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Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

inromr. accordin g !o thC' !(:ltf?'s t cen-

l:ius

fi gun"~oS.

Stai L&gt;Iics rcleas!'d by the Census
Burm u Thursda)·, based on 1980fig·
uno'S, rank Gcauga Count\' 86th in
th0 nation with a per capita incom e

of SR.Ti':l for its 74.474 res idents. No
othN Ohiocounl\· was in the top 100.
Cu~· a tl oga

County. which was

ahead of Gcauga County in 1970with
a national ranking of 71, dropped to
1 7~ th in !9ffi with a per capita incomr of $8, 103.
GPauga was 99th nationally in
1~ 70 .

Sc&gt;&lt;.·ond wealthil'SI county in Ohio
l'lfiOwas Lake. with a JX'r capita
incomr of $R.2ti.l Lake was ll~th
national\\" in 1970 but dropped to

In

l..J ~nd

in the la tes t cC'nsus.

LowC'St incomC' a \·r ragf' in Ohio
was in Adams County. rank!'d
2$10th a mong the nation 's 3.137
countil'S. ,\dams County's 24,328
rl'Sident s show!'d income of $4.598
JX'r ca pita in the 1980 census.
Adams also lm ds the state in the
percentage of res idents with subpoverty level incomes. according to
Census Burea u figures .
Th&lt;' bureau sa id 24. 7 percent of
Adams rl'S ident s were below the
povcrl\· \e,·cl. followed by Athens
County with 2Ui JX'rcent and Pike

County with 20.6 percent.
The government set the poverty
level at $3,Ti'4 for one person living
alone and $7,412 for a family of four
in 1980.
The only other Ohio counties having below $5,!XXJ per capita income
were Vinton. $4.804 . and Hoinnes,
$-1,961 .
Poorest among the nation's 3.137
counties was Shannon County,S.D.,
$2,637.
Here is how0hio's88countles are
rated according to per capita income and national ranking:
Adams $4.598, 2,840: Allen $6,949,
6.17: Ashland $6,515, 1.040: Ashtabula $6,523, 1.031: Athens $5,091,
2,5(Y.); Auglaize $6,620, 940: Beinnonl
$6.&amp;47, 922: Brown $5,&amp;41, 1,958:
Butler $7,344, 407: Carroll $6,018,
1,5.'&gt;l; Champaign $6,500, 1,057:
Clark $6,804, 788: Clef!Tlont $7,001.
613: Clinton $6,280, 1.216: Columbiana $6,532, I,025: Coshocton $6,534,

um.

Crawford $6,579, 978: Cuyahoga
$8,103, 175; Darke $6,303, 1,250: Defiance $7.157, 500; Delaware, $7,465,
360: Erie $7,523, 331: Fairfield
$7,067. 564: Fayette $5,766, 1,810;
Franklin $7,630, 286: Fulton $6,873,
726: Ga iU ~ $5;951, 1620: Geauga
$8,Ti'3, 86: Greene $7,CiYl, 346:
Guernsey $5,986, 1,582; Hamilton
$7,917,212: Hancock $7,411 ,381.

Hardin $6,159, 1,407; Harrison
$5,998, 1,571; Henry $6,959, 650;
Highland $.1,533. 2,000; Hocking
$5,665, 1,923; Hoinnes $4,961, 2,594;
Huron $6,781, 805; J ackson $5,309,
2,306; Jefferson $7.191, 474: Knox
$5,998 1,570; Lake $8,263, 142: Lawrence $5,776, 1,803; Licking
$7,233,451; Logan $6,209, 1,355; Lorain $7,209,465; Lucas $7,597, 306.
Madison $6,318, 1,237; Mahoning
$6,928, 681: Marion $6,672, 903; Medina $7,864, 223; Meigs $5,359, 2,259;
Mercer $6,611, 945; Miami $7,102,
538: Monroe $6,124, 1,448; Montgomery $7,&amp;43, 282; Morgan $5,413,
2,217; Morrow$5,974, 1.597; Musklngum $6,134, 1,434; Noble $5,721,
1,861: Ottawa $7,329, 415.
Paulding $6,519, 1,039; Perry
$5,4&amp;4, 2,167: Pickaway $6,267,
1,291: Pike $5,015: 2,550; Portage
$6,894, 714: Preble$6,545,1,(Xll; Putnam $6385, 1,171: Richland $6,803,
789: Ross $6,251, 1,:m; Sandusky
$6,968, &amp;41: Scioto $5,495, 2,132.
Seneca $6,379, 1,176; Shelby
$6,569, 983; Stark $7,330, 414; Summit $7,755, 250; Trumbull$7,5!11, 313;
Tusearawas $6,436, 1,123; Union
$6,734, 843; Van Wert $6,947, 66);
Vinton $4,804, 2,701; Warren $7,220,
455; Washington $6,402, 1,156;
Wayne $6,768, 816: Williams $6,&amp;39,
757: Wood $7,235, 450: Wyandot
$6,313, 1,241.

