. Then, when
Bouterse brutally liquidated his
chief political opponents last December, the Netherlands abruptly
cut off the $100 mlllion·plus aid lt
had been providing each year.

'Bouterse had to find money
somewhere else. Last April, Brazil
providentially offered him an eccr
nomic and military ald package
estimated at about $300 million.
How did this happen? Brazll is
broke, deeply In debt to interna ·
tiona! creditors. Yet suddenly lt
found $300 million to give ·Its
Marxist nelghbpr.
My sources tell me the United
States secretly agreed with Brazll
last spring on the Surinam deal.
Whether the U.S. Treasury wlll
ultimately be putting up the money
cannot be confirmed. It Is at least a
reasonable possibility.
But there's a stick along with the :
carrot for Bouterse. There were
not·so-subtle thfeats from both
BrazU and the United States that be
might be ousted by Ioree If he didn't
moderate his communist policies.
Thus the Brazilian aid p.gckage was
a gotlfatherly offer he couldn't

Jack Anderson ·
refuse.
Bouterse's aides hinted that the
regime had been' told: "ACcept the
offer - or else." One foreign
ministry official told my associate,
" We know which slde our bread ls
buttered on. Cuba Is a good friend,
but It can't give money. Brazil
can."
The American ambassador to
Paramaribo, Robert Duermling,
denied any direct U.S. involvement
in the ald deal. But he did say,
"We've discussed Surinam with the
Brazutans. They know how we
think·."
Bouterse's ambassador to Washington, Helnrlcus Heldweiler,
described his country's situation as
" between the devil and the deep
blue sea." He said: "I want
Surinam to be friendly with both the
United States and Cuba. But I &lt;lon't
want us to he subordinate to either
of them."

:
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:
:

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Chicago marathon _______--A_rt_B_uc_hwa_l_d .
The first Airport Terminal Marathon was held last week at O'Ha re
Field in Chicago. The Idea for the
marathon came from Fred Talashore, a young lawyer who had
watched the entire New York
Marathon on television a couple of
Sundays ago.
He said, "I've been racing
· through airports all my life and lt
suddenly occurred to me that most
. terminals are now 26 rnlles long.
Since people have to run to catch
their planes, there was no reason
not to have an airport marathon.
"I am amazed how many have
shown up for it. We have competl·
tors from terminals ln Atlanta.
Miami. San Francisco, London, and
Paris, and one team came all tile
•Nay over from the Tokyo airport/'
"'How does a terminal airport
marathon differ from the New York
and Boston Marathons•" I asked.
"Ours ls much more dlfflcult
because we require the contestants
to run the 26 miles fully clothed,
carrying either an overnight case
or a garment bag. Tbe course ls laid
out as follows: Everyone starts
from the curb. When the gun goes
off they race up to the ticket
counter, check in, and then they go
to the gate where their plane is
leaving from ."
uwon't some contestants have
shorter distances to run than
others?"
"No,'that's the beauty of O'Hare
airport. Every plane gate is exactly
26 rnlles from a ticket counter."
I · talked to several of the
-contestants who were wannfng up
In the parking lot. Husbands were
rubbing wives shoulders and wives
were putting Ben Gay on their
spouses' legs. I was surprised to
Hnd a lady who ~aid she was 68
years old, putting resin on her
shoes. "My chUdren liveallovertbe

handlers. and porters cheered them
country so I've been In training for a
year.! once ran from one end of the on, and airline stewardesses proDetroit. airport to the other in seven vided Gatorade for those who
minutes and 14 seconds."
looked like they were about to drop.
The youngest runner was Sty son, Every wheelchair at O'Hare was
who was eight years old. He sald he put ln service to take off those who
got interested ln air termlrial qropped from exhaustion.
marathon running because his
The winner turned out to be a
mother was always late for their traveling salesman. ·Jimmy Dla·
mond, from Rosslyn, New York,
plane.
Before I could Interview anyone who got to hls gate in two hours, 12
else. the gun went off and the First minutes, and lour seConds, beating
Airport Terminal Marathon was out the Atlanta favorite, Jeff
on. The fleld was jammed as It Harrington, who works for Federal
began; but once people went . Express. Harrington might have
through the X·ray machines, It won, but he claimed the woman at
started thinning out. One FBI man hls ticket counter had sent him to
got cramps In his legs and fell In the wrong gate.
front of Gate E·l, several got as far
I talked to Diamond after the
as the cocktaU lounge before they race. He was agony and gasping
began, retching. Pilots, baggage for breath. I asked hlm If lt was the

tr

toughest airport terminal race he
had ever been ln. He said, "No. I
once had to run from Piedmont to
the Eastern Shuttle at Natlonal
Alrpori, and I couldn't stand on my
feet for two weeks."
The flrsf lady to cross the finish
line was Virgie Kessling Ot Doyles·
town, Pa. She was hardly puffing.
"I'm an Avon lady sales rep, and
I've been doing this for years."
What .made tbe Chicago O'Hare
.race so Inspiring was that the losers
· were just as exhilarated as the
wipne\'5. As one contestant told me,
"Just to have completed the 26
miles Is enough 'glory for me.
Running through an' airport Is the
only way an ordinary person lil&lt;e
me can prove he still has the right
stuff."

The ~nday nmea-Sentinei-Page-A-3

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

Nowmber 6, 1983

....., Warm ..., Occluded....- Stationary • • .
WEATHER MAP - The Nallonal Weather SerVIce forecasts
rain Sunday for .moot of New England. Rain Is also predicted In an
area edendlng from Washington, Oregon, and Callfomlll, west to
Montana, Wyoming, and Utah. ShOwers are expected In partS of
TeXa8, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, arid
. F1orlda. (AP Laserphoto).
'

Ohio fQrecast
Mostly sunny and warmer today. H~hs between 55 and 60. 'I he
chance of preclpltatlon is zero.

.E xtended forecast
Extended Ohio Forecast - Monday through Wednesday:. Fair
Monday and Tuesday. A chance of showers Wednesday. Highs ·
through the period between 55 and 65. Lows from between 35 and 40
Monday to between 40 and 45 Tuesday and Wednesday.

'

'

·Around.Ohio•••
By The Associated Press
The National Weather Service says the Mississippi high will drift
eastward during the next 48 hours and bring improving weather
conditions to the state.
. It will be mostly-sunny throughout the state Sunday.
Sunday will bring a wanntng trend and Mond~y
find ·
temperatures pushing.lnto the 00s with sunshine.
Skies were mostly cloudy with some light preclpita tlon continuing
In northeast Ohlo overnight. Temperatures remained in the 30s.
Clearb)g skies in extreme southwest Ohio allowed the mercury to dip
to 00 at Cincinnati. That was the coldest early morning reading in the
state.
Ratn and snow in northeast Ohio counties diminished durtng the
night, but before midnight, heavier snow deposited local
. accumulations of around an inch from Cleveland's eastern suburbs
to Youngstown.

will

Around the nation...
By The Associated Press
Snow whitened ·western New York state and western Pennsylvania
Saturday, while rain scattered over the northern Allantic and Pacific
coasts, and thunderstorms raked Texas.
Fair skies and cold temperatures prevailed In the upper Great
Lakes region, and the southwestern states enjqyed fair weather.
·
Heavy snowshowers left a three-inch accummulation at Elmira,
N.Y. Mat)Y other ,areas of western New York were left sloppy as the
snow turned toraln, whilelightsnowreachedsouthernPennsylvania,
the National Weather Service sald•._ _
A low pressure system brought heavy rain to the coast of New
England, and showers also fell on the Paclflc Northwest.
A cold front brought thunderstorms to ·the Southern states. A few
showers moved through the northern plateau region, while most of
Texas felt showers or thundershowers.
Temperatures were forecast to be In the 00s and 40s across the
northern and middle Atlantic Coast into the Ohlo Valley, in the 50ss
from the upj,er Great Lak~ through the upper Mississippi Valley and
from the Dakotas across Washington. The thermometer was
expected to reach the 8(E In south,Florida, southern Texas and the
Inland Southwest.
Temperatures ranged ~m 17 in Marquette, Mich., to 76 in
McAllen, Texas.

.

(Continued from page
_----,--:.. .,::.___ _;___
R epeal... _ _
Al)

He said an estimated 5.8 million enacted by the General Assembly
persons will be eligible to cast since January, Including the 90
ballotS and that be expects 55.5 percentincreaseintheslateincome
percent - or about 3.2 million - to tax which took effect March I.
Issue 2 would make lt harder for
do so.
'That would be higher than the 51.5 the General Assembly to raise taxes
percent llll'IIOut in November 1981 in the future by requiring a
tiut short of the 57.2 percent in three-fifths vote in the House and
November 1979 when an anti·lltter Senate instead of the simple
measure was on the ballot.
majority needed at present.
Issue 3 would repeal all tax laws .

ByROBERTE.MDJ.ER
last week.
A880Ciated Pftll8 Writer
Citing continued high ~~~~e~~~ploy­
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·If the
ment and escalating welfare costs,
long and emotional campaign over Ms. Sale asked "lwl¥ do we get from
the tax Issues on Tuesday's ballot
bere to an Slm mllllon surplus?".
proves anything, It's that govern·
(On Frtday, the U.S. Labor
ment by plebiscite, except perhaps
Department said Ohio's seasonaUy
on philosophical Issues, Is seriously
adjusted rate in October was 11.0
flawed.
percent, down tram 11.5 percent tn
Ohloans, many of them confused,
September, compared with a naare being asked in Tuesday's
tional rate In October of 8.8 percent,
election to decide complex eccr
down from 9.3 percent the month
nomlc issues affecting the future of
before.)
the state without the tleneflt of
There have· been other serious
lincontested facts.
cllscrepancles tn the broadcast and
There are sharp dlsgreementsnot
print media and elsewhere between
SET and the Coounlttee for Ohlo,
only between the warring factions
the formal anti-repeal group, with ·but also among the state's leading
regard to the Impact of Issue~ If It
economists as to whether this year's
· state tax increases shoUld be
passes. .
repealed as proposed ln State Issue
The Comrnlttee for Ohio envisions
3.
gloom and doom, withdrasticcuts tn
Voters have heard from the educatiOn, social servtces, mental
pro- repeal forces, for instance, that
health, and other vital state
a 90percent boost in the state income
services.
tax last Mar~h ls going to help
But that picture envisions that the
produce an $!OJ million surplus by Legislature would not replace any of
the end of the current biennium on
the repealed taxesatamoremodest
July 1, 1985.
rate, whlch ls what SET has
In part, the Ohioans To Stop suggested.
ExcesstveT~tlon (SET) bases lts
SET, at the same time, contended
claim on their tax experts' predic·
that there Is a lot of fat in the state
!Ions lhatOhlo' s economy Is going to
budget, and that the ll:Chools and
::ontlnue to experience and acceler·
most other services wlll not have to
3te what so far this year ha5 been a
be s~cantly cut. SET buUtmuch
modest recovery.
of Its campaign around clalms of
On the other hand, Democratic "deceitful scare tactics" by the
Gov. Richard Celeste's admlnlstra·
opposition.
·
lion says tax revenues so far this
While no one could deny outright
year areoniy nine tenthsofl percent
~~ there is waste in government,
above projections.
SET left a void in Its campaign by
If that increase holds steady, · not saying - except for vague
there would be a surplus of $00 claims of welfare fraud - where It
million at the end of the biennium, is.
Budget Director &lt;::rlsttna Sale said
And if a 90 percent increase in the
state income tax Is too much, SET

seeks
vacancy
hls wtll
second
be term,
createdwhile
whena
Howard Baker Saunders steps down
fromthecommjsslontnJan,uary.
Three other candidates are In the
nmning for the non-partisan panel
- Joseph E. Fencterboseh, Ddw
Saunders and Nancy Y. Smith. ·
In the only contested mayor's
race ln the county, Marlin' Wedemeyer seeks his thfnl term as
mayor. He Is opposed by Donald L.
Walker and Charles Robert "Bob"
Shaw.
NotWJSltloniSseentnthreeol!ler·
!

GALLIPOLIS - The followtng
couples flied for llt8l'l'la&amp;e llcenJM
this put week In GaDla Coonty
PrQbate Court.
Clyde G. Pu1er, 75, ~ureka Star
RoQte, retllal, and Olfve Lewis, 7t,
Rt.l, N01111Up, housewife,
GeneC.OIJer,t9,151UpperRiver
ao.!, cm1 miner, and Mary F.

au.u, 38, (Rt. 1, theahlre, clerk.

Douglas M. Cowles AND
Jolynn Boster
ATTORNEYS AT LAW

. Announce the Associat.i on of

Attorney Brent A.· Saunders
WITH THEIR LAW FIRM

Cowles ·&amp; Boster
Company, L.P.A.

'

GALLIPOLIS- Contested races
ttussell and Charles E . Martin,
Addison; Albert Loveday, Rodney
for township clerk's positions in
E. Spires and Wendell BradbuJ1',
J'uesday's election will be seen in
Cheshire, Green, Greenfield, Ohlo
Cheshire; Norman L . Mitchell and
and Springfield townships.
·
Charles Barcus, Clay; David W.
Candidates for the position in
Gallipolis. and Warner M. Halley,
Cheshire Township are Carolyn R.
McKenzie
Merrlll Jolmson, Carlos B. Wood
Little and Irma D. Balles; in Green,
and
Daniel S. Salisbury, Green;
Marton Caldwell and Thomas E.
E. Lewis, Leo Carter, Morgan
Jolm
Pasquale; Greenfield, Brenda !l.
Lewis and Pamela J. Ramsey; . R. Hammond and Steven A. Kiser,
Ohio, Janet S. Cardwell and Gale K. " Greenfield; Lewis Sheets, Phyllis J.
Fowler, CecU W. Wise arid Jack M.
Layne; Springfield, Barbara Den·
McGuire, Guyan; Donald E. Wooney, Connie S. Massie and Herman
Sprague.
Voters in other townships will
elect the following who are running
for clerk without opposition: Vivian
C. Taylor, Addison; Connie Hemphlll, Clay; Wayne L. Niday,
Gaillpolis; Eudora Montgomery,
Guyan; Terry E. Cremeens, Harri·
son; Daniel M. Evans, Huntl!lgton;
Heleniu Etmian, Perry; Phyllis
Hash, · Morgan; Janice Sheets,
Raccoon; Betty Stewart, Walnu t.

.

~~:n~· g.: ~:1s~be~b~:

Perry; James Howard, Mll!'lln
Meeks, James H. Halley and
Charles u. Mlller, Raccoon; Daryl
w. Salisbury, William H. Saunders ·
and Larry Camden, Springfield;
OrlynMiUer, Walnut.
·
Trustee candidates are Wayne

WITH OFFICES AT
26 LOCUST STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
( 61
446-0644

~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

·PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE
ENDS 8:00 P.M. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7th

RE-ELECT

die and Kenneth Swain; Harrison.
Jolm W. Swlsber and Arnol
Weaver, Huntington; Richard A.
George,JamesE. HallandJolmnie
E . Russell, Morgan; Melvin Ours,

DavI•d W.
MCKenz1e
.
ALL DIAMONDS, COLORED STONES,
REMOUNTS
.

FOR

GALLI POLIS
TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE
y
S
·

l!J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;;~~~~;;;';•;";~~~~;·;;~~
Paid for by the
Oav~ McKenzie, 33 Buri&lt;ehart.lane. ti
Ohio.

ew .

404 SECOND AVINUI

RON SILVERS

Reflecti9n~

...,..,

FOR GALLIA COUNTY
SCHOOL BOARD .

o_f good taste and smart shopping
'

...the Action Group by Bassetl Mirror

Your vote wi II be appredated.

.

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Pd . for by the Candidate·

Galll'a County'
Health
Department

NURSING . ~

~
··

our upport
Will Be Appreciated

~·~el;ec~t~io~~~·~~~~~~~~· ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,n

Blood Preaaure Control

~

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VOTE FOR

mayor's races, allowing Harold E.
Brown and W. Scott Lucas addi·
tiona! terms as mayors of VInton
·
and Cheshlre, respec tl ve1Y· Ra ndY
E. Halley will succeed Charles
BurgessasCrownCitymayorinthe

'•

Flle for marriage

..

Several contested
races highlight Ga~lia
election on Tuesday

Gallia... _.._..,...__i;...C_on_t_ln_ued_f_ro_m_pa:....:g_e_A1_l_ __
while James L. Holley and DavidS.
Seamon faee .no opposition In their
bids to succeed Dr. Gene A.bels and
Robert Marchi on the board.
On the Galllpolls City Commls·
slon, Incumbent Richard Moore

didn't say how much of a boost Is media ads, grciup associations,
enough. "Thafs something for the Involvement in government or bY Legislature . to decide," sald Curt other means.•
The two camps did not reveal the
Steiner, a SET spokesman.
figures
in their latest polls, but both
Further complexities which vosaid
Issues
2and 3werecloseenough
ters wlll face Involve Ballotlssue2, a
that
they
could
goelther way.
SET :proposal reqiJirlng a three·
Reportedly. those 11th (lour polls
fifths vote of the Legislature to enact
showed Issue 2 passing by a narrow
future tax increases .
SET said the proposal would margin and the tax ·repealing Issue
··
make it harder for the lawmakers to 3 trailing slightly.
A former stale official who now
raise taxes because Issue 2 would
require bipartisan support of tax practices law in Columbus said he ·
deplores the Idea of putting such
measures.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe teclmlcal questions on the state
Jr., D·New Boston, who opposes ballot, "causing millions of dollars ·
to be thrown around by special
repeal, said the three·flfths provl·
sion would bring minortty rule to the interest groupg."
Legislature.
He sald the Issues should be ·
He also sald it would lead to discussed at length and then
pork·barre!fng to get votes for resolved by the Legislature. "It's
not llke they want to decide a
legislation, Increasing the costs of
philosophical or moral question
government.
Meanwhile, the voters, trying to such as capital punishment or the
legalitY of a leg·hold steel trap," be
sort through all of tills after being
bombarded with at least $2 million
said.
The fotinero!flclal , askingthathe
worth of media ads, must he
wondering what they are paying · not be quoted because he has friends
on both sides of tbe campaign, sald.:
their representatives to do.
"the Legislature can do It, and the;
Still, there were indications at
people have recourS&lt;&gt;. U they
week's end that about jlO percent to
(lawmakers) don't do It right, they
65 percent of voters had made up
can be voted out of office.''
their minds, a pparently from the

Protect Your
Health ....
' County
(G1IIi1
Gtrtfll Hellth District)

SERVICES

•IMMUNIZATIONS

A GREAT
CHRITMAS
LAY AWAY .

ITEM

•FLU'PROGRAM

.CHILDREN'S DIAGNOSTIC
SCREENING
•ADULT MEDICAL CLINIC ·

Paid IQr by: Gotlil County HeoHh Levy Committee,

Gary

Bane, Hettnlu Ehmon, Ml~in Wedemeyer.
· Chotrmon, P.O. Box 27, .Ria Gronde. Ohio 45674
Or . Fro ntis W. Shane,
Hananry Ch1lrmon

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•

�•

Page

A-4--The Sunday Time1-Sentinel

··

Mei.u~
.
...
"'l:)~

(Continued from pag,&gt; AlJ

----.---___:_;,;;=;..;;;;:;;.~::.:.._

~ickersharn, for clerk.
•:Olive- Francis H. Andrew, SolS.
~~ley, ClltfordLongenette, Chester
ry2Us, for trustee; Barbara Ann
~urn. Vlrgtnia A. Newlun, for
c&lt;erk.
.
.:O....Oge - Edgar J. Pullins,
mibur E. Ro~lnson, for trustee;
Njlla Robinson, for clerk.
: ~tland- Leo B. Morris, Charles
E.Rife, for trustee; Edna M. Swick,
fotclerk. ·
. ~-Robert Beaver, John F.
Colwell, Walter F. Garnes, Ralph F .
MOOre, Richard L. Lambert for
ti-Qstee; Bonnie G, Scott, clerk.'
· ~-Denver G. Hysell,
!Wbert Lee Mash, Charles H.
BArtels, for tnistee; Richard B.
Bailey, Wanda L. Eblin, forclerlt
Sulton- Roy E. Armes, Delbert
A. Smlfh, for trustee; PaulS. Moore,
for clerk.
yw.ces will take place Tuesday for
seals on all three of the local district
bpllrds of i&gt;ducation but there is no
ra!'e for the Meigs County Board of
£1!ucation. On the county board
t~re are two full term seats and one
~xplred term open. The candl·
dft!es are Harold Roush and Oris
Smith for ll]efull terms and VIrgil c.
~g for the unexpired term.
' In the Eastern Local School
Dlstrict where three seats are to be
fll~l. therearesixcandtdates. They
are Roger C. Gaul, James R. Smith,
ThJVid L. Chadwell, Carolyn Sue
Heines, Thomas A. Caspers and
Jimmy C. Caldwell. Keith Weber is
a l'o'rite-in candidate for one of the
seats.
In the Southern Local School
District there are two full term seats
and one unewired term to be filled
this year.
There are three
candidates for the full terms and
they are Charles F. Pyles, Don P.
Sll)lth and Jpseph E. Thoren, Jr.
David Lee Hillis the candidate for
the unexpired term.
Voters of the Meigs Local School
District will elect three candidates
tQ ~ full terms on the board of
education from six contenders. The
cat\dldates are Harold D. Graham,
Ch_arles E. Jones, Larry Powell,
Roy R. Vaughan, Richard W.
Vailghan and Robert F . Snowden.
TJlere will be races in all villages
of •the county Tuesday with the
exception of Middleport where just
th&lt;; candidates filed equals the
pooitlons to be filled.
·
Middleport candidates Include

The two n!'W taxes are in Rutland
Fred Hoffman, R ., for mayor; Jon
·
Township
where approval Is being
Buck, R., for clerk·treasurer; Carl
askedonal.5mlll,!iveyearlevyto
J. Horky, R. and William \\(alters,
R., for council with two to beelected, provlde funds for the prevention of,
and Thomas R. Anderson and Lewis control and abatement .of air
Sauer, bothRepubllcansforseatson pollution, and In Scipio township
the board of public affalrs with two whereanewl.5mlll,flveyearlevyis
being sought for lfre protection.
to be elected.
·
Middleport VIllage has a renewal
Pomeroy Village will offer three
of
a one mtU, five year levy;
races on Tuesday.
Richard D. Seyler, Republican
Pomeroy VIllage has a one mlll, five
year levy up for renewal; Sy'racuse
and Wllllarri C. Quickel, Democra•
has a one mill, five year levy
are both seeking election as rnayt·.
renewal and Rutland Township has
of the town and three candidates
a .3 of one mill ren~al. Ail of t)Je
have filed for two councll seats.
fourrenewals are for !Ire protection.
They are Harold D. Brown, D., and
Bruce J . Reed and Henry J. Werry,
Two wet -dry Issues will be
both Republicans. Ellen Rought is decided upon -in Olive Township.
the Republican nominee for clerko The first Is a petition for election on
treasurer and Wllllarn E . Snouffer is the question of the sale of beer by
the Democratic nominee. Ber· holders of C or D permits and the
nadette Anderson, currently serv- 'second Is a local option on whether
the sale of wine and mlx€d .
Ing is the post, has flied as a write-In
candidate for the clerk-treasurer's beverages by the package under
post. Chester M. Knight, R., Is the
· permits which authorize sale for
only candidate for the board of off-premises consumption only shall
public affairs wlthonlyoneperson to be permitted.
beelected.
.-------~----J
Syracuse VIllage has· two candl·
- '
dates for mayor. They are Kenneth
H. Cundiff and the Incumbent , Eller
Pickens. Janet Lawson, incumbent,
Is the only candidate for clerk
treasurer. Oris A. Hubbard and
Glenn . L Cundiff are write-In
candidates forcouncllandRobertL.
Cunningham ~a writecandldatefor
the Syracuse Board of Public
Affairs.
In Racine Village Charles F.
f'¥1es Is the only candidate on the
ballot for the mayor's post which he
holds . Harry R. Lyons, Sr., Is a
~
write-In candidate for the mayor's
USPSI2H80
position. 'There are threecandldales
AMntllmedlaN.....,aper
for councll with two to be elected.
Published each Sunday, B2S Third
Avenue, by the Otuo Va~y Publishing
They are Daniel Sayre, Ben E.
Con)pany • Multlmed.la, II1C'. SerondC'lass
Petrel and Lawrence R. Wolfe.
JXIStage paid at Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Margie Wolle, Incumbent clerkEntered as second class maUlng matter
at Pomeroy, OhJo. Post Office.
treasurer, Is opposed by D. Gene
Lyons for that poottlon.
Member: The Associated Press, Inland ·
DaUy Press Association and the 1\meM·
One race faces voters in Rutland
ca n Newwaper Publishers As.soclatloo,
Village and that Is for the clerkNadonal Advertising Representative,
treasurer's post being sought by
Branham, 1717 West Nine Mile Road,
Suite ~. Detroit, Michigan, &lt;JaY75.
both Brenda S. Weber and Deborah
Black Gilmore. Incumbent John
SUBSCJUPI10N RATES
By Carrier or Mo&amp;or Route
Miller Is the only candidate for
one Week ......... ................. ........ Sl.tiJ
mayor and the two council candione Mooth ........................ ..... .... $4.40
da!~ with two to be elected are
One Year ................., ..... ........... $52.!11
SINGLE COPY
Warren G. Black and Larry D.
PRICE
Edwards.
35 Cents
Stx tax measures- four renewals
No subscriptions by mall ~lttM in
and two new taxes levies - will be
towns where home carrter service Is
decided upon In subdivisions of the
available.
county'fuesday.

Speaking from the presidential

rr·;;;;;;;;;;;;===::=======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1 .
RE-ELECT

WANDA L. EBLIN

•

•

Candidate. For

CLERK-Salisbury Township

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Times-Sentinei~Page-A-5

He added, "Each t,lrne our nation •
has called upon oorclttzens to serve, :
the best have come forwat:d."
..
Reagan went,. to North Carolina:
for a memorial service to honor the ·
Marines killed In Lebanon and' ·
Grenada. ·

their fate."
Noting that he had visited camp
Lejeune, N.C. on Friday, the
president said, "Such men and
women can only come from a nation
that remainS true to the lde"ls ol our
founding fathers."

retreat at camp David, Md.,
Reagan said that If the country
remembers "their dedicated service In defense of our freedom ...
their sacrifice will not be In vain.
This Is our obligation and this has
been tbesplr!to!VeteransDayfrom
the beginning ...
Reagan also rea!(lrrned hls
Intention "to get the fullest account·
ing of our missing In Southeast Asia
... We must not rest until we know
'

""""" ........

CLERK-TREASURER
RUTLAND-VILLAGE

,•
;.
'.
,.
,.·'

ll.

Ir-;;~~~;;;;~;;~~;;j

CANDIDATE FOR

•·
::
,••

WASHINGTON (AP)- Presldent Reagan saluted the nation's
veterans Satu~y saylilg, "They
have never let America down. We
will never let them down."
The president devoted his weeldy
radio address to "ourtlnest heroes"
In advance of Veterans Day on Nov.

The Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

r----~--_:_--~==============:·:0:.::v.:::y:a:n::.~

ELECT
.
:DEBORAH
BLACK GILMORE
'

·~

November 6, 1983

President .Reagan salutes nation's veterans

_ _ _ __

·'

·:'
&lt;:
i:

November 6, 1983

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

19~

•

LB •

..

400 SECOND AVENUE
PH. tt8v1883
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PRESCRIPTION CENTER
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• AMERICAN
GAE£TING CARDS

• l«liJIS: WIN. &amp; FRI. "
1\IS. ·WEO.·THIItSAT. &amp;8
:11118

�•

•

•

Poge-A-6-The Sunday Time's-Sentinel

Fred A. Smith

Ravenswood, W.Va.; and two
TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - City pollee
brothers, Danny of Grimms Landsay
tt Is dUflcult to buy Ulegal drugs
POINT PLEASANT- Fred A. ing and Harold of Leon.
here,
and it should be even harder
Funeral services will be held a t 1
Smitb, 73, Apple Grove, died
following a citywide sweep that
p.m.
Monday
In
Raynes
Fu
neral
Thursday In P leasant Valley Hospiresulted.ln felony charges agatnst74
Home, Buffalo, with the Rev .Landis
tal following a lengthy illness.
people.
Absten officiating. Burial will be in
Born Dec. 10, 1909, he was a
Fifty -five people had been arWolfe
Valley Cemetery, near Leon.
retired truck driver and member of
rested
through Friday and arrest
· Friends may call at the !uneral
the Ohio Teamsters Union.
warrants
were still out for 19 others
Surviving are eight stepchildren, home from 2-9 p.m. today.
in the bust, resulting !rom a
William Harper and Shirley Jean
nine-month pollee investigation,
.Harper, both of East Orwell. Daniel· Thomas L. White
authorities said.
Harper of Bloomingrove, W.Va.,
Mayor Wtlllam Fruth said the
POMEROY - Graveside serviBobby Joe Harper ofWest Farmingarrests
could effectively cut off the
ton, Larry B a~r of Bristolville. ces for Thomas Lee White, 55. 35l&gt;l3
supply
of illegal drugs to the
John Har per of Fredericktown , Bashan Road, Long Bottom, who northwest Ohio city of 19,000.
Jessie Barperof Ashton, W.Va. ,and died Th ursday in Veterans Memor" An ongoing effort will .keep the
ial Hospital, will be held at 2 p.m.
Patsy Smit h of Apple Grove; a
availability
of illegal drugs low,"
brother, Homer of Columbus: a Monday in MeigS Memory Gardens. · Fruth said.
A truckdriver ,hewasbornNov. 6,
sister, Mrs. Dorothy Jason of
Pollee Sgt. Larcy Stephens said
1927,
in Meigs County, a son of Hilda
Columbus: · 39 stepgrandchildren
the bust should aid Tiffin's reputaSmith
White,
who
survives
at
Long
and six step-great-gr;mdchildren.
tion as a town that Is tough on drug
· Funeral arrangements will be Bottom , and the late Robert Lee trafficking. In August 1982, Tiffin
announc'ed later by Stevens Funera 1 White.
Also surviving are his wife, pollee worked with Seneca County
Borne, Point Pleasant.
Thelma Carr White; two daughters, authorities in .a bust that led to
Mrs. Raymond ~Jennie ) Roach of charges against 54 people.
"Tiffin is a hard town on drugs,"
Pomeroy, and Sandra Kay White, at
Stephens said. "People just don't
Marvin E. Thaxton
home; five sons, Willlam (Bill)
like to sell drugs In Tiffin, and If they
Edward of Pomeroy, Richard Lee,
do sell them, they get top dollar.
BUFFALO, W.Va. - Marvin E. at home, Thomas Eugene, Charles
Thaxton, 2'3, Leon, died Friday after
During our Investigation, we were
(Tony), and Kenneth Ray, all of
a lengthy illness caused l)y an auto Long Bottom; three sisters, Mrs.
paying $90 for a one-ounce bag of
marijuana.
The same drugs in a city
accident on March 25, 1972.
William (Donna ) Ohlinger of Pomethe size of T,aledo would go for about
Borm J une 24, 1954, in Mason roy, Mrs. Henry (Lilllan ) Penn of
$35.''
County , he was the son of Rossie Wilmington, and Mrs. 'Clare (CaThaxton, who survives, and the la te rolyn Sue) Wood of Dayton; eight
He said he hopes some of those
arrested
will tum over evidence
Nora Lanham Thaxton.
gra ndchildren and a stepabout tl]elr suppliers.
,Also surviving are his step- grandchild.
"I hope this mushrooms like all
mother , Verda Thaxton: four sisHe was also preceded lndeath by a
the
others have. That's the only way
ters, Mrs. Norma Raines and Mrs. sister and a grandson.
Sandra Withrow, both of Leon, Mrs.
The Rev. Carl Hicks will officiate. you get up the ladder in this ... going
on information that you didn 't have
Christine Tucker of Grimms La nd- Friends may call a t the Ewing
ing, W.Va ., and Mrs. Judy Moore of Funeral home from 7-9 p.m. ~oday.
before, " Stephens said.
Of the 1~ separate charges filed ,
about 90 percent were for drug
lj)a!flcking, Stephens said, adding
that pollee were more Interested In,
nabbing sellers than users.
"The way this operation was
carried out, the element of surprtse
GREEN SPRINGS, Ohio (AP ) was of the essence. Wedidn't want to
a lower price on feedstock, which is
The jobs of more than 150workersat derived from byproducts of gas and
have to have five or six search
two companies are endangered oil wells. No feedstock Is sold in the
warrants which would tie up several
while offi cials decide whether the United States, he sa id.
officers for hours," he said.
Columbia LNG Corp. synthetic gas
Dome is a major Canadian gas
plant should close next yeal·.
producer with large natural gas
Oversupply of natura l gas and fields in Alberta.
price charges for a key ingredient in
NEWARK, Ohio (AP) -Newark
The Columbia LNG plan t cost $65
man-made gas could force the million and was envisioned as a way tax consultant Robert C. Wills has
closing of the 9-year-old plant. which to supply a cost-effective supple- been sentenced to 19 ~ years In
opened dUiing the height of the ment to natural gas, Hauck sa id.
prison and a $32,500flneforcheating
energy cris is in 1974 and employs
Since the 1970s, energy conserva- Investors out of about $!0),001.
about 125 workers, company spokes- tion and expanded markets have
Licking County Common Pleas
man Tom Hauck said Friday .
created a natural gas glut , forcing Judge Neal M. Laughlin on Friday
1! Columbia LNG closes. the
the price down. Synthetic fuel has also sentenced Wills' associate,
nearby Clwrnetron ·c orp.' Cardox · pric'ed Itself out of the market, WilHam E . Brame, 62, ofPataskala,
plant also will be forced out of Hauck said.
to4% years in prison.
busines&lt;, idling 29 workers. plant
manager Gordon Smi th said. Cardox gets the CC~rbo n dioxide it
processes for medical and industria l
uses from Columbia LNG .
SL'ty gas distribution films nationwide buy svnthetic gas from
Colum bia LNG , the nation's largest
"THEME: "CHRISTMAS IN GALLIA COUNTY"
synthetic gas producer, Hauck said.
At peak capacity, the LNG plant
Sponsored by the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association
produces 250 millioncubic feet of gas
OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK
a day - enough to heat more than
1,500 homes for a year.
Name of
Coni ract s between Columbia
0rganizat ioh ... ... .......... ... ....... ......... ... ....... .,.... .... .... ............ ......... ..
LNG and the 60 distribution comType of Entry .... ....... .............. .. ................................................... ..
panies it serves expire next March.
In the same month, Columbia
Address .................... ................................................ ....................
LNG's pact with its supplier of the
Phone ............. ...... .... ........... .......... ..... ....... ........................ .. .. ... ..
key ingredient for the gas nms out,
Deadine
for entl)l is Saturday, Nov. 26. Mail all entrie~ to Gallipolis Area
Hauck sa id.
Chamber
of Commerce. 16 State St., Gallipolis, OH. 45631. The 1983 Parade
He said LNG is negotiating with
IS
scheduled
for Saturday, Dec. 3. Form up time 12:30, parade time 1:30.
Dome Petroleum Ltd. of Canada for

_ Oversupply threatens
synthetic fuel plant

Consultant guilty

.

GALLIPOLIS - A Coolville man, who suffered rnlnor Injuries fn a

car accident,. Was ·cited for reckless operation and fleeing from a
highway patrolman Friday.
.
Jeffery D. Russell, 19, received the citation following a
single-vehicle accident on Meigs County Road 26 In Chester ·
Township at 10:33 p.m. _
1be GaUia·MeigS post of the Ohio Highway Patrol reported Russell
did not need treatment at the scene. A passenger in the car, Rexal G.
Sww, 19, Coolville, suffered rnlnor injuries, but treatment was also
not necessary.
1be patrol reported Russell was reportedly fleeing from a trooper
.westbound when he lost control of his vehicle causing it to go off the
road. The ,vehicle smashed through a fence until It rolled over
landing upside down. The driver's vehicle received heavy damage.
A deer which ran ihto the path of a vehicle on U.S. 35 in Gatlia
County Friday caused· light damage to the driver's side.
Ruth Tackett, 41, Rt. 4, Jackson, was travelling east when the
animal came across the road. The deer was not killed and continued ·
on.
The accident occurred at 6: 25 p.m.

•,

SENIOR NIGHI' - Mernben Of tile Galla
Academy Blue Devils grid scjuad and their plll'l!llls
were recognized In pre-game ceremonies of Iller

GAIL'H\'heelel'llburg game. Seen above are, !rom
ldi, Todd s.-, Mimi Siorie and Jacl&lt; !!lone; Brian
Slwpler, Joanne Shepler and Larry Shepler; Clril
Sllnders, Ann Sanders and Gllberi Andersen.

Smoke enters homes

Bill allows wastes control power.
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
passage of a hazardous-waste btll
gives Ohlo the tools to preserve the
water quality It needs to regain Its
economic health, says U.S. Rep.
t ld Frt
. DeThlll\lsMEcktart.Dem
e en or . ocr~ . ~ . _ ,day ·thllt ,the' SO!IIh•a!ld W~t are
destined to run short of water and
that the economi.c future of Ohio Is
tied to maintaining fresh drinking
water, which leaking hazardouswaste dumps threaten to
contaminate.
"For us, bad water Is the same as
no water," Eckart said. "Ohio Is
uniquely su(ted tothestoppingofthis
dumping."
The bUI, If signed into law by
President Reagan , will renew the
1976 federal Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act, the principal
federal law on the handling and
disposalofhazardouschemlcals.
It was approved by voice vote
Thursday In \he House and sent to
the Senate, where slmtlar legislation has been approved by the
Environment and Public Works
Committee and Is awaiting floor
debate.
·

.Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Evelyn White, Ra- •
cine; Nancy Taylor, New Haven.
Discharged - Marion Francis,
Della Stahl, Juanita J enkins, Charles Ohlinger, Homer Graham.

DENTURES
Full Uppers .... sgo
Full Lowers ..... $9Q
Same Day Service On .
Reliners &amp; Repairs
By Appointment Only
PH. 446-1151

'The measure inCludes · restriclions on disposal of hazardous
wastes throuSh underground lnjec·
tion wells on burning of fuels
containlnghazarctouswastesandon
disposal of ltqutd hazardous wastes
In landfills.
"We preserved the timetable. We
preserved the penalty sections. we
preserved all the major components
of the bill, tncludingabanontheland
disposalofliquldhazardoliswastes,
which was rnlne," said Eckart.

7UP-O
ECRUSH,
ROOT BEER

8 BTLS
16 oz.
•.

'

FREE
Ambulance Service
I! A.!"o. til 12 Midnight
24 Hour Service

. Sah~rday &amp; Sunday

$650

resume

CLOSED FRIDAY
. NOVEMBER 11th, 1983
IN OBSERVANCE OF VETERANS DAY

•
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•

OSU building home
for scanning·device

THE WHOLE BIBLE

WE HAVE INSTANT
LOTTERY HERE

GAWPOUS
ICE HOUSE
Gallipolis·

709 First Ave..

:·Fair board election set

\'(\(\\\ ~"'~\\

~ '$'2-~c.

Speck nominated for FEMA

&amp;o&lt;lc and olloo clobl• dlrWig
In tho Orlontal tTadltton.
Semple our Cantonne &lt;r.d
Mandonn cutslnos, preporod
to yovr order by our Ol·

--:

cetler&lt; chef. - - _

Oriental
fa voritQs

COMPliT! DiNND MINU

CARRY OUT
IUIDAY TIIIU
ntUIIOAY

IUOA.I .

J!l

/' W:I

t.JO P.l

,I

. ORIINTAL D1C0tt
OPIN 7 DAYS A WIIK

446-7227

::City featured in pamphlet

¢ GntOI\tU

l .

Chow Mein

-

.

.

: GALLIPOLIS ~ Gallipolis is featured in the November Issue of
· :~ Gaslines, an Informational panophlet mailed iv!th monthly bills to
,. Columbia Gas of Ohio's nearly one million residential customers.
The area Is served from Columbia's Gatllpolis office.
&lt; • A different town servEd by Columbia is spotlighted In Gasllnes,
according to Gallipolis office manager John M. "Jake" KoebeL

RESERVATIONS
fiiOAY &amp;

IATURNY

li:JOA.I .

hL lD:JO , ,I ,

'

ROTC plans ceremonies

Wayside
Furniture
241 THIRD AVE.
.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

RIO GRANDE - The Atmy ROTC program at Rio Grande
, College and Conunumty College will hold special Veterans r:la;y:
' ceremonies at 11 a.m . Friday at Allen Hall.
The ROTC color guard will post the flag, and cadet battalion
•commander John Robbins of Jackson will address the gathering. ·
The ceremony Is open to ·the public.
, Among agencies that will be closed Friday for Veterans Day is the
local ornce of Planned Parenthood Inc.

TWO LOCATIONS

Test tube
baby hom

783 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH.
364 Jackson Pike, Gallipois, QH.

WEEKDAYS
9 A.M. TILL 9 P.M.
, SUNDAYS
11 A.M. TILL 8 P.M.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio's
first so-caned "test tube baby" was

state Sen. Sam Speck will be
nominated by President Reagan as
associate d~tor of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency's
state and local programs, a White
House spokesman says.
The FEMA is responsible for
disaster assistance, clvU defense,
flood Insurance and other emergency responseprogramsaw nable
to the slates.
"I've been doing some consulting
work with the agency, and as a
result of that I certainly have 900le
Ideas and will be working very
closely not only with the leadership
within the agency, but also with the
leadershlpatthestatelevei,"
Speck,
R-New Concord, said In a telephone
iptervlew from Columbus on
Friday.
He said he's not sure If his
nomination will meet with any
opposition.

necessarlly come from," he said,
" but there are always surprises."
Speck, who represents the 20th
Senatortal District, has servedfor12
years In the Legislature, Including
the last six in the Senate. He
authored Ohio's tough strip-mine
law In 1972 and was chairman of the
Senate Energy and Environment
Committee in 1981-82.
. Speck said the FEMA job Is "a
terribly important post In terms of
the kinds of responsibilities It has
involving aU state and local programs In a number of areas of
population protection, Including
disaster services for aU: kinds of

''
'•·

ami Sandra Mlcchta of Mentor. Dr.

weeks prematurely but was doing
very well, hospltalolficialssaid. The
labor was spontaneOus.

had been kept secret;
The-In vitro program had begun In
October 1982 under the direction of
Dr. Wult Utlan, director of the

l2 NOON TIL 5 P.M.·

Dapartment of Obsteb1cs aod

Gynecology at MI. Sinal. ·

INCLUDES: FRAME &amp;HEADBOARD, PEDESTAL, DECK, HEATER, LINERS, FUL~ WAVE MATTRESS, FILL-KIT, PATCH KIT. .
.·
I 0% SENIOR OTIZENS DISCOUNT
(60 and Over)
KIOOIE-SAV PROGRAM-10% DISCOUNT
(For 6 and Under)

$169 9 9

PHONE
446-6620- 992-6491. ·

.,

''

'
""lbe
baby's perfect," Or. Utlan
said. utllin said there are about
t11ree Oilier Ill vitro pregnancies at
~clinic, with !he next birth clUe In
~orlhreemonths.
•
' called the deliVery a bl&amp; boOit
- He

tor the program, which can treat
live patients a week. He called the

~ probably tile sixth

.

country.

'

'

"'

1!1

the

and the Jews that the GentiOs were re01g t.1lled unto salvation (Acts 10:47,48: 11:16, 17).

1-Jesus did not receive tfieHoly Spmt 1n baptismal measure, but wrtOOut measure(Jno. 3:34). To
teach. that Christ received the Spiri11n some measure or. modified portKJn tS to~ beyond the doctrine!
4. All ftesh (Acts 2:17, 18): "All" does not m.. nvery IndiVIdualbut class or ran~ "Flesh"is used
todi~inii'Jishthe "flesh of men"fmm the "flesh of animals" (I Co&lt;. 15: 39). Theflesh of man co110sted

ot two classes rJ nations, the .ltMshflesh or nation, and the Genlile f~s h ·or nation. The proptocy ol

the. ba~smal measureol the Ho!y Sp1nt was lufihed when the apostles (the Jews) nd Cornelius and
his house (the Gentiles) received it The phrase "For the promise is unto you. and yoor chihten" !Acts
239) has referenlll tothe Jews: whio "and lo all thai are afar off" (Act&gt; 2:39) pants tothe Gemiles. To
sa, that ~all flesh" means every individual IS to go ~yond the doctnne!
5.-Manifestation of the Spirit·(l Cor. 12:7) is oot Holy Spirit baptism. ~Manifestation" means
1
"to make visible~ and is used concerning the miraculousgiftsof theSir it The viSI!jeor man1!estation of
miraculous gifts Proved th egenuiness of the ~ft and apostolic inspiration. To say that I Cmmttu ns 12:7

ad-.ocates 1/'o ilaptismol the Holy S ~rit i; to ~ beyond the doctnn&amp;
6.-"Biasphemy apinsl the Holy Spirif' is "speaking aga~nsl the HoyS~ r[' (Mtt 12:31.32). To

teach there •e only two accounts of~ S~rit baptism is not to speak ~inst the Holy Spirit OOt is 11
keeping with the Sfirl's teaching iiS revealed I'! the OOctrine!
7.~The visible evidence il prove the baptismof he Holy Spirit was thesudden sound of a rushmg
mighty wmd from heaven. fining the house (Acts 2:2): the cloven tongUesas of life. sitting urx&gt;n each of
them (Acts 2:3)i and their spea~n g wijh other tongues or languages (Acts 2:4). The sameoccured with
Cornelius and his house (Are 10:46: J l:IS). If this VISible ev1dence dOes not come Ieday, rt rs not the

baptismot the Hc;y Spiril!

8.-lnciden~Y . "revere~d" is me~tioned ~nly one bme '·" the Bltj!t an d has reference to Gods
name (Ps. lll:9). ThiS belong,ngto God IS oat a title to II! usOO 1n addressmg man. To use "revereruf' 1n
any other sense is to to beyood the OOctrine!

For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write....)

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulaville Road • P.O. Box 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Suncby M omlng
Bib.. Stud I' 9:30

Worahlp 10:30

Sund• y E~n l n g

We dnn d • y
Even in g
7:0 0

Wora Np 8:00

R•dlo
" Manage from
tt1a Blbl a"
Dally ·WJEH
11 :11!1 A . M

· " The Church with the Manage"

" ' - '" Clllmt1 13. Sun!:Wf, 7:30 'a .m

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

JACKETS

Regular $40.00

S3399

Reaular $50.00

$4250

MEN'S
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SLACKS
Regular

NOW

120.25

$2} 25

Regular '30.00

NOW

$25° 0

'

...,
•

$}.}99
2 FOR

...•,,
.•,

s22

SAVE tS.OO .

FREE Bandana or

MEN'S WINTER

•
•
•

MEN'S

~1950

M!cchia is a dentist.

tbl! parents

so that they could amfirm or prove the doctrne by miracles or signs (Mrk.. 16:20) .
2. Cornelius and his home recei11ed the baptismal rneasure of the Holy Sp1rit to amvince Pmer

14 Oz. Denim

lbe chDd was born about three

OPEN SUNDAY ·

Com
loiler (Jno. 14:16. 26: Jno. 16:7): who woold leadti&lt;min all truth (Jno. 16:13). bring totl&lt;ir mind
Chnst's mds and deeds (Jno. 14:26): show them tl&gt;ngs tocome (Jno 16:13): and g•e ti&lt;m power to
1mpart mllaCulous~Its unto thelisa pies by 1/'o lay~ng onol their hands (Acl5 8:14·19: 19£: Rm. 1:11).

.JEANSWEA

was

The pregnancy had been anIIOI!ncedlastMarch, butthenameof

I.- The apos11es were the ones'bapllled ..th the Hoy Sp•nljActs 2). and not the 120 disci~es
{Acts 1:15). The purpsoe of their being baptized with the Holy Sptrit was to recewe the Spmt as the1r

Regular, Straight Leg,
and Boot Legs

· j\1atthew Mlcchla, weighing 5
' '

very ca r~ul to not ~ra~swess G:x!'sw~d by go~ ng asr~ ~ 00yond that whrch rs,written, oot "abiding 1n
tOO doctrine of Chnst' 01 Jno. 9)_RealiZing my responsibility as a gospel preacher, 1do not presenfoor
rest up:m my claims but th e lord's doctrine. For that reasoo, I seek to abide m Chnst's doctrine.
standing remr always to ~~~e a scriptural answer wrth meelc.ness and lear (I Pet. 3: 15). 111Snot 1who
clarm there were two occasionsfor H!iy Spirit baptism. bt.it the Spmt through the doe1rine· The apostles
were baptized with the Holy Spint on Pentecost (Acts 2). then later Cornelius and h1s OOuse (Acts 10). To
say that there are more is to go beyond the doctrin~

LEVI'S

o~alssald.

Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

'

/ls minister of the gospel, I must '·spellk as the oracles (wntten word) of God" (I Pet 4:11), being

~

-

Sioal Medical Center, hospital

pounds9ounces andmeasurtng19~
in~hes long,
born to Dr. Ronald

Wllllam B. Kuglm

rina;;tu;ra;l;an;;;d;;tec;;hoo;;;;;logl;;;c;;;a;;;lhaza;;;;;rd;;s;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
.

Jx¥n Saturday morning at the Mt.

•Dependable, Low Cost Prescription Service
•3 Registered Phannacists
•Most complete Prescription Stock
•Itemized Receipts for Insurance and Income Tax Purposes
•We Compound Prescriptions
•We Fill All Third Party Prescriptions
•We Maintain A Complete Record of all Prescrip·
tions filled
•Free Parking

BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN
CENTRAL TRUST CO.
C&amp;S BANK
GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN
OHIO VALLEY BANK

Replying to a "letter to the editor ... "

was

FRUTH PHARMACY

(

THE FOLLOWING GALLIPOLIS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS WILL BE .

