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                  <text>Page-;--12- The Daily Sentinel

friday, November 11, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

39 .~ourt cases

Two yachters missing
after Northwest storm
"

ended by judge
Thlrly defendants were flned and ment on each charge, jaU sentences
nine others forfeited bonds ln Meigs
suspended, one year probation,
County Court Wednesday.
restitution and costs, slx days
F ined by Judge P atrick O'l;lrten community setvice work; Kermit
were Michael Lee, Athens,' over- GUkey, Shade, DWJ, S250 and costs,
load, $409 a nd costs; Earl Williams,
three days confinem ent, jali sentAthens, speed, $26 and costs; Allen ence and $150 of flnelf attenddrlvlng
Chevalier, Reedsville, disturb or school, llcnese suspended 60 days;
molest a trap of another without Stanley Watson, Pomeroy, assault,
permission from owner, $50 and six months confinement, all but 10
rosts; E lmer Kaylor, ReedsvillE', days suspended, rosts, one year
Improper passing, $10 and costs;
probation; Franklin Jewell, MiddleScott Harrison, Pomeroy, stop sign, port, no operators license, $75 and
$1D and costs; William Dlnguss,
costs, suspended $35 of flne lf obtain
Dexter, DWI, $250 and costs, three operators license; Roger MarcinkO,
days confinement., license sus- Tuppers Plains •. DWI, S2,'iO and
pended 60 days, driving under costs, three days confinement,
suspension , $75 and costs, five days license suspended 60 days, speed·
confinement, Speeding, $70 and lng, $23 and costs ; Klmali Mash,
costs; Jam es Morton,Longllotlom, . R utland, DWI, 30daysconfinement,
DWI, $300 and costs. 10 days $300 and costs, license suspended on
· ~- -; confinement , license suspended six year, left of center, $2J and costs,
m onths, no drivers license, $75 and driving under suspension, $100 and
costs, three days confinement, costs, 10 days confinement; Sherry
speed, $Z2 and costs~ Gary ·ere- Butcher, Harrisonville, no opera·
m eans, P arkersburg, speed,$23and tors license, $75 and costs, susrosts; James Harvey, Milton, W. pended $35 of fine lf obtain opera tors
Va., speed, $23 and costs, Dorothy license, 10 days confinement susMcWil liams, Nelso nville, no pended if obtain operators license;
muffler, $10 and costs; M. Sue Allen Chevalier, ReedsvUle, tra p·a
Murphy, Minersville, speed, $21 and furbearing animal during closed
costs; Ger ald D. Hamilton, Par· season, $150 and costs, suspended
ker sburg, speed, $26 and costs;
trapping prtvlleges for one year;
James Skidmore, Gallipolis, speed,
Larry Longenette, Chrisney, Ind.,
$al and costs.
speed, $21 and costs; Roger Gaul,
Also Ethel Hart, Shade, speed,$22
Pomeroy. faUed to obey traffic
and costs; Brett Friend. Long
signal, $1D and costs; P atricia
Bottom, failure to display two
Cleland, Langsville, falsification,
headlights, $5 and costs; Beeche t
one year probation and costs.
Breeding, Langsville, possess a
Fotieltlng bonds were David T.
raccoon during closed season, $150
Wood , Huntington, J ames WUlland costs; Mark Hawk, Pomeroy,
ams, Parkersburg, David Argodspeed, $Z2 and costs; Roland
nia, Buffalo Grove, Ill., and Dennis
Landaker, P omeroy, unsafe vehi·
Litton, Cleveland, speed, $50 each;
cle, $25 and costs; James McDouScott Dennis, Athens, !allure to
gal, Pomeroy, passing bad checks,
control , $45; Ronald Graham,
restitution and costs; Ricky Reeves,
Marietta. assured clear distance,
$.)];
David J enkins, Middleport,
Pomeroy, two charges of criminal
$40; James W. Quillen,
speed,
trespass, 30 days conflnmenl on
Middleport,
failed to stop at stop
each charge and costs, two charges
sign,
$.)];
Geroge
Whited, The
of petty th~ft , six months confine·
Plains, overload, $215.

Area deaths
Gerald F. Morris

Fred Cole

I

By A_...eted Ph'SS
A wet, gusty storm lashed the
Northwest today leaving two yach·
ters missing In the wind-whipped
Pacific, as snow deepened In the
Midwest where up to 14 Inches had
fallen In spots and the wlntcy blast
was blamed for eight deaths. ·
The Northeast, meanwhile, dried
out trom soaking rains that tangled
highway and' air traffic In northern
New Jersey and New York City.

The unpleasantness affected
much of the nation.
Gale warnings went up for the
northern New England Coast. High
wavespushedlaketroutandsalmon
onto the Lake Michigan beach In
Milwaukee. Farmers In south·
central Texas, western Arkansas
and western Tennessee braced for

Three vessels called off a search
early today after falling to sight a
man and woman who abandoned
their 31-foot trimaran Thursday off
the roast ofCatlfornla'sBigSur, the
Coast Guard said .
Aircraft were to resume the hunt
today for the couple, who jumped
overboard In Ufe jackets after
reporting their vessel was taking
water, said petty olflcers Dan
Kelleher and Ray Helllwell.
Up the coast In Oregon, a live
power line snapped by a tree limb
fell onto a school bus near Cave
Junction, but the 14 chUdren
escaped Injury by staying In the bus
untu help arrived.
A tractor-traller qtrcylng 3,000

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, GOVERNOR- Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste
shows oil the bicycle presented to him earlier this week by members of
his staff and cabinet members. The Ohio-bunt bike Is festooned with
.baD0011&lt;1 given to him Thursday during a birthday cake-cutting
ceremony In the cabinet room. ( AP Laserpholo).

Meigs County happenings..~
Alu~i

practice set

Practice and sign up for the Meigs
High School Alumni football game
wUl be held at 2 p.m . Sunday at the
Middleport Held. As yet there have
not been enough players sign up to
take part ln the contest.

Emergency run
One call was answered by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services Thursday. The Middleport
Unit took BarbaraSmithofParkSt.,
to Veterans Memorial hospital.

The Meigs County Coon Hunters
wUl meet at 7 this evening at the club
oouse on Snowball Hill. Refresh·
ments will be served.

and really

UVEwith

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dedsii&gt;n you can really

Uve with. Fumlture quail- .
ty finish; "Wipe-Clean
Leisure-llme" i1terlors;
slide-out trays and ad·
justable shelves. AD 11\cluded In the low affordable price. See us today!

RACINE
PLANING
MILL
At. 124, Syracuse

992-3978

Citizens Organized Agalnst Long·
walllng (COAL ) wlll meet at 2 p.m .
Sunday ln the VInton Township
trustee building on Vinton County
Road 438, ln front of the the old
North Wilton School buUdlng off the
Appalachian Highway.

Velerans Memorial
Admitted--Betty Batley, VInton;
Ronnie Smith, Rutland; Yvonne
Scally, Middleport; Wayne ChaSe,
Albany; Barbara Smith,
Middleport.
Discharged--Mary Braley, Julia
Sellers, George Molden, Dennis
Hart, Ronnie Smith.

,

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Associated.Ph'SS Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Saturday
passed emergency legislation to resume the flow of
cash to much of the federal government, and the
Senate was expected to follow suit later ln the day.
The House vote on the compromise stopgap
spending btll, worked out Frida y by congressional
negotlators, was 173-136. .
Congressional leaders predicted President Reagan
will sign the mea.Sure.
"I know this package will he accepted by the White
House and will be signed by the president," said Rep.
SUvlo 0. Conte, R-Mass., the top Republican on the
House Appropriations Committee. He termed the
package "a vecy delica te compromise."

By KEVIN KELLY
'lbnes-Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLIS - .Jn the wake of
lastTuesday'selection, lutureplans
are being formulated by officials.
For the Gall1a County Local
School District, it's looking ahead to
projected construction dates on
three new elementary school buUdlngs after the passage of a 4-mill
bond!ssue.
.
But It will be back to the original
plan In financing the construction of
the new Gailla County courthouse
afterthedefeatofasales taxlssueon
the ballot. And UJe . county health
department is looking at tightening
Its belt In the coming year now that
its three-tenths of a mill renewal
levy was voted down.
Still flushed by the 19-vote vlctory
of the bond Issue, Superintendent
Gacy Toothaker said the district has
arranged a Nov. 22 meeting with its
bonding attorneys and an Investment firm. The flrm will make a
proposal to the district on the bl!st
procedure for selling bonds.
Revenue from the bonds will
finance an estimated $11.6 million
for a new buDding replacing
CadmusandCentervllleelementarles and new buildings lor BidwellPorter, Vinton and Hannan Trace.
Room additions to Addavllle and

Improvements to Cheshlre-Kyger
will be also beflnancedbytheissue.
Toothaker said arch!tectut;al .
plans aren't complete, but he and
the board of education will begirt
discussions this week at the Ohio
School Board Association conven..tion in Columbus on involving the
community, such as parents and
teachers.
"These will be schools for the 21st
- century In tenns of life and
commlbnent to education,'' Tootbaker explained. "The 1acllitles
. won't be futuristic, they'll J;&gt;e
traditional that are not going to be
different In terms of design and

space."
A projected construction date on
the new bulldlngs has been set for
the fall of 1984, and additions and
Improvements totheotherschoois is
anticipated for spring 1985.
Defeat of the half-percent In·
crease In the county sales tax to help
pay the $1 rnl111on loan the county
entered Into with three Gall1polls
banks won't stop construction from
continuing, a county official said. t:
Designed to last three years, the
Increase was considered a quick and
equitable JPetbod.of pa)(lng Qft~a(
loan. It would hav&lt;J.been removed
when construction of three-story
(Continued on page A3)

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..

POINTJNG THE WAY- Veterans Day memorials were held In
Galllpoll8 and nationwide Friday honoring the U.S. war dead. In the
GaDipolls City Park, the Doughboy points toward the crowd, just to the
left, while a par11clpant in the services points toward the honor guard.
Other stories of the Veteran's Day services in Ga!Ua and Meigs counties
·· are on page 8-i!.
·

Lull in PLO fighting: guns of
lo ·alists, mutineers fall silent

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00CtJP1BD - l.ull border palee,_ aa plll'll aa amain llln!ll&amp;
.. IIIIIUtQISCW.eBullldtJofl\4 anlfterhiiiPII 11 ' • dead~., lroopl dmtnt
rio&amp; Oli •••
·IIII~Niwpeoamp. (API• erphot.J).

--

·--lllrowlnt

by settling on a overall figure of about $11.5 billion,
which is roughly between what the House had sought

and the administra tion requested .
Also Included in the s topgap measure is a ban on
paying for abortions under federal employees' health
plans except when the mother's life is endangered.
The new stopgap bill would provide money for a
variety of federal agencies whose regular approprialions have not been enacted.
So far , eight ofthe 13 regular annual appropriations
bills have passed both houses of Congress and been
signed Into law. Those s Wl awaiting act ion provide
money fo r the operations of th" departments of
defense, state, justice, commerce, treasury and
agriculture, as well as the Postal Service and a
variety of sma ller agencies.

Vet recalls
final day .of
World War I

BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP)- The

Children's Winter Coats
Wall-to-Wall Carpet
Leg Wamers
Boys' Lee Rider Jeans
Girts' Winter Tops
Carhartt.Work Clothes
Boys' Winter Tops
Men's Flannel Shirts
'Girts' Jeans &amp;C(mds
Blankets
Junior Sweaters
Junior SWeat Suits
Men's Dress Slacks
Boys' Winter Jackets
Ladies' Coats

I..ocai •••••... ..•...••..... ••....•.••.. A-4-8
Spo11s ................................ C-1-4
State-National ....................... D-1

Senate Appropriations Committee, said that just over
two weeks ago the president signed a domestic
spending blll that was $4 billion more than Reagan
had requested. He added that this was not the time to
come back asking for more.
During the negotiations Friday, Democrats
inltially offeredto trtmthe dornestlcspendlng add-ons
back to $250 million.
Republicans, though, said the president would
accept none of it.
House Democrats then came In with an offer of a
scaled-down package of $98.7 million, and that was
the figure that was accepted.
The ot her major issue facing the conferees was
setting a levelfor foreign aid for the rem a inder of the
fiscal year that ends Sept. 30,1984. That was resolved

After election
agency heads
look to future

Beirut newspapers . The Voice of
Lebanon said Friday the mutineers
fell silent for the first time In 10 days
had ordered Arafat to leave Trtpoll
Satunday ln northern Lebanon, and
or face an all-out attack on Sunday. .
President Amln Gemayel anArata! himself remained nonnounced plans to visit Syria.
commltal,lndicatlnghe would leave
The lull in the PLO fighting was · H he gets sufficient guarantees of
thr~tened, however, by a split
safety for the loyalist forces left
a.rnoilg Tripoli's leaders on whether
behind.
Palestine Uberatlon Organization
"My stay In this city is temporchatrman Yasser Arafat should
acy ," Arafat was quoted by Beirut
leave his last base In the Middle
radio stations as telling reporters.
East.
"When conditions Improve, I will
Tripoli's most . prominent politi- return to my headquarters In Tunis.
cian, ex-Premier Rashid Karami,
I know exactly when it would be
and Mayor Ashlr Dayeh had·issued
desirable for me to leave."
publlc appeals for Arata! to leave
.In New York, the U.N. Security
and spare Lebanon' ssecond-largest
CquncU Issued an appeal for . an
city trom an all-out attack by
Immediate halt . to . the fighting
Syrian-backed PW mutlileers.
between Palestlnlari forces . The
·Sheik Saeed Shaaban, head of
non-binding consensus statement,
Trlpoll's dominant milltla , Tathe weakest form of council action,
wheed Islaml, meaning Islamic
urged all forces "to seek to attain
Unification, said the pleas should be
and to respect an immediate
rejectEd. He pledged to take on the
cessatlon'ofmstilltles."
PLO rebels on the streets of Trtpoll.
"If tb.eYwantashowdown, they're
A government statement In
welcome. We shall fight to defend
Beirut, meanwhUe, said President
the PalesUnian revolution," ShaaGemayel will make a two-day vtslt
to Damascus on Monday for talks
ban said In a sermon- delivered
before thousands of worshippers at with Syrian President Hafez Assad
Tripoli's Mansourleh mosque
on foreign troop withdrawals and an
FridaY- •
.
attempt Ill reconcUe warring MosExcerpta of the sermon were . Jem and Cbrtstlan factions In
!Nbllshed Saturday by · several Lebanon.

guns rl PLO loyalists and mutineers

SIMMONS

Mon.-Fri. 9 to 7
308 E. MAIN

bloodless defeat of the American press-Page A-2

Congress missed a midnight Thursday deadllne for
final congressional action on the emergency spending
blll for many government agencies. But ·there has
been no apparent disruption in government operalions because of the Veterans Day holiday for federal
workers, followed by the weekend.
A key to the compromise was the willingness of
House Democrats to back away from $954.4 rnlllion In
educat,lon and social spending acld-ons that Reagan
administration officials said the president would veto.
The Democrats finally settled for just over 10 percent
of their original package.
The full amount was Included ln a House-passed
version of the stopgap bill, but the Senate stripped It
out.
,
Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield, ''R-Ore., .chairman of the

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Art Buchwald discusses the military's swift

Cla8sllleds ................. ..... ....D-:!-7
Deaths ............... .................. D-2
Editorials. , ..... ..... .. ..... ....... ... A-2

Ohio weather:
drier air
foreca~l Sunday
-PageA-3

House ratifies emergency money bill

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Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Plecisant Sunday, November 13, 1983

By CLIF'FllAAS

your decision

Every man has a diversion. For Meigs resident
Henry Wells its raising beagles-Page 8-l

tmts
Vol. 11 No. 37
Calfli dghled 1983

/

Holzer elects new board of trustees--Page C-8

+

Decide On
Men"IIa t
cabinets

Revival plannned
The Rev. Leon L. Jones, evan~
list from Hamilton, will be speaker
at reviVal services to the held at the
Rutland Church of God, located on
Route 1241n Rutland.
The revival will start Sunday and
will continue each evening through
Sunday, Nov. ro with services at 7
each evening.
The Rev. Mr. Jones is a licensed
minister In the Church of God. He
has served as assoctate pastor at the
Hamilton Church of God after
completing an intensive Internship
program.
Since leaving the
associate pastoral fleld, he bas
ministered in revival meetings and
training seminars In several states.
At each service, strong emphasis
will be placed on the gospel and Its
bnpact on Individual lives.
John Evans, pastor of the .toea!
church, extends an Invitation to the
public to attend the setvlces.

-!-3

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w

Coon hunters will meet

COAL plans meeting

Gerald F . (Bud) Morris, 84, of
Fred Cole, 85, Coolville, died
Rutland died Thursday at the Holzer F riday morning at his .home
Medical Center.
follow ing an extended Ulness.
He was the son of the late Grant
Mr. Cole was born at Coolville, a
and Mona Sutton Morris and was son of the tate Joshua and Hattie
preceded In death by an infant Kincade Cole. He worked as an
daughter, and one sister, Edna engineer for the Ohio Fuel Gas Co. at
Little.
Sharpsburg. He also was a farmer.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth E. - · Surviving are his wife, Comella;
Bachner Morris. a son and three sons, Roy, Fred, Jr., and
daughter-in-law, Leo and Linda Kermit, all of Amhearst; three
Morris, Rutland; a granddaughter , daughters, Pauline Shisler, Grove
Cathy Morris, · P omeroy, and a City; Catherine Overby, Sheffield
grandson and his wife. Steve and Lake, and Helen Tate, Walnut
Carrie Morris, .Rutland; a brother Grove, Mlnn; a sister, Lesta DIXon,
and sister-In-law , Earl and Brenda Colwnbus, 16 grandchildren and 12
Morris, New Marshfleld; a brother, great· grandchildren. He was
John Morris, Route 4, Pom eroy;
preceded in death by his parents, a
three sisters, Merta Stanley, Hazel daughter, Edith Mae, and three
Meeks, and Neva Ator, all of grandchildren.
Albany, and two sister s-In-laws,
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Mrytle Knopp, Dayton and Gamel Monday at the White Funeral Home
Bachner , Rutland.
with the .Rev. Hershel Thompson
Mr. Morris was a retired fanner
officiating. Burial will be In the
and school bus driver. He was a
F airview Church Cemetery at
longtbne mem ber of the Meigs
Coolville. Friends may call at the
County F arm Bureau.
funeral home after 7 p.m . Saturday
Services will be held at 2 p.m . and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
Sunday at the Rawlings-Coats Sunday.
Blower Funeral Home. The Rev.
Cecil Cox will officiate and burial
will be In the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral Thanksgiving dinner set
home this evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
Annual Thanksgiving dinner wlll
and Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m . and 7
be held at the Racine Grange hall at
to9 p.m .
Oak Grove at 6: 30 p.m. Friday.
Those attending are to take a
Neil A. Rosen
covered dish ·and their own table
Neil Anthony Rosen, three-month serv ice. Therewlllbeaplglnapoke
old son of Joseph and Sherrie auction following the dinner. Cake
Linthicum Rosen and grandson of walks will be a feature of the
Harley Linthicum of Reedsville, evening's activities . Members are
and the late Albaerta Barber asked to take gifts from the Athens
Mental Health Center.
Llnthucum, died Nov. 5.

pounds of hanging meat flipped In
the hlgh winds on Interstate 84 just
east of Portland, Ore., leaving the
driver In satlsfactocy condition at a
Gresham hospital, police said.
In the Midwest, more snow was
falling over Wisconsin and northern
Michigan today from a storm
blamed since early Wednesday for
four traffic deaths In MinnesOta,
three In Wisconsin and one In
Nebraska.
·

trost.
But the Pacific Northwest was·
taking the greatest pounding due to
a storm aoomnes out to sea that was
pushing toward land.
Winds gusted Thursday afternoon
to 105 mph at Cape Blanco on the
southern Oregon roastand81mph In
northern California,' causing scat. tered power outages that continued
today.

First
snow
hits
Ohio

POMEROY - Veterans Day for years known as Armistice Dayhas special significance for E. J.
Hill, 87, Flatwoods Roa d resident
and veteran of World War I, who
joined members of Drew Webster
P ost 39, American Legion, in
Veterans Day obser.. ance ceremo·
nies Friday.
Hiil brought to the observance
with him a bell which he used as a
noise maker In New York City on
Nov. 11, 1918 to mark the end of
World War I .
Recalling the celebra tion of the
end of the "war to end all wars," Hlll
says that on Nov. 7 there was a false
report issued In New York that the
war had ended.
"All New York broke loose about 1
ln the afternoon and It wasn't until
the evening paper came out , an
extra, that people found out it had
been a false report," Hill states.
"Even then , they didn't get the
noise turned off until about
midnight."
Then on Nov . 11, the second report
was received that the war had ended
and then it took a long time for the
celebration to get underway because many thought the r eport was
again false. But once the celebration
dld get started as people realized Ihe
war was over, it continued until the
next morning.
Hill remem bers that when the
armistice was signed he had been
relieved of sea duty with the U. S.
l&gt;!avy and was assigned to a hospital

11-11-11 REMEMBERED E. J. Hill, 87, Flatwoods Road
resident, bohls a beU he used oo
Nov. 11,1918tohelp celebrate the
end of World War I in New York
City.
ln New York. On both days when the
armistice celebrations took place he
coincidentally was on leave.
Noise makers were everywhere
as New Yor kers celebrated the end
of the war, Hill reports, everything - 1
ranging from tln cups to bass
drums. He went Into a hardware
store to buy his bell for the
celebration and employes were so
pleased that lhe armistice had been
signed that they gave him the bell .

Belgian town a living
monument to W\V I
By HENRY GO'lTLIEII
Al!soclaled Ph'SS Writer
YPRES, Belgium ( AP) - In the
quiet market town of Ypres and the
Flander s fields around it , where a
quarter of a million men perished ,
remembering World War I and its
dead is unavoidable - not just on
Armistice Day but all year round .
From the Brilish cemeteries on
the outskirts to the town center ,
restored brick by brick from a
wasteland left by lour years of
shelling, Ypres is a live- in

monument.
Eve!Y night atsun&lt;jown, traffic on
the busy Menln Rood ha lts under a
Roman-style memorial gateway,
and two buglers from the fire
brigade play "The Last P ost" - the
British equivalent of taps.
Friday was the 65th anniversary
of 'the end of the "war to end all
wars,' ' and as always on Armistice
Day, there was a ceremony here
sponsored by the British Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
On Menln Gate are chiseled the
names of 54,896 British soldiers who
died near Ypres !rom 1914 to 1917,
but whose bodies were never
ldentlfed.
'
The war here began about four
mUes Olltslde town In the autumn of

'

1914, when lheGennanstried to lake
the city, a strategic roadblock ln
their drive to outflank allied armies.
Fou r years and 250,00l deaths later,
they had gain!"(i two miles .
"Everybocjy thought it would be
over in a couple of weeks ." said
J ohan Martin, a loca l historian.
"You can see how wrong they
were. ·• He point s to a 1919 picture of
rubb le that was once the city center.
" NtEir the war there were two
schools of thought. The British
wanted to keep everything as it was
so people would see the .horror o!
war. The townspeople wanted t&lt;i
rebuild the town exacUy as It was
and tha t's what we did. "
The same street layout was kepi
and buUdlngs were constructed
according to old blueprin ts. givi ng
Ypres the look of F lem iSh -cit ies
whiCh the' war passed by.
Outs ide the town, there are more
than 60 British cemeteries, w'!th
nam es like "Hospita l F ann" a nd
"Railway Dugouts," where soldiers
are buried near where they felL
Fanners stil l reap a harvest of old
rifles, metal, spent shells . and
enough unexploded bombs to keep
half the Belgian Army demolition
squad on permanent duty in the
region.

�.- - - ... -

..

~

_..

November

Comment

and perspective

13, 1983

'

The Sunday nnw..Sentlrwl
l'age

A~

~rns:~

~~

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

Ill Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
· HOBART Wll.SON JR.
: Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pub!isher·Cont roller

:
A MEMBER of The t\.~lated Prt.'S."i. Inland l&gt;ltily Pre-;s ;\..;sodation and the
• American Newspaper 1-'ubU.~hers A."tiiClatlon .

LETTERS OF OPD\10N are welt,'Omt.&gt;d. tht•)' shollld ht• It~" than 300 won:loi lonJil: . ..\U

.

, Jet~ are subja:.t to edllln~ :UJd m!L..t bt.&gt; signed with lllUlie, iuldrl!"ioi and telephone num·
, ber. No Ull!llgned letters .wiU be puhli~hed. U•ttt&gt;ts should bt• in ~00 lastt', addressing ls' sues, not personalities.

WASHINGTON '- · The most
Interesting fight in town these days
bas to do with the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights. The controversy Is
exceptional for this reason: It goes
straight to the heart.of the political
process. If we look closely at this
struggle. we are likely to !earn what
elections are ail a bout.
Congress created the commls·
slon in 1957 as an Independent
agency in the executive branch.
The act says the commission Is to 'le
composed of six members •P·
pointed by the pre•ident subject to
the advice and consent of the
Senate. No more than three of the
members may come !om the same

polltlcal party. Un!lke members of
such other agencies as the Federal
Trade Commission, members o!
the Civli· Rights Conu:nlsslon do not
serve for fixed terms. A reasonable
assumption is that they serve at the
pleasure of the president.
This has been the operative
assumption from the beginning.
Eisenhower's original appointees
submitted their resignations when
Kennedy was elected . . Kennedy's
people submitted their resignations
when Johnson came Into office.
Nixon asked for - and got - the
· resignation of Theodore Hesburgh
as chairman. Nothing in , jaw,
custom or precedent suggests that

Nowmber 13, 1983

members of the Civil Rights
Commission are like justices of the
Supreme Court who may be
removed only by impeachment.
The problem at the moment is
that two holdover Democrats on the
commission belleve they do indeed
have lifetime tenure. They won't
quit. They Insist they can't be fired.
President Reagan would like to
replace them with Democratic
nominees of his own choosing, but
even though Republicans control
the Senate, Reagan is having
serious problems ln getting his
choices confirmed. Meanwhile, the
issue has wound up in federal court.
To add one mroe complication, it

Global·confusion
Public opinion poUs usually don't receive much attention in this
column, but the results of a recently completed nationwide survey are so
atitoundlng that they merit closer inspection.
:: In March 1~ and again In September 1983, NBC News asked a
s¢1entificallyelected sample of more than 1,500 men and women to identify
t~e Central American governments supported and opposed hy this
country .
. Among those polled in early 1982. almost half (47 percent) were unable
t~ Identify President Reagan's position toward the government of
Nicaragua.
..
:: The next largest group of responde nts- 31 percent- incorrectly said
tt(e Reagan admini stration was supporting Nicaragua. When the second
survey was conducted last month, however, the proportion of'those giving
tha:t wrong answer had actually increased to 45 percent.
. In the 1982 survey. 57 percent correctly said the Reagan
administration is supporting the government of El Salvador - but 18
months later the proportion of those supplying that right answer had
dropped markedly to 47 percent.
·
·
. If the survey results are reliable, exactly 10 percent of this country's
a!lults can correctly Identify the Reagan administration's friends and foes
IR Central America, a decline from the 14 percent who could identify the
White House's position toward Nicaragua and El Salvador 18 months
e!'rlier.
.
Tn other words, fully 90 percent of the people can't even distinguished
· bE.tween Reagan's good guys and bad guys, muCh less decidewhetherthey
share t hat judgment.
. Indeed. both of the president's current attempts at military
adventurtsm - the Middle East and Central America - are rapidly
disintegrating into foreign policy and national security ~isast!'rs.
To Lebanon we have sent 1,600 Marines -a lmost certainly too few to
achieve any form of military success but very surely too many to die. Their
principal mission seems to be to serve as targets of opportunity for every
ideological zealot, religious fanatic and self-proclaimed revolutionary in
Belrut.1
'
.
In Central America we have fewer troops but a far larger contingent of
surrogate mercenaries dedicated to the purported just cause of
undermannlng - if not overthrowing - the government of Nicaragua.
The justification for that multimillion-dollar operation, we're told, is
that the Soviet Union and Cuba are using surrogate mercenaries to
advance their unjust goal of undermining - If not overthrowing - the
gcivernment of El Salvador.
...
. The radical Sandinista governmencof Nicaragua is hardly a model of
democracy, but its shortcomings hardly justify this country's Intervention
in the form of extensive sabotage and guerrilla warfare covertly planned,
organized and .financed by the Central Intelligence Agency.
The right-wing government of El Salvador , our client in the region, Isn't
much to brag about either. Members of its uncontrollable armed forces, for
e&gt;&lt;amp!e, are regular participants in the "death squads" which last year
summarily executed more than 1.300 civilians.
: Throughout the past several years. a stream of committees,
commissions and inspection teams composed of religious leaders,
pOliticians, businessmen and others has returned from Central America to
de'cry this country's Involvement in the region.
' The White House, however. has routinely ignored their conclusions as
the work of malcontents lacldng In patriotism. courage or common sense.
: But now the president's own comm ission (headed by this country's
P(emier Practitioner of globa l power politics, Henry M. Kissinger) has,
according to one report, emerged from El Salvador "aghast " at the
pOlicies and practices of an authoritarian government which Is unable or
unwilling to control blatant abuses of power.
· Is It any wonder that the longer we remain ent'&gt;!1gled in Central
A~rica, the less this country's citizens understand our position there•

Letter ·to the editor
•

'We are so grateful'
We are writing this to let the
public know that your Galllpolls
Red Cross is helping people a nd we
are so grateful.
They have helped us twice since
AJ1rll of this year. Mrs. Roberts is a
very concerned and compassionate
person. We have a son, Michael
Craft, who is in the U.S. Navy and
he·was out at sea when we needed
hi,;, home for the funeral of his
brOther.
'J.'he Red Cross saw that he was
Do~ off the ship and he was home

the next day.
Then recently due to a fire In the
USS Ranger which is at Lebanon
we were very concerned as to the
condition and welfare of Michael
and the Red Cross contacted the
right people and we got return news
that our son was not Injured and Is
well. We want to say: "Thank y9u,
Red Cross."
Bob and Gerry Craft
Rt. 2, Box 2841
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

Today in history
Today is Sunday, Nov. 13, the 317th day of1983. There are 48 days left In
the year.
· Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. 13, 1956, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that segregation of the
races on pUblic huses is unconstitutional.
On this date:
In,llO'i, a Viennese butcher, Johann Georg Lahner, concOcted the recipe
for a new kind 'Of sausage, which he called the "frankfurter."
In 1875, football uniforms were worn for the first time In a game between
H~ard ll,nd Yale .in New Haven, CoM.
In 1937, NBC formed thl! first full-sized symphony orchestra exclusively·
for radlo ·broadcasttng.
In 19ll, Mother Frances Xavier Cabrln! became the first u.s. citizen to
he beatll!ed.
Ten years ago: The U.S. Senate approved the Alaska plpetlne bill and
sen! It to President Richard Nixon for his signature.
Five years ago: The staff of the Federal Trade Comrnlss!on proposed
!hat used-car dealers he required to disclose defects In their vehicles and
state plainly what warranty protection is provided.

News item: Sentries in the Marine compound were not allowed loaded guns,

should be noted that unless Congress and the White House come to
some agreement before the end of
November, the commission will go :
out of existence anyhow.
At the bottom of this confi!ct is a
philoSophical Issue of real meaning.
Is raclal-ba)ance busing a good
thing? Should employment practi·
ces and college enrollment be
predicated upon numerical quotas?
Present m embers of ihe commls·
s!on say yes. Reagan's nominees
say no.

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service
forecast lor Swulay predicts snow lor parts of the western Great
Lakes with rain predicted for the northwest and stretching over the
Rockies Into the central Rockies. (AP LaserphOto).

Now we get to the beart of the
matter. You would never believe it
ll you listen to the outcries from the
c!vU rights lobby, but we had an
election In 1980. That election pitted
the attitudes and policies of Jimmy
Carter against the attitudes and
policies of Ronald Reagan. And
Reagan won. He won
overwhelmingly.
Throughout the campaign, Rea·
gan made no secret whatever of his
views In the area of affirmative
action. The president believes in
equal opportunity. He opposes
racist quotas. He believes It ls
fundamentally wrong to bus little
ch!ldren to school solely by reason
of the color of their skins. These
views are widely shared hy blacks
and whites alike. It is a fair
assumption that many persons
voted for Reagan at least in part
because of these views. This is the
stuff from which mandates are
made.
It seems to me that Reagan has
not only the right but also an
obligation to nominate persons to
executive agencies who are in
general agreement with his politi·
cal philosophy.

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Chance of ratn late Mopday and on Tuesday and Wednesday. Daily
highs from the mid40s to mid-50s. Morning lows mid·20s to rn!d·30s
Monday and mostly mld·to upper 30s Tuesday and Wednesday.

Drier air for Sunday
By The Assoc!aled Press
The low pressure storm cell that brought the snow to Ohio was over
northern New England Saturday morning. Strong high pressure ran
up the Mississippi Valley into central Canada. The center was over
southwest Ontario. Lower pressures were over the U.S. and
Canadian rocldes.
The New England low will pull out over the northwest Atlantic as
high pressure slowly moves.our way. Drier alr associated with the
high pressure will help to put an end to the snow In northeast Ohio, ·.
and dry conditions should be the nile over the entire state Sunday.
The high w!ll move east of Ohio on Sunday, and the Rocky
Mountain low pressure will move our way. This new system will not
be as strong as the last one, but will threaten the area with wet
weather by late Monday Into Tuesday and Wednesday.

The nation's weather
\

Support .to. survive ________Ja...,...ck_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan should certify Argentina's
progress in human rights and
remove the embargo on U.S. arms
sales as soon as the new govern·
ment is installed . Not only was the
democratic election Impressive
evidence that Argentina's long
nightmare of rn!Utazy repression is
coming to an end, but the fledgling
democratic government wUI need
U.S. support to survive.
A year ago, Congress authorized
the president to lift the embargo
once he was satisfied that Argentina's observance of basic human
rights had Improved . If the discre·

dited Argentina military leadership
doesn't panic at the last minute and
stop the inauguration of Raul
Alfonsin on schedule next month,
the lifting of the arms embargo
would demonstrate U.S. support for
the new preslden t. _
The embargo, imposed by Con·
gress In the mld·1970s, was Intended
as a stamp of disapproval mi the
military junta. Its "dirty war"

some of the countries that now get
against left·wlng terrorists but·
U.S. arms. But oppon~nts of
chered at least 6,00J Argentines and
certification
keep upping the ante.
possibly as many as 20,00J, includ·
·
Bushnell
warned
that an insistence
lng pregnant women.
Is
doing harm to a
on
perfection
A£ early as 1975, I took up the
government
that
has mended Its
cause of the Argentine's "desapareways
and
now
seems
headed for
cldos" - the disappeared ones commitment
to
even
stronger
and backed U.S. sanctions, includ·
democracy.
lng the arms embargo. But there
One new condition the certiflca·
has been a stunning turnaround in
tion opponents insisted on was free
the Argentine government's attl·
elections. My associate went ' t~
tude toward the rights oflts citizens.
Buenos Aires to see whether the
President-elect AHonsln is a moder·
election met the standards we take ,
ate who is completely untainted by
for granted In this country.
the military's sordid record of
A na Ilona! election commission
torture and executions.
official spent 90 minutes explaining
John Bushnell, U.S. charge d'af·
every step of the voting process; It,
!aires In Buenos Aires. argued
would be famll!ar to any American
forcefully for certification in talks
voter. Representatives of the two
with my associate Dale Van Atta.'
major pol!tical parties were stall·
Other embassy officials, of differ·
oned at each check-off table: the
lng political sympathies and for a
voters marked their ballots In the
variety of reasons, agreed that
secrecy of the "cuarto oscuro," or
certification should rome as soon as
dark room. In fact, one U.S.
possible.
.
observer
concluded that there was
There is little question that In
less
posslbll!ty
of vote fraud In
recent years Argentina's human
Argentina
than
in some U.S.
rights reeord has been better than

precincts.
The elections were surprisingly
orderly, marred by oniy a few
Incidents of minor violence.
Hundreds of thousands of Penr
n!stas were trucked into Buenos
Aires for a mass rally in the main
plaza. Many youthful "descamlsa·
dos," or shirtless ones - the
historic backbone of the Peronlst
party- had stripped to !he waist in
the warm Argentine spring.

I

(ContlnuedfrompageAl)
.. bu!lding was complete.
"Wehadtopresent .aplantothe
bankers when we borrowed this
moneyastohowweweregotngto
pay It back," said Commissioner
Verlin Swain. "The money Is In the
bankforconstrucuon."
To help pay that debt over a

My associate, clearly a foreigner
and carrying a movie camera, was
able to elbow his way to within 50
feet of the speakers' plal1orm. he
encountered only one rowdy youth,
who shoved him twice, and a pair of
pungllng pickpockets - hardly an
alarming show of misconduct in a
crowd of more than one mUlton at
the close of a bitterly contested
election campa!RJ~.

2Q.yearperlod.commlsslonershave
requested all officeholders to cut
their budgets hy 5 percent. Swain
said 1984 county department
budgetsalreadyrenectthatcut.

risk."

"It must have been a tough
decision for him."
"When• you're deallng with the
news, there are no easy one5. For
example, we know an all-out frontal
assault on the American media

the air Thursday to give his report,
the American people bought the
whole thing."
"Apparently by going Into Gren·
ada you not only sent a message to
the Soviets and Cubans, but to the
American press as well."
"You might say that. The Reagan
government is no longer a paper
tiger as far as the media in this

country is concerned. We proved
for the first time a well-armed,
highly disciplined military force
can rout a badly demora!!zed press
corps without one shot being fired."
"Then from your standpoint, the
press-free Invasion was worth it."
"This Is only the beginning. You
haven't seen anything yet."

and Children (WIC) program In the
county was defeated by 43 votes last
Tuesday. Jt was first approved' by
voters in 1973 and was renewed in
1978.
Vallee said the board of health;
stated to meet Dec. 7, will examine
possible service readjustments and
the other possibility of cutting hours.
He expects the department can
exist for another year without the
levy, but noted ''our plans would be
to present ourselves better" In a
future effort to get the levy renewed.

Berry's World

Some evacuated
families fac~
long wait

.'

'

~CI-~ . , . •
-·-

Q,.•

Nov.1 but
received
veterans.
thatnot
were
datedby
and
mailed
checks
They were among a total of1,907 for
the month of October sent to
Tucson·area veterans enrolled
under the GI blll.
James C. Price, a spokesman for
the regional VA office here, said
authorities had not determined
whether the checks were stolen.
"We really don't know what to
think,." he added.
·
In San Francisco, off!cla!ssa!d the
government benefits checks may
have been routed from the postal
center at San Francisco Interna·
tlonal Airport to the Philippines,
then sold to business peopole after
the dollar amounts were altered.

.!'"'

is up to now?"
•

I!YI!l')'day to see hOW bad the turnea

are.