Meigs programs get $24,298
Area
deaths
I
I
Grants totaling $24,298 in federal maternal and child health block
Cora E. Renshaw
Mt o; _ Cora E. Renshaw, 91, formerly of Laurel Cliff in Meigs
County. died Friday a I Thomas
Memorial Hospita l in Charleston,
W. Va.
Mrs. Rensha w was a da ughter of
the late Phillip and Mary Poindexter Diehl. She was also preceded in
death by her husband. George M.
Rens haw. sLx brothers. six sisters
and a son. Phillip Olin Rife in Septem ber. 1 97~ .
She was a m ember of the LaurP\
Cliff Free Method ist Chu rc h.
Su r\'i \·ing are two daughters. Ca-

roi,· n Harris. St. Albans. W. Va.,
and A,·onell Brown , Gallipolis. 10
grandchi ldre n and several great and great-great-grandchildren .
Sen ·ices wilJ be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday al lhe Ewing Funeral Home
where friend.&lt; may call from 5 to 8
p.m. Sa turda.v. Burial will be in
Beech Grovr Ccmf'ICtY

Corrt'ction
Funera l services for Edward Lro
Stc"·art . 69, West Columbia , were
hPid today atl: 30 p.m. at the Fogel'ong Funeral Home.
The Rev . Krnneth Watkins otfi·
ciat!'d and burial was in the IOF
Cemeterv at Mason.
Incorrect names were listed in
Thursdav's obituary. according to
the famit,·. The correct names of
the brothers arc William Floyd Stewart and F rankl in Stewart, Columbus: and the sisters. Violet Stewart
Ray of Columbus, and Georgia
Irene Stewart Wells , Pomeroy.

Marriages end
Audrey Lynn Grindley, Pomeroy, has been granted a di vorce
from Roger Edison Grindley. Dublin , in the Meigs Cou nty Common
Pleas Cout1 on charges of gross neglect of du ty. The plaintiff was
granted custody of one minor child .
The marriage of Nola .Jane You ng
and Gra nt Eugrnc Your. ~ was dissolved and aclion for su ppot·t under
the states reciprocal af':rcement
was filed by Nellie B. Gill. Williamsburg, Va .. versus Nonnan R Hendrix. Langsville.

Open door st'ssion
On Oct. 13. a representat ive from
Congressman Clarence E. Miller's
office will conduct an open door session from 10 a. m.- 12 noon in the
Courthouse in Pomeroy.
If anyone has any questions concerning lhe Federal Government,
please stop by to discuss them with
the represenlative.

PH. 843-2693

grant funds ha ve been awarded by the Ohio Department of Health to
programs in Meigs Coun ty State Health Director Dr. John H. Ackerman announced today.
The funds were divided as follows : $6,363 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for evaluation of speech problems in children: $17,935 to
Meigs Coun ty Health Department for child health problems.
Maternal and child health monies are used to provide services to
families who otherwise would have difficulty inobtalninghealthcare,
such as the low income and medically_indigent. MCH also supports
public health services not covered by third party payers including
health education, outreach, school consultation, nutrition and social
serVices.

Emergency units have busy day
Local uni ts answered seven calls
Thursday and Friday morning, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
On Thursday at 12: 53a. m., PomE&gt;roy went loWest Main St., the scene
of an auto accident and took Larry
Longenette to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: at 1:22 a. m., Pomeroy
went to 108 Conmdor St. for Betty
Mankin, also taken to Veterans
Memorial. Middleport at 8:26a. m.
went to 550 Russell St. for Barton
Davis who was treated at the scene.

I

Rutland at 3:04p.m. went to Langsville for Ralph Swan, taken to Veterans Memorial and Pomeroy at 9:07
p.m. took Clarence Longstreth from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial.
On Ftiday at12: 16a.m., Pomeroy
went toNaylor'sRunforTimHyseli
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital and at 3: 50 a.m. the
Rutland Unit went to Salem Center
for Margaret Johnson who was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial

Admitted -- Haro ld Triplett,
Pomeroy: Virginia Riffle, Syracuse: David Grindstaff, Racine;
Ray Clark, Middleport: Brenda
Barber, Portland: Harold Hammon , Glousters, Clarence Longstreth, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Donald Smith, Lester Wolfe, Bernard Milhoan, Julia
Sinnpkins, Laura Autherson, Ruth
Smith, David Grindstaff.

Missing floor

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT. 7
Ramie B:illes, Dana Bentz, Sarah
Bird, Jason Bruce, Mrs. Roger
Clark and daughter, Linda George,
Betty Harbour, Phyllis Herdman,
Leah Johnson, Richard Knapp II,
Evangeline Lindner, Orville M;artin, Charles Mash, Adam Meek, Anthony Morris, Linda Nibert,
Matthew Pierce, James Phillips,
Reva Raney, George Riley, Claude
Slagel, Mrs. J ames Snyder and
daughter, Celia Spiers, John Studer,
Rocky Sturgeon, Cynthia Taylor,
Elizabeth Tomlinson, Bryan
Wolford.
BffiTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. James Bowen, son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Donn Creamer , daughter and son, Ray; Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel Davies, daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. David Marcum, daughter, Langesville; Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Powell, son, Buffalo, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Sexton, son, Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Randolph Waugh, daughter ,
J ackson.

LAND JUDGING - Ryan Sinclair, center with
hat, and Craig Bolen, right, complete their site and

~Fresh

CIDER·
*PUMPKINS
*APPLES
HOME GROWN

WINTER
. POTATOES

The annual land judging contest
of the Meigs Count y Future
Farmers of America was held
Thursday on the Jim Lucas farm in
Rutland township under the sponsorship of the Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District.
The Southern FFA team won the
contest with Meigs placing second,

LBS. 89¢

60

Lss.'