;Gas theft reported

,.:1 F~R E~sr · ~
~IIVII RD.Chinese
Restaurant -4 ~
Ill
"CHIP SUNNY MA"

~~~\\\

"It took me 10 weeks to learn to
drive a bus," Flanagan saki.

:In-year driver who made the
Cleveland-Pittsburgh run dally.

ByThe Auodated Preea
handlers and ticket-sellers.
The lines are. forming at GreyHesaldthatGreyhoundlsustnga
hound bus termlnalsacrossthe state special hlrtng team for bus drivers,
- not for buses, but for the jobs of and that It will be at least a month
striking G~yhound workers.
before It will hire drivers for the
About 12,001 drivers, mechanics Columbus terminal.
and other employees launched a
WhUe Juliano was Interviewing
nationwide stnke against the bus applicants, many members of
company at 2 a.m. Thursday. Amalgamated Transit Union Local
Greyhound said it would shut down. 1042 crowded Into a conference
for two weeks and then
room at a nearby motel to reaffirm
operations with new employees, If their solidarity.
necessary.
"We' re totally united on this as far
Almost400people tryingtoquall!y as I'm concerned," said Local 1042
for about 30 openings were expected President Smith Williamson. The
to pass through Greyhound's Co- unlonhas iDedunfairtaborpractlce
lumbus terminal by today, Grey- chargges with the National Labor
hound officials said.
·
· Relations Board.
Terminal manager C.R Juliano . "Whatwehavetodotsrelyonthe
said he interviewed 125 job seekers public not to pui their Uves in~ the
Thursday aAd expected as many on hands of lnexperlenc'ed people
Friday and todar
(being hired as replacements),"
"With the way the job market is, I Willlamson said.
wasn't surprised," Juliano 'said.
One strtkfug dr!ver picke ting
"But we had to cut it off because we outside the Cleveland Greyhound
couldn't handle any more."
depot, Chuck F1anagan, said he
JUliano said Columbus hiring is didn't see how the company could
geared toward replacing all lenni· expect to train replacement drivers
nal employees except drtvers, In such a short tbne.
Including bus mechanics, baggage
"It's a sham," said Flanagan, a

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohlq
Sprott, 47, who now also heads
State University has decided to Alabama's extension service, will
spend $4!17 ,000 to buUd a facUlty succeedGeorgeR. Gist, who retired '
housing a new type of medical SePt. 1.
scanningmachlne. •
The trustees established two
The university's board of trustees scholarship · funds for students
GALLIPOLIS- A taxi parked at 21 GaUia St. had approximately
on Friday awarded contracts for studying agrfcultural education.
The Mr. and Mrs. Warren Weller
10 gallons of gas reported taken from its tank:
consiruclion of a Nuclear Magnetic
created with
Debra Fi'ancis notified city pollee early Saturday that the theft
Resonancelmaglngsystemfacllity. Scholarship Fuod
'may have occurred sometime between 2 and 5 a.m. The inddent Is
"Instead of using X-Rays, the • a $17,000 gift fi'om Warren and
'being investigated.
system makes use of radio waves Josephine Weller of Worthington.
- Pollee cltt-d a Leon, W.Va. for DWI Silturday. Incarcerated in
and magnetic fteld9 to image tbe The Clyde and Crystal Beougher
Gallla County Jail on the charge Is Timothy E . James, 19.
body," said A. John Christofcirldls, Scbolai'shlp Fund was endowed
Charged by city pollee Friday were Mariana 'Minor, 66, 2136
chalrnian of the radiology with $5,100 from the Beoughers of
Delawan,, Ohio.
Chatham Ave., failure to yield; WU!lam G. Ballard, 38, Eureka Star
department.
Warren Weiler is a former
Rnute, speeding, Paul L. Miller; 89, Dayton, failure to display;.
Nuclear magnetic resonance
agrtcultural
education teacher.
William R Pickens, 20, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, squealing tires; Christine M.
scanning can · detect molecular
Clyde
Beougher
earned \WOdegrees
Ball, 28, Rt. 1, Gaillpolls, !allure to stop for stop sign; Patricia J .
changes in the body, and It "Is
from
OSU
and
taught vocational
Yoimg, 30, Rt. 1, Gallipolis Ferry, failure to display valid
expected to revolutionize the dlagagrlculture
for
35 years before
: registration; Terri K. Donoet, 1624 Chatham Ave., disorderly
noslsandtreatmentof cardiovascubecoming
a
public
relations
, ,conduct; Blaine Nolan, 19, Rt. 2, Bidwell, disorderly conduct; and
, lar. disease;, neurological disease
consultant.
; Danny Paxton, 18, Rt. 2, Bidwell, disorderly conduct.
,..- _ ~ and cancer, he saki.
A$5,000scholarshipfundforhome
A surrunons was made on ·Margaret Trent 45 !allure to pay
The NMR system will be part of a
: • parking ticket.
' '
_ · new medical imaging system at economics education students a lso
·•
UniverSl\Y H~iials.
was created. The Kimberly Sue
Voress Memorial Scholarship hoThe trustees aiso appointed J . nors a student killed In a traffic
Michael Sprott, dean of the Auburn accident last August.
University College of Agriculture,
The money for the tul'Jd came
as
head
of
the
Ohlo
Cooperative
from
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
; : POMEROY - The annual election of Meigs County Fair Board
Extension
Service,
effective
Jan.
1.
Thomas
C. VoressofSidney.
' :will be held !rom 5-9 p.m. Monday at the secretary's office at the
:· fairgrounds at Rock Springs.
;: Only Meigs residents who hold current membership tickets In the
; Meigs County Agrtcu!tural Society may vote . The board will meet In
:: regular session at 8 p.m. while the election is being held.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Ohio
"I don't know where It would

$}39

24 CANS

NOW OFFERING

GALLIPOLIS - A mystery over smoke seeping into three
Gallipolis homes Friday was solved by. the Gallipolis Fire
Department.
Qty workers checking for ieaks In underground sewer lines had
.exploded smoke hombs, the lire department reported. The Sl'llOke
,had entered waste and basement drains at the homes. .
The lire department received It first call at 1:38 p.m. Smoke was
:found at the homes o( Jerry Barnes, 1105 Teodora Drtve and Ralph
:Durst, :.JJ3 Basttant Drtve. Fifteen firemen responded taking two
;tanker pumpers.
The second Incident occurred at the residence of Greg Armstrong,
:205'
Klneon Drive. Six firemen went to the scene talclng a power
'
.wagon.

forming for Greyhound openings

'

7-UP &amp; ORANGE
CRUSH

Gallia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad

The Sunday Timet-S.ntinei- Page--A-7

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

Driver cited on mutliple charges .

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1983

t--Local Briefs:-----, Lines

GALLIA COUNTY'S 1983
CHRISTMAS PARADE

.·

No-.~6.

1983

City hard
on drugs

Area deaths

.,

NcWember 6,

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

'

MEN'S

SWEATERS
Regular 120.00

NOW

$}7

Regular 125.00

NOW $2} 25

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Times-Sentinel

"-'"'"· ....··'"'·· cuts
trash charges
RACINE - Wbne residents of
other communitles may find themselves facing higher costs for
services, Racine residents ·w m be
enjoying reduced trash collection
charges.
Meeting in a special recessed
session Thursday . night, council
voted to reduce the fee for trash
.collection by about 2Q percent.
. Council said that was possible
b ecause the town has no delinquent
accounts and because res idents
hav@ been compacting trash so that
more can be put on the truck per
load .
The new rates are $12 per quarter
:tor residential customers within the
'village and $13.50 for res idents
outside the corporation; $14.40 for
light commericia l customers and
$24 for heavy commerc ial
customers.
A pickup fee of S4 will be charged
for hauling extra items such as
'stoves and refrigerators.
: Council voted 5-1. with Councilm an Scott Wolfe dissent ing, to
purchase materials for the Community Development Block Grant
project fro m C L Thornberg Co.,
Huntington, W.Va.. as rec&lt;Xll"
'm ended by Bobby Roy and Betl'y
;Sayre, members of the boa r·d of
public affairs.
Four firms bid on supply ing the
materia ls. The grant project provides for extending the water line on
Johnstown•Road some 1.000 feet to
serv ice the residents on Ohio J3s to
YelloWbush Bridge.
Council agreed to send a letter to
Racine Gas &amp; Service Co., suggesting that hours its office Is open be
posted so that residents can pay
their bills. It was pointed out a
number of residents have been to the
office to pay, but no one was there
and when they returned, they were
charged a late paying fee.
Fra nk Cleland, councUpresident,
reported tha t the easement for the
roadway and waterline across the
Maurice l.ott property at the south
end of Johnstown Road has been ·
recorded in the offi ce of the Meigs
County recorder.
Council expressed gratitude to
LOll for granting theeasement to the
village. Council agreed to have
gravel placed on the roadway after
the waterline project is completed.

.

Noveniber

W. Va.

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MIDDLEPORT - The Rev.
Robert Robinson, pastor of Heath
United Methodist Church, spoke on
the Meigs County Food Co-op
Friday night when MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club met at the
chufl'h.
Robinson said that the coop is
designed to prov ide nut ritiona l food
at a low cost to all Meigs County
fam ilies regardless of income
levels. Eighteen counties are workIng together in the program and
locally orders are placed at announced times at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center .
Roger Luckeydoo, prcesldent,
was in charge of the meeting_ A
guest was Gordon Amsbary of
Gallipolis. Birthdays observed were
those of 1. .W . McComas and Hank
,Cleland. ·Dinner was served by
;women of the church.

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POMEROY - A parked car
owned by J erry Black was damaged
,in a hit-sklp accident overnight
Friday, the Meigs County Sheriff's
-Departm ent reportBl.
: There was modera!e damage to
B lack's car a nd the department is
inveStigating_
The department also received a
report that door emblems were
'taken from the Gallia-Meigs Com•munlty Action Agency vehicle
:parked in Pomeroy Thursday night

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By LEE ANN WELCH

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on the lawns and streets by the farmers woe.
falling foliage.
Fishers .have retrea ted from the
The alr,oncef!Uedwiththe sounds lakes, streams a nd other waterGALLIPOLIS - Summer has
'· faded into the sunset, and winter is of birds chirping away the beautiful, ways that were adversely affected
: (a.St approaching along the horizon . warm sunny days, have become by the lack of rain all summer long.
, All around the area, pepple are silent but for the whistling autumn An example was Raccoon Creek,
winds .
which had very low water levels, so
, preparing for the coming season.
Forawhile,ltlookedas thoughthe low In fact, canoeing was made
Leaves have deserted the trees,
bare limbs remain to brave the fall season would remain pleasant nearly impossible much of the
~~:e~~ Swirluning- pools, once_ and unseasonably warm In Gallla
season. .
but
the
past
weeks
have
·
Frost has arrived on the vehicles
with revelers during the hot County,
.
aDd nights, have been drained brought colder temperatures and left out overnight. Motorists must
.and covered ubtU next spring. Ciiy the rain that was so desperately either scrape their windshields In
: workers and homeowners must needed during the summer. Rain the cold or warm up the car heater
:dispose of the unwanted debris left - that might have relieved the before departing in the mornings.
Heating systems have been
•••
turned on during the recent days in
•
homes around the area. signaling
•
the beginning of high gas and
electrlc
bUls. Homeowners will
•
attempt to avoid the heating bill
•
t
crunch by adding insulatlon, wea•
\ I
therstrlpplng and sealing the win•
•
dows in the house with plastic.
!t
~
Sununer has left Gallla County,
and autumn was short and warm.
The winter approaches, faster than
m ost wish to see it. However,
'
following the long, dead winter,
comes the spring, a tlme of rebirth
" and regeneratlon, beginning the
cycle an ·over.

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· ••
. ••
· ••

Rotary Club

CINCINNATI (AP) - Relatives
of a Cincinnati Roman Catholic
missionary in Grenada have received word that the Rev. E d Conlon
Is safe at his parish house there.
Robert Conlon, of suburban
Montgomery. sa id Friday night that
ham radio operator Russell Barron
of Hammond, Ind., told hlm that he
had talked with Fa!her Conlon.
The missionary office of the
. Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Cincinnati has been trying to get in
touch with Conion since Marines
invaded the Caribbean island on
Oct. 25.
Another missionary, the Rev_
Carl Geers, 69, Is back in Cincinnatl
after being evacuated by the Navy
trom Grenada and nown to Charleston, S.C. The two prlests were close
friends, Geers sald.
Father Conlon had two parishes in
a remote part of the island, Geers
said.
Both prlests had been sta!loned at
churches ln the Dayton area before
. they volunteered. for reassignment
inGrenada.
·

Ion theri er

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·: ~~= ~ = ~~ :::~ !! ••

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Food co-op
outlined to

;

1983

t 1 t t t t 1 I I I I I I I f I

Jlom&amp;;
VIZIO:
A

'llmes-Sentinel
Photos by
Lee Ann Welch

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1983

.

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

November 6, 1983

W, VG .

TWO
CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS

'

== Anniversaries ==
POMEROY ..:.. Mr. and Mrs.

Robert D. AShley of Letart Falls
were in Canton recently to atte!lQ a
but!et dinner for the 50th wedding
amtiversary of thelr cousin, Mr . and
Mrs. Dale AShley at the hom e of
thelr son, Mr. and Mrs. David

Ashley!.

DOUBLE
COUPONS

POMEROY - ·Mr. and Mrs.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S

·Kenneth Krider of Columbus, lhe
~ Betty Circle of Melgs

anru!';observed_ their40th wedding

sary on Oct. 24 with a dinner

party at the Southern Hotel fu
Columbus where they held their

THURSDAY, NOV. 10

Budget

Budget

Budget .

PleU-&lt;er
Special

Pleaser '
Special

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

CENTER CUT
LOIN

CENTER CUT
RIB

89
LB.

BOSTON BUTT

79

PORK

CHOPS

LB.

SLICED
QUARTER

COUNTRY STYLE

LOIN

SPARE
RIBS

PORK

LB.

SUPERIOR

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Polish. Sausage

LB. 99¢

.

BEEF LIVER
· Budget
Pleaser
Special

GOLDEN
RIPE

WHITE
GRAPES

LB.

SKINNE·O&amp; OEVEINED

Pleaser
Special

CALMERIA

~

Cheese Wieners LB~ 139
.

SUPERIOR

BANANAS

LB.

LB.69¢

¢

PICK OF
THE CHICKEN

6 CHOICE PIECES

LB.

FRESH PORK

LB. $}9

Shoulder Steak
STORE SLICED

BOILED HAM

LB.

U.S. NO. 1
All PURPOSE

FLORIDA FR
YELLOW

WHITE

SWEET

B~t

Budget 1

Pleaser
Special

Pleasilr
Special

2
·
~
EVAPORATED

SHURFINE
REAL

CARNATION

CHOCOLATE
CHIPS

Bu.dget ·

MILK

5

ARMOUR
TREET ·

$ 09
. ¢
oz.
Tomato Soup
4 99

12 OZ. CAN
CAMPBELL'S ·10.75

Pleaser{.
Special

CAN ~

R

NABISCO 16 OZ. BOX

RITZ CRACKERS

$}3 9

~===='

By KATIE CROW
'lbne&amp;Seotlnel Slalf
Is
In the rose department
Marcia Karr,
Syracuse, who
celebrated her
93rd birthday on
Oct. 'n.
She was taken
out to dinner on
two occasslons, one hosted by Dick
and Leona Ka!T and the other by
Martha Moore.
Marcia reclved sever81 unusual
eards from her many friends and
Aelghbors and several gifts.
· We send belated best wishes.

992~.

For the next four Sundays,
InCluding today, the Ken Amsbary
Chapter, Uaak Walton League will
have a slug shoot at 1 p.m. at the
club bouse·
Shoots Include free hand and
bench rest. Rifles and scopes will

.DOUBLE COLA
OR DIET
DOUBLE COLA
8-16 OZ. BOTILES

TEA

VITAMIN D
MILK

BAGS
100 CT. BOX

N

BOB WHITE RED LABEL

WHITE SYRUP ~~To~.
KRAFT 3 LB. JAR

$}19

SHURFINE 14 OZ. BAG

Flake Coconut

. Brad Roller, SOD

of

Dlck and

~ofRo~~:(::a::

TOILET
TISSUE

Life
Insurance
For
Ev.aryone
you love

4 ROLL

PAK

POSH PUFFS

FLORAL OR
DECORATED

100 CT.

BOX .

69¢

- ......

!Juclget Plea8er Special

IMPERIOR

KRAFT

VAN-D-KAMP

LIGHT
SPREAD
MARGARINE

ORANGE
JUICE

· 32 OZ. BOTTLE
"

10 oz.

BOX

II

'

(Macy) Carson, Coolville; and Critt
Bradford Jr., Worthington, thelr
seven grandchldren, four greatgra ndchildren , and two step grandchlldren.
·

llves.
Bradford is a retired mall carrier
having worked out of the Racine
office for more than 35 years, and
has been an a ucuoneer for many
years.
Relatlves, friends and neighbors
are Invi ted to call during the open
house hours. The couple requests
that gifts be omlited.

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

NE W A R R J VA LS
.

COME IN AND SEE THEM NOW
o(-300 chassis
"diagonal Dark-lite 100 black
matrix picture tube
• Digital tuning- IS button
•GT-Matic color system
•Infrared · remote control-17 :
button
•11 2 channel capability
e4"x6" oval speaker
•Naw Traditional st~lin&amp;
•Grained fecan finish on wood :
,!!~~~~~~~~ products and non-wood mate~
rials

r========::;-l
I

RE-ELECT

George H.
(Alfred)

WOLFE

For Chester Twp.

25 IN. REMOTE

COLOR PORTABLES STARTING AT $J69
FULL TIME SHOP TECHNICIAN ON DUTY

ON NOV. 8, 1983

broke two bones in the lower part of
his leg during ~ junior high football
practice session Tuesday night.
Brad was to go llome from the
hospital today. He 1s in a run cast
and will be bt the cast for three
months.
Brad Is not only a member of the
Belpre Junior High team but 1s also
manager tor the Belpre Varslty
squad.
We are SOITy to hear about your
misfortune but with your personal·
lty this will not hinder you in any
way.
Good luck.

RIDENOUR'S ..

Thank You For
Your Support
Paid for by Candid ate

INSTALlATION- Daniel M.
Evans, Vlolon, wm be lnstaJied
asDist!tctDeputyGrandMaster
of the 12th Masonic District, Nov.
16, 7:00 p.m., bt the Vbtton
Masonic Temple. He will be
lnltalled by Past Grand Master
Charles B. Moody of ZanesviDe.
AD Masons and their guests are
btvlted ot attend.

$698 WITH TRADE

.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

~

~

.Gll8ALLERY
HAl
R
·
A
RTS
E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PHONE: 992-3233

OPEN MON.-FRI.
· 9:00 TO 5:00
WALK-INS WELCOME
AFTER HOURS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
1WO FOR ONE CONTACI'S
If you've reached the point
where you need bifocal correctiVe lenses to see well at a
distance as well as close up, you
ddn't have to opt for bifocal
lenses.
•
If you've been wearing contact lenses and don't want to lose
· the comfortable feellng or natural look of your face, y ou can
have separate contact lenses
made for each eye. One will
correct lor distance vlslon, the
other for near vision.
Thls may seem an unusual
solution to bifocal needs, but 1t ·
works. When you're looking fat
something, both . er es will see
what you're looking at.
j Buthathe
eye that sees the ob ect s rp
and clear will dominate. This

means that your brain wlll see a
sharp and clear !mage.
·
And even though one eye will
only transmit a blurred !mage ,
you won't be awe of it. You wlll,
If you put one hand over the eye
. t.ljat has the lens for that kind of
Vision (farsighted or nearsighted, depending on where you're.
looking). Then the only !mage
you get will be a blurred one.
Othe!'wlse you' ll see clearly at
all times and never be a ware of
' the difference.

FREE

HAIR
ANALYSI S

Le t us diagnose

yo ur hair probl e ms

*******

In th e jnteres t ot tie.ffer "Jslo n

from the off ice of.

· Davll,
·
0 .D. ·
George W.
458SecondAve.,Gallipolis
Phone 446-:zzJG

r~;;;;;;;;~;;==;;;~~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~
'

Professional Stylists for Men, Women &amp; Children
George Kovach, Brenda Janey, cathy Jo lipscomb

.so INCH WOOL FABRIC SALE
CONTINES 20% OFF

and recom mend t he proper ~•/.J...&amp;y

REVI TA LI ZATION
PROG RAM
for yo ur hai r usin g . . .

. . €xus
"

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NATURE fWD EARTH
UNITeD WITH SCIENCE

shompoos. condl~oners
ond molstvnzers.

FLOUNDER oR
FISH FILLETS

Ask fo' t~t /"t book

" A HAIR OWNERS MANUAL '

EMBROIDERY HOOPS &amp;
.FRAMING HOOPS SUITABLE
FOR CRAFTS NOW' IN STOCK
SINGER.SEWING BOXES
&amp;WASTEBASKETS etc ...
IN STOCK FOR CHRSTMAS .
GIFT GIVING
LAYAWAY OUR SINGER
SEWING MACHINE WITH
A SMALL DEPOSIT FOR ·
.. £HRISTMAS GIFT GIVING ' ·

GALLERY HAIR ARTS
118 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-3233

HE FABRIC" SFIOP

BATTE.RED ~

2 LB. BOWi.

ford will celebra te tllelr 25th
wedding anniversary at a n open
reception to be held a t the Racine
United Methodist Church on Sunday, Nov. 13, from 2 to 4 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford were
married on Nov. 16, 1958. The
reception wlll he hosted by their
chlldren, Mrs. Howard E . (Ruth)
Frank, Racine; Mrs. Herman

CHRISTMAS CRAFT PATTERNS
All FABRIC IN STOCK

BANNER

Peanut Butter

•

F elix Alkire, Kathleen Scott, Mar garet Hutton, Sherr! and Tony
Roush, Betty and Otval Wiles,
Frances Martin, Ida Mae and Steve ·
Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Hawley, Randy and Shawn, all
local.
Sharon Whitaker , Gallon; Mr.
and Mrs. Don lles, Jr., Columbus ,
Ind.; Mr. a nd Mrs. Wllllam Sherllda n, Jr. and Christina, Waverly;
Mr. and Mrs. :Randy TletUa,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Krttzwlzer and Adam, Waverly;
Mr. and Mrs . Don lles Sr. and Doug,
Gallon.
Also vlslttng and presenting gifts
to the couple were Mar)i AnJ1 lies,
Gallon; Gerl, Beth Ann, and
Rebecca Merida, Kenner, La.;
Carla Shade, Gallon; Mr. and Mrs .
Maurice Johnston and famlly.

8011 of Dorothy .Roller Middleport,

SHURFINE 18 OZ. JAR

$}69

GRAPE JELLY

not
be shot
bt the same
categocy.
~
will constat
of m~ney
and
meat such as hams and turkeys.

Plea&amp;er
Special

ROYAL CREST
HOMOGENIZED

TENDER LEAF

Both Mr. and Mrs. Bradford have

RACINE - Andrew Crittenden

(Crtt~) and Beulah Mitchell Brad- ' resided ln Racine most of their

Trustee

Alumni Interested bt playbtg are
asked to attend the 1 p.m. meeting.
Those wbo wish to play and cannot
make. the meeting are asked to
contact George Nesselroad at
992-58111 or Wally Hat11eld at

Budget :

Pleaser
Special ·.

Pleaser
Special

POMEROY - A surprise buffet
dinner and party honoring lYir. and
Mrs. WW!am Shertdan of Pomeroy
on their 50th wedding anniversary
was held recently at the home of
their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Hawley.
The affair was hosted by their
chlldren, Mrs. Hawley, Bernice lles,
Gallon, and William Sheridan Jr.,
Waverly, and their families.
· The re!reslunent table featured a
two-tiered cake with side cakes
decorated in gold and orange mums
and "50" numerals.
Attendlng the obsetvance were
~oan Weyersmlller, Mary Van
€coney, Dlane Caruthers, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Martin, Edna and
Velessa Hwmel, Debbie and Brandy
King, Velma Stobart, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Runnel and Art, Mr. and Mrs.

Plans are undeiWay for an
alumni football game to be held on
Dec. 4, at 2 p.m. at Marauder
stadium In Pomeroy.
A meeting wUl be held today at 1
p.m. at the field in Middleport.

\

SALAD
DRESSING

Bradfords to note silver year ·

Graduates of the Meigs High
School class of 1983 are reminded
that all the yearbooks have not as
yet been picked up.
· Also, there are live extra 1983
tiooks left to be sold. They are$16.60
each.
.. There are several 1981-81 .yearbooks left and are selling for $5
each.

Budget
Pleaser
Special

DANJOU PEARS

$

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew (Critt) Bradfonl

Katie's korner

WESTERN

MIRACLE
WHIP

weddlngdinner fourty years ago.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Krider
graduated from Racine Hlgh
School. He 1s the son of the late Mr.
and Mrs. William Krider, and she is
the daughterofthelateMr.andMrs.
Otha Circle, Racine.

Alumni game scheduled

SUt'tKIUK

89¢

EEF

Budget'
Pleaser
Special

SLICED
BACON

LB.

FRANKIES

LB. 59¢

LB.

SUPERIOR
D_
ART .BRAND

$ 49

SUPERIOR 12 OZ. PKG.

Chunk Bologna

GROUND

Budget ·
P'leaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

FRESH LEAN

PORK
ROAST

Budget

Budget

Braunschweiger

Also hosting the event wa5 their
daughter, Mrs. Daniel (Diane
Ashley) Hoe of Las Vegas. Nevada.
Mr . and Mrs. As hley wbo were
overnight guests of the honored
couple, then went on to Akron where
they spent several days a s guests of
Mrs. Ashley's aunt ahd uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Holter.

Sheridan anniversary observed

Budget

SUPERIOR

'

MADISON. Wis. (AP)- Wisconsin already has astatesoUandlt
soon may have a state fossil. Now a legislator is tooting his hom fora
state musical instrument - the tuha .
Sen. Car\ Otte, who played tuba in a legislative swing band In the
early 1970s and still plays in a band in . his Sheboyga n distrlct, sald
Thursday that the time has arrived tor the tuba to he recognized as
the state's musical symbol.
, ,
Earlier this year, Gov. Anthony S. Earl signed a bill making Antigo
silt loam the official state soil. Proposals to make the American
water spaniel the state dog, milk the state beverage and the trilobite
the official state fossil have been passed by the'Assembly and a wa lt
Senate action.
Mitchell Greshenfeld, a lecturer at the University of Wisconsin
School of Music who asked Otte to Introduce the tuba legisla tion, '
sald, "The tuba has a very rich history in Wisconsin."
In the m id-1800s, he said, most of the Ge1man. Polish and SlaVic
conununities ln the state had brass bands with tubas. ,
The low-toned Instrument, he said, sets the style for "a good tlme,
some music and a little beer.- what being a tuba player is all about. "
So far. Otte' s proposal has the backing of the Tubists Universal
Brotherhood Assoelation, or TUBA, which claims J,M mem bers
worldwide.

Kriders observe 40th anniversary

l&gt;OUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

CHOPS

r uba or not to Tuba, that's the question

Ashley anniversary celebration

-'

Page-B-3

·On the light side-----

'

SECOND &amp; MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
{Formerly Mark V)

PORK

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

November 6, 1983

'

. MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
Fr•trr..Z Uf• ,.,,,.,., .
H.- Offk,t - lredt l&amp;hllllll. IIIIMI1

115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy

Servlna lleias &amp; G•~i•
Counties As Your Sl1111r
·

D•lir ·

--

... .

--

�0

Page 8+---The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 6, 1983

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

BIDWELL - Mt. Carmel
Baptlst Church will celebrate
lt' s IIJth anniversary, and the
15th of the pastor, Sunday. The
Rev. Henry Fletcher of Ironton
wil be guest mlnlster for the
afternoon service at 2 p.ni. The
public ls Invited to attend.

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134 .. Order of the Eastern Star.
will meet lh regular ·session
Monday, 7:30 p :m. at the
Masonic Temple. Dues are
payable a t tlle meeting.

GALLIPOLIS - AAUW will
meet Monday, 7:15 p .m., at the
Ohio Valley Bank Jackson Pille
Branch. Speaker will be P a ul
PORTER - ' There will be .
Cochran, insuranef' broker, on
special services at Clark Chapel
the topic of What women should
Church. Sunday. 9: 30 a .m. , with
know about insurance and thC'
the Rev. Jay Jarvis. The
state settlement .
Gracemen Quartet will provide
the slngtng. The public is Invited
to attend.
·

TUESDAY

ROCK SPRINGS- A revival
will be held at the Rock Sprlngs
United Methodlst Church beg!nnlng Sunday through Nov. 9 at
7:30 p.m. nightly. The Rev. Wes
Thatcher will be 'the guest
speaker.

MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolls Junior Women's Club will
meet Monday, 7: 30 p.m ., at the
Woodland Center.
BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter
School PTO will meet Monday. 7
p.m. at the school. A play will be
presented durlng the meetlng.

LETART- Letart Wownship
Trustees will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Letart Falls.
MIDLEPORT - Voices of
Liberty wili hold a practice
session Monday at 7:15 p.m. at
Middleport Heath Church.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the school. Third grades stu·
dents will present .t he program.
RACINE - Raclne Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. Tl)ere will be election of
offiC'€rs and presentation of

veteran service awards .
· RACINE -An Election Day
dinner will be held at the Racine
firehouse by the Firemen· s
Am&lt;iliary with servlng to begin
at 10:30 a .m . Chicken and ham
dinners will be ser ved.
GALLIPOLIS - The Pembroke Club will meet Tuesday, 8
p.m., at tlle home of Mrs. Neal
Clark, 136 First Ave.
GALLIPOLIS--TheLaLJbhe
League will meet Tuesday, 9:30
a.m .. at1026First Ave. Topic will
be the advantages of breastfeading. 'This is the first ln a series of
four discussion meetings. For
information, call446-6314.

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of Nov. 7-11 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, l'pv. 7 - -Ceramics
Class, 9:30 a.m.-noon: Chorus, 1-3
p.m .
Tuesday, Nov. 8 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a .m.; Physical Fitness,
11 :15 a.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 9 - Birthday
P a rty, noon: Vinto.n.Bible Study. 1
p.m.; Games, 1-3 p.m.; . Garden
Club, 1-3 p.m.; Amedcan Literature Class, 1 p. rp.
.
Thursday. Nov . 10 -- Bible Study.
11 a.m.-noon; Games. 1 p.m.
Friday, l'ov. 11 - Legal Services, 10 a.m.: Art Class, 1-3 p.m .;
Craft Mini-Course. 1-3 p.m. ; Social
Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrlllon Program
\\'i.ll setve' the follow in g menus:
Monday - Bralsed beef cubes
and gravy, sliced carrots, mashed
potatoes, chocolate pudding, hot
rolls, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Smoked sa usage,
butter beans, tossed salad , fruit
cocktail, bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - · Chicken and
gravy, mashed potatoes, green
beans, cake and ice cream. biscuit
butter, milk.
Thursday - Meat loaf, au gratin
potatoes, stewed tomatoes. blackbeny jello and whipped topplng,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried flsh with tartar
sauce, oven browned potatoes, cole
slaw. peacbes, bread, butter, ~ilk.

Meigs Co.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights , Pomeroy, Invites all senior

Happenings
Parenthood prep
class scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - The next
Preparation for Parenthood
classes sponsored by Holzer
Clinic will be Monday and
Tuesdays, Nov.7throughDec.13,
7 to 9 p.m., in the cllnlc
classroom. Taught by a Regist.ered Nurse. topics Include
nutrition, exercises, Infant care
and a tour of the Maternity
Department at Holzer Medical
Center. Fee is $40. For lnforma- ·
tion or registration, contact

• •

•

Gallia Co.

ottlzens of tbe county to take part In
activities at the center. The center
Is open Monday through Friday
from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
Schedule of activities for the
week of Nov. 7-llls .as follows:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.noon; Physical Fltness,ll: 30 a.m.;
Chorus Practice, 1-2 p.m .
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Games, 1-2 p.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 .a.m.noon; Blood Pressure Clinic, 10

ln tnushroom gravy, mashed pota·
toes, green beans, gelatin with lrult,
marshmallows, nuts and whppe&lt;l
topplng.
Tuesday ~· Chlcken-·uvers- on
seasoned rice, beets, pineapple and
cottage cheese salad, apple
cobbler.
Wednesday - Lasagna, Italian
mixed vegetables, perfection salad,

hot buttered bread, peaches.
ThurSday - Escalloped potatoes .
with ham and cheese, Brussel
sprouts, cole slaw, spite cake with
earamel icing.
Friday Creamed baked
chicken casserole, peas and carrots, lettuee with boiled .egg, roll,
vanilla pudding, graham cracker
crust with whipped topping.

MIKE WILL

Friday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.noon; Physical· Fitness, 11; 30 a.m.
On Monday, Nov. 7, several
volunteers will be visltlng Sheila
Bevans' Physical Education Class
at Middleport Elementary School
from'· noon to 12:30 p.m. The
regularly scheduled square dance

CANDIDATE FOR

CLERK
CHESTER TOWNSHIP

,

Pd. Pol. Ad. By Cand.

HUSH PUePo,A
!§.

WORK ALL DAY.

200/o OFF

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

GALLIPOLIS - The next
Prepara lion for Breastfeeding
class sponsored by Holzer Clinic
will be Thursday, Dec. 1, 7 to 9
p.m.. In the clinic classroom.
Taught by a Registered Nurse,
the class will consist of literature
an films on preparation of the
breasts for feeding, as well as
information for women who
deliver by Casearean Section.
Fee is $1 . For lnfoimation or
registration, contact Karen
Wamsley, 446-5278 or · Becky
Saunders, 446-2509.

.. .

'

Hush Puppies"

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

.

III'.A"(\(.~S

.tuiA

Comfort Ia OIW -•-·

Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614) 992·2104
-or (304) 675-1244

M~5278 or rr=====================~LL-~---~----------Ti~---------------------=------------------------------------iiiiii._._._.

Becky
Karen Saunders,
vvarnsley,446-2509.

Sunday Gift Specials

Revival

FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
1:00 P.M. UNTIL 5:00P.M.

POMEROY - Homer Maple,
Zanesville, will be evangelist at
revival services to be held a t 7: 3J
each evenlng starting this evenIng and runnlng through Nov.ll
at the Pomeroy Church of
Chrlst, 212 W. Main St. Pastor
Neil Proudfoot lnvttes the
public.

Bobbie Brooks

Nursery School

SWEATERS
100% ACRYLIC

GALLIPOLIS - Enrollment
has been reopened for the
afternoon class of 2~ - and
tllree-year olds at the Community Nursery School, located at
First Presbyterian Church. ThLs
Ls a social program Monday.
Wednesday and Friday, 12:45 to
2:45 p.m. For information, call
Mrs. John Moore, administrator,
446-2795 or 446-4274 after 4 p.m . .

$1800

Dozen's great
choices.
PURCHASE
A
'
.
DOZEN DONUTS.

Fair Board
election set
POMEROY -- The annual
election of the Meigs County
Fair Board will be held at from5
to 9 p .m . Monday at the
secretary's office on the Rock
Sprlngs Fairgrounds. Only
Meigs residents who hold current membership tickets ln the
Meigs County Agricultural Society may vote. The board will
meet ln regular session at 8 p.m.
whlie the election Ls belng held.

A-ND
'

RECEIVE A
DOZEN
SMIDGETS
• FREE!
OFFER GOOD

Marriage license
POMEROY - Marr1age licenses
were Issued ln Meigs County
Probate Court to Stephen Matthew
Hencirtcks, 24, Raclne and DenLse
MarleDeem,l9,Raclne.andGerald
Alton Andrus, Jr. 20, Columbus and
Tammy Rae GUmbre, 18, Rt. 2,
Albany . .

Divorce granted
POMEROY - In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Connie Sue
Runnion WaS granted a divorce
from James Allen Rwinlon on
charges or gross neglect of duty.

MONDAY· TUESDAY·
WEDNESDAY ONLY!
Nov. 7th -

2322 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
675-5159
Open 24 Hours

Mister Donut is the man to see:·
,.

'

Nov. 9th

SAVE

Active Sportswear

17.50

With FREE Embroidered
Monogram
Allow 2 Weeks

Our New
Moneram

Service

Avai lable
For All

MEN'S
100% ORLON ACRYLIC

VEE-NECK

SWEATERS
SAVE
ONLY~ 18°0 $6.50

Hang Ten designs sporty, mixable componets that layer
beautilu lly. Mix and match to
find your own layered look~ ,
12

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12

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13 133, 1 34

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a

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5

where crel1smen ali\1 caree

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Sizes 4 to 10

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Nov. 6th Only!

·.

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wESTBeND.
POPPERY
...
..._ II
.

Sunday Only!
Crepeset Nylon' Hip Hugger Brief

Com Popper
SUnday Only!
lllfllar

$24.99
TH~

CIRCLEVILLE - Rebecca Ann
Hash and Gregory Garret Gardner
were united In marriage Aug. T7, ln
the · Church of Cbrlst ln Christian
Union at Circleville, Ohio.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Martln Hash, Route 2,
Bidwell. The groom Is the son of the
Rev. and Mrs. Edwln Gardner,
Circleville.
The Rev. Bob Madison officiated
the double--rlng ceremony, and
,_ music was provided by Mrs. Ruth
Barth, organLst; Mrs. Marilyn
Hatlield, pianist; Mrs. Gene
Garnder, flutist and Dawn Remmenga and Bart Gardner , vocalists.
Given ln marriage by her parents,
the bride wore a gown of white lace
lined ln taffeta with a Queen Anne
neckline and
sleeves. She also
wore a fingertip veil with chapellength train.
Maid of honor was Amy Hash,
sister of the bride and bridesmaids
were Gwen Phillips, sister of the
bride, Torona Hash, sister-In-law of
the bride, all three of Bidwell, and
Cordie Fish, cousln of the bride from
Tlffln.
They wore gowns of blue knit with
empire waistlines. The dresses had

Sl2BB

FASTEST

AROUND
Up to 4 guarts in less
Than 3 lltnut•s

SAVE S2.64
After we slice the roast beef, we slice the
price and put the savings in your pocket.
Great reasons to Taste the
·
Rax Experience~

pleated skirts, and capes of blue
chiffon over them.
Best man was Paul Gardner,
uncle of the groom from Christiansburg, Ohio. Ushers were Marty
Hash, brother of the bride, Bidw~U
and Brei and Bart Gardner,
brothers of the groom from
Circleville.
Flower girls were Sara and•Susan
Phillips, neices of the bride from
Bidwell. rlng bearers were Derek
and Dustln Gardner, couslns of the
groom, Chrlstiansburg.
The guest register was attended
by Mlndy Johnson of Bidwell, and
the openlng prayer was given by
, .James Seymour.
A reception was held lnthechurch
fellowship hall following the ceremony. Asslstlngwere Lisa Fuller and
Llnda Figgins of Bidwell, Tammy
Groves. Grove City. Ohio and Robln
Beck! from Pennsylvania.
The bride Is a graduate of North
Gallia High School and Ls attending
the Chillicothe Branch of Ohio
Unl;verslty.
The groom is a graduate of Mount
Vernon Nazarene College and is a
coach at Circleville Bible College.
The couple reside on the campus
of Circleville Bible College.

Daytonalong
stagecoach
All of
stop
the oldroute.
ClnclnnatfOhio's eight U.S. presidents are on
the distinguished guest list of the
Golden Lamb, which still offers 19
guest rooms and serves ftite
.
cooking In nine dlnlng rooms.
: Traditional American dishes prevail at the· Golden Lamb, with a
strong Shaker Influence noted
throughout the menu. As Its name
lndlcates, Iamb Is served, as well as
steak, fish and poultry. Desserts
include Sister Li:lzle's Shaker sugar
pie, chocolate stack pte and cheese
cake.
·• Other notable Ohio taverns worth
exploring during the comlng weeks
Include the Buxton Inn in Granville,
a · two-story, U·shaped structure
with a center courtyard, claiming
til be the state's oldest contlnuouslyol&gt;erating inn; Malabar. Inn ln
Perrysville (near author Louis
, Bromfield's lamous house, now
· Malabar Farm State Park), con·
structed in 1820 of bricks kilned on
!he property; and the MDan Inn
boUt In IM5, and frequently visited
lly Thomas Edison.
, .
: You can also diScover the charm
tit thele holltels In other townS such
J8 Breck8YIIle, Falrlleld, Loveland,
Milan, Unionville, Waterville and

BIGRAX
ROAST BEEF
SANDWICH

ROAST BEEF
SANDWICH

serve, instead, as museums of'

dya
orcall
a weekend
of a of
leisurely
drive,
the Ohioout
Office
Travel

and Tourism's travel counselors

CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

Th11 otter not vehd """'" any 04hfT

...........••.••

~.

FOR

CANDIDATE FOR

THANK

u:il

Thil oflfl' not valid Meh any oUwr
dliCoum Of c~ St-ln rea char!Jftl

QOOd ar part~ling Ra.l
RneaurantJ onl}o

VOT~

I
I
I

I s\.!~9
I ....... '"""'"" ou.. IE II .....""""'"' Ofl~ IE I .

Rodney E. Spires
your weekend itinerary for this fall
and winter. Most are located close
to fascinating museums, historic
sltes and beautiful scenery. To find
out more about Ohio's historic
wayside stops and how to make a

99C

1

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Garret
Gardner

Worthington . The 152-year-old Worthington Inn has recently added 23
guest rooms and complete1y renovated the restaurant. Dunham
Tavern In Cleveland and Our House
in Gallipolis do not provide meals or
overnight accommodations but
pioneer relics.
There are. other country Inns in
Chardon, Cincinnati, Coshocton,
Eaton, Granville, Vermilion and
Zoar, each unique In Its own way.
Ohio's stagecoach taverns and
country Inns can be just one stop on

••••••I

RAX

Taverns, Inns, explore history

For years lt served as the luncheon

·

LADIES
PANTIES

White Only
Regular 12.00 each

Re,.lar
• 138, 130

$}799
$2}99 .

Junior Sizes S M, L

v

100% Nylon Brief

' 123, '4

BOTTOMS ~il.'i~'s

·Pus-FREE Embroidered
Monogram. Sizes S to XL.

White and Asssorted Colors
Regular $1.79 Each

Re#ular

. · TOPS

1-'------------------------

Rebecca Ann Hash exchanges
vows with Gregory Gardner

:The legacy of Ohio's proud
colonial past can be found today at
any one of the many stagecoach
taverns and country inns still In
operation. around the state.
Stagecoach taverns played an
Important part ln the early development of Ohio. Pioneer settlers, land
developers, cattle drovers, mall
carriers and statesmen found their
journey over wilderness trails a
little easier to bear after a bearty
meal and an overnight stop at one of
these wayside hospitallty centers.
Today, guests arr1ve by highway
in automobile or bus, rather than by
wlldernes" trail on horseback or by
stagecoach. Other Ohio communities also welcome travelers to their
hlstotic landmarks. Generally located ln small, qualnt towns that
readily land transfers to one-- and
two-day trtps, they are the perfect
destination for a hot bowl of soup on
a brisk autumn day.
in 1803, the year Ohio became a
state, the Golden Lamb In Lebanon
was founded. The structure still
standtng today dates back to 1815.

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

446-9510

Given in marriage by her
parents. the bride was escorted to
the altar by her father. She wore a
gown of taffeta and lace fashioned
with a V-neckline accented with.
lace. The A-line skirt had a flounce
at the bottom and flowed Into a
chapel train.
The bride's veil of illusion was
fingertip and fell from a bandeau
headpiece. She carried a bouquet of
white silk roses, carnations and

Mr. and Mrs. Brian Keith Conde

puff

Mon. &amp; Fri. til 8 p.m.
Tues., Wed. Thur.
&amp; Sat. til 5

AP~OIN1MlNT

were used in the windows.

NOV. 8, 1983

will begin
at 1 p.m. at the Senior r'-----:=~=======:::===:=::==:=:::;~~==:=;
Citizens
Center.
Make plans now ·to attend the
center on Thursday, Nov. 10, for
Blood Pressure Reading. ThLs is a
good way to keep check on Your
blood pressure free of charge. Call
ahead for your meal reservation.
Interested in making ceramic
Items for Christmas? Seljior volunteers will be at the center on
Tuesday , Thursday or Friday to
Our working shoes really work. They tako you
assist in ceramic making. Stop by
through
the entire day with all tho comfort, support
the center and treat yourself to
and
style
you ni.ed. Treat yourself to the fit and
some creative enjoyment and see
fashion of Hush Puppies• 9 to 5 shoos. You
wruit you can make.
deserve itl
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves a hot meal at noon each day.
REG. PRICE
Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
Napoli II _
ALL
for a meal no later than 9 a.m. the
WOMEN'S
day of the reservation. The follow·
ing menu is planned for the week of
DRESS
Nov. 7-11:
HEELS
Monday - Porcupine meatballs

burgundy ·and plnk daisies topped
tied with white streamers.
Jaycee Women. She Is employed at
Marcia Cale and Megan Cale, with iSink satin bells. The table was Powell's Super Valu. Pomeroy.
sisters of the bride, were honor draped with pink netting and corner
The gr&lt;X\m graduated from
daisy nosegays. Mrs. Jeannie Owen Eastern High School and attl'nded
attendants and Loti Roller, cousin
registered the guests.
of the bride, was bridesmaid.
The couple took a wedding trip t.o the Hocklng Technical School. He Is
They wore plnk peasant·styie
president of the Meigs Jaycees and
floral blouses with T-straps and
Daytona Beach, Fla ., and resldeo9 is employed ln _the office of Dr.
floor-length pink pleated skirts.
Hysell Street, Middleport.
james P . Conde In• Middleport.
They carried nosegays of plnk and
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Is a member of the
burgundy daisies with pink and
white streamers.
.. flower girls were Jessica Cale . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ahtl Cassy Hubbard, nieces of the
bride and groom. Ryan Conde,
nephew of the groom. was the
Monday thru Friday
rlngbearer .
.
.
9AM 'I09PM
James P . Conde, brother of the
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
groom, was best man, and the
W.t,~K rrr QR I _.H fOil
ushers were Dick Owen and Bruce
AN
Conde, brother of the groom. Both
ushers are from Middleport.
The bride's mother wore a
A NfW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGfl/"'
floor-length rose gown with a
chiffon tunic accented with silver
sequlns and a rose and pink
carnation corsage. The groom's
mother was ln a floor-length
seaspray green gown of polyester
knit with a chiffon capelet. She wore
a white carnation corsage.
A reception was held in the
church basement. The three-tiered
weddlng cake was trimmed with
~aisles

MIDDLEPORT - Melissa Sue
Cale and Brian Keith Conde
exchanged wedding vows In an
evening ceremony at the Heath
United Methodist Church on July
16.
The bride Is -the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Caie, and the
groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Conde, all of MiddlepOrt.
The ceremony took place at 6:30
p.m .. and the Rev. Robert Robinson
officiated .
Donna Jenkins was organist. with
Mcs... Marvin Burt, and Crenson
Pratt as soloists. The altar was
decorated wiih arrangements of
painted daisies flanked by two
seven-branch candeiabra, and single candles with magnolia leaves

Your Vote &amp; Support Will Be Greatly l'.ppreciated

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC..

Breastfeeding class

Melissa Sue Cale, Brian Keith Conde; solemnize wedding vows

r-;:::::::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-:;;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;

a.rri.-noon.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-B-5

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

Area ·Senior Citizens plan weekly acttvlttes

Calendar
SiJNDAY

November 6, 1983

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8-6---The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

Pomeroy

RODNEY Marie Keever
became the bride of Edgar L.
Atkins Jr. July 30 In a double-ring
ceremony at Rodney Metllodist
Church.
She Is the daughter of Mrs. Carola
Keever. He Is the son of Mrs. Lanie
Atkins, Goldsboro, N.C. and the late
Ed~ar L. Atkins Sr. of Gallipolis.
The Rev. William Loy officiated
the wedding and music was
provided by Ms. Barb Scltes.
Escorted by her great -great
uncle, Ray Mantor of Delaware.
Ohio and given In marriage by her
mother, the bride wore a high
neckline gown of white lace and
organza beaded with pearls with
cathedral-length train and full length veiL Sh'e carried a bouquet of
pitlk sweetheart roses 8 nd miniature carnations in baby's breath.
Maid of honor was Cindy Rainey.
Bridesmaids were Tammy Patrick
and Laurel Henson of Gallipolis.
Junior bridesmaid ws Kerry
Keever of St. Louis, Mo., the bride's
cousin.
Best man was David Strong of
Gallipolis. Ushers were Mark
Abbott and Ron Bonecutter of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va .
R egistering guests was Leah
Steele of Gallipolis.
A reception followed in the
Rodney Methodist Church Fellowship room.

~Princess

"A Hatful ofRain,"byMichael V.
Ga2ZO, a drama which explores the
relationships within a famlly rav·
aged by drug abuse, will be
presented by Marshall University
Theatre Nov. 16-19 In Oid Main
Audltortum with curtain at 8 p.m.
The second production of the
season, the play Is directed by N. B.
East. professor and chairman of
the Theatre and Dance Depart·

~-~

berlin, Junior, Huntington,

GALLIPOLIS - Rose Frances
862FirstAve.. Gallipolis,
and WalkerStlltner,1610R1vervlew
Dr., wUl bemarrledNov. l2, 2p.m ..
In the Grace United Methodist
Church Chapel.
The Rev. ~rge Wol!brant will

.
ahd

~.

The play's action centers around
a young man whose sertous war
inJuries have lett him addicted t,o:
drugs. The playwright explores the.
Impact the addiction has on the
famUy - probing the beliefs and
attitudes of the characters as they
come to grips with guUI, blame and
understanding.

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Jack Church -in Ravenswood, W. Va.
of Racine are announcMiss Cummins Is a graduate of
Ing the engagement and approach- Southern High School and Is
Ing marriage of their daug!lter, · attending Valley Beauty School,
Michelle Renee Cummins, to Jona- Marietta.
than Scott Rees, son of Mr. and Mrs-.
Rees Is a graduate of Southern
Jlm Rees of Racine.
. and Is employed by C. and D.
The wedding will take place on Drilling In Racine.
Nov. 19 at the Second Baptist
~mins

Kathryn Plerc~.
James H.' »"'es Jr.

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

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and Mrs. Edgar L. Atkins

The bride's table featured a
three-tiered wedding cake with a
heart cake along each side. The
cake was decorated by Mrs.
Delores Williams .
Assis ting at the reception wer e

and Mrs. Steve Miller of Rodney,
also -with ladles from the Rodney
Methodist Women's Group.
After a honeymoon trip to
Williamsburg and Virginia Beach,
the couple resides in Rodney, Ohio.

- Mr. and Mrs.
James Stout of Tuppers Plains are
&lt;jnnouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Connie Stout, to Jimmer
Soulsby, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
~ulsby, Pomeroy.
-: The open-church wedding will
tijke place Nov. 26 at 2 p.m. at the
St. Paul United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. A reception will be

Ms. Beth Mantor of Delaware, Ohio

FIGS &amp; WHOLE PITTED OATES WILL BE ARRIVING SOON
.

nale manage _to rescue even the
But themindwandersbecausethe
cheapest dialogu'e:"bnt-Mflnnatlon story never rivets. At times, It Is so
of acting ability is that Miss lethargic that the characters even
Cardinale can say, "The love of a .seem to be walking slowly. You
good man can make the best could probably rea,d a Krantz book
moments live forever, " without while watching "Princess Daisy"
viewers grimacing too much.
and do Justice to both.

In a car
She watches
her 11
'r~~~~~~~~ijji~~~~~~;i'i!!!i~!i;iwjjj;il
father
diewreck.
In a plane
crash. Her
half-brother rapes .her twice. Her
twin sister is retarded. Yet viewers
won't shedanytears. Throughout all
this adversity, Daisy never seems to
suffer.
" Princess Daisy." NBC's fourhour miniseries on Sunday and
Monday nights, Is~ vlctlmoftoosti!f
an upper Up. There's no trauma, no
convinctng·~r•.~ar~a ldepriva­
tion and, what's deadly for this
genre, no excitement. The story of
Daisy, forging an independent life
after the tragedies o! her past, is too
much of a plain Jane.
If TV soap opera haf= any v::t lu~.
It's the chance to mindlessly wallow
In other people's miseries and feel
better about our own lots in life. Miss
Krantz' "Princess Daisy," "Scruples" and :'Mistral's Daughter"
Go curly or go [Of more
body 1 Try a new highlight
obviously work as escapist enter·
or a new cola ! Tnefe'sso
talnment- she's sold more than 7
much you can do for a
million books.
lool~ mar's new ... ondwf!
con show you how. See us!
But this NBC production, with
MisS Krantz' husband, Steve, as
'e xecutive producer, is emotionally
distant. even though It is not as
Ave~
Intellectually insulting as most
prtme-tlme soaps.
Notable performances from
Stacy Keach, Lindsay Wagner,
CALL OR·WALK IN.
Kelly
Sada Thompson and Claudia Cardi-

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born, the second oldest boy. There
were three boys and two girls.
· The 1860 census lists a son,
Daniel, and a daughter, Emma
Sanburn, still at homewtth partmts,
John and Lydia. Any help? If so, do
contact Mrs. Pittman.

.

GALL/A COUNTY
LOCAL TEACHERS

CHECK WITH THE FINE FOLKS AT FLAIR FURNIITURE

BOOKCASE W ATERBED

Correction

1. HEATER

]letty D. Pittman, Route 1, Box
Due to a typesetting error In
419-A, Valdese, N.C., would like
Wednesday's
Dally Trlbune,ansoine help from you genealogists.
nouncement
of
the
wedding plans of
She Is doing research on her
and
Matlhew Smith,
Linda
Ashburn
maternal grandparents in Meigs
the
prospective
groom's
name was
County. Her great-great·
misspelled.
Hels
the
son
of
Mr. and
~dtather. John Waf\l Sanborn,
Mrs.
Tom
and
Mlcl&lt;ey
Smith·
of
came here In 1.835 from New
GaUipolls.
The
wedding
wUI
take
Himpshtre. His family settled In
place Saturday at the Addison
~ond Township. Among his five
Freewill
Baptist church.
chlldreR was Mrs. Plttman'sgreatThe Tribune regrets this error.
gMndtather, Amos Brewster San-

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Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Pierce, . W.Va.
Long Bottom, are announcing the
Miss Pierce Is a graduate at
engagement and approaching mar·
Eastern HighSchool.
riage of their granddaughter, KaHaynes
senior atemployed
Ripley High
School
andIsIsapresently
at
thryn Sue Pierce, to James Allen
the D and J Trading Post. An early
Haynes, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
June wedding Is being planned.
James A. Haynes, Sr., ~t. Alto,

VINTON , OHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.
PH. 388-8603

p.m.; Smith, 2: 45-3: 15 p.m.; Myers,
3: JO.J.; 45 p.m.; Mercervtlle, 4-4: 30
p.m.; Burd, 4:40-5 p.m.; Crown
City P.O., 5: i5-6 p.m.; Eureka,
6: 15-6: 45 p.m.
Thursday - Watts, 2: 30-2: 45
p.m. ; Brick School Rd., 2: 55-3: 10
p:m .; Addavllle Elementary, 3:15·
3:45p.m.; St. Rd. 7 (Roadslderest),
3: 55-4: 10 P-11\: Georges Cr. Rd I, II,
4:15-5 p.m.; Bulavllle Tr. Ct.• 5:30-6
p.m.; Plantz Subdv .. 6:15-6:45 p.m.
Friday - Elliott's (Rt. 35).
2:15-2:45 p.m.; Kerr, 3-3:50 p.m.;
Buck Ridge, 4-5:05 p.m.; Jay Dr. I,
II, 5: 15-5: 45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6:15 p.m.

Meigs County
POMEROY - Bookmobile ser·
vice In Meigs County is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, Nov. 7- Carpenter (Laura's
Store), 3:10-3:40 p .m.; Dexter
(Church) , 4:10-4:40 p.m.; Danville
(Church ), 5:20-5:45 p.m.; Rutland

(Civic Center), 6:30-8 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 8 - Portland
(Post Office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; !-etart Falls (Effie's Restaurant ),
3:&lt;&amp;3:50 p.m.; Racine (Bank),
4:~6:05 p.m.; Syracuse (Pool),
6:20-7:50 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 9 - Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh), 7:25-7: 55 p.m.;
Rtggscrest Addition, 8: 10-8: 40 p.m.

Marshall percussionists
plan fall performance
Crash, bang and boom, bass
drummers striking low blows, and
a variety of vibrating membranes
wUI be featured accandlng to
Director Ben Miller, when the
Marshall University Percussion
Ensemble presents Its annual fall
. concert at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov.15,
in Smith Recital Hall.
An unusual combination of works
wUI be performed Including
"Jake's Mountain Mambo," a
special arrangement combining
the rhythms or Latin America with
some Instruments of Appalachia,
as well as a samba by the Brazilian
percussionist Alrto.
Tom Shriv~r of Huntington will
be featured soloist on "Interactions
for VIbraphone and Percussion" by
John Bergamo.
Others In the ensemble are Matt
Wolfe and John Selbee, Hunting·
'

POMEROY, OHIO
LEO VAUGHAN, Mgr.
PH. 992-2588

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ZOTOS CONDITIONING
FEEL SO LIVELY PERM
0

Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS -The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossand Memortal Library will
be at the'followlng places the week
of No". 7 to Nov. 11.
Monday - Ewing, 1:15-1:45
·p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m.; Adney •
Rd., 2:45-3:15 p.m.; Vinton P.O ..
3:·30-4:30 p.m.; Bidwell, 5-6 p.m .;
Harrisburg, 6: 15-6:30 p.m.
Tuesday - Eno, 2: 30-3 p.m.;
Rece, 3: 05-3:20 p.m.; Africa Rd.,
3:30-3:45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3:50-4:20
p.m.; Kyger II. 4:25-4:40 p.m.;
Roush Lane I, II, 4: 45-5: 15 p.m.;
Cheshire I, 6-6:30 p.m.; Cheshire II,
6:35-7 p.m.
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2: 30

THE GALLIA
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OH. 45631
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7:30p.m .. Saturday, Nov. 12, at The
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. Music
will begin at 7 p.m. with the Rev. W.
H. Perrin to perform the ceremony.
The reception will be held in the
Meigs Multipurpose Building, Mul·
berry Heights, Pomeroy.

•

FREE
Set Up
ancl
Delivery

I

POEMROY - Plans have been
completed for the open-church
wedding of Shari Mitch, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Mitch, and Joe
Garnes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Garnes.
The wedding will take place at

Bookmobile schedules

Times-Sentinel Stall
Things are lool~ ' '
Kenneth Russell,
Racine,
ior a
couple of reasons.
: Kenneth has
liad some rough
&lt;lays physically
. Members Of the Southern High
lately. He beSchool Band have put In a busy few
Came very m In cietiiiier
'
days observing "band spirit week"
Russell credits the local emergency
and included in the observance
u:rilts with saving his life. Believe . were concerts at the Portland,
JTM?, she can't find enough good Syracuse and Letart Elementary
Yibrds for these emergency peo- Schools. John Van Reeth, director,
ple ...the Racine and the Transfer
is turning things arountl at Southern
Unit or the. Meigs Emergency with instrumental music. The band
Medical Services.
which was at absolute rock bottom
-l{enneth undeiWent emergency a couple of years ago now has 35
major surgery at Riverside Methomembers and Is ~g.
diSt Hospital In Columbus on Oct.
u;; and he Is now released and you'll
Wanted to remind you pet owners
~glad to know, Is doing fine. He
that a rabies clinic will be held next
wUl be recovering until some time
Satunday from noon to 3: :ll p.m. at
[Q': December at the hOille or his the EMS structure, Rutland Civic
daughter, Kenda, (-Mr. and Mrs.
Center under the co-sponsorship of
Fjpyd T. Chapman and daughters,
the Meigs CountY Humane Society
Shelly and Kim, at Pickerington.
and the Meigs County Qepartment
il:e has already received many of Health.
cards and encouraging calls from
Dr. Carol Osborn wUI be In
~ds and he really appreciates
charge and rabies shots will be $3
your enoouragement. You can neeach. Other shots are available at
qimber him · in care of F1oyd T.
various costs. Dogs must be on a
Cliapman, 450 Brandy Hll, Plckeleash and cais and other animals
rf1!gton, Ohio, 43147.
must be confined.
-And, of course, Mrs. Russell Is
mi&gt;re than happy to receive wond
Do tiy to remember Nina
thllt her son, Capt. Karl Russell who
Wagner who will be observing her
II$ been In the area of Beirut is 94th birthday on Nov. 11. Her
okay. She and daughter, Kenda . address Is 324 E . Main St.,
attended the Ohio Ecumenical
Pomeroy.
M,emorial Service held In obses~ce of the tragic loss of Uves and
Hey - It's getting the season
Injury to personnel In Beirut on Oct.
when all of us turkeys are going to
23. The service was held at Trinity be popular - once a year, we have
Ej)Iscopal Church, Broad Street,
OUR day. Youkeepsmllingnow .....
Ol)umbus, and was quite lrnpresswe, Mrs. Russell reports.

Hair Techntaues1
675-6272
2415 Jackson
No. 2
Point Pleasant

held In the church social room
Immediately following the
wedding.
Miss Stout is a graduate of
Eastern High School and Is em- .
played at Keebaugh's Shake
Shoppe.
Soulsby is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Is employed In the
Meigs County Sheriff ' s
Department.

Things are looking up·
By BOB HOEFLICH

son of Mrs. Nondus Hendricks,
Racine.
The open~hurch wedding wUI
take place on Nov. 19 at 2:30p.m. at
the Racine First Baptist Church.

, Mitch - Garnes

Beat of the bend

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Jlmmer Soulsby

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POMEROY- Ms. Janice Deem,
Pomeroy, and Norman Deem,
Syracuse, announce the approach·
ing marriage of their daughter,
Denise Deem. to Steven Hendricks,

Stout - Soulsby

.' POMEROY

Coonle Stout

Deem Hendricks

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. . She Is a graduate of Gallia
· Charles Collier, Gallipolis, are Academy High School and Mar·
announcing the engagement and shall University. She Is employed
~pproachlng marriage of their
by Presbyterian Medical Center.
daughter, Jill Collier. t(} 'Tim Dallas, Texas.
Snyder, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Snyder Is a graduate of ParkersKenneth Snyder Jr., VIenna, W.Va. burg High School and Marshall
The ceremony will take place University. He Is employed by
AprU 7, 1984, at St. Louis Catholic Graphiks of Dallas, Texas.
Church, Gallipolis.

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Peaches ................. :..... SJ.36 lb.
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Michelle Renee Cummins
Jonathan ~ott Rees

JUJCoWer

Collier Snyder

POMEROY

_DRIED ~FRUITS
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officiate the double-rtng, · open
church ceremony .
She Is the owner and operator of
Sheppard Sales and Service In
Gallipolis. Stiltner, although retired, will be Joining the business
follOwing their wedding.

Cummins - Rees

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Daisy} mini-series'begins

By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Tele1(lslon Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) -Who would
have thought NBC could rinse the
suds from Judith Krantz ' bestselllng novel?
Princess Daisy loses her mother

ment, with scene design by Bruce
Greenwood, audltorla manager
and technical director.
Dan Henthorn, senior, New Mar·
tlnsvllle, 1 Yvea Duncan, senior,
Logan, Greg Icenhower, freshman,
Winfield, and Robert Miller, junior,
Madison, are cast In the roles of
Johnny, Cella. John Sr. and Polo
Pope.
Assistant Directors are Ed Hea-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-8-7

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

=======Engagements=======

Play explores effects of drugs

Marie Keever,
Edgar Atkins
exchange vows

NoY&amp;mber 6, 1983

Nowmbet 6, 1983

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

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Pomeray

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

8-8

November 6, 1983

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

or

Phawkey name to return to ·a place at Marshall
'

: Following an. 11-year absence, biiia from the old Shawkey Student Student Union when it was being D. Tippett. student body president
who later becamse manager of the
OJe name of Morris P. Shawkeyw!ll Union. ·
demolished. Several months ago,
facility for several months; Judge
be restored to the Marshall Un!ver·
The dedication program also will he presentt'd it to Mrs. Tee! for the
W. Ferguson, president of
Charles
31ty campus In eeremonies begin· Include a tribut~ ~9a.)l:key by Dr. Marshall archives.
the
Alumni
Association, and Dabnlng at 10 a. m. Friday, Nov. lf.
Mrs. Teel told Acting President
Kenneth Ambrb"se. chamnan of I he
ney
Caldwell
Jr.. representing the
; At that time, MU acting Presi- Physical Facilities and Planning Clagg of the gUt and their discusJ.
L.
Caldwell
Estate, a major
tlent . Sam Clagg will formally . Commit tee, and brief remarks by sions led to the proposal to establish
purchaser
of
the
Student Union
3edicate a room in Memorial Cecil J. Ferguson. manager of the a Shawkey Room in Memorial
bonds.
Student Center as the Morris P . Student Union from 1934 to 1945, and Student Center.
The Marshall Student Council
Shawkey Room In recognition of the W. Don Morris. manager of the
Built In the midst of the Great
and
the Huntington Kiwanis, Roformer Marshall College president Student Union from 1945 until his Depression, Shawkey Student Untary
and
Lions clubs voted \O name
who ser:ved from 1923 to 1935.
ion was considered a model ior such
retireme nt In 1978.
the
Student
Uniori In Shawkey's
: The event, open to the public, will
Clagg said more tha~ 250 invita- student recreational structures. A
honor,
as
originator
of the Idea.
take place 50 years from the date of tions have been sent to various private corporation was 'estabShawkey
served
as · president
lhe dedication of Shawkey Student offic ials, participarits in the 1933 lished aft er students voted to assess
during
Marshall's
forrnatlv~
years
Union, Nov. 11, 1933. The old dedication , Shawkey-era faculty themselves a special fee to build a
Student Union was demolished In members and to others known to student union In 1931. The corporathe late summer of 19'/.2 following have· a special interest. Among tion then sold bonds to help fina nce ~------------1
~mpletlon of Memorial Student
those planning to attend is Morris C. the construction and furnish the
€enter.
Shawkey of Galloway. Ohio, son of building. Built by M. W. Zinn, the
VOTE FOR
: "President_ Shawkey stands out the former Marshall pres ident.
Student Union cost $23,481, with an
~ one of the stro ng leaders in
. Also to be recognized are Hun - additi onal $2,600 being used to
Marshall's history," Clagg noted. tington attorney David H. Daugh· , furnish it.
"We believe it is most appropriate erty and Marshall library arc hivist .
It was to become lhe "second
· that his name · be. restored to the Cora Tee!, Cla gg said. Daugheriy's home" of several ge~eratiO!lS of
GUYAN TOWNSHIP
campus In a meaningful way. "
late fat her, Duncan W. Daugherty, Marshall students and a favorite
· He said the campus P hysical was attorney for the grm.Jp which landmark for Marshall alumni.
TRUSTEE
A crowd of several tbousand FacUlties and Planning Committee built the Shawke9 Student Union
had approved renaming of the and was one of the leaders in the one estimate put it at 10,000 NOV. 8, 1983
Special Dining Room in Shawkey 's construction ·effort. David H. attended the Nov. 11, 193.3 dedicahonor. The room will feature a Daugherty, a former Marshall tion ceremonies, highlighted by an
Paid for by the Candidate
large original portrait of Shawkey , st udent body president, rescued the address by Gov. Herman G. Kump.
along with a collection of memora- 1933 dedication plaque from the Other participants Included Virgil

establishment of the Gr_aduate
as a degree-granting Institution, the
School.
first tour-year bachelor's degrees
having been initiated In 1920. Under
Shawkey had had a distinguished
his leadership, the College of Arts
career even before assuming the
and Sciences was established, · Marshllll presidency, serving as
joining Teachers College as Mar- Kanawha County Schools supertn·
shall's princi pal academic tendent and West Virginia State
components.
Schools superintendent.
He obtained accreditation from
Shawkey died aboard a train near
two regional accrediting associaSavannah, Ga., Feb, 6, 1941.
tions and laid the_foundation for

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Buckeyes bombard IU
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) - TaUback Keith
Byars rushed for 100 yards and four touchdowns
Saturday, leading 14th-ranked Ohio State to a 56-17
Ten Collference toqtball victory over Indiana arid
extending the Buckeyes' unbeaten string against the
Hoosiers 10 28 games.
.
Byars' Hrst two touchdowns came as Olllo. State ·
raced to a comfortable 28-3 halftime lead.
Tile HO&lt;Elers, unable to move on the ground, had to
rely on the passing of quarterback Steve Bradley. But
the Indiana sophomore was Intercepted three times,
each one Je8ding to a touchdown run by Byars.
Ohio State got its first touchdown three minutes Into
the game on a 44-yard pass from quarterback Mike
TomcZak to Thad Jemison. Indiana then had the ball
less than a minute before Orlando Lowry's
Interception gave the Buckeyes the baU at the Hoosl~r
26. Byars ran three times, scoring from the 2.
His . second touchdown, a 24-yard run midway

mg

through the second period, came seven plays after
Spencer Nelms picked off a Bradley pass at midfield.
Byars appeared to be stopped at the 15 but broke loose
from safety Chris Sigler and ran In lor the score.
Byars' third touchdown, a 1-yard n.m, came five plays
after Garcia Lane retnrned an Intercepted pass 13
yards to the Hoosier 21 !it the third quarter. ·
Byars' last touchdown, another 1·yarder with 5:43
to play, capped a al-play, 96-yard drive.
Indiana's only points of the first halfcamea35-yard
field goal by Doug Smith. Th~ Hoosiers added a
third-quarter touchdown on a 12-yard pass from
Bradley to Len Kenebrew and a 33-yard pass from
reserve Cam Cameron to Stephan Benson as time ran
out in the final period.
The victory Uf!ed Ohio State to 5-2 in the Big Ten and
7-2 tor aU games. Indiana, wlllch last beat the
Buckeyes in 1951, feU to 2-5 and 3-6. '

•

·~

Wolverines rip Boilermakers

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) while charging to a 35-3 halftime
Michigan quarterback Steve Smith lead.
set a school record with four
Smithran29yardsforMichigan's
touchdown passes and ran tor tlrst TD at 5: 'IT of the ttrst quarter.
another score Saturday as the
Sixty~ seconds later, defensive
13th-ranked Wolverines romped to a back Jeff Cohen blocked a punt by
42-10BigTencoUegefootballvictory Purdue's Matt Kinzer and Carlton
over Purdue.
Rose recovered In the end zone for
Smith, who played less than three another Michigan touchdown as the
quarters, cori!pleted 11 of 13 passes · Wolvertnes bunt"a 14-0f!rst-quarter
for 159 yards and kept the ball on 12 lead.
·
option plays lor an additional 126
In the second quarter, Smith
yards for 285 total yards - his hookedupwithTrlandoMarkrayfor
third-best day as a collegian.
a 41-yard touchdown pass play,
The triumph Improved Michi- tossed a ll-yard scoring bomb to
gan's record to7-2fortheseason,6-1 VIncent Bean and teamed with Slm
In conference play. The Boilermak- Nelson for an 18-yard TO pass play.
ers sllpped to2-9-1overall and2-4-1in
The Boilermakers' only points In
the Big Ten. the first half came on a 31-yard field
The Michigan defenSe, tops In the goal by Tim Clark In the second
conference against ~ pass, came quarter.
up with threeflrst-half!nterceptlons
Smith flipped a 4-yard TD pass to
and a blocked punt and the Bean at 8:01 of the third quarter.
Wolverines converted three of those
Purdue reserve quarterback Jim
four turnovers Into touchdowns Everett hit flanker Jeff Prtce with a

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~imes- ~tntintl Section
November

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50-yard m bomb with :Jl seconds
remaining In the game for the
BoUermakers' only touchdown.
Several players had tossed three
m passes in a game for Michigan
but nobody had done If loUr times
before Smith.
His Saturday also enabled Smith,
a 6-foot, 194-pound senior from
Grand Blanc, Mich. to break the old
school passing mark of 4,284 by Rick
Leach. Smith now~ 4,348 passing
yards with two regular season
games and possibly .a post-season
bowl game.
There were representatives !rom
five post-season bowls - Peach ,
Hall of Fame, Fiesta, Sugar and
Gator-In the press box Sat\!rdaY.
Purdue's talented Scott CampbeU
- rated first In the Big Ten In total
offense coming Into the game completed 14 of 29 for 118 yards with
three Interceptions.
Michigan's defense has .Intercepted 12 passes this season.

f

jl
·•

West Virginia dumps Temple;
.
Penn State bombards Brown

• f..

OR TABLE AND CHAIRS.

from the 2-yardllnewas ruled out of Dame and Pitt, they would wind up
MORGANI'OWN. W.Va (AP) ·
_
Quarterback Jeff Hostetler tossed bounds, ending an Owl drtve wlllch 6-6.
lasted
more
than
seven
minutes.
Brown,
the
five-touchdown
undertwo first half touchdown passes to
FredO!arlesandCamZoppeach
dog
!rom
the
Ivy
League,
played
RJch Hollins and West VIrginia
scored. on four of Its first six blocked Temple punts In the second surprisingly tough except for the b!g
possessions Saturd&amp;y as the 17th- half. TheMountalneerstookoverat plays that beat them. It was their
ranked Mountaineers bounced back Jhe Temple 16 after Charles snutled f!tth loss of the season against two
from a two-game losing streak to KipShenefell'sldckandwith the aid victories and a tte.
of a roughing the passer, penalty
Brown actually outgained Penn
beat Temple 'rf-9.
West Virglnta, 7-2, kept Its bowl against the Owls got a 32-yard field Slatelnf!rsthalltotaloffense,229-25,
butstWtralledl7-7. ·
·- ·
hopes alive as Hostetler completed fromWoodside. ·
Penn State took a 7-0 lead In the
A44-yardpasslnterferencecaUon
14 of 23 passes for 175 yards,
Including scoring passes of 5 and 44 West VIrginia helped the Owls, 2-6, • first quarter as Williams' 31-yard
move In lortheironlytouchdownas 'run triggered a seven-play 62-yard
yards to Hollins, a senior split end.
The 5-yand- pass to Hollins Palmer carried In from the 4-yard drive capped by qWlf\erback Doug
completed a 78-yard drive on West llnewith10:18remalnlng. TheOwls' Strang's 6-yard touchdown run.
·
VIrginia's first offensive possession. other points C8!Jll! on Jim Cooper's
secondquarterfleldgoalof:llyards.
On Its third possession, the MountaiMeanwblle, touchdown runs of 61
neers moved !Kl yards In 11 plays,
CINCINNATI (AP.) "--- Reggie
scoring on sophomore running back yards by Jon W1111ams, 55 by Kenny
Jackson and 44 by D.J. Dozier Taylor rushed for 128 yards and a
Tom Gray's31-yardrun.
Paul Woodside' s50-yard field goal highlighted PennState's38-21routOf touchdown and teammate · Mike
Morton kicked three field goals to
and Hostetler's second scoring pass Brown In college football Saturday.
Tile victory assured Penn State of spark Cincinn.atl over Rutgers 18-7
toHolilns, whobrokeawayfromtwo
Owl tacklers on a post pattern, gave tts 45th consecutive oon-losing In non-conference college football
the Mountaineers a 24-3 halftime season, extending its National Saturday.
Collegiate Athletic Association reCincinnati's Bearcats evened
lead,
West Virginia's defense held cotd. The last time Penn State had a their season mark at 4-4-1 as they
l~lng season was in 1938 when the overcamelhemlslake-piaguedScaTemple four times Inside the 5-yard
rlet Knights, ·3-6, who committed six
line In the third quarter. A Lions were 3+1.
turnovers
on four tumbles and three
controversial fourth down pass
Even II they lost the two
remaining games against Notre interceptions.
from Tim RJordan to Paul Palmer

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Buckeye's second tally ol the first quarter in
Bloomington Saturday. Byars ·ran lor 99 yards and
two touchdowns In the first hall. (AP Laserphoto).

. overtime because of breakdowns.
Florian Kempf missed field goals
each weekandmlssedanextrapolnt
last week that could have been the
victory margin over Cleveland,
wlllch eventually won 25-19 In
overtime.
The Oilecs' defense, dotted with
rookies and Inexperienced · performers, has shown steady Improvement.. It still is last In the
American Football Conference
against the rush, but!thas lmproved
to six th In pass defense with the
development of Its yougsters;
Rookie cornerback Steve Brown,
who got his first pro Interception
against Cleveland, said: " I don 't
look at 0.9. Realistically , we're
striving for the future. We're
developing pride in each other. pride
In ourselves. We're gelling confidence playing with each other."
The Bengals have rallied around
their defense aU season, despite a
series ·of injuries. Coach Forest
Gregg said that replacements for
Injured starters have kept the
defense together .
Glen Collins replaced defensive
end Ross Browner while Browner
was sitting out a four·game suspen-

5

' 9 9 9 95
NOW .
__

ann."

.

McDonald responded with a 19-tor-41 passing
performance and one touchdown in leading the
Biowns to a 26-19 overtime victory over the Houston
oners.
"It's obvious I was jittery In theflrsthall and that I
. made some mistakes I should not have made," said
McDonald, who'll girt a second start Sunday against
tile Green Bay Packers at MUwaukee County
Stadium.
"I wllll a bit rusty," the left-bander continued. "In
the
half I was more canfortable, and played
better. I'm thankful oilr defense played outstanding
trOm the fourth quarter on and that our running game
was so etfecttve ...yoo sure learn a lot more playing

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'

College scores
By The Mioclated ~
Et\.'oiT

Boston Coll{'f!:e 31 .. Arnw H
Penn Sr :ll. llrown 21
Syr..tl'U5e 1~ . Navy 7
W. Virgin ia Tl , Tf'ITlplf"9

wurn

!\Jnbmna 32, L"iU 2'6

Cl('l'nsoo lfi . N Carolina J
Dul«&gt; 31. Wakt:' CorPs! 21
N. c; arollna St :\3, APP&lt;IIOChian Sl. 7
1\oJIDWfST
M lchlj.!!tn 42, Purdut&gt; Hl

Missouri 10. Oklahom.t II
Ohio St fl4i, lndlnna 17
Toledo W, W. MIC'hi,Lian 16
TUlsa 22. Dmkr&gt; 1.l

SOliTII
S. Mls.&lt;;Lo;stppl "..'7,

Loul.~viUr

.1

MIDWt~T
Killl~~ 2.1

ColOrado J.l .
Ni'br(ISkll 7'J., Iowa St. 29
s. llllnols :21&lt;. mt nol~ 'li
SOLITHWI-.':0\T
~ them Me! h. 2fl. fUrr. 6

T&lt;'xas 9, lloustoo 3
Te.tas Ch risll.m !{), Trxas T{'('h 10. ti•·
Jo'AR Wt"'ST

A.lr F'ortt

4~.

Hawiill 10

Including the clinching touchdown In overtime.
"Basically, I just run on Instinct, " said Green, who
has 323 yards on 64 carries this season. "I get to 1he
hole as quick as possible, The first thing l do after 1ge1
by the defensive line Is to look and see where the
defensive backs are, then see where my men are and
follow their blocks.'' '
Cleveland snapped a two-game losing streak in
defeating the Ollers to improve Its record to 5-4 in the
NFC Central, twO games behind Pittsburgh .'
Green Bay, 4-5, Is In the midst of a two-game slide
after altematlllg viCtories the first seven games. The
Packers trall .Min.nesota by two games In the NFC
Central.
.
A victory Is essential for both teams if they are to
harbor any hopes of making the playoffs.
"'This puts a lot of pressure on us." said Johnnie
Gray, the Packers' free safety of Sunday's game.
"We have divlslon~l games coming up - with
Detroit, Minnesota, Tampa Bay and two with

MILWAUKEE (AP)- Paul McDonald Is glad that
he has one grupe under his belt as the Cleveland
Browns' starting quarterback,
He got his firSt start in 1983 last week against
Houston when Browns' Coach Sam Rutigliano
decided to rest regular starter Brian Si~ for a "tired

·

{

sion for admitting he had purchased
cocaine. Outside linebacker Tom
Dinkle replaced Guy Frazier. who
was sidelined w.ith a broken hand.
"We've had a lot of changes," said
Gregg. "But the guys are playing,
hard, team defense. That defense
has kept us In games all year."

McDonald.gets second start

'720.90

NOW ·

I

~

~

HOUSTON (AP) - Sunday's
National Football · League battle
between the Houston Oilers and the
Cincinnati Bengals could have heen
a good "misery loves com!&gt;any"
meeting. But the Bengals have
ruined the plot by winning their last
·
twogames.
The Oilers have lost 16 in a row
aver the last two years, including
nine this season.
The Bengals had lost six of their .
first seven games this year, before
beating Cleveland and Green Bay in
their last two games . .
In those victories, Cincinnati's
offense eliminated the mistakes that
had plagued the team early In the
season, The Bengals' &lt;jefense,
meanwhUe, ranks No. I In the
National Football League.
"We haven't been turning the ball
over and makllig mistakes ," said
Cincinnati quarterback Turk Schonert.'"engtneer of the two victories.
"Early In the season we were
beating ourselves. Now we. give
ourselves a chance to win."
The Oilers alsO have given
themselves chances to wi the past
twL weeks, but each time \heY lost In

·'

.

....

Hapless Oilers ·host Bengals

SPE(:IAL

PINE. TABLE -CHINA· 6 CHAIRS PADDED SEATS

,,,.,.

tl

'

HOP, SKIP, JUliiP - Ohio State Keith Byars
(41) jumps through Indiana defenders' Dennis
Edwards _(right) and Joe Fitzgerald (left) to score the

Bearcats post win

00

• '•

.r

'

11ft

Not Exactly
As Pictured

'

'

'

'

'

a. lnt&amp; ,..W Gl lldlcll a&amp; Uahaillt)
!'I

5

f·llran'

5

Pan, Pa.,
'm-TedMeek-h(M)IDtl

Ilea p llnlwlei (17) • .&lt;AP r ne IJb*).

than you do on thesidellne."

,

, McDonald got a 1ilg boost Sunday from running
· back Boyce Green, who amassed 239 total yards,

'

It

1

Chicago.
'"Those games are going to be 'must' games for us,
because It's our ~l .tn.wln the division championship. We have not given up hope. There's lot of
football ahead for us."

a

�•

Page

C2-1he Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

November 6, 1983

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

North Gallia stops KC, captures SVA title
attack. The Pirates gained 289 total
yards to KC's 122. In what ' later
amounted to a heavy passing game
by the Bobcats, KCCOIIIIECtedonslx
passes after 13 tries. NG, which
passed only eight times - one of
them leading to · their second
touchdown- and completed four.
The game began with NG
repelling a strong Bobcat ldckoff
into their ten1tory. BUt KC played
on equal terms and kept their hosts
from making any progress until
Blake employed an unexpected
piece of strategy - a quarterback
sneak by Scott Pickens with4: 261eft
in the first stanza allowed the senior
tri-captain to break loose for 20
yards and burst Into the Bobcats'
endzone for NG's first touchdown.
KC, not to be denied a chance at
holding NG back, successfully
blocked a pass attempt by Pickens
to Penick for extra points.
Little else but strong defensive
play and first dowrs marked the
remainder of the quarter, and the
same preva!led throughout the
secon~ quarter. But with only a
minute rerna!nlng in the haU, a pass
by Pickens to Thurman HoUlday
took the Pirates deep into the
visitors' teriitory.
On the next several plays, Penick
tried driving It in,.com!ng as close as
the 3-yard line, but the clock ranoot
thus the Pirates led, 6.() at the half.
Coach Hariman's crew carne
back strong as the third quarter
'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVPiitaff

I

.

. PREPARING FOR T.~CKLE - A Kyger Creek rusher prepares
a&amp;alnst a tackle by North GaDia's Tbn Smith (88) during the
~pionshlp game between KC and North Gallia Friday.

VJNTON - When two cross'
CO\lnty rivals like North GaUla and
Kyger Creek get together in football,
you can be sure there's going to be
excitement - particularly If the
Southern Valley Athletic Confer·
ence title is on t]Je line.
Both teams went for all the
marbles here Friday, playing each
other toalmost a standstill, butwhen
the dust had settled, John Blake's
Pirates cinched their second consec·
ut!ve championship with a hardwon, 12-7 victory,
ThegameputNG 'soverailrecord
at S.l and 5.() in the league, while
MarkHartman'sBobcatsended the
year 4-1 in the SVAC and 7·2 on the
season. NG won the title in 1982 with
an 8-1 overall record and a perfect
slate in the league when it ended the
season with a28-6w!noverKC. That
was NG's first championship since
1959. The Pirates have now won 11
straight SVA,C games dating back to
the 1981 season.
Eric Pen!~k. the Pirates' . gogetting rusher, completro his football career at NG with 1,795 total
yards. After compUlng 369 yards in
the Southwestern game two weeks
agoandgalning223yardsatHannan
Trace last week, a determined KC
1:lefense held Penick to 113yards on
31 carries.
· Steve Waugh, carrying the balll8
times for 48 yards, led KC' s rushing

Jackson dumps Athens, takes second in SEOAL
ATHENS - Quarterback Jon
Clay rejoined the Jackson Ironmen
Friday night and guided them to a
25-}4 SEOAL victory over the host
At!Jens Bulldogs.
Clay, an outstanding senior ath· .
Jete at JHS. was supposedly
sidelined for the remainder of his
senior year due to a nagging leg
lnfury, but was cleared by doctors
th!s week to resume his ·sports
competition.
Frtday night , fullback J ohn Price
put Jackson on top with a two yard
TD run In the first quarter at the
2:58 mark.
Just over a minute later Price
int¢rcepted a pass from hls linebacker position and returned it 30
yards to paydirt to put Jackson up
12.{1.
Following Price's score Athens'
Steve Robe returned the ensuing
kickoff 91 yards to the JHSone yard
Dewey Cantor dragged him
do!m from behind.
It took the Bulldogs
three oiavs to
.

score with quarterback Dave MeAl·
lister going over from the one on the
first play or the second quarter.
Chrts Torres kicked the extra point
to reduce the margin to 12·7.
With just 37 seconds remaining in
the half Plice tallied his third
touchdown on a three yard run but a
conversion pass fa!led and the score
stood IS-7 at Intermission.
With 3:42 remalnlng in the third
period Clay tossed a 27 yard scoring
strike to Joey Wyant and Wyant
added the placement for a 25-7 lead.
Th~ clock •.showed one minute
remaining in th·e"contest when Dave
McAllister found Chris Leonard

with a 10 yard scoring pass and
Torres added the placement to
close out the scoring.
The Ironmen finished in second
pl~ce behind Ironton with a J.l ·
league mark
recordofwhile
overall
7·3. compiling an
Athens, under Dave Smith, con·
eluded the season at 1·3 and 2·8.
Although he was injured in the
third period and did not -return to
the game Price led all rushers with ·
23 carries and 113 yards.
The Ironrnen rolled up 17 first
downs; 202 yards rushing, and hit
seven of 12 passes fpr 129 yards.
Athens showed a minus 27 yards

JlukeibaiiSchedllle
IJIIS.IBI!I
(Sbawaee Ranren)
Nov.IJ. •-euyahogaComm.College,2p.m.

IJelpre earns
playoff berth

'IS.

lJELPRE - The Bepre Golden
Eagles are in the division rv state
playoffs for t!Je first time in the
scl)ool"s history completing a 10.0
season with a 14·13 win over Warren
rh;,al Friday.
Jlelpre, coached by Ralph
H&lt;9&lt;1er, wll! play the Coal Grove
Hornets in a site to be determined
Sunday night at a meeting In
Co]umbus.
The criteria for the site is that it
must have adequate parking with a
staillum that seats at least 4;00J.
Choices include Ironton, Athens, or
Marietta .
. jhe 10.0 record marks the first
unt;jefeated, untied season in the
school's history. The Eagles were
7.0:2 in 1955.

TO

ssooo

p.m.

OFF

All Men's
Frye
Boots
. Layaway.Foi

Dec. 16, Ohlo Valley College (Parkersburg ,
W.Va .). 7: :K) p.m .
Dec. 18, •-Sullivan Jr. College, 2 p.m .
Dec. 21, •-anctnnatt Tech. College, 7::1)

Christmas

p.m.
Jan. 6. Sinclair Comm.
Ohio ). 7

IFJJX.EI
,.

-

NEW MOVIES -

Muscle Motion
XTRO .
Max Dugan Returns
Space Hunter
There's A Girl
In My Girl
Blue Thunder

live &amp; Let Die
The World According
to Garp
Arthur
Something Wicked
This Way Comes

I

Col~e

·

lDayton,

p.m.

Jan. 22, • -Sinclair Comm. College, 2 p.m.
Jan. 28, · -Northwest Bus. College, 7 p.m.

The
_Shoe Cafe

Feb, 4, • -Vincennes Unlv. (HomecomUlgL

CI...EARING THE WAY - Nol'th Galila quarter-

800 Second, Gallipolis

bado; Scott

~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;~

RE-ELECT

Pickens (15) nms Interference against

Kyger Creek's steve Waugh (32) whllePiralerusher

Eric Pe~ (21) nm&lt;&gt; for clearance during Friday's

7::11 p.m .
.
.
Feb. 5, · -Lakeland Comm. College, 2 p.m.
Feb. 11, •-Sullivan Jr . CoUege, 8 p.m.
Feb. 18, Sullivan Jr . College, 8 p.m.
Feb. 19, •-Lee's Jr. College, 4 p.m.
February - NJCCA Regional ToWila·
ment, Dayton , Ohlo. Region XIJ Playoff, site
lobe named.
·
March - National Tournament, Hutchln·
son, Kan.
· -DenOies home games.

SVAC championShip game. Looking on ·at left are
KC's Frank Swanson (5,1). an unidentified Pirate
player and Bobcat defender Chuck Vogel (35). 'lbe
PiratEs won, 12-7. .

~orth Gallia

ROGER C. GAUL

LUMBER &amp; HOME CENTER

Continued from C-2
'
fought each other for yardage.
:Neither side was to come close to
S!}Orlng again, and the final seconds
otthe game were devoted to a strong
d«!!ensive show by NG to ' keep Its
sdortng margin.
;J.D. Bradbwy led in defense for ·
K~. while NG's Matt Kemper took
tackling honors with 13 sacks and
Biian HawkS had 10.

EASTERN LOCAL .
SCHOOL BOARD
VOTE AND
SUPPORT APPRECIATED."
~~YOUR

Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

ROOF
SHINGLES

Department ............. .. ........... NG
Fttst diM'ns ...... ........ .. ....... ....... 10
Y4rds rushlng ......... .......... - ..... 197

KC
7
62

Yards pass\ng .... ...... ................. 92

60

4-door, yellow w-tan Interior, V-6 engine, automatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, air cond., am .fm 8 track, stereo, radial tires, wire wheel

covers.

'4300

Total yardagE&gt; ........... .............. . 289
122
Passes attempted ....... .. ........ , ..... B
13
P&lt;lsses completed ...... .... ....... .... . 4
6
Interceptions .............. ... ............ 4
1
Fumbles ... ............... .......... .. ..... 3
o
0
Fumbles lost ..... .'........ ............... 3
Penaltles ...... ..... ............. ..... ... 6.fJJ
~50
SOOrebyqu-...
North Callla ...... ..................6 0 6 G-12
Kyger Creek ...... ........ ........... 0 0 7 D-7

stiB"x5tB'x17' Fott

WEATHERS:rRIP - -

39C

.each

1980 AMC SPIRIT
Red w.tan Interior, 2 door hatchback, 6 cylinder, 4 speed. power
steering &amp; brakes, am radio, radial tires. WAS $3495 .

Reds sign catcher

Now'2900

CINCINNATI (AP) - Minor
league catcher Brad Gulden, who
played for the New York Yankees'
Columbus farm team in 1883. has
signed a one-year contract with the
Cincinnati Reds.
Gulden, 27, a lett-handed hitter,
batted .316 in 94 games with the
International League's Columbus
Cllppers last season, hitting nine
home runs and drlv!ng In 47 runs.
Gulden, a product of the Los
Angeles Dodgers farm systefl), has
played in 58 major-league games
with the Dodgers, Yankess, Montreal Expos and Seattle Mariners.
He was placed on the Reds •
40-rnan winter roster to await spring
traln!ng with the National League
club.

20 yrs. pro-raled warranly.
Cash ·N· Carry
SQ.

Cash ·N· Carry

BUY!

2'14' Lar·tn

CEILING
TIL£
Myatlc Wbtta

::=aual

t •tt•32· "

•

i'

..

_1