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area, has tags, family member. We
miss him so much, please let us ilnow,
we just had family portrait at Lear's for
Christmas. We want to make sure he is

and 45 knots.
Maurer said the snow may seem •
early, but that the weather service's
record books show average snowfall
of 5.4 inches in Cleveland during
November. During November 1982,
2.2 Inches of snow were recorded in
Cleveland, compared to 2.9 Inches
the year before.
The area averages 53 inches of
$now each winter.
' ·

~~~~
IIB8 .:

"I've never seen anything of this
scope before," said Steve Ramsey,

Attorney Brent A. Saunders

'

REPORT OF CONDITION

The Central Trust Company, N.A.
of Cincinnati In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1983 pub·
ltshed In response to call made by ComptroUer of the Currency under title 12
United States Code, Section 161, Charter number 16416 National Ba~k Region Num:
ber 4.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions ........ ........ .. ................. $ 210,600,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... .... ............... .. ...... ................ .. ........ .. ...... 126,882,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies
and corporations .... ...... ... ......................... .. ........................... :.. 46,503,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .................. .. ................... , .......... ........ .... ...... 146,174,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debe ntures ........... ............ .......... ... ............ ..... 340,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ............. .......................... l.909,000.00
Trading account securities .... ... ................................................ .. .......... 32,000.00
Federal Funds Sold ................................ ..................... .. .......... .. ...... 23.950,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income! ........ $807,520,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses-;.............. . 7,989,000:oo
Loans, Net ........... ,...... .... .................. .. ......... ., ............................... 799,531,000.00
Lease financing receivables ........................................................ 99,359,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
.
other assets representing bank premises ...................................... 22,607,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises ........................ ............ 7,983,000.00
Customers' liability to this bank on acceptanc~s outstand!ng ............ 41,678,000.00
~I her assets ..... ...... .. ..................... .. .... .... .... .................................... 41.678,000.00 .
OTAL ASSETS .... .......................... .......................................... $1,549,731,000.00
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ... ........ ................. ...................... . ..... .. ........... $ 301,917,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individual s, partners hips,
and corporations .... .......................... ..... ....... .. ... ........ ................. 684,205.000.00
Deposits of United States Government ........................................... 684,205,000.00
Deposits of States and ·polltlcal subdivisions
In the United States ................. ,, ................................................. 138,057,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks .... ............................. ... ...................... U,983,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .......... .... ........................................... 15,752, 000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES .... $1 ,151,414,000.00
Total demand deposits ............................ .. .. .. ..... 331,729,000.00
Total time and savings deposits .......................... 819,685,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN FOREIGN OFFICES ............ 27,100,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS .............. ......................... , .... .................... .... 1,178,514,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under, agreements to repurchase ................................................ 204 ,060,000.00
Interest-bearing demand notes (note balances)
Issued to the U.S. Treasury ..................... .. .......................... ......... 25,068,000.00
Other liabilities for borrowed money .......... ...... ................................ 2,006,000.00
Bank's ltabl!lty on acceptances executed and outs ta nding ........ ........ . 2,183,000.00
Other l!abll!tles ............................... .. .................................... ... ....... 28,478,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES ............................................................... $1,440,309,000.00
CAPITAL ACCO t\~TS
Common Stock
a. No. shares authorized
1,500,00
b. No. shares outstanding
1,270,237 .... (par va lue) ................. 12,702 ,000.00
Surplus ................................... ... ....... ..... ...... .... ... ........................... .46,447,000.00
Undivided profits .................................. ........ .............. ............. .... ... 50,273.000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .................... ....... .. .......... .................... 109,472.000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........................... 1,549,732.000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Standby letters of credit:
Standby letters of credit, total .................. .................. ............. $ 63 ,875.000.00
to U.S. addresses (domicile) ......... .............. .. ... $58,635,000.00
to non· U.S. addresses (domicile~ .................. .. . $ 5,240,000.00
Time certificates of deposit In denominations
of $100,(XX) or more ................!' ................ , ..................... ......... .. 218,895.000.00 .
Customers' l!abilty on acceptances outstanding ............................ 2,183,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository institutions ...... .... .... .... .. ............... 235,674,000.00
Federal funds sold ........... ...... ..................................................... .28, 795,000.00
Total loans ............................................................. .... ................ S08,481 ,000.00
Time certificates of deposit in denomtna lions
·
of $100,000 or more .................... ·.... , .......................... : ............ :. 230,608,000.00
Total deposits ............ , ................................. .... ....... ... .'... .......... 1,103,253,000.00
Federal funds p·urchased and securities sold under
.
agreements to repurchase ................ ..... : .................. .... ........... 230,080,000.00
Other Uabllltls for borrowed money ................................ :............... 2,091,000..00
Total assets ................ ..... ... ............... .. ....................... ...... ....... $1,522,880,00Q.OO
'

I, Fred H. Gardner, Vice President &amp; Comptroller of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best of mY.
knowledge and belief.
·
·
Fred H. Gardner
October 6, 1983

The Altove
.

.

42 Cons St.

0-brNEA,Inc , ~~.,_

"What do you suppose AT&amp;T

TUCSON, Ariz. tAP) - Federal
. investigators are trying to deter·
mine what happened to as much as
s:nl,OOJ worth ofVeterans Adrninis·
!ration checks that were maUed but
disappeared, officials say.
Meanwhile, more than 1,500
government benefit checks for
retired federal workers in the San
Francisco area have disappeared,
and federal Investigators suspect a
$100 million multinational crtrne
ring Is responsible.
A VA spokesman tn Phoenix said
the Secret Service and U.S. Postal
Servlce have joined in the hunt for
more than 1,(XX)educatlonal benefits

Announce the Association of

CRESTLINE, Ohio (AP) - It
could be from a week to a month
before residents of about 10 houses
here can return home alter a
. chemical spUi from a derailed tanlt
car.
An unidentified pollee dispatcher
said the Ohio Environmental f&gt;ro.
teet ion Agerjcy told the residents to
walt until butyl acrylate fumes
dissipate, and thatcouldtakeas long
. as ooe month.
Ohio EPA spokesman Ken
Schultz J;ald about :m people were
evacuated from a llv,e-block ·area
after the Thursday night deraU·
ment. By Friday afternoon, all but
those who lived along Paramore
Creek had been !Jefmltted to return
homP.
The spill occUlTed at about 9: 00
p.m.!nlhecommunltyof5,400whell
n111e railroad cars derailed on a
Ccmra11 line.
The pollee dispatcher said she is
.
II!Uing callers to cheek their homes . . , . ,

The weather service issued a
traveler's advisory for the northern
part of Ohio, but the State Highway
Patrol reported no serious weatherrelated problems.
Temperatures dropped through
the day Friday, as rain changed to
snow flurries In Columbus and the
southern portions of the state.
A gale warning was issued for
Lake Erie, with winds between 35

Probe of missing
ch~cks underway

ATTORNEYS AT ·LA W'

"very carefully."

The levy which has supported
such programs as lmrnunlzations
andoperatlonoftheWomen,Infants

man, said about al,OOJ customers
had power outages Friday evening.
mostly In the eastern suburbs.
"It was high winds, doYmed Unes,
those kind of problems In combina·
lion with ice on the lines," Schneider
said.
An Ohio Edison power outage
Friday evening in downtown Lorain
hindered The (Lorain) Journal
newspaper and St. Joseph Hospital,
which went onto backup power.
Snow depths Friday night ranged
from about 1 Inch at Toledo and
Sandusky in the northWest part of
the state to 2 Inches at Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport and
around 3inches In the northeastOhlo
snow belt, kid National Weather
Service spokesman Roger Maurer.

By The Associated Press
The first snow Qf the season
played havoc with motorists and
utility companies in northern Ohio.
Snow whipped into the eastem
suburbs of Clevelancj at .the evening
traffic rush hour Fliday, snarling
traffic and making driving rondl·
tlons hazardous.
Some eastern suburbs, in what is
knOW!! as the snow belt, put street
parking b(lns into effect, as s~owfall
of up to siX inches was expected.
The Ohio Turnpike was reported
as wet across the state, and driver
ca utions were In effect.
. The weather caused scattered
power outages tn northeast Ohio.
· Todd Schneider, a · Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. spokes·

Douglas M. Cowles AND
Jolynn Bost.er

"Theonlyposltionitookwasfine.
we'll abide by the wishes of the
people," he said,
Dr.GeraldVallee, countyhealth
commissioner, said health depart·
ment operation will be looked at

Many predicted there would be
blood in the streets of the capital if
Alfonsin woh.
·
·

Ar_t_Buc_h_wa_l_d

would not work in a peacetime
environment. The American people
tend to get very nervous If you
launch an attack on the media when
no lives are at stake."
"Don't tell me you invaded
Grenada just to give the American
press a bloody nose?"
"No, Grenada fell Into our laps.
We had to go In there anyway, so we
decided we might as well mop up
the media at the same time. We
used as our textbook the British
military operation tn the Falklands.
Maggie Thatcher was able to rout
the entire British press corps with
minimal casualties to her government. A secret study by Her
Majesty's Forces indlcated the
British people were far more
content to hear the news of the
fighting !rom the government
officials than they were to read
eyewitness dispatches In their
paper and see televls!oill!lm of the
action.
':'But.'' he continued, "we. also
knew we had to complete the
Grenada aci!on fast, because the
American people would only siand
for a news blackout for just so long
before they would start asking
questions. Once we worked out the
policy we turned It over to the
mil!iary for execution."
"The Joint Chiefs must have been
elated with the assignment."
"They were thrllled .. The Navy
was assigned ·to prevent all press
landing hy sea. The Air Force was
ordered to turn back chartered
planes. The Rangers were in·
structed to knock out any short·
wave radlos operating on the
Island. Not one television crew
managed to get ashore. We held the
information high ground lor three
days. It gave us enough time to put
· out the story the way we wanted It
told. When the president went on

,
By The Associated Press
Rain and snow covered muchofthenat!onSaturday, with showers
over much of the Northeast turning to snow that dropped up to 4
inches in some spots.
Light rain fell on the southern California coast, while sides
elsewhere were mostly clear.
In tlie East, rain spread from northeastern New York to Maryland
and changed to snow over parts of New York state. The snow line
extended across northwestern Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, West
VirgiOia and the western part of VIrginia. Four inches of snow fell in
Uniontown, Pa.
Travelers' advisories for snow and blowing snow were posted for
parts of lower Michigan, North Dakota and Colorado.

After election

V for Victocy_______~__
The swift, bloodless victory by
our armed forces over the entire
American press corps in the Ba tile
of Grenada wUI go down In history,
as far as many Americans are
concerned, as President Reagan's
finest hour.
Government officials have lifted
· the lid of secrecy as to how it was
accomplished.
One of them told me, "We
couldn't have done it without the
support of the American people.
For some time our !ntell!gence
sources Indicated the media was
vulnerable to a surprise attack.
There was great dissatisfaction In
the country with the constant
drumbeat of had news the peoplf
were getting from their press and
electronic sources. The so·called
'free press' forces were perceived
as a bunch of thugs hiding behind
the 'people's rtght to know' llberal
Marxist doctrines."
"So your people decided it was
the right moment to overthrow the
First Amendment."
"It wasn't that simple. We
needed an excuse to take on the
press. If the administration could
dramatize the media threat to the
country, and prove tbe government
was a much more dependable
source of Information, the Reagan
administration could win the hearts
and minds 'of the people. Of course
every adm!nlstration has wanted to
launch a preemptive strike against
· the media, and it's been war-gamed
in the White House situation room
for years. But President Reagan
was the first one wllllng to take the

.....'
••

First snow slows northern Ohio traffic

ll-2

What electi~ns are all about_.J___am_es_J._K__:ilpa_·t_ric_k
t\ Division of

The Sunday nmes-Sentinel-l'age-A-3

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

,.

..

a&gt;EN DAD.Y .JO 1U. 8:00
OOSP&gt;Il~'YI

IU- • •• +• 0 t t. t • t t • t • t • O
•
'

..

oJ I2J

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this statement of resources and l!abltties. We declare tha! it has been examined by us, and to the best of
our knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Joseph D. Landen
James K. Lewis - Directors
James E. Mountjoy

v

I

J

. ··:
."

' '

...
'·

~

.

�Page--A-4--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Nowmber 13, 1983

November 13, 1983
•

•

organ donations , her father says_
A futile 10-month wait for a liver
transplant ended Fiiday with the
death of the blond, blue-eyeq baby
girl. Besides Reagan's radio appeal
broadcast nationwide, Texas Gov .
Mark Wl)ite issued a caU for
contlibutions to pay her hosphal
bills and friends raised overS100,roJ

)~:achus selected.man of year
; , GALLIPOLIS - Wllliam N.
: ~ac hus , 85j State St.. has been
~elected Gallia County's man of the
. year and will be honored at the
Southeastern Ohio Regional CouncU's annual awards banquet.
The banquet will be held at 6:30
:-p.m. Thursday at the Ohio Univcr: sity Inn, Athens. Ahospitality hour is
-scheduled for 5:30p.m.
: Eachus, who-has been In p(ivate
-law practice in Gallipolis since 1974,
:is a 1963 graduate of Gallia
:Academy High School and received
' a _bachelor's degree with majors in

economics and accounting from
Ohio State University in 1968.
He graduated magna cum laude
from Capital University law school
in 1974. Duling military service, he
was commissioned a lieutenant in
the U.S. Army In 1969 and received
an Army commeilda lion medal in
1971.

In bake sales and'golf tournaments.
"Hopefully. some other family
won't have to go through what we've
gone through," Ashley's father.
Greg Gossett, said at a news
coriference, his eyes filling with
tears.
"Some kind of public awareness
has got to come from this because
that's why Ashley is no longer with
us. I don't want to see somebody else
go throtigh this, becauS&lt;' it's painpure pain," he said.
Gossett said he learned three
tlnnes of livers that would have been
available for transplant if hospitals

Hospital
toward twins

Retur'ning to Gallipolis, he was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl --c Now
assistant county prosecuting attor- that Columbus has its first so-called
ney in 1974-76, assistant city solicitor "test-tube" bliby, University Hospi·
In Gallipolis in 1974-76 and became a tal officials are looking forward to
full- tlnne city solicitor In 1976, another milestone test-tube
twins.
resigning earlier this yea!'.
Dr. Moon H. Kim, director of
He is president of Diversified
Investors Inc. and Diversified University Hospital's in -vitro fertill Management Inc. From his home . zation laboratory, said Thursday
office at 417 Second Ave., ·he also that a participant in the program is
operates branch offices in Colum - carrying twins. The first birth from
the program, a 9-pound, 5-ounce
bus and Parkersburg, W.Va.
His other activities include being boy, came Thursday to a Columbus
on the varsity football squad at OSU woman.
"We're. relieved that it is a
In 1964-67, member of the First
perfectly
healthy infant," he said.
Presbyterian Church, president of
the Gallipolis Area Chamber. of "It turnedouttobenlnemonths, two
Commerce in 1900-82, and a weeks and two days from fertilizamember of the city board of wning tion to birth."
The parents of the chlld asked to
appeals and the county's Communremain anonymous, and no further
ity Improvement CoJl)Oration.
Eachus also belongs to Gallipolis details of the birth were released by
Elks Lodge, Gallia County Gun the hospital.
"They are a very quiet and
Club. Morning Dawn Lodge of the
Masons, Gallipolis Shrine Club and - reseJVed couple," Kim said. "We've
enjayed their patience in waiting for
the chamber of commerce.
· William N. Eachus
He and his wife, Karen, are the birth."
Although Klnn did not identify the
·- - - - - : - - - - - - - - - . parents of a son, Michael.
Tickets for the banquet are woman expecting twins, the Columavailable at the chamber office. busCitizen-JournalreportedFriday
iombq t"nn.. · itntintl
Reservations musl be made prior to that she is a Cincinnati woman due
LJSPS 525-800
to deliver in mid-February.
Tuesday.

Member: Thf" A..'lsociated Prf"ss. Inla nd
Da ilv Press Associa tion a nd the Amerl ·
{'a n 'NL'\v!!ipaper Publi.~ h ers AssOCiation,
~a r lona l

Ad\'CI'tiSUlJ{

Represenra t.l ve.

BranhJm , li17• WC'st ;-.li nt:' Mile Road.
Su ite 201, [)('trol t, Mil·hig&lt;m. 4!Jli5.

'

·'

'

'

•

•

StJBSCRIPTION RATES
Hy Carrier or Molor Route
One Y.'eek .................. ............... $1 .00
SNGLECOP\'
PRICE

3J Cent1o
~o ~ ubsc r l ptl o ns

by mail IJ('r m ltted in
tO\\llS where h ome carrier servtcP !s

-·

:JVa ilablf'.

The Sundav Ti mes·SE: nd nel l'.i.ll not be
responsible· for adva ncf' pa:,.m e nts madr
10

canters

250-300 lbs. avg. per side.

Sunda;y Only

~

n nc-vcar ................................. $20.80

for information, or to order:
Call Merrill Evans, 446-4907

Six rilon!hs ............................... $10.40

..
~,2

DaU)' and SOndas
1\l&gt;\ll.. SURSCRIPTIONS
ln..'ilde Ottlo
Weeks .......... ....... ............. $51.4H
Rak.~

. ... ........ $'l7.:JJ
.. ................... $14 .CW
Oul!&lt;ildc Ohlu

:-12 \\'('(&gt;kS ........
:.'6 \\'('('kS ........
1:1 W('(lks ........

.. ................. $5(: ,16
.. .... $29.64
. ........... , .$15·.:.n

26 \\'(,;&gt;k s .
U \A'f{.'ks ....

Johnie Russell

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Thru Sat., Nov. 19

GO TO CHURCH [VERY SUNOAV

We Resente The Riqht to. Limit . Quantities

Taking
Orders For
Fresh Turkeys
From The
Eddie lewis Farms

$}

09LB.
LB.

$ 09

HOLLYWOOD

SPARE
R
HOMEMADE

HAM
·SALAD

HALF HAM
LB.

ON

$169

KEROSENE HEATERS

$pg
LB.

LB.

LB.

99¢
.

9LBS.
UP

LAND OF LAKES

89

TURKEYS ~~l

LB.

89

KERO-SUN
.,

¢

APPLE SAUCE

388-8801

16 112

19

oz.$

ANS

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE!
REGULAR $729.95

REYNOLDS
WRAP
ROLL

SOCK

STRETCH JEANS

12.50

BY LEVI 'S
SIZES 28 TO 38
REGULAR S29.95

Special

3 PR.

$1999
\!~if
LEVI'S

Regular, Straight Leg,
and Boot Legs
14 Oz. Denim

$1950

FREE Bandana or
Authentic Levi Poster

GREEN BEANS

WILSON

oz.

16

CANS

$

NOW

$59800

• Sharpness Control • Digital Channel Numbers
• Set-And-Forget Volume Control • Early
American Styling ... Cabinet Constructed of
Genuine Pine Solids, Wood Compos1t1on Board
and Simulated. Wood Accents
·Including 42 unscrambled cable channels

SAVE 55.00

WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE
I

1.9

170Z.$
CANS

LEVI
'DRESS
SLACKS

.,

59 ~

8
2/S}

¢.
•

60Z.

EVAP.'
MILK
SWANSON

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

CORN

3/$1.
age
99'

5LB.
BAG

SHURFINE LT. BRN.

LB.
BAG

CONFECTIONERY 2

SUGAR

CRANBERRY
SAUCE

PUMPKIN

Value

VALLEY BB1

ALL ·5141:;:)

69~

LB.

FREEZERS IN STOCK
95

$

50

NLY
FREE DELIVERY &amp; NORMAL INSTALLATION!

42 GALLON_ , ELECT~I.C., . .
WATER HEATER ONLY

$} -1900

30 -GALLON GAS
.

WATER HEATER

994

BUTTER MIL"' GAL.

!

•

VALLEY 8B1

2% MILK

GRAPES

ROOF COATING

'

¢

29 oz..
CAN

SIZES 28 TO 38

•

BIG SALE ON GAS, KEROSENE, COAL
&amp; WOOD HEATERS
· LOWEST PRia, BIGGEST STOCk
65,000 VENTED GAS HEATER
ALL
35,000 VENTED GAS HEATER
40,000 UNVENTED GAS HEATER
SALE
. 20.000 UNVENTED GAS HEATER
PRICED
·9,300 KEROSENE HEATER
COAL &amp; WOOD HEATERS
OLD FASHIONED KEROSENE HEATER .................. S29.9 5
·30,000 BTU SPAa HEATERS ............................. $198.95

ALUMINUM
ASPHALT

ANGERINES

10¢

'"

EA.

ONIONS

69¢3

FINANCING AVAILABLE -

614-992-2181 -

· we WILL ·NOT
'

LB. BAG _

HOOVER
UPRIGHT

Rer.

'6975

'99.• NOW

SPECIAL DISCOUNT PRICES AT
POMEROY LANDMARK ON ALUMINUM ASPHALT ROOF CRATING, BLACK ASPHALT. ROOF
COATING. ROLL ROOFING, All
KINDS OF ALUMINUM ROOFING.

:

OCEAN SPRAY

LIBBY'S

GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL CONSOLES
$100 DIS_COUNT DURING
OUR BIG TV SALE

.

CHICKEN
BROTH IJY. oz.

STOKELY

Model

8
CROUTETIES&amp; oz.
STUFFING

$500

tliH.I IE
ILACl MITIUI
I"ICJUI( lUll

KELLOGG

STOKELY CUT O_
R SHELLIE

Value

6 PR. $1QOO

128.00

29599¢
$

LB.

STOVE TOP

INTERWOVEN

-- --.0. &amp;£COHO A'tiHUI : " ' . : . ' :

~IIIEYSEIII AAI!"'CAfoo!KIIIIOCIIf'

25PC4841 L

MARBLE CHEESE .......... JP, .... ~
STOKELY

Haney's Custom Butcher Shop

t1J)r

faa/~~
~

,COLP

$ 29

LB.

$}99

Pul;or• Quo rtz _
Always a beat beyond.
In techno logy In value . fi)

Sale
Retail
GRB ............. $187
$ 93.50
GRF9 .......... $259
$129.50
GR9............ $235
$117.95
611 ............ $229
$114.50

SUPERIOR

BOILED
HAM

Pulsar offer the ultimate in
lue. All quartz with styling you
won't believe. Come see our
complete selection.
Layaway now for Christmas.

COMFORT-GLO
SALE
$155
$155
$135
$ 90
$100

.CHICKEN BREASTS

LB.

S50-S165

.UTfiUJIC

HEAVY DUTY 18FT.·

MEN'S FASHION

Retail
Director ....... $310.00
oti.ni 1os .... mo.oo
Omni 85 ...... $270.00
Omni IS ...... $180.00
Moonlighter ......$200

FRESH SPLIT

LB~ }39
$}59

Priced from

1/2-PRICE

TURKEYS

4"8 LBS.

FRANKIESPKG.

aiTAW A (AP ) - canada has
pared down the i.ist tromwhichitwlll
pick its first astronauts to 20
tina lists.
Of the list. six wlli become
astronaut trainees and, of those, two
will eventually fly aboard space
shuttle missions planned- for 1985
and 1986.
·
A federal selection . committee
whittled down the list from 68
candidates. The names were with·
hejd pending a Nov. 21 news
conference, but the Ottawa Citizen
reported that Bjarni Tryggvason of
·the National Research CouncU, Dr,
Ken Money of Toronto's Defence
and Civil lnstituteofEnvironmental
Medicine and Dr. Douglas Watt o!
McGUl University were among
those selected.

17.2 CU. FT.
REFRIGERATOR WITH
LARGE 4.74 CU. FT. FREEZER!

ANOTHER TRUCKLOAD SALE
BALL

¢

Astronauts listed

l ' lllfl.l.&amp;.lt lll l tAI!~:r~"
THE ULTIMATE
IN VALUE

'

$}57

LB.

$}. 49

12 QZ.

terrorists
"wage
fantasyto commit
wars/' 1r-~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
thus allowing
&amp;=selves
acts of violtJ:-::e ·~at would other·
wise be lnnmorai.

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

GROUND FRESH DAILY

$}79

a fantasy. world," Jenkins said.
"Their organizations are extravagant assertions.

$ 59

TAVERN
HAM -

LB.

"In fact, cutotftr6m most normal
contacts with society, having only
each other to talk to, terrorists Uvein

ROAST

BACON

EXTRA LEAN

they are capable Of self-deiusiOI\."
Jenkins said.
He said studies showed that

CHUCK

PRE-SLICED

GROUND

brutal crimes.
"Terrorists have been unable to
translate the consequences of terrolism Into concrete political
gains," he said. "Nor have they yet
revealed a conv incingly workable
strategy that relates terrorist vio·
lence to positive political power. In
that sense, terrorism has failed."
Yet terrolism has grown in recent
years. The Sta te Department says
therewere7461ncidentsofterrorism
throughout the world last year, up
from 7091n 1981 and only 142 in 19Gl.
After !ewer than 150 deaths from
International terrorism in 1982, ·
Antokoi said, there will be more than '
300 this year In B€irut alone- from
the Oct: 23 bombings of the U.S. and
French rnllltary installations and
the Aplil bombing that killed 52 at
the U.S. Embassy.
Jenkins said this year's total of
deaths from international terrorism
wUl be about 500. He said deaths In
"local" terrorism - "Irishmen
blowing up Irishmen, for Instance"
-will total from 2,(X() to 5,roJ.
"Despite their failure, terrorists
persist In their struggles. Why? Are
terrorists irrational or slnnply slow
learners? Probably neither, but

BONELESS

Orders Must Be
Placed by Nov. 16th~~

or

' [!;;
' =~====-

r-

J'

TOWN'S fiNUI SUPfl MA.KlT _ _,

ENGLISH
ROAST

MAIL SUBSCRIP'TlONS

"

_ _·_,o_u.

Fresh From the Farm
Top Quality, Grain Fed

Buy directly from the feed lot and save!
Custom cut, wrapped and frozen to your
specifications.

I want t.o thank the vot~
ers of Morgan Towf!&gt;ship for their sup,nnrt.

1

GROUND
CHUCK

Freezer Beef Sides

One Month ................ ............. $LID
........... .. ........... S52.80

r-;::=========:;

Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

SUPERiOR

One Yea r

In
Texas
and Minnesota.
Annette
BaUey
Gossett,
21, wore a telephone
beeper and her24-year-old husband
wore a cap bearlng'Ashiey's name
sotheywouldbeeasilyfoundinthe
event of a development
Ashley suffered from billary ·
atresia, an Incurable disease that
hardens the liver. She had been in

Jmun.-Thur .. 9 am til 10 pm

FALL .SPECIAL

Entf'l'cd as S('('()nd class ma i ling ma11er
a r Pnmeroy. Ohi o. Post Oflice.

more to lose.
"I'm Inclined to think that anyone
NE;W YORK (AP) -Terrorists who would commit an act of
tod!IY are less committed to their terrorism Is mentally ill,'' agreed
political causes, run greater per- Norman Antokol, a spokesman In
sonal risks and have fewer chances the State Department's Office for
of success. Yet more people are Combating Terrorism: "Such 1a
dying In terrorism attacks. '
. person would obviously have an_
"This year, 1983, is going t&lt;l" be antisocial personality-"
probably the bloodiest year · for
Jenkins said terrorists' acts were
. which we have any statistics," said no longer necessarily alnned at
: Brlan Michael Je~s, a terrorism changing a polit)cal situation or
· researcher at the )land effecting changes In society the way
: CoJl)Oratlon.
they were In struggles for IndependJenkins says the bomh&lt;i are ence In Israel, Cyprus, Alger!" or
: bigger. the kidnappings more Kenya earller In this century.
· daring and the threats of massIncreased security - the United
. scale, high-technology extortion· States alone spends $:nl rnlllion a
more real as terrorists beCome year to protect its ilipiomats ~
more wU!lng to kill large groups of make it less likely thatterrorists wlli
people. The starkest example Is the escape after accomplishing their
239 American servicemen killed In violence, Jenkins said. -.l
•last month's suicide truck-bombing
"What's -lnnportant for us is to
in Beirut.
make sure terrorists don't get what
''In looking at Incidents with 10 or ·they want," Alltokol said. "We have
more fatalities, we have had more to continue to make it clear that all
already this year than in 19IDS2 such a person is going to get is priSOn
combined," Jenkins said.
or death.''
He said this was In line with the
Jenkins also said the public that
theory that hard-core terrorists are once might have been mobilized by
not so much fanatical believers in a political. violence was less likely to
cause as societal losers with nothing be sympathetic to today' s more
A-ocl•'etl Press Writer

STORE HOURS: .

LB.

A .Uultinu..'t.lla Newspaper
Pu bllshf'cl l.'ach Sun dav, 825 ThiiU
,\ venue, by· ttl(' Ohio Vailt&gt;~' Publishi nR
Com(Xl ny - Mu ltimedia , Inc. Second class
~stage paid a t Galli poli s, Ohio 45631.

ByTIM0111YHARPER

arid out of hospitals since Mliy. and
despite Reagan's plea, no liver
donor was found to match her small
size and blood and tissue types.
She was readmitted IP Cook
Children's Hospital on NoV. 2, arid
her condition became critical Mon- .
day.

burg, N.C., received a new Uverbut
su!!ered heart andkldneycompucations, the hospital said early today as
he remained In surgery.
Since ·Ashley was 4 months old,
her parents, from the west Texas
town of Clyde, have spent much of
their Iinne In hospltal waiting rooms

had known qf Ashley's condition.
Finding a liver was particularly
difficult In Ashley's case because
she weighed less than 15 pounds for
most of her life, said Dr. Robert
Squires, Ashley's physician.
Meanwhile, at the University of
Minnesota Hospitals In Minneapolis, chief of surgery Dr. John
Malarian said, "The irony of the
situation Is that on this very day
we're going to be doing a transplant
on a child just about the size of
Ashley BaUey. A donor Is avaUabie
today - the day of her death. So
that's really quite sad." Ninemonth-old Joshua Brooks Laurin-

'

Terrorism reaches bloody heights this year

Infant's ·death may ratse public awareness
By SCO'IT McCARTNEY
Associated Press Writer
FORT WORTI-1, Texas (AP) Ashley Bailey, thel4-month-oldgirl
who died after an unsuccessful
. search for a llver donor that
· Included a appeal by PreSident
: Reagan, might have lived if people
: were more aware of the need for

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5

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

BE UNDERSOLD
·

90' DAYS .·SAME ~H

- POMEROY LANDMARK
c....,w~h
. ..,_Mllllmum a1dtr
· WI.,hi n 75 111·tes
- JKk
Fr••-dtliYIIJ
sill Wt .. your IICII HotP'!Inl Oultr.
to Sl30. 1111 doltd 115:00 P.l.
·
&amp;IIIIa stlil llson Cavntl•

614

-2181

WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

0

ONLY$124°

�,

Page A-6- The Sundoy· Times-sentinel

~ --

..

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

..-----Local Briefs-__,
Sales tax assessment dismissed
GALLIPOLIS - A sales tax assessment violation lodged l:!y the
Ohio Department of Uquor Control against Fred J . Wray, Rt. 2,
Crown City, doing business ·as Kenny's Carryout, has l:!een
dismissed.

__________

.

The buslnes~ was cited by the department for being delinquent In
payment of sales tax assessments. The department said those
payments have l:!een made by Wray.

PCA office closed
GALLIPOLIS - Jackson Production Credit Association, 228
Upper River Road,' will be closed Wednesday for a personnel
meeti11g.
The office will also be closed all day Nov. 25 for the Th'l!lksglvlng
holiday.

Housing project commended

November 13, 1983

November 13, 1983

RACINE -Woodland Centers Inc. h_as been commended by the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urllan Development (HUD) ·for
completion of a housing project. here for adults with emotional
·
disabilities.
The River Heights project, funded l:!y HUD and managed by
Woodland's transitional services division, is 'a "fine, humanitarian
accomplishment," according Sam uel R. Pierce Jr., HUD secretary.
River Heights is a nine-unit apartment complex completed last
June.

Collins S!lid. "I will accept the
responslblli ty for the SUCCI!SS!!S of
my admlnlstra,tion, just as I will
accept responslbillty for the fall·
ures. The same will be demanded
from my aPPOintees."
The six cabinet secretaries announced by Mrs. Collins Included
three of the major lund raiserS In ,ber
campaign, her husband's cousin, a
top campaign aide and one holdover
from the adminlstration of Gov.
John Y. Brown Jr.
The new cabinet secretaries will
be Mac Thompson of Kuttawa In
,Lyon County, Finance Secretray;
Northern Kentucky physician
Floyd Poore, Transportation Secre-.
tary; Pikev!lle Insurance man

Melvin Wilson, Public Protection
and Regulation Secretary; veteran
state health otttdaJ Elbert "AI"
Austin, ·Human Resources Secretary and Lany Hayes, Cabinet

Poore, Thompson and Wilson had
been chief fund raiserS In Mrs. .
Collins campaign which raised a
record amount of money

Secretary.
Current Corrections Secretary
George Wilson will remain In his
post under Mrs. COllins.
'
Mrs. COllins also announced the
member&amp; Of. her transltioln team.
They will be former state Supreme
Court Chief Justice John Palmore,
fonner state budget direCtor Gor·
don Duke, Frankfort attorney and
fanner U.S. COIJgresSman William
Curlin, fanner ·university of Ken·
tucky football star Rick Norton and
Mary Helen Miller.

Gallia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad
. NOW OFFERING

FREE
Ambulance Service
8 A.M. til 12 Midnight
24'

Hour

..

Service

Saturday &amp; Sullday

§]

Randy Bolduc, chairman of
Temco Inc .. told a news conference
th~tt a sale price of $1.2 mllllon had
l:!een tentatively agreed upon for the
huge IH factory.
Questions about what Bolduc
characterized as "minor details" of
the transaction prevented earlier
signing of a lenerof intent by the two
firms, he said.
Ternco has said it hopes to employ
about 100 people at the plant to work
on metal-fabricating contracts.

POMEROY - Bill Quickel, operator of Davls-Quickel Agency
Inc., Pomeroy, has l:!een elected president of Melgs-Gallia-Mason
Llle Underwriters Association.
· Other officers elected are Ron Toler, Toler &amp; Toler Insurance,
Gallipolis, vice president and program director; Gene Riggs,
PomeroY, John Hancock agent, secretary-treasurer; and Walter
Grueser, Pomeroy, past president, as national committeeman.
At the meeting where tbe election was conducted, the group
discussed 20 advantages of buying an Individual retirement account
from qualltled Insurance agents Instead of financial institutions.
Bill Russell, NationWide agent in Mason, discussed new universal
llle policies offered by the association's companies as compared to
other policies on the market.
The association will meet again at 6 p.m. Nov. 22 at Down Under
Restaurant, Gallipolis. All area llle Insurance agents and their wives
are Invited to attend. State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-Galllpolis, will be
speaker.

11 86'

"Gas 8r Go" Service Center Toy
clUdes 5 occessortes tor 1'\ou'a ot play/

CANTON, Ill. (AP) - An Oak
Brook, Ill., marketing firm announced Friday it expects to sign_an
agreement within two weeks to buy
!he 36-acre, closed International
Harvester Co. plow plant in Canton.

•

Life
Insurance
· For
Everyone
you love

Two injured in Friday wreck

~

Sale
·Price
Commodore• Vlc·20~

(i)

t~Br

.

Full-fteged computer with
oraphics, music and morel

Gall iP.olis, Oh.

Ph. 446-8235

Ho•• 38&amp;-9611

(ceo••• ......... •

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

Sale Price Ea.

$10,~13

Frattrnal Lift lnJ11rance
~

. I

Ruth Miller, 70, Gallipolis, was
The driver
ol another
vehicle,
treated
and released
at HMC
for ·
contusions. GaUia County EMS
transported her there.

'

Hame Computer

GARlAND M. DIVIS
Sl2 Second A~e.

Offict

.'

GAll.!POLIS - Two women
suffered Injuries following . a two-vehlcle accident on Ohio 100 Friday
In Gallipolis Township and a driver
was cited, reports the GaUia-Meigs
Pt&lt;~t of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Norma Brunk, 38, Rt.2, Patriot, a
passenger In a vehicle driven by
Lloyd Brunk, 35, Rt. 2, Patriot, was
taken to Holzer Medical Center l:!y
private vehicle. She was reported In
saremtisalnlactorytherecondlterntloponraranUd.y ~or
''
ob6ervatlon.

•'

$88

Hon~e

Roc:k hlond , llli"oi5

Commodore'" Vlc·20'"
. Computer Software
Vat!ety ol video games
lor arcade tun at home.
Draw Pokerr" .•• . 604 •. $10
Mnle Attackr• •. • . 605 •• $10
S..aper Smash r•. , ,60&amp; •• $10

129.87

Uoyd Brunk was cited for failure
to yield the right of way and driving
without an operator's license.
The patrol reported MOler and
Brunk were traveling In opposite
direCtions on 160 when Brunk made
. a left tum Into Miller's path.
·

Sale
Price

· Oster Kitchen Center

Clownsn•., .•. ,,, 607 , , $13

Your all around everyday kitchen helper in one compact appliance. Blender/ mixer, grinder, doughmaker slicer/shred·

Super Slot ....... ,608 .$10

,,

~:_-:===7"-o•n•So•"'ii-isa~le~P~ri~ce~S~a=v:e~~::¥&amp;_::d:er~,:sa:la:d~m:a~k:er~. ...;---,~~~f.~i:==~~- ·-~~
'

Oysters Supreme wrapper~ in bacon

l hru

43

Tues.

,,

How d.o you make Captoin D's famous, ~esh,

juicy oysters
even bette!" You w1op them In leonslrlps olbaoon and
~~~'IF-'2:Pr---':llten fry litem in our crispy bleeding,
'"'
that's.howl SixtendeT o)'llerl wtlli
c1eomy cole slaw, ncrurcl cut
ftovortul ~ench ~18$. two
southern ilyie hUih puppie$, our own cocktoil
sauce and a lemon
wedge,We call ~

)

0 )

Brunk's vehicle sustained heavy
damage and Miller's moderate
damage In the 12:45 p.m. accident.
Two single-vehicle wrecks on
Ohio 7 caused by deer crosslhg the
paths of vehicles were Investigated
by tbe patrol Frtday.
At 10:20 p.m. In Addison Township, a deer ran into the path of a

vehicle driven by Leslie Whitting·
ton,44,Mlddleport,wbowasdrivlng
north. The animal was kllled and the
vehicle received moderate damage.
The other accident occurred in
Meigs county in Salisbury Towne
ship at 5 p.m.
A deer ran into the path of a
northbound vehicle driven by Nor·
man Reynolds, 32, Rt. 1, Cheshire.
The vehicle received moderate
damage.

If your doctor suggests that you try o hearing aid,
call the one who has been reliable since 1949 ...

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

444 W. UNION ST.,P.O. BOX 511, ATHENS, 0. 45701
594-3571
HOME APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Quality Tool Box
l6x7'h•7 in. steel constructed.
Model 16. ·

FRUTH PHARMACY
TWO LdCATIONS

6-amp -•ry Charger
Charoes 6- and 12-vott batteries.

~.23.88

Our Reg. 6.97
21-pc. SAE socket set Includes
reversible ratchet,' 3" and 6"

.

e•tenslon bar ptus metal case.
Ideal for home, car or bulinesa.

WEEKDAYS
9 A.M. TILL 9 P.M.
-SUNDAYS
11 A.M. JILL 8 P.M.
~

Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

•Dependable, Low Cost Prescription Service
•3 Registered Phanneciats
•Most eomplete Prelcription Stock
•Itemized Receipts for lrw~rance and Income Tax· Purposes .
.. •We Compound Preecrlptiona
•We FHI All ll*d Party Prescriptions
•We Maintain A Complete Record of all Pr&amp;.IICI'iii&gt;"'

Also, Announcing Our !'fEW Banana Tartt
~

10~97

With COUP«!"

8 lb. '-Nood Maul
c:ollltnlctlotl.

..

''

The Rax Potato Patch~

1.18:

·tione Filled
•Free Parking

'•

J

'

..•,

.. .''
'

..
.......
·. :
..
•' .•
..
.....
'

sourcream.AJI on a fluffy
, , baked potato. It 's just one
. ' of five unloppable toppings
·
our Potato Patch.
indrJdii r10 Broccoli and
Cheese,
and Cheese.
Barbecue Beef and Cheese and
Beef Stroganoff. But you 'II want to
11y them all. So just clip the coupons
and get ready to harvest the savings

Vk've spiced up
our Potato Patch
with a great new
treat from south of
the border. The
Mexican Potato. A
tantalizing combination
of beef. shredded cheddar.
lettuce. zesty sauce, tomatoes,
peppers. Mexican seasoning. and

•.

'

'
'

•.

..

•.

.' ''
'

'

········-~--------·
5oe OFF BAKED POTATO 5oe OFF BAKED POTATO
Hot baked poiato mel your I Hot baked potato and your I
choice of fM! tasty toppings.

IE

This offrr not valid wilh any other discount or

coupon Sales lax cllarged where opplicable.
Offer good al panicipaling RAX
Restaurants only.

I
I
I

choice of OW tasty toppings.

!e

This offer not valid .with any other discount or

coupon Sales laK charged where applicable
Offer good al part.crpalrng RAX
~eslauranls onty.

~CMipon npfrn 11 / !'1/U

I
I
I

MN1'5.

u

'

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.••.

..
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•

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•

•

•••

•
•

•

446-6620- 992-6491

,,

'

. ''

C.pel expll'tll 11/11/11

PHONE'

'

•.
•.

·----------------1503 EASTERN AVE.

10% SENIOR OIIZENS DISCOUNT
. (60 and Over)
KIDDIE-SAY PROGUM-10% DISCOUNT
(far 6 and Under)

•,

.' .''

I
I
I
I

WRIIOOUPOII

..·.

Featuring the New Mexican Potato,.

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

$2.99

•

JOIN US ON WMPO RADIO FOR

And should be examined by a qualified physician .
Medical or surgical intervention may be indicated.

Save '10

• fresh toaed solod -.ilh your choice of three dres1ilgs
• Country wMe beans
• Piping hot baked potalo (served 11 A~H PM) '
Salad, beans or baked potglo tt111en avattoble) may tJI.
IUblltluled lor hnch tiel or cote 11aw wtlh any order
(1-.1 ICIIadarbabcl,.... . . - .

VERE SMITH AUDIO-VISIONS

A MEDICAL PROBLEM ...

.. , , , f,

49

Citations issued

•

'

IS FIRST

$3.39

.Fro$11 banonos blended lntoo creamy banono pudding, en In 0
new g1ohom crocke~ cru~ with whipped topping. Go BancllOi

u:s.

HEARING LOSS

you'll coli ~delicious!

Ws one of our tavo1Hes ...
and yours! An elltra Iorge
se&lt;VIng ol delicious bile
shrimp, served with
cut flavorlul
~ench ~les, cole slow
and two southern ilyle
hush puppies. piiJl cocktail
sauce and a lemon wedge.

Save yqur business
abundle.

r::::::::::::::stu:de:n:t.::::::::~r.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

Oystoo Supreme...

Tender Bite Size
Shrimp Dinner

File for marri@ge

Tri-county insurers
elect new president .

OurReg.14.96
Flsher-Prlce's 0 siurdy itlte "Gas • Go"
resembles a reo/ gasollne pump. In-

IH plant site
to be bought

NEW - BID Quickel, right, has been named new president ol
Melp-Gallla-Mason Ule Underwrite"" Association. H~ Is congratulated by Walter Gmeser, past president, who wU1 now serve as
national cornmltteemaD. Quickel and Grueser are Pomeroy

l'I!Sidents.

PUCO slates public hearing

Although 8o Is sick and weak and l:!een shut down for extended periods
production of a great deal of acid,"
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP)- Foran
Chew said.
requires Intravenous feeding be· of time," Chew said. The: treatment
OhlocanlnenamedBo, thedog'sWe
Ohio State has one of three causeofwelghtloss,he'sstillstrong costs more than $500 a week, but
lately has meant treatment on a
enough to ll1t his head to greet
two-thirds of the expense is being
kidney dialysis machine.
covered by the OSU's Canine
Bo, a 4-year-old, black-and-white veterinary hospitals in the nation visitors and roll his eyes In
Research Fund.
mixed !:!reed, Is being treated at the equipped with a k!drey dlalysls appreciation at technidan Karen
machine. 8o came in1the door at a Shan!:, who, runs theequipment and
8o's case, Chew said, could
Ohio State University Veterinary ·time
when Chew and veterinarian scratches his ears.
provide !r.1portant new information
Hospital.
·
Chew and DIBartgla had hoped
on kidney function and !allure,
The dog was brought to OSU on Steven DIBartola were beginning a
$7,500 project on the use of dialysis that with the assist from dialysis
research which might be helpful In
Oct. 16 after lapping up some
for
dogs with uremic poisoning from Bo' s normal kidney function would
human cases. Chew hopes dialysis
discarded auto radiator fluid, ethy·
ethylene
glycol.
resume
after
several
weeks.
That
can be used to allow time for the
lene glycoL It's a tummon but
As of Friday, 8o had survived a
hasn't happened yet.
kidney to repair Itself after acute
deadly accident for dogs and
record '1:1 days, undergoing several
"No one has ever attempted to see
poisoning attacks.
sometimes cats, says OSU veteri- surgeries.
five blood transfuSions what
after the kidney has
'narlan Dennis J. Chew, because
(.~~~;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~
ethylene glycol has a sweet taste . and,14 dialysis trealments.
that anlmais like.
·
Unless lbe animal is treated in
four to six hours, h'e said, It usually
GALLIPOLIS - A Columbus
wUl die from kidney failure In three
man pleaded guilty to DWI and
or four days.
"The antifreeze Is metabolized by driving left of center Frtday In
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
the liver Into highly toxic chemicals,
Ordered Incarcerated In Gallla
and lbat's accompanied by the
County JaU for three days for DWI
was Tommy E. Chutes, 44. Chutes
was also fined $.'m, placed on 18
months probation and had his
Apple JJI 13usmess System· ~'l6K
.A.Pple \k Busint'SS S\stem: 6-.K com·
computer ~1th bwiHn lltsk J.rwe.
~ter v.ith exumdPd 80 column cml.
GALLIPOLIS - The following
license suspended for 00 days. He
ProF1lt''uhard disk dnve v.1th CJWh'lt~
_
d1
sk
dri\·es.
mon11or.
ami
.-\ppl~
couples fUed for marriage licenses
pleaded guUty to driving left of
monitor. r~ -month Applcr.arrsu .
~~ \l::unx Prmter
this past week In Gallia County 'center l:!ut was not fined for lbat
Carry-In 5ei'\1CC Pl:m
Probate Court.
charge.
Errol R. Roberts, 33, Gallipolis,
Pleading guUty to disorderly
coal miner, and Christina K.
Intoxication was Raymond Clark·
Roberts, 'n, Rt. 4, Gaillpolls, at . son, 56, Park Central Hotel, Gallipoborne.
lis, who was fined $12. Also llned$12
Paul D. Johnson, 20. Rt. 1,
each were Allen D. SOwards, '1:1, Rt.
Northup,
Marine COfPS, and
1, Gallipolis, falluretoyleldtherlght
Nella V. Ortega, 24, Rt. 1, Northup,
of way and Paula R Stanley, 21,
unemployed.
Gallipolis, driving without muffler.
Walker Stiltner, 63, 1670 RiverIntroducing the Apple' lie and Apple Ill Business S)~tems .
Bond forfeited for traffic offenses
view Drive, unemployed, and Rose were Ronald G. Plants, Rt. 2,
They're every1hing you and your small business need to do
F. Sheppard, 65, 862 First Ave.,
Bidwell, $25 and Windel M. Unroe,
financial planning, accounting,or word processing more
sewing center owner-operator.
Rt. 2, Crown City,$.)), both failure to
prodl)ctively
Dana H. Hallhlll, 24, Rt. 1, pay parking violations, James E.
And right now, for a limited time onlv, the Apple lie and
CheShire, drll1er, and Connie S. Calvert, 21, Rt. 2, Galllpolls, $40,
Runnion, 19, Rt. 1, Cheshire, none.
failure to control vehicle, Albert R.
Apple III Personal Computer are both specially priced. You can
Lloyd H. Stowers, 71, Rt. 2, Durooe, 71, 226 First Ave ., $40,
even lease with an option to buy or use Apples convenient
Bidwell, retired, and Effie Swango, failure to stop at stop sign, Andy L.
credit card.
61, Rt. 4, Gallipolls, housewlle.
Fisher, 23, Rt. 1, Gaillpolis, $40,
Either way, yoLJ're in business.
CiarenceJ. Waugh, 72, 215Second Improper l:!acklng, Flem Meade, 33,
Ave., retired, and Fern Evans, 68, Rt. 3, Bidwell, $788.30, overweight
Calj.h~ I&gt; a ti"Jdtom~h of ~ark . Inc ..t;lp\e.the Apple loj.(O and ProF1\e .1n! tndemarks JndApp\ e(:m' ~~a ~r.·1ce
215 Second Ave., retired. •
and Harold L. Thaxton, 32, Rt. 2,
m:11k rJfApple Compu ter Inc. 1) 1~8.~ ~pit' Computer Inc
Dennis W. Mo,llotlan, 22, Rt. 1, Bidwell, $40 and Aaron Phillips, 18,
Gallipolis, truck driver, and Ste- Rt. 3, Bidwell, $39, speeding.
phanle J. Lynn Adkins, 16, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, student.
Charles H. MOler, 33, Rt. 4,
16 WEST UNION ST.
.I
ATHENS
Gallipolis, student, and Nedra A.
GALLIPOLIS _ Cited by city
Cantn.J. 'II, Rio Grande, self· pollee Saturday was Mark A.
employed.
Nelson, 18, Galllpolls, for DWI.
Donald E. SpQrlock, 22, Rt. 2,
Charged Friday were Jean
Patriot, logger, and Karen J. Pace, Roush, 57, Point Pleasant, speed26 • Rt. 2• Patriot, unemployed.
SATURDAY
ing; Robert L. Taylor, 20, :m Upper
FRIDAY
GaRllllcpokylls Au.nemJopnlesoy'ed18and,RTt.eni2, River Road, speeding; and Barbara
9 A.M. TO
8 A.M. TO
•
L S octgr'
Rt
Galll
S.
Moss,
41,
1911
Chestnut
St.,
NOON
. n
ass, 17, . 4,
po11 s. speeding,
.. • •o, . , • c,, , . NOON

Jailed forDWI

'

L

ATHENS- The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio will conduct
a public hearing at 6: 30 p.m. Nov. 22 in Athens city hall to hear
consumer comments on Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Phyllis Casto, a member of Appalachian Ohio Pul:!lic Interest
Campaign (AOP!C), sa id the hearing will allow rural residents an
opportunity to speak out about a proposed rate Increase from the
utUity.
c&amp;SOE requested a rate increase to pay in part for the
construction of the Zimmer nuclear power plant.
Laura Yeomans, an AOPIC spokesperson, said "customers have
already paid too much and received nothing."