100

LBs.$8.7 ,

Jolynn Boster, Democrallc candidate for the 94th District House
seat, pledged Wednesday to seek
legislallve help toward Increasing
local law enforcement power In an
effort to combat rising rural crime
rates.
Boster, who hopes to represent
Athens, Meigs and Gallla counties

and Eastern placing third. High
scoring individuals were Dave Salmons, · Southern FFA, first: Greg
Bolen, Meigs FFA, second ; and
Ted Smith, Southern FFA, third.
In the contest, four 4~ln ch pits
were dug in different locatons and
then the site and soU were examined by the contestants to deter-

when the Ohio Genera l Assmebly
convenes In 1983, charged thatllltle
has been done to help the counlles
ln their fight against crime.
"The federal government has cut
grant s that our sheriffs and pollee
chiefs used to purchase equipment
and bolster their forces, and a Uthis
has occurred at the same Iinne that

Unauthorized solicitation
member that sollc\ting In corporations Is Illegal unless the person
soliciting has a permit to do so. This
can be checked easily by resident s
by phoning the local pollee or village hall. County residents should
contact the Sheriff's Department.
Residents who wish to donate lo
Buddy ~hompson !Triplett) may
do so by contacting Mrs. Eugene
Hawkins, Buddy's aunt and custodian at 992-2814. lf any more Information is needed by residents
concerning this matter, please feel
free to contact the Juvenile Court at
992-3096.

It has come to the attention of the
Juvenile Court there have been unauthorized people going door to
door collecting donallons toward
the support of Buddy Thompson.
Thompson was seriously Injured
in a recent automobile accident In
Oklahoma which took the life of his
mother, and may have gone no
further than the collector.
Relatives regret the dishonesty
of those Involved, but are appreciative of the donations they have received to cover the huge expense
that they have been confronted
with since the accident.

....

.

.

,•

W. Virginia .....20
Boston College .. l3

Michigan ........ 31
Michigan State .. 13

Alabama.......... 42
Penn State ...... 21

Miami, 0 ........ 17
Bowling Green .. .l2

+

tmts

... ,

entinel
9 Sections, 62 Paget 35 Cent•

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Three area traffic fatalities Friday and early Saturday brought to
10 the number of vlctinns cia inned on
highways In four local counties in 15
days.

T-S

mine slope, erosion, and needed
conservation practices for each pit.
Robert First, district conservationist and Dan Lemaster, Soil
scienllst , judged the contest. They
were assisted by Everette Holcomb, Aaron Sayre, and Brian Windon, Meigs, Southern and Eastern
vocational agriculture teachers
respectively.

rural crinne continues to rise," Boster said.
" While these cuts have come at
the federal level, the state legislatu re has made no attempt to resolve the pr obl e m for our
communities," she said.
Boster blamed Ohio's Republica n leadership for Ignoring the
plight of local law enforcement
agencies and charged 94th District
Rep. Claire Ball Jr. with being Ineffective. "Ball has failed to recognize this problem or to bring It to the
attention of the legislature, " she
said.
"We don' t necessarily need' new
crinne laws, but we do need creative
leadership to effectively address
this problem," the candidate said.
Boster cited current statistics
that point to an 18 percent rise in
rural crinne this year over last. "I
know how people feel already that they're at the mercy of criminal elements. Without proper
leadership In their state government , this will only get worse," she
warned.

All residents of vUlages should re- f"j~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;~;;

Sunday, October 10, 1982

A Multimedto Inc. NeW1paper

The GaiUa-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol investigated two
single-car accidents ln Meigs
County Thursday.
The patrol reports Daniel T.
Smith, 53, Sterling, struck and killed
a deer on Ohio 7 at 2:15a.m. His car
sustained minor damage.
A car driven by Robbie D.
Molden, 31, Pomeroy, was heavily
damaged in a wreck on CR 1 at 1
a.m., according to the patrol
Molden was southbound when he
reportedly went off the right side of
the road and over an enbankment.

lARGE SELECTION

4" &amp; 10" FOLIAGE PLANTS

$} oo

to $12oo

rience America as It was In the
early

1900's, the Bob Evans

Fann F•val Is the place to be
thill w~. Entertainment,

dlsplayg and mt&amp;c are all par\ of
the annual festival. Featured are
about 130 artisans who·demonstrate crafts and sldlls .while
jlressed In authentic early AmerIcan attlre ...B-1
Unemployment was the major
illluewben the Ohio gubernatorIal candidates, Democrat Rl- .
cllard Celeste and Republican

t~~~~O~P~E~N~~~T~0~5~&amp;~~~~1~T0~5~~~

PH. 992-2184

118th
ANNIVERSARY SALE
Wall Street and WIIIIJID&amp;ton
-tobeeendlngcontralltptory
mmap.s eiJcJtR the fltale of the
U.S. ·eooaomy. Wall Slreet's opCimllm IBID sharp~ to
WMhlnpon's lloom· AP . IJull.

and Furnishings for Your Home.

"The Store With AI Kinds of Stuff"

~the

I
n

&amp; SINIII Animlll-l.lwnl &amp; Glrderll .

river ... ............ B-'1-8

'

,

.. ..