~~~=
..·"""···,....

each

se·

Whfta Craullllck

STORM
1DOOR
.

'

PLYWOOD
SHEATHING

*
~~

each

~~~~L~U~M~B~E~Rc·::::~~~ru;D;S~
~rttrirlrTTl

ROLL

Dark blue. 300 6-cylinder. 4 speed. power steering &amp; brakes. am radio,
brand new tires .

1

'6900

!h

LOcal bowling
Mond·a y Night Mixed standings for Oct. 24,

1983:
Team
M'.
Teaml ........... ............................... 36
Team 4 . .......... .......... .. ................... 32
Tham8 ........ .... ........ ... ........ ... ...... ,. 30
Team 3 ....... ............. .. ......... ..... ...... 24

· 4'X8'Xl5/32" CDY

ttrxc·,r COX Aaoocy Ctotliloi.
Pl. 'IWDOU
714
IHUTHtMI- sheet

L
12
lfi
18
24

1!11'•4'd'

WAFERIOAID -

Team 2 ............ .............................. 22 26

Team 7 ... .. ............... ... ........ ... ........ 22 26
Team 5 .... ......... ................. .... .. ..... . 14 . 34
Team 6 ............................... .. ........ , 12 36
Individual~ Team 1, 182 Sharon WWcoxen,
491 Linda _Grimm; TNm 4, 158-«K Gladys

Cash ·R· Carry

$789SHEET

MINI BLINDS

Grant, 199 Greg Wll5on, -HI Tom Sims; Team
8, rot)M) Delphine StarUng, 182-511! Emery

GARAGE DOOR
OPERATORS

e· R·ll
Uotmd

2-door, light redwood. vinyl top, V-6 engine, air cond .• cloth Interior,
am radio.

~~~----~ ...,:~'

•

Tuesday Morning standings for Oct. 25,

1983:

re....

.

'

1982 BUICI&lt; REGAL

Aa Low Aa•.

167-488 Alva Johnson; Team 2, ]47 Joan
Elkins, 392 Rhonda BUand; 203-573 CleM
Rupe; Team 7, 153432 Vlrgtnia Grover,
198-M9 Tom RusseU; Team 5, 161~ June
i\llm. 171-431 Many Glassburn: Team 6.
LJ:NtO Slleni Johnson. J84.485 Ralph Barcus.

CLO PAY

629
shoOI

Ready Made

Starling; Team 3, 17'2.f47 Tonla Worley,

HONDA
FOLLOW THE LEADER

p.m.

Jan. 8, Lakeland Comm. COllege I Mentor,
Ohk&gt;l. 2 p.m.
Jan. 15. Owens Tech College, 2: :J) p.m.
Jan. lB. anctnnall Tech. College, 7:;JJ p.m.
Jan. 21, Ohio Unlv . .(Chillicothe, Oh.lo). 4

·[~
· ·:
li -.~--~

,'

.

4, Cuyahoga Comm. College (C leveland, Ohio), 2 p.m .
Dec. 10, Nonhwesl Bus. College, 4 p.m.
Dec. 12, •.Qhio Unlv. (ChUUcothel , 8 p.m.
J::)('c .

l

$9''

Nov . 18-19, (lnvltalional Toumatn(&gt;nt)
Nov. a), •.owem Tech. College, 4 p.m .
Nov . 28, Vlnrennes Unlv. (Vincennes, Ind.) .
7::JJ p.m.
.
[)(&gt;c _ 1, Lee's Jr. College (Jackson, Ky .), 8

'

15 or 30 LB.
UPPER. RT. 7-JUST SOUTH OF THE HOLIDAY INN .

Nov. 17, Cincinnati Tech College

..

BLACK FELT
PAPER

.

Sh!'wnee schedule .. '
s11a..- Slale eoue,.

FIBER-GlASS

$21 99

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

.·

Continued on C-3

I

1983
•

r~A~th~e~n~s~...~..~.. ~..;.. ~...~..~·0~7~0~7~1~4±~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;~~~~~;;:;;:;;::;l

!me.

on the ground, completed eight of21
passes for 97 yards, and seven first
downs.
Score by quarters:
Jackson ...... ........ 12 6 . 7 1}-25

opened. NG's Mark Foreman
fumbled the Bobcats' kickoff which
allowed KC to drive deep Into the
Pirate territory.
The surge surprised NG, and the
Bobcats continued marching until
they had NG at the 3. Waugh then
rambled in for a TD with 9:49 on the
clock. A kick cy Mike Elliott gave
KC a 7-6 lead.
An inspired Bobcat squad !ben
continued to battle a wavertng
Pirate defense for the rest of the
quarter before the Pirates rallied
with 52 seconds remaining in the
canto, when Pickens connected oil a
5&amp;-yard pass to Jack GlassbW'!l.
Glassburn blasted through KC's
secondary to score the Pirates'
second and last touchdown.
A kick attempt for the extra point
failed, and the game entered the
final quarter with a 12·7 advantage
for the Pirates.
Action in the fourth canto nearly
paralled the second, as both teams

November

w.L.

Propleo Bank ...... .. ........ ............ ...... 46 1B

~~

.,'•
.,.,

Rtvervtf!¥1 Carryout ........ .......... .. ..... 46 18

.•

lly 10 ~or ..-e of Allie IIIUd'" luUiioa.
let $15 w fro• OwaiJ.tOralag•

..

lly 10 N1a or ...-e of uy allier Owu-Conlag
piD FIJierPs® laAJIIIH. let $10 liKk.

3%" · R·ll

INSULATION
•

em ·•· Carry

•14~SQ.n.
LAYAWAY FOR OIRISTMAS NOWH
SlOO

Will

Hold Your Layaway Until Dec. 24th

~

.'
•

crown

Phone 446-2240 - for Service Ph. 446:-2648
433 Upper Rlwr Raid

;. Just South of the Holiday Inn on Route

7~

GaUipolls, Gh.

Miller osub); crownCtty,2U-M&amp;Opo!Castcx
CI!IZ&lt;&gt;M, :117-5lll Vtclde Hauldren; Dlvorsl·
ft&lt;d, 110 Cathy VanWinkle, 4116 Helen

Owens-Coming Fiberglas insulation ever.

Attic Blanket ™R·25/8" Insulation
25 Per 31 %" sq. ft. -roll

•24~SQ.FT.

.'

1r Flllllt leull

--"...

HI·UNE CElLINI FAN

Drummond: Jack Roulll's, IIIH73 Sue
Reynddo: E.T., lliNDI Edna 1bo111j10011.
!lpllts~: B.llemard,B.Coptoy!21,
0. Cuto. 3-10; J . Clark2·7; B. Y-~7; B.
MUiel' 3-1·10; M. Wont, 6-7-ID and 6-7.

All customized with ail the goodies Including V-lenglne, air cond., tilt

FREEU8HTKm

,... ,.,

Cllllltr .... r·e •• •

.

wheel, cruise control, am-fm cassette stereo, TV, Ice box., captain's
chairs, plus much mare!

•.
"·
::

$AV~$AV~$AVE

~

20 VEHICLES
THAT QUALIFY FOR 11.83%

:•.

t-------::-=-::-::=-:-:-::-=-=-:::---'-----1 '·..

Team standings lor 'Ibursday SwlnR'E'I'I
League for Nov. 3 at Skyltne Laafll

teun

w.L

LUMBER
&amp; HOME CENTER~--~-83
· WAREHDUBE/SHOWROOMS
f

Jericho lnn ...... ......... ... ........ ... ........ e 23

Clltzen's ... ........................... .. ........ . C2
VIllage Pizza .................................. U
Eledrlc Motor s.rvtce .................... . 40
JOP Coin, Atty............. .................... 36
Womeldorfl 6 1bornas ...., ..... .. ....... .. 36

CAROLINA LUMBER
l ,ND

.

SUPPLY COMPANY
Caslt ·•· C,ny

each "" 14tttl4

CanadaY; ~ Pleollt,.., I~ Dotty
Copley; Mlchael "' Fr1l!ndl, 17H79 -

6W' • R·19
KIWT.f'"

INSULATION

:w

Shear Pleasure ............. .. ................ 24 40
MichaelA Frleods ........... ................ 22 26
Jack Roush's Motor
Car, Inc. ..................................... 18 .a
E.T.................... ........................... 15 49
individual: Peopleo, l~!li Phyllis Fergu·
son; Riverview. 187-wl DarHn Thornton;
Jaymar's. 167 !lev Yeaj!e&lt;, 48! Bart&gt;ora

It's the greatest way to buy good pink

Just $11

'·

Diversified tnvestment ................. .... 33 31

w

KRAFT.fACE

•

Jaymar's ... ........ .. ....... .. .. ..... .......... 43 21
aiY Mining ....... .. ... , ............. :rr rr
ctttzens N&amp;Uonal Bank ................. ....
lJ

675-1

312, ~Sbllt hiiiPitlsall)iMI
Hoono -y.Frtioy,h.OI..J,.•.; ~~Ill- I
'DI.U--11111

:J)

31
32

36
3&amp;

Clrele's ..... ..... .......... ... ................... JJ 39

•

Ellxoo ...... ................ .. ......... ........... 00 43

~t~l...

Jollnlon'1 Market ..... ,... ................. .. '11 45

Team. girl wit~ hlgll game aoo)llghart' lilted.
JerldiOilllt- J. Han11212. n
Elcutn - J. BragJr 198,4,54.
Joo Coin. Atoy. - P. Sa..-n Ill!, m.
CUtlleft'l - 0. Casto 193, 541.
vtUttP PIZZa- v. Jordotl 188, m.
Docll1c Molctr - K. Illite..... IC9, 4lB.
1
, _ . Marlre! - B. Floolcllll&amp;, t28.
Womotdllallllld Tho- '- M. Lookado

m,s.-&amp;10.

Splits con..ohid: L Morpa :J.IO split: J.
~· 3-ID optll.

•

·

t;~u•

ftTOI

IWiae

'

low I Loo .....e lw Till Hllllllflll•• Are•

·~-~URY

!:!!,.
..........
.................
.................

Te lenl YM - r t

T

'

STOP IN AND SEE

Merrill, Jay and Alan Evans
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDH 8' {.M·•• 8 P.M.
SATURDAY 8

. • 3 P.M •

'

•.
•
•
•

'

�Pap1 C 4 The .Sunday Tim8s-Se11tinel

Los An~ Raiders
Washlnlrtoo' at Nt"A' York Giants
MI:MNII,y, N'O'f . 1-1
I..os Anjjl{'Jes Rams &lt;1! Atlanta . !nl

l)mo,r('f' at

-

N&amp;tioMI FOotball Leupe
Atnertcan Conlerence

:Buffalo

•Miami
' B&amp;lflrnDI"f'

'Now Enp:land

, ;N.Y.

J(&gt;!S

: PltlsiJJflh
,Cleveland

' Hwston
Derl\lt&gt;r

11

LA Ralck-rs

''

"'
' ... "' ""
""'""''
""
0
w..
"'
•• ,,J
..,. "' "'
'
' •'
7
5

~ C'lnctnnatl

'~

" ' L T Ptlt. PF PA
J 0 .an m 182
J 0 .667 199
0 . - ~ li6 197
4
0 .444 199.
4
0
185

oSe&amp;H ~

J

4
6

0

9

.77'11 'ln 110
.!fl6 181
IBI

0
0
0

-I1J ""
,(ll)
~2

0
0
0
0
0

.667 l."i.l 141
-~

..""

:M2

4
4 5
.414 ·llt!
• San Diego
3
.33.'1 !ll Z1l
•
NalknW CAd~~
• Kar~Sa&lt;;.

City

'
......1
' '
'J 5

'

: Dalla$
, Wou;hln~on

0
0
0
I
,
6 I

7

PhlladPiphJa

"'"'"

:m

.444 l.'ti

lb7

:Tanipa Bay

~ "" "'
' .m
"""'"" 0 .fth
•' ' 0 ....... ,.,.., ""
""
3' 6
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0
in

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6

St.

t

LP.Iis

• N,Y . Giants

2

' Mln nPSOta
: Dt1roit

Jti6 214

215 Zl5

J

_

0

, cree11 Bay

5

• Chle~ p

0

....."'""

, LA Ram•
, N~· Orleans
tAtla111.a·

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w...
3

'
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.66'1 ,., 1..

0
0

4
4
5

198

170
[{() 141

0

.

.Yii 'lJ] \Jll

.5!6 :Ill :Ill
IJ'J

0
0

Sunday, Nov . &amp;
• Atlan ta at Nf'W Orleans
Clflc\nnatl at Houston

-"'

Salionid lledu&gt;y l.e&amp;l\ll'
"''l b {41M'ermt1"

Tampa Bay at MIMesota
Dallas at PhUadelphla
Cleveland VI;. Gf('flrl Bay a t Milwaukee
Los An geles Raiders a t Kan.~ City
•' San Djt&gt;gO ar Pittsburgh
' Butralo at Nl'\0.' Engla11d
1\Uaml at San Franc!s&lt;'o

•.

Den\'E'r at Seal!!('
Chk'ago at Los Al1s:,oeles Rams ·
BaltlmOI'(' a t N{&gt;W York Jl?u;
St Louis at Washing10n
Mondity, N~N . 1

NY Ranj;.'ers
Phlladelpt\la
t\Y isle!
Washlngron ·

w
9

'8

r.;f:".\. lf'l~·.

••
6

.,

" ""
'' ""'

0
0
1
0

16

u

&lt;l
.17
.To

I
I

17
17

5B

'' ' ·o'

15

.Yur..Div~

lbton

""'""'

BuffalO
Montrrul
HanfOrd

8
8
6

3
6

7
12
6 I u
C*l'!ptll'U CMh&gt;Mklf
Sorrill Dlvw.tn

(lllc~o

""n
" ""

&lt;J

.... ..
..
" . .,""'
1~

Q

'' ' '
J
•' '

Calgary

I

6
8

VanmJyer
l..oo;; Angeles
Wlnnlpll!:

21

recqrd.
Wahama, after a scoreless first
period drove Ill yards In seven plays
for the gsme' s first touchdown with
5: 53 remaining In the halt. Anthony
Divincenzo. Ron Bradley and PhD·
Up Stewart carried the better part
of the load dwing the drive which
was a1sa aided by a pair of 15 l!ard
penalties against the Yellow
Jackets. Stewart's 12 yard run on a
trap up the middle capped the
drive. Donnie VanMeter split the
uprights With tbe PAT to give the

White Falco1!5 a 7.0 lead ..
Williamstown recovered a Wa·
hama tumble at the WHS 30 yard
line to set up tbeir only score of tbe
evening. The bend area defense
seemingly had stopped their hosts
at the 28 but a third tlndelght screen
pass froJil Dave Lewellyn to Bobble
Kelley went for 28 yards and six
points With 2:37 left In the half.
Donnie VanMeter stopped Rod Zlde
short of the goal on the eonven;lon
attempt to keep Wahama In (ront
by a H margin.

j4

4
54
8
51
Frida)''11 Games
N.Y. lslandl-rs 6. New Jprsey 1
Was hington 5. Vall('OUver 4. OT

GOOD

liereFrtday.
', The Win capped a 10-0 season for
1lie Eagles and a ~-0 TVC slate, good
fOr their first TVC championship.
Warren Local ended at 6-3·1 and 6-3.
• Belpre took a 6-0 lead In the
second quarter when Brian Pelo·
quln Intercepted a pass and returned It 59 yards. The kick for the
extra failed.
, Warren edged out to a 7-6
~lme lead when Rob Knight
scored from seven yards on a pass
from Brian Benson. The kick was

l.05 Angf'les at lblon. InI
HanfQrd at Phlladt&gt;lpliB. lnl
Qurllec at Buffalo, in l
{).&gt;~mi t at Washlllgron, ( n)

"

"'

Basketball
NattonalllMketball .\IJIOctal:61n
FAS'I'!:RN CONFERENCE
AllllndC DMIIun

Sunda,·, No\1 . 13
Cincinna ti at !&lt;ansa.&lt;; City
~rolt a1 Hooston

New Jer.;(&gt;)•

PhUadclphla a! ChiCP~

~· York

Boston

3
3
3

Ph1ladt&gt;lphla

CI"CC'n Bay at Minnesota
Seanle ar St . Louis
Tampa Bay a1 Ck&gt;veland
MJaml a t ~· England
But1alo at N!.'w York Jets

Was~fi:lon

Mil wau~

Cll'\·pJand
Detroit
Chicago
Indiana

Nev.· Orleans at San F'nmclsco
'Dallas at San Diego

1
1
I
2

'
I

3

3

I

L..._.._

GB

""
-"""" -1

..

·"" '' ' ·""
' ,., '

c.n.... ..._

Atla11ta

Pittsburg h a t Ba tt:lmon.•

..

!100

3
3

I
1

3
3

2

.&lt;00

I~

.400

1\1

1 Belpre garnered all their needed
points With a Scott Clelland 38 yard
reception of a Lee Holder pass.
E;mle Williams ran In tbe two-point
('onversion.
•; Warren had a chance to win With
four minutes to go when Benson
' scored from a yard out. The try for
the go-ahead points after TD was
stopped short on a run .
· Ron Riffle capped a tremendous
career at Warren Local With 186
yards In 25 caiTles. Steve Smith led
Belpre With 53 yards in 17 carries.
l3elpre had 15 first downs and 153
yards rushing. Warren collected 13
first downs and 194 yards rushing.
: : By quarters:
Warren Local .... .... 0 7 0 6-13
j3elpre ............... .. . 0 6 8 0-14

-"" '

Southw-

'l'be vlctocy left Hannan Trace
a Dnal record of 4-5-1 while

estern, 30-12111 the season llnaJe for with

bOth .SVAC

schools Friday night.
Netther coach Jack James nor
Wildcat mentor Brett Wilson could
be reached for game statistics and
srorbtg details Saturday.

Southwestern completed tbeseasoo
at U.lnslde tbeSVAC, !be Wildcats
flnl.shed 1+1 whUe tbe Hlgblanders
were 1-4.

••

WE WELCOME YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
·: ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
ATMOSPHERE .

. ..

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

The Footprint
YoU It's oltferent

.

NEW DINNER HOURS
·. TUESDAY-THURSDAY •
.

if':'

5-9

The Orf{Jinal
All season Radial

,· FRIDAY -SATURDAY'
5- 10
.-.--~--..,~--·

NOW SERVING A NEW LUNCH MENU
-=~~-~-rr--•-~-~

.. -•-------

.; LIVE ENTERTMNMENT FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

"DEACON GILES"

•""i3 Wllltowlll.S1 :&amp;1 FEl

r-----------------------,

1
1
1
I

NOW BOOKING BANQUETS AND PARTIES
FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON
CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE

I
I
I
I

992· 3629

I

I .

Pt~'"""

P166111DR'

. El
3 wrut8'41flll . ,, ,!»1 F

· · snow
• Sun tire. (aan_.t~i it all
ttre """ .
t.tr 8 ·: ·one
.nate winter ttre.
, !ltmt
Qas-$BVtng

·-----------------------J
NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

cr.ngeover~ion
radia1~?"11teel belted tor

• save the cost ot ,l)owt/

. , eependable we
ttres rac:tion , Year roul)d
di'Y t son performance
all sea I ..a\ted radial
•·Stee ""'
A
tonatruction • ,.,proved tor tront or
~ear wheel dnye

• ()OU.,.e I

Vlldngs Win
: • McARTHUR- The TVC's most
Improved team, the Vinton County
Vllditgs, won their fourth straight
which evened their season mark to
5-5 With a dramatic 15·14 win over
arch-rival Wellston bere Friday.
·: Mike Ousley scored on the fourth
quarter's first play on a yard run
With Steve Crow scoring the
two-point conversion on a pass from
Terry Radekln. This had knotted
the score at 8-8. Wellston had scored
first In the second quarter when
&amp;teve Newman ran It over from five
yards out, Newman passing to
Jerry Aleshire for the extras.
• Wellston took a 14-B iead with 3: 50
iett in the game when Ed Spriggs
scored on a 34 yard fumble
recovery . The kick failed for the
extras. ,
' The game-winner came With 3: 02
)eft when Mike Hollender caught a
~ yard Radekin pass for six polllts
lijld Radekin kicked the extra point
lor the wln.
•

· -- - .. ~

~· Byquarters:

strenottl

\yellston ...... ,........ 0 8 0 6-14
:Vinton Co ....... ... .... 0 0 0 15-15

•

•

,
Buckeyes-ToiJ'Icats tie
: · GLOUSTER - Nelsonviii.,:York
)alvaged a tie with Trimble's
'l'omcats as the ·Buckeyes scored
"11th four minutes left, but the
"game-winning extra point was off

- --- -- ---

.•

-~

~-

:furget.

WOOD WORLD

•; J eft Talbert scored the gameTD for N-Y on a three yard
)'un. Ken McCieUan had scored
1rlmble's TD In the first quarter on
a; two yard run. The attempt for the
eclra point was blocked.
·
; Trimble mounted 13 first downs
the Buckeyes six whlle N·Y Iedin
\Qtal yards 242 to 106. The tle
l!ropped the. Tomcats to a tie with
for second place while the
lhgue's defending chlllnps and
~season pick to \lOin It all,
Nelsonville-York. settled for fifth

••

I

I.

I

-I . .