Page-A-7 .

Sick dog gets kidney .dialysis treatment

Mrs. Collins makes first appointments
FRANKFORT, Ky. lAP) ·
Gov. -elect · Martha Layne Collins
says she expects the same standards from her cabinet appointees •
ttlat she e1&lt;pects from herself and .
does not apologize for Including her
major fund raisers In the group.
She said she expects them to work
;~s long, as hard and as dedicated for
the people qf Kentucky as they did
forher. ·
"If not , they won't be here," she
said Monday in announcing her first
six cabinet appointments.
"I expect those appointed today
and In days to come to meet the
same standards· I set for myself,
standards of integrity, e1&lt;cellence,
openess and accountai:!Uity," Mrs.

The Sunday Time$-Sentinel
'

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

·'·

�)

l'lmeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

Oh~Point

Pleasant, W. Va.

November 13, 1983

-

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theri er

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,••,.....-n-n'Y•
. ..
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'limts· ~tntin:el

section~
Sunday

November 13, 1983

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. NEW COSMETOLOGIST· Ida Mae Marlin of Middleport
· has accepted employroent at
Kay's Beauty Salon and will
begin her work there Tuesday. A
graduate ol cosmetology at
. Meigs llig!J School il!_ May 1982,
; she has been trained in unlse•
hair cutting, hair styling, color·
ing, permanent waves, laelals
and makeups, a.• well as scalp
treatments and manicures. The
wile of Fra.nJdin lllartin, Middleport, sbe hi'S loor chlldren:
lllargo Ma.rtln, Angela Sellers,
Specialist Fmnklin A. Marlin at
Fort Bl"o~gg, N.C., and Steve
lllartin; at home.

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I

•••••••••••

Veterans' officer
speaks to Rotary

HenrY

HIS PRIDEWell9'
pride of 1983 is Prfnce8s, who
became a field champion Oils
!aiL Tbe retired Melp County

MIDDLEPORT- Hugh Custer,
Meigs County vetera ns service
officer, was guest speaker at the
Friday night dinner meeting of
Middleport· Pomeroy Rotary held
at Heath United Methodist Church.
Custer spoke on services the
Veterans office provides . Dinner
was served by the ladies of the
church.

Coounlssloner bouiht ber as a
pup, pve her file training she
needed, and watdled ber compete with the best, tallin« wbt
alter win to boolme a field
champion.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Oscar· Imboden ,
Middleport; Mary Divers, New
Haven; Elza Larkins. Long Bot·
tom; Dennis Hart . Middleport ;
Malinda Christy, Middleport ;
Freda Mitch, Middleport ; Betty
Friend, Long Bottom; Betty lm·
boden, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Yvonne Scally,
William Hysell. Ronnie Smith.

......

!lOoN

e&gt;o
1"

.

'

•

••

A man and his dogs, wtnners tnany tltnes over
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'l'lme&amp;Senllnel Statl
POMEROY - Every man has
his diversion and for Henry Wells,
It's raising and ~Unnlng be~Ies.
He's been doing It lor years and
his fascination forwatchingbeagles ' chase rabbits stays at a ll!gh.
The only charter member of the
Meigs County Beagle Club stU!
. active with the group, WeDs has.a
; collection of ribbons and trophies to
• prove that his dogs hav~ been
. among the best in competition.
• His pride jusi now ts princesS
(registered name "Well Run Uttle
Acre Princess") which he bought

Emergency run
POMEROY - One emergency
run was made Friday by a local unit
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reported.
Pomeroy was called a t 4:28p.m .
to New Street for Kathryn Diles,
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

Vt

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as a pup. trained and entered In
competition until she accumulated
a total of 1.20 points to "finish," i.e.,
become a field champion.
She started with a licensed trial in
Duncan Falls with 65 other dogs,
but the first time out lost her rabbit
and was dropped from competition.
It was at Indian Springs In
Johnstown where 67 were In the
class that she beat the h!g'h dog and
took her first win. The second and
third wins came not far behind to
make Princess a champion .
But one would expect that from
Princess whose pedigree papers
has red ink galore, proof that she
comes from a long line of winners.

Only the names of ancestors who
are field champions are printed in
red on the registration papers.
And, the.more field champions In
the pedigree, the better the price for
the puppies for those who are Into
breeding.
Now about the field trials.
This Is when the dogs chase the
rabbits. The name of the game Is
cha.se the rabbit, catch It, and let it
loose.. And lor you humanitarians,
dori't get your tempers up. WeUs
says that he has never yet seen a
dog.hurt a rabbit. .
The judging is lJj' points based on
the chase, the dOg's timing, the
accuracy, their bark, and finaUy,

the catch. Speed Isn't au that
Important. according to Wells.
The beegles start running as
puppies in derbies and advance Into
futurias with field trial placement
depending on the age of the dog.
OUt of the 15 registered beagles
which the former Meigs County
Commissioners has in off-theground cages on his Bull Run Road
fatm, he has five which will run In
1984 derbies.
Their training will begin on the
DO-acres In, rural Meigs County
near Harrisonville owned by the
Meigs County Beagle C!u b.
From there, Wells wU! enter
them In other club competition,

where with any luck they'll qualify
for association derby trials. At the
trials, the goal Is to have your dog
score In one of the top five places
which gives what Is · called a
"winner's stake."
Once a dog has acquired a
winner's stake, then it qual!Jies for
statewide trials. The first five place
winners In each class in the
statewide trials go on to the
international In Pittsburgh where
about 600 beagles of the best in the
country compete.
Wells, who has also done sbme
judging, has had It good . For the
past five or six years, lie has had a .
dog qualify for International compe·

tlt!on at Pittsburgh.
Everything there is done by the
age of the dogs which compete In
four classes o' bitches, measuring
13-inches and under; big birches,
those between 13· and 15-!nches;
and males, 23-!nches and under,
and big males . 23· to 25-!nches.
The local club annually sponsors
llcensed trial runs which go on for
four days and attract beagle
owners from across the state.
H's true that raising and running
beagles gets In the blood.
Wells has been doing It since 1950,
and this year alone has had entries
In 38 field trials.

'

N

i

UNITED
; SECURITY &amp;
COMMUNICATIONS
Gallipolis, OH.

446-3144
Ask for Joe or Ross

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

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ICAUL-1 RONICS,

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man's 33
beapee,

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of I'IIIH!g and nQPihoa: regl8lered

'DIE PROMtiE OF lll8« - 'l1lls good loc1kfng
beqle pup II cme of a llUer of live, whlcllllellr)' WeDs
wBl have enlered in derby trials during lll8«. Five of

tbe 15 ~ Wells luui In off·the-gnlund cages wD1

compete In derbies next year.

.

••

.

�'

PC.se-B-2-The Sunday

nmes-Sefn~ti~ne~~~~T::~!f!!!!!!;~;~;~~~;~~~Oh~io--~~Po~i~n~t~PI~-:sa::n~t,~w~.~v~a~.~

Marr anniversary is celebrated

Calendar

NORTHuP - Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn T. Marrwere honored with a
celebration lor their 45th wedding
anniversary, Oct, 15 with a buffet
~er given by their faintly. The
Marrs were married Oct. 2, 1938, at
the home of her parents with the
Rev. Jennings Cremeens perfoiJJling the ceremony.
.
Mrs. Marr is the daughter of the
late Isaiah and Margaret Wells
Notter and Mr. Marr is the son of
the late Wtlllam and Mary Ann
Buchanan Marr ol. Cleveland, Ohio.
They are the parents of four
chtldren, Mrs. Beverly Watson and
Mrs. Joy Barlow of Northup; Ed
Marr of Groveport, Ohio, ancl Larry

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Ken Arns·
bary Chapter of Izaak Walton
League will hold a slug shoot
Sunday at 1 p.m. at .the club
house. Shoots Include free hand
and bench rest. Rifles and
scopes will not be shot In 'Silille
category. Prizes will consist of
money and meat.

we ReseNa The Right

To

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Umit Ouantities.

'

ANTIQUITY - Revival seiVi·

res will be held at the Antiquity
~

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Baptist Church beginning -Sunday lhrcugh Nov. 18 at 7:ll p.m.
nightly. Guest speaker will be
evangelist Blaine Farley. There
will be special music each
evening. Pastor Earl Shuler
Invites the public to attend. ·1_

·Gallia Bookmobile set

$ 39
Chuck R. oast;~...
MIXED

FRESH PORK BUTT

Happenings

Turkey..... ..........
16-22 LB. AVG.

Celebration held for Wells' 50th
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs , Earl · ents, and Gene Wells of Osseo,
L. Wells of Hillsdale Mlch
Mich.; two grandsons, Gregory
observed their 50th wedding anni: Gene and Christopher Earl, both of
versary Thursday.
Osseo, Mich.
Both former residents of Meigs
Due to the Illness of Wells, no
County, Portland Community, they public obsei:Vance was held . The
were married In Portland and lived family, however, did honor them
there until 1963, when they moved to . with a card shower and residents
St. Marys, W.Va. In 19'14, he re'!fi-ed here desiring to send a card to the
from the Ohio Rtver Sand and couple may do so to 81 Hillsdale St.,
Gravel Dredge Co. of Parkersburg, Hillsdale, Mich. 49242.

¢

¢Steak/Roast..,:~;

BUTTERBALL TOM

Mr. anc! Mrs. Earl Wells

¢

·fryer Parts.·... ~~·..

GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette
White Sirrine will meet Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., Ceremony will be
held. All officers are urged to
attend the meeting at the
Masonic Temple.

Foo:l festival

GALLIPOLIS- The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library
bookmobile will be at the following
places the week of Monday, Nov.14,
to Frtday, Nov. 18.
Monday- Lewis Dr., Noon-12: 15
p.m .; C&amp;S Bank (Rt. 35), 12:1512:30 p.m.; West Spts., 12:35-1
p.m:; Meadowbrook, 1: 05-1: 30
p.m .; Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
1:35-2 p.m.; Gallla Metro Estates,
2: ffi-3 p.m.; Pinecrest Care Center,
3: 15-3: ll p.m.; Rodney Village,
4: 15-4: 45 p.m.; Crousebeck Rd.,
5-5: 30 p,m.; Northup, 5:45-6: 15p.m.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Unit Tl will meet Tues·
da y, 7:30 p.m., at the Legion
Hall.

PATRIOT- A revival will be
held Monday through Saturday
at Patriot Church of God.
Services will be at 7: ll p.m .,
nightly.

W.Va., where he had worked 'XI
years. In 1974 they moved to
Hillsdale, Mich., to be near their
son.
They have two children, WUma
Wells, who resides with her par·

LB

~

$ 79
Whole Hams.. ~~..

SUPERIOR E-Z-CARVE BONELESS

S_LAB

Ba co·n............... :~·.

I•

conn1e:s

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
I,NC.
(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy)
PH . 992-6101

..•.j

a real wood and porce lain pepper mill filled with
fresh flowers. One quick cal or vistt to our shop send&gt; it
anywhere In the country. To spice up the ·holiday beautifully.

SNOW BLADES

Send the Pepper Mill Bouquet for
Tlw1ksgiving. Thursday, Nov. 24.

2-35 H.P. BLADES
6' Mold Board

5300 ea.
1-75 h.P. BlADES

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

7' Mold Board

1-Model 3006
BOX SCRAPER

A BOW ABOVE IT ALL.

'The Way America Sends Love."

5575
Tractor Parts in Stock, Plus We
Can Get Quick Delivery On
Ordered Parts.

7 .80
131.20

LADIES'

Save 20% Off

Women's Dress Shoes
Also

20% All Fall &amp;Winter

Handbags

Fashion Blouses

AND

..-..,
.....

JUNIORS'
R.I. II And
donnkenny

Mon . &amp; Fri. Til 8 P.M.
Tues .. Wed,, Thurs.
&amp; Sat. Til 5 P.M.
DOWNTOWN GAlLIPOliS

$}288

SKIRTS

SIZES 8 to 16

28

POMEROY - Grace Episo·pal Church , Main Street, Pomeroy, will present a program
Monday night on Personality
Development a nd Social
Interaction.
The session will explore that
organized pattern of behavioral
characteristics whlch marks
one's social influences. Discussed will be lonllness, isolatiQn, built, lack of trust and
integrity, along "'ith other
topics.
Father Lee Miller, church
rertor, is in charge of the
program, which Is open to the
plibllc.

Sizes

Sports banquet
. :ROCK SPRINGS The
Meigs Hligh School FaU Sports
Banquet will be held Monday,
N9v. 14, at 6:30p.m., at the high
schOOl.
~e banquet Is for members ol.
fOlJtball, volley ball, and golf
teams and cheerleaders. Meat,
rclli and beverage will be
pJ;OVlded by the Meigs Athletic
Boosten. Those attending are to
I!Ping two dlshes, a vegetable,
s8Jad or dessert.-

Bananas.. ~ .........
·

$ 59'

2 M.II k••••••••••••••
010
7(

PLASTIC GAL.

s· 09
¢ Cottage .Cheese...
BROUGHTON'S

E

C·ats UD.•••••• !~~z~!~L~.

24 oz.

.

.

STOVE TOP CHICKEN FLAVOR

Stuffi n
LIBBY'S

PUMPKIN

ga~z.

2

3/$2

Limit Three Per Customer
· Good Onlv At Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 19, 1983

•

19

6 oz. BOX

5Lb.!~~~~-

Good Onlv At Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 19, 1983

GOLD MEDAL

5L~;t~~..

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 19, 1983

.,,

JEANS
Lee &amp; Levi's

Regular ' .2 6.80

Regular •zz.QO to 124.00

$5° 0 Off
HANDBAGS
Regular $23.00

to 126.00

$}999
Choose from a Larp Assortment
of 'Styles

AND COLORS

and

'flbrics
'Colors

' Nov. 13th thru Nov. 15th

LADIES'

Exercise
Suits
bv. WranJier
SHORT
Rt&amp;- 17.00

$499

TOP
Rtt. 111.00

$]99

Ror. 112.00

$899

Colors: Red, Lilac ,
Royal blue &amp;
Lt. Blue
300 SECOND AVE.

LAFAYETTE MAll
GAlliPOliS. OH.

f

'·

'1!.,

I

"

·•

Flannel

Shirts
Regular
Each

sg_OO

2 For

$1200

80% Pnh••&lt;i•• "'I.

' sonoM

OzPI'r~~G

MEN:s
TWO POCKET WESTERN

Sunday, Nov. 13th
20% Cotton
Thru
Tuesday, Nov. 15th Only Sizes- S,M, L,

S, M, L

Limit OM Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bpirts llov. 19, 1983

BOYS'

NOV. 13th thru NOV. 15th

·-. ' AND

ISOli NE

LADIES' and JUNIORS'

THANK YC)U CHERRY

21

~..-·· -

STUDENTS'

NOV. 13th THRU NOV. 15th

'

Sizes 38 &amp; 46
Regula r and

16

(()\jl',))

•

IN THE SEASON'S
NEWEST STYLES
FLAVORITE

5 to

The Classic look
of lsotoner-with
the etra warmth
of a full knit .
lining .

~

Wool and
Polyester blend .

Assorted Colors
Stripe Patt~rns ,

, NOV. 13th ONLY!
LADIES'
WARM LINED

A Beautiful
Se.lection
of
Sweaters

HARDWICK

to 130 65 % Polyester
35% Cotton

$}888

SPORT
COATS
by

Regular s1soo

WOOL BLEND

1

MEN 'S

· donnkenny

LADIES'

Reg1ular

BROUGHTON'S

106 BUTTERNUT AVE.
PH . 992-2039
POMEROY, OH .
OR 992-5721
We Accept All Major Credit Cards , and We Wire Flowers
Everywhere .

139.00

LESS

On Nov. 14, 19'10, a chartered
a!rllner · carrying 75 MU football
players, coaches, administrators,
students and friends from . the ·
community trashed at Tri-State
Airport, ktlllng all on board.
The Rev. Edward L. Carter, "Cho
was one of nine team members who
did not make the filght, will be the
guest speaker. The memorial
wreath will be presented by
Michael L. Queen, Student Govern·
ment president, and Micl\ael A:
Brison, Student Government vice
president.

the
new Fepper
·Mill Bouq)Jet -

Interaction seminar

RUI'LAND - The annual
. turkey dinner sponsored by the
R!ttland Fire Department will
be held Thursday, Nov. 17, at
. Rutland Elementary beginning
a( 5 p.m. Tickets may be
purchased from any of the
· HFef!ghters.

requirements are too demanding.
Studies have shown · that physical
strength changes litile from the
time of biological maturity until age ·
60 and changes very little at all
thereafter.
The Job Bank is open Monday
through Friday from 9 a. m. unttl4
p.m . Call 446-7000 and speak with
the Job, f;o~~fe.IW:~ ,about thts free
service.

p.m.; K&amp;K Tr. Ct., 5:45·6:15 p.m.
Thursday- Cora, 2: 45-3:-lOp.m.;
Raccoon Tr. Ct ., 3:15-3:45 p.m. ;
Patr!ot/Pauley's, 3: 50-4: 00 p.m .;
Patriot P.O., 4:10-4:40 p.m.; Gallia,
5-6 p.m.
Friday - Crown City (City
Bldg.), 12:30-1:30 p.m .; Shafer,
1':45-2 p.m .

5825

Ton and sleek. Connie's chic pumpshape-complete w ith
captivating bOw - shows you've gat it all tOQether. In smooth
Purple, Wine, Tea! or Black . ~ach with coordinating suedelike oow.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. A
Memorial Sunrise Service for those
who died in the 19'10 air tragedy wtll
be condueted by Marshall University's Student Government Association at ·7 a.m. t&lt;fonday, Nov. i4, on
Memorial Student Center Plaza.

¢

Tuesday - Mitchell Rd., 3-3:30
p.m.; Sanders/ Adelaide, 4-4: 30
p.m.; McGuire Subdivision I, II,
4:45-5:15 p.m.; LeGrande I, II ,
5: 20-6 p.m.; Neighborhood Rd . I, IT,
6: 15-6: 45 p.m .
Wednesday - Chatham, 3-3: 3IJ
p.m.; Venz Rd. (Davis Dr. ),
3: 40-4: 15 p.m.; Kanauga 5th, 4:30-5
p.m.; Johnson's Tr. Ct., 5: 15·5: 3IJ

'r;:==================:;::::;::::;:j

MUmemorial
set Monday ·

~

RODNEY - Rodney United
MethOdist Church will sponsor a
holiday food festival, Friday,
Nov. 18 at the church. There will
be homemake pastries for sale,
along with complete meals of
chicken a nd noodles, roU or
biscuit, slaw and beverage. The
sale will aiso feature homemake
apple dumplings.

Turkey dinner

surrounding the older worker. One
s uch myth is t hat ·physical job

Idea

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn T. Marr

TUESDAY

Revival set

GALLIPOLIS- As an employer,
you realize the Importance of hiring
competent people to staff your
organization. Often you wiU encounter problems In finding suitable
candidates to fllJ many of these
positions.
•
If you planning to hire the Job
Bank bas appllcants 50 years of age
and older to fill your employment
needs. The old~r worker today
represents one of the best human ·
resource investments a business
can make. There are certain myths

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT .• NOV. 19. 1983

ROCK SPRINGS Fall
sports banquet at Meigs High
School Monday at 6: ll p.m. for
members of football , volley ball
and golf teams and cheerleaders. Rolls and drinks to be
provided by Meigs Athletic ·
Boosters. Persons to bring two
dishes, vegetable, salad or
dessert.

GALLIPOLIS - The 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District still has
openings for Basic Sewing,
being offered Monday evenings,
·7 to 9 p.m. , In the Gallia
Academy High School Home
Economics Room. Fee for the
class is $10. Pre-registration is
needed by Nov. 14. F or information and to pre-register, call the
park district office at 4464612.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

Job Bank offers skilled
senior citizens for work

Marr of Gallipolis .
The traditional 45th anniversary
color scheme of sapphlre blue was
carried fort h ln tlte decorations and
anniversary cake. _
. Those attending' were Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Watson and children, Nell
and Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Barlow, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Marr and
family, Christopher, Heather and
Natalie, and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Marr and daughters, Sarah and
Suzanne.
·
Also attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Norman L. Coleman of Liverpool,
Pa. Mrs. Coleman Is Mrs. Marr's
sister and was maid of honor at the
Marrs' wedding.

MONDAY

. Basic sewing

The

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va:

November 13, 1983

November 13, 1983

XL

SUNDAY, NOV. 13th
0
WESTBEND . Convenient
.__,.....
Careiree Cooking ...
0
.#

· ELECTRIC GRIDDLE
Regular 139.00

•

�•

'

"age

B-4--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va:

Pomeroy setting for wedding of
June Wamsley and Mark Rhodes
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
United Methodist Church was th~
setttng lor the Oct. l wedd ing of
June Ann Wamsley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J ames R. Wamsley,
Pomeroy, and Mark Douglas
Rhodes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shirlev
Rhodes, Beckworth, W.Va.
·
The Rev. James Corbitt per·
.formed the ceremony folloWing a
program of plano music by Ed
Harkless, Middleport, and vocal
selections by Paula Eic hinger.
Pomeroy.
Given In marrtage by her father,
the bl1de wore a floor·lengt h gown
of Ivory accented with border pri nt
on the sleeves and hemline, made
. by her mother . She carried an
arrangement of mums in fall
flowers and wore matching ones in
her hair.
·
Tamara Mossman, Ravenna,
was maid of honor, and bridesmaid
was Kathleen Schrage!, Columbus.
They were In street·length dresses
of beige and carried bouquets
matching the bride's arra ngement.
Charlie Toney, Oak Hill, W.Va.,
was best man, and Roger Dye, Oak
Hill, W.Va., brother-in-law of the
groom, was the usher.
A reception honorlng the couple
was held at the Meigs Multipurpose
Building with a buffet supper being

l

Psi Iota XI has long been Involved
with speech and hearing concerns,
she sa1d. The group helps sponsor
the speech and heartngcllnlc at Ohio

sity, w here she received a bachelor

of science degree in medical
dietetics. She is employed with the
ARA Services., Inc. and Is working ,
at Camden·Ciark Memmial Hospital in Parkers burg as a registered
dieti tion. Rhodes was formerly
employed at the P lateau Medical
Center , Oak Hill, W.Va.
Guests from Zanesville, Columbus, Newark , Indianapolis, Oak
Hill, W.Va., Gallipolis, Lexington,
Ky., Fayelteville. W.Va. , Balli·
more, and Le\\isburg, W.Va. at·

I

primarily
raise revenues,
so
reports
Rand to
McNally's
"Places
Rated Almanac."
Seven states, the almanac saysCalifornia, Connecticut, Florida.
illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey
and New York - each make more
money from lotteries or from
pari-mutuel betting on horses and
dogs' than Nevada does from its
amusement taxoncaslnogambl!ng,
sports-card betting shops, slot
·machines, jal alai matches and
occasional horse races, combined.

-

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Douglas Rhodes

The group's Interest In speech and
hearing has spread !rom the areas
of therapy for precschool age
children Into recruitment programs
for speech therapists, contlnui)lg
education for practicing clinicians,
to the tatestendeavors olrehabllitatlve workshops for adult hard of ·
hearing and preventive brochures
for national distribution.
'
'

Vows exchanged in Columbus
by ]oyce]aney, Kelvin White

NEW YORK (AP) -States that
permit legal gambling In the U.S. do

I

Each year, she added, Psi Iota XI
helps raise several hundrEd thousand dollars to fund their many
Interests, the bulk of the money
remalnlng ln the chapter area In
which It Is raised.

people around
like Tim and
MartyBaum.
Meigs Game
. Protector . Keith
Wood encounted
a fawn deer I)V!th
a broken leg. Tim
over the care of the deer. They took
it to a veteranarilm who put the leg
ln a cast.
The Baums bottle-fed the fawn at
all )lours of' the day and night and
kept her In their basement at their
hOme In the Baum addition untU the
deer started to recover. It was then
allowed to roam aboot the property
gradually weaning Itself away from
the Baums. It has now been
returned to the wild. Incidentally,
Mr. and Mrs. Baum paid the all or
the costs Involved.
Wood points out that the policy
generally Is not to place deer with
people but this was all that could be
done to save the animal.

Lasti~ color portraits you

can enJOY for years to come.

I

ISears I

~=p=
Includes:Two 8 x 10s, 95"
'r' S}295

three 5x7s and

DEPOSIT TOTAL COST

fifteen wallets .
·
• One gltt per sitting • Poses our selecti on ,
• Groups $1.00 extra per person

. SILVER BRID.GE PLAZ~

'Vou will recelve -)'our Chrletmae Ornament when YO\&lt;
return to purchue your portrelt pa, kege.

Wed. 10-1 2-5:30
'hurs. 10-1 2-4:30
lunch 1·2

PHOT()(;ItAPHI:R'S tfOURSt

DATES:

PHONE 446-2770

.

Maxine Walker Leason, formerly
'of Meigs County, expresses her
appreciation for all the kindnesses
extended by herfrlends heredul1ng
her illnESS.
Maxine has been hosp!taJI?,d for
one month and now takes dally
radiation treatments. Her address
Is 223 S. Hillcrest St., Anaheim,
Calif. -

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GALLERY
HAIR
ARTS.
118 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.

First the turkeys are stuffed and
then the people are.
That's about the story of the
annual turkey dlnner staged so
successfully by the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department.
·
'I1t!s year the event has been
scheduled fOr this Thursday beg!nnlngat5p.m. Turkeydlnners"wlth
all the trlmmlns" wW be $4 for
adults and $2 for ch!!diren ~ that
lnclud~ dessert.
Tickets may be purchased at the
.N ew York Clothing House, Fruth's
Pharmacy, the Rutland Depart· ment Store, Miller's Grocery ·In
Rutland or from any fireman.

PHONE: 992-3233 .
'

OPEN MON.-SAT.
9:00 TO 5:00

BACK TO
SLEEP

AT TREMEN

WALK-INS 'WELCOME
AFTER HOURS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

SAVINGS HI

Professional Stylists for Men. Women &amp; Children
George Kovach, Brenda Janey, Cathy Jo Lipscomb

FREE

Steve Powell has encountered
some additional health problems
and Is naw confined to the
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
Hospital at DaytQn. Cards may be
sent to him there where he Is
undergoing more treatment .
Steve's the son of Gerald and Mary

HAIR
ANALYSIS

For The
FashionMinded
Woman

Powell of Pomeroy.
,

Mrs. Garnet " Ma " Williamson,
highly regarded retired Rutland
business woman, more than enjoyed her 92nd birthday which
brought cards, !Jowers and gifts
and best of all possible, dinner out.
Her guests on the anniversary
lncluded Mrs. Helen Saxton, Logan; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Saxton,
Columbus; . Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sheets, Gallipolis; Dr. and Mrs.
John Sheets and son, Gallipolis;
Mr. and MRs. Hetzel Folden, South
Carolina; Dr. John Lutz and Jack
Lutz, both of Charleston; Mrs ..
Floyd Weber, Long Bottom; Mrs.
Herman Grate, Mr. and Mrs. Murl
. Davis, Mrs. Arnold Grate, Mrs. Bill
Young, Rev. Lloyd Grimm, all of
Ru!!and; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bailey,
Lehigh Acres, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Davis, Vinton; Mrs . Truman Grimm, Alhany; Theron
Morris, Langsvllle; Joe Struble,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Quillen , Letart Falls ..
Quite a celebration, eh?
, Mary Bacon, a Meigs County
school supervisor at the county
board o!fice, has returned to her
home on South Third Avenue,
Middleport, and Is recuperatlng
nicely followlng surgery at the
Holzer Medical Center. We look
forward to seeing Mary back on
pace.
'·

Some 12 or s0 photography
'students of Ohio University were at
the Sweet and Eat Shop In Pomeroy
FI1day afternoon photographing
various aspects of the business as a
project. They were accompanied
by an Instructor and selected the
shop after looking the town over for

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"Veronica "

Black

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Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Walker

En(deering' Meigs couple
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honor; Kay Deneca, London; Amy
Brewer, Columbus; Brenda Janey
and Mary Crisp, Langsville, and
Debra Blevins, Columbus. K!mbelry Janey 91 Langsville was .the
flowergtrl.
Best man was Tom White,
Columbus, and the ushers were
BI1an Murray, Don Koch, Steve
Volkmann, and Steve Edmister, all
of Columbus, and Paul Janey,
Langsville.
Gretchen Frenz registered the
guests.
A reception was . held at the
Luther B. Turner Lodge, Valleyview, immediately following the
ceremony .
The couple resides In Columbus.

From Gallipolis, the school m ay
be located by turning left a t Little
Kyger Road, then turning left at
Kyger Creek High School. Continue
on Little Kyger jioad for about
three miles, bearihg to the right at
each road division. (Or' if coming
from Meigs, turn right at the light ln
Cheshire and light at Kyger Creek
High SchoOL I
The Open House Is an opportunity
to tour the new build ing, meet the
staff, and hear a briel presentation
on the school's program. Light
refreshments will be served .

Beat of the Bend

Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin ~ce While

Wanna bet?

/

CHESHIRE .,-·The Gallia Christian School, located In Cheshire, is
having an O)lf1n House Sunday.
Nov. 20, from 2 to 3 p.m.
The school, which Is nondenominational, Is committed to
serving t"" needs of famllles of all
Chr!Stlall faiU!s In the trl-county
area, and offers the highest stand·
ards of a Christ-centered education
from kindergarten through high
school.
G .C.S. endeavors to ·develop a
working relationship With the com·
munity, home and churches.

By BOB HOEFLICH
11me&amp;Senllnel S&amp;aff
It's nice to

POMEROY - Joyce Annette
J aney and Kelvln Terence White
exchanged wedding vows at the
Columbia Heights United Methodist Church, Columbus, on Oct. 22.
The Rev . William Miller performed the double-rlng ceremony
following a program of organ music
by Mrs. C. D. Hart and soloist, Chris
Ward.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Janey, Langsville,
and the groom is the son ot'Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Whlte, Galloway.
The bride's attendants were
Donna Li!tle, Pomeroy, maid of

\

GALLIPOLIS - Psi Iota XI, a
national philanthropic·and cultural
sorority, has beguntoorganlze!nthe
Gallia-Melgs area, accord.lng to
Mary Plymale, a charter mem)ler
of the group.
.
She said the organization, formed
In 1897, Will be forming here, and
hopes Interest wlllgrowqulckly. She
said She recently moved to Ga!UpoUs, and was pleased to see free
speech and hearing clinics, which
has motivated her to form a chapter
of Psi Iota Xi here.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-5 •

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

Gallia Christian School
plans open house Nov. 20

Speech, hearing group
forms in Gallia, Meigs

served by Jeanne Braun and Susan
Ol!ver, co-workers of the bride's
mother. Hostesses were Carol
Fisher, Mansfield, and Patty
Schrum. Fort Worth. Texas. Me·
lissa Dye and Delta Legg, nieces of
the groom. registered the guests.
The bride's table featured a
three·tiered cake decorated with a
stairway ·Of flowers matching the
bridal bouq,u et and yellow candles.
The decor included a thret'-branch
crystal ca ndelabra belonging to the .
bride's gr·andmot her and the table
was covered with a li nen tablecloth
belonging to her great·aunt.
The couple resides at 2516 21st
Ave., Apt. 6, South Parkersburg.
W.Va.
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Ohio State Univer-

_!in~~the=~--

No ...,.,.. 13, 1983

November 13, 1983

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Walkers to observe anniversary
. VINTON - Dewey and Mary Ridge Road , Winter svllle, Ohio,
Walker will observe their 50th 43952; P olly Lyons. 518 Lewis Ave. ,
weddlng anniversary at /he Vinton Lancaster, Ohio, 4313! or Robln
Masonic Temple, Nov. 27,1 to4 p.m. Yoho, 1770 Jndlanola Ave., Colum·
The reception for the couple will be bus, Ohio, 43~1.
The couple requests that gtfts
open house .
Their daughters Nancy Anctrzejc· other than memories, be omit!ed.
zyk and Polly Lyons, and grand- ,--.:...- - - - - - - - - - 1
daughter Robln Yoho, are tomplling a memory book to honor the.
coliple. The daughters and granddaughter are seeking memories of
the couple and their friends
throughtout the years. They m ay be
sent toN ancy Andreozjczyk, Bantam

:wu Second ,.\ ve.

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Lafayette Ma ll
0,

For Belly Dancing or Yoga Classes Now
(Final Date to Register Is Nov. 18)
"TANNING SPECIAL"

ssoo Off

:

WITH COUPON ·

ClAt'()J.. w/(/,

GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. H.
Howell Edwards, 529 Magnolia Dr ..
Gallipolis,. celebrated their 40th
weddlng anniversary on Nov. 6.
They were married at Grace
United Methodist Church by Rev.
Scott Westerman.
The couple was honored at a
dinner party ln Edwards' hometown,.Oak Hlll, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard (Susan) Bockhorst With
children, Tracie, Steven and Crist!
came from Oceanside, Calif. lor a
surpnse visit.
Others attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Edwards,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Jenklns, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
William Bahr, Cara and Brandy,
· Mr. and Mrs. Robert Woodward ,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wheeler , and
Mrs . Marie Utte rer . all of
Gallipolis.

Tlie
Shoe Cafe

STOP I.N AND REGISTER

If you want
to get the most
for your car
insurance
dollar...

Edwards' note
•
•
40th

...

Ill

hpires Nov . 19, 1983

TOP OF THE STAIRS

State FM1rr
Let me explain State Farm 's
unbeatable combination of
service, protection and

"Gift Certificates Malee Excellent
Christmas Gilts"

economv...

TRUDYROUSH

HAl R STY ll STS : ~~~~R~~;~iH
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TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS &amp;
BEAUTY SALON

CAI!OL.LSNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290

Home 446-451;.8- -....
State

F~rm

Mu tual

111

Aul omot!lle Insurance Company
Home Office :
BloomlnQion r1Uinol5

W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy. Oh.

PH.99'l-6720

good subjects.
Try to say somethi!\g nice to
someone this week . It won't cost a
cent, .It's a great gtft and you might
just help someone over a touch spot
so they can keep smiling .... .'......

ADY...-...o rfiiii"'O.KY

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"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"
PHOTO SERVICE &amp; SUPPLIES

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111
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FREE BLOOD PRESSURE CUNIC
We Honor All 3rd Party Prescriptions
'Call us if you have any questions concerning your
prescriptions!

DELIVERY

AVAI~ABLE IN ALL STORES
Cooked Party Shrimp
in the Seafood Shop
or frozen Seafood section
Make your own shrimp
troy for home or office

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446-1883

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and recommend the proper

PROGRAM

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SUNDAY
12 'TIL 5

YOUR CHOICE

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PER MONTH

l~clude~: Plain Pedestal- Deck· Heater· Full Wave Mattress- Fill Kit- Patch
K1t. Delivered and Set Up. ·
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REVITALIZATION

OPEN
SUNDAY
·12'TIL 5

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JUST RECEIVED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF
FACTORY FRESH CANDY FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Let us diagnOse

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KEY Ill -SPANGLER- FRANKLIN TOP GRADE
QUALITY CHOCOLATES AND CA~OIES
Onqe Slices ......................... st:so lb. Tiny Spice Jelly ....... :............... 11.50 lb.
.Gum Drops ............................ '1.50 lb. Spearmint Leaves ................. :.. 11.50 lb.
Old nme Mix ....................... ,. 12.05 lb. Caramel Cremes ...................... 11.65 lb.
P•nut Brittle .........................'2.15 lb. ·eoconut Bonbons .................... 12.00 lb.
Milk Chocolate Peanuts ............ '2.85 lb. Milk Chocolate Raisins ..... ;....... 13.75 lb.
Frosted Pletzels ...................... 13.25 lb. -Hershey Kisses ....................... '4.60 lb.
Butterscorth Chocolate Drops .... 13.60 lb. Milk Chocolate Opera Creams ..... 13:60 lb.
Solid Peanut Cluster ................13.30 lb. Vanilla Cream Peanut Clusters ... 13.45 lb.
Mapte Cream Peanut Cluster ...... 13.45 lb. Caramel Cream Penut Clusters ... 13.45 lb.
Mint Cream Patties .................. 13.50 lb. . Vanilla Cremes ........................ 12.95 lb.
Butt.-scotch Logs ............. - ... ;13.00 lb. Coconut l.ad~naers ................. 13.00 lb.
Milk.Chocolate Caramels ........... '3.50 lb.
..

PARTV·PAK

6

Shrimp &amp; crab Trays

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COOWfiQSnrlmp &amp; CraD ShiPH In variOUS

comDin;u ...... : ':oclltall sauce. ana a
convenient PartyTrav ltldV -To·ASStmDie.

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at nome or office . DIIIQM your guests
lit prlcel tl'llt'll CIIIIOTil vou to on

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THIRD AVE.
.
GALLIPOLIS

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118 E. MAIN ST.
·
POMEROY, OH.
PH . .992-3233
'
SEE THE WATERBED SUPPORTED ON EMPTY McDONALD COPS

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BULK
FOODS
POMEROY
514 EAST lAIN ST.
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Butterfly ShriMp.. .. ~=:

992-6910 '
. HOURS: llon.-Sat. 9:00·5:30
Friday 9:00-7:00
Wt Accept Ftdlfll food Stamps
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Page

8-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

LAK land
in Chicopee .

LALs.

One city hall secretary was seen
SINGING THE NIGHT AWAY- Members of the
Gallia Academy High School Madrigas put on their
annual Variety Show ~nd ay night. 'I'he group, made

up of sophomores, juniors and seniors, performed
songs ran!;lng from today's pop to easy llstenlng
classics. The group is directt-'11 by Ms. Anne Fischer.

Gallia seniors plan activities
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the w~k of Nov. 14-19 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday. Nov. H -Chorus, 1-3
p.m.; Blood Pressure Check, 1:30
p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 15 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.: Physical Fitness.
11:15 a.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 16 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m. ·
Thursday. Nov. li - Bible Study,
11 a.m. -noon; Board of Trustees
Meeting, 1:30 p.m .
Friday, Nov. 18 - Holiday
-Bazaar, 10 a.m.: Art Class, 1-3
p.m.: Crafl Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.

beans, jello and topping, hot roll,
butter.
Friday - Macaroni and cheesf,
broccoli and ca uliflower, apple

OGDEN, Utah tAP)- A bowling
alley has seen some interesting
deliveries in its time, but this week it
witnessed one of the strangest when a woman gave birth to a baby
girl.

Karen Phillips, 38, was wa tching
her husband, Vernon, bowl at Hill
Top Lanes on Thursday evening
when she discovered she couldn 't
make il to a hospital ii\ time. So she
went into the alley office, where the
9-pound, 4-ounce baby was born,
Phillips said.
Mother and daughter, named
Karroll, were taken to McKay-Dee
Hospital after the delivery , where
they were reported in satisfactory
condition Friday.
Mrs. Phillips went into labor as
the baby's father finished the last
frames of his third game in league
play.
"My first two games were 181 and
225," Phillips said. "Obviously, I
don't know what the third score
was.''

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To Give Thanks
At This
Holiday Season

Beauty Salon
Offers

Get a Perm For Full Price
Bring a Friend For, Half Pri~e
Good From Nov. 14 thru Nov. 23

PH. 446-1209
~\

STYLISTS
Ruth Finley
Helen Wilson
Adrah Neal

~

Rebecca LeMaster

Hro.: Mon. 9-5; Tues. 9-8;
WALK INS
Wed. 9-5; Thurs. 9-8; .
WELCOME
Fri. 9-5; Sat. 8-3
"

Niehm- Sterrett

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10°/o OFF SPECIAL
. ON PERMS. &amp; COLORING
THRU NOV. 30th
We Are Pleased to Have Evelyn White
Joining Our Staff

Plus Tn

&amp; Deposit

89¢

$600

GALLIPOLIS
ICE HOUSE

709 First Ave.

Model 6110
Patricia Nlehrn

MaUhew Sterrett .

CHRISTMAS CRAFT AND
FABRIC NOW
IN STOCK
THE FABRIC SHOP .

2 WEEKS ONLY

ATTENTION

NEW AND USED HOMES:
0
DOWN PAYMENT
AS
LOW
AS
$795°
.

MONTHLY PAYMENTS CAN BE LOWER THAN RENT
ON THE SPOT FINANCING AVAILABLE
(CONVENTIONAL, FHA, VA)

FREE DELIVERY
WILL LEVEL AND BLOCK UP HOMES (FREE)
'

NOTICE: Free Blocks Given to The
First 5 Qualified Customers
'

HOURS: Monday-Saturay 8:30-Dark
Sunday
1:00-Dark
EVERYONE WELCOME
SEE CARL POLING

·Kingsbury Mobile Homes, Inc. 1100 East Main St.
Pomeroy
PHONE 614-992-7034 or 992 -6284

A TOTALLY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS
NO OTHER TRIBUTE IS AS LASTING AS A
PERSONAUZED MEMORIAL FROM LOGAN
MONUMENT CO. IT IS A WORTHY EXPRESSION OF LOVE AND RESPECT.

Holiday Sale·
THE MOST BEAUTIUL WINDOW TREATMENTS
EVER TO COME TO UGHT ARE NOW 15% OFF

COMPANY, INC.
.VINTON, oHIO
JAMES 0. BUSH, Mar.
PH. 388-8603
.