..................... :.... E-1

.
'fled.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,
j., .,.,,.,....,

~ .................. ,..... A·t-8

F81'111 .............................. &amp;.'1
LoCal ............................. A-H

Pomeroy, Oh._

tOr Peta-Stlblea

-wrtterJ-Peltlexpl•hw

lhe-mnc coaltaillctioa. ..D-1

Ana dellb ...................... A.J

SHOP FRIDAY TILL 8

....NII&amp;Ioaai .................D-1·1

.....................··:·····!····c-1-8

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

of multiple skull fractures.
Since Sept. 25. 10 persons have
died as the result of eight separate
traffic mishaps in Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and Mason counties.
Six of the victims have been teenagers and eight have been under22
years old.
Eleven persons were injured in
the eight accidents.

ing to a state trooper.
At Sanders Memorial Stadium
Friday night, Classmates of the victims and their friends and parents
paused for a moment of silence and
prayer led by the Rev. Tally Hanna

1WO MOREFATAUI'IES- A WestVIr8biJastatetrooperexamlnes
the scene of a wreck which claimed the Ule of two Leon teenagers Friday
afternoon. 11tree others have been hospitalized as a result of the accl·

dent, which occUlTed on West Virginia Route 62 at 12: 18 p.m. Otit of 10
persons killed on area highways recently, six have been teenagers.

BHCC human resource center
By KEVIN KElLY
'lbne8-Sentlnel Stall
RIO GRANDE- Imagine a wheel withspokesspannlngout
and being connected to a central hub.
That's the way Buckeye Hills Career Center officials view
their new Human Resource Center facUlty on the vocational
school's campus. The hub Is the center, and the spokes are the
bus routes h:adlng to the building.
The center, which cost $1.2 mUllon to build over the past year,
hasn't been fonnally dedicated, but some classes which were
crammed Into the 7-year-old l')'laln bulldJng have been moved
ln.
"Some programs that were designed for that building are
now operating out of there," explained Dr. Jerome Brockway,
superintendent of the Gallla-Jackson-VInton Joint Vocational
School District
"It meets slate requirements for space, and the state has
been allowing us to operate at below the standard, knowing
we're In the process of moving," he continued.
The 15-room, 22,!XXJ.square-foot structure will house licensed
practical nursmg classes, an occupational work experience
program, 11 reading enrichment lab and a vocational assess-

men! lab- some of which are now in operation.
Ponney Cisco, the former Buckeye HU!s director who was
recently promoted to vocational administrator, said the assessment lab is an offshoot of the OWE program. If a student has n't
been placed In a job for training yet, he or she will work ln this
lab.
One of the features helping vocational students is a production ag class, which allows students to work in a particular
program until they d~Ide what course they want to follow.
"It contains a diversity of areas to expose students to a broad
range of skills," Cisco said. '.'H a kid goes into welding and
decides he doesn't like It, we say, 'okay, we've got this program.' Later, he might go into building trades, and if he decides
he likes building trades, that's what he'll go into."
The center's main thrust this year, Cisco said, is to open it up
for use by the six school districts in the JVSD- Gallia Coun ty
Local, Gallipolis City, Oak Hill Union, Jackson City, Wellston
City and Vinton County Consolidated. The building has facilities
for Instruction of the physically handicapped other districts
may not have.
"The theory and concept of the Human Resource Center Is
that It's a central hub for districts to feed into, particularly for

•

In

use

handicapped students," Cisco sa id. "We know we have a lot of
work to do in developing handicapped programs, but our main
intention is to serve the area. We ha ve to get back to the schools
to see what services we can help."
This will take "a lot of tinne, a lot of coordination" in the next
year, Brockway added.
The center's roots stemmed from an April 1978 meeting
which discussed linkages between vocational schools and community agencies. Buckeye Hills was designated by the sta te as
a pilot program for rural vocational districts, and Cisco went to
the Gallla County Human Resource Committee to see ))ow
Buckeye Hills could better serve rehabilitation, juvinlle diagnostics and employment services.
Programs such as these operate out of Buckeye Hills and are
funded by respective agencies. However, to answer increased
needs in the area, the resource center was formulated.
Funding, to the tune of $425,!XXJ, was obtained from the Ohio
Department of Education, and an additional $250,!XXJ from the
Appalachian Regional Commission was a lso thrown into the
project. Due to early payment on the main Buckeye Hills
building, the JVSD was able to contribute $-'W,!XXlto the center's construction.

Job woes likely to linger in
U.S. manufacturing sector

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Prices on Quality Clothing for Your Family ·

the Roger Turner residence. McDonald was not wearing a protective
helmet, officials said. The motorcycle was demolished.
McDonald was pronounced dead
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was taken by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
Assistant
Meigs County Coronor Dr. John
Ridgway said that McDonald died

School's Homecoming parade, but

SALE ENDS OCT. 10th

Our Special Anniversary Sale

chael E. McDonald, 226 Union Ave.,
was kUled at 2 a.m. Saturday when
the motorcycle he was driving
crashed into a stone wall on Mulberry Avenue.
Pollee reported that McDonald
was westbound on Mulberry
Avenue at a high rate of speed when
his motorcycle went oui of control
and crashed into the wall in front of

Jl'or thc.e seeking to expe- . , was not related to the event, accord-

HANGING BASKETS
$2 25 &amp; $550
CACTUS &amp;VIOLETS

Mis~

before the kickoff of the PPHSMUton football game.
Groundbreaklng ceremonies for
Pleasant Valley Hospital's new
Medical Office Building were cut
short as many officials there were
needed In the emergency room
where those Injured In the accident
were being treated.
AccordlngtoPomeroyPollce,Mi-

The accident occurred just prior

6" &amp; 10"