Hall Trees
Ice BolleS
Lap DeSks
Letter Holders
Lezy susans
Microwave Stands
Magjulne Holders
Mall Boxes
Oak Tables
Peg Clothes Racks
Roll Top Desks
Rocking Chairs
Shelves
·

Ch~~~~r~~~~}&amp;

~~~~c~~~:,:;!'

Dough Rollers
Deacon Benc11es
Dry Sinks
Dtsks
End Tables
Etageres
Foot Stools
Gun Cabinets
High Chairs

-··-

to

!lietp

l..

..

~·

,,
••

L
I

i

,

IIOUIIa . . .WU..ntL&amp;N ·
TUII., fti ..... IAT.IN

WOOD II ALAITINQ Qln

:~i~~I~~~t,REEZER BEEF smEs- HIND oR
FOR INFORMATION CALL 446-7457 OR 4464920 AFTER 6 O'CLOCK.

By quarters:
MOler ................... 7 13 0 6-26

JACK MEADOWS, MGR.

r~W~e~s~t~soo~red~~the~fi~r~st~tw~o~M~ill~e~r--~o~ne~y~ard~~ru~n~.2M~il~l~er~h~ad~l2~flrs~t--~A~~~x~a~nd~e~r~.~--~-·~...~..~..io~o~o~~~~O~~====::::::::::::~~~~~~~~::::~~~~~

•

..

..
;

64C
84C

I Standard

QUAKE

· Reg . 87¢ Limit 16

Quaker State
10W30 or 10W40

STATE

Resistors
Reg. 1.07 Umit 16

.•

Exceeds new car mfg. specifications
Reg . 89C lit 99C Limit 12

AutoiHe
Spark

1.99

.

e~O~~!GE

•

0

Motorcraft Oil Filters

Limit 2 Reg. 3.95 For most domestic applications

Maintenance Free
Calcium Batteries

29.88

,.;~:"ocl:;-m-lg's $2.00 r'-=ebe::::t::::e:.:.::_::)49C After mtg's $2.00 rebate

..

38.88
44.88

Prestone ·

on 2 t•t purchoae

Anti-Freeze Tester

sac

74.88

25C

Snap
Windshield
Washer
Solvent

Torque
Starter

Snap
Gasline
Anti-Freeze
Reg. 331: Limit 6

Batteries
Reg . 77.88
72 Month With eKchange

12oz. each

Super Retread
Snow Tires

4.88
Relined Brake Shoes
Sot

Reg. 6.88 For mo st domesti c cars

25 .000 miles

rated

6.88
Original Equipment
Axle Set

Quality Disc Pads

••

Spartan~ Shocked
• ALBANY - MWer stunned a
.Jerry Green•less Alexander Spar·
tln eleven 26-0, gaining Its first win
of the year here Friday.
, The Falcons, who had Jl()t scored

REG.

B78x13 ...................... 22.88
E78x14..................... 2B.ti8
F78Mt4...................... 28.18
G78x14............. ......... 31 .11
G78x15...... :..........:.... 31.118
H78x15.............. ,....... 32.11
L78M15 .......... ,........... 33.11

•

40 Month Reg . 32.88

•

50 Month Reg. 41.88
60 Month

5.88
Booster Cables
BC 704 Reg . 6.88 12 II.
'•

Cobra

.

Booster Cables

16 Foot Reg. 20.95 8 guage

&lt;400 amp with Cobra clamps

9.88

Axle Set

New Premium

•

Brake.Shoes with exch
or New Disc Pads

Reg . 11.49 &amp; 9.95 Both lor most

domestic cars 50,000 miles rated

19.88

Reg. 7.95 For most domestic cars
25 .000 miles rated

A7h13

•
••

•

Att batteneo with

Sale 2.49 AF1420

,~ By quarters:
Nei.·York ............... 0 0 0 6-6
~hie ................. 6 0 0 0-6

Trestle Tables
Towel Holders
Toy Boxes
Trays
Toy Trucks
htlr·Onlon Boxes
Wine Racks· ·
Water Buckets
Wooden Eggs

2S061r•nd Cent. II Ave.
VlenM, W.V.

downstoAlexan~er'sfiveandledin

.tot~ yards 224 to 95.

~ace.

From

75.95

New Radiators '

With exchange Reg. From 60.95 ·
From

F.E.T .33 • .13

~osp,On&amp;or

Plus Lots More
I

TD'sonathreeandatwoyardrun:
Ray Jenks added another on an 18
yard run, and Darryl Warten
scored the game's final (J(Jints on a

lrtng

"WHERE YOU PAY FOR THE
, WOOD, NOT THE FINISH"
Featuring a complete line of solid
wood furniture &amp; gifts
Armoire
Butter Churns
Butter Molds
Bread Boxes
Bar Stools·
Book Cases
Butcher Blocks
Bedroom Furniture
Chairs
Clothes Hampers
Corner Cupboards
Curio Cabinets
Child's Rockers

In five straight weeks, jumped out
to a 20-0 first half lead behind .the
running oi George West who had 60
yards tn 20 carries.

NOW TAKING APPOINTMENTS FOR CUSTOM
SlAUGHTERING BEEF - PORK &amp; DEER. CUTWRAPPED AND FROZEN BHXPERT MEAT CUTTERS.

'gtxx!.

I

Wildcats post 30-12 victory .
Jfannan Trace defeated

Barfs Custom Butchering

'; BELPRE- The Belpre Golden
E!agles clinched their first playoff
~pot In the school's history With a
close 14·13 win over Warren Local

10

lbronro 2

~·.o..ua

WATCH FOR OPENING ·

: Belpre captures TVC championship

•
su....,...GAmN

No games !ld'llduiP.d

NOTICE
. ·
KERR, OHIO
3_miles from Holzer Hospital off 160 on Kerr Harrisburg Road .

?:1

11
10
10

Chlc880 at Nl"W ..Jerwy, t n l
Edrnontoo
W.,nlpeg,

1-.s4 RIO GRANDE COWGE RED~ - Plclured are
membeN of the J.88S.8t Rio Grallde College basketliaU team (frGnl niw,
from Je(t), a11818tul coach Earl 'Thomas, ....•ant coachKevtnPurceu,
Boa Fumier, Mike Smith, Kent Wolle, Jerry Mowery, Collqe
Po lh'ent elodus R. Smith, Rick Penrod, George Pappas, asotstaN
coach 8""1' Barber, u"'stanl coach Joho Jeffers, and head coach John
Lawhorn, Standing, e's!"'•lll trainer Tom Mack; John Maisch, Brad
Rivers, Joe .Verhoff, Dan' CUJTy, Paul Morrison, Bob Shaw, Adlim . ·
McNichols, Rick Fritz, John Walters, and head trainer Jeff WUi.

Followln&amp; the ensuing kick ·the · ·
Wblte Falcons went Into their •
"quaD" offensive formation which ::
resulted In moving from their own •
37 to the Williamstown 13 yard line ,
on Ron Bradley passes to VanMeter : •
and Todd Gress. From the 13 · ,1
· Anthony DivincenzO gained five . ·
yards to the eight before Stewart
scored on another trap up the
middle. The point after attempt
faDed when the snap from ·center
was errant. Wahama held a 13-6
lead at tbe Intermission break.

+I

I

'

The Sunday Tiri.es-Sentinei-Page C 5·

\'l

I&lt;

St . Lou l~
M lni'II.'!IOla
- -- - ~tr DhUiotl
Edmomon
10

By GARY ClARK
A determined Wahama White
Falcon tootball team made two
second quarter touchdowns stand
up With ·an outstanding defensive
effort in the second half to gain a
hard fought 13-6 decision over the
Williamstown Yellow Jackets Fri.
day night.
The victory was Waha ma's
fourth In a row and was their sixth
Win in their last seven games as the
bend area team concluded the 1983
campaign With a Winning 64

.

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

50

'6 '3 ,0 " "56 47
' '7 ' 12
•' 7 I ' " ""

Drtrolt
Toronto

WIM~

...

L , T Pbi GF' GA
I 19 58
I 19

•'I 12''

Pj.tisbJ r~h
~

New Y ork Giaflts 111 Dt:&gt;tmlt , 1n1

..

DM;Ion

l!lj

~

.778

Hockey
Putri&lt;*

Noventber 6, 1983

W ahama finishes season with fourth win in row :~.

Scoreboard
...
.

Football

November 6, 1983 ·

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

' GALUPOLIS :._ The W18e!Jtan

.-\aimcy Is proud to sponsor the Rio
Orande eoueae Dyke Colleae bas·

MEIGS TIRE·CENTER

f!tball game, Nov. ~at 7:30p.m.
at Lyne Center.

JOHN FULTZ-QWNII

242 WEST MAIN ST.

Free tiCIIell to the

•.

are

evauable at The WllenWl ~·

992-2101

! '

aame

·

P11zes will be
lft!lfrmllllon.

1

HOURS: Sun.lQ.S
. l·f 1:30-8:00
'Sit. 1:~6

209 UPPER RIVER RD.

446-3807·

given away at

'

•
\

�•

Po~roy-M,iddlepofi-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W, Va.

Marauders win, _·finish in ~2nd .-place tie \..
By KEITH WISECUP

CRUNCHED lANCER- Tim Bobo, (20), senior running bock for the
Federal Hocldng Lancers Is tackled by two Marauder defenders, Scott
Gheen (84) .and Jackie Welker (25) durlng actloo In Friday's TVC
encounter won by Meigs. With the vicklry, Meigs finished In a second
place tie.

POMEROY ....: Scoring two
touchdowns within two minutes In
the third quarter, the Meigs
Marauders ended their 1983 season
with a 28-6 trtumph over FederalHocking here Friday.
The Meigs victory mupled with
NelsonvUie-Yor"'s 1i" with Trimble
and BeJpre's "· n. Jver Warren
Local, enaoi6d the Marauders a
second place tie with the Tomcats
at 6-2-1 . The Marauders finished.at
6-3-1 overall.
,
1 Friday's 28 points brought the
local eleven's total to 20&lt;1 on the
year, the highest since 1970 when
the Marauders scored a school
record '292.
Meigs' "triple threat" comprised
of senior backs Shawn Eads, Chris
Burdette. and Jon Perrin accounted for all four touchdowns and
212 yards rushing. All of this came
in less than three quarters of actloh.
· Burdette scored the game's first
points a minute into the second
quarter on a one-yard run capping a
nine-play 46 yard drive. A kick for
the extra wa~ no good.
· . Perrin tallied a second first half
touchdown on a two-yard run with a
minute left Meigs had gone 66
yards in 11 plays, all on the ground.
A pass !or the extras was
incomplete.

Schlichter ·eligibility decision Nov.l8

.

.

,•
Eads return~ a FederalEads led In rushlngwlthS4yai"di
ScottGheengrabbedthe Maraud- :
Hocking punt 37yardstotheLancer on 13 carrii!S while PeiTin had 76 1n ers' only completed pass for 19 , .•
eight with four minutes left In the 11 · t(lles and Burdette 62 on 13 yar:ds, the junior's Initial catch this ; :~
third quartei:. Eads ran -It In from carries. Singer was the Lancers'
year. Nick Bush also had an ·'
six yards two plays later. perrin top rusher with 84 yards In 12 trtps.
Continued toN
::
scored the extras.
• .,
After James Acree recovered a , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.;;:
•
Lancer fumble on the 37 following
the IJJelgs' kickoff, Perrin rammed
Available
Experienced
it In from a yard out four plays
''
later. Perrin had the big gainer In
the drive with a 23 yard run. Nick
Riggs ran In the extras.
The Meigs' first !earners saw no
CANDIDATE FOR
•
•
more action after this.
Federal-Hocking, 1-9 overall and
1-8 in TVC play, scored with three
RACINE VILLAGE
minutes to go when Glenn Singer
went 53 yards. A run failed for the
"Your ~ote Will Be Appreciated"
'.
·
extras.
•'
Coach Charles Chancey's
NOV. 8, 183
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Candidate . ;.
charges either started or drove into
Lancer territory on all 10 of their
possessions.
Senior middle guard Andy Iannarelll led the l'/Ieigs' defenders with
seven solo tackles, ending a brllllant career for the lightning quick
Marauder. Burdette added six
while a trio of Juniors, Tony Welch,
Jackie Welker, and Mark Ham'•
'•
monds, each had four stops to show
reason for an optlmlstlc next year.
.
'
Seniors Mike Willford and Danny
•
Davis also each had three stops for
'
the Marauders.

D. GENE LYONS
CLERK-TREASURER

*.THE
VERY BEST IN AUTO
GLASS .REPLACEMENT

..,f,

·

-\

JEWEL RD
' ADMISSION:
, 4 OO IN ADVANOE
•
1
5.00 AT THE DOOR

.

Rt. 33

.'

LOOKS FOR RUNNING ROOM
Meigs ll\ilback-wlngback
Shawn Eads (10) goes upfleld
during Friday's TVC gap&gt;e
against Federal Hooking. Eads
had 84 yards rushing in 13
carries while scoring one touchdown. Meigs won :I:S-6. With the
vlcklry, the Marauders tied
Trimble for second place in the
loop. Meigs finished the seasoo
with a 6-3--1 record .

. '

.,. . . .

•
•
•

'

'

r

•

'

ive Values!

CUT $23

45
161

''·
'·
'

'

DieHard battery

Vinton County ................ 5 5 0 123 18.1

............. ... 1 9 0 .')5 232
49 E I 1:1!11 t~
TVC Only

Team

WLTP OP
0 0 282 47
2 l Jl1 tOO
2 t l.D 56
85
3 1 122 57

BelprE' .......... .. ..... ......... 9
Metgs .. .... ............... .... 6
Trimble .. ........ ............... 6.
warren Loc&lt;~i6 3 0 16.1
Net-York .......
.. .')

$52·9 9

VInton C&amp;lnty 15 Wellston l&lt;l

Miller 26 Alexander 0

{tedmen nip Urbana
:0RBANA - Rio Gra~de College's soccer Redmen concluded
their season· recently with a 2-1
victory over Urbana Coll~ge in
Mid-Ohio Conference action.
The win moved the Redmen to
7-4-1 overall and 5-3-1 in the
Mid-Ohio Conference.
Ter!a Aikor and K. K. Kasama
scorect Rio Grande's goals to
support the efforts of Andy George
in the goal. George finished the
season with a stellar 7-2-1 record In
~goal, Including two shutouts.

Drive continues
RIO GRANDE - The aimual
Boosters Club drive will continue
until Nov.12 at Rio Gra nde College.
a school spckesman said .
For membership information,
oontact the Office of Intercollegiate
Athletics; Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, or call (614)
245-!i.'l.'i3.

-

I'

SAVE ON BAnERIES

'

,-

2889

40MONTH

3489
4189

SO MONTH
60MONTH

Camirldge li. Coshodon 0
Cempbell Memorial 12, Hubbard 0
Canal FUlton NW :W, Trtway ~
Caul Winchester ll, Mlllers1»11 3
Canlon Cath. 6. U::ali5Villfo Aquinas J
Clrclevrne 11. Miami Traa&gt; 14
C'laytmnt :W, CarmiJtM 8
C'Je. Benedlctlnt 7, Padua 6
Cle. Bnlsb 21, Maple Hts. 10
CW. East 8, Oe. Hay 0
Oe. Gimvtlle 18, Cle. Collinwood 0
CJe. South lB. C'le. Rhodes 15
CJe. W. Tedl U. Cle. Uncotn-West 8
Coldwater 42. Delpm&amp; St. Jot'll 22
Uti. Bnggs 7, Col. Brookhaven 6
Col. East 8. CoL Linden-McKinley 0
Col. F..astiJDIH' 23. Col. W!'St 9
~ol.

Franklbl Hts. 14, ChllUcotlle '1
Col. Hamilton TWp. 19, LIOOny UniOn 6
Col Han}E!'y 15, Col. OeSales 7
Col. lndPperldfnce 10, Col. Marlon ·

FraJiklkl 0
1
Col. MllfUn 22, Clear Fork 12
Col. N~d f6, Cot Sooth 8
Col. Walnut Ri¥ 6, Col. Bet&gt;chcrott 6.

•'

SAVE ON ZEREX
ANTI FREEZE

CJ

0

CORVAIRS WILL HELP •.. WITH THE
RIGHT BAmRY FOR YOUR CARl

Buckeye 6, Independence 1&gt;
Buckeye S. 33, Buckeyl' N. 6
&amp;d~ W. 16, Jf'\Wtt-Sdo 0

Col. Wbel:stonc 22, Qll. Cerltennlal 6
C'.ormeaut 3). PaiAesvtlle Rlvenlde 13

PER GAL AffiR
MFG. REBATE

SAVE ON OIL CHANGE
FRAM
SAVES

NON RESISTOR

OIL
_,,./~r\irot~l'l FILTERS

7 11111 Hypalan s.ts

399

cil 399
6

RESISTOR

CYl

64~

8

cYl

AfllrMfll .......

591
691

8 ... Silicon
Pri&lt;otf """" 11.99

s

SALE PRICE NOIIIIESISTOR 641, RESmOR 891

Co&amp;:*Y 7,

Greensburg Greeno
Cary-Raw!an 7. Hardin Northern 3
CovNton 26. Mllton-llnlnn 6
Dubin 5!, Big Walnut 1

.
j

tiP
E. Plle!ttne ~ W~ 0
Easllake N. !2, Menlt'll' 21

m, HWiq) 0
£1&amp;ln "- CoL

Edon

''

Mtllcr ...................... ...... I 8 0 55 2'.15
Tolals
M M 4 1:rl$ l:rl&amp;
Trimble 6 Nelsonv\IIC"-York 6
Meigs 28 Federal-Hocking 6

'

E. c.nm 21, ·Sandy Val. al
E. Clt'YPI.nd Sh.w 0, Garfll'ld Hts. 0.

WeUstoo ...... ......
.. ...... 3 5 1 ll3 141
Alexander..........
.. .......... 2-7.0 74 U&gt;
Federal -Hocking ........... 1 8 0 78 225

Belpre 14 Wai'rEn Local 13

·

MON.-FRI. 8-8;
SAT. 8-6; SUN. 9-5

Bn!cksvtlle n. N. Royaltm 0
~ru•wlck 14, Stmipvllle G
Brooklyn 18, Firelands 7

""
.7'
Col. Watterson 3l Cot Wehrle 8

Ain_
erica·s best-se lling re\IIIIth trade-In
placement battery! De- ·
signed for long-lasting serVIce. fast startS.

Vtn1on County .... ,........ ,.. 4 5 0 101 183

~ov. 4 ~uiL'i:

12

'·

'

I t ! ......

.
AdEfla 16, Richmond Dale SE 14
Akron Cent·H(M.'f.'r 16, Alcroo EUel ' 15
&amp;aVf!I'CY'fek 35, Sprmg. North 13
&amp;lin u. wam:n Local tJ
BergOO~ ~g. 7, Sebrblg 0
BethPI 8, MlsstSs!nawa Val. 3
&amp;1~-Tate 22, On. Ftmeytown 6
Bexley ~. Marysville 14
Bcwllllr Gm.'ll 13. SylVania SoutiiV!e'.l.·

'

Wellston .... ......... , .......... 3 6 1 119 167
Alexander ................. ..... 2 8 0 74 242
Fed..,al· H OCKin~ ............ l 9 0 11! 253

· 5-1
5-41

Ada~ln~~

.

W L T P OP

ft.')

·

. SAVE ON
EVERYTHI G!

4
116

Olllo HIP 8lilool F001ba1

•'

Belpn.&gt;' ... . ............... ...... 10 0 0 298 ~...,
Meigs , ... ... ........ ............. 6 J l 20&lt;1 109
Trimble ......................... 6 3 1 139 77

GENERAL E'LECTION NOV 8 1983

Be

FH

High school
grid .scores

.

Miller
Tolals

d
""Your_Support and Confi ence
. Will
Ap'.p
' reciated." .

ooo

Va.

'FVC Standln.p
AU Gatnl'S

Nt&gt;l.-York ... ......... ........... 6 3 1 134

For Sutton Township Trustee

Fed.-Hocldng ......................
6- 6
Meigs ............................... ..0 12 16 Q-28

I

Final TVC
standings
TeiUll

EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

••

Muon, W.
(304) 773-5710 or 773·5111 .
CALL COLLECT - · FREE ESTIMATES

saara

IJ'~ lHf bAMf ~f llff!

.DELBERT A. SMITH

WE RESERVE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIE-PRICES GOOD THRU 11/9/83

M

Fumbles/ Ulst ... .... .. ........... .4·1
Penalties ......................... 7-75
By quarters:

Point-Mason Auto Glass

For Tickets or More
lnformat1on Call: 992-6300
or Buy T1ctets at the
Middleport Book Store

KEITH WEBER
Write In Candidate For

Passing .. ......•................ .•. 1·s.1l
2·:&gt;-1
Punts .............•... .. ...... 2-76138.01 6-214(35.71

Open MGndlly-Frldllyh.m. - 5' p.m. Saturrlly- 12 Noon.

PARKERSBURG. W. VA.

VOTE

RE-ELECT

Continued from C-6
Interception for the winners. ·

SERVING THE TRI.COUNTY AREA FOR 13 YEARS
"We Want And Appreciate Yoiar Bu•ine••"

•

r-=;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~;;;;~~~

Marauders .

•

.

Paid For
by the
Candidate

Nov.LI18~o~t~the~O~hl-o-Re~glo-n_al_c_am-pus_j~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::P:d·:P:o:I.:A:d.:b:y:C~a~nd:.~L~~~~~~~~~~~~Pd~·~P~o~I.~A~q~,~by~C~an~d~-~

Total yanls .... .................... 293

Give Us Yoqr Braakl

.·

decided at aathletic
specialdirectors.
meeting (AP ~rphokl).
Confereaee

Yards,rushfllg , .. .......... ..... .. 274
Yards passtng ..... .... ....••..•. .. 19

BLENNERHASSETT JR. HIGH SCHOOL

CHESTER TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

6-8 p.m.-CoUege Swim

Depanment

I

FOR

Nov. 10 &amp;8 p.m.-lnttilmurals .............. ......... . :............ ..... ................... ................... aosed
Nov. U 8-10 p.m.-Open Recreation ................
.. ............ Noon·l p.m.-Ft,tness Swim
t}-10 p.m.-Open Swim
Nov. l2 7:30 p.m. -Redmen vs. Dyke ... ...........
.. ... ............ ...... , ...... .. ........ CJosed
Nov. 121-3 p.m.-Open Recreation ..................
.. ... .................. 1.J p.m.-Open Swbn
1·9 p.m. -Collegp RecrE"allon ...... , ......... ............ .:................ 7-9 p.m.-College Swim

Flrs1-... ........................ IB

ALSO APPEARING "LIGHT"
THURSDAY, NOV. 10, 1983

W~Y N~HlAYID WIN1

~vlngs Bank

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

SUver Bridge Plaza

D

MID1ber FDIC

Spring Valley

Falrtlankl 29. BenJIRlln l..Oian I)
Fairtfld 7, Hamilton Badin 7, De
Fairfield UJOOit 61, Heme Union 21
Foltcrla 42. ~. Mkh. 7
~fT. [)anv!lleO

RoA 7' SanWU:t 0
Galkln 13. BeU!wt 10
Geneva
As!Ubuia Sl. Jom 9
Genoa 29, Kansu Lakota 0

:m.

CUT $20 -The Sears 48
car battery
Battery gives you 410 cold cranking
amps (Size 24) . Fits most vehicles.

SAVE on Sears Best
St~dyRiderl!!l

RT shocks

Radial tuned for. comfort and control.
See big boOk lor warranty.

Y2 Price ·

Now
Only

3!.!

Gllrmir 26, Aurora l2

Sacirs
••
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Glrvd 8, Struthrn 6
1 tirand Val 21. Mathe"M 0
~ Ji. Llcltilta Htl. 8
1 Greeno~~ U, Belll'lonta!Jl~ 23, lie
CroYe CUy ~. Grcw$0117
HamUion 71, Ckl. Aiken 1f
I

SAVE 0¥11
..

25%

Hart1lon J), Hamlhc.! Rca 0

• lillian Vallfy N. 7, ~ood 0
J«kJan ~ Atlii!N J4
r Jolla GlenJil5, Trt-VaUI!)r ~
1 Keruon 1D, Elida ll
: l&lt;ef~l Falnmnt 41, Falrbenl 0
1

12. Ttpp City 7

'

LeiDI:Ift-MIWtlt li, TaiP'anda 3
M11bd 8, an. NorthMI! 8. tie
t Yllltu')l Lab 11. ADttrtn:Y Wayne 0
f Mmpr S, Alli!Under G
, ~ S\ New lftllellll
~ ,....,.. Cl, Crwlwoqd 8
. f ~ It. Bllcll River

......- .._..,....

Most merchandise available
lor pick-up within a few days

u

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Mt HnHJrf l l N. ~ HW 0
. - I T . Onp 0..,0 7
rN!IIonvJk-Ytrl. l 'l'rtntR tl. tie
.. New AlaliV l&amp;. GrucMrw 0
+ New~. Pl. 1), Yw._ WU.. 0

t· Nw:twl&amp;"'*i
Nlw .......... t , DrMrT
-~·-·
•• 1.._ VIDfy S.. 0
.

· NEW

gia .lgia

~T,Cc*mtiatl

, Kls11111d(l,F-Hantna8
LaUwood 13, O.WOIMd Hll. 0
I.Ancuttr 21, z.n.vt1r 13
~

SILVEI BRIDIE PUA
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liMIT 2

l Hlli!Jboro 1). MadiiCrl Plains 0
I Hq:ltMU-LoJdon 7, l..aknldt 6

~:L\UblriY-10

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The commercial 8r

era......, '

EIYN Cath. ~ Loraln !b!thvleW 0

r.remom

Get in~e~tment rates without lnveatment riaka on aU ynur sa,··

inp, with a aav~s atcount thai worke like an investment. You'll
rusd them here, at our btmkl
. :
With thio plan, you earn remarkably high inveotment ntei on aU
the money you keep in 11vlnp. And, all your money il inoured by
the Federal Depooit IDiuranee ~orporation for up to 1100,000.
With a minimum opening depoolt which you muot maintain,
you'D eam hi@:h invettm~nt ratee. You'D alto receive a regular
cheekin! aceo11nt- with no oervice cha'1!•· Then, the n,toney you
utually keep in )'OW' KCOIIDt to qualify for free cbeddng can be
placed in your inveotmentoavlnp account. And, that meano more
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It'• 1 ~-hlp play dull mak.. you a dermite winner! And,
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..

.'

"A FULL TIME TRUSTEE"
Pool

,

Nov. 8 6-8 p.m.·lntrarnurals ..... ............................................·.... Nooo-1 p.m.-Fitness Swtm
Nov. 9 G-8 p.m.-College Recreation ............................................ Noon-1 p.m.·Fttness Swim

w

1

REX NELON SINGERS

BERNARD GILKEY

Schlichter, who continued to work
out with the OU-C team tltls-\(oeek,
played one-and-&lt;lne-half seasons of
varsity basketball and foilr years of
college football whllel!ttendlngOhio
State's main campus In Columbus.

Nov.
p.m.·Open
Rfereatton
.............................. ..........................
p.m ..()pen Swlm
Nov.61·3
7 fi.8
p.m.·lntramurals
..................................................
Noon-11·3p.m.-Fitness
Swtm

8CIILICHTER cAWNG siGNALS AGAIN _ suspended
Baltimore Colt quarterback Art Schlichter glves'tbe diamond defense
signal
his teBntlllates dlll'lng" pre-season game lor the Ohio
Unlverslty-Chllllcothebasketballteam.Theellglbllltyofthesuspended
NFL quarterback IAl play basketball for the branch campus team wtll be

YOUR LOCATION WHICH·MEANS
AT WORK, HOME OR PLAY •••
•
.WE COME TO YOUI

AN EVENING WITH THE

May by National Football League
Commissioner Pete Razelie after he
acknowledged that he had gambling
debts totaling$389,00l ..TheNF1..wlll
review Schlichter's case next
spring.

VOTE FOR

said.

Date - Gymnasium

••

rr:==:::;==================;

Lyne Center Sehed~e
'Week of Nov. 6,1983

•

* PROFESSIONALY DONE AT

-tt

ora
representative
to thewith
meeting.
"I'll
be quite bones!
you . I
haven't really talked to ;myone In
regards to Mr. Schlichter," Strola

"Fi-om an athletic (llrector's
point," Stoia said; "I'd have to look
at the constitution before I form an
opinion. Personally, it' doesn't
bother me. lie's not God . .He's an
All-American football player."
Schlichter was suspended last

.

''All Work Unconditionally
Guaranteed"

GOSPEL CONCERT

Ohio University-Zanesville.
John Strola, athletic director and
basketball coach at Ohio State
University-Lima, wUI not be able to
attend the meeting, bUt on Friday,
be told the Chllllcothe Gazette that
be will send either a written opinion

CHILLIOOTHE, Oblo (APj Fonner Ohln State University
football quarterback Art SchUchter
shoUld know on Nov.l8 whether he
can play basketball for Ohio
Universlty-Qtllllcothe.
A special meeting of Ohio
Regional Campus Conference athletic dlreciOI-s has been called for
that date to rule on whether the
league's constitution allows the
suspended Baltimore Colts quarterback to play, It was reported Friday .
OU-C Athletic Director ·Bob
.Christian and basketball Coach
CorkY Miller refused to comment on
either Schlichter's plans or the
meeting, which will take place at

..'

Point-Mason Auto Glau Inc.

The Sunday

W.Va.

Ohio-Point

'November 6, 1983

50%
liST.

.

HEATER
HOSE

THDMOSTlTS

•

::::

112" -518" -314"

149

199

. YOimllf

N1W1DD 1"1111 1, IDatlbc o 6
~S.Pann~O

;

/J

�NoV!!mber 6, 1983

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

Page-C8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

State/ &amp;tiona I

Late comeback fails, Wheelersburg·_drops GAHS;_20-14
.

•

GALLIPOLIS - PLaying without the services of wtngback~nd
Jimmy Beaver and defensive end
Juan McCabe, Gallla Academy
High School's Blue Devils almost
pulled off the upset of the year here
Frtday night before losing a 20-14
non-league grid decision to visiting
Wheelersburg. ·
Beaver, who led GAHS In nearly
all offensive categories going Into
the Parents-Senior Night contest,
suffered a shoulder Injury II!
Wednesday's drills, and didn't
dress for the season finale. McCabe
was Injured In the Oct. 28 game at
Logan.
Coach Jim Gill's Pirates built u'p
what appeared to be a comfortable
20-0 haHtlme advantage.
.
Coach Brent Saunders' Blue
Devils, however, never gave up.
GAHS came back with ·single

scores In the third and fourth
periods, and for one brief moment .
late In the game, actually had a
chance to tte or win the contest.
The victory left WHS with a 7-3-0
season mark. Gallipolis finished the
campaign with a 0-10-0 record.
Senior tailback Don Brown, who
led all rushers with 102 yards In 13
carries put whs on the board with
8:29 left In the first period with a
37-yard scamper.
The Pirates made It 14,0 in the
second (8: Oli when Senior QB
Chuck Bowen hit senior end Bill
Gerlach with a fou r-ya rd strike.
Bowen ran the points after.
With 1:02 left in the half. Bowen
tossed a 19-yard strtke to junior
tailback Scott May who "taunted''
his way into the endzone. That
maae It 20-0.
It was a different story in the

second half.
· Aided by three Wheelersburg
penalties, GAHS QB Todd Slone
·matched the Blue Devlls67 yards in
14 plays. Dave Garber smashed
over from the two (4: 33 left) and
Brian Shepler's kick made it 20-7.
Following an exchange of punts,
GAH~ marched 63 yards in eight
plays. Slone sca mpered the flnal39
with excellent downfleld. blocking.
•

Area grid
standings

•

9
Shepler split the uprights. With 3; 31
had 43 In '12 carries and Dave Comptettons ...... ,......... ...... ......... 3
1
Garber 34 1n 14 trips.
·
Intercepted
t&gt;y ........................... 1
left, It was 20-14.
Yards passing ........................... 20
U7
Kev Werry Intercepted a Bowen
Betnle N!ehin recovered one of To\1) yards .............................. I!IO
280
pass with 34 secon~left. GAHShad five WHS fumbles.
Playa ......... ...... ...... ......... ........ 6l
~
possession on the Blue Devll22.
Slaltat!ao
5
Incomplete passes to Gamble D e - t
G
WB · Lost tumbt.. .. ,.......................... o
1
Grant and Werry after a two-yartl ~~-ns
Iti
17
Penaltles ................................. 7-65 s-m·
l.os
rushlng .......................... I87
173
Pun'-' ...................................... 3-n
2-02
gain by Slone made It fourth and Nett~~ ............................. !7...
IO
Scare by qu.......,
eight. Dave Mace plckj!d off a Slone p
·--. ............. ....... ......... 170
163
GolllpoiiS .... .........................o o 7 7-14
01 '_-_
aerial with six seconds left, ending , __
••_•_•t_t•_m_
..._..._.. _..._..._.. _..._..._.. _.. I_7_ _
" _ _w_h_ee_I"'_'_b_urg_
..._.. _..._..._.. _..._..._..._6 _1•_o_a-_20
the GAHS comeback.
r
For the third straight game,
GAHS controuea the ball at the line
of scrimmage, running 62 plays to

..........

.ELECT

:~;~~a~~~~:vo~~f:1:-=

(Ail·Gaml'l!i) ·

Team
WLTP OP
Coal Grov(' ..... ................. 10 0 0 29\ 8..1
Ironton ............. .. ..... ....... 8 0 1 2'72 79
Boyd County ... .................. lO 1 0 2$ 87
Rock Hill .......................... 9 1 0 238 69
JacKson ....................
... i 3 0 193 U6
Whrelersoorg ...... ...... .. .. 7 3 0 197 127
Riploy ................. .. ........ :6 &lt; 0 151 133
? I. Pleasant .. .. .. .. ........... ~ 4 0 147 98
Logan ... ...... .................. 3 6 0 139 1~
Athens .............................. 2 7 1 100 214
Gallipolis ........................... 0 10 0 103 :J11 1
Friday's result81
JackSon Zl Athens 14
Wheel ersbUrg~ GallljXllis 14

WHS 11-3 In the second half, and
outgalnedthevis!tors,l22-5llntotal
yardage the final two periods . .
TheP!ratesfinishedwith2llltotat
yards. GAHS had 190.
Bowen connected on nine of 14
passes for 117 yards and two

f or Mayor 0f pomeroy

GENERAL ELECTION NOV. 8, 1983.

"Your Support &amp; Influence Appreciated."
Pd.Pol. Ad .

by Cand.

Darlene Newe'1
.1
CANDIDATE FOR

Ripley 14 Rav£'nswood 0
Rock HHI 46 Sym mes Valley 0

...GERNIE'S

SEOAL

(final!

WLTP OP

Ironton ....... . ................... 4 0
Jackson ............................ 3 1
Logan ... ..................... ....... 2 2
Athens .......................... .... 1 3
GaUipolb ......................... 0 •
TOTALS
tO IO
Note - Coal Grove and Boyd

Richard uDick" .Seyler

of17~-~~;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

for
20 yards. Slone
May hit
hadon62three
yards on
touchdowns.
four receptions. _ ·'·
GAHS
with 70
SloneInled
yards
nine
trips.runners
Jeff Rathburn

Coal Grove- 21 Falrland' l4

Team

=.iar&lt;ls.::::::::::: ::::; ::: :: S:

0 123 32
0 84 54
0

95 82

0 46 117
0 59 122
0 40'7 40'1
County In
post-season p)ayoffs. Pt. Pleasant, Logan
_played Saturday games.

CLERK

Hea,ing &amp;Cooling
*Commercial
*Residential

Chester Township
14 Yrs. Office Experience
"Your Vote &amp;

CALL 446-3217 ·,

Support Appreciated."

Pd.Pol. Ad . by Cand.

r

Relumlng from duty In Grenada, a
member of the 82nd Alrbomc reJ&amp;Cis by raising his

'
Mexico,wheretheytransferredtoa
By RICHARDT. PIENCIAK
Soviet jetliner that took them to
Alfioclated Press Writer
Havana.
: ST. GEORGE~S, Grenada (AP)
Meanwhile, 14 Congressmen new
,- U.S. Army officers seized 38
to
Grenada from Washington, via
·loaded rilles, five pistols, amrnuniBarbados,
for a three-day fact• tlon and bayonets . that Soviet .
finding
trip.
The
group 1s led by Rep.
-diplomats Jrled to "smuggle" onto
Tom
Foley,
D-Wash.
He told
Amerlcari planes evacuating them
:from Grenada Friday, aU .S. ol!lclal reporters on theflig(ltthat Congress
"would like to see the United States
said.
withdraw
all milltary forces as soon
: The 49 Soviets were among 126
as
possible
from Grenada," even if
:communist-bloc diplomats, de·
the
Interim
government set up by
. pendents an_d Cubans evacuated In
Grenada's
governor
general. Sir
two U.S. Navy DC-9 jets that took
Paul
Scoon,
asked
them
to stay.
:them from Point Salines airport,
About
l,!IXJ
u.s.
soldiers
boarded
:south of St. George's, to Merida,

How the top teams fared

1~

4, Ctnctnnatl Prtnreton. 3-1 . playf'd at
Cincinnati MOOier Saturday
~. AU5tlnt0\ol'n fitch , ~ - 1. losl to Yc.J~ ·
stown Ursuline l.:l-7.
ti, Ci'11t(ll"'l.o11le. 10.0, t:F;~t Xt'nla 111-0.

i. Up~ Arlln,itoo. 8-1·1. txat GaiJoo•a y
Westland 14-{1.
s,' Ml&lt;k:l~own , 9-1, ~ar Clnctnnatl
WtthJV.II ~9. Massman Wastllngton. 8-1..0, pl~@d ar
Canton McKinley Samrdi_!y.
10. Franont Ross. 9{1.1, brat
1~.

SandUS~·

5, Stf\lbc-nVWe, lo-0. beat StPJbPrlvll[('

Ca tt'Ollt' 14·10.
6. lrontoo. S.O.l. Was 1~.
7. Belpre. 10-tl, beat Vincmt Warren 1&lt;1l:\.

8. LeavUtsbu.rg LaBrae. !HI. played

USED CAR SALE IN TOWN

Brookfield Saturday

CHECK THESE SPECIALS:

9, Washington C&lt;:11rt House. 9-1. t.&gt;at
Wilmington 2i-tl.
10. Canal F'ultoo Norttr...·est, s-Q. I. beat

WOOSl('f l'rlway 34·11

CLASS •

I. M~adDfl' . 1[}.(1, beat Mantua Crest·
wood fHi.
1. Fostorta St. WentPIIn, g.{], pta~t'lll To-

1983 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

1978 CHRYSLER LeBARON, 4 DR.

l«&lt;o Onawa Hills Satun1ay.
l. McC(ff)b, IIH), ~at Vanlue 66-ll.
t Swth Charleston SOUtlleaSll'!'n, IM.
~at YeUow Sptngs 43-14..
!\, Newllf'k C&amp;th:lllc . S.l, pla~ at John·
stown l'/or1~e Saturday.
6, McOonaJ~ 9-1, bl-at t'&lt;lorlh Jaclt.&lt;;On

CLASS .U

1. Urbana. 10.0. !:Fat lnndon !i&amp;O.
2, Elyriil Cattdlc. IIHI. IX't~t !..tlral n
Soo thvlew 5MI
:l, FO!&gt;tol"la, ,ill-0. bt'at Fl«tlord. Mich .
~ -i .

&lt;1. Akron St . Vlnrerrt' SL Mary , 'H . br&gt;at
Barberton 26--0.

9; Co turn~ Re-ady, ~1. played :H Co-

klmbuS St. Charles Satu~ay.
'
10. Arllngtorc. 9-1, beat Arcadia ~1 -'U.
10. Rkhmond Height s, HI. playi'd )'~;(ow .

bury Si\W'WI)'.

FREE NEW 10 EA HAT WITH

PARTS ORDER OF $75 OR MORE

Triple burgundy with tilt, cruise, air cond., AM/FM stereo
power antenna and only 9,122 low miles. It's a local car: '

1981

CHEV~

DISC SPECIALS
$3 99 AND UP

Black exterior with matching leather interior equipped with
air, cruise, AM/FM radio, power ~Yindows, power door locks,
power seat, rear defroster and much more. Local trade.

1979 DODGE MAGNUM -

CITATION,- 4 DR.

$1 75.

1_

••

This compact is fully equipped wit~ air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
stereo and only 31,642 low miles. See it todayt
Priced to sell . .

BALER TWINE
DALE FORD TRACTOR

1981 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

White exterior with dark blue custom cloth interior, mileage is
29,000, wtth atr, AM/FM radio, tilt, cruise. Priced hundreds
less than most.
c

-6 FT. DANEX POWDER PAINTED
SPUN ALUMINUM DISH
dLM SKY EYE V RECEIVER
•CHAPPARAL POLAROID I
•s.R.S. QUAD POD FEED SYSTEM
•s.R.S. COMPLETE POLAR
Special
MOUNT
Introductory Price
100• L.N.A.
*125FT. COMPLETE
For the .New 6 Ft.
• DANEX SYSTEM
CABEL SET

*

..

Thll system is complete. Instal·
Inion &amp;tax is extra.
Re&amp;ular Retail Price $1,795

$},395°0

This auto is strictly a showpiece. Equipment inciudes cruise,
split seats, landau roof and only 35,000 low miles. Locally
owned .
New Monte trade.

northern Lebanon cut off from the
south, which It occupies, following a
terrorist bombing which killed at
least 39 people at an Israeli mllltary
post.
State radio quoted Its correspond·
ent In Lebanon's northern port, of
Tripoli as saytng the Palestine
Liberation Organization mavericks

•I

-~

GMAC &amp; BANK FINA,NCI.NG AVAilABLE
Special 11 .83
APR rate on
used 82-83
models
have plenty to show you"

15 New Chevrolet Trucks In Stock
20 New Chevrolet &amp;Oldsmobiles In Stock
MANY MORE
. ARRIVING DAILY
.

40 Nice clean ·

late models
in stock.
"We Will deal!" '.

•

.
••

.... u'

·. i.

.....
f '

. .
Joh

Saldtheevacueeswere49Soviets,53
Cubans who had taken asylum in the
Soviet Embassy, 15 North Koreans,
six East Germans and three
Bulgarians.
He said all but the Soviet
ambassador also were frisked for
arms but no additional weapons
were found.
President Fidel Castro welcomed
the evacuees at Havana's Jose
Marti Airport, exchanging salutes
with Col. Pedro Tortolo who had
been sent to Grenada two days
before the invasion to organize a
defense by some600Cubanworkers

building a new airport at Point
Salines.
About 1,000 spectators applauded
as· the evacuees left the Soviet
jetliner.
Fatmer said negotia liOns have
bogged down on theevacualionof37
mebers of Cuba 's diplomatic mission still in the Cuban Embasgy,
which has been surrounded by U.S.
troops . 'They are refusing to leave
until some 600 Cuban prisoners held
at the Point Salines airport are
returned home. Reports in Havana
Indicated a Btitish ship wasen route.
to Grenada.

--

..

...
'

~"it
I

"

I•

COMPLEI'E SHUTDOWN - Striking Chrysler
workers John Stolta, left, and Ben Phelps man their
post in front of the virtually empty parking lot at
Twinsburg Stamping Plant as their strike over

working conditions continues. Chrysler pla11ts around
the country have been affected by the work stoppage,·
unable to obtain critical body parts produced by the
Twinsburg plant. ( AP Laserphoto ).

truck through the gate of the
rocket launchers, the radio said.
compound
Friday, Gonen said.
Hospitals In Trtpollsald 200people
The
terrorist
, described as man in
were killed and 500 wounded In the
his
early
20s,
struck
In virtually the
twodaysofbattle. The International
same
way
as
suicide
drivers who
Red Cross In Switzerland said
bar\'"led
their
vehicles
into
the posts
hundreds of the casualties were
of
U.S.
Marine
and
French
peaceclvlllans In the refugee camps.
keeping
troops
on
Oct.
23,
leveling
Slate radio said about lOO,&lt;XXJ
Lebanese villagers, caught In the those compounds and killing nearly
PLO crossfire, have been staying 300men.
Lebanese reports said as many as
Indoors since the fighting broke out
at dawn Thursday. The villagers 60 people were killed Friday when
Israeli jet bombers avenged the
have no electrtclty orwa te; and food
Is rapldlyrunnlngout, theradlosald. blast by pounding positions held
In southern Lebanon, an· Israeli jointly by some.of the most radical
mUitary spokesman, Lt. Col. Aaron Palestinian Liberation OrganlzaGonen, said main roads were under t.longuerrt!las, Syrians and Druse In
curfew and slabs of concrete were the central mountains.
The same extremist group of
placed at river bridges to halt traffic
. Shiite Moslems that boasted of the
between south and north Lebanon.
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe attacks on the Martites and the
Arens ordered the bridges closed on Frenc(l, as well as of the explosion In
Frtday, shOrtly after .a suicide Aprll which killed 49 people at the
driver detonated a truckbombatan U.S. Embasgy In Beirut, claimed
Israeli military post on the outskirts responsibility for the Israeli blast.
of Tyre, Lebanon's southernmost
Calling Itself the Islamic Holy
city. The blast killed at least 29 War, the group supports Iranian
Israeli troops and 10 Palestlntan.and ruler Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelni.
A telephone caller to the Beirut
Lebanese prisoners.
Sidon-based Lebanese reporters office of a French news agency said .
said Israeli troops shot In the air to the bombing was to avenge Israel's .
scare off people trying to sw!n continued occupation of southern
Lebanon and the arrests of ShUte
across the river.
An Inquiry committee began Its Moslems InTyre, Beirut state radio
Investigation of the secudty mea- said .
Arens, louring the bombeQ army
sures which felled to prevent a
terrorist from driving a bomb-laden post, 12 miles north of the Israeli

were bringing in fresh troops and
armor ina bldtowrest the highlands
held by Arata!, the PLO chairman,
and 8,000 of his followers.
PLO loyalists In the hills and at
highway Intersections around the
Baddawl andNahr el· Bared Palest!·
nlan refugee . camps struck back
with baZookas and truck-mounted

.

Ch'e vrolet-Oidsmobile, Inc.

I

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
Syrtan-backed PLO mutineers
mounted fresh tank assaults and
kept up massive barrage and 'rocket
itre Saturday on Yasser Arafat's
last Middle East · strongbold In
porthern Lebanon.
While the fierce battle raged for a
third straight day, Israel kept

SEE: Mike Sickels, Terry Hamilton, Roger Dillard or Morris Sheets.
.

Guy Fanner told reporters about
the Soviets' angry departure.
.: "Their baggage was searched
and. two boxes holding 38 AK47s ,
each with a round In the chamber,
were found," he said. TheAK47 Is
the standard automatic rille used by
Infantrymen in ·Warsaw Pact
countries.
Farmer said the pistols were
hidden In typewriter cases, and the
U.S. officers also found 300 magazlnes of ammunition.
Theplanesleftat2:30a.m.aftera
seven-hour delay caused by Soviet
protests and the search. Fanner

Battle continues. between Arafat, mutineers

This 350 series truck has 4-speed trans., power steering,
power brakes, big 6 engine, and AM/FM stereo. Heavy duty,
flat bed .
Priced to sell.

AVENUE
. 200 ,SECOND
.
.
446-3672 Bill
. I

a

1982 FORD 1- TON CAB/CHASSIS

251 WEST MAl N ST.
POMEROY,OHIO
992·2668

.

12 C-141s Friday and flew back to
their camp at Fort Bragg, N.C. That
leaves about 4,000 on this small
Caribbean Island. U.S. officials said
additional units woul.d pull out
within thenextfewd&lt;!VS.
.
Scoon, who had been appointed ·
i:overnor general of Grenada, a
Commonwealth member, by Queen
Elizabeth II in 1978, broke dlpl~malic relations Tuesday with the
Soviet UnlonandLibyaandordered
their diplomats to leave. Sixteen
Libyans flew to London on
Thursday.
State Department spokesman

'IWlNSBURG, Ohio (AP) Weissman said a ratification Detroit, company spokesman ~ug
· United Auto Workers officials meeting had been scheduled for 11
Nicoll said early Saturd~y. The
bargaining Saturday said they a.m. today at Cuyahoga Falls, an
talks are going on. That s all ~e
expect a settlement ''wltllln hours" Akron suburb near the Twin sburg know."
1n the 5-day-old strike at a Chrysler stamping plant. The plant'~ 3,200
Since the Twinsburg plant produCorp. stamping plant that has Idled workers walked out Tuesday,
ces all the front doors and most ofthe
up to 20.000 workers nationwide.
complaining of forced overtime and
steel underbodies for Chrysler cars,
. Only final language of a proposed poor working conditions.
the strike has caused parts shor• agreement remained to be worked
Management and the union began !ages that led to shutdowns at~
!)ut as a marathon bargaining exchanging proposals at 9 a.m . • Chrysler assembly plants.
·
'sesslondraggedon,saldUAWLocal Friday and, with only a two-hour
Plants In Belvidere, Ill., and
; 122 President Bob Weissman.
· dinner break, talked Into th1s Windsor. Ont., weretheflrsttoclose,
"From our view, It looks like morning.
laying off employees on Wednes·
: we're moving towards a rapid
Union officials had said Friday day. Those at Newark, Del., and
~oncluslonotthesenegotlatlons,and they were making progress toward Detroit followed suit Thursday, and
settlement seems imminent "said a settlement that could put the two plants at Fenton, Mo., were .
l;&gt;aul Jeunnette, financial sec;...tary strtklngTwlnsburgworkersbackon closed Friday.
of the Twinsburg local.
their jobs at midnight Monday.
The nl.tmber of employees at tbose
. · An agreement was expected
MembersoftheChryslerbargaln· plants approached 20,000, but Nicoll
')within hours," he said at 5 a.m . ingteamhavedecllnedcommenton saldhewasnotsurebowmanywere
: ~turday.
the status of the negotiations. In actually on layoff.

DUMP LAWN CARTS
. 900 LB. SIZE

terror and undermine democracy .'' officials say the total value of ai(l
• But they do support the admlnls· · from the Soviets, Cuba and North
Korea was $37.8 million.
·
tratlon claim that Grenada, the
The
treaties,
from
1980
through
smallest nation In the Western
1985, suggest the Soviet part of the
Hemisphere, was developing a
package was worth $2;.8 mllllon.
substantial military capacity. The
Grenadians were to receive thou- North Korea was to provide the
other $12 million while Cub;l
sands of automatic weapons and
provided 27 permanent, and 12or:l3
other small arms, along with ·large
te mporary, military advisers.
'
amounts of ammunition. ·
The documents also show turmoil
Much of the material In the
documents had already been dis· . among Grenadian leaders, who took
closed and discussed by U.S. over in a 1979 coup.
One document, said to be the
officials. The material released
Friday was only aportlonofthetotal minutes of an Aug. 26 Central
Committee meeting, said the revoamount seized by U.S. troops.
Cuba says the weapons were only lution was facing its "worst crisis
for defense, a fear Cuba claims was ever" and " the mood of the masses
justified by last week's U.S. -Ied is characterized at worst by open
dissatisfaction and cynicism and at
Invasion.
best by serious demoralization":
An Oct. Tl, 1980 pact between the
Soviet Union and Grenada outlined because of social problems on the
delivery of an assortment of Island.
Minutes of that meeting, and e.
material, Including armored per·
similar
session three weeks later,
sonnet carriers, submach!ne guns,
indicated
a diVision between Bishop,
thousands of rounds of ammunition.
who
was
regarded.
as somewhat of a
andjeeps. ·
moderate,
and
Bernard
Coard, the
The documents do not carry a
dollar figure but State Department more leftist deputy prime minister.

.:Settle01ent expec~ed
.in.Chrysler strike

Jackson-Milton 14-1i.
1. ElerUn Center Wt"Stcrn R('Spf'\11", 8-2,
lost to LowellviLlE' lJ. 7.
~. Art'hbold, 9-1. tv-at LJ~rty Center~
N

By TIM AHERN
A!iliOC!ated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Docu·
ments captured by the U.S. military
In Grenada- show that Marxist
leaders of the small Caribbean
nation were to receive substantial
military aid from the Soviet Union,
Cuba and North Korea, but worried
about the future of their movement
and argued among themselves.
The documents released Friday ·
by the State Department outlined
five treaties- three with the Soviets
and one each with the Cubans and
North Koreans - providing arms
and mllltary supplies to the Marxist
government of Prime Minister
Maurice Bishop.
It was Bishop's overthrow and
murder by a more militant leftist
faction on the Island which led to last
week's U.S. Invasion,
None of the 125 pages of
documents specifically backs up the
,. . contention by President Reagan last
week that Grenada was a "SovietCuban. colony being readied as a
weapon as he an1ves Friday at the division area at
major military bastion to export
Fort Bragg, N.C. (AP i..aserphoto).

Army takes weapons from departing Soviets

FORCES FllMBLE - Gallipolis defensive back Steve Sanders
(16) forced a Wheelersburg fumble (by Don Brown) on lhls play late bt
tlte first period Friday. WHS won, 20-14.

CQLlnl.ffiL'S. Ohio rAP t - Hov.• the top·
rankl'(! teams In 1lle Assoclatl.'l:l Press
Ohkl high school fOOtball r a tin ~ farM:
(;!AS'; AAA
1. Clnclnn&lt;~ll Mot"'lf'l'. !Hl. pla)"Ni Clndn·
n:~11 Pr1nc.:-ton Saturday .
2. Akron Garfl(&gt;ld, 9-0. beat Akron
B~ll&gt;l 7S-O.
3, Sandusky. ~1. lo!t to Fl'm!Onl Ross

HAPPY -

~m.·-~mliml Sect~. ,g'
Con101Unist bloc aid
promised to Grenada, .
but leaders disagreed

•

•

-

BOMB - Alllllnell bellcopter llllrM oiJ -the
ol devulaloa after a car W1lll driven IIIIo the

.'

......

...

"-i .

~

I'll) pllltiDihecltyof'J'yre,OCClllplediOIIIh

Le'llaDaD ..S blownup. (AP Wbepboto).
I•

/

border. told reporters that the
suspects were "terrorist organlza.
lions ... Pa lestinian groups .. :
drawing fheir inspiration from
Khomeini, all of them receiving
support from Sylia."
Israeli soldiers who survived the
terrorist blast dug through th~
wreckage wllh their hands to find
comrades. Three Israeli soldlenj
were_jlulled out unharmed. Israel
said'"29 Israeli s and three Israeli
detainees were wounded.
Beirut radio, giving a death toU
higher than the Israelis, said25Arab
plisoners died in the blast.
•!
.
The
Israeli command said thealt
strikes over the central mountainS
were .to avenge the bombing: They
were Israel's first air attacks on
targets in the mountains In 14
months. Israel Invaded Lebanon lh
June 1!ll2 to rout PLO guerrtllas. .

'

..

The attacks Friday In Trtpoli.:
northern Lebanon, were the secon4
day In theassaultonArafatandS,OO(l
supporters. The PLO chieftain and
followin g, with their backs to ~·
sea, are holed up at the Baddawlant
Nahr cl-&amp;red' refugee camps.
,'
From Sylian-controlled height$ '
rocket and artillery fire pou~
down on the camps.
•
Tripoli hospitals reported ~
200 people were killed and 500 ~
wounded In the two days offlglltlnfc.:
'

.

'I

•

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipoli~. Ohio-Point Plea5anl, W.Va.

Page-0..2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

November 6, 1983 ·~

31

Defense ·Department says
Korean plane search over
oext week. (AP 1 ·-erpboto).

Andropov fails : to appear
for .important Kremlin meet
By ROXINNE ERVASTI
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet Presi·
. dent Yurt V. Andropov failed to
attend a nationally te levised Krem·
lin gathering Saturday at !he start of
the country's biggest holiday, in·
creas ing speculation about his
health.
The 69-year-old Soviet leader has
not made a public appearance since
Aug. 18. He has been reported
suffering from kidney. heart and
o(her ailments, and is said to have
given up plans to receive visitors in
the Kremlin since then.
His absence from a meeting to
inaugurate a three-day celebration
honoring the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution to power was cons idered highly
unusual. Attendance Is traditional
and expected.
Foreign diplomats said they
assumed Andropov would have
attended the speechmak!ng and
concerts in the Kremlin's Palace of
Co ngresses unl ess he was
incapacitated.
Last month, the Kremlin public·

ized a letter Andropov wrote to
international scientists In whlch he
said he could not meet them In
Moscow then becausehehadacold.
Government spokesman LEonid
Zamyatln said after the Saturday
ceremony that Andropov was
absent because he had a cold, whlch
he descrtbed as "not serious."
Zamyatln, head of the Central
Committee's lntematlonal Informa lion Department, also said he
''doubted" Andropov would attend
the Revolution Day parade Monday
in Red Square.
"The doctorS will say when he can
return to work," Zamyatin told
Western reporters. He said An·
dropov had been suffertng from tiM!
cold for 10 days.
Andropov's absence from the
parade would be considered even
more startling. His predecessor
Leonld I. Brezlmev never missed
a ny Revolution Day festivities
· despit!" numerous ailments.
Brezhnevdledatage75onNov.lO,
1982, three days after watching the

annual parade from atop the tomb of
revolutionary leader Vladlmlr I.
Lenin.
The official Soviet news agency
Tass said workers, party officials,
veterans, mllllary officers and " the
leaders of 11\eCommunist Party and
the Soviet state" attended the
Saturday meeting.
It did not mention Andropov• But
Soviet televiSion carried live cover·
!ll:eo!the Kremlin gathering, giving
viewers ample opportunity to ndte
hls absence.
Konstantln U. Chemenko, 72, and
considered Andropov's chief rtval
on the Politburo, led the procession
on and of.1 stage to applause by the
6,!XXJ speetatDrs. During the hour·
long speech by Polltburo Grtgory
Romanov, Chemenko sat alert,
spreaklng occaslonafly with others
seated on the podlwn.
AU members of the 11-man
Politburo except Andropov and two
out-of·tOWJI members, Vladlmlr V.
Sbcherbltsky and Dinmukhamed A.
Kunayev, were present.

1 CN&lt;IallPIMtlol.... d&lt;ftM .. n&lt;ll

J .t o -

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IH ... nA&lt;Io

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,., ... , ... tii'OOd .. . ... _

,

U · f•moi &lt;K501o

~

·~· ··· -~·

I

i

'1 .. .,. , ,. ~old (].ocld o
~J.( I , IV .. II No&lt;&gt; Equop-nl

, . • .,..,.... lo• Solo

UAMoqu . .

J) V on o .. 4 W[)

n

71 .. ., ..........
1 11 1 0111 ..... . ...

"No lawyer or person likeS the
prospect of facing the · death
penalty," . be sald.''I' ve a)ways
considered thls and Lauren Wagner
the two strongest counts."
Soperlor Court Judge Ronald
George ordered jurors to resume
dellberatlolls on the seven other
charges Buono faces.
The Jury has been deliberating six
days a week since It received the
case'Oct. :ll. The trial, which bepn
Nov. 16, l!m, Ill the longl!st In
Callfomla history and paJSibly

nationwide.
Miss Miller was a runaway wbo
wwktdlnHollywoodasaprostltute.
Sbe- piclrl!d up outside Carney's
Dlnel" 011 Suaaet Boulevard early 011
the momlng of Oct. 31, 1977,
leithldij' lbowed.

n

u .,.,.., ...... . ....... .
eu~o ·• iulllli'•

u ''" ... ....
&amp;1 ·~'"''' ""'"'~"'"""
u r. ...... voootob'*•

the area for the prayers,
Ctfdl, telephone calls, ftow-

w..

en end those who viaited me

while I
a patient in
Univer1ity Hospital. Columbus.

Oh .

My

sineere

appreciation .
~ob Chepman, Syracuse,

Baby bed mattrBsa. medi~
cine cabinet, lavatory -old.
twin size bed springs. Good

cond , 814-992 -5005 ,

0

"'
..
· .,.

to thank everyone who ient
carda. flowara, visits. pray-

oute. 614-949 -2627.

era and
kindness

2 mala puppies, Shepherd

."'"'! ' '

,·
•;-:
v

"'

··
.~

Bill and Carrie Kennedy with
all their loving
when Bill was a

patient in St. Joseph's hos-·
pltal. God Blass you aiL

3 Announcements

chine repair, partl. and
aupplies.
Pick up end
delivery, Oevia Vacuum
Cleaner, one h.-If mila up
GeorgH Creek Rd .
Call

446· 0294.
Balloon• for Birthdays, Get
Well, Anniversary•. Swee ~
theart•. parties. Call Bal-

loons &amp; Co .. 446-431 3.
Christmas Bazaar Addaville
E'ementary School. Sat .•

Vacancy: Julia's Personal
Care Home. Formerly
Mercer Canvaleaance
Home. 18 yeara experience.

Clifton. W.V. 304-773·
5873.
Young

teecher

wants

a

friond (ogo 30·40) for Friday
and Saturday evening activities. Call 448-2131 after 6
p.m - Ask for Nadene.

.I
4

FOUND Calico cat in front of
stock nlet, Oct. 31 . Call

448-0945.

Giveaway

;
Female English Saner &amp;
1mall pup. Peek-a-poo

' "•&lt; ~

.......,.

n .,..,.,.,._

............,. ...
1:).1 _.....

••· •-""•' "'•~'~"" '

.,.,;

01-k h -

41 '""' ioohH 1'1 - o
4 1 II'Oooloo ll .,.o

" ·" " - TY .. CIII-~

tJ . W..,todt ~ llom

'1· -...,....._uo.

.,.. c...,otll

'"' -o-o

~~~ - ~~~o,.,...,,.,.