POMEROY,OHIO
LEO VAUGHAN, liar.

PH. 992·2518

HuntFurst

Adkins ~

EWINGTON - Mr. and Lewis
Hunt of Ewlngton announce the
engagement and forthcoming mar·
riage of their daughter, Tammy
Hunt, to John Furst Jr., son of
Shirley Furst and John Furst Sr.,
both of Gallipolis.
Wedding plans are Incomplete at
this time.

PORTER - Dean, Eugene, Jl!ll
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
and Jay Adkins of Porter are
'Delbert
E. Vandevander of
announcing the forthcoming marWhitner,
W.Va.,
are announcing
riage of their mother, Mary Lee, to
the
engagement
of
their daughter,.
Lloyd E. Smith of Louisville, Ky.
Dianna
Vandevander,
to Charles
The wedding will take place
Mark
Sauters,
son
of
Mr.
and Mrs.
November 18, 7:30 p.m. at the First
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis, V. Leroy Sauters, Pomeroy.
Wedding plans are incomplete.
with Rev. Frank Hayes officiating.

Smith

•DRAPERIES
•SHEERS
•FANCY TREATMENTS
•WOVEN WOODS
•VEROSOL SHADES
•LELOLOR BLINDS
•PADDED CORNICS
•WOOD BLINDS
•VERTICAL BLINDS

POMEROY- Bookmobile services In Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Al"l'a Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, Nov. 14 - Hemlock Grove
(Post Otflce), 2:45-3:15 p.m.: Pageville (Store), 3:554:25p.m.; Harrl·
sonvllle (Church), 4:35-5:00 p.m.;
New Lima Rd. (one mile south of
Fort Meigs), 5:20-6 p.m.; Rutland
())epot St.) , 6:40-8:10 p.m.
· Wednesday, Nov. 16 - Chester
(Fire station), 2:15-2:45p.m. ; Keno
(north side ol Keno Bridge), 3-3:30
p.m.; Success Road (near 39060),

You can enjoy an updated
look with custom window
treatments from Tope's. We
at Tope's will help you find
the look that is just right for .
yourhome. Our professional
staff will measure your windows, completely install
any treatment you choose,
steam and prepare it to your
satisfacction. ·

POMEROY - The engagement
of Jacquelyn Ann Lusk and Brent
G. Stanley Is announced by her
parents, Mary L. Goyette of
Providence, R.l., and John W.
Lusk, Quincy, Dl.
·
Stanley ts the son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. Frederick Stanley, Fisher-Chase
Road, Athens.
Miss Lusk graduated from Bar-

rlngton High School, Barrington,
R.I., and Martella College, and Is a
personnel specialist with Wetterlogs and Agnew, Rochester, N.Y.
Stanley Is a graduate of Meigs
High School, Marietta College, and
Case-Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, and Is an engineer with
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester.
N.Y.

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Ruth
Murray, Gallipolis, announces the
engagement and forthcoming marrlage of her daughter, Rebecca
LeMaster, to Lawrence Grady Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Grady Sr., Henderson, W. Va.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Office Hours by Appointment Only

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

Don't pop
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GUERNEVILLE,
Calif.
)
Champagne
producers
says(AP
there's

a right way and a wrongwaytoopen
a bottle of champagne.
"Contrary to popular belief, corkS
should not be 'popped,"' says Gary
Heck, president of Korbel Champagne Cellars here.
DR . .

EW. DAV .
OPTOM"'TR 1ST · - - - - ,

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·concave or Convex Lenses?

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•Fine FumHure
•Custom Dr8pery
•Citrpet
•Interior Dellgn

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FREE PARKING
FREE DEUVERY
HOURI:
1:30·1 Dlilly
Mtlft•• Prt. Eve
Untiii:OO

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ChoW Mein

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RESERVATIONS .

CARRY OUT

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Do · you know why your
glasses are shaped the way
they are? If·the lens curves In- .
ward. this Is a corlcave-lens. It
pushes the focused rays of
light backward to the retina to
correct for nearsightedness.
If you didn't ·have those
glasses, your eyes would be fo cusing too soon, causing your
vision to blur.
If the lens curves outward,
lt"s a convex lens. This Is designed to pus~ the focused
rays of light forward to theretina, correcting for !arslght·
edness. Without these glasses,
your eyes would focus too late
also causing blurred vision.
For people with astigmatIsm (two points of focus Instead of one), the lens wUI be

•

To All Who
Supported Me In
The Nov. 8 Election
For Trustee
of Cheshire Township

I Thank You
·Albert Loveday

VlTERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

3:45-4:15 p.m.; Long Bottom (Post
Office). 4:25-5:10 p.m.i Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5: 20-6:10 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's), 7:107:40 p.m.; Baum Addition, 8-8:30
p.m.

1395

$249

VALUE

SOLITAIRE

$1 99

~2:L9UE
A December wedding Is oe1ng 1
planned.
Miss LeMaster is employed at
Holida:y Inn of Gallipolis. ··424 Second, Gallipolis
Grady is employed for MIG
Pd. for by the Candidate
-Transport , · SeFvices, .. ou-t · of
Cincinnati.
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JQHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

•.

Eneray-Efficient Uning
or 100% Cotton Lining Available
.
.
.

ELLABELL, Ga. (AP ) - This
small Georgia community near
Savannah considers it self a "doorway" to Europe in aspecial way.
The joinery-grade timbers produced at Georgia-Pacific's hightechnology sawmill here are sent to•
wood-short Europe for the construction of window casings, cabinets and
dbors.
.------------

.--------------~-----------11

"

$399

VALUE

Doorway to Europe

Lemaster - Grady

'·•.

-.

SECOND AT GRAPE IT.

Miss Vandevander is a graduate
of Harman High School and Is
employed at Canaan Valley Resort
Park In Davis, W.Va.
Sauters Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Is employed at
Kroger's In Pomeroy.

Lusk - Stanley

..'

Free Installation!

FURNITURE
GALLE.RIES

Community Chapel Church of
Proctorville on Dec. 16 at 8 p.m.
Miss Turley Is a graduate of
Fairland High School.
Markin Is a graduate of Boyd
County High School. He Is em·
played by M. C. Machine and Tool
Inc. of South Point, Ohio.

Vandeva;rzder - Sauters

Meigs bookmobile set

SAVE 15% ON:

OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT

LOGAN MONUMENT

Tammy Hunt
John Furst Jr.

Whiteley, a general. thoracic and
. GALLIPOLIS - The Southeast·
vascular
surgeon, Is a graduate of
ern · Ohio Area Ostomy Group,
recently organized in September, Princeton University and received
will have Its regular monthly his medlcal degree from the State
University of New York at Syra~lng on Thursday evening, Nov.
19, . at 7 p.m. In the Fifth _Floor .cu:;e. He did both his internship and
Classroom of Holzer Medical Cen- residency at the University of
ter. Featured speaker will be Dr. Cincinnati, serving on the staff
Daniel H. Whiteley, member of the there until 1973, when he came to
medical staff at Holzer, who will Holzer. He Is a member of the
speak on the types of ostomies and Board of Trustees of the Ohio
Division of the American Center
their Implications.
According to Annabel Houda· Society as a medical delegate.
This recently organized ostomy
shelt, president of the group, the
group meets on the third Thursday
~eeting Is open to all ostomates
and their families, 'as well ·as of each month. Other officers
physicians, nurses and anyone Include Lori Sommerville as vice
interested in learning more about president, Barbara McKinley,
R.N., as secretary, and Larry
ostomies.
Spencer
from Racine, treasurer.'
Members of the Southeastern
Phyllis
Brown,
R. N., on the nursing
Ohio organization Include residents
staff
at
Holzer
Medical Genter, Is
from Gallla, Meigs, Jackson and
Vinton Counties in Ohio, and Mason an advisor to the group.
County, W.Va.

Custom Drapery for Christmas!

"Call Today For A Great New loolc"

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Turley of Crown City,
Ohio are announcing the upcoming
marriage of their daughter, Christi
Yvonne Turley, to Joseph Jan Allen
Markin, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
L. Markin of Proctorville.
The wedding will take place at the

Ostomy Group meeting
speaker will be Whiteley

115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy
Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia
Counties As Your Singer
Approved Dealer

Ga

Lutheran Church, Sandusky. Dr.
Theodore Stellhorn Jr. will
officiate.
Miss Nlehm Is working at
Children's Hospital In Columbus
and attends Ohio State University,
majoring in biological sciences.
Sterrett attends Ohio State Unl·
verslty, majoring in marketing and
logistics.

Turley -.Markin .

$174 99
JANET'S
HAIR-GO-ROUND
MASON, W. VA.

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. and Mrs.
Bernard Nlehm, Gallipolis, formerly of Sandusky, Ohio, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Patrtcla Lynn Nlehm, to Matthew
Nolan Sterrett, siln of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard · Sterrett, New Albany,
Indiana and grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Knopp, Racine.
The open-church wedding will
take place Nov. 26, 7 p.m., at Zion

c LOs EO .T·
SPECIALS

Model 6104

$139

Dianna Vandevander

Christi Turley

Jacqueline l.usk

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

POMEROY - The Keith
McCall Orchestra wUI play for a
dance at the Royal Oak Park on
Nov. 19, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The
dance. Is $15 per couple and is
open to members of the Royal
Oak Dance Club members and
guests.

2 LITER
BOTILE
24 CASE
CANS

POMEROY - Meigs County Thanksgiving Dinner will be Tues·
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry day, Nov. 22, at noon . At11: 15 a.m.,
Heights, Pomeroy, invites all el- prior to the dinner, the Senior
derly of th~ county to take part in Citizens Chorus will have a Thanks·
activities at the center. The center giving program with music and
Is open Monday through Friday readings. See you then, but please
do make a reservation If you plan to
from 8: 30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Schedule of activities for the come for Thanksgiving dtnher, so
that we maY have enough food
week of Nov. 14-l.Sis as follows:
Monday - Physical Fitness, ready to eat.
The Senior Nutrition Program
11:30 a. m. ; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
serves
a hot meal at noon each day.
Tuesday - Ceramics: 10 a.m.·
Call
992-2161
to make a reservation
noon; speaker, 1 a.m.; ·Physical
for
a
meal
no
later than, a.m., the
Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; Chorus Pracday
of
the
reservation.
The follow tice, 1-2 p.m.
Ing
menu
is
planhed
for
the week of
Wednesday - Social Security
Rep.. 10 a.m. -noon; Black Lung Nov. 14-lB:
Monday - Liver and onions,
Rep., 10 a.m.-noon; Physical Fitgravy,
mashed potatoes. spinach,
ness, 11:30 a.m.; Games, 1-2 p.m.;
bread pudding.
·
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
..
Tuesday
Creamed
chicken on
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m. ·
noon; Christmas crafts, 10 a.m.· biscuit: peas, orange gelatin with ··
pineapple, peanut butter cookie.
noon; Chorus Practice, 1-2 p.m.
Wednesday - Ham loaf, sweet
Friday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.·
potatoes,
green beans, banana,
noon; Christmas Crafts, 10 a.m.·
oranges,
grapefruit.
noon; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a.m.
Thursday - Tuna and noodle
Final day for Thanksgiving Dinner
casserole,
broccoli -and cauliflower
reservations; Square Dance, sponmedley,
cole
slaw, pears.
sored by Women's Auxiliary, Vete·
Friday
Soup
beans with ham,
rans Memorial Hospital, 8-ll p.m.
lettuce
with
boiled
egg, peach half
On Mqnday , Nov. 14, several
with
cheese,
cornbread,
pumpkin
volunteers will visit Mldleport
cake.
Elementary Sc hool from noonChoice of milk, tea, coffee
12: 30 p.m. to assist with square
available
da ily.
dance instruction.
Tuesday, Nov. 15. atll .m.. Lour-;========~:::;
Horvath, Social Security Rcpresen·
tatlve, wlli j talk about recent
50 YRS. OF SERVICE
changes· ··in i the Social Security
IN GALLIPOLIS
Laws.
Stop by the Craft Classes on
Thursday and Friday to see the cute
Ideas for Christmas, then make
some of these simple-to-do crafts.
Lois Pauley of the Crafty Ladies
will conduct the classes and have
kits made up to make the "Potpourri Plaques." The cost will be
1/2 CARAT
•
$1.25 for each plaque that Is made.
The Senior Nutrit ion Program
1695

EVA'S

Dance set

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

Meigs Co. Seniors
plan week s activity

====~==Engagements=======

,-------------------------.--=-----------1

Saturday,
10:30
a. m. Nov. 19- Yoga Class, I
The Senior :-Jutrition Program
will serve the followin g menus:
Monday - Pinto beans and ham ,
cottage cheese, pudding, cornbread. butter, milk.
Tuesday - Pepper steak and
buttered noodles, beets. kale, gingerbread and topping, bread,
butter.
Wednesday - Spaghetti, tossed
salad, Italian bread, banana frosty
cream and topping, butter.
Thursday - Beef patty and
grayy. mashed potatoes. green

Bouncing
bowling
baby born

l'ings, fruit, bread. butter, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal. Meals.subject to change ·
without notice.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-B-7

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

~-:-

CHlCOPEE, Mass. (AP) ~-Ever since RichardS. Lak
was elected mayor It seems that
lleense plates. bearing the letters
LAK have been sbowlng up every·
where, even in the city hall parking
lot.
"You can assure everyone it's not
a city ordinance;" joked the
40-year-old mayor-elect.
He said there's no political
statement involved and no one has
been forced to get one of the tags.
It's just a coincidence, said
Registry of Motor Vehicles Inspector Roger R. Martin, after the
agency found 90 plates stamped
with LAK when It opened a new
shipment of tags Wednesday.
Ironically, the license plates had
arrived the day after Lak won the
mayor's race by a 2-to-1 margin,
The plates, made in 1981, follow •
those marked LAA and precede the

sporting a Lak,
LAK plate on her car
Thursday.
Whose platesexplre
: . month, says he'll try togetone,

November 13, 1983

Noveinber 13, 1983

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

either concave or convex, depending on the kind of asllg-,
matlsm. It can be either farsighted or nearsighted .
If the problem Is presbyopia
(the Inability to use the neat·
focusing muscles), the lens
will be convex, just as It Is fo r
the farsighted person •
Whatever the shape of lens
needed , It has to be carefully
prescribed to give good results.

A Message From The

~ible.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
. .

THE KINGDOM AND HOLY SPIRIT BAPTiSM
Wiiiiam B. Kug-hn
John preached the coming of the kingdom, "for the kmgdom of heaven • at hand"
(Mtt. 3:2), and the baptism of the Holy Spirit. "He shall bapllze you w~h the Holy Ghosf' •
(Mit 3:111 As we examine these lwo established facls 1n light of their fuHillment, we will I
readily see tht the baptism of the HolySpirit was not promiSed every citizen mthe k1ngdom. ;
1- The kingdom. power. Holy Spirit baptism: Jesus preached. "Repent for the •
kingdom of heaven oat hand" (Mtt4:17). He sen! the lwelve "to the lost sheep of the house !
of Israel" IJewsl. preaching "The kingdom 1s at hand" [Mtt. 10:81.Jesus to~ thea pestles that )
some of them would not die unlit they had "seen the kingdom of God come with power'"
(Mr~ 9:11). and they would receive "power. a~er that the Holy Ghost and the bap1ism of
the Holy Spirit. Why?Because, when the kingdom was establehed the Lord would baptize
the apostl ~ with the Holy Spirit. giving themapostolic authorly to launch out in Ihe great
comm issio~(Mtt. 28:19. 20; Lk. 24:46481. This all began on Pentecost[Acts 2)!
2-The apostles and Holy Spirit baptism: Jesus. before His ascens~n. commanded
the apostles to "not depart from Jerusalem, but wail forthe promise of the FatiJBr. wh ich ... ye
have heard of me" [Acts 1:41. Jesus tdenbftes the promtse, spoken by John, wrth the baptism
of the Holy Spirit whenHe said. "For John tru ly baptized with waler. but yeshall be bapti&gt;ed
with the Holy Ghost not may dance hence" (Acts 1:51 The Lord baptized the apostles w!h
the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. directly from heaven wrthout the interventlm of human
a~ency, and it was visible: "Suddenlythere came asound from heven as ol a rushtng mighly
wtnd:" "There appeared unto them cloven tongues l1ke as of f~re;" and they "began to speak
with other torgues" [Acts 21-41. The promise was the baptism of the Holy Spirrt
administered by Jesus. clothing them with aposlohc power from on high: The power of
inspiration idtvtne revelation of the gospel); the power of confirmation ·(impartmg
miraculous gifts of too Spirit by the ~ying on of the handsi, and !he power of
communication (speaking the gospel in different languagesj! The baptiSm of the apostles
(J~) wrth the Holy Spirit was spoken of by Joei(Joel 2:28·321. establohmg the facts that
salvation had come to the Jews. !he establishment ofth e kingdom, and the beginning of the
great commiss~n!
3-The Gentles and Holy Spirit baptism: Peter, delend1ng hiS meehng with the
uncircumcised (Gentiles!. quotes Jesus. "John indeed baptized wih water; but ye shall be
baptized with the Holy Ghost" (Acts ll:l6). Peterremembered these words when 'the Holy
Ghost fell on them, as on us at the beg1nning" (Acts 11:151 When was the beginning?.On
Pentet:0$1! The Sp1nt !~ling on Cornel1us and hishouse (Gentiles) as 1td1d the apostles (Jewsl
on Penteoos~ was administered by the Lord from heven witlvlut the ~ntervenllm of human
agency, even without the layingon of the apostles' hands. having the same vi~ble signs and
speaking with tongues (Acts 10:4.61. The Lord baptizing Cornelius and ho house (Gent1les)
with the lffiiy Spirit was, also, spoken of by Joei(Joo 2:28-32111 was not to equip them w&lt;h
apostolic authority, but to convince the believing Jews that the Gentiles being c~l~d to
salvation were to be baptized (Acts 10:47. 481
.
.
These are the only two records of "Holy SpirK Baptism" artd 1t was not promrsed to
individual crtizens (Christ~ns) in the kingdom but the two groups. the Jews and Gentiles.
sOOwing that God makes no d~ti nction between Jew and Gentile 1n ChriSt (Rom 10:12; Gal.
328; Col. 3:11)1
•
For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write.... )

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Buleville Road~ P.O. Box' 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 46631
Sunct.y Momlfl111

Bible lbldy 9 :30

*******

Wor11tlp 10 :30

Sundey Evening
Worehlp 8 :00

e ...ening

7 :00

In Ihe mreresl ol beller vl.slon
from the oH1Ce of.

George W. Davis, O.D.
458 Second Ave., Gallipolis
Pbone . .Z'&amp;lG

Wedneld1v

Redio

..Mee•o-ltcm
the Bible "
Oelly-WJEt-4
11 :8&amp; A.M .

"The Church w~h the Me110ge"

,,

~H

Ctwn.l 13. s..,. 7:~ 1.111.

1

�Ptlge-B-8-The Sunday

'

~e..Oy-Middleport-Gallipoli5,

Tl~s-Sentinel

November

Ohi-Point Plea5ant, W, Va.

13, 1983

1rimet· •eutinet Sectionber·
Novem ~: __

Bucks. ·r out 'Cats,
ready for Wolverines
.
at Michigan Saturday
.

SOLEMN SALUTE -'Ibis honor guard from Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, 6red a salute to
the deceased veterans who gave their Hves for their

ended by a miHtary salute by firing weapons, and
HONORING VEI'ERANS Services were
conducted in Gallipolis City Park Friday, marking . Included a message by Maj. Gen. (Ret.) George
Veterans Day 1983. All Gallia C&lt;lunty veteran's
Bush.
'
organizations participated in the the services, which

Ohioans mark Veterans Day
Gallia honors veterans

Meigs remembers . .

' s, Veterans Day services were
GALLIPOLIS - In GallipoU
conducted F tiday a t the Doughboy in the City Park , with
representat ives of all the loca l veterans organiza tions, the American
Legion Lafayette Post 27, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of
· Foreign Wars Post 4464.
The base of the sta tue bears a plaque reading " dedicated to the
memory of the va lliant sons ofGallia County who served in the World
War. " Erected in May 1931 by the Lafayette Post of the American
Legion. that had been the big war to that time. Since then, the United
States Armed F orces have been involv~'(( in another World War and
conflicts in Korea and Vietnam . Now. many young Americans are
involved in Grenada a nd as a part of the multi·national peacekeeping
force in Lebanon, with hundreds of lives lost between the two in
recent weeks.
During the services. condu cted in a cold misty rain, Major Gen.
(Ret.) George Bus~. delivered a m essage from President Ronald
Reagan to all service'veterans in the United States.

POMEROY - Despite cold, drizzling rain members of DreW
Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy, again gathered in
front of the Meigs County Courthouse Friday to conduct their annual
Veterans Day services.
Joseph Zwilling, past commander, presented a message from the
National American Legion Commander, and the Rev. Fatber
Anthony Glannamore, of Sacred Heart Church, called the occasion
"a day for remembering" hitting upon the tradition and importance
of the date.
"Without tradition, we are set adrift with only a 'now,' a prekent
without a past, upon which to build the future," he stated.
He noted that those being remembered have given "the ultimate
gift of human existence" stressing the Importance of making
Veterans Day, a meaningful occasion. He called for the living to
work for the furtherance of peace.
The post honor guard presented the salute.to the dead .

•

RUNNING AWAY -: Ohio State's Keith Byars
( U) runs away from Northwestern tacklers Jbn
Bobblit ( 46) and Alex Moyer (26) for a 10 yard gain In

country at annual Veterans Day services held in front
of the Meigs County C&lt;lurlhouse Friday.

The Tutors' 20-year-old son, Rex,
was re ported killed in 19€8 when his
Army unit was ambushed in
Vietnam near the Cambodian
border. Tutor said he and his wife
later buried a body in Hillcrest

Cemetery in Aurora , Ohio, that
weeks, in which he walked every
Army officials said was their son.
day.
But Tutor, who twice viewed the
He proudly displays a · medal
body, remains doubtfuL
bearing the seal of the state of West
"There was simply no way ihat VIrginia, which he received during
could be Rex. The body was just too his walk.
big," Tutor recalled, adding that the
"Thesecretary'OfthestateofWest
wounds in the face and shoulder Virginia (A. James Manchin) saw
didn't correspond to Army accounts me coming past his home," Tutor
of the attack.
! thought !twas great of him to
Tutor said that shortly after their said."
get out in the rain."
son's reported death , his wife closed
Tutor said he had pledged last
her beauty shop. In an attempt to
have the shop's phone disconnected, r--'-----------1
the Tutors had to !igh! to keep their
home telephone number, which was
the same as the one In the shop and
the phone company wanted to wipe '
~
•
fh,·olrc
off the books.
"They didn't want to leave us with
Tonight Thru Thurs .• Nov. 17
our old phone number our son would
know," said Tutor, his voice
cracking a nd eyes welling with
CHEVY
tears. " Ithreatened to camp in their
CHASE
office to keep the old phone."
Oad in a battle-dress camouflage
uniform and lugging a backpack,
CI!N'ftJilY
the wiry Tutor began his 436-mile
trek to Washington on Sept. 24. He
worked in Oeveland dwing the
ONE EVENING SHOW AT 8 P.M.
week and made his walk on the
SUN . MAT. ONE SHOW AT 2 P.ll.
weekends. except for the final two

Christmas "that if there was not
progress toward an accounting of
the guys for a year, that I would
Indeed by Veterans Day walk from
Cleveland, Ohio, toWashingionD.C.
to call attention to the need for an
accounting. And there's been no
significant progress since last
year."

'

CREATED JUST FOR YOU
AND YOUR INDIVIDUAL
NEEDS. BASED ON A $1000
MINIMUM .
LET US "MAKE" A
CERTIFICATE JUST FOR YOU .

TO THE
VOTERS OF
CHESHIRE TWP.
FOR YOUR
VOTE AND
SUPPORT
FOR ELECTING
ME YOUR
TRUSTEE

COLO\' ·

191.

Wendell Bradbury

-

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A crowd of about
50,!XXl was expected today to see the Kansas City
Chiefs and Cinclnna tl Bengals, two teams heading In
opposite directions, meet in a National Football
League game.
A month ago, the Chiefs had reason to think this
mlght be a soft spot on their schedule. The Bengals
were tom apar1 by strife and distraction and
struggling to a 1-6 start.
Bpt the Bengals who wiD be in Arrowhead Stadium
on Sunday are riding a three-game winning streak
and playing, according to their coach, as well as tbey
did in getting to the Super Bowl two years ago.
The thre&lt;&gt; game winning streak has given the
Bengals a 4-6 mark. Last week, they demolished the
winless Houston Oilers 55-H.
The Bengals' three-game winning streak Includes

a

28-21 victory over Cleveland and a 34-14 drubbing of
Green Bay.
One factor in the Bengals' turnaround Is the return
of fullback Pete Johnson, who was suspended for four
games by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle for
admitted cocaine Involvement. The 270-pound
fullback ran for 65 yards and three touchdowns last
week, giving him seven touchdowns in five games.
The Chiefs are also 4-6, but they have arrived at the
reconl from a different direction - two straight
losses. The Chiefs have shown a decided tendency to
lose leads and drop close decisions. They lost by thre&lt;&gt;
to San Diego after leading, led Washington 12.() before
losing 27·12, led Miami 6-0 before falling 14-6, lost by .
three to Denver and have lost by one point to-theRaiders ear-lier.

IN OAK HILL,. OH.

441 St'f'1md Awnu~&gt;

Pd. PoL Adv.

(;allipnlili
441&gt;:\H:\2

GALLIPOLIS
§AVllNGS

ORDERS DUE BY NOV. 17th
· (Small Deposit Required with Order)

Call For lnfornMition.
- '
.

. WE ALSO OFFER AN ASSORTMENT Of
HOLIDAY HAMS PLUS A FULL LINE OF FRESH
CUTS OF BEEF &amp; PORK, LUNCH MEATS &amp; CHEESES.

Cheshire General Store
PH. 367-0314

CHESHIRE. OH.

"Phone-In Orders Welcome"
"Food Stamps Accepted"
.Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9 to 6
'• I

,,\

'

•

II HEY BLUE
DEVILS!
COME
I ACROSS THE STRE
I

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I

'I

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I
I
I

LISA DID!

I
I

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1
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Lisa Cotton - '1983 Jtomecoming

1
1
1

We are giving a 10% Discount to all Blue Devils receiving
cuts &amp; style. Present this coupon for your discount.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

J ·~ New Direction In Hair Design"
I

OUT OF REACH - Iowa's Edt!Je Phillips gels

around Michigan State's Tom Allen as Allen reaches
out In an afford to stop his rnn during first quarter

Scouts from the Orange, Sugar,
Cotton, Fiesta, and Hall of Fame
bowls huddled with Big Ten
Commissioner Wayne Duke and
Ohio State athletic officials Friday
or watched the Buckeyes' rout.
However , the representatives from
the Orange and Cotton bowls left
before the Ohio State victory.
The Buckeyes scored in the flrst41
Seconds when Broadnax ran two
yards for his first touchdwon. The
short drive was set up when
Northwestern's Eric Anderson
fumbled the opening kickoff and
Dennis Hueston recovered at the
Wildcats' 5.
Ohio State needed only a totaloflO
plays to score three touchdowns and
a 2().() lead after theopeningquarter.
Northwestern now ha$ - been outscored 92-3 in the first quarter this
season.

action at Spartan Stadium in East LinsingSaturday.
(.AP Laserphoto) .

Browns Eye WUd Card

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland Browns Coach
Sam Rutigliano Isn't talking much about ·.vinnlng his
division anymore. Instead, the coach is looking at
Sunday's game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
as the first step toward making the playoffs as a wild
card.
"Realistically, it's probably going to take 10
victories (to get into the National Football League
playoffs), " Rulgllano said. "Maybe somebody will
sneak in with nine."
That means the 5-5 Browns can afford only one or
possibly two losses 'in their flnalsix games.
Tampa Bay Coach John McKay also Is talking
about the playoffs, but only jokingly. His 1-9Bucs won
their first game last weekend, beating the NFC
Central-leading Minnesota Vikings 17·12.

Former Cincinnati Bengal Jack Thompson has
started the last eight games at quarterback for
Tampa Bay, but the Bucs' offense has been Ignited in
the past two weeks by running back J ames Wilder .
Wilder ran for 219 yards in the victory over
Minnesota .
The Browns are three games behind the first-place
Steelers in the AFC Central Division, and Rutigliano
said this week that the turmoil caused by his
quarterbacks' contract problem s has not helped .
The Issue carne to the forefront Tuesday, when
starting quarterback Brian Sipe flew to New York for
discussions with the USFL's New Jersey Generals.
Those talks produced no contract , and Rutigliano
says it's time for Sipe, reserve quarterback Paul
McDonald and the rest of the Browns to concentrate
on the task at hand - Tampa Bay and the playoffs.

Meigs, GAHS cagers
scrimmage Saturday

AND SAVE
1
· - - - - - - - - - - - -QIP
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -I

Fresh From The Lewis Turkey Farm

bowl by jumping ltsoveraUrecord to
B-2 going Into the finale at Michigan.
The Buckeyesare6-2in theBigTen.
Northwestern fell to 2·8 overall and
2·6 in the conference.
Ohio State quarterback Mike
Tomczak, also playing in only the
first half, ran 8 yards for one
touchdown and passed l4 yards for
another score to tight end JoiiD
Frank. Tomczak completed Bof 12
passes for 112 yards .
Vaughn Broadnax, Ohio State's
252-pound fullback, also scored
twice in the opening haH on runs of 2
and 11 yards as the Buckeyes built a
4l0 halfllme lead against the
Wildcats.
Northwest..:n, however, was
playing without Its No. 1 quarter
back Sandy Schwab, who was
sidelined for disciplinary reasons.

Bengals battle Chiefs, Browns face Tampa Bay today

Tailor-made
certificates.

MANY THANKS

Laserphoto) .

Saturday, including the gameseams in Rutgers' pass defense.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)winner
with 32 seconds remaining,
Quarterback Jeff Hostetler threw
to
give
Wisconsin a 42-38 Big Ten
for three touchdowns and ran for
Penn St. 34, Notre Dame 30
&amp;&gt;nference
football vlctocy over
another Saturday as 15th-ranked
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) West VIrginia moved closer to its Quarterback Doug Strang swept B Purdue.
The Boilermakers seemed to
third straight bowl appearance with yards for a touchdown with ~
have the game won after Lloyd
a J5.7 victocy over Rutgers.
seconds left to give Penn State a
Hawthorne's3-y"l'd touchdown run.
With scouts from the Hall of 34-.'l) victory over Notre Dame
his second of the game, put Purdue
Fame, Liberty, Peach, Gator and Saturday and keep the Nlttany
ahead 38-35 with 2: 35 to go. But
· Citrus Bowls watching, Hostetler Lions' postseason bowl hopes alive.
Wright
completed passes of 7 yards
completed 17 of 28 passes for 279
Notre Dame had gone ahead ]).27
to Bret Pearson and 27 yards to AI
yard&lt;; as the Mountaineers inn· with7: 3lleftin thefourthperiodona
proved their record to 8-2.
1-yard burst by tailback Allen · Toon to help the Badgers to the
Pui'due 22. Five plays later, Wright
. West VIrginia scored on three of Pinkett, who accounted for 217
hit Pearson !rom the 13 for the
Its first four possessions as Hos· yards and four touchdowns.
go-ahead
touchdown .
teller, who passed the 4,®yard
After fumbllitg away a scorlng
Purdue's
last chance ended when
career total offense mark, directed chance at the Notre Dame 12, Penn
Averlck
Walker
Intercepted a
scoring drives of 65, 61 and 74 yards. State got the ball back at midfield
.
desperation
pass
in
the Badgers'
He passed 40 yards to Gary Mullen with 53 secoJI(!s left. Fullback Jon
end
zone
as
the
final
gun
sounded.
for one touchdown, hit Willie Williams picked up 5 yards and
It
took
nine
plays
for
Wisconsin
to
Drewery with a 45-yard touchdown Strang connected with Dean DIM·
go
63
yards
on
the
winning
drive.
pass on the next series and ran for a
idio for a 35-yard gain and a first
Wright earlier scored on a 1-yard
1·yard touchdown as the Mountai- down at the lrlsh 10.
run In the second quarter and a
neers built a 21·7 halftinne lead
2·yard
run In the third period.
· against the 3-7 Scarlet Knights.
Wisoonsln 42, Punlue 38
Campbell passed for 181 yards
Wide receiver Rich Holllns
WEST LAFAYEI IE, Ind. (API
and two touchdowns to Cliff Benson.
caught seven of Hostetler's passes -Quarterback Randy Wright ran
·The victory lifted the Badgers to
for 97 yards as West Virginia for three touchdowns and passed for
4-4 In the Big Ten and 64 for all
receivers continually found the open -311 yar!ls and two more touchdowns
games.

Anew concept
in saving
money
.
.
arrives In
Gallia
County.

r:::==========:;l

the Drst quarter of play Saturday In C&lt;llumbus. (AP

Mountaineers in romp,35-7

Father completes 436-mile memorial walk
By JAI\IES HANNAH
AS50ciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON tAPi - Homer
Tutor saw his son off to war in 1%7.
More than 15 years later he finds
hinnself in the shadow of the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
searching for his m issing son as
painful memories wash over hi s
broken heart in waves.
The 55-year-old Deersville. Ohio,
man comp leted a 436-mile walk
!rom Cleveland to Washington in a
driv ing rain last Thursday to
underscore the need to determine
the fate of the thousands of
Americans still m iss ing in Southeast Asia.
Sitting in a cramped camper
parked across the street from the
memorial , Tutor and his wife,
Charlotte, recounted their ordeaL
Tutor's Army bush hat, still SOdden
!rom his walk in the co ld , driving
rain, lay by the door.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sporis Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - TaUback Keith Byars became the
second sophomore In Ohio State
histocy to rush for 1,000 yards in a
single season, scorlng two touchdowns and leading the lOth· ranked
Buckeyes to 55-7 Big Ten Confer·
ence football rout of Northwestern.
Byars, the league's leading
rusher this season, played In only the
first half and scored on touchdown
runs of 1 and 2 yards. He had 52
yards.
Archie Griffin was the only other
sophomore to gain l ,!XXl yards
rushing In a single season for Ohio
State. The two-tinne Heisman
trophy winner did It in 1973..
Ohio State, a 38-polnt favorite,
ramalned in contention for a major

CUP AN SAVE

6

:~;~.:~
A~E~
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

0

II

·---------------------------·
'

•

IIIEICl8' ~~ Cllrpenter pa ID lor two paints AI I I a l'oft Fry
d I ' • MIII!JIIaUd lllllrp Ill a
llldlml8p •1 I I Fan
tr.,.ud'"*'""B lzl*'llll!rdQIIIIIIel..lrrJMuatkiBG)il
I 1.
.
.

..._WIQ'

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Columbus Walkins Memorial in a
three-way basketball scrimmage
Marauder varsity cagers were
given an "A" rating by Coach Greg
on the Gallipolis boards.
Each GAHS prospect got in tOto 15
Drummer In two scrimmages
minutes playlng tinne according to
Frtday and Saturday at the Larry
the veteran Blue Devil mentor.
Morrison Gymnasium.
On Friday night, the Marauders
"We're stU! trying to determine
some individual roles," said Osoulscored Licking Heights by seven
points In five quarters of action. On
borne. "We (the coaching staff) feel
Saturday they battled Fort Frye we have a very competitive bunch
this year. We don't know how many
'a nd the same Licking Heights team
we'll
win, but It's a hard·nosed,
with the Marauders the strongest .
unselfish
and competitive bunch of
team of the three.
"We played consistent and very young men,'' Osborne continued.
Commenting on Saturday's prac·
haro. We hustled, the bench played
well, and I was pleased with our tice foes, Osborne said: "East
effort. It was a real good weekend of Carter a fast·breaklng team, had
basketball," said Drummer after good quickness. They applied full
cour1 pressure, and broke only two
the scrimmages.
Members of the varsity are or three tinnes against us. Our boys
'
.
were able to convert ·quickly . to
senior Mike Kennedy, Nick Riggs,
defense."
and Jay Evans, juniors Jackie
AgainSt Walkins Memorial, OsWelker and Jay Carpenter, and
borne said, "we held our own. We
sophomores Mike Chancey, Rick
Wtse, and Lee Powell. Dave Fisher, were the smallest team out there
a junior, Is still sidelined with an today."
Osborne added, "wehave13more
ankle lnlury and did not play.
days to pick a starting five and
' Also on tbeMaraudercagescene,
backups to thestartlngfive."GAHS
coach Mlck ChUds' reserves fared
well In a scrimmage against North opens Its 1983-84 campaign at
Gallla last week- The Little Ma· Southern on Nov . 26.
rauders won by a convincing
Wednesday, GAHS has a 5 p.m.
scrimmage
at Chesapeake. Friday,
rnlll'l:in.
the Devlls will play Columbus
GALLIPOLIS - 'IWelve candl· Beechcrolt Ina 6:15p.m . preview at
dates saw action bere Saturday Reynoldsburg. Saturday, at noon,
l'II0!'1Iing 81111 at1emoon as Coach iJ1e Devils wlll wind up pre-season
Jim Oabome's Gallipolis Blue action In a scrimmage at
Devils battled East Carter' Ky., and Reynoldsburg.

'

'

,I.

SOPHOMORE Lee Powell and .Junior .Jaclde Welker attempt to
rebound a miiMd Melp' free tbrow. Melp opened Its P..,.!lea80n
scrjnunap Friday and Saturday at the Larry Morrison
GyinnM!um.
·

�Page

C2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-

N•tonaJ Football L.ewpe

-Con!~
Miami
Baltirral!
' Butfakl
f'iN-· England
N.Y. Jets

W L T Pd. Pf' PA
1 J o
~9 · 1&amp;~
6 4 0 .im 1&amp;3 '211
640~ijl)200

s

5

Cinctnna!l
Houston

. 500~

0

196

0
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tm 17:! J7.l
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4

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224

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Nev.· Orleans

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Atlanta

4 6 0
SUn4a)•, Ne\1 . ll
CtndnnaH ur Kansas City

:\allonul SW.kdha.ll A!N)(•hdkm
E.o\.~TERS

Patrkit Dh woo
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NY Rangprs
II 4 2 2o1 n S
NYislf-1;
l l l i 0'!l76.":19
Phllock'lphla I{) ti 1 21 71 57
Washlng1on
7 9 lJ 14 ~ 61
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Q\.II'IJE'c

Buffalo
Har1ford
Momreal

4

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8
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Camphi'U Coofffmce
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4

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76
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NE"Y&gt;' \' ork

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w a.~hln~on

fm ti'IIJ DI\'LoJon
~

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Chic~

3
2

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Indiana

2

:,

Mllwauk(&gt;(&gt;
AUama

t"

DMroit

~

.625 - ,
.429 I~

.-129

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2

.:cJ
.:Bi

2l,l,t
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Cl~eland

2 6 .Z!O
MUU:RN CONFEREN(E
Mldwt&gt;!tl Dlvftlon

Dallas

3'
3

Kansas City

.'ill

1

.500

,1

~

~

.375

2

5

,B;

21-:t

2 6
PIICiflt ()lvistOII

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Los AngPics
SNit I('

GoJdl&gt;n

33
3

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Hwston

~tall:!

San Dlep:u
Phool~

F'rkl~Q' '!i G11111e~

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Buffab 3. Ton:»1t0 1

I· High school scores
Ohio

\\' L Pd. GB
1 .m!
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11!
,'l
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~ . •:iii
~

Boston

Dh·l'llon

8
8
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Detroit at Houston
Phlladelpllla at Chicago
Grwn Bav at MiJUlflf,()t:t

fOI\"FER.E.VC'F.:

,.\llanlk· OkWun

\\'l,kW f,'Onfl'l'mt'l'

S
;
7

1m 222 214

()
0
0

tnt

Basketball

N~aUon!ll llo.._-ko· l.e~SP~

.001 166 lll

0
0

Tampa 83.}'

Mood.&amp;¥. Nov. I~

4 6
0 10

4
4
li
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Detroit

PhJiaot&gt;Jprna at WlnniJl(l!. 1n 1
:\1ontt'Pal at \'anruun•r. tnl

Hockey

iW ?m

C h icn.~:o,

F.dmonton at

[)(Inver ar l..os AnltC'k's Ral&lt;i:'rs
Washlngtoo a t l"N' York Giant~

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6
6

Cret&gt;n 1¥Y
Chicago

~ F'ranc!~

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111 Boston , m~
Calll:at)' at BLJffalo.' 1n t.
Detroit a t~ . ,•. RanJ..'('I':'i, tnt

Oouas at San Dleszo

FurXbUI

to Coach Mark Hartman and the

Ecker,
teacher
and
gridforiner
coach,Galllpolls
praised play
by
North Gall!a and Kyger Creek
players in last week's SVAC
championship tnt. He also gave
first-year Gall!polis Coach Brent
Saunders a pat on the back for his
efforts despite·a wlnless season.
Ecker, !n a letter to the sports
editor, said:
Certain things need to be said
after a football season when the
cheertng and moaning are over, the
trophies put away, and the crying
towels are drying outlot next year,
LN's give out cheers for two great
finales on the gridiron.
Last Frtday night, a large crowd
of Gall!ans witnessed one of the
finest games seen around here in
years,
'
North Gall!a won a hard fought
contest over Kyger Creek by a
narrow, 12-7 score. Both teams
must be congratulated for a great
game. There were many outstanding plays and players that we will
talk about for years to come. There
was no bush league behavior by
players or coaches.
Congratulations go to John Blake
and his staff for their second
straight SVAC championship. Also

~~ ·•Gamet~

2

7

Dall&lt;r&gt;

Washin~on

5

LA Raldf'n.

.sano~·

Mlaml at Nt&gt;w En2land
Buffalo at N&lt;&gt;\4• York J()L~
Plnsbur~h aT Baltlmol"t'

""''""
s
w..

· Ka nsas Citv

N.Y . lslanctr-rs 6, Plmburdl !'I
Vancouver -1. "'inn!~ 2

Los !\n~k$ Ram.-; at Atlanta. tnl

I~

GALLIPOlJS - C. L. (Johnny)

Seattle ar St. Louis
Tampa, Da)· at Ck&gt;''f'land

460.'100D:D2

8

Plrts.W!llh

C1e\l('land

:roo

OPEN DAILY 10-9; SUNDAY 1-6

ri~~C~reek~~Bo~bc~a~tisii~a~jo~b~w~e~Jli.iiiii~~~iioinij&gt;iage~Ci-4~)~.

359

.....J:w"·

15-111, . . .....
For PUlling and POund .
naris scraPI"" .
mo

JJered sleel .,., lll'trno. Tem.

Oloatllltl

u.,,.

MMMB-15

8!~-•u•

MulU-Outlll Clllllf
Converts ooe outlet to si1
grounded receptacles. With
circuit breaker. MOC-liC

BAUM TRU,E VALUE
· CHESTER

985-3301

E;Jyna Ca t h. 13. Fostoria 6
AI Gahanru~
~ - C lairsv illE' 12, Col. ·St. Cllarles 0

AI &amp;Efta
Drt'Cksvlllc 2-1. Wf'Silake .1

AI Spm&amp;fk'ld
Urbana .U. Washln~&lt;~:on C. H. 1.1

AI Troy
Ct'lll1a 38, i&lt;c'HI'rlnJ: Al1f.'r 19
Al SU!uhftrvllJt!