Don't

Two West Virglna youths were
killed In a single-car accident !,n Mason County Ftiday afternoon and a
20-year-old Pomeroy man died Satutilay In a motorcycle mishap on a
Pomeroy street.
The Mason· County wreck, which
also left three Injured, occurred at
12: 18 p.m. on West Virginia Route
62.
Harold Matheny Jr., 14, and Kriss
Thomas, 16, were pronounced dead
on arrival at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Thomas and Matheny were passengers In a car driven by Hannon
Casto,l7, Pt. Pleasant.
According to the Point Pleasant
detachment of the West Virginia
State Pollee, Casto was southbound
on Rt. 62 when he apparently lost
control of thevehlcleafterltwent off
the right side of the road.
The car came back across the
highway, went over anenbankment
and crashed Into a tree, pollee
report.
A PVH spokesman identified the
injured as Casto, who is listed in fair
to stable condition: his sister, Lisa,
15, who underwent surgery for head
injuries at PVH and has been transferred to the intensive care unit of
Charleston Area Medical Center;
and Ricky Wernslng, 12, Point Pleasant, who Is In guarded condition at
PVH's Intensive care unit.

to the start of Point Pleasant High

U.S. Rep. Clarence Brown, debaled In Cincinnati Friday. Celeste blasted what he called
Brown's naive attitude towanl
jobs, whDe Brown cited recent
et•twJcs which shows Ohio's unemploymeut rate has dropped
receatly. A capacity crowd of 350
altended the debate, held at the
Clnclmatl Club...D-1

Probe minor wrecks

MODERN SUPPLY
l.erge

'

N. Carolina .....24
Wake Forest.. .... ?

Today"s

'

10

'·

Auburn.......... lB
Kentucky......... 3

Boster pledges legislative assistance

Effective
16, 1982
. thru Oct.
.

399 W. Main St

soil examination In the annual contest on conservation practices sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Water
(Ainservatlon District.

Southern FFA wins annual
land judging competition

BOOTS

FALL SPECIALS

"·

·~

Local weekend accidents kill three

ON
DINGO &amp;ACME
· WESTERN.

From Pomeroy: Take 124 (ast

r .,. ·, .

Notre Dame...... 16
Miami, Fla..... .l4

Vel. 16 No. 34
c.p,righted 1982

20% DISCOUNT

PORTlAND. OH.

,

Wisconsin ........ 6
Ohio State ....... O

unbaJI

FARMINGTON, Conn. (API Hotels and high-rise apartments
are being bull t bigger and higher
than ever before, but many of them
wind up missing one floor.
Som e 90 percent of the new buildings forwhlchltdoes Installations do
Closed
Director Monday
Clifford Reich of the
not have a 13th floor, says Otis EleOhio Department of Liquor Control
vator Co.
reports all state liquor stores, agenThere are exceptions, such as in
cies and departmental offices will
Atlantic City, N.J., where some gube closed Monday, Oct. 11, In obserests actua lly request rooms on the
vance of Columbus Day.
13th floor, in the hope that It might
add to their fortunes in the casinos. ~------------------------~
"Gamblers are a superstitious
lot, and since 13 Is supposed to bean
unlucky number, they think a room
on the 13th floor could reverse their
luck at the tables," Otis explainS.

Open 9 a.m. til 6 p.m

,

'

Friday, Oct. 8,1982

Figures put Geauga County
as of.io's richest per capita
ASHTABULA · GPauga County,
Oh io's wcalt hil'SI county ranks 86th
, in the nation ln terms of per capita

' ...

~ ....... ,............. J..ert

•,

.'

'

By MERRILL HAR'ISON
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- For millions of American blue-collar
workers, dwindling job opportunities will be a grim reality long after
theeconomyreboundsfromitsdeep
recession, prlva te business analysts
say.
..,
Behind the overall na tiona! 10.1
percent unemployment rate In September are obscure statistics that
the economists said spell bad news
for rnllllons of workers - predominantly men -who envisioned a lffetlme career In heavy
manufacturing.
Several economists Interviewed
followfng release of the September
unemployment figures last week
noted that the.l5.6 percenqobless
rate for blue-collar workers was
three times' that of white-&lt;:ollar

counterparts.

And while these analysts gave
vacylng predictions of when a bus!. ness turnaroupd w1ll ~. they
agreed that rnllllons of jobs In suci\
Industries as auto, steel and rubber

have been lost forever.
· For the IastlO years, they said, the
American economy has been
changing from reliance on the basic

heavy manufacturing industries,
which held sway in an earlier era, to
dependency on high-technology
goods and services.

DEMOCRA'nC REAC'l10N- CharJes·T. Manatt, chalnnan of
the Democratic Nationai Committee, holds a Washington news conference Friday to react to the government's annotincement of sep- ·
!ember's 10.1 pereent 'tlnemployment rate. Mllnatt said "Ronald
Reagan's handBng of the naii!Jn's unemployment for the past22 mon&amp;bs
fepre8ePt8 a ~ abdication of his responslbWtles as president." (AP
Laaerphoto ).