)GJ - Cfwo~••

--·
~'~•"'

c..... ..
..... c..... .,.
G..,..

Moo,. cou"'•

71•Como""' f " " - " '

•••• tOi oto'ljooiOd

4, .................,
4
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ld ~ ~ ... -

Ut - e ......

2-«1 · l'loollrondo

lU

a,......, o...

:u
ll · homtqu"''"'"~'

It Momollftllta••-~"
13 ~lumO&gt;Of lloiiOIIont
IJ ·h&lt;not•l
,
I4 · Eio&lt; oro:ol llolloh-ol l&lt;&gt;"
l t •llone&lt;olllooh&lt;ll
II · M to Aopolo
11 u,~oc,,....,

li ·II'.,IUiol ...

ll
l'"""84·"-rl Or ooft

U · Sood llo hoO.hoo•

41 l"u'•-"' 1o• Mo"'

4 pups. Coll446·8104.

/11 111!11 ill /( U •fo•f .JtH/11 ' 1'1 t•/tfOIIJ.II'•

l
....
lll lotol•••-•

1 \ •ttolpW.,.,H
12-aio .,.ooooiW...oM

-,

Ul Aoololo O.ot
371 l'lol""'

u1

.....

Ponlo~d

~

..... '-''"

141 l'loe&lt;.,.
Hl - ll"'lo,..
lfl - C- -

'·"

-

........ c. wv

'

Aooo C011o Jl)o

.

'"' ,._,
'II - loan
$71

.........

o......

n J ,......,

black 8t white Beagle pup. In
Gellipolia vicinity. Reward .

-!

n

2 female klnen1, 1omeone

I _ __ _ _.::._..:.__ _ _ _ _ _
1Utoo11-"' OftehloiN•uo•
Uoool&amp;-do . 1~'""' ' "-"on
Uo 10 IS WO&lt;do llo ..... ~-·-

I A--4-~oJ*I..ot

UIO . . I.MM

dropped at my hou11 . Call

UOO
UOO

387-7828 .

17 00

676-2643.
LOST black and' white spotted female Beagle . Carl

Thomas 304-675-1577,

8

Boll Auctioneer . 428-8177.
Wanted To Buy

We pay caah for late model
clean uaect cera .

Jim Mink Chev.·Oido Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3672 .

Wanted to buy uaed coal &amp;
wood haater1. Swain Furni ~

turo. 446 -3169. 3rd. •

in

good

cond.

NOTICE
Lead1ng Creek Con servancy
01strlct w•ll accep1 b1ds at as
off1ce located at 34481 Corn
Hollow Road . Rutland, Oh10
45775. for the purchase by
Lead•ng CreAk Conservancy
D1str.ct of two new motor
vehicles as follows·

heavy duty shocks. aux rear
sp11ngs (51 7x501C16 mud and
snow 11res and wheels. tr ansmiSSIOn coo iAr gauges (amffiflter and ad) and heavy duty vmyl
seat.
All b1d s must be f1led at the
offtce of Leadnt g Cn~ek Conser·
vancy 01stnct on th e I 4th day
of November, 1983. by twelve
o"clock noon. All b1ds Will be
opened on thA 15th day of
November. 1983. a1 twelve
o'clock noon
TEAMS Cash Cop1P.S ot
spec•licat•ons can be obta1ned
at the Lead1ng CreP.k ConsP.rvancy Dtstnct Ofl1cfl

• I • • • •

~

BIIR 4-43 - .NEW LISTING -FIRST TIME ON IIARKETI Bi·level
locted Just mmutes from iDwn on Debby Dr. Includes LR, eat-in
kitchen with d$hwasher &amp; diSpOSal, dtnmg room joins knchen 3
BRs. I bath plus 2 haff baths. Fami~ room in basement I car
:=pump. S99 mo. budget City school dist Call for an

BIIR 426- !YMIER SAYS SELL- Hhas an 3SSII!lable loan with ·
~ 911'11 !merest. we are lallting about awer; cleMI, 3 BR home
siual!d on nice flat iOC in a family orienled n~borhoQd.
REDUCED! $3,0CO down an~ assume loan!
.
BIIR 435- IDEAL SIARTER HOME- 3 BR,tqe kithen,LR.
13PIIt nalural gas heli, new roof, kx:aled within Gail~ city
1m Priced at $31.900. Be the Ml 1D see lhii one!

.

BIIR436 - EXCEUOO START£R IIOihtlh 2BAs, LR. OR. ni:e

· kll:lt81, utiity and new bathroom. Cerpelld tltrou&amp;houl Scteened
. pdl. CIIJ)Ort. LIIIB let Call tlr appoinlntlrtl.

. BIIR 389- OWN9I SAYS SELL TODAY! Your family will enjoy Ill!
rcmtiness. of dtis house. lndl.des 4 BAs, 2 baths, LR, DR, buiH~n
kitht1t. Sibnd on large ccmer let Oose 1o tuwn in cily s:hooi
. dL!Iricl. (Orten Elan). Call to 581! tlis one!
.

iroRr FRAIIE

Bill 440- 2
1tame b"lltlr $10.SOO. Rent 1 or ',
lli8 1n l Eilw wry the Yliue II tltn. Citll 11011 b