DIVISION IV
A.t C.alon
Orrville 15, Lculsvllk' 1\ql.llnas 8

Ycu~ - lJnii.IUnc;&gt; IJ, Strobenvlll£' 0

Itt Muldldd
Loudom:Uit&gt; 49, MDr~t"an'lla 8

At Middletown
Li'mon·MonrOE&gt; 17, Cin . Gm•r1hllls 0
DIVEION m

Coal Grove

Roo8t-velt
LaBrar 19. AkrOn Sl. V-St. M tl ,

Col. RPady 22, W. Je ffprsoo 1l

~UOR'i

..._..."'_
8,\.' SEliALL

NEW YORK Y A.~KEES--AdG:'\1 Ort&gt;Stes
f)pj;tractl. Rc&gt;x Hudll'!". Mike Pagliarulo

1\l Gl"'Weporl

and Kl'it h Smith, Infielders. to thf' Z'Q'IIl'r.

Outrls:ht.-..:1 &amp;ott Pan~. pltcht'T. to Columbus ot till&gt; l nternatk&gt;r1aJ Lcaj~\H'.

I'IIICI.UnR RIIAJE
"K mtrt Fittltm1 11nd
Ammunttlon Po licy
l'"nomo 1nd 1mmuno1oon 111 oQid
on 111'{1 ~1&gt;mlllo 1n&lt;2 WITh fltllfll
S1111 ~ nllloal ~-• All J&gt;&lt;Jrel&gt; 1,.;
muol t. p icMG ~~~ on llt'IOII
Pu,.:hloto ot loru rmo mull t. 1

rn•dvtt ut Sut•

on"'"'(~ l~&lt;n•om

allll&gt;ld

5.97-7.97:~~

f-ral' Centerfl.. Ca~·

Box of 20 HI·Shok'"'. sott..polnt bu»ets. Save
:~11.? Cal. lulet., 20 Roundl ... , ... . .. 6 .97•
z,Q 1Col. lui..... 20Roundl •.•....... 7.17
,301, 30/06 Cat, 20 loundl, .. , •. , 1.17

.
7400Sem--·
4-shot magazine ri11e features
straight-line 5tock with checkering. Cross bolt tor safety.
30/06. .243 and .308 c al.

Limited
Quantities
Available

Remington" 170 Venl·rlb lho!Vun

1983 PLYMOUTH RELIANT, 4 door, S.E., 4 cyl., auto. trans.,
air cond., AM/FM/Stereo, Less than 2,200 miles. "SAVE
BIG ON THIS ONE".

Sale
Price

249.97

F\xnp-octlbn snorgun Is chambered for 2Yi' Shells. Available lr.
12 or 20 gaUge. Right hoM only.

Our Reg. 39.97
Our Reg . 10.97

29.97

8.97

Weover4xl2mm Allelcope

llock Vinyl Gun Ca1e
Lint-free cott on lining. plastic
ha ndle and l.D holder. Savel
Our 12.97, Scope Model ca .., 9 .97

Blue finish Wffh coated sealed
optic1 for "fog prOOf"' Image.
Metered adlustments.
Our

1-a.••·"· Weaver

l-9a1Zmm lcepe, lt.t7

Our Reg. 39.97

34.97

Our Reg. 34.97

i,;.
49

""\.

•

Our Reg.

5.97

~

'~ J
~

'i

Thermal Underwear Tops
Heavyweight cotton Raschell knit, Asst.
SIZeS.

29.97

lhlrable Hunflnvl'antl
Ten Mile Cloth• polye$ter
lined. with 5-oz.• Docro~·
polyester fill . 2 pockets,

....

•~~ue~g~on

he 1M

~

•'Oul'oftt"'-9 1M

Fumbles/lost ....

Coal Grove scored first after
Belpre fumbled on t:te!r first
pqssesslon at their own 40. Ross

WILlARD MOORE

Moore's team
wins playoff
opener, 17-0

2.27~Price
~g!Qn" ·~~ ...,

.......""" '

~x~nenced hunters prefer these high vetoc' Ys ugs. Box of 5, 12, 16 or 20 gauge. Save.
'

.~: Moore previously coached at
,'!:astern of Meigs and GaWa .
!i\cademy before heading . to the
:;.&amp;oestern part of the state.
~: Moore ha.S credited the Hornets'
•.111ccess to a sol!d weight llftlng
~rogram and the attitude of the
. lloys. Moore also has the dulles o!
~thlettc director at the Class 'AAA'

r:~lbowling

t ·

,......,. Swln1&lt;11

:~ 'Team standings as ot' Nov. 10. 1983.
,.......
W,L.
1-;!trtcho.IM ....... , ...... , ................ ,., ... 'S1 2J
~~~ns .... .......... .. ..... .... .............. ... 44 36

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
PH. 992-2174

500 E. MAIN

POMEROY OH.

Motor Serv1ce .. ................... 40 40

'Circle's ....... .. ...... ...... .. ................... 39 41

.• ~Team . and lndlvkhaal h1gh game and ·
~~ high oertes are listed.
.; ~JertchO lnn J. Harris 110, .Sl
.

0urReg.
•
6.97
Hclncly ThiCk lltln Rdck
Adjusts to fit easily.
Cluicldy on truck window

!' iElDf.Dil. - J . Bragr 176. 440.
· ;. Joe' Cain, Aft)'. - P. saunden 197. 5ai.
·-·, .. ,attzens- H. Marcum :illo, t'l81.
•, Clr&lt;le's- J . Mooney lll6, 417. '
;. "VIllqe Pizza- V..Jordan 151, 415.
•' ;Electric Motor Service - R. Whitehair 1!10.

~·ohnlon's Market -

T. ADen ·193. 507.'
moldorll lk Thomas - S. Edwards 210,

One

••••
I
NIAll

1.47~11eg

.....---

il,..llpllt&gt; converted- J. HarriS 6-7,10 split, J .

I
I
I
I

,. ,... ~10 opll1.
~

~·'. •

11

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

Foam lamll-.

._

Nnember 1.

~•bric Shop ..

Belpre......
Coal Grove ..

There's more to financial
planning than saving JDOnj!y.
Security and protection for your
family need to be an important
part of your overall financial
picture. That's why every one of
our club rilem~s is entitled
,
automatically to $10,000 worth of
Accidental Death ln8Ul'ance.
It could be the most important
part of the services that we offer
our club members. In fact, we
even give members the
opportunity to tncreaae their

•Johnloo.'s Market ........... ........ ... ..... . ~ 45
.Ejaon .... ... ................... ..... ... .... .... .. :ll 50

4 97

.. ......... 4-2

Penalties ........ . .. .............. .. .. .3-25
By quart-en:

3-1
4-.JO

,_

'

TO

13500
OFF
All Men's

Frye

!,_ :.
~ 1 •

..

.,

:II
·,
~ .

~ ,-.

Boots
"' .
Layaway For 5 :
Christmas ~ ;

fRYE I
[~l

GERNIE'S
Heating &amp; Cooling

*Commercial
*Residential
CALL 446-3217

800 Second, Gallipolis

.. ..0 G 0 7-13
.. ..... 6 12 8 6-32

248 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Your Sporting
Goods Store .....

-'

~

M&lt;KDialtt
' tl!2;

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M;uy, 9-2 and No.4 tn ClaSs AA, led
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By KEl'l1l WISECUP
Times-Sentinel SWf
In one of the more dramatic
turnarounds in Ohio High School
football history, Coach Willard
(Buddy) Moore has directed
Lemon-Monroe High into second
round competition of the divisiOn II
playoffs.
Moore, a 1966 graduate of
Middleport High School where he
starred as quarterback !n football,
and guard In basketball under
Coach Carl Wolfe, is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted R!ley, Jr.
Lemon-Monroe, a weakltngon the
grid scene before Moore's tenure
began three year's ago, went 9-1 this
year, losing only to playoff bound
Middletown-Fenwick 3-0. The
i~ornets advanced Friday night
,:with a 17-0 win over Cincinnati

~Eiectrtc

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!shed at 10-1.
Running bacl~ Paul Berardinelli
scored on an 8-yard run w!th5: 09Ieft
in the third quarter to snap a 3-3 tie
and lift Brecksvllle (11-0) over
Westlake (10-1).
Junior quarterback Tom Bolyard
accounted for all of the points for
OnvUle (8-3 ), running 4 yards and 1
yard for touchdowns, kicking an
extra point and passing to junior end
Mark Auble for a twp-point conversion against Aquinas (~5 ).
St. ClalrsV1lle (10-0-1) held St.
Charles (8-3) to 118 total yards while
dominating the game offensively.
Senior fullback C.J. Grbss rushed
for &amp;3 yards

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1979 FORD F-100, 6 cyl, eng:, std. shift, 3 speed with overdrive, new tires. AM/FM/Tape, sliding rear window. "You
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touchdowns as Bishop Ready (9-2).
rallied from a 13-7 halftbne del!c!t to
beat West Jefferson (9-2).
Three backs combined for 326
rushing yards lor Loudonville (9-2) ,
which set a new state DlvJslon IV
playoff record with 49 points. Senior
quarterback Scott Vickers led the
way with 114 yards, while Steve
Weltmer and Doug Black rushed for
106 yards each. Junior defensive
back Doug Long had \hreE' interceptions. Margaretta f!nlshed at 8-3.
Senior tailback Jeff Rogan rushed
for 154 yards and scored lour
touchdowns for Urbana (11-0),
which got a back-breaking 86-yard
kickoff return lor a touchdown by
John Arnold. Was hington Court
House (9-2) got 104 yards rushing
from Fred Jones, whoscoredbothof
Its touchdowns.
It was Christmas !n November for
Celina, which turned four of Alter's
five turnovers into touchdowns.
Rick Ross ran for 119 yards and
scored thref:&gt; times for Celina (11-0),
which also got 101 yards from Dave
Knous. Alter (8-3 ) lost four of eight
fumbles and was intercepted once.
Lemon Monroe had similar good
fortune, converting three of Greenhills' six turnovers into touchdowns .
Ed Martin had three interceptions
for Monroe (10-1), Greenhills lin-

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:U. Bdpn&gt; 13

Transactions
f'ridta'' S Spo~

ByPAULALEXANI)ER
Mooolated PreM Writer
Only two defending state cham·
pions remain in the high school
football playoff chase after two 1982
tltllsts saw their hopes da$hed in the .
first round.
West Jefferson, the 1982 Division
IV ch(lmplon, !ell 22-13Frlday night
to Columbus Bishop Ready. De!end. ing D!vtslon m t!tllst Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary was ousted by
Lev!ttsburg LaBrae 19-13.
Ten other teams claimed vlctprtes to advance to next weekend's
state semlflnais. Pairings wtll be
announc® Sunday.
In other Division m matches,
Urbana, top-ranked in ClaSs AA,
whipped Washington Court House
41-13; Elyria Csthollc got by
Fostoria J3.6; and St. Clairsville
blanked Columbus St. Charles 12-0.
In D!vls!on II, Brecksville beat
Westlake 24-3, Ceitna ripped Kettering Alter 38-19, Youngtown Ursuline
sl)ut out Steubenville 13-l) and
Lemon-Monroe blanked Cincinnati
Greenhllls 17-0.
Coal Grove rolled over Belpre
F1ELD (mAL ATI'EMPT FAilS- Belpre's Lee game agaln&lt;lt Coal Grove In Tank Memoprial
32-13, Loudonville 'rlpped MargaStadium, Ironton. 'lbe Eagles were ellmlilllled, 32-13.
Holder (left) missed a 23-yard field goal attempt ID the
rella 49-8 and Orrville sUpped by
(Keith Wisecup Photo),
-~ period of Friday night's poo;t-seasoo playoff
Louisville Aquinas 15-8 in Division .
IV .
Eight morefirst-roundgamesare
,scheduled tonight, h!ghl!ghted by
defending D!vtslon I champion
Cincinnati Moeller against Cincin·
scored from a yard out on fourth
32-13 over Belpre in the first round
By KEITH WISECUP
nat! Princeton and 1982 Division V
down.
of region 15, division IV state
~: :
Time&amp;Sentlnel Staff
king Newark Catl!ollc versus
In the second quarter, quarter. . IRONTON - Workhorse tall- playoff action .
Woodsfield.
back
Steve Murphy bootlegged It In
Ross' second and final touch_down
back Joe
ran for 246 yards in 27
Fostoria quarterback Guy DeM ·
from 13 yards out to make It 12-0,
carries as he led Coal Grove to a came on an '81 yard run with only
ars was hit as he passed on third
Belpre Ill the scoreboard mid1: 27Ieft in the first half and upped
down and goal at tl!e Elyrla catholic
way
in the second quarter when Lee
the Hornets' lead to 18-6 and
3-yard line. Tim Coy picked the ball
Holder passed to Shane Simmons
seemed to take the steam out of the
off and raced untouched 95 yards for
from eight yards.
Eagles. It was also the longest run
Ross' long run then made!t18-6at
!n division IV playoff history.
athe
touchdown
7¥., Elyrta
minutes
left in I
game andwith
saved
Cathol·
the half.
Coal Grove now has won 17
!c'sunbeatenseason (11-0) ,
The Hornets scored a TD in each
sdtraight games including all
A 1-yard run by Chris Hoover in
of the f!naJ two quarters as lullback
eleven this year while Belpre ends
the first quartergaveFostor\a (10-1)
Mike Preston went tn from 18 and 12
their fine season at 10-1.
a 6-0 lead and marked the first time
yards.
Elyria Csthol!c, second-ranked in
Belpre scored Its second touch- Class AA, trailed in a game this
Three other division IV teams
down !n the f!nal minute when
season.
that advanced to state semi-final
Holder passed 19 yards to Scott
action next week were Columbus
Running back Tony · Stephen
Cleland.
Ready who defeated defending
broke loose lor third-quarter touchstate champion West Jefferson
Department
B
CG
down runs of five and 73 y~rds as
First down'i ..............
.. ........ 10
1B
22-13, Orrv!lle, and Loudonville.
Leavittsburg LaBrae, 11-0 and No.6
Yards rushlng .......
. ...... ll1
378
Coal Grove's second round oppoYards passing........ .. . ........... llrr
32
in Class AA, ended Akron St
nent and site will be announced
Total yards .......... ................... 2.17
410
Vincent-St. Mary's hopes for rePasses, ......................... ..... .10·19..() 3-5-1
Monday.
Punts .......... ........................ 3-40.0 2-31.0
claiming Its title. St. Vincent-St.

Page-C.~

champs eliminated·:

Ross

At ln:doo

At Kl.'lll.

D~fending

Coal Grove ,bounces Belpre

SALE ENDS SATURDAY

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

done,

AI lM'aln

Slate Playoft.i
t)oldQ's Kc!ulis
DfVISION 0

November 13, 1983

Fonner GAHS coach praises play

Scoreboard ...
Football

November 13, 1983 .

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

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White on white with 2 velcro fasteners casual shoe.
Rea. $22.95 ............... .....$15.00

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Gallipolis, Ohio }
L.~---~----------------~----------------.Jl ~
I)

�Page

C4-The Sund!ly Times-Sentinel

~~outhern domi~ates

All-SVAC squad

, •

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: •
By S&lt;X)'JT WOLFE
-·
l'lmes:Sentine l Staff
-; CHESHIRE - Defending SVAC

;Dormer
-;1:'1
..

: Let' s give

sam~

champion and sectional champion
Sou thern dominated the ra nks
du ring a recent m eeting of SVAC'

cheers -

not

!!'ers - to Coach Brent Saunders
.a nd the 0-10 Gallipolis Blue Devils .
· : What do you say when vou 're

D: lO? They did their best, the)!'!! be
)letter next year, the su n will s tU!

come up, I believe Coach Saunders
deserves a m edal.
To coach a team that i$ small in
size, shm1 on experience and
lacking in speed and agility takes a
great deal of patie nce, understand·
ing a nd a cool head .
Coach Saundet-s m ade no excuses
and he did not blame the players for
their shortcomings. He got the m
out to play and they played their
hearts out. T hey d id n't complain

Final GAHS wid statistics · I
)-layer

( Individual Net l' ardS
RUShin$ )

Kk k oH IU&gt;tum \ ' ardugf'

f&gt;la )w

T (•h l'!t ,\\'g.

3.0

B.auSC'II

3.0
JO

~Ic('atx&gt;

11

11 .0

: ....... .1

~

5.0

;BeavPr.....

B4

H

.lR

. liJ.l 200

.CIQsC' ..
. .. 45 171
SandC'rs .. ..
. ...... .. . 7 :21
&lt;Dill on ..
. ..... ...1
3
G ra n! ..
.. ... ..... .... .... .~
6
Rathburn --············ ........... .. 99. 292

.Garber ............................ , .. \)9 200

~. 9

2.H
2.1

Ni£&gt;hm .. .. .................
Toto.Js

971
-'38 tJ95

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_Opponent.-&gt;

2. ~

3.4

t Pa.......,in gl
J-La}ler
f ·A I Yd Td
..Bergdoll .........
.. .... ....1&amp;-813 '10 -:157 5
sione... .... .... ..
.. .. .. .,..,.. 1!1-57 'J :.!67 :1
'Sa·ndcrs .. . ....
.. ...... 4-7 0 125 1
)u.thburn . . . . . ,
f). 1 n
f1 n
. Totals
59-1$3 L9 S19 9
'Qpponents
5&amp;-94 7 665 12
• lttx'Overed Enemy Fumbles- Pa tterson.
:1; Clark, McC'atx&gt;, 3 each: Swisher. Slone.
..N lehm. 2 each; Smith. Eastman , Garber.
.COllins. Davis. BeavN, Watson , 1 each. Totals
-~ 23. Opponents - 10.
.
: ..
Team Staiistitos
....Department
G
OPI ' "
'-F.Irst downs ...... ,..
. .......... 11.~
161
:Vards rus hing .... ..... ..... .. ..... 1262
2l81i
J,Jost rushing .... .. ........... .. ..... ., .. 291
189
\l.' :et rushing ............... .. -. ..... ... ...9n
2195
~ass anempt s ... . ..... .. .. ...... .... .. .153
9-J
'\lompJetloru; .... ........ .. . ... .. .......... 59
51
)'ntt"!'cepted by ....... ........... .......... 7
19
~f afds pa ssing ..
. ..... .... ... M'J
06."1
~ot8.1 yards ......
.. .. , ....... HI~
J)6(J
...P.Iays ix \ .. ,...
~52
~1:1
,:R~ t urn ~' anl s ..
. .. .69'2
..Fumbles .
.. . .. 'li
J.l
...eost fumbles .. . .
.. .10
23
..P.enall iE&gt;S.
.. .. 7-1-670 73-704
"Runts .. .... : ... ...... . .... ... , .. . 41 -1167 23-69~
~: x- Incl udes fOIJr field gQa\ allempls.

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Punt Return

\' IU'rla~t'

'1i!!la3o·er

A Y G 1'D

,:seaver

...... .................... 9 100 0

...oranl ................... ............. .. .... 1

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

~poncnts

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""" i~ 11~ ~
25 -lOll l

Pass Inter ce ption
f«.'lum.S

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"Jilayer
: Heaver .
.Sh epler

.. .. ......... .. ... 1 11 0

.. . .. ....... .. ... ........... .. .. 3
Strait .. .
.. .... .. ................... I
l.nffin .. .
. ................ .. .. 2

f))one .......................... .... . 15 51
'Eastman ............. .. ....... : .. ...... :1 -1 -.3
:aerJ':dOII .. . .. .. ..
.. . .. .. . ,53 -85 ·1,ti
.Team .......
.. ........... .. .. .. .. .. $ -17 -15.5

·T otal'&gt;

Beavf'r'

u

. ..... ........ . . .... .... I

Griffin

. . .... lR

AH im
l.'i 22fl (]
... \6 ~ 0
.. ..... ~ -10 0
.. ....... 2 23 0

ClosP .. GarbPr ..
Rathburn . .
f'::mick ... ..... .. ....... .. ..... . , .... .. 1 20 0
r:a stman ... .. ....... ....... ........ . .. ~ 1-J 0

Strall ..

M ('('abf' ..

volleyball coaches, as players for
the 1983 SVAC girls' volleyball
dream team were selected.

tContinued_
from __;,;
Page
e-2 1_
_ _ __
T::......_..::.

00 0

: Last Fridai night was also the
finale for a Blue Devil team w hich
C)ll!le 20 points behind at the na if
a.gainst a strongly favored Whee·
!$burg team, to nearly pull off a
liictory.

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-CS .,

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

November 13, 1983

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

t\ \'G TO
.. ... .. .. ..... 3 3-1 0

.............. 1 5
.. \Yf'rt) '... . .. .. ............
.. .. ........ 1
5
'"' O:wL" ..
.. ...... ........... . .. .. . ! 0
: w a tson
.......... .. ..... ..... 1 0
"Total-\
7 -14
• pPponent.'"
l9 17-t

:.

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0
0
0
I

0 0
0 0
0 0

_ _ __

a bout the tough schedule or cry
about the outcome.

Coach Sau nd~rs behaved like a
gent!erha n a t all times . The tea m
altitude was always good .
Congratulations. Coach Saund·
ers. and the 1983 Gallipolis · Blue
Devils. Go get 'em next year:

Meigs fete Monday
R OCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
High School Fall Sports Banquet
will be held Monday, Nov. H, at 6: 30
p.m . at the high school.
The banquet is for mem bers of
football , volley ball, a nd golf teams
and cheerle ader s. Meat, rolls a nd
beverage will be provided by the
Meigs Athletic Boosters. Those
a n ending' are to bring two dishes , a
vegetable, salad or dessert.

Local howling

.. .. .... 1 0 0
50 536 0

Oppoot•nts

Joinlllg Wolfe on the first t~am
were two other talented Tornadoettes, Amy Littlefield and Becky
Mic hael. This trio was part of a
group that led Southern to its third
straight SVAC title and second
sectional title, while bowing In
tournament play as dlstrtct runnerup after claiming the school's first
e ver distrlct,game over Unloto.
Also gaining first team honors
were Amy Roush, Kyger Creek;
Arvina Donahue, North Gallia; and
Tony a McNeal,Southwestern. ·

ROUSH

This year tbe SVAC enjoyed a

DONAHUE

.,..,..·,:,·.,·.:.:. , -...-.... :·
.

Punting
Play('r
p
\ ' A vg
Garber ................................. 29 884 :H.S
Seaver .... .. .... ....................... 10 28.1 28&lt;1
Totais
39 1167 30.0
(2 blocked )
OpponcnL&lt;;
~ 005 :Jl.l
&amp;:oring
Player
TD EP FG TP

Bc0\'{'1'...
Watson .
Garbrr...

..... . ... .. .. ... ... .6 0 0 36
.. .. ..... ... . J 2 0 20
.2 0 0 12

Shepler . .. ....... .. , . . .. ............ 0 3 2 9
Bergdoll ...... .... ... ... . ........ .1 2 0 8
Slone
......................... .. .1 0 0 , 6
Strail ... . .. ...... .....
... 1 0 0 6
F:a .~tman .. ............. .. ............ 1 0 0
6
Totllls
I$ 7 6 103
Opponents
4-t 35 6 305
Sco re by quarters:
Gallipolis ...................... 3 34 31 35-103
Oppollf'nts ................... 94 &amp;5 67 59--.Rl

F1rst Team

Oct 26, 1983

Player----5chool
Yr.
La ren Wolfe. S ........ .. ......... .. .................. 4
Tony's Carry O ut..
_A my Llttleft eld. S ................................... 4
No. 5 .............. .. .. --------~-... 38
Amy Roush, KC ...... .................... ........... 4
Smith-NelsonMotors ... , ........................ 34
Arvina Donahue, NG :..........
. ........ 4
Eagles Club .. .... ........................... ........ 32 · Tonya McNea l. SW ... ........ ... ....... ........ 3
Roach's Gun Shop ................................ 26
Becky Michael, S ..
.. ........ 4
No. 3 ............ ... ......................... ........ ... 20
Second Team
High series- J im Hawley510, Betty Smith
Player-School
Yr.
5.JJ; Charlie Va nMeter 501. Helen P helps 499 · Angie Miller, sw............... .. ................ 4
High game - Bob Hensley 202, Helen
Cindy Higley, NG ..................... .... ..... , ... 4
Phelps 228: Speed Russell 197, Betty Smith
Krist! Ga ddis , E ....... ,.........
.. ........ 3

Team

Pts.
........... , ......... 42

192.

Team sertes -No. 3 1947.
Team gam e - Smith-Nelson Motors 729.

I

J ackson ............................ 7 3 0 19.1 116

Whcclecsbucg ................... 7 3 0 197

m

Totals

Riplt&gt;y
......nt
...........................
.. .................. 5
o
Pt. Pleasa
Logan ..... : ....................... 3
Athens ....
. .... 2
Galli polis
.. 0

1.
1.1
112
216
214

Rock Hm ......................... 9 1 o 238 69

Gall!pollsOJackson ~

Gallipolis :ll Loga n 41
- -(ialliPOIL" 14 Whf&gt;el('fsbu r~ 20
Tot.als 103
:115

"""'" MVP '"'" " """"'""""

SEOAL flnaJ
Team
W L' T P
Ironton ...... .. .................... 4 0 0123
J ackson ............. .. ........... 3 1 o 84
Logan ........ .......... .......... . 2 2 0 95
Athens ........................... 1 J o ""
Gall ipolis .....
.. ........... 0 4 0 S9

BoydCoumy.................... io 2 0 :112110

Gallipolis 6 P t. PlC'asant 30
Gallipolis 12 Boyd County 16
Gallipo lis 17 Athens 2IJ
Gallipolis 12 1ronton41
Ga!l!polls 6 Rip! ('y 'n

au'

I

Grid standings

Team
.
W L T P OP
Coai Grove ...................... J l 0 0 323 96
1ront on .... .... ................. .. .. S 0 1 272 79

Ga llipolis 0 Rock Hill 40
Gallipolis 6 Coa l Gr-ove 40

a

Laren Wolfe,S ............ -....... .. , .................. 4 .

( AU -Game~ )

Sea 'SOn Record

Lea nna Nlbect, KC ................. ................ 2
Le c J E
4

"5
7
7
10

o
0
0
1
0

t57
154
145
100
103

OP
32
54

82

m

122

10 10 0 441'7 441'7

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D.MICHAEL

GADDIS

NIBERT

GAUL

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This system is complete . Installation &amp; tax is extra.

$1,395 00

Regular Retail Price $1,795
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h
o um us oa - At ens. Ohio

Save 60'

Save 70'

Save 40&lt;

Save 40&lt;

SavP over l O(

Si\TEl.LIT1:.
a::::x::::r~J\1 c::.\JIC:T'C"'AC:.
_
1'\1...'-L.I-- 11\..11 ....JT-JI LJFL...1
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Valvoline 10W40

Anti-Freeze

6 FT. DANEX POWDER PAINTED
SPUN ALUMINUM DISH
*KLM SKY EYE V RECEIVER
*CHAPPARAL POLAROID I
*S.R.S. QUAD POD FEED SYSTEM
*S.R.S. COMPLETE POLAR
Special
. MOUNT
lntroductoJY Price ·
100° l.N.A.
125 FT. COMPLETE
• Forthe New 6 Ft.
CABEL SET
DANEX SYSTEM

•

-

ggc

ggc

ggc

ggc

ggc

Annor·AII
Protectant
Reg . 1.75

Solder
Seal
Power
Steering
Fluid
Reg. t .39 12 oz .

Solder
Seal
Brake
Auid
Reg . t .39 t2 oz.

Bars
Leak
Reg. t .69

Gumout
Jetspral
Carb
Choke
Cleaner
Reg . t .59 7440

4oz. pump 13040

IIIA'IIIIIII594-2124 •Ill OHIO J.lto-Jt2·1U7

r_:____________l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
S.wt• 10'

5 112 ounce

M43· t2

s~ve over

1984 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE ·

Armstrong Imperial®
Accotone® VInyl
No· wax Flooring

Delivered
Price

•'

$53 7Q

REG. S4.79

. ·.

·~

99t

Snap w~ l.~'.X~

NOW$ 79

ggc

6 amp
Battery Charger

DL Blue Label
Hand Cleaner

36.95

~~~~ .,._._
Jl___

SQ. YO.

Plus Tax &amp;Title

Reg . 87• Limit 16

84e

• Durable vinyl no-wax
surface for long-lasting,
easy·care beauty.
• unusual realism and
vivid colorations.
• Economical, easy to
Install yourself. .

Tough Chevy Trucks Are Taking Charge
2-S~lO

4 WHEEL DRIVES IN STOCK
2-S-10 BLAZERS IN STOCK
2-SCOTTSDALES w/AIR IN STOCK
I-CUSTOM DELUXE 4 SPD. IN STOCK .
4-'83 MODEL 1/2 T. PICKUPS IN STOCK .

Reg. 29.95 8761 2 manual

10 amp Charger

So nice to lX»'t7e home to TM

~~-

CAROLINA LUMBER
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, 1nc.
BILL
GENE
JOHNSON

. AND

SUPPLY COMPANY
312 Sixth St.

6 7 5·1160

Point Pleasant
Store Hours: Mon.-Fri., 11.~.-S p.m.; Sat. 1-12 noon

~ --

Reg. 46.95 CR6t2 automatic

,------------~~~~~~~==--

snow &amp; Ice fast, easy to
insta ll

Original Equipment Quality

li ghM~~!![.!

For most
=:=::=::;::::;::::;;
and domestic cars. Lifet ime ·

Autolite
Spark Plugs ·

guaran tee Reg . 19.77

From

3.95 ~~''?'

Exhaust &amp; Tailpipes

19.88
A78x13

RIG.
121.00
131.00

sn.oo

ns.to

137.00
131.00

ue.oo

181.00
141.00
f.I.T.1.1H.II

HOURS: 8UN. 10.1
' M·F 8:30.8:00
SAT. 8:30·1

-

reUII pair)

9.88

15.77

·--· -

Realstors

A78x13

(blades each

2.88
Rain X
Window

Tr~l~~m &gt;.&lt;~

:m

~l~~;

blades each refills

Save &gt;4.00

Reg . t .07 Limit t6

@mstrong

.

Anco
Wiper
Interdynamlcs
Window Blades or
Defroster SaleRefills
pri ce 2.99
Re g. 12 .95 ED6L D•logs melts

Rebead
Snow Tires

HUGE DISCOUNTS ON THESE MODELS

200 S~COND AVE.
GALLiPOLIS ·

aHer mig ' s rebate'

Reg. t .09_5540 5580

Prestone
10 Min.~~
Flush or
Anti-Rust
&amp;Water
Pump
Lube

' 3 00

2.49

Snap Starting
Fluid or
Windshield
Spray Deicer

ggc

5 ounce

M27-12

l)5

-~~~-0

Fully equipped, all
standard features and radio.

...

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1331.

AU-SV AC VoUeyball

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

Early Wednesday Mixed

...
Ill' :...· !!".

·.

~ -··'

Teain high ser ies - Craw's Steak House

(7 lntet"cepted)

"

HIGlEY

MCNEAL

great year with Southern and r-,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Playllr
C·A Yg Td
Southwestern heading the list. That
Team
,
W,.
L.
Beavl?l' .... .. ............., ............ 18-4 1 355 -1
duo
fought It out in league play,
Crw.•'s
Steak
House
.......................
46
1B
Wa tson ..... ............................ 8-16 151 3
Garber .... , ............................ 10-21 103 0 E bersbach Hardw are ......... ....... .. .. .42 22
deciding the loop championship at
\Ve r ry ..... .. ................. ......... ... 4-8 49 0 WMP0 ......................................... 36 28
SWHS in the season finale as
McCo br ..... ;............... . .. .... 4.-l -12 o Team 5 .... .. .......... ... ....... .. ....... .... ... 32 -32
Ultra-Clean ................ .... .. ....... ....... 24 40
Sionr ....... . ..................
.. .... 1-.1 .12 0
Southern scored a unanimous win.
High !nd!vtdua l g3me-- Susan Knight 183;
Strait .. .. .. ............................. 4-12 41 I
·
BesldesScuthern'ssecttonalcrown,
Beth
Whitlatch
180;
DarleneBagshaw
173.
Rathburn
.... ... .....
.. ..... &amp;10 -10 0
Southwestern also earned a sec·
High series - Betty Whitlatch 48J: Susan
Pat t'lcl\ ............ , .. . , ......... 1-1 18 0
Ea stman .
. ....... 1-6
3 1 Knight 466: Nonna Andrews 450.
tiona! tournament crown to gain
Team high game - Cr aw's Steak Hou se
Griffin ... ........... ........
1-1 -2 0
..
some recognition for the league.
Closf' ..... . ...... . .. ....... .....
1--1 .3 0 4&amp;1.
r.rant .. ...... .. _.................. . 0-7
0 0
Totaloo
5g..134 849 9
( 19 intercepted)
Oppom.'Dls
50-SS 665 12

.

__

Second team selections Included
Angie MU!er, Southwestern; Cindy
H)gley, North Gallla; Krist! Gaddis
and Lea Ann Gaul, Eastern; Debbie
Michael, Southern; and Leanna
Nibert, Kyger Creek.
· Honorable mention honorees
were J enny Bentley, Scuthern;
Chris Jeffers, Southwestern; Diane
White, North Gallla ; and Rhonda Ba,rnes and Holly White, Hannan

Trace.

Pomeroy BowHng Lan~
Tuesday Tripi"'"'
No\'ember 1, 19&amp;'1
Standings

23 395 0

Southern's Laren Wolfe, a senior
s plker and three ye ar veteran,
top!J€(1 the list of nominees and was
chosen as the league's most
va luable player as voted upon by all
league mentors.

209 UPPER RIVER RD.

Remanufactured

Water Pumos .
With rebuild. exch . for ariVB

E·Z Ride
Heavy

Chevy 69-7t with 2 BBI

Duty

14,95
With cebuild. exch
for most do mesti c 4·6 cyl.

Shocks

Chevy &amp; sm block VB 69-7t

Auto Equip.

18.95
With rebu ild. exch
for most 8 cyl. domestic

Company

By Monroe

Reg. 10.95

Co1rrtro Arm &amp; Bushings
.. ............ From

2.50

�I

•

•
I

13, 1983 ''

Page-V6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Noven lber 13, 1983

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C7 ..

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

Campaigning for high-tech occupations

I

FFA AWARDS- Trophies and cash awards went to the Soutbem
High School Future Farmers of America agrlcult)lral and urban soU
judging teams at Thursday night's Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District dinner rneetbtg at the Salisbury School. They are, front, I tor,
Jokhn Willbarger, WendeD Clark, Andy Rose, urban soD judging team;
back, I tor, Todd Hubbard, Randy Anns, memhers of the agrlcuJtural
social judging team, and Aaron Sayre, Southern High inslructor. Mike
Henry, a member of the latter team was not pictured.

OU'ISTANDING FARM FAMJLY - Outstancllnl farm lamlly
awards were presented at Thursday night's Meigs SoD and Water
rn.trict meeting at the Salisbury School. Wbtnlng the awards were
front, Dr. PhiUip and Lois Jones, and back, I tor, Betty Dean and Debbie
and Rodney Chevalier for a jobtt farm endeavor of some 345 acres in
Chester Township. 'Their m'l)or crops are no till com and hay. Dr. and
Mrs. Jones operate a 21l3 acre farmer in Scipio Township.

~~-

I
',
TESSIE'S CRAFT SHOP - This new 8aclne craft shop, recently
opened by Tessie Evans, offers a variety of yam and Doss, along with
accessories for needlecraft as weU as finished gift and craft items Mrs.
Evans aecepts on assignment.

.

Meigs County agent's corner

Farm calendar
By JOHN C. RICE
El&lt;tenslon Agent,
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY -Calendar- Sheep
Meeting, Nov. 17, at 7: :Jl p.m. atthe
Charles Carr Farm near Alfred. We
will .be discussing preparation for
lambing, preparation of facilities
and grouping the ewes.
Feeder Calf Sale - Ohio Valley
Livestock, Gallipolis, Nov. 15, at
7:30p.m.
Beef Referendum - Extension
office, Nov. 29, :Jl and Dec. 1.
Meigs County Beef Cattle Association Meeting.
Nov. 21, at 7 p.m.
.

.

GOODYEAR HONOREES- The Goodyear Outstanding Cooperator
Award went to the Roy Holter FamUy and was presented on behalf of
the Goodyear Tire and Rubher Co. at the Thursday night dbtner
meetbtg of the Meigs SoU and Water District. Alan, Roy and Ed Holter,
left to right, own and operate a 325 acre farm and rent an additional 300
acres in Chester Township. They have :US head of registered Holsteins.
Pictured at the back arc wives of the Bolters, lrom the left, Kay,
Patrl.cia and Jan.

WW&gt;LIFE AWARD- Horace Karr, left, of Royal Oak Fanns and a
"""'rador, was p......uted the Wildlife Conservation Award by
Melp Game Protector KeWt Wood at 'lbursday nlgkt's Meigs SoU and
Water District dinner meeting. Tom 'lbe~ wa&amp;IIUIIIter of oeremonles
for the meetm&amp; during which Davfd Gloeckner was reelected to a three
year term oo the board of supervisors beginning Jan. I, 1984. Wes Oneth,
deputy state conservationist, Soli Conservation Service, was guest

local

Planning for 1984? According to
Doane's (an agricultural report)•,
you can expect some of the
following: Costs wlll be up. This
Includes seeds, fertilizer, and probably herbicides. Interest rates wUI
be about the same (13 percent to 14
percent range). If you can obtain
one, a revolv!ng_~ redit line will hold
down your Interest costs. Lenders
are going to be looking at cash flow .
This Is going to be more important
than eq uity. Lenders wlll be
wa~ ting to know ... can you pay it
back; not tha t you ha ve resources
to back your loan. Good financial
records are going to be even more
Important.

New AI Technician Now Available - Carol Russell, working
through Archie Meadows, will be
servicing Meigs County.
Improving SoUs For Vegetable
Gardening - Vegetable plants
grow best in a fertile, well-drained
soil of loamy texture. Sandy loam
soils well supplied with organic
matter· are easily worked and are
productive. Unfortunately, most
gardens do not contain such soils.
Very coarse, ·sandy soils dry
rapidly and are difficult to keep
fertile. Clay soils are difficult to
work and usua lly remain wet until
late in the spring. These soils are
most often yellow In color and very
sticky when wet. They tend to form
a hard crust after a heavy rain and
become compacted to an extent
that the plant's root system Is
deprived of the essential air
required for healthy growih. Clay
and sandy soils mu~t be modified
before seeding or planting crops .
Basic Consideration In SoU Improvement - To obtain a desirable
soil for gardenlng,lt Is necessary to
deal with the following areas of
concern: water drainage; moisture
condition at the time of working;
erosion hazard; texture and structure; reaction (acidity or alkalinIty) and fertlllty .

Agriculture and our community -

T·.esst·e's Craft Shop

A LIMITED TIME OFFER
FROM PAT HILL FORD

Uers. DeCeSSl•tl•eS
0,. .1.1
1

RACINE _Tessie's Craft Shop,
.
'L'hlrd Street, Racine, owned and
&lt;¥rated by Tessie Evans, features
notonlyawldevarietyofcrarutems
1\!hlchshereceivesoncon'signment,
butalsoaDthenecessarysuppUesto
createyourown.
Open fro m 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .
weekdays and 9 a .m. to 9 p.m. on
Saturdays, Mrs. Evans' shop Is
located In the former Racine Home ·
National Bank building.
Exclusive renovation and redecol'!ltingof the facility has taken place.
Family , members, Including her
nephews, Benny and Joseph An·
drew, who constructed the'shelving
aiJd display areas, assisted Mrs.
Evans In readying the shop for the
grand opening, which took place the
tlr$1 weekend In November. A niece,
Mary Ann Andrew. designed the
sign and assisted In other aspects of
decoration.
'In her merchandising, Mrs.
Evans emphasizes Red Hart yarn ·
and floss and the needles and other
aCre!sorles and supplies needed for
crocheting, candiewlcklng, emlx'olderlng and other hand work. She
also stocks stmcillng supp!jes and a
v~lety of instruction books, along
wjth hoops and holiday craft
supplies. The storage place for her
yarn Is In the old bank vault, which
his bad shelving llistaUed.
·Many crafts have been placed

RANGER 4X4
FOR ONLY

ORDER NOW &amp; UNTIL NOV. 15TH
AND GET A RANGER 4X4 WITH 4 SP. TRNS., 108"
WHEEL BASE, RADIO, POWER BRAKES, AND MORE
FOR ONLY

$799500

Price Includes Freight, Tax &amp; Title Extra

PAT HILL FORD-, INC.
614-992-2196

Fall excellent time to plan for spring planting
MIDDLEPORT. oH.
By BRYSON R. CARTER
the winter may also help break up~======================--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Exlension Agent C!'.'RD
any compaction that does occur
462 S. 3RD AVE.

w!thMrs.Evans,lncludingartillcial
flowerarrangements,doorandwaU
hangings, fancy doUs, both stuffed
and crocheted. novelty pillows.
afghans, ceramic pieces, wreaths,
babyblankets andavarietyofother
giftltems.

ACORNwantsColumbustomake
By DOUG FISHER
receiving public assistcompanies
AJII!lC!eted P...,. Wttler
sign
an
agreement to use a
ance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Two
federal
job-training
program as a
Ohio University professors say a
jobhankfortlleunemployed,andto
campaign for jobs at the new Hyatt
report to thectty every three months
Hotel may be the beginning of a push
about their hiring.
for service jobs In a world o!
"We'veopenedhalfadozen hotels
"high-tech" ·promises. ·
UOAG money, aM we've told
with
"We want any company that's
ACORN
they can go around the
receiving a tax break or a UDAG
country and look at those and see
(Urban Development Action Grant )
!hat we've fulfilled our responsibll·
or a loan to give us an opportunity,"
!ty," said James P. Dorn, Hyatt's
said Jacquelyn E . SampsOn, an
·vlcepresldentfor human resources,
Association of Community Organifrom the company's Chicago
zations for Reform Now volunteer
headquarters.
.
who heads the job campaign.
"l'muncomfortablewiththeneed
Mrs. Sampson said she Is trained
·
for
pressure. We've done it as a
as a nurse's assistant and a
method
o! com m unItY
keypunch opera tor, but hasn't had a·
responslblllty."
permanent job since June. Themost
Cltyofflclalsarenegotltatlngwith
recent reported unemployment rate
for Franklin County was August's
ACORN, but said they are skeptical.
"The minute you try to convince
8.0 percent.
·
'
any
ma jor
company to forego Its
UDAGs worth $50 million were
hiring
prerogatives,
you'.1! setting
awarded In Ohio in the fiscal year
hiring
haD,
which
is like a
up
a
city
that ended Sept. :Jl., according to
hiring
haD,"
said
David
I.
union
. Randall F . Howard, senior &lt;!CO·
Dresser,
mayoral
assistant
for
nomic development specialist In the
economic development.
U.S. Department of Housing and
ACORN officials said they don't
Urhan Development office In Cothe city to !orce companies to
want
lumbus. The money goes to projects
hire
people,
they just want those
that cannot obtain adequate private
financing.
eompanlesrece!vmgunAGsare
supposed to create jobs for low-and
middle-Income people and the
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)-Housunemployed. For $1.9 million In
ing starts in Columbus should top
site-clearance money, the Hyatt
agreed to create 425 jobs.
Madeline Talbott. ACORN re-

5,100 units In 1984, a national title
insurance company estimates.
James Aprile, the assistant vice

gtonaldtrecto,r ,saldtewcompantes
meet the goals .
"Our view is that!fyoudon'tflght
for those jobs going
. In • before the
place opens up and the hiring begins,
thechancesaretheywon'tfulfilithe
promises they've made," Talbott
Said In a telephone Interview from
her Chicago
. Office·

president and manager of the
ColumbusofficeoftheChlcagoTitle
Insurance Co., said thestarts would
mean an8percent increase over the
1
5,000 units In 983.

from fall ferdllzatlon.

occurs.
Phosphorus - This element does
not move readily in the soil. Losses
of P occur primarily through crop
removal and soil erosion. Bulk
application of P may be made at
any time on soils not subject to
erosion. These Include sands and
organic soils. One hundred pounds
of fertilizer phosphate (?200) wm
rlase the sol! P test about 10 lbs. per
acre.

cents per head of cattle marketed in
Ohio. The current deduction Is 25
cents per head .
The beef referendum goes back
to producer voters Nov. 29 a nd 30
and Dec. I, 1983. Producers wlll
vote on an Ohio cattle producers'
program. Other states may conslder similar program s , but no
national program is Involved atthis
time.