.,

~

i

\

�•

Commentary and perspective

Page-A-12

October 10, 1982 :

,.__Weather:-------~----,
The nation's weather

IRS VS. Bob •tt:J~o~n~e~s===:::;::=======J=am=e=sJ=.=KL=·lp=at=ric~~
~~~

Blm~

~15

A l)ivision or
~L..---r-"l~diF=~

Ill ( 'uurt St., Punlt'roy, Ohiu
16141 992-2 156

H2S Third Aw .• Ga llipolis, Ohin
1614 I 44&amp;-2342

ROflF:HT I. WIN&lt;;E'IT
r)ublt shtT

HOflAHT WII.~ON .!H.

I' AT WHITF:HI-:Afl
Ass tstant I 1 ub1 Jsllt·r-Cnntnlllt·r

1-:Xt 't 'Ut t \ t ' Edttur

A Mt&lt;MIII-:IIui Tlw ,, _,M II ' Hih·.t l 'n·~~- lul;uulllaih l 'n ·~' ,\ ,~·~ t: lll•!ll :u•tllht• /wwru ·:ut
Nt·'A ~ j lii JH ' T l'ulil• ~ lll'r ' t\~Mwutliutl.

l.t-:r rFtt..; tW OI 'IN ION art· 'Adt·unw1t. l"hn , huuhl ht· lo ·~, th:111 :UMI 'Aurd .. tuu ~o: . r\11
ldh · r ~ an· .. uh)t'O'I tn •·•hting a.ul mu ~ t lu- ' tl!tU'tl \\tlh unnw. : ut.ln ·,.~ anti td•·t•hn•w
nnnllwr Nu tlll' ll! lll'tlld\t·p, \\111 h1· pnhlis lwd . I A ' lh · r~ , huul•l lw 111 g uutlta,k.ntltlrt· ~ ~ ~~~ g
I :«~ U n• . nuljlo · r ~ llllllhtu ·'

Why is the Stock
Market soaring
Pprhaps thP s toc k markPI bull should bP given a blood IPS I to dPIPrminP
what it s norlru bPfore going on a rampage.
Was itlowpr interPSI rates. institutional buying panic, lhPpossibilil y tha t
RPaganomics will work- or bPchangro aft er the coming elections, or tha t
foreign monpy will conlinuP to pour into the United States?
Who knows what role these possibilities play, a ny more than you ca n say
for sure thP pessimistic bParsarpn't correct'' Bmrs still roam lhP fiPid , and
don't S('('med inclinro to crawl into hibernation .
"The m arkpt' s bPhav ior of thP past two wC'&lt;'ks has provided fresh PVi·
de nC'&lt;' that wP arP witnPSsing the pa rly phasP of thP 1~1 crash," claims the
Holt Inves tment Advisorv in its issuP of Oct. I. "ThP contrived August
bubbiP L' abou t to burst," it says. "Fu ll-scalP crash in lhP months a hmd."
ThL' is a lways lh&lt;' wa.v it L' whPn thP markPI is making a major movP. It
do&lt;&gt;sn't announC'&lt;' its intentions. as lingPring mpmoriPS of thPgreal cras h of
J9ll can a ll est. It is only in revipw thatlhP paiiPrns ix'comP a bit c learer.
RPviews. howpver. ~ren't appr('(' ialed in an atmosphPrP that puts a
prPmi um on prPvit'ws. MonPy L' madP from guessingthP!uturPralhPrlhan
analyz ing lh&lt;' past. And so. whiiP history may be worth morP than thP
gla ncing rPv iPw Ihal Wall Street g ives il, the ovPr hwe lming intPrf'SI is on
what might happen .
If inl&lt;' ri'SI ratC'S continuP to fall. for PxampiP.
Shou ld thai occur, two major pvpnts might pnsut': Economic aclivitv
could bP gPneraled alll hP way from consumprs togrm t corpora tions; and
hugP sums of monP.v might bP transferred from dPbl sPCuritiPs to "'JUilies,
such as stoc ks.
LowPr intPri'SI raiPS might rea sonab ly bP Pxpecil'd to gPnPraiP morP
intPrest in a utom obiles and houses . basic indusltiPs whosdortu nes diet a lP
thP hPa lih or s ir kni'Ss of many othe r indust ri&lt;'S a nd thousands of loca l
('('()nom if'S .
Thls L' th(• bn·akthrough sought by thP Reaga n adm inistration. which has
romP to rPI.v on 1he consumer to spend thP nation ou t of r('(·pssion. It L' what
thP co rporal&lt;· wor ld is wa iting for. too.
· Specifically, for many months, and in spiiPof tax incpntives. big businPss
has ix'c~ cool to capital spending projN: ts. Why expa nd when capacity Ls
alread y excessive? If consumPrs spend, compa mPs mtghl havP a rPason to
grow .
lnslitutinna l buying panic ca n bP Doth ca usP and Pfft&gt;cl of ris ing s i&lt;X'k
pric'f'S .
· lnsur!'rs. mutual and pension funds. bank ·adm inistPred trusts- any
groups that collect funds for in vestment - have to bP aware of wha t lis
neighbors arP doing. Institutions today are enormous. multibillion·dollar
i.n vPst or s. A h•w of thC'm tog('! hC'r can m&lt;.~kC' stocks mov £', and movrmC'nt
arouS&lt;&gt;s thl' herd .

Reagan's wrath
In lhP usC'S of righlrous wrat h, Ronald Reagan bows to no onP. II has
hPiped him win PI('('! ions. reprimand a balky CongrC'Ss a nd. now. siiPnC'&lt;' a
h('(·kling eonserva ti ve Rl'publican .