Card of Thankl

-~

•

~~~ · ·
~
"

Public Notice

-

GALUA-MEIGS
REGIONAL AIRPORT
AUTHORITY
GALLIA·MEIGS
REGIONAL AIRPORT
GALUPOUS. OHIO
46631
NOTiCE
Pu• suant to Chapter 308.

secHon 13 of the TransponaIIOn Laws of Oh10. DIVISton of
Avtatlon. The Gallla-Me•gs AeQIOnal Atrport AuthOrity 1$
accepttng sea led b1d proposals
for the pos •tlon of A~rport
Manager and Fixed Base Operator of the Gall•a-Me1gs Re gional A•roort.
Btd Proposals should mclude
the appltcant"s quallltcaiiOns
references. ..orevtous av•at•or1
expenence. and educational
background The proPosal
shou ld delineate tmanc1al AICpectatlons and managenal re ~
sponslbllitles dn the par! of the
applicant
Proposals wtll be accepted by
the Board of County Comm•sStoners at Ga tl •pohs. Oh1o, until
10·00 AM on the Bth day of
November, 1983. and opened
1mmed•ately and publicly rea d.
Each B1d Proposal rnust be
addressed to the Board at Galli a I
County CommiSSIOners. and
endorsed on the outs1de of ·the
envelope as follows: Proposal
·tor Ga ll•a -M e1gs Aeg to nal

A•rport

The Galha· Me•gs · Reg tonaJ
A1rport Aut honty reserves the
nght to watve any tnfo rmahtlt!S.
or to reject any and all brd s

Oct 30. Nov. 6

-

Public Notice

: :

..

NOTICE OF SALE
~. :
BANK ONE. ATHENS. NA 2 S
Court St . Athens. Oh1 0 45701 •! :
w111 offer for saiP. th e followtng .
descnbed 1tems frP.e and clear
of all encumbrances .

DESCRIPTIONS
1981 Yamaha 11 00 SHB . •
Very Clean
J '
1978 BMW mo10rcycle ; ;:
.. ,
Model R-80 7. Very Clean
1978 Jeep Model 25J1 0
Pi ck up
. ..
1978 l nu~rnatlanal Semt
Model F-43 70A
1979 GMC Stat1on Wagon. •,
Very Clean
1978 Dodgf! 8 Swepthne 1/2
ton 4-wheel dn\le truck
1976 Toyota
1970 Volkswagen Van
1980 Fori LTD automat•c
'
1980 Chevrolet Camo;~ro Z- ~-.
28 Clean
:
The atoremP.nltonP.d 1tP.ms • •
shalf 00 sold by pnvatP. sale at • :
4 00 PM. EST on Monday. ' ,
November 14, 1983 at BANK i '
ATH ENS. NA. 2 S Court ;
Atnen&lt; Oh1o to the h•gh Ast ~ •
seaiP.d
The 1tems w;ll be ~ :
sold as 1s w1thout any P.xpress , ,
or tmp lted warranties Items "' ~
may be seen pnor to the ~al e by • ,
pr tor arrangement by calling \I 1

61

tiA~~

o

~~E~~ t.JA of ;.:

3 66 8 1
NE A

6

Athen s. Ohto reserves lhe nght ·, ~
to re1ect any or all b•ds. tho'! r1g ht ' t
tO withd rawa l ol any or all•tems 1
from sale pnor to con ft tmat1on. : ~
Tf!rms of sale. Cash ce ntfi A d ~ '
or off1 c1al check or l1nanc•ng " :
co nl1 rma110n
• ~

110i2PI 11 )6.13. 3tc

· •

• •

.'

.

~

•,
'
•'

"'

I

.,

,,

.
...,."-''l,tll..,..n~..

····-·aiiiiipoiii·······-·
&amp; Vicinity
··~------------------····-----

LOST 8moll ohort tog,
brown·block·whho, ...11.ri
pup. Coli 448·1125.
"eward.
,

I wish to thank all of my
family and friends lor the
btaulilul flowers. &amp;ifts.
cuds, ud prayers which
they pve to me and lor the
-time they toot lroro their
busy lives to spend with me
durtna my recent stay at
tht Holzu Medical Cenltr.
I also wish to t~ant Dr.
Price, his surcical team, all
of the third floor nurses,
nurses aids, and any of tht
other personnel of the
Holier Medical Centar who
wenf ·so carinclor me dur·
ina my hospitalization.
May God Bless Each of
You.
Sincerely, ·
Juanita (Nita) Conde

2

furniture, gold, silver dollars, wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques, etc., Complete households . Write:
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,,Pomeroy,

Oh . Or 992· 7760.
Wanted to buy. New. used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
place or complete house-

I

Oorogo S.lo lat. • Sun.
Nov. 5th • lth, 8 til e. To
many Item• ta lt.t. Come ' ~

bro-1 Pout Donnoy'o, Bid- · t
- · Dh. Comw ot IT. Rt. ' I
554 ond llci--R-..,
Rd.
.:: f

holda. Also complete Auctl·

shop. 304-875-2770.

Mfddlopor!. oh . 61 4·992·
3478.

Raw Fur Buyer. BNf &amp; Deer
Hides-Ginseng, Trapping
Suppliea . George Buckley,
At. 2. Athens. Oh . Phone

614-614·4761 , 1·9 Oaily.
Woul~

like to buy GMC
plokup model '89-'72. Coli
botwoon 4-8, 304·882 2714.

12

~

For ·i••tion about Synlhtlic Lubricants, 1ft ucel·
ltnt BusitltiS Opportunity.
Cont1ct
Rodney St1pleton

We lost our dnrost friend.

448·7414

· Sady llsstd by

BabysiHing in my home.
Ages 1 ~ 6 years .. 8 a.m..!5

p.m. 614-985-4392 aok for

Sharri. Will pick up at $6.00
at your home, radius of 15
miles .
Have •vacancy for elderly.
Room, board and care.

1983.
Pttctfully slttplna
lestiq at liSt
Till watld's w.ylnlublll
and trl* palld.
In llltnct shi sufftrtd
In patltnct she bore
111llod ctiiiCI her ho11t
To sufltr no mort.

ST. LOUIS
CATHOLIC CHURCH

Wed., Nov.9, 7:30-11:00

Donation $3.00. Hours'do1rs.
a.. ..... l'1ll1lc ltMiod. . ..
Clll 245-1417 .. ...
9317. Limilld - -

ANNUAL BAZAAR
Slmd H.-t Cluch
Po1111roy

THURS. NOV. lOth

Hem and creamed

chlc:bn dinners from
4:30 to 7 p.lll.
.
Glmts of 111 kindJ.
Door prlas Ml'J hllf

llour stlrtl'lr It 7 p.m.

. I
~

t

..

Located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. $24,500. or
will rent for $275 mo .

Clgarette Oiatributorship.
Instant cash flow! We are a
Bonded national firm ax ~
panding into the area . It you
are seekin9 a secure business opportuinty . We pro ~
vide all retail locations and
all necessary training. Full or
Part time. Investment from

304·816·3934,
Baum Addition . 3 bed·
rooms, 2% baths, a.c .. fam ·
ily room, with fir~pl~ce, 2
acrea. $65,000 . f•rm. Loan
assump1:1on possible. 614-

985·4387 .

Salem-Kools. 1 -800-241 -

home. carpeted, full size
basement. 1 car garage, in
ground pool 1 6x32 .

$46.000 . 614 -992-5858 .

you

up.

1 - 404-469 ~

I am going to put a local
family in buainesslll National company has high
profit dealership available in
your area. Turn key program .
This is not an employment
solicitation . We are profes~
sionala at establishing peo·
pie in their own business
with unlimited income potentiaL We require S25,000
totally secured by inventory .
We provide complete training. For complete informa ~
tion, write W.S.A .. Inc.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . ,USED · CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS ,
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446·7672 .

614-992-6207 after 7 p.m.

home. Earn S76 to 61 60, no
investment. Call 446-6264

22 Money to Loan
HOME

LOANS

FIXEO

RATES 1 2 1h% purchase or
refinance. 1 1V.% adjustable
rate . leader Mortgage,

House raising , leveling, resilllng, concrete work: base ment water proofing. foun dation work, free estimates.

304· 675-3908 .

23

Professional
Services

$16,400. 14x70. 3 BR . 2
full bath. total alec .. 1984
Broadmore by Fleetwood,

$14,996, 14x70, 2 BR, FR

NO TUNING Lower
prices-regular tunings·
discounts to Senior Citizens,
Churchea &amp; schools . Werd's

Kit., total alec .. Used -1977
Governor 14x60, 2 BR.
$9,996, gas heat. central
air ., 1974 Homette 14x65;

.2 BR, $9,696. gas hoot.

Insurance

31

1980 Liberty 14x54, 2 BR ,
$8 , 295, fireplace.. 1970
Monarch 12x48, $4,795 .,
1968 Holiday Var. Camper.
$3,900 .. Kessels Quality
Mobile Homes, 1 mile west
Holzer Hospital. Call 446-

Homes for Sale

SANDY AND BEAVER tn·
surance Co . h11 offered
IINices for fire insurance
coverage in Qallla County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and peraonal property
coverage• are available to
meet individual needs. Con·
tact Harry Pitchford. agent.
Phone 446 ~ 1427.

16

Schools
Instruction

cluo Sat. Nov. 6th, 2221 N.
Moln St. Brick buldlng by
Marietta

Coli 446-0276.
Middleport. priced for immediate posaessionl Cozy
home with floor furnance ,
fireplace, reasonable utili·

ties. oil 992 · 694 1.

Learn t"low to use your
camera. Sign up end fir1t
old

4 bdr. ranch home, farge LA ,
full basement, with garage.
wood burner included , city
schools. 2 miles from town .

Plant.

304-

675-2931 ot 8:30·8:30.

18 Wantad to Do

Good 6 rooms &amp; bath,
garage. good tobacco barn,
&amp; other outbuilding. 1. 100
lbs. plul tobacco base . Calf

446-1006.
Completely remodeled . 6
rooms . Bath . Carpet. large
lot. 3 porch-.s. large baae ~
mant.· Muat HI I. Immediate
po11e11ion . Only $18,600 .
L81t houae away from River
ol\ Hender10n St .. Henderson, WV . Phone nu.mber in
yard.

General Hauling end Trash
ramovel Service . Reliabla
end ct.pendable. Call 4483169 between 9 and 15.

l..:__________

lawn Mowing no yard to big

1----------

or smell. Rollabloondllopon·
For

estimala

call

7274 .
New 1984 Skyline 14x70. 3
BR . 1 1h bath , completely
turn.. delivered and set.
regular , 816,600, Speci.al
$14,500 . French City Mo-

bile Homos. Call 446-9340.
Now 1984 sectional I 306
sq . ft .. 3 BR .. 2 full baths,
family room. delivered and
set regular $24,500 , Special
$21,995 . French City Mo·
bile Homes. Cali 446-9340.

11

Help Wanted
Market in&amp;
ASSISTANf

Nuraea Aide d11lre1· parttime care for elderly. babysItting, housecleaning in your
home. Pomeroy·Gallipolla /

nt tl-1

Large house or land in
town, or within city '
school district.

or omatl. Call 448·8537.
Call botwoon 6:00·8:00AM.
or 4:00-B:OOPM, Mondoy
tllru Friday.

8

Lott and Four:~d

11

ref. Call446-3176.
House beautiful 3 bdr .. 2
bath, LA , FR , wall to wall
Carpet , dishwasher. gas
heat, air cond .• in Gallipolis.

576-2711 or 576-2866 .

Three bedroom hOme on
Park Drive, 1300. per month
plus deposit. Call 304-17154340 and ask for Mr. Clark.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Rei , 1eq. Call 446 · 1 409
after 5 .

'

·

2 bdr. mobile home. CAll

2 bdr. central air, equipp~;td
kitchen, $300 mo ., 41

Spruce St. Call 446· 2 I 58 .
Two story house, 4 bdr.•
$250 per mo. $250 dep.

1eq. Cal i 446-4222, 9:30·
5:00 ,

446-0508 .
2 SR . all elect .• 2 '12 mi ., Rt.
688, n'ew carpet. ready now.
$1 75 mo . Security dep. &amp;
ref. Call Mr . Dobson 446-

4607 dey. 446 -2602 ovo .

2 bdr . trailer partially fur·
nished, Bulaville Ad. Cell
Furnished 3 roo m cottage, 446-3437.
one bedroom , only large
enough for one or two 2 bdr partiallY furnished,
adults. no pets. ref. &amp;
Kerr~.Harr1sburg Rd, *17&amp;
deposit required. Call at · mo . Coil 446 -9384 ,
1057 ~ nd . AVe ., Gall ipolis .
House for rent 5 rms ., bath.
central heat, with full ba sement, adults only, ref. &amp;

dop , Cai1446 -1163.

3 BR house betwe en CenterviiiO and Oak Hill , $175/ mo.
Also Country store for lease.
S125 / mo. Call 6 14· 245$235. month . 3 bedroom.
Fully carpeted. gardener fur·
nished, Stove and refrig.
614-992 -2815 from 9 to 5

7 p.m .

· ...

Very nice 2 bdr . mobile
home in good location near •
Green School. Unfurnished
except new carpet. stove.
ref .. drapes. C -A. $200 mo. Includes water, sewage S.
garbage. Call eve. 448-

0254.

'

In Mercerville. 2 bdr . trailer.
Close to school. Call 266-

6251 .
1 2x60 2 bdr . modern fur·
nished trailer. convenient
location , Upper River Rd,
deposit req . Call 614-446-

8558.

2 bedroom house in Lan gs- 2 bedroom mobile home in
ville area. Deposit &amp; referen - Pomeroy . 61 4 ~ 986-4290 ,
ces req uired. Coun1ry home. after 5 p.m .
large yard . 614-742-2541·, , _ _ _.:...__ _ __ __
Small 4 room house in
Ra cine . Unfurni shed. adults
only , $ 125. month plus

Trailer for rent in Tupper•
Plains $165 . month plus
utilities and deposit. ,6673 487.

1
===:::::;;======
!- - - - - - - - - utilities
2619 . &amp; depo sit. 614 -949 -

2 bedro om w ith garage,

44

Apartment
for Rent

Salem St .. Rutlan d. $1 80.
month. U nfu rnished 614-

742 -23 78 .

1- - - - - - ' - - - - Middleport. S325. 3 bed room. dining room . full
basement , garage, nice
neighborhood . Security
depos1t required . A lso references. 614 -992 -25 17 .

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-576-2711 ,

Five room hpuso. 1wo bed rooms . carpeted , S250 .00
plus deposit. 304 -675 -

1984 1 4' wide, 3 bedrooms.
1 1fz baths , 6 inch outside
walls , all-electric. com pletely furnished ,

4072.

44

$13.995 .00 : 14 '•50 ' 2 bod ·

Furnished aPt . $185. W•ter
paid. 2 bdr.. 131 % 4th.
Gallipolis. 446-4416 aher 7
p.m.
2bdr ,, 2 bath. 11 Court St.
Ref. &amp; dep . $325 mo. Call

446 ·4926.
Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. ·Call

445 -0338.

Apartment
for Rent

RIVER BEND
New Haven, W.Va.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
35 acres at Rodney on W . T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ·
lng available . Call446 ~ 822 1
after 6 weekdays,

16 acres outside of Rutland .
Gas well , good timber. good
hunting. $13 . 000 . 614-

992-3901.
For hunting or home site. 80
acres $24,000. Me igs Co .
near Eastern High School on
Twp. Rd . 614-985-41 I 6 .
Five acres of land with
electric and water. Down~
payment and pay balance on
land contract . 304 ~ 675 ~

2449 .
Grandview Heights, two lots

for sate . 304-675 -3626.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Save 45%
Heat Your Entire
House....

Enjoy the comforts of a beautUul new apartment as
well as the security provided by automatic door
entry system and emergency alarm system.
Housln~ lor persons SO years and older and the
handicapped. Rental assistance available under lite
H.U.D. Se&lt;:tion 8 Program. Tenant pays 30 Pet. of
adjpsted lncom e toward rent. All utilities Included
In rent eucpt TV Cable and Telephone. Income
Umlts one person $12,3110, 2 people $14,1110. The
tenants can enjoy the buildings Community Room,
Lounge, and planned Social Activities. 51ft Street,
New Haven~ WV or caD 882-3121 for further Information .
$50.00 IInder's le&lt;: paid to person for finding a new
qualified tenant for River Bend Place.

@

Equal Housing Opportunity.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

•Automatic Controls
•2 Blowers

Wanted To Btiyl!

•Firebrick

lined

•Bums Wood or Coal

446·3036

REG. 5995

Reliable, responsible, IJtpeyard work, roofing. carpentry, odd jobo. No fob too big

4 bdr. house 5 acres of land
On Rt. 1 60 in Vinton . Central
air, 6350 mo., sec . dep. &amp;

$588

Wanted To Buy

Call

room, two car garage. heat

•

388-"8346.

Call 448-391 a.

$10.000 304· 773-5 023.

Fireplce .Insert

Colt 614·3B8·9854 or 614·

those!~========:::

help . Colt 448-2008.

1976 14x70 traitor. 3 bed ·
room , 2 baths , large kitchen .

Two yoero old three bOd·
pump. 304-675-5545.

o• 614 -99 2-2362 fr or
l 5to
1974 New Moon Mobile
Home. 2 , bedroom. la rge
utility room , on 1 acre of
land . Off Leading Creek Rd .

2500 TO 5000 SQ FT.

Small farm. 9 acres. plenty
outlida buildings, ranch
atyle home. 3 bedrooms .

9

Houses for Rent

Houses for Rent

304-576-2711 .
New- 1984 8roadmore by
Fleetwood, &amp;15,995,
14x70. 2 SR. fireplace, 2
full bath, total elac ., 1984
Broadmore by Fleetwood,

Koyboord. 304-675-3824.

13

985· 4488 .

rooms . all electric Flee1NEW AND USED MOBILE wood mobile hom e, deli HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· vered and set up on your lot
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES. $9,995 , 10 percent down ,
4 ML WEST. GALLIPOLIS. low bank financing
RT l5. PHONE 446· 7274. 8vailable.
All -S tate Modular
2 bdr. 1 2x50 . $3 .500. -3
'
Homes
bdr., 1 2x70. total electric, 2
located halfway between
baths $7,500 . Call 614·
Huntington and Point
448·0175.
Pleasant on St . At. 2 .

Athens, 1-800-34 t -6554

their home. By the weak.
Mldleport. Pomeroy area.

1974 Kirkwood 12x65 . 1 %
acres . Carpeted. under pinned. garden. fruit trees .
outbuildings, well. 614 -

Priced right . $13 ,000 will 1981 14M70, Shultz limited
buy this partially remodeled, mobile home. microwave,
2 bedroom home . Garage, 1 dishwasher, central air, un·
country acre . 614 -742 - derpenning , three bed ~
2390.
rooms , 1 Vz baths . eMcellent
condition. S15,500. Call
6.6 acres. Sacrificed price. 304-675-6049 after 5 p.m,
S12,000 . 3 bedroom1railer,
1% bath . pasture. fenced. Mobile Home Moving. Li pond, garden . 61 4-742 · censed and Insured. Free
2364.
Estimates $100 . per hook·
up minimum. · Phone 304-

4438.

41

93 15 .

3 bedroom ranch style 2801 .

Open a beautHul jeans.
sportswear or childr~ns
shop. Top brands, low priset

10x65, 2 bedroom. New
Moon. 614- 985 -4120.

614·992 -7406 or 61 4-742 ·

2268 .

Will care for the elderly in

rioncod poroon willing to do

Dauahters, Rosina &amp; Doris

Koehler, who passed.
IWIY November 5,

1806 after 6:00. Also buy·
ing antiques.

41

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

•

Hou11cleanlni for
that work or just nHd extra

dtrl~

In memory of Cleta

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you kJlOW. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have tnvesti ~
gated the offering.

21628 North 2nd . Avo ..
Phoonlx. AZ 85027 or call
Jim Kelly , 1 -800 -821 ·
.------Tree trimming and removal. I. _4_:3_:3_:0_
Free estimates. 614~992 6040 or 61 4·949-21 29.
Need 10 1adiesto work from

3 Announcements

mofhtr.

lui-= .. ..

THE OHIO VALLEY "PUB ·

Situations
Wanted

446·3159. 9 to 5.
In Iovin&amp; memory of our
llyrtit IttI on
her blrthdly,_Nov. 6,1983
Willi II hOiftt wit-OUI I
IOOihlr!
All thlop this wo~d IIIII' sond

I NOTICE I

ces, $13,97.6 to $16,976to

A. Mortin 614-992-8370.
Buying dally gold, 1ilver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large currency. Top price1. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Business
" Opportunity

Homes for Sale

The

For sate by owner 36 a m -1; l - - - -- - - - - 3bdr house; 2 bldvs - 1 7' x
80' &amp; 26'x30' metal w- Windsor, 14x70. with ex ~
concrete, ele. &amp; wtr; dbl panda, 3 bdr., 2 batht,
crib; 2 pnds w~stocktanka; priced at approx . payoff.
good fence; sit 2 mi . off US Rodney . Oh . 304- 675 ·
35, Jcks Co .: 20 m i. from 1726 for information.
Jcks; 20 mi. from G'pls;
Gatlia Co , sh. dist: CalliS 141 1 4x70 2 bedroom unfur682· 6892 after 5 &amp; week nished mobile home, carpet·
ends; (614] 446 -0336 8 am ing, appliances: central airheat , $11,000 . Cell
to 4 pm; ask tor June.
614 - 256 ~ 6035 , or after
3 SR . 3 acres ground. Near 7fM 614-256-1572 .
Porter Old 160. Take mobile
home trade in. Call 44,. $1.000 down $127 mont_h,
good 2 bedroom mobile
4202 or 446-2867. ·
home on rented lot (Rod 4 BR bi ~ levef. eat-in kitc,en. ney). Call 446 -1241 or
LR , dining area. family 614 -256-6224 .
room, 2 V2 baths, 2 car
garage, gas heat. central air . 1970 Bindale. living room
$68,900 . Jay Drive. Call expando 1 2x63. ~ BR. t~tal
electric , central a1r, awn1ng.
446· 7923 ..
underpinning , deck. Call
3 BR house, with carport, 61 4-246· 9222 .
Garfield Ave. location. Call
614·246-5259 or 446 · .4 mobile homes . 10 ' and 12 '
8679 .
ft . wide . 2 bedroom ·
furnished . Low priced .
3 BA , -~ baths, 2 car garage, Brown.'s Trailer Park . 614 Rio Grande, $460 / mo .. 4 992-3 324.
BR , 1% baths, 2 c~ garage,
in town , $300/ mo ., 3 BR. 1 1981 3 bedroom 141(70
bath, fireplace, · Addison, Shultz Mobile Home. 1 %
$250 / mo . Calf The Wise- baths with front porch
man A,gency , 446 -3643.
12x55. 614· 247·2664 .

$2,000.00 . Winston ·

Companion needed for el·
derly gentleman for Saturday &amp; Sunday; 7 :30a.m·. to
9:00 p.m . Must be able to
prepare meals and grocery

dable.

1

J

61 ·4 · 367-01 02. Av~ilablity­
Oecember 2. Application
deadline-November 16,

oneering ..Nice. Cell Osby

\

'lard Salel
.

CARD OF THANKS

language Development
Specialist-Guiding Hand
SchooL BA or BS degree
from accredited universitycollege in Speech and Hear·
ing . Contact: David Ratliff,
Principal, P.O. Box 14,

Call

BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old

1

7732.

Olive 51. , Gallipolis, Oh,
car

21

Shop to open soon . Now
seeking handmade country
crafts to sell by consign~
ment . If interested call446 ·

814· 992-8022 .

9

304-j;75· 761 0

THE CORNER CUPBO,tiRO.

1-:========::.

Mt.Aito auction avery Sat.
night, 6 p . m. Stllrting
Christmas seson. No more
consignments will be taken
until efter Chri1tm11. Emma

Now open . New home for
elderly people . Nurse on
duty at all t•me. Phone

Someone to pick and crib 6
acres of corn. Call 446·

WVo 773·91
. 304-773-6786
or 1·
304·
86.
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandill every , week.
Consigments of new and
uaed merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .

1 B Wd~ted to Do

1---- - - - - - -

LOR - FocuMs upon emotionally dilturbed behaviorally dia.ordarelil
youth in residential treatAuction every Tuesday ment facility. Baccalaureate
night, Pt . Pleasant, WVa. required -Masters' preferred .
Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth Counselling experience ,
Center Bldg.. Camden St. with expertise in substance
abuse will command prior·
814-367-7101.
lty. This Ia a full-time tam Rick Pe1rson . Auctioneer porary poaition, to expire
9·30 ~ 84 . Contact Director,
Service. Eatate. Farm, An~ Adole•cent Services, Lakin
tique &amp; liquidation sales. Hospital. Lakin, WV ~6250
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio&amp;. 304•676 . 3230 .

1879-80·81 Otdo or Chevy

Public Notice

over the age of 56 to work
20 hours per week . Appfi cant must meet low~ income
guidelines of the Senior
Employment Program. Will
be reaponsible for coordinatjng spBCial projects and
activities sponsered by the
Agency . Other duties will
include general office work .
Some tra11el required . Appli cant must have access to
reliable transportation. Send
Resume to Joyce Shong.
Area Agency on Aging Dis·
trict 7 . Inc .. P.O. Box 978,
RGC, Rio Grande, Oh
46674 . Deadline for applications is November 15,
1 983 . An equal opportunity
employer.

ADOLESCENT COUNSE·

Public Sale
8o Auction

614·258·6632.
Public Notice

I~~~~~~~~~A~g~in~g~is
seeking 8
person

1983.

Red Cocker Spaniel lost in
Gallipolis Ferry area. 304-

4 yr. old country dog, male,
good with children. Call

814-246-9389,

UJ N.,.,.,.,..,
IK loo..o
UJ - Iollolo&gt;

Firewood to give away. cut
your own. Call 388-8437.

Wanted

-Small. short·leg , brown , Cheshire. OH 46820 , Call

Call 446-9625.

J

·'

304-876·6268 after

6 Lost and Found

.Gun.ahoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m. Fectory choked guns
only.

.,
.,,
·"
··'

mixed.
e.

895·3621 '

to the public. Tablet availa·
bla 16.00 ea. lunch available. For more informetlon
end reaervatlonl call Brenda
Cnto. 446-7887 , 1st .
come, 1at. •rve basis.

~

6 week old klnens . Real

Two yellow kittens . 304-

Nov. 19, 11AM·4PM. Opon

..,

Hunting dog . 614-742·
2565. Red Tick.

SWEEPER . and sewing ma-

John Paul has spoken In Protest·
' ant churches before, Including a
historic meetlog with Episcopalian
leaders In Canterbury Cathedral
durtng hls visit to Brttaln last year.
However, thlswlllbethefirsttbne
a pope has ever participated In
Protestant service In his own
diocese, and Is considered by some
Vatican oll;ervers as one ofthemost
significant and symbollc steps
towards reconciliation In modem
times.
Dec. 11 Is the third Sunday of
Advent, a feast day recognized by
both churches.

LOST· 1$400. $20 and S60
bills. Jones Boys, Super
Amerlce . or Aevco . Call
446 -3625 .

·~

".

...

U.S. Navy ships, Japanese sal·
vage, shlps under contract to the
Navy, a U.S. CoastGuardcutierand
U.S. Navy and Air Force planes
participated In the search, . the
Pentagon said.
The initial air search covered
3,!XXJ square miles and the surf~
ship search covered more than ,150
square miles, the Pentagon said.
More than J,OCO hours were flown
and more than 320 shlp days
steamed durtng the search.

( 'ltH&lt;ij&lt; rd fU!/11'• nll"••r l ito•

71·A..,oPoriiA•"""'"''••

Ufm!olt.,. f oodoo

The Syrtans object In particular Ill
portions of the accord ending the
fonnal state. of war between
SPECIFICATIONS
Lebanon and Israel, providing
198 4 F-250 Ford 4)(4 StyleIsrael a securtty rone and normallz· s•de P•dup or GMC . Chevro let.
Dodge or other P.Qutvalent
lng economic relations.
make or model w1th 302 cubic
Opposition sources said the May 1nch. 351 cub1c 1nch or
17 pact could be replaced by another equtvalt:mt engme. automatiC
agreement In which the Lebanese transmiSS IOn. a1r cond1 tronmg.
front tract1on tack or eq1J1valent.
govenunent or other parties could · rear
hmtted shp or equ1valent. '
. guarantee that southern Lebanon rear step bumpfH , tinted glass.
I10) 30 (11 ) 6. I 3. 3tc
would not be used for guerrtlla bught low mount m1rrors.
attacks against Israel.
· · Real Estate General
If the Israelis accepted this and
agreed to withdraw, that would
pave the way lor a pullout by Syrtan
and Palestinian forces, the sources
Broker-Auctioneer
said.
The delegates adopted a resotu-"
Call 4-46·0552 Anytime
lion affirming the country's Arab
Beth Null 245-9507
character and ties to the rest of the
Arab world. They also agreed to
BIIR 437 - FIRS! TillE ON MARKET - Duplex brick ranch
strengthen the shaky cease-fire of
siiualed on fiat I acre lot House includes 4 BRs. 211 baths, deluxe
kitchen, 2 famr~ rooms (I with fireplace. I w~h woodburner).
Sept. 26 whlch ended three weeks of
Electric heat pump. Much more. Cell for detailsl
fighting between the Druse and
Lebanese army and Cliristlan
BIIR 4-42 - OWIIER SAYS REDUCE! 974 Shultz motile home
forces.
(l2x65) Tip Out includes 3 BRs. new carpet awning &amp; patio,
situated on 1acre m~. Washer &amp; dryer induded, Ci;y schools. Was
$20,000, now $17,900. Call for detailsl

Buono convicted in second slaying
He sat Impassively as the clerk
read the verdict and polled the jury.
Deputy Attorney General Roger
Boren said he was "very gratified
that (the jury) agteed that Angelo
Buono was one of the murders of
Judy Miller."
He noted that In the Miller death,
·'There were no links to Kenneth
Blanchl," El!OOJ:s adoptive cousin,
who pleaded gullty to five d. the
staytngs and two In Washington
state and turned state's Witness to
escape the death penalty for a IUe
prison sentence.
Bianchi's contradictory testlm·
ony has been attacked as unreDable
by defense attonreys.
"lln dlaaW&gt;iJtted, exbatiEIY.
disappointed," said defense attcrney Gerald Chaleff.

__ ,.,..,.....

rroiO..oo ti.OI ''"'" ''

Ji l t _ .. , . , ...

a

No ~agreement reached for
withdrawal of Israeli force

LOS ANGELES (AP) -'Angelo
Buono Jr. was convicted Saturday
of a second murder in the 10 Hillside
s tmngler slaytngs, making hlm
e ligJble,!orthedea!h penalty.
ihe jurors' verdict in the death of
15-year-old Judith Lynn Miller was
the third In a week after a trial
lasting almost two years. Last week
Buono was convicted In one other
slaying and found \lmocent In
another.
.
l!IY being convicted of multiple
murders, the 50-year-old fanner
a ula upholsterer becomes eUglble
ror:lhe gas chamber.
Buono was accused of killing 10'
yo(lng women and girls In the
Ji$lde Strangiel" slaylntls In . the
Loll Angeles area during late 19T7
and early 1978.

The Rev. Christopher Meyer.
pastor of the Lutheran Evangelical
Church, said It did not slgnlfy
recognition by either the pope or the
Lutherans of the other's
supremacy.
' Vatican spokesmen refused to
comment, but Vatican sources
confirmed that the pope would visit
the church, saying it would be the
first such visltfor a Roman Catholic
pontiff.

u .,.._,,u,.,

ll

-·-

Lebanese allies.

sennon.

l t •~,. .... ,n _,ooo~ ••w

) •AMDU ... -1111

I W-ool to I ...

shlngton or Israel for changing the
. May 17agreementenough to satisfy
demands of the Syrians and their

them in services on J.lec, 11 at a
Rome church and to deliver a

Very special thanks to
neighbors, friends, relath,ll,
co-workers and churches of

~·.

Giveaway

mixed. Call814-388·8368.

•

the multinational peacekeeping
By ROBERT H . REID
force Ill withdraw.
Associated Press Writer
"We met together, and I repeat,
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)
the Lebanese spirit prevailed," said
l .ebanese leaders scored a psycho
Saeb Salaam, a former prtme
logical breakthrough by managing
minister and pro-government Sunnl
to convene their reconciliation talks,
Moslem.
but they left Geneva without
"A psychological barrter has been
a~U.eeD;lellt (l.,.,lioo01Tl'!Ultt' fMi'tJii!
surpassed.;:.
~l"ablk.Bea-UMi&gt;t
wit!lru' awa1 of Israeli forces .
.• ci!: t'!l~ !in!i(e'MOSfem· ArriiiT m!lltlli.
I)uring five days of often heated
· " We established channels of commeetings, which ended Frtday , the
munJcatlons that did not exist
Lebanese government and the
before."
var lous factions did narrow their
The withdrawal pact emerged as
differences on the May 17 Israeli·
the
main Issue at the conference
Leba nese troop withdrawal pact.
ahead ol other agenda Items such as
Thel.ebanesegovernmentandlts
reforming Lebanon's political sys- ,
suworters agreed that the U .S.·
tern tDglveMoslemsagreatervolce
mediated pact posed enormous
in national affairs.
political problems for President
Sources said the Lebanese beAmin Gemayel' s administration.
lieved they could not sort out their
Pro-Syrlan delegates, Including
Internal problems freely and with·
former Chrtstian President Sulel·
out outside pressure as long as
man Franjleh and Druse leader
three-quarters of their country was
Walld Jumblatt, accepted the Idea
occupied by foreign ,troops.
tha t som e agreement with the
The task now facing the Lebanese
Israelis must be found If Lebanon Is
is
to find a formula acceptable to
ever to be treeofforelgnoccupatlon.
Israel and the Syrtans, who mainUnless some formula Is found,
tain an estbnated ~.1:00 troops In
' prospects seem bleak for brtnglng
Lebanon.
· peace to Lebanon and alloWing the
It was unclear whether Gemayel
U.S. Marines and other members of
would find much support 1n Wa·

_.

•;~

11

3 white female kinens~ 6
mos. old. 1 white-gray.
female long-haired cat. Call
44&amp;~7618 after 5 .

1

Pope will preach to Lutherans
ByJOHNWINN MJIJER
Associated Press Writer
VATICAN CITY (AP) -Ina bold
move for Chrtstian unity, Pope John
Paul II has agreed to preach in a
Lutheran church In Rome, Vatican
sources and Lutheran officials said
Saturday. In a letter released the
sam~ day. the pope praised Martin
Lu !her, the 16th century German
prtest who broke with the V a !lean
and led the Protestant Reformation.
Lutheran Church officials said
they received word from the
Vatican on Saturday thatthe pontiff
had accepted their Invitation to join

4

..

..

•

WASHINGTON (AP) The down by Soviet fighter jet near
Defense Department said Saturday Sakhalin Island afler it strayed into
It has ended its unsuccessful, $22.4 Soviet airspace. The 269 people
mllllonsearchforthewreckage and aboard the plane were killed,
flight recorders of a Korean Air including 61 Amertcans.
The mllltary began searchlng for
Lines jumbo jet shot down Sept.l by
the Soviet Union.
the wreckage, particularly the flight
The two-month search In the Sea recorders, the day the aircraft was
of Japan "has been completed, '' the downed. U.S. officials had hoped the
Pentagon said In a statement. "U.S. recorders, contalnlng tape record·
units found no wreckage or signs of tngs of the crew's conversation and
wreckage," it added.
other flight information, could shed
Officials said thecostofthesearch · some light on why the aircraft
was estimated at $22.4 million.
veered off-course on a flight from
The KAL Boeing 747 was shot New York to Seoul.

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

Ad8

Call!ng himself Cinque, DeFreeze
was a black leader of ·young whlte
followers. Several "soldiers" had
worked as volunteers at a state
prlson In Vacaville, where DeFreeze had formed a statesanctioned group for fellow
Inmates.
''As far as the hard-core members
-the ones who did the thlngs that
everybody knows about - ,I figure
they never had more than 12," said
Charles Bates, the ex-FBI agent
who led the nationwide hunt.
In February 1974, the SLA
kidnapped Patty Hearst, 19-yearold daughter of rnilllonatre pubUsher Randolph Hearst, from the
Berkeley apartment she shared
with fiance Steven Weed.

The rtseof the SLA began with the
They
Nov.
6, 1973, ambush of Marcus
cheered their hlgh school football
Foster,
first black su~rlntendent of
teams. They fought In Vietnam.
the
Oakland
Unified School Dlstrtct.
They helped rehabilitate convicts.
The
fall
C8111eSept.l8,1975,afterthe
They seemed like All-American
kills, · the sons and daughters of largest manhunt In FBI hlstory led
merchants, ministers and military Ill the arrest of the two active
mep.
. "soldiers" and Miss Hearst, a
But In the fall of 1973, these captive turned comrade.
Foster, slain with eight cyanidechildren of the middle class formed
tipped
bullets, was chosen as the
the Symblonese Uberatlon Army
SLA's
first
target because of a plan
and declared war on the United
Ill
hire
school
guards to stop drug
States 1n the name of " the people."
dealing.
Ironically,
Foster was
Taking a seven-headed cobra as
trying
to
stall
the
program
when he
their symbol, the terrorists lost the
was
killed.
war, but they rattled the country
The SLA had been !mined weeks
with grandiose rhetortc and a
earlier
In Berkeley by DOnald
nationally teleVised shootout with
a prtson escapee fasciDeFreeze,
500 pollee officers In whlch six SLA
nated
by
gUru; and revolution.
members died.

actors are In New Yorlj; rehearsing for a CBS-TV
movie, "Terrible Joe Moran," which starts flbnlng

Ohio-Point Plea5anl, W. Va .

'Average' Americans fell in
as Symbionese terrorists
SAN FRANCJSOO (AP) -

HAPPY BffiniDAY, ART
Actor James
Cagney, right, gives actor Art Carney a cake for his
65th birthday Friday in New York. The two veteran

No ~&gt;ember

Help Wanted

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST

Accepting applications for full

time supetviSQIY position. Applicant must be M.T. Salary negotiable. ·
Resume or applications can be mailed to:
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115· EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OH. 45769
AnN.: W. F. ~UCAS, ADM.
614-992-2L04
E.O.E_.
'i

Enjoy the comforts of a beautiful new apartmeat aa
weD as the security provided by automatk door
entry system, and emergency alarm IYI(em.
Housing for persons 50 year&amp; and older •d llle
handicapped. Rental assistance avaDable onder tile
H.U.D. Seetlon 8 Program. Tenant paya 30 Pet, a1
adjusted Income toward rent. All ullliUea lochrded
In real except TV Cable and Telepbone. Iaeome
Umlts one penon $1%,3011, 2 ~pie $14,1Ge, Tile
tenants can enjoy the buildings Commaalt:y
Lounge, and Arts and er.fts Room and llluaed
Soda! Activities. 200 Second St.. Point PI-t,
WV or call 875-6679 for further lllformatloa. '
$50.00 finder's fee paid to person for flndlna 1 DeW
qualified tenant for Twin Rivers Towen.

a-,

DlRECTONS:
South on Ohio Rt.
7. &amp; mile• balow
Galllpollt to , Rae·
coon ~reek Bridge
- Follow Slgntr.
·

OPEN TILL DARK ·

A

Equa!Houtoc~
\

�'

Page

44

D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
•Apartment

Ohio-Point

46 Space for Rant

by larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

for Rent
Furniahed

3 roomt , with

private blth. Reference pre -

ferred . Cell446·2216.

Furnlahed upstairs apt.. 3
fooma a. bath, dean. adults
only, no pets, ref . req .
Utilitiea paid . Call 446 ·

1619.

Furnished office for rent .
Cloae to cit-; building and
court hou1e . Call 446 -0866
days, 8126 . mo .

49

peid. Cell304·676·6104 or
304· 676·7386.

Furniahed apt . $2 bdr ., 196,
water paid, 1138 Second

For

For Lease
laue

Modern

office

suite eapecially good for
' inturance, real esta te or
accounting . 1300 sq . ft.

utilitie1 paid, adults only, no

FUrn . eftiency apartments .
Choice of three, for •ingle or
couple• only. Newly redeco rBted. starting at 8160 mo .
Security d&amp;p. &amp; ref . Call Mr .
Dobson. 446 -4607 days ,

446·2602 .eve .
Newly remodeled 2 bdr ..
unfurnished, equipped kit chen. central air. S260 mo.,
821 2nd. Ave. Call 446 ·

2168.

9:30·6:00.

Nice 2 bedroom apt .. 843
Second. Ave . Deposit and
references . Call 614 -266 ·

1629.

1 bad room Apt S196 . mo..
in~luding utilitia1 .
Equal
housing opportunity . Con·
tact Village Manor Apes.

ti14 ·992 -77B7

2 bedroom furnished apta.
614·992·6434, 614 ·992 ·
6914 or 304·BB2·2666.
Small furnished apt. for 1
person . All utilities paid .
614-992 -6262 evenings or
mornings .
Apartments . 304 - 676 -

664B .

A:PARTMENTS , m o bilia
homes. houses. Pt . Pleasant
·a nd Gallipolis . 614 -446-

8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled w ith an
income of less than
812,300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjustad income. Phone 304-676 -6679 .
bedroom apt. at Gall .

Ferry. 304·675-254B .

Two bedroom apartment in
Muon . W .Va . Adults ,only,
no p8ls . 304-676 -1462,
after 6 :00 ..

45

t/ llll:lto,l&lt;l~" '

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and .light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Coli 446 ·0766.

46 Space for Rant :
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy . large lots , Call

992· 7479 .
Floor space for Flea Markel .
308 3rd St .. Racine . Mon.Thuu . 614-949-2317 .

IMho~ u~ ··~IA I U " "

-~

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

$99 ., to 436. 7 pc . $189

One bedr . apt .. 613 Third
Ave. 1136 per mo ., includ ing ~R•ter . Call 446 -4222,

2

51 Household Goods
Sofa, chair, rocker , otto man. 3 tables . (eiCtra heavy
by Frontier). $685. Sofa.
chair and , loveaeat, $276.
Sofas andfhairs priced from
$286 . to 895 . Tables, $46
and up t
$126 . Hide -a beds . 8440 . ' and up to
8526 ., Recliners , · S 175· to
6376 ., Lamplii from $28 . to
$75 .6 pc . dinettes from
and up. Wood table wifh six
chairs S426 to $746 . 0Hk
6110 up to $226 . Hut chu,
$6~0 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Sunk bed complete
with mattresses, S260 . and
up to S396
Baby bed11,
$1 1 0 . Mattreues or box
spring1 , full or twin, $68 ..
firm , $68 . and $78 . Quean
sOts. $196 . 4 dr . chests,
542 . 6 dr. chests, $54 . Bed
framn, e20 .and $26 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, 5350 .
Gas or electric ranges 5375 .
Baby mattresses, S25 &amp;
536 , bed frames $20, $25 ,
&amp; &amp;30, king frame S60 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites . cedar c hests ,
rockers . metal cebine ts ,
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dryers . re frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm. ,Mon . thru Fri ., 9am
to 6pm, Sat .

446·0322
TV &amp; Appl iances, 627 Th ird
Ave., Gallipolis, 446 -1699.
Spin wuhers, gas &amp; electric
dryers , auto Washers. gas &amp;
electric ranges , refrigera tors. TV sets
large wood burning add -on
furnace -brand now -heats
h o t water - automatic
controls - fnebrick lined .

$590. Call 614·256·1216.

Used sofa &amp; chair . love seat ,
cedar wardrobe . 4 drewer
chest &amp; bed . Ce11446- 1 171 .
876 each used wash ers &amp;
dryers guaranteed 30 days .
Number to choose fr om .
Call anytime . 614 . 256 -

51 Household Goods

446·739B.

53
Antique

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St ., Gallipolis . 6
piece wood living fOom suite
with tl inch flat arms $399.
bunk beds complete w1th
bunkias S 1 99 . 2 piece an ·
tron livingroom sui tel S 199,
antro'n recHners S99, other
recli~ars $80, maple dlneno
sets $179 . love seats S70 .
hide - a - bed $260 , bo•
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $1 00 set regular -firm
$120, maple dinette chairs
$36 , wash · stands $34 .
maple rockers S69 , 7 piece
chrome dinette sel S 1 49, 5
piece dinette set S89 , used
bedroom suites, reHrgera tors. ranges. chest. dressers:
wringer washers, TV's.
dryeres , &amp; shoes . Call 446 ·

3159.

Antiques
brass bed. 614·

246·9448.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered , 12 " · 22 " stocked
•n yard . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery. 614-256-

Ele c hot water healer, May tag wringer washer, e18c .
dryer. wood cookstove,
laundry stove. bedroom su ·
ita. lamp. end tabtos. coffee
tables, new baby furniture,
cherry rope bad , oak book case. Call614- 367-0637 ,
Wh ir lpool dishwuher ·
portable, white with butcher
bloc k top . $200 . C~tll 614 245 · 9261 , 1f no answer call
after 9 :30PM
One kitchen display , odds
and ends kitchen cabinets .
0ale 's Kitchen Center .

MARK YOUR CAlENDAR
Slate Run Farms &amp; Neal Angus Farms
Presenll Ohio Black Bull Power
CHIANIA·ANGUS ClUB CALF AND HEIFER SALE
REGISTERED ANGUS PRODUCTION SALE
Saturday, Nov . 12. 1983. 6:00 P.M.
Indoor Arona - Slate Run Farm · Jackson . Ohio
For Cataloc CMiacl Dtiane. S.lly and Georp Da~d Plymole, Slate Run
farms, 2433 Buckeye Church Road, Jackson. Ohio 45640. 16141286·
5395 or 28&amp;-1787; Didl Mtd Carol Naal. Ne~ AniUS farms. Route 2.
Bo• 211. Vintoo,llt!K&gt; 4~3. {614) 388·8287.
AUCTION : MERLIN WOODRUFF
Slat! Run farm is louted 7miles wes of Jackson. 01110 on St. Rt .
114 iAppalachlln Hiahway).

SPECIAL CHRISTMAS AUCTION
Pt. Pleasant Youth Center

Bid.

7:00P.M.
TUESDAY NIGHT-RACINE LEGION HAll
THURSDAY NIGHT 7:00 P.M. COME EITHER NIGHT
Toys of all kinds- dolls, electronics, trains, stulfed ani·
mals, few 1ools, tractor trailer sets, somethine.for everyone. At leasl$7,000.00 1o $10.000.00 load of Chnstmas
items, •II new. Come do your Christmas shopping the easy
and cheapest way in town .

&amp;

Son. Call 446 "7766.

Fireplace insert-still in fa c tory carton - automatic
~;:ontro l s-2 blowers -glass
door -ash pen-fits 30 in. to
48 in . fireplace -burna wood
or coal. $690 . Call 614 Troybilt Tillers Sales &amp; Ser vice . Swishers Implement .
St , At . 7, North, Galhpolis .

614·446·0476.

Cal 446·0840.

Green couch $40 .00. Phone

Lima ltone delivered tOr
$10 . a ton . Call 814 · 256 -

SAT.,NOV. 12,10:00 A.M.
State St .. ALBANY, OH. Turn off Rt. 50 at the Rt. 681
Exit. Contents of the Florence Brown home. She is
91 &amp; many iiems have been in her family well over
100 years. DRESS FOR OUTSIDE SALE.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE, COllECTIBLES. HOUSEHOLD GODD
&amp; MISC. Includes: beautllul old 3 piece white marble top
walnul bedroom surte: walnut wardrobe w/drop pulls: 3 pc.
mahogany bedroom suite {c. 20's); golden oak sideboard sel
6 T back oak charrs; low oak dresser wllg. mirror; rockers;
stand s; treadle sewing mach.; mirrors; swivel oak chair: lloral
Will on rugs; crazy palch comlort; quill: prclures; prrn ts; slo·
neware: fireside bench: linens: lew old dishes; 22" color TV
likenew: Jenny lrnd bed complete; lrost free rei.; gas range;
good hrde·a·bed; sweeper; variety ol charr s, stands &amp; lamps;
usual krtchenrtems; coal healer; lois more Very parlrallrst·
1ng.

.

.

. Eats. No Viewinl Until Sale Day. Terms : Cash or ck. w/10.
AUCT.: C. E. SHERIDAN-PH. 614-448-4263
OWNIER: FLORENCE BROWN
Rowell.- P.O.A.

1 registered beaGle-mala 1 0

2 girl• French Provential
while bed1. complete t360.
Yamaha FG200 guitar
1175.; 2 twin spreads t26 .

AKC solid black female
German Shepard, $200.00.

614-992-7883.

Howard 2 dr. stainless steel
uPright display cooler, per·
feet fQr grocery store or
carry out . Priced to move.

304-676· 1822.

Real Estate General

773·6231 .

AUUOR

One registered female tree ing walker 3% month

Rt:~frigera ­

tor •200 . 304·676·7478 .'

old.$50.00.
5941.

SOUTHERN HILLS R;E.r INC.

AFFORDARII MADE us NUMBER
1,CENTURV 21:
.
.

55 Building Supplies

Beagle pups 6 months old.
$75. each . 1 AKC registered
female 6 years old. 6126 .

PRICE REDUCED - Owner says sell now. l ovely 3
bedroom ranch srtuated on 1.27 acre lot in Baum
Addrtion near Pomeroy. Kilchen, drningroom.living
room, full basement wrth family room and fireplace.
#430

"PICTUREYOURSELF" -lnlh~ roomytri·level. 3
large bedrooms, 2 baths, family room w~h
fireplace.. equipped krtchen breakfast area plus
formal drnrng area. 2 car garage. Very desirable
locatm

.

WOOD8URNING STOVES,

446-1676 .

Beige 1hag carpet, approx .

3Q aq.yd ., $60. Call 446·
4806.
Amana r-a~Qrange complete
cooking canter . Includes
microwave oven, conventional oven, and glass top
range. Clean and in axe.
cond . Call 614· 246·6160 .
Wild Cherry lumber 60 cen11

aft. Cell 446-B03B.

614-388·B463.

Grain fod beef . Call 446·

1427.

304-676·4 1 64.

Building materiels
block, brick , sewer pipes.
windows, lintels , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

2027.

56

16,000 sq. ft. warehouse, clearspan,
sprinkled, inground loading dock. Excellent
investment.

Pats for Sala

HILLCREST KENNElS

Wiseman Real Estate Agency

Barding all breads. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 448 · 7795 .

Phone

for

sale

Musical
Instruments

SOUD OlOER FRAME 2 story home wrth 4 bedrooms.
INing room, k~chen, family room, dining room. bath.
c~lar house, garage wrth attached carport Could be
used for business Priced in lhe 30's.

Kimball electric organ, like
new. Cell 446·7230.

446-3643

#371

Old Hamilton piano, $76

firm. Call 614·388·9864 or
614-388-8346.

Real fi'stata General

Briarpatch Kennell Profeaaiorial All -breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa ·
cilitiea. English Cocker Spa·
niel puppies . Cell 614 · 388 -

Coonhounds

57

ARP OMNI II STRING MACHINE SYNTHESIZER. Call
446-t968 or 446·1 012 and
ask tor Chuck.

POSSIBLE lAND CONTRACT- ROUND HOME -1 A. woodland,
basement. Pornerll)'. $65,000. Lots ol glass &amp; decki n~
.

Oriher acoustic g4itar. Si;~~:
string 885. Gibson Les Paul
custom copy, Black $60.
Sekova copy of a Fender
Stratocaster 875. Thirty six
8·track including: Asia, AC·
DC. Bos1on. Journey, Led
Zeppelin. Two tape cases
holds 24 each S25. Every·
• thing in good condition.

or

trade. Call 614·266-1416 .

Cockftr Spaniel puppies .
Solid blaclc, show quality.
pedigree• available. Females

&amp;176, Males $200. 614992 -6B83 .
"""

...

~

For Sale By Owner
Phone
.... _... 446-8221

· Reel Estate General

ROONEY - Home and business or rental. Completely refin~hed
older 2 story Large bu ildin~ Storage. cily schools. Make us an of·
lerl

304-676-6974 or 6 14·3889321.

TARA ESTATES - Bi·level 4 BR. lg. lamily and rec. room, Kyger
Creek Schools. Priced $70's.

58

1981 KINGSLEY MOBILE HOME with 7x24 expando, Irving room,
w.b. fireplace, 1ormal dining room witll patio doors, kitchen w~h all
appliances. sid .. by·side ref., dishwasher, 2 bedrooms. laundry
room, 2 full baths, garden tub, 2 showers. Total electric, central air
Ali underPin ned. 'La r~. covered patio. all th~ lor only $18.901l.

Fruit
8o Vegetables
i

drop1. $2.50 and $3.50
pecks, 10 lb. medium and
large. $6.00 and $8.00 bu.
Drops 86 .00 . Cider 82.50
gal. Featuring Red Oelious,
Gold Delioua, Winesap1, and
Rome Beauty. Cell 446·

8698 or 614·379-2303.

"""'"•' NOTHING - In this
weft cared for home you can get 5 bedrooms for
what you'd expect to pay lor many of the 2 or 3
bedroom homes. Bnck. 1'h baths, full basement.
Nice lawn. Priced in the 40's.
#467

4 ACRES OF NICE IANO lo burld on. Nice homes in the
area. Very good location. Within 3 miles of Gallipolis.
Buy all and use for building lots or build your own
special home.
#468

RIO GRANOE - $29.000. Secluded. 1.21 acres Crty schools.
HOMESSTARTER HOME-3 BR, cily schools. Reduced ...
lAND, lOTS~
BUilDING SITE-5 acres, water. .

FOR SALE BY OWNER

AUCTION
NOV . 19-12:00
Gallipolis, Ohio
161 4) 446· 0562
Auctioneer: M . L. 'Bud' McGhee
Appt. Auct . - Steve McGhee
Lie. and Bonded in Ohio &amp; W. Va .
We sell it all. Real Estate and personal property.

IN

#442

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE! - Take a look at th~
nice home. 3 bedrooms. large krtchen, bath, utility
room, garage, area'for workshop, 1II acres, chain
link dog pen. City school district Priced in the 30s.
#413

PRICED FOR QUICK SALE - 134 AcLe.farm. State
Route 681. Tupper.; Plains. Approx. 20 acres crop land,
most all level. The rest is wooded. Has streamson tand.
Gas well. pa~ roya~ies approx $750 per year. Counly
water available. $38,800 all yours.
#367
170 ACRE GRASS AND BEEF FARM - 57
Acres permanent limeand treated pasture. 60
Acres reclaimed . treated and seeded in alfalfa,
clover, orchard grass. Woods, tobacco base,
2200 Christmas trees 2 years old. Modern 7
room house. good barn . Buy while farm prices
are low.
#360

.... $38,000

.............. $10,600

PRIME LOCA liON

5 bedroom Georgian Colonial Brick - entry hall w/ beauti·
lui open stairway. den. 2'11 baths. Chandler kitchen
w/ oodles ol gorgeous cherry cabinets &amp; new appliances .
Extra large livin1 room w/wood burning fireplace , formal
dinino w/ buill-in china hutch. full basemen! w/ fireplace.
ftnrshed atltcs, 2 car garase. beautiful finished natural
wood floors &amp; woodwork throughout.
BONUS: Atlaohed 7 room office w/ 'h bath - seller Iinane·
ing could be considered.

NEW liSTING - COME TO THE COUNTRY and get
·away from ~ all. 3 bedroom ranch. 1\\ acres.
Woodburner. Storage building. Only $21.500.

#477

· Realty .m
446-3636 . ~
'~

Phone 446-2755 or 446-6244

,_AudM'tl (~mwdoy CRcnQlnh
. 2G 'lnl:ur:l (~lnr&gt;r!l, (j(lQOipnOif·. e1h~p,

Real Estate General

1973 RANCH STYLE HOME - It has ~all. One story
three bedroom, large eat·rn k~chen, formal dining
room, ltving room, lamily room wrth fireplace. utility
roorn, large concrete pat~. Aprox. 8 miles from
Gallipol~. $36,000.
#388

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
10:00 A.M. SAT. MORN .• NOV. '12, 1983

WEEKEND RETREAT - Reetwood 2 bedroom mobi~
home on a wooded lot Utility bldg, on concrete.
Screenhouse 16 It by 20 ft., cement fklor. Su per~r
condition, stronf drilled well. County water available
Tycoon lake. $ 2,900.
#387

From Holzer Hospital take Sl. Rt . 160 toward Porter ,
Ohio app. 6 miles. turn right off 160 at Evergreen on
old 160. turn lefl first road. Watch for signs .
1969 12 ton) Chevy tru ck, 1977 Oodge 4X4 prckup, nrce:
1976 ford statron wagon. C.A. Allrs ·Chalmers, Hfar mall, 135
Massey fergu son, ferguson 30. 8 N. Ford. more tra ctors to
be cons1gned. Four row John Deere corn planter, Oliver
mower, drsk, plows, tandem llal bed trailer, brush hogs,
boom pol es, scra per blad es, large truck load ollools, socket
sel s, wrench sets, all krnds rtern s subtectto be sold belore
sa le. Lois more rtems to be consrgned . II you have anythrng

HillTOP - CAREFREE BRICK RANCH, ONE ACRE LAWN. 4
BEDROOMS, 2'h BATHS, LG. FAMILY ROOM. FUU BASEMENT, 2
CAR GARAGE, 24x40' WORKSHOP. OWNERS HAVE JUST ADOEO
16'xl6' DECK, BEAUTIFUL VIEW, NEAR CITY. EXCELLENT BUY AT
$09,500.

ROOM TO GROW w~h th~ older 2 slory home, 3
bedrooms, fam!y room,INing room,large k~chen, bath.
Nice large lot In walking distance to downtown and
schools. Priced at $23,500.

#458

to sell call to make arrangements.

JACK CAMDEN-614-446-4641
AUCTIONEER l. E. NEAL-614-367-7101
Nol Responsible for Accidents or loss of Property

PRICED REDUCED - Brand new home. 3
Bedrooms, I ll baths, large living room, kilchen
wilh dining area in one end, lormal entry, extra
wide hallway Utilitv room. Anderson wrndows. lot
size approxlOO ft. x 120 ft. Priced in lhe 40's.
#461

WATCH THE DHIO RIV£R FlOW BY- fromlhe lroot porch ollh~
nrce 3 bedroom·home. Exterior has ~nyl siding. Beoulrlul carpet.
Located rn AddrS&amp;n. ,

SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 12, 1983
10aoo-A.M.
On Rt. 33 North of ~son, w. 'Va ., al the Hotel Smith
residence, right behind 1he Exxon Station, formerly
!he old Burton's Sunoco Slallon.
·
mlocolloneous : 3 ploce boclroom suite,
player,ltlly cupbooFd, cemel
stl
l!r:~:::·.~=~
of 011k chairs, INik teblo, plosafa wllh !In, 2 fans, bl11ck~
and white T'V, curtains, quills, cornlval and
Ooprosslon glltos, lamps, duck dacoys, old stontlars,
let walor stone lar, old American Flyer train, lenterns lard press, table saw, mine tools, Mil propelled
lawnmower, tO fl. self.contolned !ruck cemper.

'

TERMS OF SALE: Cosh or Check wllh positive

112399
CUTE AS A KillEN - Nrce modern rustic lrante horne. Beautrlul
carpet, woodburnrng stove, carport, 2 garages, severallxildrng&lt;, 8
acres. Very low p~rce ol $34.900.
·

SHARP COUNTRY
RANCH. QUICK POSSESSION. lARGE TRf

T£NDER lOVING CARE - Thrs splrt·leo.! ,home ~ in excellent
condition. Has 3 bedrooms, master bedroom very large, I 'h baths,
lui~ carpeled, pa!ro and carpol!. Located on a large levellol on Rl
160. Pnced ~~ery reasonable.
'

BUY NOW AND SAV£1 REilllCHl $10000 QUAlifY
CONSTRUCTED, EXCELLENT LOCA liON, :t HroROOM RANCI1 ~
BATHS, fULL BASEMENT. ATTACHED (;AijAGl WOOOlN I~ c'K
LIKE NEW. $46,000.
''
"· •

n499
HOUDAY HillS - Two ~Is w~h 26' Trotwood Trailer, air
oondiloned, ~eeps 6, also concrete plld w~h shelter wlfireplace &amp;
small red barn. Owner wants ID sell now lor lhe low Jiim ol $9,700.

3 BEDROOM MODERN HOME - Buift·in k~chen w~h
relrigerator, stove, range hood, deep lreezer. Large
INing room and lamily room with woodbumer. Orllled
well w~h pump. Garage and other outbuildings. Old
Route 35, Thurman area. $34,000.
#390
COMMERCIAL ACREAGE- 7 acres. Corner of Old
Rt. 35 and New Rt. 35 at Rodney. Springfreld and
Green Township. County water, 11 inch line,
natural IllS and electric are available. Alterna~ve
financilg possiJie
#42b .

FIRST AD! A REALLV NICE OlOlR HOME CONVI.NII NILY
LOCAT£0 NEAR CITY. SCHOO.S ANO IJOWNIOWN SHOPPING 2
STORY FRAME, 3 BEDROOMS, FORMAII~NING EAl·IN KIICHEN
VERY AfFORDABLE AT l-15.000
'
·

11081lE HOME - 1973 Holly Par~ one owner, excetlertl
condition, 14x60, 2·bedrooms. extra~ slorage buidin&amp; klcaled in
Quail Creek.

iow lO'S - LITTLE ,CHARMER. 2 BEOilOOM BRICII 'ix11 ONIAI
NFORICE fRONT PORCH, BlACKTOP ORIVf. RIVERVIEW Pf.RF£Ci
SINGLES OR NEWLy MARRIED
' ·

~1099

OWNER: HAZEL SMITH
AUCTIONEER : RICK PEARSON
MASON, W. 'VA .

USE YOUR IIIAGINATIOII - Building site. 211
8I71!S close to Rio Grande. 28x48 basement shell
ju!.t waiting to be finished. Call for more details.

#41)1

,
VACANT lANO - Ohio Township. 20 Acres. woods,
pa!.ture. Approximately 2 level acres. tobacco grollnd.
Home s!e.
#463

WID FOI THE WISE INVESTOR - ROAO fRONTAGE GREAT
NEICHBORHOOO. 44 ACRES. 3 BEDROOM RANill HOME BARN
PONO, FENCED.
·
•

Phone 304-773-5785

98 ACRE FARM- READ CAREFULLY' Older lull
story brick home. 5 bedrooms. 2 staircases. a~o
one to altic. Partral basemen\ good condrtion.
Counly water, lair barn. 10 acres crop land 63
Acres pasture. 25 acres woods. Good larm, exc~inR
location. $78,700.
#368

NEW LISTING - 111.95 ACRE FARM ,-- This
couple would consider lrading for a nice
ranch style home. Partially remodeled home. 2
large barns, machinery shed. 3 other outbuildings,
all rn eoc~lent condition. 2670 lb. lobacco base.
pond, 30 acres bottom land.
#474
o~er

Canaday

GALLIA COUNTY

THAT COZY RANCH AWAITS YOU - lis sharp
brick exler~r is only the beginning, ln~de rt offers a
large k~chen and dining area, 3 bedrooms,INrng
room, bath, garage. 2 large lots, storage building,
concrete drive. Priced in the&lt;\(\; with possible loan
assumption.

.LOOK WHAT YOUR'RE MISSING - II you don't
inspect th~ well cared lor home. 3 bedr~s.
double vanrty in bath, large kitchen and dtmng
area Woodburner. 2 cafgarage. Aluminum
siding, Storage buildin~ tot 100x300. Priced in
the 40s.

HILDA DRIVE 81-LEVEl - 3 BR, basement. landscaped lot. all
brick, cily schools. Priced $50's.

Applet from Garman Ridge 1
Orchard, handpicked and

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes,
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 12 acres with stable, rail
fences, swimming pool, garageworkshop. Immediate po$Session.'

ONE OF THE FINEST HOMES

OWNER SAYS SEll - This nice home in Middleport
has been drasbc~ly reduced from $42.500 to
$32,000. Uving room, formal dining room, bath, 2
bedrooms. full basement 1 car garage, aluminum
siding.
#476

Plaomar 300A CD Linear

Amplifier . 304-676·1664.

Antiques, oak turnhure re·
production. miac . items. Use
our Christmaslayawey plan ~
Conkels, Tuppers Plains .

Public Sale
8o Auction

- HURRYTODAY and take alok at this
I home. 3 bedroom ranch with family room, livi r.g
room, eat·rn krtchen. bath. utility.ln·ground swimming
pool, 2 storage buildrngs. 2 level kits. Call for an
appointment today. $39,900.
#478

FARMERS FARM - 92 Acres producing farm with tr&gt; .
bacco base, mature woods, creek runs through land
Suitable for cattle or sheep or truck farming, Modern 2
or 3 bedroom house.1obacco and stock barns. Guyan
Township.
#436

Real Estate General

8

-

lOOKING FORA NICE HOME PLUS ACREAGE? ' Then take a look at lh• 3 bedroom homa large living
rm., krtchen w~h p~nly ol cabinet spaca 2 baths, 2car
garage. Basemenl Vinyl and trick, 2~ acres. Within 5
miles of Ho~er Medical Center.
#351

Wanted Great Dane for stud
service. Phone 304-882·

0 . Cell614·246·6121.

.

SMAll FARM - 57 Acres, 2 bedroonlt mobile home,
large barn in good condition. A little farming, a.lrttle
hunting, a lrttle fooling around. free gas. Rural water.
Approx. 45 acres· wooded. 6 miles from Cheshire.
$34,900.
#398

304&lt;-8'76·
.

Coli 446-9174.

44B2.

675-6356.

Judy DeWitt, llaltor, 388-8155
J. Merrill Cad«, Rlahot, 379-2184
Becky Lint, Assot:ilte. 446-0458
,Becky Elliot!, Assotilte, ~5

55 ACRE FARM wrth a 3 bedroom modular home w~h
lois of space. 44x72Aiuminum buik!ingthal has a3 car
garage rn one end and barn in the other. Good timber
and 1,8251b. tobacco base. Land lays in 2 sect~ns will
sell one or both. Crty schools.
'
#424

[H

1613.

Queen siza hide -a · bed, vlnVI
recliner, 2 and tables. plat ·
fo.rm rocker. all 1 V2 yr. old.
Call 446 -8085 or 446 ·

Large Spinning wheal,
throadle sewing machine,
electnc butter churn . 304 -

446-6610

Real Estate General

AKC Reg. Doberman pups,
black S. rust, 5 male 2
females. $75 ea. 304-468-

For Sale hand made log
cabin dollhouses with furni ture. S66 . 00 . 614 · 446 ·

Times-Sentinei-Page--1}.5 ·

Road, 304-895·3874.

'

1427.

Antiques

•••son. 304-676-6036 .

Bark buster, 3pt. Mitch wood 1
splitters. $345.00. Trailer
mounted 5hp . hydraul~c
wood splitter, 14 ton split ·
ting force , $976 .00 . We
have 19 good used chain
saws, $60. to 8200. A
complete line of Homelite
saws end we are a Homelite
full service dealer , N4w
Holland Model 696 Tobacco
striP.per, special $2,650 . We
have some fantastic deals on
new Allis Chalmers tractors
in the 4th quarter . See us
before you deal. Keefer's
Service Center. At . 87.
Point Pleasant and Ripley

AKC RegiiJtered Doberman
puppies . One black and one
fawn . $60 . to 886. Phone

Ught green Early American
sofa and chair. e6o. brown
awivel vinyl chair 136 . 304·

Stove $100 . and

Sperry New Holland 595
Tobacco •tripper, used one

The Sunday

W. Va.

Farm Equipment

304-676-7771 .

304·676·2101 .

Custom furniture built to
your specification. Ordera
now being taken for Christmas . We also repair and
refinish furniture . Bidwell
Country Furniture, located
on Rt 664, Bidwell, OH .
Open 9-6, Mon .· Sat. Call

Call 614 -367-0409.

2364.

0o1..

1·60•64. 304·676-4409.

Firewood for aale S36 a
pickup load delivered, 10
loads for $300. Call 614-

1- - - -- - - - - -

!E..E~~ ...

months old arid running.

Oragonwynd Cattery ·
kennels. AKC Chow pup·
pies, CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .
Call 446·3844 after 4 .

20BB .

53

after 6 p .m.

tank. Call 446·2004.

1 9' portable color TV &amp; 2
gas warm mbring stoves.

C::O'....,
~ . ..:::=:..':".,:.:;::·...~..

range, $96. 304·676·1390

6604.

1- - - - - - - - - -

.,...,

II'OR INJJOIIM4TION eotJT'.A.CT:

General Electric

9790.

266 -1427.

--.....
__.._,....

4.z&amp;D,rt

Geti Miller. 814·992 ,3196.

Phone 614-843·5193.

1 Blue tick male 3"12 years
old. Triple registered. 2 started dogs·1 red bona
bench champ and ona pup,
PCA 8t UKC registered. Trial
on older dog only. 614 -742·

.SU.I.UA COVN7Y

Sofa and chair. S60. Mra.

29 gal. fi1h tank &amp; stand
with fish plus 20 gal . kmg

Firewood- cut up, slabs, S 16
pickup load . Call 614-245 -

Auctioneer: L. E. Neal-614-367-7101

AUCTION SALE

0612 .

Kenebec Winter Potatoes$14.00 per 1 00 lb . Harris
Farms, from Pomeroy Take
124, 10 rililesabove Racine .

742-2621 .

Jn"'F9::4•1VUN RliAL ~AT'Ii. QO.
M ~Akin 8:, ,'tcoe-~~.Ohlo 4~754

4630 .

Go cart and 2 yr. old
guelding , Call446 -1456.

Guns : good selection shot guns. rifles , &amp; handguns. We
Siegler fuel oil space heater, buy, sell or trade. Good
like new . G -E auto wBBher prices. Franks Pawn Shop,
with new motor . 304 -676 - 430 Second Ave .. Gallipolis .

304·675 ·4072.

Dolly $20., Oremel electric
chain sharpener •20 ., Bluegrass hatchet , ew t1 0 ., G. E.
smoke alarma, new $6 . ea ..
bolt cunera •16 .. 2 - 16" T
Bird hubcapa. spoked 810 .
ea .. AMF 10 speeid bicycle
$36 ., countr y all time grea·
teat hits 816 ., Arrow heavy
duty hammer stapler $18 .
nttw. Swinglina staple
hammer tacker. new 812 ..
McCullock 14" chain bar
$10 ., 2·McCullock chaina
$6. ea .. varioua aockeu.
inquire. 614 -992 -7817.

limestone. Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards

McGhee Auction Co.

Public- Sale
8o Auction

614-387-7220.

lttmo . Coil 446·2481 .

Wood frame windoVIII with
acraen 9-28x38; 2-24K54;

6245.

For complete listing see next Sunday's paper.

8

aew, 16'' ber . Call614-387·

freestanding, fireplace inserta, mobile home ap proved, &amp; furnance ad-ona.
Jiwidens Farm Equipm8nt,

256·121 6.

1207.

30' coppertone rango S95 .
30' alec . renga $66, Tappan
alec . range avocado green
top &amp; bottom oven $175 ,
Coldspot. refrig. $95 . frost
1
free refrig. $96, 6 refrigera toh to choose from . Ken ·
mora auto . wosher $95 ,
Kenmore auto . dryer $65,
Maytllg wringer washer
S75. 5 drawer chest $44 , 4
drawer c hest $36. dess e r
$57. desk $38 , Sl.aggs
Appliances, Upper' River Ad ,

Homelite Super EZ chain ·
Maytag waaher &amp; dryer
8125 .. General Electric
Wether &amp; dryer 8226 .. G.E.
self defrosting green refrig·
erator &amp;100 . 614- 742 -

Trained Bej!lgle Rabbit dogs.
M~le &amp; female . Also pups.
Wdl trade for guna. 614-

992·6461 .

3 or 4 room unfurni•hed apt .

61

&amp; V agetablas.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

Wood burner aupplemental
furnace, tor use with present
heating ayatem . Call 614-

Mpfijhped!&amp;a

Pats for Sale

1·5 fel. Terr~rlum •16.
indoor green house 126,
plant stand $16 &amp;. misc.

30 inch

Four room a plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and stor-

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Enclosed trailer. 12 -L., 7 'W., 5' -H. for flea markets.
motorc~cles. wood atorage,
etc, 1395. or offer. 304·

2362.

age room. Nat . gas. central
air. carpet. Rent v8ry reasoAVe ., Gelllpolil. 446·4416 · nable for this quality office_
after 7 p .m .
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Galli·
polis. Oh . Ph 614 446
Furniahed apt . 607 2nd .,
3994 . Evans fnterpn~e!:i.
Gallipolia. 1 bdr ., adults,
9 -6 , Mon . thru Fri.
$200, utilities paid . Call
448-4416 after 7 p .m .

pets. Cell 448·3437.

56

54 Misc. Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise

773-6679 .

.

2 bdr. apt ., utilltin partially
paid . 3 room apu. utiltiea

Nowmber 6, 1983

November 6, 1983

W.Va.

.

.

lARGE 4 BED~OOM HOME in ascenicsetling. Tobacco
bas~ barn and other outbuildings. Jusllarge enough
- 20 acres, most all tiiL1ble. Present crop, affalfa and
orchard grass. Harroon Twp.
#356
HUNTERS PARADISE .- Any hunter or nature lover
woukl appreciate the beauly ol th ~ property. 64 acres
w~h true ~g cabrn. Pond. road frontage. Secluded.
WildiWe. Gel back to nature w~h th ~ one. priced in the
30's.
#379
FIRST QUALITY BRICK ol frenc~ design. Tho
home has 2.058 sq. It of lrvrng space, plus full
basement. large attic. 3 bedrooms. 2\\ baths. family
roorn dining room. ~itchen complete. brea!last
room, 2 frreplace. Nice size law n al Tara Estatll'
#469

SMAll FARM - Immediately lakes your eye. 5 room
mooern ranch slyle home. 3 bedrooms. barn, tobacco
base, 6 acres mosl all crop land. Several different lype
lrurt trees. Better look - one low price. $25.000.
#357
NEW liSTING - 4 BEDROOM RANCH - l II
baths. shower, modern kitchen, divided basemen\
landscaped yard. Cheshire area . !'need right low 40's.
#460
LOOK AT All YOU GET FOR $28,000 - 3 bedroom
home, main bath. large krtchen,'very nice living room,
good carpet, natural gas heat, all new windows, front
porch, recenlly buik garage, 40x150 ~t located incrty
school d~trict.

1#456

ONE TO SEE- five room ranch slyle home. House has
been extensNely remodeled. 2 bedrooms, modern
k~chen coun~ water. Counly school system. 1II acres
of ground. Look at price' $24,900.
#392
COME TO "'IIERE THE FlAVOR 1St - Real country,
fresh ·arr. r48tural w?OO sided ranc~ 3 bedrooms. nice
oak cable Jls "' equrpped ~itchen, 2 baths, Irving room.
lrrep~ce. 2 car garage. Over 5 acres. Minutes from
hospital. Immaculate inside and out
#457
JACKSON COUNTY - 105 Acre tarm. 2story older
home. 3 bedrooms, bath, k~chen witll buin·in
range and oven. dishwasher, living room. Barns.
ceiL1r and cellar house.
#449
7 ACRES - Uose to Rio Grande. Several feet r1
lrontage on Slate Rt. 325. Rural wateravailable. No•
restrictilns. City schools.
.
#428
.

JUST USJID-MOVE YOUR FAMILY into this neat
and attractive home belo•e winter. 3 bedroom ranch 2
baths, eat·rn krtchen, lrvrng room, lamily room with
woodburner in basement 2 car garage, ~nyl sidin&amp; All
lh~ on a l acre lot
#462

136 ACRE DAIRY FARM - In
this spring Step·down milking parlor,
sheds, 2
sdos, 5 ponds. Tobacco base. 1680 sq. modular
home w~h 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, kitchen w~h
ey..level double ovens and d~hwasher, lirepL1ce. for
more information give us a ca~.
#412
POMEROY - 2 story frame house on l acre ~t2
bedrooms, bath, IPiing room, 2 car garage. Priced in
the teens.

#441
lAND CONTRACT - Wrtll very reasonabie down
pay.menL 7 year old home wrtll 2 bedrooms. bath,
eat·rn k~chen rncludlrtg range and refrigerator
l~rng room. L9 acres, more or less. $25,600.
I.
#451
56 ACR£S- Appr011. 25 acres tillable and balance
in very nice woods. Woods fenced lor game.
Approx. 4 acres of road frontage on Centerpoint
Road. Excellent land.
#410
lARGE VACANT LOT - Perry Townshrp. Counly
water and ~ectric avarlable. Level lot Hard road.

#465

25 ACRES, BARN ANO RANCH HOME-~
in Addison Township. 2200 sq. ft. of lving space.
Complete new kitchen, breakfast room, family
room, dining room,INing room with fireplac~ large
bath with garden tub. 3 bedrooms. util~ room and
many extras.
·

lWEIITY AcR£5 - ot:AUTIFUL 'N000£0 ARfA. 3 DEOOOOM

*378

NEW ON THE MARKET - 5 room rancn and bath.
beautiful landscaping. charn link fence, covered
sundec~ One of the finer homes in the area Westbrook Vil~ge.
'#420

• i982 C!'ntury 21 RHI Estate Corpor110n •• tru11M lor tbi(NAFe and TM-trademarlcs of
CtniUI')' 21
E•t•~ Corporallon Equal Houslnr OpportuDity fQ

MOBILE HOME, CITY SCHOO.S SlS,OOO

J

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•

1

WANT TO BUIL07 Then take a look at this well laying
kt .47 Acre. Just off Rt. 160. Close to city. Restricted.
'
#431

EACH OFFICE tiiNDEPI!N!&gt;ENTV OWNEQ AND OPERATED.

I No! R•pon••ll of Accidents or Lass of · Property 1

•

\•

�..
The
81

Po me

Equipment

Jividen' • firm Equipment.
Long trlctora, Vermeer
round blilert, ,.ket, tedders.
mowera a. 1 complete line of
bale hendlert &amp; feed ing
acCMIOrilt. Tobacco &amp;'corn

.apr•v•ra. wagons. rotary
tiUer1. rotary cutten, bl•des,

cultiv-ors, discs, plows.
poet drlvert, plactic tanks.
powerwtahere. wood splitter• S. wood burning stoves!
And 1 complete line of pa{!s

&amp; service.

'

USED EQUIP'
·IH hydro 70. 245 MF. 36
MaSley, 85 Massey with
loader, .1 76 Massey Ferguton, Ferman c . Gravity
wagons. N . H . grinder mixer, cornpicker, square
baler1. 2 &amp; 3 bottom plows,

post eugers, tobacco •• .,,., ,
cultivators.

WE BUY
EQUIPMENT
446-1676.

USED

Complete tobacco striper
set up. 2 strippers. 1 auto .
conveyer &amp;. press box, exc.
cond. $2,000. Will consider
cattle on trade. Call 614-

256·6476.

JO model K Bl 6 ft . pic kup'
disc, JC model 246 corn . planter, MF ;3 - 14 plow with
1p1re moldboard . PTO 3
point posthole auger, ell in
very good cond . Call 6 14-

689·631 1.
New dozer, \lery r8asonable .

Cell 446-8038.
Farmall 460 Diesel. Plows,
mower and disc . Trade f or
smaller tractor. 304 -773-

71

Autos for Sale

'TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars .
Smith

Buick-Pontiac:. 1911 East·
ern Av e .• Gallipolis, 44·6·

22 82.

71

77 Ford Pinlo Square wagon
one owner, 37.000 miles.
ex c . con d . in side and out . No

rust. neve r wrecked. PS, PB ,

1980 Camaro Railey Span · Ca ll 614-256-6475 .
V-8 , 5, 700 m iles . auto .. AC.
PB. PS. AM ·FM 8-track 1980 Datsun 3 10 GX. am fm redip. great mpg . rust
ste ro . Call 614-379-2726 .
proof ed , asking $3495 . Call
1977 Olds Cutlass Sup reme 446·6626 .
casse tte tape. PB . PS , auto.,
'2 60 cu . engine , 2 brl. good 1972 Mustang Grande good
gas m i., ex . co nd ., good sha pe, good tires. needs
rubber, S2,400 . Call after paint . c._u6 14- 388 -827 2 .
1980 ' Ford Pinto 4 ~y l..,
8uto .• AC . 3 dr., Runabout,
21 ,000 miles, 53,000, exc .
co nd. Call 446-7383 .

1973

Chevy

Nova

350

auto .. low mi .. $800 . Call
446 -7340 after 6PM

1975 Monte Ca rlo exc .
cond., good tires. Call after

7,

~14 - 245 - 94 7 9 .

1971 Super Beelte rebuilt
motor. n ew pa int , $1 ,395 .
15 4 Second Ave .• Gallipolis .

Call 446· 1615 or 4461243.

1980 D elu xe Renault leCar,
4 spd .. full sunroof . AC,
AM · FM . real spo rty ,
S2 .49 5 John's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd .• 446 ·4782 .
1954 Chevy stati on wagon.
11.000 actual miles .. many
new parts . $1 ,500 . Call

71

lff}\}1.\,(t fil'\l ~MTICIWIBLEOWORDCIAIIIE

~ ~ ~~·
Unscramble these fo·ur Jumbtea,
one letter to each square, to form
four'ord1nary words .

8189.

no.oo.

1114-992 -

1973 Chovy Capric cleaolc.
4 door, good tiree. excelltnt
condition, 1475 . 00. . Call

304-1176-81188.

J

I

"iHe LI511:A~IA"i
AI. 50 Cl'r.ll!t::' W~eN
6H! 5AW HE~ I'OOK5

oo
_ _._
_$_
1J_o_o_._c_a_ll_1_4_6_·_1_3_
1
1977 Gra nd Prix SJ .Ioaded.
58,000 mi., 53,000 . Call

WE~ETH / ~ .

PRAULLl

I I [)

1980 Toyota Corolla . 2 dr .•
exc . con d .. 34m . p.g .. with a

1976 Chevy 4-door hordtop. good cond. 64,000
octuol mlleo. t1400. 304675-7380.
1976 Chevy Monza 2 plus 2,
VB. new tires; PS, PB,
automatic trentmletlon, tilt
whHI, air cO'hdh:loning. f'81r
defro.t, air ahocke. need•

pointed, •1.000.00. 304882-3448.
.

Print answer here :

sporty look. 614-992-6737 .

2421 .

regularly . t5,200 or offer.

1979 Red Camero. NHdl
little work, have parte. Baby

1973
unner , red w it h gray
stripes, Cragares . Sharp,

dependable

1972 Corvotte. A .T.. o.c ..

304-773-6679.

Road

1967 Ford Mustang . 6 cyl.
automatic . no rust. run s
good . S2.500 . 614-992 7406 or 61 4· 742·2801 .

Autos for Sale

p.b, p.s.. am-fm. radiale,
high mlluge but maintained

be~ .

1979 Volkswagon diesel.
Call 61 4 · 24 5· 9 405.
Pl ymouth

byHonriAmoidondBobiM

[I]"(IIII]"
(-.Mondoy)

Yesterd ay's ! Jumbles: SNORT ALIAS SAILOR EXPOSE
Answer: It was his last meal, but you anoutd nave
seen thisHOW THe, ASSASSINATE (aaaualn ate)

1 980 Chevy luv 4x4, four
tpeed.

with

topper ,

t4,000.00. Seoro whirlpool
for bath. und very little .

304-895 -3618 or 896·
3621 .

1982 ·s-10 Chevy pickup
truck. Call614·268-8270.

1 976

88. $795 . 814·742-

~ Sunday,.Times-Sentinei- Poge-0-7

1983 "

W. Va.

utos for Sale

AC . AT, 4 cyl ., $3,00 0 firm .

4'30PM. 742-2746 .

Ohio-Point

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 OMC s:1a. iu11o.

72

Trucks for Sale

' 75 Jeep excellent cOndl ·

trans.• AM -FM , atero ca... ,
wide bed packogo, whh

tion . '78 Luv truck, VB con veraion. bla:r:er wheels, roH

fi'*glou topPif, 37,000
mlloo, U ,300. Coli 448·
8060.

bar, auto . transmiuion .

80 Toyota-Tercel front
~heel drive. am-fm . axe.

cond. 83900 . 304-6751035 or 675-4568.

304-871-3388.

1980 10 ton F260 Ford.
1972 Whlto troctor, olng•· t4.000. 304-876-7758.
lXII, W·IIMper. 50,000 mi. 1973 Ford pickup F-100
on mljor. goad tlrte. new with flbergla11 topper. Ru111
clutch. preuure pl1te. pivot
304·876·2039 otter
beorlng, 11,600. Coli 876- good.
5p.m.
3008.
1979 Ford Courier pickup,
real opoity, *2,986. ~ohn'o
Auto Seleo. 8ulovHio Rd ..
448·4f82 .

B1 JHP truck, '78 Ford
tt,uck. 70 Lincoln flatbed

73

1981 4 wh. OdesseV. great
Christmas gift. $695. Call

446-7244.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

76

1979 Bronc 113.000 mi.,
pocluogo, loodod. $8.200.
Coli 814-387-01131 or 4481769 ofiernoono.

400 Ford engine, transmis sion and drive shaft. Runs

good.

614-992-2676.

79 'Motors Ho'mes
&amp; Campers

1---------1 9&amp;5 Superior short bua,

8 ft. slide in camper with
jacks. S600. Call 446 -2075
eves.

1963 M-124 Trojan 1'h yd. ·

Pay off. 814-992·6434 or
tion • . t8900, 304. 8781114·992-6914.
2377.

1979 Wilderness self contained camper. with roll
out awning. Call 446· 7230.
1977 Nomad travel trailer.
Self contained. Awning,
ten dum axle. A- 1 condition.

PM.

~14-992- 3194.

LACKBURN

Real Estate General

5428

. .

62 Wanted to Buy

Appliance Service An mekea
&amp; models refrigerators ,
washers, dryers, ranges ,
compa ctors, dishwashers
microwaves . Heating &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work .
Gallta Refrigeration Co. Call

614-446·4066 .

RON'S Televi$ion Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls . Call 576-2398

'·.

446-7380.

Tobacco Quota for sale.
Location · Gallia County.

63

Livestock

Purebred Simmental bull .
550 lbs ., also baled hay and
dinette set. Call 446-2724 .

Pigs. 304-675 -3224 .
Pigs for sale .

304 -882 ·

3448.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Large round bales of hay end
aquare baled hay . Will de·
liver around Gallipolis . Can

446· 1062.
CORN. 304-675-3997 alter 8 :00.

Real Estate General

RELAX IN THECOMFORTof a
i
view from the lam1ly iOOm. Modem 3 bedrm. brick home wdh
many amenrties includmg a 20'x40' pool. 2 acres of
landscaped lot Pnvacy. Call for app~nmenl

•• 2 BEDRM. COTTAGE situaled along Vinton Ave. Nat. gas heat
1',\ baths, Sl&gt; rooms, fam1ly room, 2 car garage. Price

TEAFORD
VIRGIL B . SR.
210 r.. 2nd sr.

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REALIOR

Phone
1-( 614 ) -992 -3325

NEW LISTING - Nice olde; 3
bedroom home. Stove, retriger·
ator. hot waler heat carpeti n&amp;
full basement near stores, in
Pomeroy. Asking $39,000.
NEW LISTING - 2.5 acres on
Rl 124 in Racme w1th 6 rm.
two story home. bath, gas f.A.
furnace &amp; lull basement for
$40.000
NEW LISTING - 10 rm. home.
bath. furnace, woodburner,
bath, washer·dryer. on two lg.
lots in Syracuse for $'2 5.000.
NEW LIST! NG - 7 acres w1th
2 septic setups lor mobile
homes for just $7,500.
TRAILER SETUP - l evel lot in
town or 3 acres In the country
for $6.000.

2 COUNTRY HOMES - 4
acres plus 5 rm. house on 2
acres plus 6 rm. ranch near
Rutland.
RUTlAND - 6 homes to
choose tram. 3 on Rt 124 two an Depot Street with level

lots.
MIDDLEPORT - lllurnished
apts. near schoo~ and stores.
As~n&amp; on~ .$85.000. Approx
$34,000.00 mcome

5 FARIS - Some nver
bottMI, some hils, woods and
crop land. All sizes and pri~
Two 12 acre ones and many
~.

IDTS AND ACREAGE -1 acre
to 145. Some on water line and
hard road. lDis at $2,500.00.
~rp acreaae at about
pxJ.OO per acre. Call to see or

•
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•

$32,000.00.
COLONIAL DUTCH , 2 or 3 bedrm .. 2 full baths. convenien~y
located across from new court house. Lg. living rm. w/ wb.
f11eplace, I&amp; krtchen and formal dining rm. Call for
apprnntmenl $82.000.00.
•

•

2 ACRES, more or IllS\, w~h 3 Bedrms., family rm., attached

•
•

garage Pnvacy with in·ground pool. Near city limits.
$59,000.00.

•
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•

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm. home in Eureka, near Gallii)&lt;Js
dam. Be ready for canstruc~on boom. live in or rent
$22,00000.
.
.

•

QUALITY BRICK HOME s1luated on appra&lt;. 2acres, wrthin crt)
of Gallipolis Solid cherry woodwork and panel, 3 W.B.
fireplaces. lull basement !finished). constructed durin.g late
40's. Amenities too numerous to l~t Call Ken Morgan

•
•

now.

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·.,.••·,
•

•• APPROX. 5 ACRES wnh 2·3 bedrm. home. all modem. electric
heat wrth wood .ar coal auxiliary, f.a. lreatingsy~em. hard road
• on three sides of property. Room for additional building
owner may help finance qualified porchaser. Call for more
•
• information.
.

•
•

VERY PERSONAL HOME IN
OITY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Warm and in~ting with convenient location, close to all faciti&amp;es.
large liVing rom. 3 bedroms, country k~chen, famiy room with
f1replace, laundry room and patio. Beautiful luxurious carpet
throughout and best of all priced in the $40s. Call for personal
showing loday.
NICE COUNTRY HOME &amp; 2 ACRES
1728 sq. ft. living space plus 2 bathrooms. Full basement unfinished, front porch 15 ft. by 32 It, 2 car garage 32 ft. by 32ft.
all under one rool, 2 acres more or less, 400ft. fronlage by &lt;lb It
deep, all useable New home not completely finished. Has agarden
bath tub- its own water system !drilled wei~, Buck Slove heater,
plus electric healing system, has about evt!l}'thing you.would want
Pnced at $59,900.00. Phone now!!

#587
NEW BRICK APPAOX. 1 YEAR OLD
Whde brick front. 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 bat~. nice modern
step-saver ~chen . Electric heat pump with A.C. Two car garage
Nice landscaped shady backyard. Beautiful hom~ you must see
th~ one
jj581

.
IN GAlU POUS - WALK TO SHOP 00\VNTOWN
.
Puce reduced for quick sal~ $29,900. 6 rooms, 3 BR, full
basement, n~ce large front porch. No upkeep. Nice large shade
trees, low taxes. Home you should check on.
#530

FRESH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE'
Move right in th~ fully furnished Mobile Home wdhapprox. 7acres
ot beautiful woodland. Perfect tor retirement Call for informabon.

4 BEDRMS., 8 RM. HOME situated along Gartield Ave . A

F~hingpond

VACATI!)N CAMP BY BWE IAJCE
Owner financin~ sundeck, rural water, septic system, electric. Buy
rt wlh camp;ng tra~ler or wrthout. concrete pad, Great Fishilg Buy
and move right in.

convenient p!ace to INe. Overlooks the beautrrul Oh·~ River.
Price $30.000.00.

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151 ACRE FARM near Vinto~. Has 3 bedrm. house, It
equipment shed. bottom lantt pasture and some WO'Jded area.
Price reduced lo $86,000.00.
3 BEDRM. HOME. family rm., adapted for w.b. healer.
ln·ground pool, lg carport fenced-in yard. Mad~on Ave. Price
$46,900.00.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY!! 2 apartm~nt home wrth 2 bedrms.
each located wrthm 2 blocks from school~ Plenty parl&lt;in&amp;
·good locat~n .$65.000.00.
COMMERCIAl PROPERTY - Approx. 4,000 sq. ft. located in ·
downtown Gallii)&lt;Jis. Can be leased or purchased. Across ~om
city parlrjng ~t
PREPARE FOR WI.NTER and move into th~ 2 bedrm. cottage
across from Foodland Grocery. Nat gas heat Buy now
$25,000.00.
COMMERCIAl' PROPERlY - Active restaurant business
located an corner lot in.Kanauga. Purchase and get immediate
''Cash Row" owner may finance some to qualified porchaser.
Call for more informabon.

-·-

- ------

LOW DOWN PAYMENT, OW'NEA FINANCING
Are you look1ng for a 2 bedroom hom~Qverlooking the Ohio River
With little mamtenance. Begmner home or retirement home We
hBIIe rt.
.

Houses Raised or M oved
Floors leveled , joist's sill's
replaced , basements dug
beneath house , e•cavation ,
ponds or roads made. All
work guaranteed . Free Esti mates . " In business for over
a quarter of a century ".

576 -

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

EAST

WEST
~98i 2
• J 8 52
• 4

•n

Y A 94

• a 76 3

"' ' K e 1

+Q J 10'
SOL.Tll

304-675-208B or 675 4560.

Phone 446·3888 or 4464477

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

his diamonds for 10
tricks.
"What was so bad .about
that?" we asked . "They only
made four-odd since they
never got a heart trick."

. KQ

t J I0952

+;
West

Pass
Pas's
Pass

North

I ~T

••Pass

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

,••.
So• I
I+

•K

Cor . Fourth and Pine

ING. Fomerly Dewitt' s
Plumbing. Call 614-367-

0576.

from dummy and finally had
run

+ AKQJIO

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Sou th

second club. cashed one of
dummy's high diamonds. run
off his spades to pull the
trumps whlle discarding the
other two top diamonds

B! Oswald Jacoby
' and Jamrs Jacoby
The unlucky expert was
yammering as usual. It
seems that his North-South
opponents had bid to four

"Look at the bidding!" he

screamed. "LOOk at South's
three-diamond jump . Then
look at NortlJ 's pass to four
spades. Practically no one
was in four spades. which is
the only game that makes."
We must admit that some
pl aye rs would stop short of
game. Others would land at
three no·trump Or five
diamonds,.· Our unfortunate
friend had been fixed on this
hand. bu t everyOne who
plays duplicate knows that
he can expect some unavoidable bad scores due mere ly

to successful
bidding.

opposit io n

(NEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE A.SSN .)

FOLLOW THE CIRCULAR DRIVE- and you'll fnd
th~. eye-catching home !hat features ·a roomy
fam1ly room. 5 BRs. 2 bath~ bui~·ih range and
d~hwashser, 2 ~replaces, 3 patios, woodburning
stove, central a11, also has a pond and utility
bu!ldmt

Lonnie Boggl Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call

448-7903.

REALTY

Real Estate General

All yOu need
to know in
Real EstateT:

BEAUTY IN THE WOODS - Attractive bi-le11el is
nestled on a 1.21 acre rol~ng traci in the Kyger
Creelt School District Features are 3 BRs bath LR
kil:hen and dining area range, washer. dryer, ~..;
carpet and WB stove. Si+% loan can be assumed
with approx. $11,000 down.

W"llltorizq Available.

Dozer, Batklloe, Dump Tru&lt;l:.

Cat 216 hoe. dozers. crane.
loaders, dump truck. Cell
81 4 · 448 -1 1 42 between

388-8869

.427 KATHY DRIVE.
NEAR U.S. 35 - Convenonce is iust
I .• onehos,;lal,of theshoppin&amp;
many amenities this brick
aose
and in •
neighoortood. 3
I t..otooms,
equipped Ntchen, dining room, new

I:

ranch offers.

Call 446-1515 or 446-0445

SHEET METAl WORK

HOMELITE

7:00AM • 6:00PM.

We make cus1om duct
work. We Repair Furancos
&amp; Heat Pumps.
GALLIA ,
REFRIGERATION CO.
81 4·446·4066

CHAIN SAW
SERVICE AT

Good- 1 Exc•vating, -.sementl. footere, driveway•.
•Ptlc tenk1, landscaping .

Coli anytime 446 -4637.
l.

James
owner.

Davison , Jr.

J .A.A. Construction Co.

BELL CONTRACTING

Water Llnee. Footen.
Drains. All kind a of Ditching .

GALLIPOLIS
All types construction and ,._

Rutland. Oh. 614-7422903.

modtlinr. insulation, roolinc.
plu!Niina. hlltin&amp;. No job too

84

unaII

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

PasquaJe Electric Co. all
phases of electric work, all
work guaranteed . Aerial

truck rental. Coli 614·4462716.
SEWING Machine ropolro,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciasors . Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy. 992 -2284.

as

General Hauling

Call 446-4002

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 and I to 5
Saturday
8:30 a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service on
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also ser·
viced and we also service
Kerosene Heate1s.

9 ... _
~

Pomeroy

~.

~fl. IMPI!OVEMENTS

.?:' .

Bill'S

r

Nu-Prln:te replacement
Windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum I vinyl

sldlnt

How met Piltlo Coven
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home .1wn1ngs
Aluminum utility

buildings
691 Miller Drive
446·2642
Free Estimates

Landmark
614-992-2181

SOLUTION

Call 446-3159

Water haUling, Fast Ser~ice,
tow rate1 . Call 61 4-266 ~

1743.
Now Hauling Good Lump or
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4

ton. 814-367-7101 .

1163 Sec . Ave., Gtllipolis .

lloea~e

~w loaffic

fireplace, tx!autiful kitchen, dining, 2 overhead light·fan
fiidures, fenced ~ay yard, ~ garden, 2 car garage and
storage room. Ex~lent ~rge corner klt klcatiln.

1 ~ ballo~

carpt!. 2 car gara~ ~"' nat gas heal and "'nlair, $59~. _

I'

t:

CUSTOM BUILT - Brick ranch inCr0..n C~. Very attractive
&amp; W~l m~ntained 3 bedroom OOme W
ilNer 1580 SQ. ~ of
bvmg area. .locludes an equipped kithen w/ d!ning.area. 2 full
baths, famtly room. 2 nice covered porches plus a large

I
I

landscaped yard

1I :

.

Woodland Hills Uphostery It
Antiques. 167 Woodland
Dr., Gallipolis, Oh . Calr

446-2010.

REALTOR

OWNER DRIVING 100 MILES TD WORK- Wanls oome srjd
l&lt;fore winler. Most altracti&gt;e sol~ bu i~ brickoanchincludes 3
rice sized bedrooms. 1'h baths. large living room wlttl

to

BUYERS PROTECTIOII FOR I YEAR - Yoolll en~y tr.
a&gt;.mlry alrrosphere envronmenl wtli~ still ha•ng tr.
convenience of sllopjjng only a mile away. This attractive
bnck home is clean &amp; well decorated With 3 BRs. eat·in

39.4 ACRES- RIO GRANDE- Nice wooded acreage akJng
Cenlerpoot ICilerrv Ridge! Rd. Has 1.000 ~acl&lt; walnullrres
~anted 15 yo. ago. ~II make agood investm"'t for anyone.
$22,000.
~·

!Jll, LOAN ASSUMPIIOII - Recenl hst1ng of oome &amp; O.B A.
City schools, only 4 miles, nice quiel area to INe. Good roads.

Counly water. Level ~onl lawn, space for garden, modern
quality buiK home. full baseml!ll Reoent imprllVI!mO'I!s.

TREE SHADED 101 Wllh rnmadeled older home in Rio. New
roof, aluminum siding, rlSUiated, one of the best fini~ed and
well carell for homes on the market large walk·m closet.
bui~· in features, Utility building, city gas, sewer, al)d water. All

near campus. Reasanaijy priced at $31,800.00.

.

~ kitchen w/ nice caOOels nd all the lurn~shin~ dining room,

lamity room &amp; hving room w/ bay'window. Full basemen~ I ~
' bath!, 2 car garage and 'large lawn, Make n affordable al

• $56.500.

'

ACROSS
1 liberates
6 Haste
~ 1 Part Of
I lower
16 Drinks
heavily

21 Laughing
22 Linger
23 Get up
24 Worship
25 Emmel
26 long lor

26 Wolrd

30 Strong wind
32 Hypothetical
force
33 ProDOYn
34 Greek letter
' 35 Aff irmative
36 Kind of
fabric
37 Fruit drink
38 Condensed
moisture
40 Skid
42 Spread for

drying

..._,

.,_·i~

LNIE DRIVE- RIO GRANDE - Pos&gt;~e 9 ~% assumpiX&gt;n
on this ~vtly 3 yr. ~d brick. 2 ~"Y oome. lndudes 4
bedrooms, 21111 &amp; 2 hiit baths, nice bui~·in k!chen wi1h bar,
full basement famiy room w/ f11eplace and 2 ca1 garage.
$67,500. Owner an&gt;ous lo sell. CaH JimCochran.

PIIICED AIGIIT - You won't lnd "''Y man111J0d buys ike
lho one too often, Priced al $44,1XXJ, !his 3 BR li1evel ofers
}200 SQ. ft of living are~ living room !ami~ room both
w/fire~ace, 2 fuH baths and garage. tOC..oo on cnrner lat.
lh!S oome " close to shopping and in cily schools Fenced in
yard w/lruit trees.
·

43 Supercilious
person
44 Prophet
45 River Island
41 Evergreen
trMS
49 Permission
touae

••
•

note
72 Crlmaon
74 Is con·
earned
76 Watering
place
7T Withered
78 World War II
atllence
79 Having
three leaves
B2 Wli'e nail
B4 Incline
85 Ballot
86 Fruit cake
88 Great Lake
89 Let lt stand
90 Steepla

92 English
counties
94 Aeatllence
'sa Mine vein
99lean-lo

tOO Legal
matters
102 Chemical
compound

10J Hint
104 Beverage
105 Ur&amp;lne
ant mal

106 Whips

seeks game
54 Father
55 Sharp pain
56 Lower In
rank
60 Foollike
Plrt

120 Unusual
122 Scoffs

64 Stockings
85 Chaldeln

125 Young horse

51 One who

•

71 Guido's high

108 Organ of
hearing
109 Parent :
colloq .
t to A s1ate:
abbr.
111Judge
112 Disavow
114 Insect
t 16 Preposition
1t7 Commission

50 Equality

59 Goal

62 Plaguing
City

66 Paid no11ce
67 Female;

colloq.
69 Look fixedly

IF YOU WANT CONVENIENCE ... .then th~ is the
place for yoo! Easy·to-care for home, just steps to
stores &amp;.schools. New vinyl siding 2 BR~ bath,
kitchen, liv1ng room, dining rm. Priced a1 $23,000.

EI~CIIWiinc.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
·AGENCY
.

BAING YOUR HAMMER &amp; NAILS - And 1J1 to
work on lh~ unfinished home near Rodney. Has a
full basement and over ll acres of rofing to level
land. Prioo has been reduced to -34,000.·

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING NEAR lME WE? Ths 5 it 3 BR roodular with 2 baths, lvirlg room,
d1n111g area. kitchen with sto¥e and refri&amp;
Comfortable screened porch, wood bumilg stove
24x60 block garage and lots ~ trees.
'

ELLIOTI CO.

Ltnnox Htltq &amp; All Conlitiorinc. All typos ll!lulltion,

.,

fully landscaped. Splendid white brick home
exhibits approx. 3100 sq. ft. of livmg area wrth 3 or
4 BRs. 3 baths, 20x40 family room, dining room,
beautiful carpet, kitchen, offers !NI, d~posal,
microwave and trash compactor, intercom, air
conditioner. 2 car garage, 10x20 utility buildina.
deck and 20x40 pool.
'

PRICE ltfDUCED TO $27,900 - Modem ranch
with 3 BRs, living room, kitchen bath carpet,
electric BB heat. an attched gar~ge. LoCated in
RodneyVillage II. Excellent buy for first time home
owner!

RUSS AND MAX

446-7833 or 446-1833.

FARMER'S FARM - Approx. 50 acres, near
Vinton. All clean crop &amp; pasture land, remodeled 3
BR home. 60x80 bam. 2 silos !former dairy farm)
fronts on 2 rds.,large pond. SEE THIS ONE BEFORE
PLOWING TIME $49,900.

1104 ADRIAN AV£. - 3 BR ranch v.ith eat·in
kitchen, iving room, bath, carpeting and hardwood
~. carport Very convenient $39,500.
·

Pool

'

between 9 and 6 .

WlU BE YOUR PROUDEST POSSESSION! Beauti-

GREEN TOWNSHIUP - GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD
- 12 acres m/1, appro•. 120 ft. IM Rd. frontage,
rural wall!r available. ExceUent for bui~ing or
mobile homes. Call for more information.

THE STAN·SHOR CO.
EacavotU., Sloimminc Pool
Soles &amp; Soriic:o. Wintor COVfl.
Wlllltrizinc Kits. Domes. SpiS.

We'll do

'

THIS OIIE HAS IT ALL! Exceptional home near
town features 2 family rooms, one with ~rge stone
firep~ce and patio dooo, other has a bar, 3 BRs,
dream kitche!' has cook lop, micmwave, (!Yt' level
oven, !NI, d5p. and range, 14x24 living room,
dinette. carpeting and 2 car garage.

Transportation .

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Coli 614-367-7471
or 614-367-0591 .

ELECTRONIC REAL
ASSOCIATES

25 ACRES - 8 ROOM ROME

Nice remodeled ho.ma Blown-in insulabon. 2 storage buildin~
ch1cken house. M1n1 farm. Cheshire township. New country
klchen.
#55&amp;

matoa. 814-446 -2107.

leads. South had ruffed the

Serviees

ponds • . dltchea,

baoemonto, e1c. Coli 448-.
4907. Corter • Evon•

Need something hauled
away or 1omething moved?

•

ATTENTION CITY COWBOVS
Have horses' See the fenced·in pasture with 4 acrns more or less
including a three bedroom home. just a few miles from Gallipolis.
Excellent ~nd for farming as well as new home construction.la!J!
bam plus two storage bu!dings, pord stocked with catfish, bass
and bluegills, large concrete drive. CaM for a showing and be
surprised.
11437

STEAMER . Water removal,
furniture cleaning, free esti-

Real Estate General

#591
WHAT A DEAL! $27.000
C?me see for yourself Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer,
d1shwasher, refngerator, woodburner, and all like new. Storage
bui1lding and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools.
#552

#583

•• 10 UNIT MOTEL wdh house and appro&gt; . 8 acres.
socked with fish. Relax and enjoy life while making a INingl

•
•
•

#590

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

HOUSE MOVERS 2711..

. AKQ

SHIP

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

107.974 lbo. Min. bid 1.00

IN CITY
3 bedrooms. storm door.; and
windows, 6 room ranch style
with no upkeep, vinyl sidint
Nat. gas furnace. Nice modern
kdchen. Price only $29,900.00.

+9 6 52

carpet

nanced roofing, including
hot tar application. ca.rpen1er. electrician. mason . Call

304-895-3802.

11 · ~·13

GET

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpo-

446-0008

THE PERFECT
SETTING
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2.211
acres more or less, formal
dining room, family room,
plenty ol garden space lots of
dwart fruit trees, woodburner
stove, fuel 011 FA furnace.
lhermopane windows and
ste&lt;m windows. Beautiful setting on State Highway No. 160
at junction of old Rt. 160. Seed

~OR Til

The contract wasn't a
tough one. It seems that Our
unlucky expert had started
the defense with two clu b

~ -

Wanted to l ease: 1983
Tobacco Poundage . Call

per lb. bid reg . Owner in
appropriate county intent to
actively produce tobacco on
yo~,~r land . 1 .000 lb. ' max.
quota per tillable acre. Pay ment by certified check only .
Sale subject to available
quota and qualified determi·
nation by Dept . ~f Agric .
Submit written proposal
with bed price , quota
amount desired, county location and advise the
amount of tillable acres
available to support your
quota requests . No verbal
bids accepted . Offers end 1 2
Noon Nov. 14, 1983. Mail
bids to: Crown City Min ing.
Inc.. 6422 E. Mai, St .,
Reynoldsburg. Oh 43068 .
Attn : Dale Th ompson .

spades and had made lt.
. 65
• 10 7£3

your

Hanna ,

Lamentations

tor, IDav 614'-592-4066.)
Inight 614-698-8205 .1

Business

•

DOZER WORK . By Ted

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

SEAMLESS GUTIERS. Ono

or 446-2464.

Real Eatate General

446-3862.

'.Marcum RoQfing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 years experience,
spe~ializ i ng in built up roof.

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

79,000 mi., good cond. Coli
448-2838 or 676-2432 .

4 WD loader, good condi -

1 979 Ford Truck F-150 ,
4•4 . Excell ent condition .
304 ·675·1859 after 4 :00

$125. Also 1972

Buick 360 engine. transmission and drive shaft . 5125 .

1979 Chevy 4x4, 4 ap .. carpet. Coli 446-7669.
lock -out hub1. new black
paint. roll bar, white I poke 1970 Dodge van. runs good.
carpet and panel. •800. Cell
whHio. Coli 266-1484.
4411-3882.
1979 FO&lt;d pickup. 16,000

1982 'h ton Dodge pickup
with topper. Standard shift .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

auto .• crulae, XLT Ranger

AM-FM, 2 bench seats &amp;.

mlle1. Like new.
•4.800. Nonh of Racine on
Carmel Ad. Devid Parson1 .

estimates .. Call
1182 .

Phone 614-367 -0636, call
after 5 .

piece custom fit your home.
614-256 - · Guaranteed . Advanced Gut·

Call&amp;14-388-9857..

1 97&amp; GMC liln auto. trana.

actual

E &amp; R Tree Service. fully

t~xtured ceilings commer·
and residential , tr;e

Clal_

BRIDGE

in sured, free estimates.

STUCCO PLASTERING -

74 Motorcycles

trailer. Call between 5-7,

448-0181 .

Home
Improvements

Excavating

83

Home
lmprove.ments

81

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

November 6, 1983

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

10 Remainder ·

119 Ascend
124 Skill

12il La)'OfS

128 Hindu
cymbals
. 129 Linger

1J1 High

132 Dance step

1J3 Having dull

finish
135 Brim
138 Conjunction
139 Transaction
140 Small rug
141 Cry of goat
142 Negative
143 Note ot

scale
144 Semi-precl·
ous stone

145 Striped

-animal
147 Bone of leg
149 Po11sesslve
pronoun
150 Omit from
pronunciation
152 Raise the
splrll of
1M Bab)'lonlfn
hero
156 Proofreader' II mark
158 Renovate
159 Tropical
fruit : pl.
160 Jury list
161 Rips

DOWN

17 Poem
18 River In Italy
19 Wear away

20 Hebrew
festival
27 Lamprey
29 Organs ot
sight
31 Priest's
vestmen t
36 Projecting
tooth
37 Danish
Island
39 Stalt
· 40Walk
41 Redact
42 Handles
43 Melody
44 Identical
46 Pronoun
48 War god
49 Path
50 Nuisance
51 Vital organ
52 Beneath
53 Feast
55 Buccaneer
56 Portion of
medicine
57 Aower

58 Wipe out
61 HindU

1 Deceit
2 Wash lightly
3 Dine
4 Printer's
measure
5 Pigpen
6 Opposl1e of
dynamic
7 Commemorative
marches
a sea e~~gle
9 Teutonic
deity
10 Change
color ol
11 Peeled
12 Goddess of
discord
13 Stalemate
14 Conjunction
15 Yatt throng

16 Speoch

· garment
63 Weakens
64 At this place
68 Tanned hide
70 let go
71 Foreign
73 Sever
74 An imal
enclosure
75 Sedate
77 Small plug
78 Fish sauce
80 Golf cry
81 Transgress
8~ Exist
84 Mix
81 Cylindrical
89 Cubic
meters
90 Toll
91 Pertalhing
to the poles
92 Pretense

93 Scorch
""95 Pierce

96 Swollen part
97 Periods or
lime
99 Sow
101 Begins
105 Twisted
106 Choicest
107 Mark leM b ywound
111 Arrow
1 12 Small brook
113 English
streetcar
115 Heraldry:
grafted
116 Dropped
118 Foray
t 19 Part in
play
121 Loosely
woven
cott on
123 Babylon ian
deity
125 Heiled
126 Surfeit
127 Kentedrum
129 Liquid
130 Old
woman ish
131 Cl'line!e
pagoda
132 Boy
attendants
134 Siamese
native
136 Bury
137 Stations
139 Pour forth
140 Small
amount
144 Poem

14 5 Make lace
t46 Corded
cloth
147 Sunburn
148 Perform
149 Man 's name
151 Preposition
153 Note ol
scale

155 Symbol lor
tantalum
157 Diphthong

Rl'ltR LOTS FOR SAl£ - Localed 3miles
Eureka Dam. !dell for camping building or
mobile home&gt; Call Ranny Blackburn

-260
MULTI PURPOsE PAOP.Em
.
l~ted on Ohio Rl. 7 near Gallipolis. Walk·m cooler, display
,cabinet\, three rental mobile homes- income now $660 00 per
mo. Could be 6 room brick ~ont home pkls 2 rooms for
whatever ·you have in mind. Flower shop, small grocery store,
carry-out. etc..Lots ~ uses. Phone for appointment lo see. live in
part - .busmess 1n other part Rent mobile homes. Great
Opportunity!
. #580

business-

6.95 ACRES VACANl lAND OFF liT. 35
Rolling land - Beside Old U.S. Highway 35. In an area tltll s
developing fast Rt. 35,!hort distance west 91 Gallipolis. Get~~·

'

·,
•,

11544

,. .
8 ACRES
W••·
'"''" .v minute drNe to dow ~town GalhPOiis. CitY School SVstem

· Has hookup for mobile home Gallia·Rural Water,eli!cli~ and seillic'
tan~_Night light on pole. 200 It trontaee on Grah~ Schooi.B!!..
Timoor.BLiltint sites. Cai
114"'17

now:-

....

7

•

·-

dlaPin.

..-...
~

Housing

Hr ·.ulquartcrs
I

!

•

t

�The

Editors told to adopt
decency standard-s
By STEVE SWIFf
Ignoring environmental Issues.
Associated Press Writer
She wondered why newspaper
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
editors should be surprised" that the
F01m er Environmental Protection public trusts you as much as It truSts
Agency chief Anne Gorsuch Burford labor union rack!lteers, paHmony
compla ined at a newspaper editors' lawyers, Nautilus instructors and
·
meeting that too many stories about politicians:"
her were inaccurate and focused on
"The public may not have a
ma tters trrelevant to her job.
refined sense of what is good
Mrs. Burford, who resigned her joqrnalism, but Americans have a
EPA post in March because of well·honed standard of decency.
pressure from Congress a nd envir·
And It Is this standard of decency
onmenta lis ts, told editors a l The
that the press assaults every
Associated Press Managing Ed!· · morning at the breakfast table and
tors' 49ih annua l convention on every evening after the movie of the
Friday tha t American newspapers
week.''
cou ld reca pture the confidence of
Jones said editors are faced with
the public by adopting "common two major problems - . eiTOrs and
standards ofdecency."
arrogance.
She participated in a panel
"Newspapers are not as bad as
discussion a bout the credibility of readers believe. The pity is that
the press.
editors are doing so Utile to disabuse
Other panel members were that misconception," Jones said.
Norman Isaacs, former editor of
He said every newspaper should
The LouiSville Times and for seven
have a WTitteri policy on how to
years head of the National News handle eiTOrs, complaints, and
Council: Louis Harris, founder of corrections. Both the newspaper
Louis Harris Associates research start and the reading public should
firm; Donald D. Jones, ombudsman
know about the policy, Jones said.
for the Kansas City (Mo.) Star and
"What the public has come to
Times, and John McMullan, refired
detest Is the taint of bias, ana they
executive editor of the Miami can recognize It swiftly," Isaacs
said.
Herald.
Mrs. Burford said reporters
McMullan, who before his .retireassigned to · cover her spent too ment In June was a vigilant critic of
much time describing her clothes,
the press, said that newspapers
her cigarette smoking habits, the could reduce their errors If indusl!y
car she drove and accused her of leaders paid more anention to copy
tha !fills news

PERFORMERS - These two young performers will be among the
some 60 dancers of the Shlrley Carpenter School of Dance taking part In
the school recital at 7:30 Sunday evening at tbe Chesture-Kyger
Elementary School. On the left is Debbie Werry, soloist, dressed for a
jazz number with Valerie Connolly, dress€d In a glittering whlte outfit to
be worn In a group banet number. The r ecital will feature tap. banet and
jazz and the public -is In •ited.
·

Soviet official urges
strong armed forces
MOSCOW (AP) Politburo
m ember Grfgory V. Romanov,
delivering a major annual address
Saturday. sa id world relations are
the poorest since World War [) and
that Soviets must bolster their
armed forces wit h " utmost
vigilance."
Romanov repeated the Kremlin's
warning that the Soviets will put new
m issiles in East Germany and
Czechoslovakia and take other
retaliatory measures ii NATO
deploys new nucleaJ' rockets in
Western Europe starting next
month.
He also said the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization's planned de-

'•''

Sl ~ooo•o•••••••0&gt;¥•1·0

ploy ment "will make impossible the
continuation of the ongoing Soviet·
American (arms reduction) talks in
Geneva."
Romanov covered no new ground
in the hour·long speech at a Kremlin
gat!Jering to mark the 66th anniver·
sary of the BolShevik Revolution, a
major occasion in which members
of the Commu nist Party Politburo
appear In public.
But the choice of Romanov to
deliver the prestigious address
indicated Ws strong standing in the
11-man Politburo following his
elevation to membership In the
ruling party's. Central Committee
secretaria t last .June.

Richard Simmons is
a one·man industry, a
number-one bestseller '
maker, a supersmr with
his own TV show, an
international celebrity!
Now Richard is back in
publishing with an allnew book on exercise
filled with brand-new
exercises (plus all·new
photos!) for everyone.

Fined SJ2 and six months probation
for no operator's license was Arthur
R. Petrie, :io. Rt. 2, Crown City .
Bond was forfeited to William H.
Cromlish, 83. RL 2, Gallipolis.
failure to yield from a private drive,
$40, Gregory S. Unroe. 2Q, Crown
City , failure to display two plates,
s-10; and Ralph W. Sarson. 53. RL 1,
Scottown, failure to stop, S40.
Additional bond forfeited went to
Wendell Hull, 28, 001 Sl'ring Valley
Drive,$42; Dav idE.Secoy,30,Kerr,
S43, William Hatfield. 59. Ga llipolis
Ferry, $43, Emerson E. Reynolds,
50, Rt.l, Bidwell , $41 a nd Sandra K
Scott, 30. Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $40, all for
speeding .

•

Portsmouth . Road,

20 LB ..

BAG

FOODLAND
SEE OUR NEW

FARM HOME MODEL

1o/o INTEREST
3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME

No Down Payment
Payments As Low As

$12800 PER MONTH
..
Depending On Your Income

f!iaximum Ytarlw Income

2 ........................................ $1 5,750

MODEL PHONE 592-1418
KINGSBURY HOMES

All-American Homes

Profitability plan listed by ·Robbins &amp; Myers

50 W. by Pic-Pac ""arket. Athens
1 00 East Main St .. Pomeroy
HOURS: Mon., Tue .• Thur., Fri. - 12-7
Closed Wednesd11y; Open Sat. &amp; Sun . - 12-4
Rt.

OAYTON - Robbins and Myers
had a Joss and decine In sales for the
year and fourth quarter ended Aug.
31, but continues to 8Dtlclpate a
return to profitabUlty during the
,
,nsre~"&gt;0'
.LO:JCIII.,....... ~1
·
Fred G. Wan, president and chief
·executive officer, said the company
had Instituted a major corporate
restructuring and cash coriservatlon program to reilerse losses, and
was positioned to operate profitably
at sharply reduced saleS levels.
For fiscal 1983, Robbins and
.Myers had losses of $'20.8 mllllon or
.$8.77 per share, Including a OJI&lt;tlme cl!arge taken during the fourth
quarter of $12.0 million or $5,(5 per
share for a WTite-d&lt;iwn of assets,
costs assoctated with the restructurinJ: program and a Joss from

NOTE: New State FmHm Director says money allocated
for housing In Ohio must be used. Call now for details.

STOP IN AND SEE OUR DISPLAY
AT THE EXPO 83

The Alcove 42 Court St.

Galiipolir, Ohio
-

L:fayette M:JJ

OPEN DAD..Y 9:30 1U. 8:00
UOSEDSUNDAYS

Oysters Supreme Wlilpped in bacon
How do you make Captain D's famous, ~8511. juicy ovmrs'

._

lZl.l~~••ooo••oo••••~t l2J

$

•
•
•
•

50

'

Firms file for incorporation
COLUMBUS - Four area businesses, one in Meigs County, three
In GaUia County, have filed Incorporation papers with Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown's of!lce.
Herald Energy Co., Middleport, llled 1,00l shares. Incorporator
and agent is Frank Herald Jr., 35857 Wells Road, Middleport.
Mlnk·Johnson Insurance Agency Inc., has incorporated with 500
shares. Incorporator is John H. Parker and the agent is Bill Gene
Johnson, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
Robert L. Ratliff and Kathleen M. Ralll1f are incorporators of
Ratliff Auto · sales, VInton. Warren F . Sheets, 19 Locust St. ,
Gallipolis, Is agent.
Sheets Is also the agent on tbe incorporation of Ratliff Pools Inc.,
Gallipolis. Rober! .Ratllff and _ Kathleen Ratliff are also the
Incorporators and have flied 500 share5.

ST.ATIOI

THE
ALCOVE

42 Court Street
~ Galllpolla, Ohio

~\c.~~::~~~
STATIOI

FRUTH
PHARMACY
381 Jackson Pike
Galllpolla, Ohio.

~\c.V.~::~~
STATIOI

FRUTH
PHARMACY
2!l0t Jack eon Avenue
Point Pleaaant, w. va. ,.

~\tV.~=~~

$2.99

RIO GRANDE ..:. Laura Dickson, food service director at Rio ·
Grande cOuege and Community Coliege, was recently presented
Custom Management Corp.'s five-year service award.
T!Je presentation was made at a recent regional conference ~ld
by finn, which is based in Kingston, Pa.
The award recognizes company employees lor loyal servl9€ to the

finn.

.

.

Foote Mineral earnings reported

'

'
EXTON, Pa. - Foote Mineral Co. reported net earnings of
~lXXI. or ( cents per sbare lor the third quarter of 1983, compared
with a net Joss r1 $7,114.001 for the same period In 1982.
· Ssll!s were $36.7 rilllllon, compared with $28.5 mllllon in 1982.
The company reported a net lou of $2.8 million lor the 11rst nbie
months of this year, compared with a net loss of $2.3 mllllon in the
' 181111! perkxlln 1982. sales were Slal.2 m1lllon, l.'lliiiJI8l'ed with $100.5
•. mUIIon in the period Jut year. .
.
.
1
'
The company sbiM'ed its first quarterly prcftt since llm, which
E.P. Comer, prelldent and chief ~live oftlcer. atll1buted to
· pralltabJJny 11 Foote's Dthlwn operations and Joss reductiOn in
· ~ opentlonll.

'

Also, Announcing Our !YEW Banana Tlrtl
ffelh banancs blended Into a creamy banana pudding, all in a
·· newiJQhctm crack• au~ wtl1 Whipped lOpping. Go llanDnost

49C

,

•

·

•

~ lor lithium lncieilsed due to a pickup in the ahiminum
~.Comer said.
.
·
Foote Mineral II 83 ~~ owned by Nr.......,....,.,nt Mining COrp., a
wulclwlde naturall'eiCUJ'Ce linn elll8led In exploration, operation
'llld JlliiYCfiiWI r1 llllll-ferrous 111111 poectcg me4al rnlillnll' and
. petrollum priiJIIK'IleB.
(

STATIO

FRUTH
PHARMACY

/i \J~

serving ol delicious blt8
size llwlmp, lef\'ld wl1h
natural cut I'Qva1ul '
lrertch tiel, cole Slaw
and two IOUittem llyta
hush P1!PP1e1. plul c«:idcU
sauce and a ler)1Qil wedge.

fEATURING:·
Free Popcorn (TV Time) With Every Preview,
Rental or Purchase.
Purchase_Video·M·ovies (Beta or VHS) From
A List Of Over 3400 Titles.
· ·
3
Free Use Of Nickelodeons Alsop VHS Head
Cleaner With Any Preview or Rental.
Great Prices On Blank Video Cassettes.
Movies Changed Weekly At All Locatiam.

~\tV.~:~~o~

Food service director honored

'

ra one o1 our tavorltes. ..
and 'IOini M exta large

discontinued operations.
For fiscal 1983, the company had
losses of $2.6 mllllon or $1.12 per
share, which Included the cuinula·
tlve etrect of an accounting change.
Sales from continuing operations
for fiscal 1983 were $160 million
compared with $195.4 million for
ffscal 1983. continuing operations
exclude the recently sold materials
handling division.
wan said the one-time charge
reflected costs associated with
downsizing of organlzatioq and
facilities, Inventory write-downs
and llusiness withdrawals. He
notEd the actions would result in
reduced expenses thus enabling the
company to operate profitably at a
much lowet sales leveL
For the foul'(h quarter, the

Business Briefs:

even bel1ei? You wrcp them In lean illlps o1 bacon and
~~;___:-lfl.en lry lhem In our CIIIPY bteadlng,
"'
lhafs howl Six lender 0'/11erl wl1h
creamy cole ilaw, na1ural CUI
tlavorluitrench ltles, two
50u1hem l1yle hUih puppies, our own coek1all
sauce and a lemon

Ttndef Bite Size
Shrimp Dinner .

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For 24 Hours'

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•

I@

November6, 19

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• the Better Body Quiz ( How bad do you want it ?)
• chapters on individual body parts ('' Lose Hips
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• special plans for beginner, intermediate, and advance fitness, plus programs for seniors, pregnm
women, the handicapped, and the overweight.

PREVIEW OR RENT
VIDEO

: Divorees flied in Gailla County
·common Pleas Court were Morris
:F . Blazer Jr., Rt. 3, Gallipolis and
~Diana L. Blazer, Rt. 2, Crown City
:.Wd Alfonso Johnson, 3 Garfield
;;.ve., Gallipolis and Blanche John·
-son, 3Garfteld Ave., Gallipolis.
·: Filing for dissolution of marriage
1111
-were Russell Gothard , Rt. 1,
:Calllpolis and RocheJleGothard, Rt. . ~
~
; 1, Galllpolls and Terry
Wall, 16
-wan, 18
":Gallipolis.

POTATOES

Number in F1mily

l

Rededication
•
ceremonr,es
were
heldjor the
remodeled G. C.
Murphy Co. store
{n dawntown ·
Gallipolis. The
store has
expanded .its line
of cosmetics,
toiletries and
,hardware items
and changed the
interior slightly.
The store has been
at its present ~ite
since 1974. Present
for a ribbon-cutting
ceremony were,
from left, Jeanette
Scott, Vivian
Trowbridge, City
Manager Chris
Morris, Murphy ·
District Manager
Ron Kent and
Dt,Jrothy Jeffers.

$3.39

:File for divorce

~Lane,GaUipOllsandKellyJ .

'

~nn..- .-...tillt! 'ection

..

'

Mdge. We caH H
Oylleis ~preme...
you'll call Hdelciousi

,r

s.

.

CORRECTION
U.S .. NO. 1 WHITE

3 ........................................ $16,050
4 ........................................ 516,350
5 ...•.................................... 516,650

HARDBACK '16.50

Not guilty plea filed
in municipal court
GALLIPOLIS- A Ga llipolis man
pleaded not guilty to &amp;:vera!
charges Friday in Gallipolis Muniri .
pal Court . Charges were placed by
the Gallia Cou nty Sheriff' s
Department .
Timmy A. Skidmore.21, 48Spruce
St: Is charged with oper ating a
motor vehicle under the Influence of
alcohol and or drug abuse, criminal '
damaging, assa ult, disorderly con. duct. reslsling arrest and assa ult of
two deputies. Judge James A.
Bennen ordered Skidmbre's case
continued for Nov. 14.
Bennett continued another ca se
for Nov. 11 involving a c rim inal
damaging charge. Bond was set a!
$500 for Charles Plymale, Rt . 2,
Gallipolis.
Four PortSJ\lOuth men individu ally pleaded guilty to spotlighting on
Oct. 22 with firearms in their
possession. The incident occurred
around 1: ll a.m.
Placed on 18 months probation
with one-year hunting lights suspen sion were Jerry D. Osborne, 25;
Mike Pool, 22; Roy Lee Ramey, 41;
.and Ronald L. Osborne, 21. Ramey
was fined $100; Pool, $75; J erry
Osborne, $50; and Ronald Osborne,
no fine.
In other court matters, John D.
Morrison, 823 Third Ave., pleaded
.guilty to assault He was fined $25
and placed on 18 months probation.
Fined $25 and given six months
probation for passing bad checks
was John J e ff Fulkerson, 1014
Second Ave.
. : Pleading gwlty to disorderly
.conduct was Ray Pearson, 28, Rt. 2,
Crown City. He was fined ,$17.
Continued to Nov. 14 was a case for
Richard Dotson, 30, Eureka Star
• Route charged with failure to
j&gt;rovide adequate child support.
• In traffic-r ela ted fines, William E.
:Siders, 34, Rt. 2, Crown City, was
lined $25 and 18 months probation
:for no operator's license and $12 for
'fallure to display valid registration.

-

Business

NOvember 6, 1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

Times-Sentinel

If

7116 N. Sacond 8 - ,_.
Middleport, Ohio · ~·

~~,~----------------.---~----_.~e

"

J

)JI

.

'

company had losses of $16.9 million
or $7.13 per share on sales of $37.9
million compared with losses of $4.8
mllllon or' $2.05 per share on sales of
$52.8 mllllon for the comparable
period In fiss'al1982.
Besides the one-time wrlte-llown
of $12 mllllon or $5.05 per share,
fourth quarter results consist of
after tal' lqsses atlributed to
operations' Including corporate in·
terest expense of $4.9 million or
$2.C»l per share.
Wall said com!iany _backlogs at
the end of August were $38.7 million
compared to $41.3 mUJion at the end
of August 1982.
Wall noted the company's dllfl·
culties for the 1983 fiscal year
stemmed from a · delay In the
economic recovery which adversely affected all of Its operating
divisions and, even more Jmpor·
tant, the very rapid changes
occuning in the ceiling fan market.
"Although Industrial production
had Increased natiOnally duling
1983, our customers had excess
capacity and were not yet rebuild·
lng their Inventories or making
capital expenditures ... In addition,
there was the decline in the energy
market which had an adverse
'Impact on the exploitation of
opportunities for our . oil field
· products, and the strong dollar
which made competitive Imports
more attractive In comparison to
U.S. products," he said.
Commenting pn the company's
ceiling fan business, Wall noted that
"anticipated higher sales In the
tradltlonaUy strong second hall of
the year failed to materialize."
He said, "Sales were Impact€(! by
a natural l'fl8.turing of the ceUII\ll
fan market, a continued flood .of
· low-priced fan Imports and a shift In ·

consumer preference to lower:
facilities consolidated without im·
priced ran products." He noted that
pairing the company's production
the consumer preference shift was
capability. A Comfort Conditioning
particularly harmful because the
Division celllng fan plant In Foley,
company's strength had tradition·
Ala . was closed and operations
ally ~n In middle and top-of. the· · transferred to the company's m a in
line products.
·
fan plant In Memphls. Earlier this
Wall said the company's restrucyear, a fluids handling division .
turing program represented a
Industrial pump plant was closed in
series of sweeping actions to
Columbia, S.C. , and operations
confront the company's problems
transferred to Brantford, Ontario;
head-on and brtng about a return to
Fairfield, Calif.; and Sprtngfleld. .
profitability at the earliest possible
An electric motor division plan in
time. Included In the program were
Tallahassee, was closed and operathe following:
tlons transferred to Gallipolis. The
- Downsizing of organization actions · resulted in some one-time
and Wlite-down of assets In the
severance and production reloca·
comfort conditioning division.
tlon costs but the company expects
The division was substantially
to realize substantial savings from
reduced In size ·to enable it to be
the moves in 1984.
profitable at much lower sales
Business withdrawal.
levels. The number of employees
Several unprofitable operations
was reduced by 40 percent duling
were stild or closed. The materials
the year from August 1982to August
handling division, representing
1983. The division took a write-down
about five percent of company
of $8.3 miUion after taxes (Included
sales, was sold to KONE Corp .,
In the fourth qua rter write-off of $12
Helsinki, Finland. The division had
million ) for excess facilities and
sustained losses over the last
equipment, Inventory obsolescence several years. A charge of $1.8
and other anticipated costs.
mUI!on,. which Is Included In the
- Overseas production of Com· fourth quarter one-time write-off ,
fort Breeze fan line.
resulted from this sale.
Although the top-of-the-line Hun·
The company also announced
ter Otigtnal fan will continue to be
plans to dispose of its AC subproduced In the company's main fractional electric motor plant In
fan plant in Memphis, Tenn., the Barcelona, Spain, and service
company determined It could re· customers from its electric m otor
duce costs and better meet the division In the U.S. The decision
competition from foreign fans by was based on the inability of the
having Its mld·pliced Comfort Spanish subsidiary to capture an
Breeze fan line produced to Its adequate share of the market. The
specifications in Taiwan. The move International division was dissolved
has enabled the company to
malntall) its traditional standard of
high quality while achieving substantial cost savings.
- Consolidation of fac ilities.
Three ·plants were closed and

with respon sibility for foreign sa les
decentralized to !he company's
operating divisions . The divis ion
had fulfilled it s miss ion of ana lyzing
and penetrating the inlernational
ma rkel place a nd the company
helieves it can provide bette r
· service a1 lower cost by utilizing
mar k~ling specialt y learns from
the opera ling di visions.
- Combine elPctric motor div·
ision and e lectro·craft corp. su bsi·
diary into newly formed motor and
control systems division.
The company's two electric
motor opPrati ons were comblncd in
September, reflectingevolvin gs imilarity in markets, technology and
strategies. The company noted !hat
the electric motor di vis ion had been
upgrading it s s kills as a specially
motor producer a nd recent y began
ma nufacturing low cost bru shless
DC motors, while the Elcctro- 6aft
Corp. had been in creasing it s cost
effectiveness lh•·ough greater a ul a·
ma lion of its production process.
The company felt that the com bining of these two entities would
strengthen its competitive posture.
improve man agemen t con1 rol a nd
reduce costs.
-Cash conservation and preservation of balance sheet liquidity.
Actions Included reducing inventori e~. curtailing capital expendltures a nd disposing of cx&lt;X'ss
assets . As part or !he progra m , the
company, on July 27, voted to omit
Its quarterly cash dividend which
would have bee n distributed Sept.
15.
·

Banking. ~ervice
under expansion
.

.

CLEVELAND (AP)- An elec· and Interstate ahnoul)!:ed their
Ironic banking network fanned last
network prevJOusly. Monday's antaU Is being expanded statewide
nouncement said they were being
withtheaddltlonoftwomoremajor jolnllll by BancOWo and First
banklni ftrms, It was announced National Clnch)natl, plus other
Monday. ,
financial Institutions Including sav·
The new network, Money Station ings and loans and credit unions
Inc., will have more than 3 mftllon
throughout the state.
cardholders ' served by 676 auto- ·
Target date for the first live
mated tellet mac:hlnes through 136 transaction ·under the new Money ·
financial Institutions when service Sta tlon network Is July 1. Card·
begUls this~.
holders will be able to use their
11ie six organizations forming the present cards In any of the
network are National City Corp. aiid automated teller machines oper.
Socli!ty Cotp. of Cleveland, Band). ated by the participating financial
hlo Corp. r1 Colwribus, 'ruth 1blrd Institutions.
BancoiP and First National Clncln·
Clement L. Buenger, president of
nau C01p., Cinclnnatl, and Inter· Fifth Third Bank, will be pn!5ldent
state F!JutnclaJ Corp., Dayton.
. of the new network.
NatblalCit,ir, Soclety,Fif!hThlrd

.
-··~

PHARMACY EXPANSION- Spring Valley Phamtacy, 529Jack.son

Pike, Ge!!Jpnlh, hall campleted expansion ollts Door space from 1,000
lll)llal'e feet lo2,811q118leleet Expansion hall been jWJtlfled by growing
bullb!u at lhe piiMmacy, Widell was opened In 1980, said owner Dan
Melldow8. The, lltGre II ~ by Bendce Stowers and has four
tuiHUJe end two patHime employees.
·

�Page

E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

to~owmber

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

6, 1983

No..mber 6, 1983

Dole seeks special. task force

....

'\{
'

MOST OUTSTANDING YOUNG FARMER - J.
Martin Irvine, Jell, president ol Gallipolis Area
Jaycees, congratulates David Mills, right, who was
named most outstanding young fanne r iit Gallia

County by Jaycees at the soil and water consei'\Oatlon
awardS banquet. The award was given In conjunction
with John Deere products. At center is Gordon
Swisher, representing Swisher Implement Co., local
John Deere distributor.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
Robert Dole, R-Kan., Is asking
President Reagan to create a
special task force on farm exports
and foreign food assistance.
Dole, a member of the Senate
Agriculture Committee, said ln a
letter to Reagan tha\ there Is Uttle
effort at present to coordinate the
many federal programs abned at
promoting exports and food ald.
" Our goal should be to reallocate
our finite financial resources and
our abundant agricultural resources to achieve a better balance
between the world's food -needs and
the productive genius of the
American farmer," Dole wrote.
He said the panel should review
the effectlvene$s of the Food lor
Peace program and other federally
assisted foreign aid and export
lncent'lve efforts.
Amendentments Sought
Amendments sought by environ·
mentalists to tighten federal controls over farm pesticides will have
to walt at least until next year.
A House Agriculture subcomrtlittee wtllch had been scheduled to vote
Thursday on controversial changes
In the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act was forced
to put the matter off because, said
chairman George E . Brown Jr.,

Racine Vlllage.
Darla N. Lucas

to

David McOo-

NEW SUPERVISOR - Lawrence BurdeU, Rt. 2, BidweU.
was elected to the Gallia County
Soil and Water Conservation
District hoard of supervisors by
SWCD memherstllp. He replaces Blaine Taylor, who has
served three years.

DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
AWARD- Gallia County Commissioner Verlin Swain displays
the distinguished service award
cmnrnissioners received from
the Gallia County Soil and Water
Consenoatlon District. Commissioners purchased a n&lt;&gt;-till drill •
used by the district.

~ongress

concerned
over PIK program
WA SHINGTON (A P)
Members of Congress are concerned that the government's
''payrnent·ln-kind" acreage reduction program may have become a
public relations embarrassment
that could jeopardize future farm
legislation.
"ln all honesty, I think this could
have a dramatic effect on agricultural policy." said Rep. George E . .
Brown Jr., D-Calif .. at a session of
the- House Agriculture depanment
operations subcommittee just hours
after release of information Thursday about multi-million·dollar PIK
payments to a handful of large
farms .
Brown sa id he feared that
baoklash created by the news could
affect consideration o1 a compromIse dairy subsidy bill schedduled for
House floor debate next week. The
bill Includes a provision that would
pay dairy farmers not to produce
milk, the same approach that has
brought PIK in for crltt~lsm .
·~This could subject the paid
diversions In the milk bill to a !fa ir
amount of public scrutiny," Brown
said.
Rep. Leon Panetta, D·Calif. ,
agreed. "The committee cannot
avoid this issue," he told Brown in
uq;tng prompt hearings on PIK's
alleged excesses. "1 don 't think we
cad put our headS In the sand on this

one."
The cause of the renewed attentlon was a report by the General

Accounting Office that found a
handful of the nation's largest farms
some owned by profitable
corporations - stood to rea p huge
benefits under the PIK program.
The program gives su11&gt;lus government cotton, rice and grain to
farmers who agree to take part of
their land out of production.
The study of 7ffi farms in nine
stat es. aim~ at discovering paten·
tially large individual payments,
found seven farms that would
receive upwardS of $2 million, with
some tota l commodity transfers
worth as much as S3.7 million.
During a hearing on the matter
Cleared in death
before a House Ways and Means
sbbcommlttee, Rep. Byron Dorgan,
LANCASTER, Ohio (AP)- An
D-N.D., said the revelations "could
18-year-oldLancaster
man has been
poison thewellforthosewhowant to
cleared of charges he killed a baby
push good farm programs through
by shaking It to de'lth.
Congress.··
A jury In Lancaster Friday held
Rep. Fortney H. "Pete" Stark,
•
that
Larry Denison was Innocent In
D-Calif .. the subcommittee chair·
the
death of 10-month-old Staci
man who requested the report, said
Danforth.
he is considering taking legal action
Denison claimed he was rylng to
to force repayment of any PIK
bring
the Infant out of a seizure when
awards over $50,(XX), contending
she
died
of Injuries New Year's Eve
that is the ceiling for land diversion
while
he
was baby-sitting.
payments under existing farm law.
Denison
had been charged with
Brown said he had consulted with
Involuntary
manslaughter, felonAgriculture Committee chainnan
Ious
assault,
endangering children
Kika de Ia Garza, D-Texas, whom he
and
a
lesser
included offense of
said "perceives the seriousness of
assault
the matter."

r-;====~=======::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;l

'

(Union), Monday, Nov. 14, at 7:30
p.m.; Gallipolis, Tuesday, Nov. 5,
at 7:30p.m.
_. _ Income Tax Workshops (for tax
practitioners) - O.S.U., Nov. 14
and 15; ChUIIcothe, Nov. 17 and 18.
Fair Board Election - Monday,
Nov. 7, atthefalrgroundsfrom5to9
p.m.
SCS Annual Meeting ·- Thursday, Nov. 10.
Beef Referendum -.Nov. 29, 30,
Dec. 1, at Extension Office from 9
a.m. to noon and 1 to 4:30 p.m.
No Tillage Conference -Dec. 21
at Canter's Cave near Jackson,
Ohio.
Athens Feeder Calf Sale - At the
last . Athens Feeder Calf Sale the
steers averaged $56.16 and the
heifers averaged $46.94. ·

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TlaoBa•tn-•

..---- ----"------------,1
FIREPLACE INSERTS 4 ADD ON
FURNACES FROM 1700
.

In Carpenter
Off State Rt. 143
Follow The Sicuf

By Nonna Brown Peeps
GALLIPOLIS .:.. Welsh Immigrants came down the Ohio River to
settle Moriah, barely across the line
In Jackson County, 'way back In the
early Jrols. Norma Brown tells the
story that the women were tired of
traveling, and the Ohio hills looked
like home - like home In Wales
across the
!I'HE WELSH Immigrants used
boats which they· set adrift In the
night and stayed at Gallipolis,
Centerville, Centerpoint, and Oak
Hill. Norma Brown points out that
whether the story be true or not, the
Welsh settlement at Moriah organIzed the first church In 1835, and
later helped establish other
churches In the area.

'•

I

a

C8uTodayl '

69&amp;6121

11

1

Rawlings, deceased, Denver Rawlings, Freda Smith, Affidavit,
Columbia.
Daisy Rawlings , deceased,
Denver Rawlings, Freda Smith,
Affidavit, Columbia.
·
Denver Rawlings, Erva Rawlings, Freda Smith to WUbur
Dalley, Parcel, Colbmbla.
Richard Koblentz, Janet K&lt;&gt;blentz to Dale Kautz, JoAnn Kautz,
.12 acre, Chester.

rp;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

occupied these two buUdlngs •.~~Wl·r;===========:;i
as 00.52 State Slr!:et- For about 20
years the Gallipolis COnic had
the second Doors of both buildings.

RE-ELECT

MARION

THIS IS still a · practice In the
Moriah Church.

A MEMBER OF Moriah, the
Mother Church of the area, has a
book of pretty "Bitter Bread"
publishedbyWUlEvans.TheRev.
Mr. Bicksler edited a book, "The
Parish of the Templed Hills," in

IN THE LATE 1920s, a minister,
the Rev. Carl Elliott, named the
parish the Parish of the Templed
Hills. Perhaps the name came fn;Jm
the second stanza of "Arnertca."
Patriotism runs high among the
people. This was a fitting name,
since the little white churches really
temple the hills upon which they
stand.

1938.
theslides
work of
of the
parishMore
wasrecently
shown In
Scioto Valley Presbytery Mission

THE REV. HARRY BICKSLER
'built a manse In 1933 and a parish
shelter house In 1934. His ministry
came at a time of groWth and
building In the parish. · In 1937 a
movie was made of the parish

Africa, and started a synod there. ,
The Jones Welsh trio and Edwards
musical group traveled all over
Amelica In earlier years sharing
their talents.

areas.

'

.

A MISSIONARY, Eunice Edwards, spent many years In China.
The Rev. Roland Evans spent

numerous years in Cameroun,

run-·of-

p_rnill

Gallipolis Business College is
the place to be!

Ca II 446-4367
Business Administration • Job Placement Assistance
Computer Programmmg • Fin..ncial Aid
• Day Classes
Accounting
•
Evening Classes
Executive Secretary
• Sin!jle Classes Available
Legal Secretary
• Approved lor
Medical Secretary
' Training ol Vets
General Office

Register Now. For Winter Classes
Beginning January 2
Employable job skills are our business ... and yours/

.Gallipolis
BUSINESS COLLEGE
829 Jackson Pike

Arthur T. Warner, Janet' Warner
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Burdell J. Black, Effie E. Black
to .Chrts Edward Neece, Terry Jean
Neece, Parcels, Salisbury.
Agnes L. Brown, H. D. Brown to
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Jessie Jarrell to Dean Hill, Lou
Hill, one-half acre, Letart.
Alva Rawlings, deceased, Daisy

ACROSS STATE Skeet from lhe First UnHed PresbyterlanChurcll
1s a building which Jake BRd Earl Moore erected bt 1939. II was the
buDding on the left half of the picture to match the wUdlng on the right,
which was put up In 1929. It was not a complete match. Through the
years such !innS as Gallipolis Motor Company, Moore Plymouth,
Payne Ford, GWen Ford, Trout Dodge, and CaJTOII Norris Dodge have

"Hearthstone and Altars." They
did this at the request of the Rev.
Warren WilSon, who had a strong
Interest In the rural ministry.

'

I

Property transfers

Apple Ill Busines.~ S)'~m , 216K

computer v.1th huilt-in disk drive.
Profile"' hard disk drive . . ,,th C;ual}~t:"
mon itor.l2-month.AppleCare 5"'
Carry· in Service Plan.

.

·abundle.

horse, according to Norma B..;wn.
The care of the church buildlngw~
bY "keeping month," each famUy
taking a turn.

•
•
•
•
•
·•
•

I

SaVe yqur business

Stiversville For the
News Notes
want a

By FREDA CARPENTER
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lipps,
Little Hocking, spent Sunday wtth
her stster, Leota Birch.
Mrs. Fannie Durst, local, Mrs.
Nita Wells, Long Bottom, and Mrs.
Tammy Causey, ReedsVffie, spent
the weekend In Columbus wtth Mr.
and Mrs. Ttm Wllklnson and sons
and Mrs. Kay Henderson .
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels,
Long Bott~m. visited Mr. and Mrs.
John Prater, Lana and Darrtn, on
Monday.
Tom Durst, Columbus, spent the
weekend with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Durst.
Mrs. Ada Van Meter was a
weekend guest of her daughter,
Mrs. Jerry Northway, Grand RapIds, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hauger,
Martinsburg, Ohio spent Wednes·
day and Thursday with Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Carpenter.
Mrs. Raymond Kerns called on
her daughter, Mrs. Doris Haynes,
Pomeory, recently. .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lehew and
Melissa, Pomeroy, visltP.d Mrs.
Gertrude Lehew and Elalnl)
recent Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans and
family, local, and Robert Brown,
Mtnersvllle, spent the w~kend In
Battle Creek, Mich., attended the .
Wedding o! SllarOn Owens, clauti:hter o! Mrs. Andrea Owens. Mrs.
Owens Is Iarmer Meigs County
resident and sister to Mr. Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Davis are
spending a week in Nashville, Tenn.
Mrs. Patty Triplett and son called
on Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson on
Wedlll!sday.
Mrs. Merle Evans and Ruby Van
Meter shopped in Pomeroy on
' Monday.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant Is presently
employed at Dobbins Grocery.
Mn. Zetta Boyd, Mn. Ruth
s.-, Mrs. Reva Taylot and
Kalby, Parkersburg, spent Sunday
atlernooll with Freda Carpenter.

,that firm was just tben being
organized to do business In the old
Miller building now the home o! Jim
Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile.
"Dealers were expressing great
sa tlsfaction Saturday night over the
results of the show; saying It had
greatly exceeded their expectations
and the Interest taken by the people
of Gallipolis guaranteed a repetition of the event" (Tribune).
U you will write to James Sanda,
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115, you
can get
an Sands
extra column.
copy 9f Ibis or
!lome
other

Apple lie BusintSS S"~m, fHK comIXJttr INith extended 80 column c:1rd.
1 disk drives. monitor. and :\p~e
Dot \blrix Printer.

Welsh immigrants came down·Ohio River

a

In A Cabinet!

play car rolled Into position at two
o'clock Frtday afternoon when the
spectators began to arrive. Profuse
decorations of green and white
paper streamers were strung
across the ceiling and walls. , .
The orchestra dais in the center
was a ttractively decorated in the
same color scheme. Soft lights and
soft music greeted the visitors while
the two long rows of motor displays
Invited attention." (Tribune).
The two&lt;laHhow attracted some
1,800 visitors. Rarden Studebaker
wa s unable to participate because

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

FOR MANY years the church
and adjacent school were the center
of community life. The congrega. tlon fed and cared for the minister
In the Ty Capel (tea house), and
they provided hay and grain tor his

*WE PAY '1 PER 100 LBS. TOBACCO HAUL BILL *HONI:ST WEIGHT

Wood/Coal
Stove

By JAMES SANDs
a combination dance hall apd
GALLIPOSpeclal Co1Tt!Spondent
skating rink and was locat!!d about
LIS - In 1926 Galllpowhere the Buckeye Rural office Is
now. The Silver SUpper burned
lis had 10 different automobUe
agencies and in !'hat year nine of
down In the 1920s.
them
In
Music was provided by the Dixie
annual
Six and there was a contest with a
auto show at
$10 prize to see who could dance
"The Charleston" the best.
Silver SUpper
Third Avenue.
The winning couple was Wllllam
The
Chambers and Ruth Hanlon .
-~ There was also an Old Fiddler's
were: 0. L.
Ford, Poe
contest. The contestants Included:
J. M. Norman, R. E . GJbbs, Werley
bury Stutz, Williams and Scarbel'ry
Essex and Hudson, Smeltzer OverForrest, W. H. Rayburn, WUl
land and Wlllys, Swanson HupmoRobinson. and Henry' Romaine.
bile and Dodge, Womeldorff and
"THE NEW STUTZ attracted
Thomas Oldsmoblle, Gallipolis Momany comments as ~Jradbury
tor Company Chevrolet, Lupton
displayed the new Vertical 8 seven
Nash and Ajax, Withers Chrysler,
passenger sedan featuring the
and Rarden Studebaker.
safety chassis. Wlllys Knight's
The building we feature today
model 70, six cylinder four door
sedan with the Overland two door
was built at 50 State Street three
years after this auto show by
body six and lour cylinder cars
Gallipolis Motor. However, In 1926
were shown by W. N. Smeltzer and
Galllpolls Motor was located In this
J. F . Niday." (Gallipolis Weekly
Tribune) .
block In another building. Gallipolis
Motor was begun about 1925 bY the
The Swanson Hardware ComMoore brothers, Jake and E~rl. In
pany showed the Hupmoblle 81929 they erected the building that Is
sedan, the six cylinder roadster, the
at 50 State Street today, and also
Dickey seat roadster, the badge
sold out In 1929 to Col. H. B. Ecker.
sedan and Dodge coupe. Gallipolis
It was ln 1934 that Ecker moved
Motor had the coach, roadster, and
Gallipolis Motor to 236 Second
five passenger touring car from
Chevrolet Also on display were
Avenue. In 1943 Ecker sold to A. R.
Knight who In the last year has sold
Oldsmobile six deluxe, coach and
toJ!mMinkandBlllGen~Johnson.
sedan; Nash special six sedan;
The 52 State part of this· butldln!l
Ajax five passenger sedan (built by
,was added in1939aboutthe time the
Nash); Ford coupe, touring, runaGalllpolis Clinic occupied the upbout, and Tudor sedan; the Hudson
stairs portion of this block.
coach; and Chrysler four ·and six
In later years such !Inns ·as
cylinder sedan.
'I
Payne Ford, Gillen Ford, Trout
in addition, Derry Wetherholt
Dodge, Moore Plymouth, and
(Willard Batteries), Huntington
carroll Norris Dodge would occupy
Battery Company (Exlde batteries
these two buildings at 50-52 State.
and Mason Cord tires), and Charles
It Is Interesting to read the
Huber (Duco Re-!lnlshing) showed
account of that auto show held In
their wares.
1926 at the Silver SUpper, which was
"SCARCELY HAD the last dis-

sea.

THE PRIDE IN TOBACCO MARKETS ARE
RECEIVING IN TWO LOCATIONS. MAKE YOUR PLANS
NOW. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL 1304) 523-9441

Sehididler honored
~ALLIPOLIS - Raymond A.
Scnlndler, Area Extension Agent,
Community and Natural Resource
Development, The Ohio Cooperative Extension Service, was presented the National Association of
County Agricultural Agents "Disun«utshed Service Award" dut·ing
ceremonies recently at the National
Ml!etlng of County Agricultural
Agents In Wichita, Kan.
The award Is made annually to a
select group of agents across the
natton who have conducted outstanding Extension work. Ray, a
· naUve of New Riegel, Ohio (Seneca
Coiinty) and . a 21-year veteran of
ExtensiOn, Is one of two Ohio agents
receiving.the award this year.
Ray and his wife, Theresa, have
re!!lded at Fremont, Ohio, for the
pa~ 15 years and recently moved to
Marietta. They have one daughter,
Lillda Wollerman , of Gautpolis.

.

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

Beef referendum

cent of Ohio, or 7.1 million acres, Is
forested. Meigs County is 67 percent
forested, totaling 188,000 acres.
Before settlement, Ohio was
almost entirely forested. Land
clearing steadily reduceQ the forestland base until 1910 when only 12
percent of Ohio remained forested .
Since 1940, however, forestland has
been Increasing every year.
According to the U.S. Forest
Service, abandoned fa~mland returning to trees is the source of
Ohio's Increased forest acreage.
The trend is slowing down though.
In 30 years the area of Ohio
forestland is expected to be much
the same as It Is today.
Crop Insurance- A bid Improvement In Federal Cros Insurance's
Individual Yield Coverage Plan
A moveable feast
(IYCP) was made In 1983, accordIng to Linda Miller, Field Person,
VENICE (AP) - What may be Federal Crop Insurance Corporaone of the world's most lavtSh and tion. Additional caverage may now
expensive dinners was serv~ on a he provided to farmers who
railroad here recently.
produce above the county average
To commemorate the 100th birth- yie)d, without extra premium
day of the Venice Simplon Orient- change. What this means, added
Express on Oct. 4, 140 passengers Miller, Is that farmers may purpaid some $2,000 each to drink chase reallstlc crop Insurance
vintage champagne and dine on coverage at a very reasonable cost.
haute cuisine re-created from
To be eligible for the additional
menus on the first Orient-Express coverage of the IYCP program, the
run.
farmer must have at least the last
The passengers, who traveled . three years' production records for
from London, through Parts and the the crop he wishes to insure. These
Swiss Alps, to Venice, toasted a records are verified by an ASCS
tribute to George Nagelmackers of county office after an application Is
Belgium, who launched the fabled
made with a local crop Insurance
train In the style of a grand hotel a agent.
century ago.
· Insurance agents offering crop
The train, refurbished at a cost of insurance In your area may be
$23 million, was re-born In May 1982 determined by calling the toll free
as the Venice Simplon Orient- number, 1-00!-4474700 or by calling
Express.
a county ASCS office.
Calendar of Events
Feeder Calf Sales - Hlllsboro
(Union), Monday,' Nov. 7, all a.m.;
Hillsboro (Producers), Wednesday, Nov. 9, at noon; Hlllsboro
By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County ·
POMEROY- They are wanting ,
to change the per head assessment
from 25 cents to 50 cents per head.
The increase of operating costs Is
the reason stated. Anyone selling
cattle In 1982 is eligible to vote. The
voting will take place· here at the
Extension Office on Tuesday, Wednesday, a nd Thursday, Nov. 29, 30
and Dee. 1, from 9 a.m. to noon and
1 to 4:30p.m. each day.
Forestland on the Rise - Onto
forestland has increased 5.5 percent
since 1968. Approximately 27 per-

nald, Velvle McDonald, Lot, Salem.
William E. Morris, Sandra K.
Morris to Steven H. Eblin, Wanda
L. Eblin, .27 acre, Salls bury.
Joyce Louise Reynolds aka Joyce
Louise Bartels, Charles H. Bartels
to. Frank Nelson ReynoldS, 201
acres, Chester ..
Carmel Rowe, Margie G. Rowe
to Mary •Crlckman, Parcel,
Rutland.
.
Herbert H. Matheny, Clarestlne ·
Matheny to Hubert H. Matheny,
Clarestlne Matheny, Parcel, Olive.
Allen G. Lipscomb, Opal Marte
Lipscomb to George H. Warner,
Righi of Way, Bedford.
, James A. Riffle, et alto Security
:Savings Mig. Corp., Sheriff's deed,
Syracuse.

. Charles P . Riffle, Ruth A. Riffle
to Herald 011 and Gas Co., Right of
Way, Salisbury.
Geral~ M. Mohler to American
Bonding Co., Inc. , Part Lot ,
M!ddlejJort VIllage.
Dwight L. Hysell, M1ldred L.
Hysell to Dwight r:.. Hysell, M1ldred
K. Hysell, Parcels, Rutland.
Winnie BaUey, deceased, Vena
Bailey, Affidavit, Olive. ·
Howard Thoma, Evelyn Thoma
to Leading Creek _Conservancy
District, Right of Way, Salisbury.
Robert L. Hall, Lorene Hall to
Kenny H. Osborne, Garmelita
Osborne, Lot. Scipio.
·
Estella Clark, deceased, Ernest
Clark, Affidavit, Racine VIllage.
Ernest Clark to Ronald ' E.
Russell, Nancy A. Russell, Lot 5,

'

Meigs County agent's corner

I

Property transfers

I

Ten automobile agencies busy in Gallipolis in 1926

Rep. Torn Harkin. D-Iowa.
Brown 'suggested !'hat the subcommlttee walt until Ruckelshau&amp;
has time to come up with his own
ideas for improving the law, which
has been Umplng along under
short-term extensions.

D-Callt., thereweren'tenoughvotes
on the panel to pass It
Environmental Protection
Agency administrator William D.
Ruckelshaus had appeared before
the panel a day earlier but Mild he
was not prepared to lake a !)6sltlon
on !be amendments- sponsored by ·

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page--E-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Poinl l't.asanl, W.Va.

..... No. 75-02-04728

Gellipolia

lntrodJcing the Apple" lle and Apple Ill Business Systems.
They're everything you and your small business need to do
financial planning, accounting,or word processing more
productivelv.
And right now, for a limited time only, the Apple lle and
AppleUI Fersonal Computer are both speciallv pric~d. You can
even lease with an option to buy or use Apple's convenient
credit card.
Either way, you're in business.
Catd ~sl 1~ ~ trWemotrk ofQJ:u"k.lnc..\j1ple. the Apple IOJI,Q :tnd Prof1le

CALDWELL

mll'k'of .'Pfllt: Uvnputtr Inc. 0 1~.~ ~~~ CrrmJX~ler Inc.

-·

m tntlemJrks aml ..t.pple(in' IS a serYICf
-·

I

'

FOR

Clerk of
Green Township

VERE SMITH AUDIO-VISIONS

16 WEST UNION ST.

ATHENS

JOIN US ON WMPO RADIO FOR

Your Vote
&amp; Support
Appreciated
Paid for by the Candidate

.... ' " ' .. _,.,., .

FRIDAY
·
9 A. :A. TO
NOON

SATURDAY
. 8 A.M. TO
NOON