The Ohio Beef Marketing Program was first established In April
1971. It enables all cattle producers
to Invest toward beef promotion
and advertising.
Operating costs have Increased
since the last beef referendum was
passed In 1978. This referendum
provides for the deduction of 50

national otflce, from 3,000 in 1983 to
4,00lln 1984. Cincinnati should gain 4

•

CJ

40MONTH

fll1l1' ANTI FREEZE
I

2889
3489
4189

LIMIT 2 GAL

59tSTKIT
VALVDLINE

''

64~

••
•

PI! IC!D FROM

329

89t
Wiseman joins
agency staff

10 YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY
COMPATIBLE AT 2o SPACING

GALLIPOLIS- David E . Wiseman ~ joined the staff of the
Wiseman Agency, the GalllpoUs·
based realty and Insurance firm.

'"

-~

lf'.s the· most important gas furnace breakthrough
in over 40 years. The Lennox Pulse furnace can ·

"

slash your heating . bills with efficiency vastly
superior' to your present furnace. Payback on your
initial investment takes just a few heating seasons.
If we can't convince you, your current high
heating bills willl Call or see us today.

.'

'

..
'"

•AM ua for e .free reprint.

'

'..

""i I ! '

R&amp;M Heating &amp;Air Conditioning

"

OWNER. RUSS ELLIOTT

'1

'

,.r
., ,

PH. 446-8515

.'.
l· p

UNITED SECURITY &amp; COMMUNICATIONS

' •I

G.ALLIPOLIS - 446-3144
ASK FOR JOE OR ROSS

••

'·'
J

"'J
D

'

•ttELPS SAVE
OAS

'

ENGINE
STARTING

599
FttOM

FROM

....

178

988

....
IMPORT

Wiseman completed 60,addltlonal

hours clltlldlel at ERA Marketing
Raardl and Training Center'
~ him to offer services
aVIIIIIblt illawab ERA and the

"VS

Wllllnln Alf"CY· 'lblalncllldel the

Bu)&gt;enmlSeDenp-otect!mplans•
Sellen !lac:urlty plan and lnterna·
tlooal electrOIIlc teferral service.
I

I

FUlL

. . . .11115

fiLTERS

Priced from

Priced from

889
I,

1gc

12 Ft-10 Ga.
C-t012·AS

SEAT
COVERS

I

Since gr8duation, WISeman ~

GAS LINE
ANTI-FREEZE

BOOSTER CABLES

REGULAR 6"

worked in Silverton. Colo., In one of
the few active gold mines In the
country, and lll Ptkevll1e, Ky., at
Scotts Branch Coal Mining Co.

~~

'

SIMULAT.ED
SHEEPSKIN

ce

A graduate of the Ohio State
University SchOOl of EDglneei'lng,
he earned a bachelor's degree in.
mlidng ~ring. While at OSU.:
heaJsocompletedstudlestobecome
a real estate salesman.

MOTOR OIL

KITs

RESISTOR

4~~~~~~·..

All CLIMATE

o1miauro•
CAP &amp; ROTOR

NON RESISTOR

'

ANTI- -.l'l~

FREEZE

,aueo.tune

David E. Wiseman

446-4367

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

SAVE ON TUNE-UPS

b

FOR MORE INFORMATION &amp; DEMONSTRATIOSN CA~~

Gallipolis, OH.

St. Reg.# H -02-04728

CORVAIRS WILL HELP .. .WITH THE
RIGHT BAITERY FOR YOUR CAR!

1.1.:1

Nova SS-112 stainless 'steel
satellite dish antenna system can
receive 80-100 TV channels in your
home.
*12 Movie Channels
• 8 Family E.ntertainment
• 5 Religious Channels
• 7 News Channels
•• 5 Adult ·Entertainment
• 3 Children's Programming
"24 Hr. Weaher Channel
•• All Major Networks

·

529 Jackson Pike

SAVE ON BAnERIES

60MONTH

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===1

Potassium - Potassium Is absorbed on the exchange sites of clay
particles and , therefore . does not
move readily In medium- and
fine-textured soils. Losses of K
occur through crop removal leachIng, and sol! erosion.
When leaching is not a hazard,
bulk appUcatlons of K may be made
at any time. On sands and organic
soils, where leaching losses can be
serious, annual potassium applications are needed. ·
Here are two of several Import ant factors to consider when
making decisions about fall-winter
fertll!zatlon.
1) Save valuable spring work
days by applying fertilizer 'now.
Tight scheduled occurring In spring
1983 despite the large acreage Idled
by ARP!PIK programs. It is even
more likely to happen again next
spring.
2) Soil compaction can be a
serious problem In crop production . .
It restricts root growth, reduces
water lnfUtratlons and lowers yield
and profit.
2-Ai Fall fertilizations help eliminate the need to run heavy
application equipment over wet
fields In spring. SoUs are unusually
drier and less suscep!lble to
compaction in fall.
2·8) Frrezing and !hawing over

Gallip·olis Business College

Bill Kelley
Manager

985-3308

CHAIN

FINANCIAL AID STILL AVAILABLE

FALL SAVINGS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
URG.iT ..LLINQ

TRAIN IN FIELDS THAT PAY WELL,....
ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIPI,OMAS
•Bu~iness Administration •Executi ve s'ec.retary
•Com puter Science •Accountin ~

th~~anpadnsyho~~dpo~~21f:~e~~

50 MONTH

; : : : - -....~S~T~IH::_I.'s new mid-size saw is
right
lor homeowners,
farmers
and proles~f""''!l~P""';;;.:.::.::;_:::::.~~~
·~) sionals. With elec·
...tronlc Ignition,
anti-vibration and a
fully automatic oiler lor lightweight
high performance. Try one today.

IIU.t!J'8

,

WE RESERVE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES- PRICES GOOD THRU 11/ 16/ 83

ASTIH.:
Can Cut It

CHESTER

WINTER· TERM OPENS
MONDAY JANUARY 2

r~--------------------------------------------~pe~rce~n~t,~fro~m~5~,&amp;0~t~o~5,~700~.~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ &gt;

TheJo~J.­

~~. .'6r""'

long as the emphasis is on high
technology.
" Youdon'thavetobea ccmputer
operator or a top-notch engineer to
be a real citizen," he safd. "It's a
question of how do you upgrade the
dignity o! good, honest work'?"
At present, he said, "U I work in a
fast-food place. It's because I'm no
good for anything else. II should be
thatl'mdoingthebestjobposs!ble."
Howard said HUO does not :
consider low-tech or high-tech jobs
when It awards the grants. He said
economic conditions may keep a
company from meeting Its goals,
and, "if they have good reasons,
there's nothing we really do."
He said of 30 proj ects In Ohio
reviewed so far, all but one met 95 •
percentoftheirgoals.

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Unit starts up

&amp;

GaiDa County
GALLIPOLIS - Fall is an
excellent time to apply phosphorus
and potassium for spring planted
crops. Nitrogen ca n also be fall
applied with the exception of sandy
soils or a few areas subj ect to
flooding. Fall application allows for
better Incorporation of P and K on
la nd fall tilled plus It alleviates the
rush In the spring If a wei spring

companlestogotothejobbankflrst,
and Dresser said the city might
agreetothat:
"It seems that It's In keeping with
the move in various state legislalures to get business to accept some
responsibility tor unemployent,"
said Christina Christenson, assistant professor of management at
Ohio University.
•
Shesaldmanypeoplecan'tafford
retraining \lnless they can get jobs
like those at the Hyatt. "I'm sure
there are a lot of people that want to
dosomethingotherthandlshwasher
to retrain themselves, but on the
other hand , thatlsn'tfree,"shesald.
Edwin T . Hellenbrand!, professor
emeritus of management, satd he
expects to see s!rnllar campaigns
for the low-skilled or unskilled as

299

LIMIT
5

FLUID

59c

�I

Pa~B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Paint_Pleasant, W. Va.

,s tate/ ational

0
Wars' victims, survivors honored nationwide

Business Briefs:
Two 'Engage-A-Car' brokers open

'

GALLIPOLIS - "Engage-A-Car" brokerages have opened In
Gallia and Meigs counties.
The system, which leases new cars, vans and light trucks, both
foreign and domestic, works with ·Individual brokers In the area.
Ray McDaniel of Ga!Upolis is an associate broker of Blackston
New Car and Truck Leasing, the local broker operating In Meigs and
Mason counties and In Parkersburg, W.Va. Robert and Resa
Sawyers of Racine are running a similar operation in Meigs.
Engage-A-Car a~lws a person leasing a car from either brokerage
to dispose of the car when the used car market Is up, or return the car
to the brokerage If the market Is down.
· Robert Sawyers Is a Wahama High School graduate and is
employed at Ohio Valley Electrtc Corp.'s Kyger Creek plant. A
Vietnam Navy veteran, he coaches Racine pee wee baseball, Is
assistant den leader for Den 1, 241, Racine, and a member of Racine
PTO.
Resa Sawyers, a Meigs High School graduate, holds a certificate in
nursing aide training from Buckeye Hills Career Center and is
studying computer training at HockingTechlncal Collegel She is also
a Racine PTO member and assistant den mother for Pack 241.
Twelve-page brochures on the Engage-A-Car system are
available from McDaniel by writing to him at P .O. Box In!,
Gallipolis 45631, or by calling 388-9003, and from the Sawyers by
wrtting to P.O. Box 86,_Racine 45m, or .call 949-2892.

Apco promotes Gallia native
. GALLIPOLIS - Appalachian Power Co. has promoted former
Gallia County resident Richard E . Northup to executive assistant to
the company president.
North-up will join Apco's Charleston, W.Va. office and wlU assume
duties of Nicholas Roomy, West Vlrginla vice president, who will
retire at the end of this year.
Northup joined Apco in 1969 as a performance engineer at the
Philip Sporn plant at New Haven. He moved to Roanoke, Va., as an
environmental staff engineer and the following year became
e nvironmental affairs director.
His mother, Janet Nmthup, resides at Eureka Star Route. Marrted
to the former Sarah Yoho, they are parents oi three children:
Patrick, Zachary and Noel.

Local bond purchases reported
GALLIPOLIS- Purchases of $12,365in U.S. Savings Bonds were
credited to Gallia County in August, said C. Leon Saunders, local
savings bond chairman.
That brought the total amount of bond sales in the county to$99,169
on the year, Saunders said.
Sales in Ohio increased 24 percent over the same pertod In 1~.
The total amount sold in the state until August was $153,543;969.

Multimedia to sell stations
GREENVilLE, S.C. - Agreement in prtnclple to sell radio
stations WAKY-AM and WVEZ-FM, Louisville, Ky., to Capttol
Broadcasting Co., Mobile, Ala., has been reached with the stations'
owner, Multimedia Inc.
Multimedia President Walter E . Bartlett said the transaction Is
subject to Federal Communications Commission approval and the
sale of Capitol's LouisVille FM station, WRJ{A.
Multimedia publishes the Sunday Times-Sentinel, Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, The Dally Sentinel (Pomeroy-Middleport) and the Point
Pleasant Register.

Small company stocks down
NEW YORK tAP!- The stock research report.
"Probably of greatest usefulness
market has dealt out some harsh
treairnent of late to the shares of is the relatively long record of the
fund, which stretches back to Its
small " growth" companies.
start in 1900. The 23-year time span
While markei indicators domicovers several major market tops
nated by the big-name blue chips
and bottoms, periods of high
have held relatively steady since
Inflation and low inflation, and years
mid-summer. whatWallStreetcalls
of economic calm as well as
"emerging growth" stocks have
turbulence."
been heading almost straight
It was mostly calm and little
downward.
turbulence in the market this past
The net asset value per share of
week, with trading subdued by
the T. Rowe Price New Horizons
elections on Tuesday and the
Fund, a large mutual fund that
Veterans Day holiday on Friday.
specializes in this category ol
investments, fell 6.9 percent in the
t hird quarter of the year. Over the
same span, Standard &amp; Poor's
500-stock composite index barely
budged, declining 0.1 percent.
New Horizons' value fell an
additional 8 percent In October,
noted Dennis Sherva, an analyst at
Morgan Stanley &amp; Co.
Like several another analysts
who specialize in following the
fortunes of young companies,
Sherva uses the fund's ups and
downs as a kind of emerging growth
stock index .
" It is a goodwindowon this sector
of the market because It is large
($1.4 billion), and Its assets are
Invested in about Wl stocks, making
1ts portfollo statistically representa ·
tive," Sherva said 'in a recent

By DANA FIELDS

_

D. Paul Davies

MerrDI L. Eva~~~~

Holzer board· elects officers, trustees
GALLIPOLIS - At the annual He became a member of the board
meeting of the Holzer Hospital in 1976, A graduate of Gallla
Foundation Board of -Trustees, A~ademy Jflgh School, Davies
officerswereelectedforthecomlng holds his bachelor's degree In
year and foor new board members business admlnlstration from Ohio
added to serve on the hospital's University. He attended Jhe U.S.
boardoftrustees.
Naval Academy, where he was
The new chairman of the bOard Is commissioned a lieutenant, special·
Thomas E. Tope of Gallipolis, with lzing in communications.
Davies served In the Navy from
Theodore T. Reed Jr., of Pomeroy
elected as vice chairman; D. Paul 1942 through 1945. Duling his 35
Davies of Galllpolis serving as the years In the jewelry business In
new secretary; and Merrill L. Gallipolis, he ·was active In the
Evans of Gallipolis, re-elected Gallipolis Area Chamber of Com·
treasurer.
merce, retail merchants associa·
New board members are Mar· tlon and was a member of the
garet Follrod of Pomeroy, Cell Amertcan Gem Society. His !lnanGeltz of Wellston, Nedra Jones of ·cia! experience Is recognized
Point Pleasant, and Verlln L. Swain , through his service as a director of
of Crown City.
Commercial and Savings Bank,
After serving four years as and as a past president of Gallipolis
treasurer, Tope became vice chair· Savings and Loan Co.
man In 1982.
Re-elected treasurer, Evans beA Gallipolis native he holds a came a member of the board In
bachelor's degree fro~ Ohio Unl· 198J. A lifelong resident of Galllpoversity and Is the owner-manager lis, owner of Motor Car Brokers, he
of Tope Furniture Gallertes. He Is an active farmer.
became a member of the hospital
Other corporate Interests Include
board in 1976. Serving as president Evans Enterprises lnc., and Con·
of the community Improvement certed Investments. From 1955
Corporation (CIC), Tope sits as a until 1972 he was an of!lcer and
member of the Gallipolis Plannlng director of the Evans Packing Co.
Commission and chairs the Board Presently he is a member of the
of Zoning Appeals for Gallipolis. A board of dlrectorsoftheOhio Valley
past president ofthe Gallipolis Area Bank and served as an original
Chamber of Commerce he con· trustee and vice chairman of the
ttnues to serve on the c'hamber's Holzer Foundation for Tri-State
board of directors· he also Is a past Health Care Inc. He has been an
president of the ;..,tail merchants active member and officer In a
association, a group In which he number of community organizaremalns active. At the November lions throughout his business
1982 Person of the Year Award career.
Mrs. Follord Is newly elected to
banquet o{ the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council, Tope was ho- the board. A graduate of Olive
nored as Gallia County's Person of Orange High School in Tuppers
Plains, she attended and graduated
th e Year. ,
Reed became a member of the from BUss College In Columbus.
board in 1968. He was elected
secretary In 1981, the position he has
held until his selection as vice
chairman.
A lifetime resident of Pomeroy,
he holds a bachelor's degree from
Ohio University and did three years
of graduate work in banking at the
Graduate School of Banking of the
University of Wisconsin at
Madison.
His total career has been at the
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy, where
he Is president and chief executive
officer. This past year he was
Grand Treasurer of the Grand
Lodge of Free and Accepted
Masons ol Ohio, and ·he Is a 33rd
Degree Mason.
Newly elected secretary, D. Paul
Davies, Is a retired retail .jeweler.

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ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada (AP)
- The Army sent 700 paratroopers
back to the United States and U.S.
and Grenadian officials signed part
of a $3 million U.S. aid agreement,
much of it to replace Cuban doctors
and teachers kicked out of the
country.
The withdrawal of a battalion
from the 82nd airborne division left
2,ll0 U.S . .;servicemen on the
Caribbean island, where a U.S. -led
Invasion ousted a leftist mllltarycouncll which took power in a coup a
week earller. At one point, 6,000 U.S.
troops were on Grenada.
The batialion flew home to Fort
Bragg, N.C.
1n Washington, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said the
remaining troops will be sent home
"well within the 60-0ay pertod set by

"This Is the best day that ever
happened to me," Harold Brazen,
father of a Marine lance corporal,
said as he watched liis son's name ·
etched In the stone Friday,
Fifty-eight of the 68 were killed In
_1965 when a C-rn transport plane
carrying Marines crashed outside
Hong Kong harbor -while returning
thern toDaNangafterthreedaysof
rest and relaxation.
The crash occurred outside the
war zone defined by President
Johnson, and the casualties were riot
counted among the Vietnam dead
and not Usted on the rnemortal.
TheBrazenfamlly,fromMcKees·
port, Pa.; and others pressed the
Pentagon to change Its mind.
Pentagon officials finally agreed.
. The names of 10 others also were
added, Including Charles MeGan!·
gle, an Anny,medlc who suffered a
head W&lt;J!1nd · during a Vietnam
mission In August 19'10 and was
unconscious untll he died in a
Pittsburgh hospital In December
1972. TheAmlydtschargedMcGonl·
gle while he was comatose and
neglected to put his name on the
memorial until this week. ·
· Charles and Jennie McGonigle, ol
Penn Hills, Pa. , came to touch the
name of thelr son Friday.

were trying to learn what happened to an estimated
$750,000 to $.Ul,OOO in Veterans Administration checks
. Uuit 'disappeared after they were mailed.
About 1,000 educational benefits checks, r&lt;U~ging
from $342 to $464, haven't been received since they
were mailed Nov. 1 from the VA's data processing
center in Hines, Ill., said James Prtce, spokesman for
the VA regional office.
World War I veterans were among the 2,000people
who joined a parade down New York's Filth Avenue.
Taps sounded and bells tolled at 11 a.m., precisely the
time when the armistice was signed on Nov. 11, 1919,
in the finale to "the war to end all wars."
Veterans Day used to be called Armistice Day, and
at its inception was to honor those who served in WWl.
:·Not very many of us are left to do the celebrating,"
sa1d M.G. "Hap" Clark at a breakfast with other
doughboys in San Diego.
Porilano, Ore., lost World War I veteran Vernon E.
Ross, 88, who collapsed as a parar passed a
memortal he had erected to honor_ the nation's
servicemen. He later died at a hospita ,

700 paratroo.p ers pulled out
.of Grenada, return to U.S.

WASHINGTON (AP)-Veterans
Day 1983 will always be special for68
families, who watched as their dead
sons' names were inscribed on the
stark, black granite of the VIetnam
Veterans Memorial.

•

drinks or even said thanks. Someofuswere booed and
even spit upon.''
A wreath was placed on the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery, where more
than 70 people turned out to honor and rebury Albert
W. Reynolds, a former sailor who died in September
of cancer. The Veterans Administration, unable to
find any relatives, ortginally had burted him In
Virginia in a cardb&lt;;lard coffin.
"It made me sick when I heard about it," said John
E. Sullivan, a Veterans of Foreign Wars distrtct
commander In northern Virginia who campaigned
for Reynold's burtal at Arlington In a metal casket.
Veterans Administration head Harry N. Walters, in
the keynote address, said, "Our people perform their
duty without hesitation and with honor, and some pay
the greatest sacrifice.''
·
Cincinnati's Vietnam veterans cheered the news of
a businessman's anonymous donation of $10,000 that
finished a $74,000 fund drive for a monument to open
next year in Eden Park.
Meanwhile in Tucson, Ariz., federal investigators

13, 1983

Congress" under the War Powers
Act, but he refused to give a date.
U.S. and Grenadian officials on
Friday signed an agreement to
repair roads, the first part of the
civilian aid program.
Ted Morse, deputy director of the
U.S. Agency for International
Development mission in nearby
Barbados, said the S3 million
program was aimed at immediate
needs, and that officials wete
studying the Island' s long-term
needs.
The departure of Cuban doctors
has hurt health care on the island,
especially in the backwoods, and
Morse said that $1 million would be
spent on medical projects.
Cubans also taught on the island,
and $lJl5,000 will go toward
education.

John Walsh, a U.S. spokesman
here, acknowledged that much of
the aid was designed to fill the gap
left by the Cubans.
Peace Corps ,volunteers might
come here for as long as nine months
to fill the jobs of 32 secondary
schoolteachers from the "East
Bloc," said a U.S. spokesman who
requested anonymity.
Morse said $1.1 million would be
spent on projects for electrical
power and water supplies.
Starting Monday, 120 Grenadians
will be hired to resurface and patch
roads, Morse said, explaining how
the aid will begin.
Hotel owners, businessmen and
taxi drivers complain that the
severely pitted, narrow and winding
roads on the lush, hilly island hurt
development of tourtsm.

Ortega rallies support against U.S.
By The Associated Press
Daniel Ortega, bead of Nicara·
gua's leftiSt junta, says U.S. troops
in Central America threaten his
country more than rebels fighting
his Sandlnista government. He
winds up a trip Saturday to rally
Latin American support against a
U.S. Invasion he claims will come

soon.

COLOR GpARD - A Joint Services Color Guard stands at
attention at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial In Washington Friday
durtng a Veteran's Day ce~mony. The marble walls In the background
bear the names of servicemen killed or missing In the VIetnam War.

(AP Laserphoto ).

Ortega said Friday in Bogota the
U.S. government needs "only a
pretext" to invade hiscoun~ry.
Ortega was headed Saturday for
Panama.
He mel in Bogota with President
Belisarlo Betancout1 of Colombia.
He already had visited Venezuela
and Mexico, which along with
Colombia and Panama make up the

Contadora group of nations trying to
prevent full-scale war from erupting in Central America.
"The greatest danger to Nlcara·
gua now is not the counterrevolutionary forces of the traitor Eden
Pastora but the North American
troiJps in Honduras and the areas
near our country that are ready to
ambush,'' Ortega said.
Pastora, a hero of the 1978-79
revolution that brought the Sandi·
nistas to power, commands forces of
the Revolutionary Democratic Al·
liance in southern Nicaragua.
Another rebel organization, the
Nicaraguan Democratic Force, is
fighting in the north.
U.S. Congressional testimony has
shown the CIA has given support to

the rebels iightlng the Sandinistas.
In Nicaragua, a Roman Cathollc
Cliurch official said frtction between
the church and state was the result
of an "ideological confrontation.''
The official. Monsignor Pablo
Antonio Vega, president of the
Nicaraguan Council of Bishops, said
talks with the government earlier ·
this week showed' 'therelsnota total
rupture of relations and the persecution Is not at all levels, but we are
experiencing it ideologically and In
the agitation and harassment that
we feel from the so-called "turbas
(mobs)."
Some churcheswereattackedla5t
week after the bishops said a
sweepirig new military conscription
law smacked ol totalitarianism.

Reagan visits U.S. troops in South Korea
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - President Reagan,
who told-South Koreans Saturday they are living In
the shadow of a country "on
war footing," Is
piannlng a visit to U.S. troops encamped along the
d,t!mUitarlzed wne within site of North Korea.
· Thousands upon thouSands of Koreans - a U.S.
Embassy official put the number at two m1111on turned out to welcome the president along a 12-mile
·l(lotorcade route from KJmpo International Airport to
downt!lMI Seoul as Reagan arrtved for a round of
meetings . with President Cbun Doo-hwan and
addresSj!d South Korea's National Assembly.

a

The president is traveling by helicopter to the
2.4-mile-wlde buffer zone 30 miles north of this tense 1
capital on Sunday morning, when he will atlend a
morning worship service at the Camp Liberty Bell
motor pool. !Je wlU have lunch with some of the 1,500
troops stationed along the 38th parallel, and descend
Into a hlllside trench and visit below-ground facilities
near Guard post Colller, all within range of North
Korean guns.
Since the 1953 armistice that ended the Korean War,
60 Americans have been killed along the DMZ. In 1976,
two American officers were slain by ax-swinging

North Koreans when the officers tried to prune a tree
near a United Nations guard post.
Securtty measures were readily apparent Saturday
In Seoul. Soldiers armed with automatic weapons and
South Korean police officers guarded Reagan's
·motorcade routes, often standing no more than ~
yards apart.
The l&lt;;mnges overlooking the arrtval area at the
airport were cleared of visitors, and the a lrport
resembled a ghost town.
Nancy Reagan was asked aboard Air Force One as
she and the president traveled to Seoul after a

three-day visit to Tokyo whether she was concerned
about the president's safety in Korea. She paused an(;!
then asked a reporter: "How do you feel?"
·,
Deputy White House Press Secretary LatTy
Speakes said that the Secret Service "satisfies
themselves on his personal safety before they let him
go in any situation.''
The presidimt's travels through Seoul took him at
one point past the Korean headquarters of the human
rights organization. Amnesty International, a few
blocks from the Blue House, South Korea's executive

mansion.

llaily supports Greyhound strike

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1979 FORD
FAIRMONT WAGON

the most in~ or 30 years and "easily the largest since
before the Vietnam War era," a city spokesman said.
In North Carolina, relatives greeted Army soldiers
returning to Fort Bragg and members of the 82nd
Airborne Division coming home to nearby Pope Alr
Force Base from combat in the Ca,ribbean Island of
Grenada.
Taps was played In Owensboro, Ky., at burial
services for Marine Sgi. Daniel Shane Kluck, one oi
238 American killed in the Oct. 23 terrortst bombing of
the Marine headquarters in Beirut. " In heaven there
Is no more fighting," said the Rev. Jerry Baker.
Jn, Washington, about 2,000 people attended an
oa.ervance at the stark, black granite monument that
honors Vietnam veterans.
"We served our country no less well than if we had
fought to win our Independence, to end slavery or to
defeat Hitler,'' said William Broyles Jr., editor-in·
chief of Newsweek magazine, who was a: Marine
lieutenant lri Vietnam.
"When we came home, there were no flags and no
parades. No one patted us on our backs, bought us

New names '
added to
Vietnam vets
memorial

Faces surgery

CAR PRICES
GOT YOUR
FEATHERS
.
RUFFLED?

1982 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

•Hunting License ·
*8~~EGE Hunting Clothes
•Remington Deer Slayer Barrels
•Many Guns To Choose From
GUN ACCESSORIES: Cleaning Kits

•

Mrs. Follrod

r------------:--;;::=::::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'

OPENS MONDAY, NOV. 28TH

Remington
Winchester
Federal Magnum

•

has served as In 1962 she was chosen the Big:
president of the preceptor chapter Black Backers Mother of the Year,
of Beta Sigma Phi and president of having two sons who were outstand· '
the Meigs County Jaycee-ettes. She ing high school athletes. She now~
has participated actively In the serves as a member of the Battle
PTA, Heart Association and Arneri· Days planning committee for Point •
can Cancer Society local chapters Pleasant. She Is a member of the
vestry of Chrtst Episcopal Church. •
and lund-raising efforts.
Swain Is joining the board as
Mrs. Geitz Is also a new member
trustee.
Now a member of the
on the board. Originally from
Gallia
County
Commission, Swain
Cincinnati, she was a bank execu·
graduated
from
Fairland High
tlve at Central Trust Co. for 20years
School
and
attended
Northwest_
before coming to Wellston in 1965 as
Mlssourt
State
College.
He
served·
the wife of the late Harold Geltz.
In
the
U.S.
Air
Force
from
1953unlli
Presently, Mrs. Geitz Is serving
on Wellston City Council, chairs the 1955. A merchant by profession, he '
industrtal development committee is also an active farmer In southern '
for the city, and Is a member of the Gallia County and is a member of
Community Improvement the National Tobacco Advisory
Committee representing tobacco
Corporation.
For more than two and one-half larrners in Ohi'O, Missouri and
years, she has worked In the Wisconsin.
Re-elected to three year terms to
mayor's office and with the service
director in Wellston. She is secre- con~lnue serving on the hospital's
tary of the Wellston Pride and Board of Trustees are Dr. Edward
treasurer of the Ohlllco Society. She J. Berklch, William P. Cherrtngton
is active In a number of civic and and Louis R. Ford Jr., all of
Gallipolis.
,
community organizations. .
Elected to serve on the executive
Mrs . Jones , newly elected
member of the board, Is a lifetime committee with board officers for a
resident of Mason County. A one year term are J . Tim Evans
graduate of Point Pleasant High and Warren F. Sheets of Galllpolis,
School. she received her bachelor ol and E. Neal TaylorofWlllowWood._
arts degree from Goucher College Other board members Include Dr.
and did graduate work in econom- Oscar W. Clarke, Dr. Charles E ,
ics and history at the University of Holzer Jr., and Dr. Thomas W.
Morgan, all of GallipoUs.
VIrginia a t Charlottesvllle.
For three years, she was a
teacher at PPHS. Mrs. Jones Is a
past president of the Point Pleasant
Women's , Club, the North Point
POMEROY -Robert Wood, Rt.
Parent-Teachers Association and a 1, Long Bottom, who was sertously
charte~ member of the Point
injured in a motorcycle accident
Pleasant branch of the Arnertcan Aprtl 1, has been admitted to Holzer
Association of University Women. ·Medical Center for additional
She was twice presidential surgery in connection with the
elector-at-large for West Virginia. accident.

A8SOClated J'ress Writer

Expressing renew€'! pride In the armed forces ,
thousands of Americans joined ceremonies dedicated
to soldiers who died In war$ around the globe, to
others who came home to heroes' thanks - and to
VIetnam veterans who survived only to be ''booed and
.
even spit upon."
No longer "is It unfasWonable to wear our hearts
and our flag on our sleeves," Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger told 1,200 peop\e Friday a( a
World Peace Luncheon in Birmingham, Ala. ,
highlighting that state's Veterans Day observances.
The ceremonies from coast to coast spanned
generations, ranging from parades in New York and
Portland, Ore., to the unveiling of an exhibit at the
World War I museum iD Kansas City, Mo .. to the
groundbreaklng for a memortal in Des Moines that
will honor the 180,000 Iowans who served in Vietnam.
"I'm prood that the state has not forgotten our
veterans of any era, especially the VIetnam era " said
'
Iowa GoV. Terry Branstad.
Atlanta's parade drew an estimated 8,000 people,

ThoiiUI8 E. Tope

TheodoreT. Reed Jr.

DEER SEASON

Rutland, wW retire m Dec. I
trom Columbia Gas Transrnl8-

%'im••- J•ntintl Section
November

20 VEHICLES THAT QUALIFY FOR 11.831J,.
STOP IN AND SEE MERRILL, JAY AND ALAN EVANS.
Open Monday· thru Friday 8 a.m. • 8 p.m.,
Saturday 8 a.m. · 3 p.m.

: CLEVELAND (AP) -About200 there have been reports of Greypeople braved cold, wet weather hound employees gradually cross'
F)ictay night to rally outside of a tng plcke.t lines and returning to
·
Greyhound bus terminal in support work.
of the nationwide strike by Grey"Don't believe this bull that
Greyhowid's putting out that people
h(rund employees.
The peaceful rally Included are going back to work," said Ellis
members of sympathetic labor Franklin, an International vice
imlons and several public officials, president of the union. "This labor
Including Cleveland Councilman movement needs something to rally
Dennis Kuclnlcb, the city's former behind, andlt'stoughwehavetodolt
mayor.
. . this way ...
"The working men and women of
{The strike by the Amalagamated
Transit Union began Oct. 19, and

this country have got to wake up,"
Franklin said. "There's a deliberate, weU·lald plan across this
country to destroy the labor
movement or render It Ineffective.
Just look around you.''
Other speakers Included Anetta
Fox, president of ATU Locall571,
and Jim Ondrejack, president of
ATU Local1043, the locals working
out of Cleveland.
The rally lasted about 90 minutes
and blocked a portion of Chester
Avenue, a busy downtown street.

Jetliner lands with sparks flying
: MIAMI (AP)- Passengers on an
E'astern lllght forced to land
bllcause of a burst tire described It as
"a little bit rough but ... fine" when
tfl!! jet's landing gear colla~ and
I~ skidded In M Its belly - sparks

flying.

'

• No InjUries were reported among

149 ptiSSI!IIII!I'S and seven crew
r)lmhers helped oil the plane by
ertler&amp;e~lt'Y technlcl8n.s. But one
lip \\IRS hospitalized becallll! at a
he8rt ~and about 25peaple
apl barmleBS lire retardant foam in
their eyes, alllclala said.
'EastemAirllnesFlight836,bwnd
•

\

for Denver and Salt Lake City, had
blown a right tire durtng takeoff
Friday night, apparently damaging
the landing gear hydraulic system,
said Eastern spokeS.man Jim

Ashlock.

The Boeing m then circled aboVe
the Everglades, dumping fuel to
IJghte!l the load, before returning to
1'vflaml International Airport, he
said.
' After flYing by the control tower
for a visual check, the pilot landed
the plalle with only two of three
landing gear down, Ashlock said.
Thecraftsklddedolfthenmwayina

cloud of smoke when the two
remaining landing cgear collapsed
from lack of hydraulic pressure, he
said.
,
.Passengers broke into applause
when the plane landed, said Jan
Brown, 33, of Salt Lake City.
"Everybody said 'Eastern Airlines
Is buying the drinks.'"
But after the l3lllltng gear
collapsed and theplaneveered to the

right, "everybody ROt very quiet,"
said Mrs., 13rown, en route bOrne
from Martinique with her husband,

Ben.

·GREYHOUND SOLIDARri'Y - About 200
strlldng Greyhound worken~, memhel'll ·of other
unions and pubHc officials tumed oot In cold, wet
weather Friday night In a rally outside of the
Greyhound bus terminal In Cleveland In support of the

nallonwlde strike by Greyhound employees
memben~ ollhe Amalgamated Transit Untoa,
Stein, a Social Agencies Employees Union olllciai 1n
Cleveland, Ill llliown here add!"!MMng the rally, ( AP

caroi

Laserphoto ).

.,,,

��Page

D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

13

Insurance

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

1 B Wanted to Do

31

.SANOY AND BEAVER In·
sur1nce Co . has offered
Mrtlicea tor fire insurance
cover•ge in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet Individual needs. Contact Harry Pitchford, agent
Phone 446 ~ 1427 .

16

Schools
Instruction

Piano Leasons. Gallipolis
Ferry area . If interested call

304-676· 7677 .

21

Business
Opportunity

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446Ctgareue Distributorship .
3159 between 9 and 5 .
Instant cash flow! We are a
Lawn Mowing no yard to big Bo nded nat ional firm ex ~
into the area . If vou
or smell. Reliable and depen ·
a secure busi dable. For estimate call are
446-3159. 9 to 6.
ness opportuinty. We pro all retail locat1ons and
B1 bysttting in my home. all necessary training. Full or
Cheshire area Call 367· Part time . Investment from
7814.
S2 . 000 . 00 . Winston ·
Salem -Kools . 1- 800-241 ·
Will do babysitting in mv 2268
home and will give referen -

ces Call 614-367·0462

1--- - - - - - - -

18 Wanted to Do

22 Money to loan
f!ln liiVIal

Wantmg to take care of
elderly people and children .
newborn and olde.r in their
home. Anytime day or night .
Will work weekends. Would
like holidays off. Call 614388-9354 or 446 -3007 ttsk
for Ooris
Now open. New home for
elderly people. Nurse on
duty II all time. Phone

304·675·7610.

21

Business ..
Opportutii'ly

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. end NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have investigated the offering .

------:-~-:-:--l.:=========:J
11

Help

Wanted

HOME

LOANS FIXED

RATES 12%% purchase or
refinance , 1 1 1/.r.% adjustable
rato . Leader Mortgage .

4202 or 446·2857.

By owner brick 8t frame, 3
bdrs .• 1 V2 baths. LR. DR.
utiltty room . large kitchen
With lots of cabinets. Lo·
cated in very nice neighbor·
hood. little over V:l acre.
approx . 3 mi. from hospital .

located in Syracuse -Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one·
third acre lot . $24 ,500 . or
will rent for $275 mo
Baum . Add1tion
3 b~d ­
rooms. 2% baths, a.c , fam ·
ily room, with fireplace. 2
acres. $66,000. firm . l.,oan
assumption possible. 614 ·

23

Typing, some bookkeeping, and various other general office duties. Must
be neat &amp; personable.
Send Resume to: Box 500
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
DEALERS IS NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR TKE POSITION
OF SALES PERSONS.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
SEND RESUME TO ,

P. 0. Box B-12

Point Pleasant Register
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

EAST

+QJI OJl 4
'f fi3
• •..

'1 ;,

+Kto a•.,

+QJ 9s a

32 Mobile Homes
4 bdr. ranch home. large LR .
full basement , with garage,
wood burner included. city
schools. 2 miles from town.

Call 446 -0276.

Middleport, priced for immediate possesstonl Cozy
home With floor furnance.
fireplace. reasonabJe utili·
ties . all 992 · 6941 .

for Sale

• 88

·-··

¥ K J 10 2

tAK JIDIO
+A 7

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer· North

,,..

West

North

East

1•
Pass

Pass
6 i'iT

P a s~

Pass
Pa ss
Dbl
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

,.

SouLh

••Obi

7 NT

Redbl

Openmg lead : +s
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Here is a hand reported by
Joe Amsburb in Internattan·
al Popular tidge Monthly
The game was rubber bridge
and the parttcipants are·
described as typical sportmg
rubber bridge players .

f----------+------;._---4
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1974 Granville 12x65 3 1 - : - - - - - - - - - - - ; - - - - - - - - - - - 1
bdr ., completely furnished,
TRI·STATE MOBILE Wanted older three bedroom
WD -AC, porch, awning, unHOMES . USED· CARS, mobile hometest for Point
derpinning,
$7,500.
742Comple1ely remodeled . 6
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS . Pleasant
rooms. Bath . Eat -in ki1chen . 2000.
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL Save thousands, 1983
Spring Hill by Freedom.
446-7572.
Diningroom . Carpet. Large
24x66 three bedroom. two
lot. 3 porches. large b•se- 2 bedroom, completely furmen1 , and carport. Must sell . nished. good clean cond.
NEW AND USED MOBILE full baths one with garden
Immediate possession. Only $3.250. 304-882-2466.
HOMES KESSEL"S QUAL· tub, cathedral ceiling. dis·
S1 8,500 . Last house away
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. hwehser, fireplace. utility
from River on Henderson 1976 14•70 trailer, 3 bad4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS. room, fully carpeted. Needs
St .. Henderson, WV. Phone room. 2 baths. large kitchen,
RT 36. PHONE .446·7274. insulation under floor. Furnace and some trim dam$10.000. 304·773·5,023.
number tn yard .
2 bdr. 12x60. 83.500 3 aged. Sold new $30,000.00
For sele by owner 36 a m -1; 14x70 2 bedroom unfurbdr., 12•7d',to1al electric, 2 occupied one week. As is
with blocks for
Jbdr house; 2 bldgs - 17' x nished mobile home, carpet baths 87.500. Call 614· along
$18.900 .00. Possible
446-0176 .
SO ' &amp; 25 ' x30' metal w- ing, appliances. central alrowner financing at 12 per
concrete,· wle . &amp; wtr; dbl heat, $11.000 . Call
cent with $6,000.00 down.
crib, 2 pnds w - stocktanks; 614-266-6036, or after
Trailer on 2 acre lot $19,000 Shown by appointment
good fence ; stt 2 m1. off US I 7PM 614-256-1572
and trailer on 1 acre lot only. 304-676-7377 ba35. Jcks Co , 20 mi. from - - - - - - - - - ' 11,000 on Kerr-Bethel Rd. _tw_o~:_n_B_A_M_•n_d_8_P_M_.__
Jcks, 20 ml from G'pls; New 1984 Skyline 14~~:70, 3

Gallia Co . sh . dist; Call (614) BR , 1112 bath, completely
682-6892 after 5 &amp; week turn.. delivered and set,

ends: 16141 446·0336 8 am regular. $16.500. Special
to 4 pm; ask for June

S14,500. French City Mo·

bile Homes Call 446-9340.
For sale 1 mi. above Chester
on St. At 7 , brick home on 1
acre lot 6 yr old quality built
home. Large livingroom with
fireplace , 4 bdr., dining
room, 2 baths, 2 car garage .
Frank Reynolds. at 304-

Call614·388-9360.

14-"70 2 bdr ., family room,
total elec., central•ir, underpinning, on rented lot. Cal

614-245-9226.

New 1984 sectional 1306

1

Mobile Home Moving, licen.sed and Insured, Free
Est1matas $100. per hookup minimum. Phone 304·

578-271 1 or 676·2866.

sq . h ., 3 BR •• 2 lull baths.

family room, delivered end
set regular 824,500, Spacial
S21,995 French City Mobile Homes. Call446-9340.

773-5421 or 773·5319.

1972 Schultz mobile homa
12x62. all electric. 2 bdr ..
4 roams, bath and utility ttp out. good cond., priced to
room. nice location. 304- soli. Call 446· 7832.

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST

. Accepting applications for full
time supervisory position. Applicant must be M.T. Salary negotiable.
.

675 -1090.

---------

1972 mobile hom a with 1 1h:
T~i - level, excellent condi- 'acres land and outbuilding.
tion, $66,000, BY2 assuma - Located near Mudsock. Call
ble loan, $11,000 down. 446·0063. $6,500.

Phone. 304-675-1529 after - - - - - - - - - -

For sale or rent . 2 bdr . trailer.

5 p.m .

Caii614·256·6Bt3.

SALE: 1974
WITH 3 BEDROOM ADD-ON AND .24 ACRE
w/unUTIES ON KRINER SAND HOUOW ROAD.
PRICE $5200. CONTACT CREDIT THRIFT OF
AMERICA, INC. 446-4113.

after 5PM .

19B1 14x70. Shuhzliml1od·
mobile home. microwave, ' ..
di1hw1Sher, cantril lir. underpenning, three bed·
room• . tlh: baths, excellent
condition, $16,600. Call

APARTMENTS, mobile
and Gallipolis. 614 -446 ·

ingovolfoble. C~N448·8221
1f1er I weekdays.

Canaday

Realty

14V. acrea. Rouah Hollow
Rd. off At. 654, nice road.
building ·~·· rur•l water

clo.O. Coli ohor &amp;I'M. 614·
3~8-9718 .

!ll

814·~46·5269

or 446·

4 bdr. houte 6 acres of lend
on Rt. 180 in Vinton. Central
air. e350 mo .• sec. dep. &amp;

rot. can 448·3t75.

.

.

h

3 roomo •nd both. 142 4th
Avo .• ltiO mo,, 1100dap.,
6 moe. IHu required. Call

448·3867 ohar 5.

House beautiful 3 bdr .• 2

both. LR, FR •. wolf to wan

carpet. diahwaaher, gu
heat. air cond., in G•llipolia.

Rat. req. Call 448· t 409

0

'

Rent or slle-2 bedroom
unfurniahed house. cloae to
General Hartinger parkway

in Middleport. 614·992·
3467.

5 rooma • bath, full basegarege, gl•s"d ' in
brHIIWIY, 811 forced air
ment~

hoot Contrel ofr-cond. 614·
949-2734.