. Mis handled, public angPr ca n be hazardous to political health. A hair·
triggl'r 11-mperwas onPof the raps against Sen . EdmundS. MuskiewhPn hP
sought and lost thP 1971 Democra tic presidential nomination .
Pri'Sid&lt;'nl Reagan's anger Ls dlspla yro spari ngly, which makPS it morP
df('('livpw hen it shows.
Stron g languagPdoesn't sPrvP the politician's purpose. In his presidential
ca mpaign, St&gt;n. GrorgP McGovernonrP. withgoodcausc, lnsultroa harass·
ing woman- but in languagP not fit for broadcast.
acing down youthful demonstrators in Binghampton. N.Y .. in 1976,
thPn· · · President NPiso nA. RockefeiiPr gave the m the geslurPthPy wPrP
giving him . and rrPalru a controvPrsy about his dPmmnor ralhPr than
Jhpirs . Whm Richard M. Nixon was president. he usedtogPtangrya lot. Th&lt;'
WhiiP HouSP tra nscript s arefull of his rag".
ThP politica l adagP is thai you don ' t gPI mad. you gPI PvPn . Rmgan has
mastPred thP art of doing both a t oncP .
On Wedn&lt;'Sday, a hard· line conSPrvativP RPpubliean h('(' klro him in a
Whii P HouSP spe&lt;'&lt;'h to GOP ca ndida II'S. Rmgan has problems wilh Npw
Righi Rl'publieans . who say hP's not conscrvativPcnough. Cary R. A m old
of Sant a Cnu.. Calif .. broke into lhP s~ h to arguP thai .
"We havt• a Tylenoltaxationsituation hPrP. andwPhawa Reagan·mortls
sPiting into thP nation's body politic," A m old sa id .
Reagan said Arnold hadn 't ullerro a truthful word . thm 5&lt;'1 about
defe nding hls tax and forpign policies. A mold kPpl interrupting. Reagan
said he had thought lhP ca ndidaii'S w&lt;•rp supposro to be RPpublicans.
A m old kept intprrupting.
Finally, flu shro wi th a nger. hP told Arnold : "Shut up." Hardly a nf'W'linP,
but punchy, coming from a conSf'rvativP. RPpubllca n president to a vPry
conservative RPpublica n congressiona l ca ndida tP.
On the pvpof his Pi('('tion tothP WhitPHousc, Reagan ran intohf'ckiPrsa t a
campaign rally in San Dipgo, ignored lhPm for a while. a nd then said, "Aw,
shut up." HL' crowd chPPred .
· ·
ThPn thPre was lh&lt;' night in Nas hua. J\1 .H .. whm Reagan debatru GrorgP
Bush, then his rival. now his virP president. three days before the opening
presidential primary Pi('('! ion of 19ffi. Four other Republican ca ndldatPS
wanted to join thed&lt;•ba tr. and Rmgan thought they should. Butt he Nashua
Telegraph, which arrangro the dPbaiP, set thP formal, and 11 was to be
Reagan vPrsus Bush.
·
The RPagan campaign paid thP bills for the ctPbale, butlhepapersPtlhP
ground rules. When Reagan protested the formal, Jon Breen. edllor of the
paper a nd deba te moderator. told technicians to cut his mike.
. " I a m paying for this microphone. Mr. Green," Reagan said angrUy. "I
payingforthisdPbaiP." Bush sat s ilent. Reagan won lhedebalebeforell
began, a nd he won the primary .

am

WASHINGTON - ThP U.S. Supt'('mP Court will hear argumml on
TuPsday in a casP 1 tha t has at ·
traclro much a tt e ntion but moslly
for a llihP wrong rPasons. The caSE'
is Bob .Jones UnlvPrslt y vs. Unlled
Stat Ps of AmPrica . We ought to
think about this onP, for the caSf'
lnvolvPs IhP most profound ques·
lions of law and philosophy likely to
bP argued this IPrm .
You ma y r('('all ihP hullaba loo
thai dPveioped last .Januar')l whPn
thP Reagan adm inis tra tion badly
mishandlro lhP mailer. Bob .Jones
UnivPrslly is a fundamentalist religious instituti on in Grppnvllle. S.C.,
founded in 1~17. dedlcatro to the in·
doctrlnation of its st ude nts In a li·
teral rPading of lhP Bible a nd an
unwa vPri ng obediPnce to biblical
commandmPnls as Bob .Jones per·
&lt;'C'iVf'S lhf'm .
Among thosp percPivro com·

the status under Secllon 50Jtc)(.11
of the code. In J a nuary, lhP pres!·
dent at first held tha t the IRS ruling
Pxceroed lis a uthorlly, but under a
barrage of libera l fire he passed the
buck to Congress a nd rNreated.
Now the matter has reached lhP
SupremP Court under procedural
circumsta nces tha t puzz le obSE'rvers. The governme nt In effeet
has confessed e rror. Is lherP a ny

longer a "casf' or controvf'rsy" as
the Constitution rf'qulrps ? William
T. Coleman. a prominent black a t·
torney, has been lnvltro by thP