~~~~~~~~~~~~~g;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
·State Bank NO. 983
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF
(Including Domestic Subsldlalres)

The Commercial and Savings Bank
Federal Reserve District No. 4

·

of Gallipolis, Galli a County, in the State of Ohio at the close of business on September 30, 1983.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository Institutions .......... ............................... 4,016,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .. .... ......... .... ... ........ ............ .................... .... 13,340,000 .00
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies
and corpora!Ions .................................................... .. ........... , ......... 1,656, 000 .00
Obli)!atlons of States and ool!Ucal subdivislnn.&lt;
In the United States.. ................................ ............... , .... ~ ................ 6,311 ,000. 00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ...................... ,, ........... .... ........................800,000. 00
Loans, Total (excludlng 'unearned Income) .............. 19,155,000.00
Less: J\llowance for possible loan losses ...................... 198,000.00
Loans, Net ... .... ... ... ....... .................................. ..... ... .............. .... ..... 18,957,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other asets representing bank premises.. .................................. ...... .. 900,000.00
All other assets ......... ..... ... .... ............. ... ............ ... .............. .... ............. 950,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ............................. .. ........ .. .. ................... .. ... ........... 46, 930,000.00
LIABIUTIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and eorpor a lions ... ........................ ........ ........................................ 4, 496,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
,
and corpora lions ............................................ ................ ........ ...... 35,1%,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ...................................... ............ 25,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
·
In the U nl ted States ................................................................. ...... 1,812,000.00
Certified and officers' c becks ........................................................ .. .. .. 249 ,000 .00
Total Deposits ....................................................................... .... ..... .41, 778,000.00
a, Total demand deposits .......................................... 5,263,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposlts ............. .. ...... ...... 36,515.000.00
All other llabiUtles ...................................................................... ........ 548, 000 .00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures ...................... ........ ............... ... .. .... . ... .. ............ .. . .42,326.000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stock
No. shares authorized
1,800
No. shares outstanding
1,800 .... (par value ) ....................·.' .. 900,000.00
Surplus ......... .............. ...... .. ....... ............................... .. ......... .. ...... .... 2,850 ,000. 00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves .... ..... ............. .. ................ , .... , .... ... ........... 854 ,000. 00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ......................... . .'................................... 4,604,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........... .... ...... .. .... .'... 46,930,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
a. Standby letters of credit, total ........................................ , .............. 63,000:00
b. Time certificates of deposit In denominations
of $100,000 or more ....... _, ........................................................ ... 3,244,000.00
Average for.JO calendar days (or calendar month)
·
ending with report date:
Total deposits ......................... ... ......................... .. ..... ... :.............. 42,186,000.00
I, the undersigned officer do hereby declare that this Report of·Condltlon (Including the supporting schedules) Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Wayne L . Niday
Executive Vice President &amp; Cashier
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Rep.o rt of Condition (Including the supporting schedules) and declare that It has been examined by
us and to the best o! our knowledge and belief has been prepared In conformance
with the Instructions and Is true and correc&lt;.
Phillip L. Pope
Donald L. Crance - Directors
Alva G. Shoemaker
State of Ohio, County of Gallla, ss :
Sowrn to and subscrlhed before me this 31st day o! October, 1983, and I hereby
certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
My commission expl{es August 1, 1986. Christina Day, Notary Public.