46 Furnished Rooms

Furnished apt. 3 rooms &amp;
bath, water paid , adul11.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

304-675·2482.

304-675·7112 or 675·
4626 .

1 bed room Apt. in Middleport . Utilities include~.

$200. plus deposit. 614·
992-7177.

1- 2-3 and 4 bedroom apts.
and house in Middlepon.

6t4·992·2381 days. 614·

992·2509 evenings.

SUPERMARKET
FOR SALE

Out of town owner must sell
prosperous business. Fresh.
Ufl"to-date inventory and all
the equipment. Good feaseon
modern building w~h 8.300
sq. ft. &lt;;an Ike Wiseman 446·
3644. Wiseman Real Estate
Agency.

Are you

ct.. n. newl¥ ·

REAL ESTATE
446-4206
Bonnie Stutes, Realtor

PRICED REDUCED TO $56,900! - Excellent
cattle farm. 132 acres m/1, mostly dean hill
pasture. good fentes, I I&gt; slory home, 5 rms. and
bath. large barn, tab. base, ~ants on 3 roads in
Walnut Twp.
.

676·1BII2.

.

GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1 located
south of Mercervile Approx 20 A. bllable: balance
woods. lob. base. Owners will help finance.

CfiESHIRE - II&gt; story frame offeB 4 BRs, bath.
IMng room, kitt:heo, tar~ front ard rear porches .
and an attached
. £1(11e. AsWmable loin at 9\o\%.

NI.W LISTING Ill. VINTON AREA- 4BRs, kitchen
bat~ large ivine room with woodburn1ng lire!Hce
al on one slay. Nice level lawn witlll.6acres, m/1.

FOllOW THE CIRCULAR DRIVE - and yOU'H fiitd

2 ~ . bedroom

th~ eye-catchng home that features aroomy famiy

Rent

1
1

:t,

RODNEY- HOME AND BUSINESS OR RENTAL- Compte·
tely ref1mshed older 2 story large building. Storage. City
schools Make us an offer! Just move in - there isn't any·
thmg that needs to be done belore you move. You should
really look at thiS .home. It is a very nice home.

or

Cl&gt;;.hlro. \llflltleo pold ex·
c:odt olec. Huted by gat.
c.ll441·43et.

roorn. 5 BRs, 2 baths. buitt·m
·and
diShwasher. 2 fireplace~ 3 patios. w urning
st(M!. centr~ a1r. a~o has a pond and utility
bUIIdm~
1

•
2 ·:bedroom. •10. week.

'

•l•. exc.
nice

Lowrey or. .n for
d. would make

otrnoo gfh. 304· 773·

3.

oven

a.droorn trailer. Real nice.

8.-.lwn'e Treller Park. 614-

Btl·3324.
2
1

GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRAllY LOCATED 112 acre farm has frontage on Stale Route 58&amp;
Fairfield Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fa~rfield Rd
Excelent for farming or d~ment Older 5 tm. &amp;
bath also mcluded. Owners .WJII consider sl!11mg
smaller ~acts .of short term financing Calf for'more
Information.

·bdr.

.

mobile home, com-

plMory turn.. 11811 pluo
utlfltloo, tiO dop. Coli 304·
81.&amp;-2486.

.'
Apartment
for Rent

'

••
Brt!oll

BUHL.. ORTON RD. - lb.,,14U 11cres.
pool, pond. Contemporary home. . ,
ment. C1ty schools. Excelle"t location'

Fumlohod 3 roomo. with
Rof..,.ce pro·
fottod. c.ll448·22111.

POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT - ROUND HOME - 1 A
woodland . Basement. Pomeroy. $65,000. lots of glass
and decking. Let's make a deal!!

turn. houoo 1 or 2
ld•llo only. no pots. Coli
441-0338.
-

pr"•"' -·

F...,._
epll .• 1·2 rm.
boft-•1 up.Atoo1·4
&amp;

a - up. Creon. no
~ .....,.. only. Ref. mr.

rm.

Cojl448·\118.

Fa· 1JtM.Ibdr.

HERFS AN EVtCATCHER- 3 8R brick ranch on ·
equipped kKchen. I\; baths, laurdry room, central
air, carpeting and ~rge 2 ~r garage.

-

A'(e..

"'* 1

EVNIS HEIGHTS - $27,900 - This home
fNturas 2 BRs. bltlr. llrae lving room witll

-----

,

fireplace, kitt:l)en and llundry room.

•
••

t180,
ltil, 11H - d
ellpolll. 4411·4411

...

STA 90 200 watt receiver ;
Fischer turntable. two new ·
75 watt speakers . Cost
S1 JOOO. want $400 304 ·

675·7436 .
Atarl 2600, 9 cartridges
extra . price negotiable . Call

AEP HAS MOVED OWNER BUT NOT HIS HOME! - That
means savings to you because he •s ready to deal He'll have ahard time r~Ctng thrs attractie 3 bedroom bfick ranch tom·
plete with full
family room, ltvtng room,
mce
kilchqn,
baths. effic1ent furnace with
and
ol 1n·
sulaOOn
the bt1ls down Uflltty roam, car garage, and

5 bedroom Georgian Colonial Brick- entry hall w/ beauti·
lui open stairway. den.
baths. Chandler kitchen
w/ oodles of gorgeous cherry cabmets &amp; new appliances.
Extra farge living room w/wood burning fireplace. formal
din1ne w/ bu•lt·in china hutch , full basement w/ fireplace.
f1msHed att1cs. 2 car garage. beautiful finished natural
wood lloors &amp; woodwork throughout .
BONUS: Attached 7 room office w/ '/, bath- seller financ·
'"·'could be considered.

304·675·4515.

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

TECTION. CIIY scho~s. close to shopp~n~ Reduced to
$54.800
.

WHITE BRICK - 3 bedrooms, 2\1 baths, formal living
and dining, family room w/wb fireplace , large k~chen,
lots of extras. Bushels of trees, shrubs and Howers. A
must to see!
ing room, w.b. fireplace, formal dming room with patio
doors, kitchen with all appliances, side·by·side 1efrig.,
dishwasher, 2 bedrooms, laundry room, 2 full baths, gar·
den tub, 2 showers. Total electric, central air .. All under·
pinned. Large ·covered patio. All this for only $18,900.

CHAROLAIS HILLS -On e of th e fmesl areas m Gallta
County. You can live on 31h acres there m aqualtl~ bnck
ranch 3 1a rge bedrooms, 2 1ull baths, basement !lv1ng
room famrl y room, formal d1ntng, woodbu rmng !~re­

place. 2 car

ga~age.

OWNER WILliNG TO TRADE lor

smalle r. less expensi ve home Assuma ble loan lo qual ·
1f1ed buyer

71 ACRE fARM - MOBILE HOME &amp; RENTAl HOUSE Only $39 ,5 00, l!' s a buy lo r anyone wantt ng pr1vacy and
somen tce cropland, pasture and wood s plus anedra tn come fr om lhe 2 bedroom renta l house The mob1l e ·
home tS 14x7Q and rn good co ndttion. Has loba cco base
and lots of road frontage on both sides of road . Ap prox
10 m1les from town.

100 ACRES IN ADDISON TOWNSHIP- Approx 30 1•1·
lable 20 pasture and th e balance lf1 woods Road fronla ge on Johnson Rtdge. gas well 1000 lb. tobacco base,

posSible limber $56,000.

HISTORIC WDMARK - E1ght room 1\Wl ~ory bnck Mosl

elaOOrate door and window facio~ in Southern Ohio. WMe
marble fireplace Circular stairs. Includes 2 A. of l11wn and
good
fruntrees. 2 baros Must see to ap·

zy,

Phone 446-2755 or 446-6244

REALTOR

.

LARGE MODERN COUNTRY HOME- 5.200 sq. II. ol to·
1al peace and QUiet. S1ts on a 40 ac re tract Th1s home
featu res an rngmund sw1mmmg pool, t1 1ermopa ne wm dows burl! tn Oar beque p1!, 2 woodburning fireplaces, 4
very large bed10oms. a spac1ous bu11t m kilchen, large
covered porch, attract1ve lt ght fi -.tures. Slldtng glass
doors, some hardwood fl oms, •all closets are ce dar lined.
3 bJt hs and o~e rs1zed 2 car gara ge Thrs ISa place where
you can ha ve all kmds of act1vtl te s, hunt1ng, swtmmmg,
dtrt brke ndtng horseba ck rtdmg, gardentng, k1ds could
ra1se a bee t It's also bu1lt ol qual ity matmenals and
cr at1smansh1p Kyger Creek Schools. 8 mrles !rom city.
0\'Vners moving out of stat e

INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAl or WAREHOUSE - Owner
prefers to sell at a bar gam prtce rather than lei th e buldtng go lhrough the wtn ler empty 31,961 sq ft. of which
2432 sq ft ts offtce space. We have space next door rf
you need m01e Call E. M Wiseman 446 3644. Wtseman
Real Estate Agency

QUAliTY- CONVENIENCE -LOCATION - PRIVACY

IMMEDIAIE POSSESSION - II you are look•ng lor

- Attril ctive 3 bedroom bnck on 1 7 ac at edge ol town
Includes a wile approved ki tchen, l'h baths, 2 ftreplaces ba semenl. 2 car ga rage and an outslandmg
v•ew Green Grade School This is a modern well-kepi reSidence that is hard Jo match

spac e and pnva cy lh en call us to see lh1s remodeled 2
bedr oo m home near Rto Grande 1 acre yard wtth lots ol
room around yolJ Th e house has ba sement. large bedrooms, paneled. carpets. are new an d la rge k1lchen Gal·

lipohs C•ly Schools $29.900.

14.000 DOWN- ASSUME 10%MORTGAGE- Owne1
says sell 11 oow. Very att racttve 3 bedroo m 4 yr ol d
home Decorated to surt any one's Jaste Ftreplace, 21ull
balh s, mce large kttchen . heat pump, 2 ca t garage
workshop ar.d 1 acre tre ~ studded yard $59.000

HillVIEW HOME JUST Off 2181N CITY SCHOOlS- 3
BR. bath, 12'x24' basement. Ne w porch length ot house.
14"xl6' pa110. siOrage bldg ove1 1.5 A land. p11ced lo
sell l et us show yo u th is clean well kept 4 yr old hom e

I
i

Priced al $36.000

ENERGY EFFICIENT - Very iiJQd stale Olllllair 3 BR rome .
1ust wailing for new OWilE!r. large living room. 18'x24' garage
(concrete floor) ., back ol klllrontlng on ok!y.
GOOD LARGE OLDER HOllE - W1lh almol t 4 acres of
land located on Neighborhood Road . Only 4 1111les fJom
·

OWNERS MOVING Ofil OF TOWN- CITY SCHOOLSThrs is a nice 3 bedroom brtck snd frame home 1us1 2
miles west of town. Includes a warm and cozy ftteplace,
full blsement w/family room, central air, garage and
more. Call to see thrs one today. ·

:•

ONE OF THE FINEST HOMES IN GALLIA COUNTY
PRIME LOCATION

'

crty. Lots of mce shade, Quiet location. '

1111 KINGSLEY MOBILE HOME with 7x24.expando,liv·

Rt 35 West large living room, dimng room,

675·1802, 304-675 ·5757.

,'.•
,.
•,

FOR SALE BY OWNER

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
AGENCY

I . l lh basemen~
extra
central
lots
to
keep
2
I possible 9% lo.ln a;sumplon. PLUS OOE YEAR BUYERSPRO

u"turn~ mobile home in

LOG CABIN .- Very urique. old hind f1eMt Ia&amp;
beams, sleeping loft, ~rge stooe fireJlace, modem
bam. 14 acres woods, localed in the YlaVIIII
National ForesL 10'11 down.
r·-

SECLUDED AND PEACEFUL-lovely place in the country has an
oiler home an a 2 BR Sch.;t mobile home w~h central air. large lot
of 5.6 acres. Kyger Creek scho&lt;&gt;s.
#2020

furniahed

40 channel Robin side band
C.B .. power mike $125 ., 2
sets of speakers $10 . each,
8 track player S1 5 . Ae ·
corder 8 tr.a ck $25 , 304-

All you need
· to know in ~
Real EstateT:
I
I
I
I
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I
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304-

aduho only. Coli 446-0338 .

Suburban wood and coal
heater for sale. a200. Call

Each office independently owned and operaled.

for a nice

required,

SWAIN
I- -- - -- - - AUCTION S. FURNITURE BeaUtiful coffee table, made

ELEORONIC REALTY
ASSOCIATES

FuU baMmeht, 11h story
with city water, double
garage, prden, 1 unall child
ICCoptod. 304·876·t078.

1

BRING YOUR HAMMER &amp; NAILS :._ AnO ·~ to
wak on th~ unfinished home near Rodney Has a
fuH basement aild over II acres of 1~!1ng to ·level
land Price has been reduced to $34,0001

446-0322

REMTOI

f""!'tlon, Uppor Ri- Rd,
d..,.lll req. con 8 14·441·
8&amp;118.

MAKE US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE MOVED
TO FLORIDA- and would l1keth~r homesdd th~
month. like new spirt level ~ located on Debby
Drive and offers approx 3.000 sq. fl of hv1ng area
plus 2 car garage and one oft he area:snicest pools.
Over $100.000.

Gibson refrlg., coppertone,

exc. cond .. $150. Call446·
2193.

rn

12•10 2 bf.tr. modern fur·
niJhed trifler. convenient

WILL BE YOUR PROUDEST POSSESSION! Beauti·
funy landscaped. Splendid wMe lirick home
exhibits approx. 3100 sq. fl of liv1ng area with 3 or
4 BRs, 3 baths, 201140 fanify mom. dining room,
m1crowave and trash compacli:J. intercom, air
conditioning, 2 car £1118je.' .10x20 utility building,
deck and 201140 pooJ. (River View)
·

30 in. electric range, gold ,
With fan hood. 16 in trash
compactor. 304-~75 - 7749 .

frames, S20.and $25 .. 10
gun - Gun cabinets , $350.
Gas or electric ranges $375.
Baby mattresses, S25 &amp;
$35, bed frames $20, $25,
&amp; $30, king frame $50.
Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar chests,
rockers. metal cabinets.
swtvel rockers .
Used Furniture ·• bookcase.
ranges, ch'airs, dryers, refrigerators and TV ' s. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri .• 9am
to Spm. Sat.

UTES

$176 per Jmo.· Call 256·
6251.
'
. .

INSTANTLY APPEALING - lovely 4BR brick and
frame ~-level 11 Pleasant Valley Estates. Other
attractions include family room, equipped kitchen,
l•mg room. one lull and two hat baths 2 car
garage arid _central air.
•

675·2029 .

54 Misc.

Antiques

$42. S dr."chests. $54. Bed

RCA. Stereo Video Disc
player, remote control. eight
different movies and con certs, $300.00. Phone 304-

6806.

home In good neighbor·
hood1 Thlolt·ltl Dopoolt and
rlf.erencu

5l

Real Estate General

I

THIS MAY BE JUST THE ONE! lovely ranch
HUNTER"S PARADISE - 48 acres mil on nestled on a level to rolling parcel w~h wooded
Raccoon Creek near Ewmgton, approx. 10 A back yard and covered pallo. riJso diSplays 2baths
tillable, balance woods. II&gt; story log cottage cellar 3 BRs. galley krtchen. l·shaped li~ng room and
ouse, 12xl5 metal bwldin11 extra mce 14x70 2BR
d101ng room, family room With patio doors and
2 bath mo~le home. ~I this for the ask1ng pnce oi · central a1r. Only minutes to town.
$39.400.

Service Station for lease,
downtown Point Pleasant
for Information phone 61 4 ·
373-8411 ask for Dave.

beclroomo. kitchen. dining,
living room. *376 mo. ptuo
dap. 304·1176·3099.

lWENTY ACRES - BEAUTIFUl WOOOED AREA. 3 BEDROOM MOBILE

GOOD LIVING FOR SALE! 781\ acres mil. lovely
bnck and frame ·ranch. d~plays 2 baths. 2 BRs
16x24 k~hen w/washer. dryer, double
range, refrig. rHI, d~p. large liVIng room, articill
fireplace. Master bedroom ~ 16xl8 Cellar house
shed ard 30x50 bam. 44 acres of pasture with
SJW~ng and pond. Located in Cheshire Twp.

3994 . Evans Enterprises,
9-5 , Mon. thru Fri.

HouH on 5 acrn of lend, 2
f\ltf botho, utility rocrm, 3

$12::

OWN YOUR OWN CAMP SITE - In the widerness
of the Wayne National Foresl 5 to 9 acre tracts of
woodland now available, adjoining thousands of
acres of government land. Pu~ic hunting fishing
and camJJng permitted. Prices start at $3500 w~h
financing availabla

polis, Oh. Ph. 614·446·

Washer &amp; dryer. Call 992-

In MercarvHie. 2 bdr. trailer.

TOO BIG FOR PRESENT OWNER - May be just
nght for you! Th~ home features 2 baths, 3 BRs,
kttchen '!/range. oven. 1M'. disp. and refri~. dimng
room. hvmg roo111 fam 1~ IOOm, fireplace, !6x32
pool. attached double garage. carport and a pallo.
KC schoo~.

For lease Modern office
suite especially good for
insurance , real estate or
accounting . 1300 sq.ft .
Four rooms plus lge. clerical
office. kitchenette and stor·
age room . Nat. gas, central
air, carpet . Rant very reasona~le for this quality office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive, Galli-

sehold G&lt;fOds

61 4· 379·21 13
62 Olive St., Gallipolis . 6 from wooden spoked wagon
piece wood living room suite wheel. bran knob. hone
with 6 inch flat arms $399 , home !eggs. Call 446-0822. Woodburning Fireplace . For
446-9301 . .
sale, Seara freestanding fire~
-bunk beds complete with
place. Glass doors. red &amp;
Used dryers &amp; washers all bunk1es $199. 2 piece en·
black porcelain enamel finnice &amp; clean·. guaranteed 30 tron livingroom suites 8199 ,
ish, auto . fan, almoat new
recliners
$99
,
other
1
---antron
days. Delivery . available,
grate, outside ai'r kit, apS50 &amp; up. Cell 614·256· recliners tBO, maple dinette 54 Misc. Merchandise proved
for mobile home1,
sets $179, love seats $70,
1207.
like new, $360 . Call 441·
hide-a - bed $260 , box
Antiques, oak furniture re - 1078.
Brand new Sears washer- springs &amp; mattress twin or production , misc. items. Use 1
- -- - -- -- - dryer. never used , warranty full f100 set regular-firm our Christmas layaway plan .
$120,
maple
dinette
chairs
and instructions . Electric
Conkels . Tuppers Plains.
New 4'- 8', alec. arrow flash ·
dryer 8740 . 614 · 992 · $36, wash stands $34,
maple rockera $59, 7 piece
ing signs . Two colors, rent
3649 .
chrome dinette set $149, 5 Firewood split, stacked , &amp;
$1 00 mo. for 4 mos. Then
piece dinette set $89, used delivered for 826 a large buy sign 845 . 614-446·
bedroom suites. refirgera - l.oad . Oelivered promptly. 4782.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker , .,o t t,"'o·rl tors. ran_ges. chest. dressers. Call 446-7993
wringer washers . TV's,
man , 3 tables, (extra 11 8 0
by Frontier), $686.
dryeres , &amp;: shoes. Call 446 ~
Real Estate General
chair and loveseat.
. 3169.
Sofas and chairs priced from - - - -- - - - - $285. to 6895 . Tables, $45
and up to S1 25. Hide-a~ TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Th1rd
beds.$440 . and up to Ave., Gallipolis, 446· 1699 .
$525., Recliners, $1 75. to Spin washers. gas &amp; electric
$375., lamps from $28. to dryers, auto washers, gas &amp;
$76.6 pc . dlnenes from electric ranges, refrigera$99 .. to 435. 7 pc . $189 tors, TV sets.
and up. Wood table with six
chairs S425 to $746 . Desk Maytag washer A - 1 cond .
$110 up to $225 . Hutches, guaranteed S95 , GE washer
$650. end up, maple or pine like new guaranteed 9135 .
finish. Bunk bed complete Call 614·367-0560.
with mattresses. $250. and
up to $395 . ,Baby beds.
$110. Mattresses or
springs , full or twjn ,
52 CB,TV, Radio
firm, $68 . and S78. Queen
Equipment
sets, $195. 4 dr . chests.

deposit required. Afoo refer·
onceo. 1114·992·2617.

tor

SOMfTHING TO PLEASE EVERYONE!- ~1ghtlul
home offers 3 BRs. 2 baths. k~chen w~ all
appliances. J'4x24 living room, dinette, 16x22
tam•~ room and bar. II l&gt;x24 lami~ room wrth
stooe fireplace and patiO doors, central air. 2 car
garage w/ opener. located at the ooge of town

For lease

Real Estate General

42 Mobife Homes

app~ntmenl

49

Call 446 ·0766.

Calf 304·8711·6646 or 676·
2371 .

COULDN'T ASK FOR A BmER LOCATION!
Handsome Victonan home offers 3BRs. l'h baths.
laundry room. li~ng room, family room. car~
unattached garage, 16x32 1enced pool. K~chen
has range, rein~. OW and disp Nat gas heat and
alum Sid In~ located atthe edgeol town. Call foran

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

S1nger sewing nachine
makes designs . etc . Cost
S500 new , exc . c o nd S89
cash or $6 per week. Call

dining room, full
baaerhen1;. ganga, nice
neighborhood. Security

FARM. lAND. LOTS:
I
121 ACRES. GOOD FARM lAND. HOM~ MINRAL RIGHTS
$100000
270 ACRES. fARMER'S fARM. MODERN HOME
.... $lXJIXXJ
154 ACRES. DAIRY OR BEEf CiffiE fARM. MOO.· HOM.E...... $18iiXXJ
~~MCRJ~ MINERAl RIGHT&amp; Tlt.IIER . . ........................•.$E!I:soo
OVER 21 ~~~~~~~\v~~~~~SE(NCI.Bl.,;;···s··,·T··E·····
S ··· •l$22I2.0001XXJ
40 ACRES-3 BR HOM~ LG. BARN. HANNAN TRACE sciiiiiii:mS'
NEARlY 38 AC~ES. MOSTLY WOODED ........ . ... .. . . ....

YOU'LL BE DELIGHTED- W~h th~ 4 BR ranch in
Vnton area. A~o has 2 baths, galley krtchen with
eye level oven. range and rHI, 12x24 fam~y room,
IMng room. dinette, and a 12x 15 master BR.
lndudes a sundeck. unattached garage and lublity
building, woodburmng stove. level to r~ling lawn
with alxlve ground pool.

Nice trailer space for rent.

Call 446 -4736 or 446 ·
4265 .

Nice one bedroom apart·
mont. utilities furnished,

3 bdr. 2 baths. heat pump, 2
ctr garage, nice location.

PICTURE BOOK SETTING... descnbes th~ stone &amp;
frame ranch surrounded by pines. Other
oulstanding features are 4 BR~ 15x30 l1v1ng room
w/ new crpet firep~ce. kitchen has eye level oven
and range. central air. Over five acres with apond.
large assumable 911% loan.

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house. Call446· 0866
days, a126. mo.

51

51 Household Goods

rc~om.

bflt homo, In city. 1 or 2

1tND£R LOVING CARE - Th~ s~it·level home ~ in excellent
con!ition. Has 3 bedrooms. master bedroom very large, 1~ baths,
fully ~rpeted. patio and carrm Locatoo on alarge level lot on Rt
160. Priced very reasonable.
N2499

l-::5:5~4:8:.

46 Space for Rent

Middleport. 1326. 3 bed·

OUR PHONE HASN'T STOPPED RINGING SINCE WE PUT OUR
FOR SALE SIGN ON THE FRONT LAWN OF THIS LOVELY OlDER
HOME. LOCATED NEAR CITY SCHOOLS WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF DOWNTOWN SHOPPING. 3 BEDROOMS, ·FORMAL
DINING, EAT·IN KITCHEN. I CAR GARAGE. NICE FRONT AND BACK
PORCHES. FENCED BACK YARD. $45,000.

Nle1y lumlthed modern mo·

VERY NICE 2 STORY HOME - 4 bedrooms. I ~ baths. steel s&lt;fin&amp;
garage. Located in 'linton.
#1260

=======-

Apartments . 304 - 675 -

304-675·3030 or 675·
3431.

6304.

Two bedroom houR 1936
Chllthom Ave. Aduho only,
no peto. Con 446· 16BO.

FIRST AD! EXCEPTIONALLY SPACIOUS RANCH BOASTING 1600
SQ FT. LIVING SPACE 3 BEDROOMS, 2 FUll BATHS. 16'X25'
FAMILY ROOM OPENS ONTO DOUBLE DECK. EQUIPPED ~ITCHEN
HAS RANGE. DISHWASHER; LOTS OF REAL WOOD CABINETS,
BEAUTIFUL PLUSH CARPETING. . SOME ROOMS HAVE
WALLPAPER. FUll BASEMENT. LANDSCAPING FEATURES
fNQUDE LIGHTED. WALKWAY. CITY SCHOOLS. PRICE WILL BE
ATTRACTIVE TO THE MOST CONSERVATIVE BUYER!

room
duplex with
basement,
2 bedroom
house,
Phone

Two atory house. 4 bdr..

required. Coli 446·3384.

.

paid, $250 month, 3 bed-

New 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apts. in
Middleport 614-992-

Hou1e for Rent or Sale,
sultltble for 1 or 2 per10ns.
quiet loc.ltlon. ref. &amp; deposit

SUPER BUY IN VINTON- STAY CDZYTHIS WINTER THIS l«lME
HAS AWOOD BURNER PLUS FUEL OIL FURNACE. 3 BEDROOMS.
EAT·IN KITCHEN. ATTIC THAT COULD BE FINISHED FOR 4TH
BEDROOM, LOW MAINTENANCE STEEL SIDING. GOOD GARDEN
SPOT $34.000.

Unfurnished apts, Middle port. No pets. References &amp;
security deposit required

614·992-7787.

after 6 .

$260 per mo. 1250 dep.
req. Call 446·4222. 9'30·
6:00.

DWNER"S LOSS COULD BE YOUR GAIN - MUST SELL 3
BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAME RANCH SUPER SIZE FAMILY
l OOto1 WITH BEAUTIFUL BRICK FIREPLAC( LIVING ROOM HAS
BEAUTIFUL CARPET WITH COORDINATED DRAPES. FENCED BACK
YARD TO KEEP THE CHILDREN SAFE. CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT

446 ·2236 or 614 ·446 ·
2681.

1 bed room Apt. 8196 . mo.
including utilities . Equal
housin~ opportunity . Contact VIllage Manor Apts

.8579.