..

�1

•

Page--E-4--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

NOvember 6, 1983

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

~K~e:ep~i:n:g==~~~~~~~
relation
.secret

By TAMARA JONES

We Reserve The Right To

Umit Quantities.

STORE HOURS

Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 12, 1983

'

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

LB

$ 49

Chuck Roast .....-. . ·
USDA CHOICE .
$ 99
Round Steak . ~~;...
.
$ 09
Ground Beef ....~~-...

FRESH ORK BUTT

Roasts

or Steaks

SMOKED

Picnics
WILSONS SAVORY
Bacon ........................~~~·..
LB.

•

But there are human touches, too:
The guardhouse has lace curtains
and a wlndowbox with purple and
yellow pansies can be seen through
the bars of an interrogation room.
Sometime", '- !'liard will wave

cement, with explosives and attack
them use a pulley to roll across the
dogs, with guards ordered to shoot
border high above the wall.
anyone who tries to nee.
The biggest mass escape involved
A lethal network of security
57 people who crawled through a
dev!ces,IOelntorces East Germany's
160-yard long tunnel from an
borders. According to the tiny West
outhouse to an abandoned West
Berlin museum, they include: .
Berlin bakery over a six-month
-Sl,tXXl self-firing weapons;
period in 1~.
-976 watchtowers, Including 263
The tunnel wasdisc6veredwhena
on the Berlin Belt;
young girl who crawled through
-855.9 miles of wall:
alone was un;lble to replace the
-341 miles of nnineflelds;
heavy cover.over the entrance.
-436 miles of electric fence,
From East Berlin, you seldom see
Including 76.2 miles around Berlin.
the wall.
In addition, attack dogs patrol the
Instead. you C()nfront a less·
border and several special devices
imposing fence. Between that atld
are said to be in use, such as spiked
the wall 1s a rtng of no-man's land
underwater fences designed to
dotled with East German guard
discourage people from swimming
towers, dog runs, tank traps,
to freedom through waterways
minef!elds and other bOOby traps.
flowing out of the country.
Rickety wooden pia !forms on
West Berlin's side of the wall offer
Despite the danger, about 4M,800
people have escaped to the West . glimpses Into the so-called "Blood
since the wall went up. Filled with
Alley" and the boarded-up hulldings
draiJla and despalr, their stories
facing it.
often testify tothetriumphof1human
To leave East Berlin, a tourist
spirit.
passes through five melal gates and
Anartistswungmonkey-llkeover
under the scrutiny of at least that
an ll,oo:J.volt overhead transmls·
many guards. At the border .post
sian wire and another escapee hid
beforetheU.S.sectorofWestBerlin,
inside the belly of a plastic cow on Its
concrete plllngs In red and white
way to a West German fair.
form an obstacle course to prevent
A welding machine carried 29· cars from gunning through the
people to freedom between October
checkpoint area.

tentatively fr&lt;&gt;n
usatoponeofthe
tower at a
camera-toting
tounst
West Berlin viewing platforms.
Western observers say the East

around the world who express their
rage, their frustration. their· cynl·
clsm, their grief.
Their messages range from .
obscene to whimsical, from politbl
slogans to love poems. Their words

I!rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

ISSUES 2 &amp;3 TAKE AWAY
MONEY OUR SCHOOLS NEED

Germansrotateguardsa~tevery

two months, so they can never trust
their partners. Gu~ds have been
known to shoot a fleeing comrade
without wanning.
Guards make up only a handful of
East GermanY's escapees.
One East German escapee,
ex-soldier Dieter Jensen, defended
his friends In an essay published In
the bOOk, "ltHappenedattheWall."
"!am convinced that the number
of those captured at the wall and of
those shot would be at least 10 times
as high lf those serving the~ were
merely blindly carrying out
orders," Jensen writes.
"Occaslonally,asmembersofthe
People's Army, we were stared at
!Ike animals Ina cage: many a time!
have heard abuse, then, right the
next minute, 'Hey, come on over!"'
In West Berlin, the wall creates a
canvas lor graffiti artists from

Meigs County Schools
stand to lose $1.2 million. Meigs local's loss
will be more than
$800,000. Our schools
need those funds to
make progress, and so
does the ·economy of
Meigs County.

THE MEIGS LOCAL
TEACHERS ASSOCIATION

~=====================;~

People have also rammed ar- 1
197landAprll1973.
mored cars through the wall or used
explosives, but "methods like these
are not repeatable because they
immediately improve the wall so It
won't happen again," Schmpm
says.
Escapes over the wall Itself are
now relatively rare, he adds. But
two men recently succeeded by
shooting an arrow with a steel cable
from an East .German attic to the
roof of a West Berlin bullding. An
accomplice In West Berlin helped

come In letters four-feet high and
cramped, childish characters.
They paint jloors and ladders,
windows and gaping holes on the
wall, imaginary escapes that the
people on the other side cannot see.

VOTE FOR

'I

URGES YOU TO

RICHARD BAILEY
CANDIDATE FOR

VOTE

CLERK
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

NO

ON ISSUES 2 &amp; 3
Pd. Pol. Ad. By The Meigs Local
Teachers Association.
Carol Ohlinger, President

"Your Support Appreciated"
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.
VOTE NOV. 8, 1983

¢
ALL KERO-SUN

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

HEATERS

¢

PRICE ,
MODEL

Bananas

•••• ••••• ••••••

LB.

processes.

~ ·

reminder

LB.

· never made money and he's never

· Gandhi's family is well-known In
::Bombay, he said, butnotln the sense
::Of being celebrities. He theorizes
· that friends from Bombay who now
• live in Columbus revealed his
: heritage.
: Gandhi is looking forward to
·:speaking at thefund-raiser, because
&gt;-r don't know yet what view
::Americans have of Gandhi."
:· Until now the younger Gandhi
·hasn't had time for social welfare
; activities in the United States. He
: spent his first 3'/., years In
;. Youngstown working as a meter·
·· reader by day and earning a n
::accounting degree at night. Gand:·hl's wife became a U.S. citizen last
· week and he will apply for
:citizenship within a year, he said.
; Gandhi plans a local project to
;. raise funds to regularly feed, clothe
~and educate needy children In India.
:-He came to the United States
;: because of the "better opportunl. ties" and said, "You haven't seen
; I'D"erty untU you have visited
: !ndia."
·. • "I'll definitely have to use his
~ (Mahatma Gandhi's) name to get
';this project going. I don't think he
:-would mind," he said.
· His wife, who did some social
work In India, Is studying lor a
, master'sctegreeln thatfleldatOhlo
;.state University.
~ "lcannevergetawaytromsoclal
&gt;'workers," Gandhi said. laughing.
·"They will plague me all IllY llfe."

BERLIN (AP) - At 18, the last
dream Peter Feehter dreamed was
of escape. The last thing he felt was a
bullet In his back. The last i:huig he
saw was the Berlin Wall.
As the years unfold, the death of
Peter Fechter has proved to' be just
one brief and bloody scene In the
human tragedy seen at the wall.
A generation filled with anguish
has passed since the summer night
ot Aug. 13, 1961, when without
warning, soldiers began building a
wall that stunned the world.
By morning, Berlin was sealed
off. Hundreds of families were
separated. Panicked people leaped
from window ledges and rooftops of
buildings overlooking the new wall .
Some survived, some did not.
Peter Fechter became a statistic,
just one of 73 victims known to have
died at the Berlin Wall in Its 22-year
history.
Although the 71.&amp;-mile wall girdles only West Berlin, It provides the
most visible and dramatic symbol of
the separation of the two Germanles, a reminder that the barrier Is
both physical and political.
In the wall's first year, 51,624
peopleescapedEastGermany.Last
year, only 2.565 escaped, Including
those who got past the wall.
Between· January and July this
year, 1.109EastGermansflec:l to the
West, according to The Working
Group August 13, a West German
. human rights group. Of these, 82
''risked life and limb'' to cross the
· Communist East German frontier.
The others reached the West via
third countries such as Yugoslavia,
says Dr. Rainer Hildebrandt, director ofthe group.
Rebullt three times, the wall Is
constantly being "improved,"
further strengthened with steel and

•
griin

¢

: cared to. He's always been Involved
; in a lot of social work. ... He still
· wears garments made from khadi,
: the kind of woven cloth that Gandhi
; wore. He doesn't eat anything
· non-vegetarian, not even eggs. He
:_.till weaves some of his cloth."
:: His mother, Saraswathi, 59, no
: longer wears khadl, which Ma·
· halma Gandhi made a symbol of
· : national pride, opting for garments
; made in India, but by modern
~

The Sunday Times;Sentinei-Page- ~-S

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

Berlin ·wall: serving as a

.

·· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pradeep Gandhi recently reached a
day of pers6nal reckoning In his
second homeland; his secret leaked
that he Is the great-grandson of
;Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi.
: "I kept thisasecretforsolongthat
l')n wondering who In the world let It
· out," Gandhi, 31, said.
Gandhi, an auditor, told no one
about his famous relative since
moving' to Ohio In 19TI. He had even
denied it to those who asked because
of the last name.
. "When you mention it, people
siart viewing you a little differently.
You somehow Inherit your great·
grandfather's mantle, whether you
!Ike it or not. I have my own way of
things," said Gandhi, who lives with
his wife, Mangala, 28, and2-year-old
daughter, Priya, In a townhou!;e on
the City's north side.
·
· Gandhi is deeply proud of
Mahatma Gandhi, recognized In
India as "the father of the nation"
and internationally acclaimed for
• his doctrine of nonviolent resistance
that led to India's independence
!rom Great Britain. His great·
grandfather was called Mahatma
(Great Soul) in deference to his
opiritual reputation.
· Gandhi's silence on the man
whom he regards as a "brllllant"
inan of great achievement may
stem from !)Is experiences as ~
youth In Bombay.
. "Back home especially they
expect you to be wearing the same
kind of (native) cloth that he wore
and to be extremely religious, which
I am not," he said.
Gandhi learned "thecatwasouto!
the bag" when he was invited to
speak about the Academy Award·
wiru1ing film "Gandhi" at a fund·
raiser to combat world hunger.
Gandhi praised the film chronicle
of Mahatma Gandhi's public
career.
"He didn't have much of a private
:ltfe, which is one of my grievances
against him. I'm descended from
'his eldest son,Harllal, the rebellious
'one. My grandfather didn't agree
'with Ga ndhi's policies regarding
:tamily We," Gandhi said.
· · Gandhi was born lour years after
: a fanatic assassinated the enig·
matte Hindu, but " He was so close to
:us (his family ) that for me to view
·him as ana tional figure is somewhat
:Impossible."
: His father, Kantilal, lived his first
:25 years with Mahatma Gandhl's·
·entourage and his parents raised
: their other child, Shantlkumar, for
; several years at Gandhi' scommune
;in northwest India . His brother, now
;l!2, Is a heart surgeon In Topeka,,
. Kansas, anct lived in Youngstowli
: for several ye¥s.
· His parents participated In many
· of Mahatma Gandhi's campaigns,
: including the famous 1930 Salt
:March and both spent time in prison
:;!or various Gandhl·led actions, he
·said.
:: Gandhi said his father, 73,
; continues to model his life in
· Bombay after Mahatma Gandhi's
: ideals of religious faith and
·
: sacrifice.
: "In spite of being a doctor, he's

November 6, 1983

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Page-E-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

National education group improving image

Spirits still walk in
southwest Ohio village
WAYNESVll.LE, Ohio (AP) he watched she walked away from
set the stage for the bauntings."
John Stetson made plans for the thE&gt; door and dissolved into the wall.
Since the pgychlc's e1&lt;perience,
10-gallon hat in this village a sport
"It was a long time before hesa ld Dalton said two elderly sisters who
witch's broom ride from Cincinnati anything about lt. Then when he told
had gmwn up here visited about five
but gave no hint he would leave a his wife, .both of them decided to years ago. to see their hometown
haunted legacy.
keep It quiet for fear ofwhat the town· before retiring to Florida. They
But there are some who declare would think of him.
toured the Stetson-house because
they've seen hls face, as recently as
"Then Mrs. Dodd began having Ms. Bottham had been their
last month, peering from a window odd experiences there." She found
schoolteacher and they had won·
of the housewhereStetson lived with that mirrors wouldn't stay hung on dered as children what life was like
his sister while talking her into the east wall of the house. They for her in this house.
staking him to a Philadelphia hat stayed in place in the day while she
"It wasclosetoChrlstmas and we
factory.
worked but overnight tliey would be (Dalton and Mrs. Dodd) were sitting.
Dennis Dalton, town historian and smashed to the floor.
there talking when the two sisters
librarian who is accumulating a
"The nail would be in place, the came in and introduced themselves
library on haunts, is among those
hanging wire still on ~ frame but and wandered around.
who insist that Stetson is more than a
the mlrror, and sometimes thE&gt;
"Then they came back into-tlje
memory. And that's just one frame, would be on the floor dining room where we were and one
haunting thing about this Southwest
broken," Dalton said. "Then she sald, 'I just don't believe this house
Ohio village.
hung an antique coffee box on the could be haunted. We heard stories
"This Is probably on~ of the most
wall "ith a small china cup and a but I just don't believe there Is
haunted towns in Ohio, maybe thE&gt; marble figurine displayed in lt. Next anything to them.'
,
nation," Dalton said. "And it' soot so · morning lt was out in the middle of
"She had hardly finished speakmuch becauseofthe{l€0plewhodied
the floor. 6 feet or so from the wall, ing when this mllk glass dish with a
here but because of the living they
smashed. The box was broken but lid fashioned like a chicken head
did here. It's the strong character of the cup and figurine were not ...
came flying across the room off a
the frontiersmen who gave us this
" I took a tour group in and there sheif. lt hit tbe floor and part of it slid
wealth of character and heavy was a woman psychic. She'd never up to their feet.
energy."
been there but said there was a
"We don't know whalcuased this.
Dalton, 40, an acknow ledged woman whose name began with 'L' But the only thing broken was the
storyteller, said thatofthetwodozen
at the kitchen stove crying. She had head off the chicken ornament."
or so haunted houses, the Stetson
never heard of Louisa Larick ...
He said because the head was
house Is perhaps the most ghost ly.
.Beside Mrs. Larick, Dalton said a broken, he picked up the base of the
" It has morestol'ies and some are
woman named Lila Bonham lived in dish and dropped it to the floor
unel&lt;plained," he added.
the house at about thetumofthe20th several Urnes but lt did not break.
The house was built lri the 1820s century but that the psychic had not
"The most recent haunting was
and got its name because Louisa
heard of her either.
just this month, Oct.l4 at about3: 45
Stetson Larick lived there in the
"John actually got the Idea for the In the morning," Dalton continued.
·1B50s and 1860s with her brother hat after he made one for a mule "Pat Ellis, one of our police cadets,
before he was a hatter. She married
skinner in St. Joe, Mo., but It was was .making his rounds on foot. He
a farmer fi·om this region but liie on after he came back here that he shook the doors of the Stetson house
the fatlll was too much for her and
drew up the plans for the factory," because It's still an antique shop and
she moved into town. History ls
Dalton continued. "He left here in there was a robbery there a while
vague on how the separation 1865 for Philadelphia but he never back. He can't say why but he looked
affected her marriage but her broke his ties with Waynesville. For up at the second floor.
brother lived here at leas t twice in
years at Christmas time he would
"He saw this face of a man looking
the decade around the time of the
send the women hE&gt;re bolts of cloth. out of an upstairs window. It
Civil War.
But he was cheap, he only sent alarmed him because he knew there
"The first real siting was the ghost
cotton calico, and the men got had been a robbery.
of Louisa several years ago around
Stetson hats. He wouldn't lend his
"But he watched and the face just
'Thanksgiving," Dalton said. "A
nephew money to pay off the ' faded away and disappeared.
neighbor stepped out to check the
mortgage on the farm here but he
"It scared the hell out of him. He
weather about ll p.m. and saw a
kept sending the token gifts.
sald later it was the face of a man
small dark ha ired woman standing • . "Louisa had a miserable life and with a very pronounced nose and
at the front door.
died in 1879 of consumption in that iJerhaps 40 years old.
"He thought it was Marj orie
house. She spent all her life here and
"That would have been about
Dodd, who ran an antique shop In the
she hated it. She was utthappy, John Stetson's age and looks when
house. But she didn't work at night
homesick and upsetatJohn because he left here In the 1860s to go back to
and he thought it was odd that she
he wouldn't help thefamUy. lt was a Philadelphia and open a hat shop."
wore a long coloni al dress. Then as
bleak time in her life and maybe that

Concentration key to memory triC k S
e

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
If you introduce yourself to
Raymond Tucker, chances are he
will never forget your name or
anything else you tell ' him. The
Bowlirg Green State University
professor ls a self-trained memory
master.
To Tucker, someone named
Cunningham is a sly pig. Marianne
reminds him of a song. A woman's
breast size and a man's nose are
good ways to remember their
-

names.

Memory tricks are numerous. but
the key is concentration. .
"Concentration is nothing more
than saying to yourself, 'I'm going to
pay attention to this, and I will
remember what is there,"' he said.
Chairman of the BGSU's department of interpersonal and public
communication, Tucker has spent
more than two decades studying
memory. He concludes that people
with poor memories can't blame
heredity. The reason is "mindless
behavior" or mental laziness.
"Memory is about it in life. If you
have memory, you've got It made. If
your m~mory Is not gOod, then
you've got problems from the day
you can cognize until the day you
die," Tucker said.
Using numbered pegs, Tucker.
sald. he can remember anything by
associating it with one of the pegs.
The key Is associating lt with

3~~~
LRI

16·111........
For pulling an~ pouhdinO

nails. scraplflll, prying. Tempered steel. MMMB-t5
Q110tltl11 Lt•ltltl

, I

George Hendefson In lllliO IUid Is said lobe haunted by
a little man wearing a plnstliped sult IUid derby. It Is
now IUIIUitique shop. (AP Laserphoto) .

Mean cop lives down image
PORT

WASHINGTON, N.Y.
(AP) - '"You're writing a story
about Detective Willie?" asked a
teen-ager. "Be ~re t~ say how
mean he Is. "
Whenheheardaboutthisremark
Del. Lt. Thomas E. WlllleofthePort
Washington Pollee Dep3rtment
laughed. "That's my image and I
can't destroy it. I become vulnerable then. It's not mean; I'm always
business-like. It makes my job
easier. ... It's not easy tD arrest a
14-or 15-or 16-year-old kid.' '
"He's a tough guy, but the. kids
know he's fair," says AI Whitney,
dean of students at Port Washington's Schreiber HighSchool.
Says Willie's boss, Chief of Pollee
Edmond Zwiecki: "He's got the
old-time poll~ officer or drill
sergeant personality, but he's very
concerned about kids. He won't
jump to make an arrest. If he feels a
kid made a mistake of the hearl,
rather than of the head, he'll do ·
anything he can to hE&gt;lp the'chlld."
Wlllle has spent most of his
24-year career - during which he
got 18 commendations - working
wlth young people.
·
"I've stayed because I like what I
do. In the 24 ~ years l've.been ~I
have never had a day when I've
gotlen up and said, 'Oh, I bave to go
to that job ltgain.' 'There are no two
days that are alike."
But the job isn't what most people
think tt 1s. etther. "It's not like an
TV,'' says Willie, 54. "You don't
solve cases In an hour."
The job also isn't fancy equipment
and modern computers, at least not
for Del. Lt. Thomas Willie. He keeps
a pile of yearbooks from the local
high school in hls office, a lot of
names and faces in his head, and a
knowledge of youngsters in his
heart.
When Willie first joined the force,
policing was fairly sedate in Port
Washington. "The biggest thing we
had to do was sit in front of the
Beacon Diner on Saturday night
after the bar closed to break up any
fights. That was the only diner
around.
During the late t900s, things
changed. Port Washington residents insisted there was no drug
problem in town, Wlllle says, "'untll

something crazy. The wilder the forget where It is.
better, he said.
-Visualize where something is
"Trying to remember a discreet, placed and say aloud while you're
logical fact . is impossible for most putting It there. Saying it aloud
people if you don't associate It with enforces lt with a second sense.
something," Tucker said.
-You won't forget to take
People forget names of other something somewhere if you put It in
people because there's no reward in front of the door. That applies to
remembering, he said.
. Items blg enough to see.
"As far as they're concerned, if
-Do lt now. It doesn't cost .any
they need to know your name, more, and 90 percent of all things
somehow they will find it out. But can be done irrunediately.
right now, they're too busy day"We can learn to stop doing things
dreaming. They don't want to spend mindlessly. That's why to so;ne
the energy concentrating at the extent society is as sick as it,"
moment," Tucker said.
Tucker said. "We justlook out there
He said hE&gt; can prove the mindless and everything looks OK. We think
behavior theory by Cl!lting to the
that way because we're alive."
front of a grocery store checkout
Tucker sald daydreaming and
line.
mindless behavior begin early in
"All you have to do is say, 'Excuse life.
me, I have to pay for this.' No one
would sal' a word. Thls bas nothing
to do wlth status. Don't say It's me
because I look like a professor and
VOTE FOR
I'm mlddle-aged and all that junk.
You can do It A 5-year-old kldcan do
lt. People will never say a word
because they're not thinking. Most
people just sort of look at you. They
ON NOV. 8th- CANDIDATE FOR
don't know what you're doing
because they'reSpaced out."
Tucker's advice on Improving
"Yo ur Support and Vo te Appreciated"
memory and beating mindless
behavior:
Pd. Pol. Ad . by Cand.
-Put things in the same place
every time. Don't put anything
down temporarily because you'll

our first raid, when we arrested 60
people."
He worked hard in his anti-drug
campaign and there were many
arrests for marljuana posse.ssion in
those years. "I thought lt was
outrageous then, but I don't know
now... I've mellowed with the
times," he says, referring to
marljuana.
In the late 1970s, the pollee
department's biggest headache was
home burglarles, mostly committed by kids. Willle used his
yearbooks a lot then . "Now," he
says, "crime here 'is on the
decrease. "
But he's been around too long to
get over-optimistic. He recently
dealt with a group of 12-year-olds
stealing bicycles and breaking into
homes.

VOTE FOR

Charles L.
Barcus
FOR

Clay
Township Trustee

.'

Your Support
Will Be
Appreciated
Pd. fo r by the Candidate
Charles Barcus
Rt. 2, Crown City, Ohio

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CAROLYN

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HEINES

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD

8~-Mil•.r

Mtiiii.CJutlet Ctllllr
Con1111ns one OUtlet tO Sil .
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985-3301
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. We: the undersig_ned, are in strong oppositiOn agamst the establishment of CARRYOUTS for
the sale of alcoholic beverages in Olive Township.
Major reasons for our stand:
(1) the lack of law enforcement in our area·
(2) making alcohol too readily accessible t~
the youth
(3) additional empty containers littering our
properties and roadways.
I
.
Weare urgmg you, our neighbors, to join us
.
m our efforts to keep our communities SAFE,
CLEAN, and RESPECTABLE.
·
Please vote NO on the W£T ISSUE on the ballot in the coming election NOVEMBER 8.
Thank you.
Paid Pol. Adv . by t~e Following:
~ong Bottom Senior Citizens' Club
Eden EUB Church
Riverview Garde n Club
Long Bottom Christian Church
Reedsville-Long Bottom .
Long Bottom Methodist Church
Community Builders' Club
Success Church of Christ
Olive Township Firemen's Auxiliary Joppa United Methodist Church
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Moun! Olive Communty Churth
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I

nuclear disarmament.
Reagan, in a July 5 speech to the
rival, much smaller American
Federation of Teachers, accused
the NEA of promoting "curriculum
guides that seem to be more aimed
at frightening and brainwashing
American schoolchildren than in
fostering learning and stimulating
balanced, intelligent debate."
Reagan did not elaborate, but left
little doubt he · was referring to
controversial NEA courses on the
nuclear arms race and the Ku Klux
Klan. The leading critic of both has
been AIT President Albert
Shanker, who complained that the
NEA's arms guide minimized the
Soviet ·threat and Its KKK course
labeled America a racist society.
Cameron and Ms. Futrell defend
both courses, but Cameron told the
NEA's 7,'JJXJ delegates at their
recent convention in Philadelphia
that the union should get out of the
course-writing business and concentrate on developing positive stands
on ectucatlon issues.
After warning trnit "NEA ls
pmmulgating a 198ls agenda based
upon 1900s policies and rhetoric,"
Cameron told the delegates !tis time
"for an open-minded reappraisal of
many of those policies."
The NEA and the AFI', which
seriously considered a merger In the
early 1970s, have drtfted further
apirrt in recent years.
The independent NEA and Its
AFL·CIO rival have long-standing
quarre~ . qver. testing, b!Jl11gual
ectucailon' and use ofraclal quotas in
schools, jobs and union leadership.
Shanker contends, "They're not
just against merit pay, they're
against everything that stands for
standards and quality."
Ms. Futrell says Shanker is
"reaching for straws and trying to
dredge up stuff that happened 10
years ago."
"W€ came out against testing.in
the 1970s because we felt that the
tests were being used and abused to
track kids ... :· she said. "As a result
of our efforts, much of the bias and
much of the discrimination is gone.''
· The delegates at the NEA
conventiOn quietly jettisoned the
last remnants of the antltesting
rhetoric that had been on the NEA's
books since 1973. The union had
sought a moratorium from 1973 to
1978onallstandardlzedstudent tests
and in recent years had objected to
using any test that was "potentially
damaging to a student's selfco nc e p t" . or o tljer wlse
objectlonable;
The delegates scrapped a litany of
conditions under which tests should
not be used and instead adopted a

resolution that ~ognizes the need
for periodic testing and outlines
ways the results can be put to best
use.
But the NEA opposes using the
Nationa l Teachers Exam or any
other existing standardized test in
making decisions about which
teachers to hire. Shanker favors
making new teachers pass competency tests.
NEA leaders say that apart from
merit pay, they endorse nearly .
every recommendatiOn that the
National CommissiOI\' on Excellence in Education made to Improve
U.S. schools.
"No one denies that the standards

State remembers
workers'. history

IMPROVE OUR SCHOOLS

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESTER

HAUNTED HOUSE - Dennis Dalton stands
outside one of several houses that are supposed lobe
haunted In Waynesville. This house was !lullt by Dr.

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
Natlonal Education Association has
never been short of critics since It
shed ltsco!!ee club image in the late
19Qls, started backing teacher
strikes and began a relentless
march Into liberal politics. ·
So In the current atmosphere of
educatio nal controversy, It
shouldn' t be surprising to hear
sharply worded ridicule like this:
''NEA is promulgating . a 1980s
agenda based upon 1900s policies
and rhetoric."
Except that the words come from
the new executive director of the
NEA.
The NatiOnal Education Association, after a decadeofbattleagainst
standardized testing and impassioned advocacy of sucP, causes as a
nuclear freeze, is getting a facelift.
Its new leaders are charting a more
moderate course and are concentrating on classroom issues.
The 1.6 mllllon-r,nember union is
not expected to retreat from the
political arena and Its courtship of
political candidates - usually
Democrats - who share its
enthusiasm 'for federal school ald.
But Ixith Don dunerllil, thii new
executive director, and Mary Hatwood Futrell, who replaced Willard
H. McGuire as president on Sept.1,
say It is time for the NEA tD devote
more of Its energy to school
problems and how tD improve the
teaching profession.
Theunlon has been thrust onto the
defensive In the cun-ent national
debate over how to improve tl]e
public schools by Its hostlllty toward
merit pay, which President Reagan
has championed as ''the American
way.
"Until NEA supports badly
needed reforms in salary, promotion and tenure policies, the improvements we so desperately need
will only be delayed," the president
said in May.
The union's' politics and Its
pectagogy both took on a liberal cast,
as it lobbled for a Cabinet·level
Department of E~ucatlon and more
federal school aid, championed civil
rights and the Equal Rights
Amendment and waged war on
standardized testing. Conservallves
long ago pronounced anathema on
the union.
Scott D. Thomsori, executive
director of the National Association
of Secondary School Principals,
feels the NEA's rnllltance on
pocketbook Issues has hurt
teachers' rEputations and undermined pubHc support for the
schools. He believes the union
should "stop chasing every rainbow
that comes down the plke," such as

i

the markers comes from a state
By ROBERT GREENE
appropriation for the labOr history ·
~MOd•ted Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - The project, which has been in the state
labor movement may have seen budget since 1978.
Meade, 32, said the role of
better days, and a project by the
Columbus
in labor history had more
OhloHlstork:al Society lsremindlng
to
do
with
Its crossroads location.
the public of those days.
·
"Basically
lt was more of a
The Society has erected seven
convenient
meeting
place," he said.
markers to commemorate impor"It
was
easy
to
get
to
from east and
tant events in the labor history of
Ohio, and niore are planned lf they west."
The UMW is the exception. "It
can be financed. Much of that
history forms a big part of the was definitely the nearest blg city to
the coalfields,'' hE&gt; said.
nation's labor history.
Ohio has been "terribly signifiThreeofthollemarkershavegone
cant"
in Amertcan labor history as
up in the last few weeks. United
one
~fthefirstlargeindustrtalstates
Mine Workers Presklent Richard
Trurnka attended a dedication here 1n tlie Midwest. "About lllnternalastweekforthemarkercommemo- tlonal unions were formed in Ohio,"
hesald. "Aboutsevenarestlllhere.''
ratlngthe UMW's founding in 1890.
Samuel Gompers, the irrunigrant
Aweekbetorethat, thesocle(yput
cigar
• maker who became the
up a IJlQIIument to the American
leading
figure in American labor
Federation of Labor. 'The AFL was
history,
spent
much time in Columfounded ln1119iafterreorganlzatlon
bus
as
AFL
president,
Meade said.
of a labor coaUtlon that fanned in
"The
one
person
that
really sUcks
1881 In Pittsburgh. The AFL
backdated Its charter to 1881, the out was John McBride,'' he salcj,
refening to the lesser-known but
date 00 the marker.
Akrm recently got a marker to important !lgures. Historians know
note the foondlng In 1935 of the relatively little about the man, who
United Rubber Workers. There also as president of the AFL from
is a new marlier in Coshocton at the 1894-1895 was the only person to
birthplace of Wllllam Green, a coal . defeat Gompers.
"There are some sketchy facts,"
min« w11o became a state senator
Meade
said. "He reniains largely
and secretary-treaurer and pres!·
unwrttten
about.''
dentoftheUMW.
'
The
project
will bypass some
A sidewalk marker in Cincinnati
better-knOWn
and
more violent
I"ecOIInlzes the founding of the
events
1n
labor
history,
such as the .
International Typosrapblcal Union ·
in 1852. A marker. in Mlllfleld, 1919 Toledo Auto-lite strike or
Athens Coonty, remembers a J.9.ll violence In the F1ats section of
coal mining dlsasfer that kl1ted 82 Cleveland, he said. He el&lt;Plalned
people. A marker lllCielleland notes that those have bei!n well docu·
the lormln&amp; in 1942 ol the tlDiti!d -mmted and mnuilemorated. . .
"We've tried to sUck with some of
SteelwQrlilefs of America.
the
stgnl'lcant contributions that
Roeer Meade, director of the
normally
get lost In the shuffle," be
~a Jabal" hlatllly proJect, l8ld
said.
A
marker
is being contem·
the llllll'lcl!n IP"EW out of a researdl
plated,
lloweYer,
lor
the pioneering
PI'OfP"IID tllatala!1Edln15'15. "l~wu
General
Motors
sit-down
strikes In
a CCIIIJ1IIIIralt to the Natiallal
:1936-1937.
EndawniMit for the Humallltles
Tha markers have an average
that the Soelltywould do tiOITielhiDC
cost
ol about$l,!XXI,e acb andcometn
more vlllbllt to the pub!Jc," Meade
variouS
types. &amp;me have two skies
l8ld lui week. .
.
and
are
on poles. Others are··
'The p&amp;O)eet 11 a joint Wlltilrewllh
one
iililed
tor
placement In walls or '
the Natloilal Ealbirlllllt, the OldD
AFL-aOIIIIUJeHJIIIIIea!Soclely. ID lldewaJkl.
If the money CORII!B, tbe next llllf1
MOll 11111111\1 can. fralil the labor
wm
probebty be 1n McGutrey,
iiiiM!Iilllllt and lndlvldlill doiiDn.
Meade 11114 Scme oftheiiiOIII!Y tor Hardlll County.
I

were lowered. No one denies that we
were permissive,'' said Ms. Futrell,
43, a veteran of20years a sa business
teacher in nearby Alexandria, Va.
"Now It's tlmeforus to putinamore
rigorous program and have more
rigorous standards."
Ms. Futrell is a popular figure in
union ranks with a gift for oratory
that her predecessor lacked.
Cameron, a former deputy dtrec-.
tor, replaced Terry Herndon, who
steered the union's course for 10
years and spurred its heavy
)nvolvement ic the nuclear freeze
movement in June.
Also moving into NEA's laadershlp suite were anew vice president,

Keith · Geiger of East Lansing,
Mich., and secretary-treasurer,
Rnxanne E. Bradshaw of Colorado
Springs, Colo. None of the new
leaders Is talking about curtailing
the NEA's political activities.
Thl' NEA is atllaSsing a warchest
of at least $3 mllllon for the 1984
elections. Last fail it inau&amp;&gt;urated a
pro;:ram tbat allows it to flood
Co~gress with postcards from
132,!XXlmemberswhohavegtven the
unij:m their prozy or certain issues:
It ;has. budgeted $l)),OOJ for its
"lobby-by-mall" efforts this year.
The NEA is expected to throw its
poilttcal ~upport this fall to former
VIce President Walter F. Mondale.

He was among five Democratic
presidential candidates who
courted NEA delegates In
Philadelphia.
Mondale has promlsed to seek an
$11 billion increase in federal school
aid If elected. But his Democratic
rivals all have strong education
records in the NEA' s books. Sen.
Fritz Hollings, D-S.C., wants to give
$5;00J federal raises to all teachers,
and $10,00J to those in tnner:clty
schools, at a cost of $14 blll!on1&lt;'n. ·
Gary Hart, D-Colo., is the fjftme
sponsor of the NEA ·s $4 billion
American Defense Education Act,
which would tunnel $4 billion to the
.schools.
'

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�Page--E-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

No.... m.r6, 1983

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Poiot Pleasant, W. Va.

Pomeroy

Community group, realtor battling in court
CLEVELAND HE!GIITS. Ohio

..

(AP) -For more than a decade, a
non-profit community organlz3tlon
In this Cleveland . suburb has
Involved whites and blacks. as well
as various clvlc and religious
groups, lnane!fort to calm fears and
foster racial integration.
This year, the Heights Qommun·
ltyCongres!fhas taken on Its avowed
foe- the real estate business-In a
· legal war in federal court.
The community group contends
realty sales practices in Cleveland
Heights violate federal fair-housing
laws by luring blacks. into the city
and Instigating whites to move out.
Hut top Reaity Inc., the defendant
and the state's largest real estate
l!o/1111anY, says !he charge is without
basts.
Some Cleveland Heights resi·
dents recall that racialty motivated
fears spread quickly through the
middle-class suburb a decade ago,
as blacks began integrating its white
neighborhoods.
Residents held meetings to discuss whether what had happened in
a nearby subu rb, East Cleveland,
could as well happen in Cleveland
Heights. In East Cleveland, the
racial composition changed from

'

nearly 100 percent white In the 1950s
The census of 198J revealed 56.~38
to predominantly black.
Cleveland Heights residents, with a
In 1970, 2.7 percent of the f/J,7(j{
'l:l percent mlnortty population.
Cleveland Heights residents were
Each of the city's 17 census tracts Is
Identified by the U.S. Census as
Integrated, with no less than than5.8
racial minorities.
percent black residents In any tract,
"Block busting was a real tear In
Mrs. Cowell said.
CI~yeland Heights, " said Dwight
"Basically, what we are attemptDavis, a lawyer and black resident
ing to do is create an environment
of the suburb. "It was a concern of
where people of all races can live
white residents, and one of !lie
and work together, to make It stay ,
myths was that a lot of blacks would
that way and still be a quality
be moving In and that If you didn't
residential area," Mrs. Cowell said.
move out then your house va lue
"In orderto dothat, you have to deal
would go down."
with a number of {actors, and the
Davls; now a member of the
greatest compilnent Is dealing with
organization's board, said the
therealestatemdustry."
·
congress has had "a very positive
·The congress, operating on a
effect upon Cleveland· Heights and
budget of $125,1Xll a year from a
serves to bring all the segments
foundation and fund-raising activitogether to voice concerns.'' He says
ties, has recently completed its
the congress aims to convince
I4-week federal court battle with
whites there's no need to flee.
Hilltop Realty. U.S. District Judge
Some of the suburb's residents
Wllltarn K. Thomas, who heard the
formed Heights Community Concase, has yet to rule.
gress 10 years ago with the aim of
The key Issue In the case Is the
promoting racial diversity, rather concept of "racial steering" "than fearil)g it. It also sponsors
leading prospective home buyers to
neighborhood upkeep prograil)s.
certain neighborhoods based on
The concept was considered their race, aceordlng to the group's
experimental for suburbia, ~id · lawyers.
Lana Cowell, a white resident and
Avery Frtedman, who headed a
director of the congress sil)ce 1977.
team of lawyers representing

'

~-•

r.:==========:;-1

about$~higher.

3, "in rime for Christmas and

said Tuesday.
A modemiz~ data processing
system has helped the Social
Security Administration catch up
with a backlog of cases which
needed to be recompu'ted - some
dating back five years.

VOTE FOR

ELECT

"We have an opponunity in Social
Security 10 demonstrate that govenunent' s busine~s ran be ca 1Tied
out as eff iciently and effeclively as
any in I he private sPctor ," Mrs.

IRMA D. BALES
For

Cheshire
Township Clerk
Your support will be
greatly appreciated.
Paid for by the Can didate

FOR

listings

CREATED JUST FOR YOU
' AND YOUR INDIVIDUAL
NEEDS . BA$ED ON A $1000
MINIMUM.
l E T U ,5 ' ' M A K E ' ' A

Brad Davis

CERTIFICATE JUST FOR YOU.

Page3
"C.hannel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

FOR

441

~'f:Ofld Avt-nul~

Gallipolis
446-~11:12

GALLI

OHIO TOWNSHIP

· WTAP

Paid for by the Candidate

783 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH.
364 Jackson Pike, Gallipois, OH.

WEEKDAYS ·
9 A.M. TILL 9 P.M.
SUNDAYS
ll A.M. TILL 8 P.M.

tiona Riled
•Free Paltcing

BUCK STOVE
INSERTED IN EXISTING FIREPLACE

\ill~3 unmatehedii'i ~

Your EMrgy AnswiH ..

..

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

•

992-3671 -

10% SEII.lOR OTIZENS DISCOUNT
(60 and Over)
KIDDIE-SAY PROGRAM 10% DISOOUNT
(.... 6 and Under)

PHONE
446-6620- 992-6491

I.

'

Spona NMwork

A-.OA
Columbua, OH
Pn..-g,wv
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WPBY
WIN$
WOUB

Columbua, OH

WVAH

Humc....wv

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WOWK Huntington,

TWO LOCAJIONS

·•We Compound Prescription'
•We FHI All Third Party Pntscriptlona
•We Main11lin A Complete Record of ell Pre:ICrii~

'

WCHS

FRUTH PHARMACY

,Itemized Receipts for lnsurence and Income Tax Purpo-

FREE DELIVERY ·

Chrlellon~

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•Dependable. Low Colt Prescription Service
•3 Registered Phennaciltl
•Molt complete Preacrlption Stock

MECHANIC ST.

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Your Support
Will Be
Appreciated

AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR MEIGS &amp; GALLIA COUNTIES

MAX

Huntington, WV
Homt1 a... Office
Cinamu
·

ESPN

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Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

Reg. S860.00 Little Buck .......Sale $799.00
Reg. S960.00 Regular Buck _...Sale S879.00
Reg. $1060.00 Big .Buck ....... Sale $959.00

WSAZ
HIO

Pd. Pol. Adv.
By the Candidate

Y,

BUCK STOVE

Station listings

§AVllNG§

Special Savings on Buck Stoves All This Week!

FREE $TANOIN'G INSTALLATION

A guide to local
Television. programming ~
November 6 thru November '1 2

Tailor-made
certificates ..

BUCK STOVE SALE
SALE ENDS SAT

~-

6!/)

Thomas E.
Pasquale
Your Vote
Appreciated

David B. Chapman

Call Gallipolis

Includes complete

CLERK OF
GREEN TOWNSHIP
Hanukkah," Social Security Acting r-;:::==========tT;::=========::;~
Commissioner Martha McSteen
The checks will go out around Dec.

V

Anew concept
in saving
money
•
•
arrives In
Gallia
County.

VOTE FOR

recomputations date back to 1978
and were completed only recently
becauseofthenewequlpment,Mrs.
McSteen sald.
Social Security's m8S3lverecordkeeplngoperat!onkeepstrackof240
million workers, 36 million reclptents and 4 million Supplemental
Securtty Income recipients.

Classes

Beginning Nov.14 41

like

McSteen said.
The payments are based on 1981
earnings. Thebeneficiarieswhowill
see increases in their checks are
those who earned more money In
1981 than previously and thus are
owed a larger benefit.
The payments will he retroactive
to at least January 1982. But some

G 8 f»
\1jl~ Drivers Education :

=ts~d

director of adminlstratlonforcorpo- · the past. Neither thinks the Incident 'Gee, I could never .. .' But they
TOLEDO. Ohio (API - Bill
dramatically altered their lives, could. I did, and I know." .
Niehaus says he never has night- rate technology. For the last 2%
though the attention during his
mares about the 3\1 years hi' spent years, he's been a vice president in
Unlike the Americans held hosthe plastic products division.
as a hostage ·in the jungles of
captivity and for months after his tage for 444 days In Iran, Nlehous
0-I spokesman Jerry Arkebauer
return was often aggravating, Mrs. was rarely subjected to physical or
Venezuela, butrnorethanfouryears
said
Niehous' responsibilities today
Niehaus said.
after his rescue, he still wonders
mental abuse. He read books and
"I was rather tired of being a . newspapers, listened to a radio, and
are
at
least
equal
to
those
In
'what hiS life would have been likfi'
public figure," she said. "We're just
Venezuela.
had he not been abducted.
had regular meals served. He
everybody else. We always exercised and kept a diary. Fortu"I don't think I've been mls·
Now a col]Xlrate vice president
were just like everybody else. What
treated," he said. " But there has
for Owens-Illinois Inc., Niehaus was
nately, he said, he never saw his
happened to us was just an
been a delay lnmycareerandidon't
taken a! gunpoint from his home in
captors' faces, which means he was
extraordinary situation that afknow aU of the reasons why."
. caracas on Feb. 27, 1976. OnJune29,
unable to Identity thlim. He Implied
1
fected otherwise nonnal people."
One of the factors, Niehaus said,
1979, he was found by two policemen
that had he been able' to IdentifY
Niehaus gives about two dozen ·.them he might nothavesurvlved the
and two farmers searching for was his conNslon a bout his life
speeches a year about his expecattle rustlers. Niehaus still thinks following his return to the United
experience.
rience to security and Industrial
States. He said he wasn't lnltaUy
his rescue might have been an
Perhaps most Importantly, Nierelations groups as well as high· haus said, washlsabllltytotalktohls
sure If climbing the col]Xlrate
accident .
level rorporate managerS. On
''Four years later, who's to say," ladder was what he wanted.
captors In Spanish. Without that, he
"When I first came home, I
several occasions, he has reassured
Niehous said. "As far ao the
said be's not surehowwellhewould
the families of other kidnap victims. have held up.
kidna pping experience, I'm sure it thought I was going to change," he
On March 10, he met In Indiana
didn't promote my career. If said. "But I found that once I was
"(Talking) gave me a way to
with the daughter of an oil company engage In something more than
home for awhile, I wanted to get
anything, it retarded it."
executive who had been abducted In worrying about what was going to
Niehaus was a rising star for back into the swing of things. My life
Bogata, Columbia, a few days
Owens-lllinois in 1976. He · had hasn't changed. I still have my goals
hapPen the next hour or the next
in
front
of
me."
earller.
Nlehous told the woman her day," he said.
served as general manager of the
father probably was safe and told
N!ehous Is one of a bout 65 vice
company's operations in Mexico
Niehaus saki he learned early In
some
presidents
at
0-1,
which
ranks
11Y71n
of his own expertences. The his captivity that he was a specific
and Spain. At the time of ·his
executive was released unhurt after . targetofleftlstguerrlllas, who were .
abduction, he was a vice president in · the Fortune magazine Jist of 500 top
38days.
charge of O-rs Venezuelan opera- industrial firms. The finn has 50,00)
angered and frustrated by the
"I'm not personally lmpii!SSed Venezuelan government.
employees worldwide and operates
tion , ovPrseeing l ,B:Xl employees.
that I Survived 3% years In the
Upon returning ro work in in 20 nations.
jungle," Nlehoussaid. "I don't mean
Both Nlehousand his wife, Dorma,
September 1979, he was named a
vice president of corporate staff and said his abduction Is firmly rooted in
to make light of It Most people say,

WASHINGTON (AFt - CblistrnasandHanukkahwillbealitllebit
brighter for about 2 million Social
Security recipients this year. with
retroactive payments averaging
aimost $1.000 a nd monthly checks

.

Heights Community Congress, said
ot Cleveland Heights, has asked the 1m1e owners," who bought theil'
evidence Includes reports by
Judge to Issue an order banning CleYeland Heights hornell through
HWtop.
•
"checkers " or peoplE! who acted as
certain real estate sales strategies.
prospect!v'e home bi\yers and \}len
The congress and the suburb abo
Both . black and white . IIDWed reports with the congress on the asked the Judge totlx &lt;~amages to be meowners testl11ed they were
tactics of sales agents.
assessed against the reeJ estate Interested In a specltlc kind of heme
"The Heights- Community Con· e&lt;mpany.
and never dlscua8ed a neighbor•
gress has been at the forefront
The defendants Include Hllltop
hood's racial composition with the
among similar groups nationally of
Realty Inc., which advertises as
real estate agent.
advocating racial harmony 311d
HGM·HWIOP: HllltoppresldentVIn·
Integration," Friedman said. "It Is centAvenl,whoSEI'Vedaspresldent . - - - - - - - - · - - very tough and hard-nosed. Those oftheOhloAssoclaUonofRealtorsln t!\ (ill
f1j A
people stand by their principles."
certain Hilltop sales
Mrs. Gowell said the trend would
have been whole nejghborhilods
Aven1 saki equal opportunity In
switching from all-white to all-black housing Is a prtmary goal of his '
had not It been for the congress and company.Eachsatesagentmustbe /(\\
the strong support of the city, the well-acqilalnted with fair housing \1jl
'U
co-plalntillln the lawSuit.
laws, Aventsald.
" We feel that people who want to
Anthony J . DIVenere, the lead ~
live In an Integrated conununlty
lawyer for HilltoP, said the Heights· ftft.!.
'have a right to do so, and that Community Congress has falsely ~
~
Includes blacks as well as whites,"
accusect real estate professionals of ~
Ph. one 446-0699 ~.
Mrs. Cowell said.
racially motivated sales policies.
~ ~- 4ft&lt; '(I'
The congress won a $15,000
The defense called 33 "satisfied
~ ·~ ~ ~ ~ . ·•
!jettlement In the mld-1!170sagalnst ....---~--------'----------~
another realty company after
alleging that firm practiced racial
steering, Friedman saki.
Friedman and other lawyers
worked the case at no charge and
will be paid this tlmeontyHtheywtn.
•
The congress, along with the city
'•.

Terrorist victim looks at experience

SS making retroactive payments

'•

Hollywood
PageS

s01JTJIERN BEU.E AND FAMOlJS HUSBAND - ~e Gordon Rogers porirays a
Soalbem.belle • lbe televWon " ' - "Bee Haw," a role that her llwlband,
""Y8 Ia " ......tel,y her." (AP ,I •nrpllo$o ).

wv

l!lfn&amp;er Kenny a.era.

-

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

•rn
(})
(})
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(J)
(I)
(I)
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(jj)

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•

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