NEED A HOME YOU"LL BE PROUD OF -AT A PRICE YOU CAN
AFFORD? 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. HI BATHS. FAMILY ROOM
. W/FtREPLACE. PLUS WOOD BURNER IN LIVING ROOM;
~~~~ J.I~~-~ 2 CAR GARAGE. POSSIBLE LOAN

Completely furnished .
newly decoratad •.allalectric,
centri111v located, at $200
mo . plus deposit . Call 614-

Duplex 6 rooms, baih, basement, water furnished, Lock
26 Road, Point Pleasant,

Garfield Ave. location . Call

.: .)'/'; :;l}~..
'%'~~ '\ &lt;y ~

3 rOom &amp; bath in Pomeroy.
992:5621 .

Twp. Rd . 1114-986·41 16.

3 BR houM, with carport,

t5

Dobaon. 446-4607 days.
446·2602 eve.

Call evenings, 992 ·3267.

Poitt. 448·\802.

oumANDING BUY - large ranch home. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs.
family rm .. central ali. 2 car gal age. beautiful carpet you)llovelh~
home.
#1252

2 bedroom apt. at Gall.

Furn . effiency aPartments .
Choice of three, for single or
couples only. Newly redeco ·
rated. starting at 8150 mo .
Security dep. &amp; ref. Call Mr

Farry. 304·676 -2548 .

211dr. trellera. Apartments 1
b4r- BeauJiful river vMiw in
K1naup. Fosters Tr•iltr

and more attractive lhan most' Inspect this lovely
ranch. 2
years old family room. d1mng room. lui ~ carpeted. large bedroom,
2 car garage. over 2.000 sq ft l1v1ngspace. beautiful settmg on I
acre
. #1799

.Phone 304-675·6679. ·

3 room apartment, utilities

Real Estate General

POUlT WITH PRIDE - look1ng lor a home

Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of len than
$12.300. Renting for 30
parcen~ of adjusted income·

1-614-446·0239 .

c..A:udhPY Cqnada~ CReaQto~
~ocust gheet QaQQipoQii'. ~h1o

.

--

TWIN RIVERS TOWER.

'Apartment
for Rent

For hunting or homesite. 80

acru e24.000. Meigs Co.
near Eaatern High School on

~

446-3636

CITY SCHOO.S $35,00()

Furnished efficiency. 920
4th Ave., Gallipolis , adulu,
$175. utilities paid. 4464416 after 7 p.m .

36 •crea •t Rodney on W.T. '8221 .
Watson Rd. Owner finenc- 1-:::-:::-::------

Real Estate General

HOM~

44

Apartment
for Rent

homea, houses. Pt. Pleasant

Resume or applications can be mailed to:
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OH. 45769
ATTN.: W. F. LUCAS, ADM.
614-992·2104
E.O.E.
. .J

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676·271 1.

36 Lots l!o Acreage

304·875·6049 otter 6 p.m.

·

4 mobile homes. 10' and 1 2 '
ft
wide 2 bedroom fu rn is hed . Low priced . j------:;:;-;;;:-;-:;--;:;-----------~

Brown·s Trailer Park. 614·
992·3324.

446-7171

to

Then East backed in with
stx no-trump to try for a
black suit save . ·South
doubled, West ran to seven
clubs and South bid seven
diamonds. West went ·on to
seven spad · s.
North really should have
doubled , but North had
opened with a mere 11 highcard points and was afflicted with bidder's paralysis.
It got back to South the
best player in the game.
South assumed that his
partner's pass showed the
spade ace and decided to g&lt;•
for broke at seven no-trump.
West could bLd no more,
but East produced a double.
South redoubled and since no
further bids were possible, it
was up to West to lead.
He knew that his partner
had shown a black ace. After
considerable thought, he led
a club.
A queen of spades lead
would have given him a
2800-point profit Instead of
the 2930-pomt loss for seven
no-trump redoubled The
cho1ce of leads produces a
5730 swing, whtch may well
be the biggest of this year .
(NEWSI'APER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

+A 9i 6 ~

w~h

water bed, beaudful coordi·
nated livingroom. large
handmade tile shower.
muli sell

six hearts unscientific, but good rubber

S O~TH

Pass
Pass

HELP WANTED

jump

bridge.

\\EST

home. carpeted. full size
basement, 1 c•r garage, in
ground pool 18x32 .

3 bedroom ranch style home
with lerQu bath. kitchen end
living room on a one acre lot
with swimming pool.

11 · 12·83

•..

Services

d1scounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches &amp; schools. Ward's

The biddmg started out
.simply enough with South's

• K 32
• AQ 981 1
• Q75 2

3 bedroom ranch style

$36.000. 614·742·2624.

IN POMEROY AREA

!\'ORTII

Professional

$45.000. 514·992·5868.

BR," 12x85 1ralfor,

A·measly 5730

.Pass

PIANO TUNING Lower
P.rices · regular tunings -

For Ale by owner. 1972 2

44

for Sale

for Sale

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-D-5 •

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

32 Mobila Homes

32 Mobile Homes

Osw.ald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Cell 614-245-5233. Priced

in 40 ' s.

985-4387.

----------------------J Keyboard, 304·675·3824.

General OHice Worker

BRIDGE

3 BR , 3 acres ground. Near
Porter Old 160. Take mobile
home trade in. C•ll 446·

304·855-3934.

Athens. 1·800·341 -6554
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

Homes for Sale

Ncwednr 13, 1983

November 13, 1983·

W.Va.

HERE'S A BEAUTY fN THE WOODS - Just whal lhe
doctor ordered il you're lookmg for a httle peace and
auiet when you come home m the even ing. You' ll fmd
thts hand some 4 bedroom with an English Tudor acce nt.
tucked back allhe end of the drive surrounded by huge
trees on the 5 ac. lot. Th ts one offers an unusually large
family roo rh , 3 balh s and a very mce ktlchen. Crty school
d1stri ct. See it and make an offeJ. Immediate poss esston.

WilDERNESS "'A'" FR~ME - 3 BR. en01gy s"'"R and
attrac tive l oca ted off 218 on a woode d lot and you 'll
like it. Good water supply, 1111 ba ths. wood stove and
part1al basem ent. 0.69 acres. Pnced· reduced to

$32.000

'·

..

�Page-~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

r.';~~~~~~~~~~§~S~~=~

54 Misc. Merchandise
New gun cabinet, holds 10.
Sliding glass &amp; storage,

Pleasant, W. Va.
54

WOODBURNING STOVES.
freestanding, fireplace in-

8100 .

loads for $300. Call 614266-1427.

proved. &amp; furnance ad-ona.
Jividans Farm Equipment,

Used 42" vanity&amp;: toliet, air

lime stone delivered '· tor
$10. a ton Call 614- 256-

pair, 165. Queen size cro-

chete&lt;J bedspread,
e14-992· 7&amp;69 .

1427.

conditioner. plate glass mir·
ror, double rollaway bed
Call 446-7339.

Misc.

54 Misc. Merchandise

ae~ta.

mobile home

ap-

Meet block top t81urfecing Firewood . 304·882-2637.
!'llchlne, JH the country let
II PlY tht bill1. Phone Firewood delivered $25.00
lood. Mo1tly oak . 304-676'
304-676-2406.
6809 .

4-1561iRU" ltool bo~od
rediel 1now tire1, v.g. con d.,
$110. Coli 446· 7828 oftor
&amp;PM .

446-1676.

0

0

Running boarda for pick-up

Firewood, Delivered &amp; Large truck topper. Paneled.
Stacked, $36.00 a load. Good for hunter. Fits 8 fl .
bed. t35. ·675-2566 .
676-5644 .

446-6610

For Sale By Owner
Phone .446-8221
Four Bedroom brick
home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes.
plush carpet.• attached 2 car garage.

Doublo glass 1o ft . showcoso coolor. S475 . Joff's
Carryout &amp; Grocery ,
Pomeroy .

situated on 12 acres with stable, rail
· fences.
swimming pool. garageworkshop. Immediate possession.

Wards Rototiller. 6 h.p.
haavv duty s1 75., groan
couch &amp; chair $126 . good 1'~--------~----------------------------­
cond .. Philco console 25 in.
color. good cond. $150.,
end tablea &amp; lamps $60 ., 2
bar stools $60 . 614-992 ·
5146 .

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

MAKING HOMES AFFOIIDABlE MADE US

beautiful tri-I!W has
. Amenities include 3
bedrooms,
comlete, !ami~ room,
lormal ·entry, 2 car garage. location ~ great with 1.33
acre lawn. Approx, 5 miles from town.
#479

#411 ·

ment. 2 classrooms upsta1rs
and a large sa nctary.
$1 5.000.
NEW liSTING - Rutland
- Newer ranch with 3 bedrooms, tamrly room , ·
carpeted throughoul, and
has nrce cabi nets. Neat and
cute. One acre of level
ground $39 ,900 .
NEW liSTING - One acre
of mostly level ground and a
1974 New Moo n mobile
home wrlh equipped krlchen
and front porch . Just
$12,000.

NICE MODULAR AND ONE ACRE _:_ Home has nke
size rooms w~h 3 bedroms, 2 baths, tamily room,
k~hen wrth buin-in range and oven, plus refrigerator.
Formal dining area. Th~ home is located in a &gt;ery
scenic location.

One six year old registered
Plott CQOn hound. 304676-2098.

home and recenUy redecorated. 5 rooms, bath, part
basement ·and front porch. You may rent out the rest
Efficiency apartment oulsile er4rance. 2 bedroom
garage apartment 828 2nd Avenue. Only $44,900.

ARP OMNI II STRING MA·
CHINE SYNTHESIZER. Call
4.46· 1968 or 446-1 01 2 and
Hk for Chuck.

WANT A RIVER VIEW PlUS FINANCING! Owners are
willing to finance this 3 bedroom double wide w~h 2full
baths, fireplace, famrly room, full baemenl Over 2
acres wrth river frontage Priced at $32,500.
VACANT LAND - 7 acres, will be surveyed. Most all
wooded acreage. Perry Township, jorns country Mrk
State Route 775. Owner financing possible.
'
#355

•

_I
ranch home, situated near North Gallra ·••
• NEW
• School, nrce
Rt. 160. Price $37,500.00.
•
2 BEORM. COTTAGE ~tuated alon ~ Vinton Ave. Nat. gas heat •
•
1\l baths, srx rooms. family room, 2 car garage Pnce •
$32,00000.
•
•
COlONIAl DUTCH . 2 or 3 bedrm .. 2 lull baths, convement~
•
located across from new court house. lg living rm. w/ w.b. •
•
frreplace, lg. k~c he n and formal drning rm Call lor •
•
appointment. $82.000.00.
•
•
•

•
•
•

•
•
•
•

e
•
•
•
•

e

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm home in Eureka. near Gallrpelrs
dam Be ready for construction boom L111e in or rent.
$22.000.00.
QUALITY BRICK HOME srtuated on approx 2acres wrthrn cily
of Gallipolis. SoiK! cherry woodwork and pan~l. 3 W.B.
frreplaces. lull basement (finished) constructed during late
40's Amenil•es too numerous to lrst. Call Ken Morgan.

•
•

4 BEDRMS .. 8 RM. HOME silualed along Garfield Ave. A •
convenrenl place lo live. Ollertooks the beautfful Oh~ Rrver.
Pnce $30,000.00.
·
•

!51 ACRE . FARM near Vinton. Has 3 bedrm. house. lg
equrprnenl shed, bottom land, pasture and some wooded area.
Pr~e reduced to $86,000.00.
3 BEDRM. HOME. family ' rm., adapted lor w.b heater.
In-ground pool, lg -carport, fenced-rn yard. Madison Ave Price

$46,900.00.

.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY!! 2 apartment home with 2 bedrfllS .
each. located wrthm 2 blocks from schools. Plen1)' parking
goo:llocation.$65,000.00.
·

CoMMERCIAl PROPERTY - Active reslaurant business
located on corner lot in Kanauga. Purchase and get immediale
'Cash Flow" owner may finance some to qualified purchaser.
Call for rrwe information.

MEIGS COUNTY- WHOCOUlDASK FOR MORE13~
acres and large permastone ranch w1th lull basement
3 bedrooms, 2 ~ baths, see thro~gh fireplace, buitt-in
TV, 2 car garage All new draperre&amp; l~ acre stocked
pond.

#432
SMAll FARM -Modern 4 bedroom home with partial
basement Average barn, approx. 8 acres. Pasture land
and tobacco base. ~H consider moble home as a
tnrdein.

#434

••
••
•••
••
••
••

livestock

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Applea fro~ German Ridge.
Handpicked and drops.
Golden Delh;:ious, Red Deli-'
cioua. Crown Beauws. and
Wfna Saps and Cider. Call
446-8698 or 614-379 2303.

Egg production business.

Jividen's Farm Equipment.
Long tractors. Vermeer
round belert, rakeS. tedders.
. mowera a. • complete line of
bale handlero &amp; feeding
accestQriea. Tobacco &amp; corn
.Prayere, wagons, rotary
tUiars, rotary cutters, blades,
cuhivatort, discs, ~ows,
RUst driven, plactic tanka.
pawerweshars, wood splittara &amp; wood burning atovesl
~nd 1 complete line of parts
&amp; Mrvlce.
!HlED EQUIP:
It:! ~ydro 70. 24&amp; MF, 35
Mouoy, ee Molloy Whh
loader, 17&amp; Maeuy Fergu~n; Farman C, Gravity
wa,ona, N.H. grindermllll.r, cornplcker. aquare
b•hh. 2 &amp; 3 bottom plows.
post eugera, tobacco setter,
ctlltivetorl.
VfE BUY U6ED
EQUIPMENT
446-1676.

,

35;000 chickens. 4 bedroom tri-tevel hOuse,
bedroom molile home. 100 acres. Owner will
, chicjlen operation separate. Call for more detar~.

#445

$4,500 MOBILE HOME - Only 12x60' 1974 Castle
mobile home. 2 bedrooms, kitchen with range and
refrigerator. Woodbumer. Includes: porches, tie &lt;*Jwn
straps, blocl&lt;s and underpinning_

#471
SMALL FARM - Tho 12 acres mbie or less, has a
_large older hol)le w~.h aluminum ~din~ storm
Wlndows, rnsulalion:. Partially remodeled. Nice larae
barn, tobacco base. stocked pond Priced in the 30'~

25 ACRES, BARN AND RANCH HOME - located rn
Addison Township. 2200 SQ. tt of living space.
Complete new kitchen, breakfast room, family rom
dinrng room, livrng room with fire~c~·large bath w~h
garden tub, 3 bedrooms, utilrty room and many extra.
#378

11454
SECLUDED LOCATION - 45 acres mostly wooded.
Owner says good timber. log house, bam and several
outbuildings. If you want fo get away from rt all this
could be ~ priced in the 30s.

.

POTENTIAL - large ~der home that h~ some
remoclel_
ins This home has a formal entty, new family
room with fireplace, formal dining room. living room
new kitchen with sliding doors ~ eating area, ne;;
bath, all ori main level. 3bedrooms, attic full basement
1 acre. Priced in the ro~
'

271&lt;30 BLOCK GARAGE - On comer lot in Vinton,
Concrete flMr and fuel oillurnace in garage. Room oo
lol for mobile home. Call for details.

•

. #415

NICE RANCH WITH VI NY( SIDING -locatoo in the
Kyger Creek area. Home oonsists of living room, bath
krtchen wrth countei lop range, and oven. 3 bedroomi
and very nice basement. Priced at $35,000.

#447

area, living room, flrllily room, 5 bedrooms, 2\\ baths;
plus extm too numertlUS to menlion.

11414

•

HERE IT 1st Three bedroom doublewide 24'x44' years
ot1. lluilt&lt;n kilcllolll, living room, flrnlly room,~­
Carport, lotted .. LP. ps hell, firer*ce, ooilnty

waler, shode trees, permanent foundlliO!I. Apprv.., I'

acre olllnd. Only $27,000.
NICE Bl-lEVBEL and 4() acres krcated . in Perry
Townshrp. Home has 3 bedrooms, living room. 2bat~
krtchen and lamrly aree in lower level, sewing room and
utility area 24x36 unattached garage. land mostly
wooded. Appra&lt;. 5 acres cleared. Tobacco base.

mz
IACH

e 19112 Ctlhii'Y II

COllE TO WilER£ THE FlAVOR lSI - Realaruntry,
fresh a1r. Natural wood sided ranch, 3 bedrooms nice
111111 cabinels in equrpped kitchen, 2 balhs, living room.
firepllce, 2 car fllfile. INer 5 acres. Minutes from
hospital. lmmacutate inside and out

73

A VERY GOOD HOllE PWS 10 M:iES
bedrooms, eat-in ~~*hen, btlh, lYing

'

ff470

- Ranch, 3

room..fenily

room, '-"en!. UI'JI linae lllld worloshop. Blm.
Priced in llle IIJIPI!f 3011.
18'

Polled hereford i;!ull sired by
Mr. Majestic. 10 months
old . 650 pounds . $400 .
614-742 -2877.

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

81

1978 Ford F250 4x4 cui·
tom. 400 engine. Many
TOP CASH paid for 111e extras. Sharp. S4,300 . 614m'odel used cars.
Smith 742 -2877.
Buick-Pon1iac, 1911 East·
ern Ave ., Gallipolis. 446 · 1982 Dodge Window van,
2282.
luxury edition . 318 engine,
towing package, loaded. ult
1979 Volkswagen diesel. 304-882-2934 .
Coli 614 -245-9405 .

GREEN TOWNSHIP - LJrge modem home 40x60
metal bam, chiden house. Two car garage. ~~ in goo:1
, alOCMiln, cily waler. Approx. 47 acres, fenced for
IM!stoc~ Approx, 2~ mles from city limits.

#407
6 ACRES PLUS - 3 bedroom double-wide with 1\l
baths, _large kitchen, lrvmg room, utility room. This
home ~ ~n a permanent foundation. Barn, garage
chidlen liouse. 2 shed~ located on Rt 141.
'

The

\lftjiN'ffi;}'il

Sunday

nmes-Sentinei--Page-0..7

~THATSCRAIIIILEDWORDOAME

~ ~ ~~·
Ul'\la'amblt theSe tour Jumbles,

Home
Improvements

Business
Services

byHerviAmoklandBoi&gt;Lee

one latter to each squue.IO form
fouron:ltnarywordl.

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 years experience.
specializing in built up roof.
Csll 614-388-9867.

I NONAY±

i KI ... )

Appliance Service All makes
&amp; models refrigerators.
washers, dryers. ranges.
compactors. dishwashers,
micro"'!'avaa. Heating II
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia Rtlfrigeration Co . Call
614-446-4066

.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

"'!"'~-

LEDIY

0

1

KX)

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

I

IZACMEEt
ITRAMPEt
I I K J
Print BIISWor hero: (

THe !::&gt;OCTO Fe PR'AC.TIC:EPAC:UPUNCTURE
ON THE 5fPE IN 0~­
!::&gt;E~ TO PICK UPTHrS.

PAT HILL FORD
992 - 2196
Middleport. Ohio .
1-13-tfc

Now arrange the ctl'cled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·

~~IMPROVEMENTS

gested by the above cartoon.

XX)[ XXI I )

f':

(Answeq Monday)

Yesterday's

I

W

EAFORD

POMEROY -lovely looking •
frame home In the·lower end
of town. Plenty of room lor a
family and view of the rrver.
3 bedrooms.

RACINE - We have 4
homes to sell. One floor and
2 stories. Woodburner, 3
bedrooms. 3 with gas furnaces, level lots. $12,500 up
on time.

i

1 973 Dalla BB Old,, air
condition, PS, PB. low mi·
leage, 8860.00, phone 304675-1702 after 5 p.m.
1973 VW Super Baatle.
excellent condition in and
out, $1500 , 304-8822232 .
-

when he played this - BACH fiOITEN

J~..,_No.20,com•"*'' tto puatK,~t~ 1.. ~t~tbWior$1.tSplut55cpo~;...,_

.....

72

." .

Housing
Headquarters

1973 Chevy Y2 ton, new
tlrea, body good, run a good.
1961 Falcon, good cond.
81 4·843·6244.

.,

,., "'

_;,. ~.:·~·~-- .~f.!f£ ;,,:~ ~i' 'J:·~

'•

Beautiful custom-built brick ranch style home. 3 bed·
rooms, bath and a half. Dining, large living with a brick
fireplace. modem kitchen. fully. carpeted. Full base·
ment. patio. 1
This home is in excellent condition and is maintenance free. situated on a y, acre lot
with a wooded back yard. Privacy, but located on a
blacktop st1te route minutes from town and schools.
Roush Lane, Ch~shire, Ohio.
Shown
A
7560

,,.

1973 Chevro18t V2 ton
pickup, VA st1ndard. runs
good, &amp;650. Call 614-446739 .

.

HOME FOR SALE BY OWNER

Trucks for Sale

SYRACUSE - Modern 3
bedroom one floor home
looks like new. in A-I condi. tion with large lot. Only
$38,500.

~

car praee.

83

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane,
loaders, dump truck. Call
614- 446-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5 oOOPM .
Good-1 Excavating, basementa, footers, driveways.
•
"
·
. septiC tanks, 1anuscapmg.
Call anytime 446-4537,
James L. Davison. Jr.

=======-

SOLUTION

ACROSS
1 Strong wire
rope

6 Rescued

11 Immediate
18 With force
~9 Lessen
20 TOOk cognizant of
21 Father or
mother
23 Barracuda
24 Flying
mammal
26 Poker stake
27 Symbol for
gadolinium
29 Girt's name
30 Narrow
opening
31 Rational
32 UnU of
Portuguese
33 Exist
34 Female
student
35 Skidded
36 Sylvan
deities
38 Saturated
40 large cask
41 Strike
42.Path
-43 Organ of
hearing
45 Protuberances
46 Pronoun
47 Tiny
panicle
48 Disclose

scala
53 Manipulate

Cali 446·0552 Anytirne
Beth Null 245-9507

54 Loved one
55 Staggers
57 Legal
matters
58Chamtcat

SYRACUSl - Need a niGe

brick home? 3 bedroom
ranciJ,I.j.living room, formal drning, 2 baths fireplace .
fuR basem~ 2 car prage. SpaciOus lawn. Pncacr 111e
th 40s.
'

appointmen~

BMR426- DWNERSAYSSEH- ithasanassurnableloanwith
00~ 9'h% interest We are llllkilg abo_ut a wery clean •.311R home
sitUated on nice lilt lot in a familY orienle!l neghrorhood.
REllUCEIJ' $3,000 &lt;*Jwn and assume lol!n!

1978 Chevy pick-up, 4
w!Mol drive, 46,000 mlloo,
e.111:callent co.ndition,
U,&amp;OO.OO. 304· 676·
2792.

H31!.

443 .::-NEW liSTING -FIRST TIME ON IIARKETl Bi-level

locled just minutes from town oo Debby Dr. Includes lR. eat-in
kitchen with d~hwasher &amp; disposal, dinrng room joins kitchen, 3

BMR 4l5- lOW sTARTIR HCiiiE- 3 8R, large kithen,LR,
c.v!J(II. natural BIS heat. new rW, localed within Gallipolis city
limb. Priced at $31,900. Be the first to see lhis one!

PRICE REDUCED $10,000 - Pomeroy, 3 bedlooms,
brictl ranch situalad on I acre k!l Kitchen with dining

BIIR 436 -

carport, fuN basemert "'·-.:
wil rant with option to buy,
""'""

1111, living fCIOT1I, bllh,

73

.

Vans &amp;

4 W.O.

#402

'211 ACRES, more or less located 2 miles below Euralil ' ·
Use for buiding srll or motile horne. P~ 11 ~ ·

mum STAIIIU HOME with2 BRs.LR. OR. nice

kll:llen, utiity and new blth1t1011L Ca'l'fted lhroogl1out. Saeened
PI!'J, ~ llrae lot. Call. til tppOinlmenl

1811 Superior 30 po100ngor
b140, good cond. ·cou 4462131 or 1711·2432.

BIIR 389- OWNER SAYSSEU10MY!Yourfami1Ywi110f1pythe
r(Q11iness at ltii! house. lncli.dlis 4 BRs, 2 baths, lll, OR, bui~&lt;n
kilthen. SiiUiiiBd on larae CGmer lot. Q(B! lo llw¥n in ely school
drstricl (Green Elsn.l. Call b) see this one!

t 171 C""""'" Chlel PS,
PI, olr, CB radio, othw
- · Call 141-2114.

-

ff452

______ -- -------·

440 -

2 STORY FRME horne for only $10,500. Rent l

01 •

live In il. Eilhlr way lhe Vllue ir lhere. Clll now for 1ppointrnent

!

,:...,

•

GALLIA
REFRIGERATION CO.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipolis.
446-7833 or 446-1833.
We do quality reupholster·
ing, make new cuatom made
roupholste,rod furniture. R &amp;
M Manufacturing, Crown
City, 614-256-H?O.

614-446 -4066

Bell Contracting

Gallipolis. OH .
All types of construction &amp;
remodeling, roofing, plumbing, heating &amp; electrical work.
Ncr Job too Small
446-4002
THE STAN-SHOR CO.
Excavaling. Swimming Pool
Sales &amp; Service, WrnterCovers.
Winterizing Kits. Domes. Spas.
Pool Winlerizing Available.
Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck.
388-8869
0

-'

AND MAX
ELLIOTT CO.

RUSS

lennox Huting &amp; Air Condi·
lionint All 1ypes Insulation,
Electrical WirirlJ
Call 446-8SIS or 446 -0«S

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Broker-Auctioneer

BRs, .I bath plus 2 ~aW balh&amp; Family room in basement 1 car
garage. Heat pump. $99 mo. budget Citt school dist Call for an

'76 Jeep excellent condition . '78 Luv truck. VI conversion, blazer wheele, roll
b1r. auto. transmi11ion.
304-676-3388 .

11417

BMR

JIMS WATER SERVICE,.
Call Jim Lanier. 304·6757397.

service. Authorized Singer
Salea &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-2284 .

rraudulentty

1976 Truck Ford F1 00. Exc.
con d. Must ... S. drive to ·
approcioto. t3,000. 614949-2644.
.

Water hauling. Fast Service,
low rates. Call 614·2561743.

SEWING Machine repairs,

51 Nerve

BMR 442 - OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 974 Slufu mobile home
(12x65l Tip Out indudes 3 BRs. new carpet, awning &amp; patio,
sQiated on I acre m-1. Washer &amp; dryer included. City schools. Was
$20,000. now $17,9~l!l.-Call for detai~!

We make custom duct
work. We Repair Furances
&amp; Heat Pumps.

Need something hauled
away or somelhing moved1
We'll do it. Call 446·3159.
between 9 and 5.

Pasquale Electric Co . all
phases of electric work. all
work guaranteed. Aerial
truck rental. Call 614-446·
2716.

network

f'ilna Hampshire plg1, reedy
to go, *15 each , Phone
304-67&amp;-3308.

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Call 614 -367-7471
or 614-367-0591 .

_o:w:n:o:r:
.
.
84
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

52 Note of

Livestock

Free Estimates

SHEET METAL WORK
DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna, panch', ditches,
basements. etc. Call 446 4907 . Carter &amp; Evans
_T_r•_n_•.:_p_o_rt_o_ti_o_n._______

clandestinely
49 Small island

BMR 437 - Fl RST TIME ON MARKET - Duplex brick ranch
situaled on flat I acre lot House includes 4 BR; 211 baths, delu.e
kitchen, 2 family rooms (1 with fireplace, l w~h woodburner).
Electric heat pump. Much more. Call for detai~!

85

Excavating

~

Real Estate General

j

446· 2642

currency

Nice family 77 Ford LTO, 4
dr., 1 owner, PS, PB. cruise,
AM-FM stero, and others.
Exc. mileage no rust.
83,000 . 304·882-3376 after 5 .

Bill's .

Nu·Prime replacement
windows
Sform windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive

Jumbtel: CHAIR FOUNT PENCIL BALLET
Answer . That classical musician hit rock bottom

lftdudeY*If'MIM, ~,dpcod
..nd~r~aku,..cbiN'r•bletol'fewsprprt
~it.· w
Service. _:.,.::""::"":·~-=':-:::·~··
":':'N:•~-~~
~~-·~"~"~·•g~~-~·~"~·o~r...
~·

•

63

Pleasant, W. Va.

1979 Pontiac Firebird. V·B,
AT, PS. PB. AC , excellent 1981 4 WD Ramcharger
condition . Contact 446 - excellent condition . 22,000
mites. $7,800. Call 614·
1 1 95 altar 5 p.m.
446-6288 .
RON'S Television Service .
1 978 &amp; 1979 Dodge Vans.
$3,000 for both. 446 -4119 All terrain vehicle, aix Speciellzing In Zenith and
between 7:30·4:30 Mon,· wheels. goes on land or Motorola. Quuar, and
water . Deer hunters special. "house calls. Cell 676-2398
Fri.
Call614-367-7660.
or 446·2454.
1971 Pontiac Cat81ina 2 dr.,
F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump
HT, PS, PB. AT. air. V-8,
removal. Call676-1331 .
make exc. second car. $500.
Call 614-256-1962 alta&lt; 6 74 Motorcycles
RINGLE'S SERVICE expePM .
rienced roofing, including
hot tar application. carpen·
1979 Fiat X-19 , 43,000
miles. good conCiition, 1983 Honda V 65 maginum . tar. electrician. maaOn. Call
$4,200. Call after 5PM, Call614-367-0136 .
304-675-2088 or 676Real Estate General
446-4041 .
4660 .
1976 Hondo Enduro, 360
1978 Dodge Magnum eMc. CC in excellent condition Water Wells. Commercial
One of the finer homes in
cond.,
one owner. Call446· with only 1,400 miles . C•ll ' end Domestic. Test holaa.
Gallipolis for sale by
446-0822.
8286.
owner. Private location
304-895·3802.
Pumps
Sales and
-in city. Modern design,
73 Buick 2 dr runs good, · 1978 Kawaski 650 Motor·
good transportation, $276. cycle. Very good condition. E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
tri-level. Custom design
Call 304-8B2-2202 .
Call 614-245-9264.
insured, free estimates.
kitchen, all appliances go
Phone 614-367-0636, coli
with home, three baths.
1980 Dodge Aspen auto.
after 5 .
Boats and
Two firelaces, basement,
was $2,995 now $2,796. 75
SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
1979
Starfire
Oldsmobile
Motors
for Sale
laundry roam (was h./dry.
auto., was $3.196 now
piece custom fit your home.
), garage. Owner will fi·
82,995. 1979 VW Rabbit,
Guaranteed. Advanced Gutnan.cewith proper down
auto., wash $3,195 now 16f1. Alumn . Bess boat, tar, (Day 614-592-4066,1
payment.
$2,996. 1978 Ford Futura 4 32in. insulated truck topper. lnlght614-698-B205.1
For Appointment .
spd .. $2,995. 1979 Ford 304-675-6521.
GET your carpet SHIP
Phono 379-2142
Courier
pickup wash
82,995
now
$2;796.
John's
Auto I -~========== SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal,
Sale, 'Bulavllle Rd. Galllpo- 78
Camping
1
furniture cleaning, free estiReal Estate General
lis. Oh. 446-4782 .
Equipment
mates. 614-446-2107.
1 978 Che.vette 4 spd., new · ______:__:__________
tires, for sale or will take a •
Houses Raised or Moved.
trade. Call 446-7832 .
1974 27' camper and 1974 Floors leveled, joist's sill's
------------------ truck . Will sale with or replaced, basements dug
.
1977 Ford Granada. New without truck . Call 614· beneath house, excavation •
210 f.· :lnd Si.
IEAUO · ' paint. new tires. new ex·2
-:.4:.:5:_·:.
62:.4:.3:_.____________ ponds or roads made, All
work guaranteed. Free Esti·
Phone
haust. Asking $1.800. 304- 773
6013
5
30
"In business
for over
1·(614)·992·3325
'
after '
p.m. -7-9-M-ot_o_r_s_H..,o_m_e_s_ mates.
a ·quarter
of a century".
HOUSE
MOVERS
6761974 Torino. $400. 614·
&amp; Campers
2711..
NEW LISTIING- 1.8 acres
B43-5494 .
and a 2 bedroom carpeted
-----------home. Natural gas, FA tur1979 Volaro stationwagon: 8 ft . slide in camper with House raising, leveling, resilnace and front porch for
very good cond. Lots of jacks, $600. Call446-2076 ling, concrete work. bese·ment water proofing, founoxtros. $2,500. 614-742- eves.
$2.500 down. ONLY
dation work. free estimates.
3006.
$18,000 . .
.304-676-3908 .
1977 Chevrolet Chevene. 1979 Wilderneu self·
NEW LISTING- Good 6 rm.
All new tires, brake system, contained camper, with roll
fianie 'Wittl bath, gas furvery good cond. 614-992· out awning. Call446-7230 .
6267 or 614 -992-6517 .
nace, private water . carpetPlumbing
ing and lg. level lot at Rut1962 Chevy bus conv•rted 82
1981 Chevy Citation. 4 dr., to
&amp; Heating
land . Asking $27,500 .
motor
home.
excellent
auto. trans., a.c. $4.200.
·condition. all new tires,
614-992-7403 .
forced air furnace. complete
NEW LISTING ' - lg. level
Ideal for hunting
CARTER'S PLUMBING
lot in Middleport with 3
1978 Oldsmobile Delta 88 kitchen.
and
fishing
.
304-773-6878.
AND HEATING
rented trailers and rented
Royale. Dependable. fully
Cor. Fourth and Pine
apt. All four for only · equipped, a. c.• plush valour
interior. new tires . $3.100. 22f1. Starcraft, new air. Phono 446-3888 or 446$20,000.
0.8.0. 1963 Falcon, 6 cyl .• cond .. very good condition. 4477
runs
well. economical 8600. Phone 304-675-2126 after
MINERSVILLE - 'l homes.
6:00.
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
O.B.O.
614-742•2681.
one 3 bedrooms, bath, furlNG. Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 614-367nace and '4 acres, the other
1974 Chevy Nova SS hatch·
0576.
has 3 bedrooms. bath. gas
beck. Automatic, good
heat and 2 lots for $6.500.
con d. $1 ,400. New paint.
814-378-6349.
Homo
----------------lc- 81
POMEROY - Offer wanted
83
Excavating
1976 Continental Mark 4.
Improvements
on this 3 bed roomer with FA
All options. Absolutely gor·
furnace, bath and l4 acre.
geous. 65,000 actual miles .
J.A .R. Construction Co.
$17,000.
$.4,500. 614-742-2877.
STUCCO PLASTERING
Water Lines, Footers,
telCtured
ceilings
commerDrains. All kinds of Ditching.
MIDDLEl&gt;ORT - Some re·
80 Toyota-Tercel front
and residential. free Rutland. Oh . 614-742modeling on this 3 bedroom
wheel drive, am-fm. exc , cial
con d. - $3900. 304-675- estimates. Call 614-256· 2903.
home . Nice lot out at high
1182.
1035 or 676-4668.
water. Otfer welcomed. Also
5 bedroom frame with vrnyl
1980 Pontiac Sunbird,
siding near Cardinal.
Reel Estate General
phone 304-773-9143.

#457

All THE SPACE YOU COULD ASK FOR - Beautiful
5,000 SQ. ft. home silulted on 5 cres. Kitchen, dining

H397
LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE - No, but ever st1
cute. Rustic srdrn~ plus nice sile kitchen, dining room,
large bath. 2 bedrooms. living room with opi!n caling
beams, upslai ~ balcony. l60 acres: located in K1K&amp;'
Creek School District.

11418

Horses. New and used sad·
dies. 1 horae-horse tr~iler .
614 - 698-3290. Ruth
RMves.

MIDDlEPORT - One floor
2 bedroom frame home
above all floods. Bath . gas
heat and lg. yard.

11464 .

•
•

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Approx. 4,000 SQ. tt, located in •
downtown Gallipolis. Can be leased or purchased. Across from •
crty parking lot
·
.
'
PREPARE FOR WINTER and move into th~ 2 bedrm. cottage
across from Foodland Grocery. Nat gas heal Buy now
$25.000.00.
.

OWNER SAYS SELL NOW!! 11 year old home wrth 3
bedrooms, bath, living 'room, basement Also included
on this 1.38 acre lot is amotile home hookup. Priced at
$28,000. Malee us an offer.

•
•
•
•

e
e

NEEDS TO SELU - Price redoced on this
beautiful cedar ranch. 1500 SQ. It on marn lave. Full
basement con1Jietely finished, kitchen with all
appliances. 2lull baths, 2 car attached garage. Owner
willing fo nee:mate terms.
'
#321

#472

•

:.1

58

OWN YOUR OWN HOME? Yes, youcan. Two bedrooms.
modern k~chen, Irving room, family room, bath,
carpeted. Electric heat and exc~lent woodbumer.
Natural gas, rural water, two moble rome hook-ups,
three .se~c tanks. Make offer.

•

APPROX. 5 ACRES wrlh 2·3 bedrm. home all modern, electrrc •
heat wrth wood or coal auxrlrary, I.a. heating system, hard road •
on three • des of property Room lor addllronal building ~Is.
owner may help finance qualified purchaser. Call lor more
intormalion

10 UNIT MOm wrth house and approx. 8 acres. Frshing pend
socked wrth frsh. Relax and enjoy life while making a lrvrng!!

•

•

Musical
Instruments

A RAR£ FINO, GREAT lOCATION - Modern 2 story

• #389

#421

2 ACRES. more or less, w1lh 3 Bedrms., lamrly rm .. attached
garag• Pnvacy with in-ground pool. Near cily lrmrts.
$59,000.00.

57

Kimball electric organ. like
new. Call 446-7230.

#429

room, I ll balhs, 3 bedrMms, and 2 ca r garage.
$35,000.

REAlTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

English Satter Bird Dog.
Good for pointing grouse.
$1 00. or trade for 2 good
rabbit dogs . 614 -742·
6846.

#473

RELAX IN THE COMFORT of a woodburnmg lire
vtew from the lamrly room. Modern 3 bedrm. brrck hnrr•• wrth
many amen1ties rncluding a 20'x40' pool. 2
landscaped lot Privacy. Call lor appornment.

room, living room, din1ng

NEW LISTING - Near Pomeroy- 3 bedroom house,
bath, refrrg. and range
House needs repair.' Small
lol. $9,800.

AKC Registered Poodle pupplea, roady to go. 446-0857.

LOVELY FAMILY HOME - All brick. Three bedrooms,
1\l baths,INIIlg room 16'x24'. Formal dining room, two
car attached garage 24'x24'. A ~autiul hom~ well
landscaped. Patio, walks and hedge. Lot approx.
26l'xl27. 6 miles from Gallrpolis. Green Township.

QUALITY BUilT located on Bulaville Road. 7
year old brick and frame bi-level w~h 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, family room, roc. area, krtchen with formal dinrng
area. utility room, 2 car garage. Situated on Ill acre
lawn. In excellenl condrtion

NEW liSTING - Racine - ·
large 2 story home with
alum. siding, large lot, enclosed front porch, famrly

NEW liSTING _: Farm Salem Township- Approx·
imately 64 acres with 2
older houses. Several outbuildings. Approxrmately 25
acres tillable. $39,900.

3-7 week old Siamese kittons, $50 each. Call 4464230.

11444

1957 Dodge 3.4 ton truck , 1
Allis Chamber 816 lawn &amp;
garden traCtor. 16 HP 48 in .
mower scraper blade &amp;
canopy top . 2 rolls concrete
reinforcement . 3 walnut
logs. Call 304-675-1248.

NEW liSTING - A little
country church - comes
with piano, pews. songbooks
and etc. Has a full base-

Black-Black-Black AKC German Shepherd puppies. Reatirve now for Christmas.
Call614-773-4966 nights.

SECLUDED AREA - 62 acre farm. New 3 bedroom
modular homa A remod~ed farm home and a set of
modern buildings by themselves. Good fences. Alfalfa
and clover hay. Free gas. Call for more..

Stero components ,JVC Hi·
tach i great sounds. -exc .
cond . Must sell . Call 304·
675 -2343 after 5. 675·
3582 days.

992·2259

Dregonwvnd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Hima,layen, Per·
sian and Slam••• kittens.
Coli 441-3844 ofter 6.

#437

Copy machine $30 35,000
BTU Warm Morning heater
$100 . 30 in' storm Ctoor
$10 . Call 304-675 -4148 .

POMEROY, 0.

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All·bread grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boerding fa·
cilitiea. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 814-3889790.

SUPER liSTING - THIS ONE TOPS THEM AllAttractive brick and frame tri~ev~. 3 bedrooms, 11'
baths, formal dining eq~pped k~chen with loads of
cabinet space, family room, den, workshop, 2 car
garage, 2 fireplaces. Nicely landscaped. State Route 35
West location.

REDI~CEO PRICE- This2ndA~~~~6~~~~~~:, I
lor lhe retirement couple. Home has
room, dinrng room. nice krtchen, bath, .
basement front porch. separate garage and mce s•e
back yard.

Denim New Jackets Heavy,
$21, insulated coveralls,
927.50 , heavy jeans $10.
Army field jackets. $46 ,
camouflaged Army clothing,
(Combat leather boots, $31,
higher after this monlh).
Sam · Somerville 's, east Re·
venswood , Open only Fri ·
day, Saturday , Sunday,'
1:00-7 :00 p.m.

Pets for Sale

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

#427

Oak firewood $30 .00 pick·
up load 304-675-4216 .

E . M"ain.LJli~u....l

'

HILlCREST KENNELS
Bording all breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446-7796.

Canopy Bed-1ull size solid
wood , white and gold. Mat·
tress and box springs. Exc.
cond , $165 . 614 -9 49 2133 .

Real Estate General

1, CENTURY 21;

Building materials
block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels. etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Call614-246-5121.

MIDDLEPORT- 2 story ~ucco home on Front Street
Home has 3 bedrooms, bath, k~chen, fiving room,
dining room or family room. Sidrng ~ass doo~ from
Irving room to redwood deck. Priced in the 40's.

'76 Electric start Gravely.
42in . mower deck. plow.
tiller. blade, sulky, $1,800.
'67 Fifteen foot camper
sleeps six. gas· etectric re·
frigerator, three way lights.
two way water. $400. '77
Z50 Honda trail, $200.
Phone 304-773 -6177

Ume1tone, Sand, Gravel.
DiJiivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Coli 446 ·7786.

56

IMMACULATE HOME - localed 011 9 acres of
mamcured land that will brighten your day. A circular
lane, tree plantm~ decorative shrubs, a lazy lake adds
lo your ''awe''. This is it Faim~d Vanoo Rd. Green
Township.
#425

3-heavy truck tarpaulins·
$25 . each . 3-15 in . tru&lt;lk
chains. $15. ea . 10 speed
blke-$30. 2-air hoses. 25 in .
with hardware - $12. ea
Truck battery· S 25 . Yankee
acrewdriver-$10 . 614-9927617 .

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"·22,"11ocked
ih yard. HEAP vender ,
prompt delivery . 614-256·
6246.

.'

lfMI'AIIJIliD//'All.

•

275 gallon fuel oil tank with
150 gallons of No. 2 fuel oil
in it. $160. all Fuel 011
fur·nace $50 . 614 -992 5258 .

63

Fireplace lnsan -still in fac - ·One 2yr . old registered
tory carton -automatic Morgan, Arabian mare . One
controle-2 blowen -glaH 12yr. standard mare . 304door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to 676-2098 .
48 ln. fireplace-burns wood
or coal. 1690. Call 614256·1216 .
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Firewood- cut up, alaba, 515
pickup load. Call 614-246·
6804.
first class hay. 81 .76 bate.
Redmond Ridge, 304-676NeW dozer, very reasonable. 6970.
Call 446-8038 .
Hay fint cut. ~04 · 675-.
5162.
55 1B'Ililding Supplies

Real Estate General

33 Savage, exc . cond. $75 .
New pickup bad liner. axe
cond . Fits standard 8 tt .,
wido bod. $250. 614-2472022 .
.

..

truck. SixtHn puge J .C. Hoapital bed, mettre~e &amp;
Higgens shotgun . Homellte rails. New 4 ups woodburn - ·
XL2 choln 10w. 304-876· ina laundry stove. Call 304676-4871.
2792.

Combination.' 7" table saw
4" jointer with 'h hors~
ballbeari'ng motor. me tat
stand . Call446-0822 .
3 rooms cream carpeting.
Fair cond . $100 . After 4,
614-992-3489 .

Pomeroy--Middleport--Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

----~

Firewood for l!lale S35 a
picku,p lOad delivered , 10

locks. 8180. Older electric
typewriter. needs minor re·

November 13, 1983

November 13, 1983

compound

60 Fiber plant

61 Skill

62 Killed
64 Oettrium

tremens:
abbr.
65 Sun god
66

Phltip~ne

kntre
67 Standard of

pertectlon

69 Bit

71 Bother

73 Accedes
7 4 Former

Russian ruler
76 Roman
off6clats
79 oesttne!l
81 Greek lener
82 Encore!
84 Winged
85 Deprive ol
office
87 Kind of
cheese
90 Thrive
92 Beverage
93 Stalks
95 Redacts
97 Actual
98 Exist
99 Symbol for
erbium
101 troquian
Indians
103 Comparative ending
tO• Soli
105 Pondered
108 Scold
110 GapttaJ of
New Jersey
112 Small
amounts
113 Hindu
cymbals
114 Note of
scale
115 Eat away
1 t7 Secret
agents

118 Boy
attendant
119 Fall short
120 Preposition

121 Bury
123 Health
resort
124 VerUitates
125 Hairless
126 Indonesian
127 Wanted
129 Disdains
131 Fruit ol
the pine
132 Jog
133 Bitter vetch
134 Macaw
136 Male deer
137 Boast
138 Bishop's
headdress:
var.
139 Steamship .
abbr.
140 Parad1se
141 Before
142 Pedal
axtremittes

143 Negligent
144 Inventor
146 Declare
148 Melts
t 49 Tillers of
the soil
150 Sum
151 Smallest
number
DOWN

1 Cause to
heel over
2 Repeal

3 Polson
4 tttum.naled
5 Printer '~
measure
6 Savory
7 Encourage
BLarge tub
9 Latin
conjuncUon
10 Argue
11COncern
12 Negative
13 Play leading
role

14 Fork prongs
15 Thing done
1~ Born
17footbatt
score: abbr.

21 Photograph
22 Stirs

23 Undergarmeot

25 One, no

ma11er
which
27 Welcomed
28 Thickest
30 Bndge term
31 Subsided
33 Snake
35 Plug
doggedly

36 District in

Germany

37 Seasons
39 Click beetle
4~ Mhc

42 Jump
44 Walk s
unsteadily

47 Region
48 Summer
drink
49 Specks
so Delineate

54 Strike out
55 All owance

lor waste
56 Native chief
In tnclia
59 Bodies of
soldiers

60 Stockings
61 Paid not1ce
63 Metal
fastener
66 College
degree:

abbr.
67 Exists
68 Tory's
adversary
70 Pieces of
dinnerware
71Sumup '
72 Female deer
73 DeClare
75 Parts ol
steps
77 French for
"summer"
78 Ocean
BO Speck
. 63 Quarrel
86 Arabian

commanders
BB Farewell in
Madrid
89 Attitude
90 Postscript:
abbr.
91 Spanish
article
94 Leaks
through
96 tnltlals
ol 26th
President
98 Mate
elephant
99 Motors
100 Pennants
102 Cuts
i04 Excavates
105 Servant
106 Newspaper
executives
107 Gives
109 Openings tn
lance
11 1 Instructors
112 Prohibits
113 Story
116 Marry
118 Liquid
measure
119 Long tooth
122 Schoolbook
124 Apprehend
125 Vessel

126 Painter
128 Vis1on
130 Paddle
13 1 Fisherman's
basket
132 Instances
135 Poker stake
137 Greek
Iefier
~ 38 Tabletand
140 Period ot
time

142 Obese
143 Regret
144 Baseball
position :
abbr .
145 Conlunction
147 Preposition
148 Symbol for
fluorine

I

�Page-D-8- The

Su~y

Times-Sentinel

November 13, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, a-.io-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Civil War soldiers' camp made into funeral home
By JAMES SANDS

WHILE THE FRONT part of ~!mer's Home lor Funerals is not too
old, the back part of thls mortuary was built in j875 by Henry Gilman as
the "Young Ladies Seminary, Boarding :u•d Day School," operated by
Miss Anna Gilman. Heavy emplmsis was given to the arts and
languages. In 1917Wetherholt·Entsminger Funeral Hometookoverthe
school and since then the school house has been a mortuary.

Gallia fairboard approves
major changes for "84 event
GALLIPOL~

- 1\vo major
changes in the operation of the
Gallla County Junior Fair's li\·es·
tock sale have been approved b)' the
fair board.
The first change 'affects the
number of animals each exhibitor is
allowed to sell at the fair , the other
deals with minimum weight for
steers at the weigh-in on the first day
of the fair.
In the past. exhibitors were
displaying and selling up to sLx
animals, consisting of no more than
one steer, two market hogs and
three market lambs . In 19M, each
exhibitor will still be able to exhibit
up to six animals, with a maximum

of three market lambs, two market
hogs and one steer, but they will only
be eligible to sell two o! those
animals through sales sponsort&lt;l by
the fair board.
An individual will then be able to
sell two market hogs or two market
lambs , ora comblnution ofonesteer
·and one market hog or market
lamb, or a combina tion of one
market hog and one market lamb.
Exhibitors who decide more

Two GAHS graduates

back from Grenada
GALLIPOLIS - Two 1980 gradu·
ates of Gallia Academy High School
were among the soldiers returning
from tiny Grenada after quick
military pacification. They are Sgt.
Jonathan S. Doughman, 21, ahd SP
4 Baron L. Haner. 21.
Doughman is the son of former
Gallla Countians Jero me P . and
Judith L. Doughman. 419 Ports·
m outh Road.
Haner is the son of Adrian and
Gladys Haner. Lower River Road .
Both Doughman and Haner saw
action on Grenada.
Haner is a medic \\rith the 3fJlth

medical · battalion of I he

82nd

airborne division.

Emergency runs

market animals than he or shel)'lay
sell must decide no la ter than noon
Thu rsday during the fair which two
animals he or she plans to sell at the
livestock sale Friday.
"This change has be;oome neces·
sary be;oause a number of mar,ket
animals has continued to increase
and thus, has made it more difficult
to find a suffic ient number of buyers
each year to suppm1 the livestock
sale, " explainedFredJ. Dee!, GaUia
County 4-H agent.
Dee! sa id it's felt this system will
stitl provide each exhibitor an
opportunity to market up to two
animals during the junior fair sale
and at the same time provide the
exhibitor a chance to exhibit other
animals and expand in other areas.
The fair board has changed the
1minimum weight for steers from825
pOunds on the weigh-In day to 900
pounds to be e ligible to be sold in the
livestock sale.
.
The reason for the change is an
effort to keep the sale more current
with the livestock industry ls
promoting.
"One of the main things exhibitors
need to remember concerning this
rule is that In selecting their steers,
it 's important that they select a steer
that iscapableofweighlnginatleast
900 pounds by fair time," Dee! said.
Four-H and FFA members plan·
ning to exhibit a steer at the 198l0hio
State Fair should be aware of two
changes affecting their project s.
The first ls that all steers v.1ll be
exhibited at the 1981 fair from Gallla
County need to be weighed and
identified by a nose print process.
Also, steers exhibited at the state
fair will be judged in classesdi\1ded
by height of the animal rather than
its weight. Members should be
aware of those changes early in the
project year.
For more information, questions
may be directed to theGallia County
extension office or any fair board
members.

that girls were not even allowed to
S~lal Correspondent
leave the premises unless acrom·
GALLIPOLIS - The city lots
panled by a teacher. The cost for
directly above the Galllpolls city
rooming was from $3 to $4 per week,
building, now houstng the WareThe official name of the school
hime Clinic and Miller's Home lor
was "Young I .adles Semln:lry,
Funerals, held a
~
·m. ~l Boarding, aod Day School.''
soldiers' camp
·
It had both a preparatory depart·
through much of
,
ment for ages six to 12; and a senior
the · Civil War,
-;-: ·:. .
department for ages 13 to 18. The
according to his·
senior curriculum Included courses
torlan P. T. Wall,
In science, Greek, Latln, French,
In 1865 Henry Gil·
German and the arts,
man erected .a fine home on the spot
R. H. Shepherd taught drawing
where the Warehime Building Is · whlle Miss Gilman specialiZed in
today. Ten years later Gilman built
plano, organ and vocal music
the back part of the present building Instruction. The school had a
that Is used by MIUer's,
reading room and one of the better
That latter edifice was put up as a
l!brarles in town. Mlldred Gilman,
school building, operated by the
a 1983 Galilpolltan, Is related.
Gilman famlly. It was some time In
Among the puplls were daughters
the early 1870s that Miss Anna V. of some of the finest families of
Gilman opened In her father's 1865 Galllpolls, Katie and Mary
home a select girls' school. It McClurg, daughters of Captain and
proved to be so successful that In Mrs. James McClurg, who l!ved
1875 Anna's father Henry bullt the then In the VInton house at the
present back part of the Miller corner of First and Locust.
bullding. And In August of 1875 the McClurg was a successful steam·
classes were held for the firsi time boat captain who In partnership
In the new building.
With Peter Sanns bullt the structure
Tom down
now · housing Haskins-Tanner.
Some students continued to live In McClurg later erected a large shoe
the large Gilman home next door. factory In Gall!pollS that burned ·
Some may recall that home that down one year after It was built.
was owned in the present century
From shoes to medicine
by T . S. Berridge and others. It was
Mary McClurg left the female
torn down in the early 1950s when semlnaey and studied medicine.
the Warehime building was She beeame one of the first female
constructed.
doctors In San Francisco:
There was even a bridge that
Other students included Annie
connected the two Gilman bulldlngs. and Sallle C0x, daughters of
so that the students did not have to General Oeorge Cox; Lizzie ~nd
go outside In going from their Lou Beall, daughters of Henry
rooming place to classes. Security, Beall, who buut the present Gll·
In fact , was so tight in this school

town's big~est dealers irt planosand
organs.
Elias Wetherholt In k
Around 1917 Elias Wetherholt and
Fred Entsminger formed a part·
nership to open a funeral home In
the old Gilman school buDding and
thiS arrangement lasted for some
dozen or so years when Entsminger
~Je;oame sole proprietor.
Claude Mtller began to w.ork, for
Entsminger shortly before World
War II and with the retirement and
death of Fred Entsminger, MUler
became owner, having oper;1ted In
the Gilman school for over three
decades .
James Sands' address Is Box 92,
Clarksburg, Ohio.

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w

CARPET
YOUR HOME
IN TIME FOR -·
THE
HOLIDAYS

A guide to local
Television programming
November 13 thru November 19

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

Templed Hills Parish shares
Gallia Baptist .minister

i

By NORMA BROWN PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Since October,
1960, the Parish of Templed Hills
has shared a minister who came
from the Gallia Baptist Church, and
he still serves that congregation. It
has been said
- " Pastors stay long In the
parish." and the long term of the Rev.·and
Mrs. Gerald Brown indicates the
truth of that statement. On Nov. 11,
1980, an appreciation night was held
at the Oak Hill Presbyterian
Church honoring the Rev. and Mrs.
Brown for 20 years' service In the
parish and 25 years at the Gallla
Church. A large crowd attended,
and an abundance of love for them
was manifested.
Prior to 1960 several student
ministers served the parish, and
with thiS experience and its many
blessings, they have been better
equipped to go out and to minister In
other parts of America.

are:

Every August the people of the
parish join forces and sponsor a
chicken barbecue with the proceeds
going toward the maintenance of
these facl!ltles. Nineteen eighty·
four will mark the 50th year for this
event.
Word Is stlllpreached, the Gospel is
still declared. The people remain
active In almost every phase of
community life. Although we may
seem small in number, dedication
and love surpass the norm.

•

'

•

• •

MECHANIC ST., POMEROY
992-3672

•

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."
Station listings
WSAZ

HBO

MAX
CBN
ESI'N
WTB$
WTVN
· WTAP
WCHS
WPBY

With only 5,000 miles this car exhibits exceptional
value. Features tilt, cruise, AM·FM-cassette, .cast
aluminum wheels, auto., factory AC, etc. '84 Firebird trade.
.
·
COMPARE OUR SAVINGS!

This local one owner features power seat, power
windows, power door locks, AC, auto., AM-FMr
crushed velour interior. Local executive's trade on
'84 Riviera.

"82 Buick Century
4 Dr. BurQundy
IN STOCK

.

1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass
'82 Buick Req~ls
Clloose From 2

SUPREME ~ROUGHAM ·

Chestnut brown with saddle vinyl top, features AM·
FM-cassette, power windows and door locks
cruise control, cast aluminum Rallye wheels, low
miles. Local executive's trade on'84 Pontiac.
HAS THE RIGHT HISTORY·

-~·-... vw Bee~ BAR~AIN H~NTERS, SPECIALS

LAW OFFICES

Passe111er St. Wagon

. $1750

* 76 Ford Tonno , .
Brown, 4 Door
* n Butck Electra
$15 00
Ful power, book v1lue over
* 73 O1 .
4,000
1

4 ~~. Cutlass Spetial $2990

$795

*
,
*

'78 Ford
Station Wagon
.2 IN STOCK
Bl!Y the pair

~or only $2400

(Which

Huntington,WV
Home Box Office

Clnemaoc

WRETl'A ON THE ROAD - Coomlry lllnger Loretta Lynn says she wants more lbne off but
myt1ad plana 1Bcludln1 a new movie and alonpr version ol. her !JeM.IIIIown IIOIQI, "Coal Miner's
Daughter," would appear to rule that out. She did take time out lor an Interview on a recent stop In

her native eutern Kentucky, (AP Laserpholo).

•

·

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Atlama, GA
Columbuo, OH
P,arkenburg. wv
C"-1-.WV
Huntingblrl, WV

(!)

Cll

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~.OH

WOUB Athena, OH
WOWK Huntington, wv
WVAH Hurricane, WY

I983 Pontiac Firebird

1981 Buick Regal limited 2 Dr.

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PHONE: 446-8575 or 446-2129

ELBERFELI)S WAREHOUSE

65

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'77, Plymouth Fury

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stereo, AC, tilt, cruise, much more. '84 Skylark
trade in.

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Are Now Located At 417 Second Avenue

Showboat
Page3

1983 Buick Skylark 4 Dr.

SUNDAES

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listings

Home-Grown
Quality

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WISH TO ANNOUNCE THE
CONSOLIDATION OF THEIR

As Low As

So, after almost 150 years, the

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Moriah, established In 1835;
Bethel 1841; Sardis 1M3; Pyro
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shelter house used as a community
building, which Is centrally located
on Ohio State Route 279 one and a
half miles from the v!llage of Oak
H!ll. The five local congregations

Along with the five local congregations, there IS a manse and

Eight calls were answered by fl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-i
loca l units Wednesday and on
Thursday morning
Calls on Thursday morning In·
elude the Pomeroy Squad at 1: 26
a.m . for Earl Thoma, 1m Wo~
Drive, taken to Holzet· Medical
Center and the Racine Unit a t 3:59
a.m. to Oak Grove Road for Fay
Powell. ta ken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
. Runs on Wednesday included:
Tuppers Plains at 8:16 a.m. to
Indian Run Roai:J for CoUn Cheva·
Hot Caramel, Hot Fudge, Ice Cream, English WalUer, taken to Veterans Memorial
nuts.
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9:33
a .m . for Ada Hera ld, Tuppers
Served In A Football Insignia Cup
Plains, to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Syracuse a t 7: 04 p.m. for Elvira
Barr, Syracuse, to Veterans Mem·
NOV. 14-20
orial; Rutlantl Unit at 5:43 p.m . for
Leroy Bart rum, Route 124, to Holzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 10:25
a.m. to Route li81 for Retha Day,
•taken to Veterans Memorial; Pome·
roy at 4:17p.m. to Pomeroy Health
care Center for Evelyn Lewis, to
Veterans Memorial .

ONLY

lingham building; Nettle Ford, the
daughter ofT. S. Ford, who lived In
the beautiful home at 5 Vine; Annie
Menager; Annie Lowery of the
Gatewood clan; and Allee Preston
among others.
It Is Interesting to note that Ml~s
Anna Gilman also taught In this
school four of her siSters, Mary,
Ida, Edith, and Nettle,
w~ are not certain how long the
schooi operated as a full fledged
seminary. It seems that Miss Anna
did continue to instruct students In
music In the Miller building for
many years. The Gilmans had
somewhat of a corner on the music
market In town as still another
Gilman, Roma, was om; of the

eUJ

•

Filmeter
Pages 7, 8

Sl!rving Gallia, Meigs and Masqn Counties

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