court to a ppear as a friend of the
court. but he reprPsenls- whom?
William B. Ball of Harrisburg, Pa .,
perhaps thP na llon's forpmost law·
yer in areas of religious freedom.
will be argui ng for Bob JonPs. CoJp.
man has no client . The situa tion

· ThPrP is no black petitioner 111
this rasP, demanding admission.
ThNf' is no Issue of direct publiC
funding . There Is only the questiOfl
of whelhPr this small religious co~
Jpge should be effecllvely punished
for holding unpopular beliefs. I had
supposed thai issue had ~:lee!!
setlled by Mr .. Jeffe rson long ago: ~
II\M~t,1t\ 'ij!J IJ,llfillli!J~;":••t- ""'-"~..,"""

,..._._. '""''"'- J.;.-•

mandmrnt s is a commandment

" public policy." lhP lnt Prnal RPSc-rvicf' SC"f about to rf'vOkf'

Vf' OUf'

waste-disposal Ep::::=r=O=fi=:t:=::S=====J=ac=kA=n=de=rs=on
WASIIINCTON - OrganizPd
crimP has musrlt'Cl into thP Iue ra·
livP businpss of c hem ical waste dis·
posal with sorr:PtimPs appalling
rPsults. l' vp reporlm sonlP of ih('S('
horror stories -deadly poisons al·
lowm to S('('p into farmla nds and

s ignm and "'JUipped vPssds is a
cost -f'ff ('('! i vf'. t('('hnka ll.v pfficlf'n t
and Pn vironmPnlally ac&lt;·PplabiP

watrrways; f'xptosivf's buring out

ing, thf' racf' wa!-1 on.

of control in fly ·by-nighl dump

WasiP ManagPmPnl Inc ., lhP na ·
lion's larg Ps l disposal firm,
through li s subsid ia rv. l' hPmical
Wastf' Ma nagt•mf' nl. was df'lf'l'·
mined to gPI a jump on lhPco mpeli·

maiiPr PVPI')I day . CIPa rly. a n a liN·
nati vr to bury ing thf'Sf' poisons on

land or dumping lhPm at spa would
IX' wf'lro mr.
A.f1Pr yf'a r s of sf udy by scir nlisl s,

a ft&gt;llPral inl e ragPncy group con·
eluded in laiP 1~HO Ihal lhPre was a
tX'ttrr way. "Chrmical wast£' inrinPralion at sPa aboard specially dP·

f('('hnology for df'stroying man.v

combustiblf' hazardous wastrs. ''
lhP commiiiPP reporl&lt;&gt;d.
OncP llndP Sam gavP his biPss·

lion and gain a IO&lt;'k on lhr nPw
f{'('hniqUf' o r O&lt;'f'ilO in('inprafion .
l ~rsl April. I rPporlm thallhP En ·
vironmr ntal Prolf'('fion Agf'nry
had adoplru landflll·dumping rPgu·
lations for hazunlous waslf' that
wf'rf' takPn almost wo rd for word
from a mPmo wrillf'n by Waslf'
Managf'mf'nl' ~

v icf' prt•sldf'n1.

s piril or COOPf'I"&lt;Jiiun
popp&lt;.~l up in lhP permit 1-:PA
lssuro to govPrn Wa siP ManagP·
Thf'

Si.lffif'

mPnl's first &lt;-tiiPmpl at I&gt;C'Pan indn-

Pration of dmdly I'CT wasiPs. Th&lt;'

luating lhP permil-lhPusual EPA
roulinP. As illurnroout. lhPofflclal
said, " lhP permit was so poorly
t.~ha ndon it s usuul pPrmit prO('C'·
wrill&lt;'n and poorly puttogPihPrthal
durf' and issuf' a wah'n'd -down rPsf'arrh JX'I'mit. whi&lt;'h savf•d lht • thPrf' was no control. but II savro
WasiP ManagPmPnl hundreds of
com pan y pn•dou s tim f' and
thousands of dollars bv not rf'quir·
monf'v.
i\('{:ording to an EPA s oUt'('( ', lhl,. ing lhP nf'&lt;'Pssa ry IC'Sting."
J)pspiiP lh&lt;' compeliliVP rugP
J.ll ' rmil. which allowPd Ch&lt;•mical
Waslf' Man&lt;Jgf'mPnt , lhP subs i- ga ined by lhP MarinP Pral('('tlon
Branch's agn'!'abillty on lhP per·
diary. to inrinPraiP 7111.1111 ga llons
mil. lhP first IPsl burn failro loproof Pl'll·loadro oil in lh&lt;' &lt;;u tf ol
dU('f' thf' dPsin&gt;d r&lt;'Sults, and a
MC'Xi('O, lackf'd both I'PSf'al'{'h n •sPmnd on&lt;' was undPrlakPn. ThP
quirrmPnl s and safPI V mras un •s.
poor rPsulls from lhP first burn
" Th f' pPrmit wa s a ca rtt •
ca ug ht thP aiiPnlion of high·
blanch&lt;' ... ihP t-:f'A official said. "I I
ranking F:PA officials, who th""
just sa id . ·co out and burn.' Thl'n'
lighlf'n&lt;'&lt;l lhP standards on lhP sewa s no moniloring plan or saff'I V
plan_al a ll. "
c-ond pPrmit .
MPanwhilt•, though, Waslf• Manllow could this hapJX·n·~
agPmPnt's hoped·for monopoly on
1-:P/\ SOUil'(' C'Xplainf'd :
oc·pa n incinPra tion was thi'Paf£'nl'd
"ThP permit was mark&lt;~l up at a
hv lhP appearanrP of a rival. Apollo
m"•ing of mPmbers of lhP MarlnP
Co .. which had lis own burmuProtPclion Branch and WasiP Man·
rralir backPr- thP F'edPral Marlilgf'mf'nl lawyf'I'S and f'Xf'CUiiVPS ."
limP J\dministration.
ThPrP should ha v!' ix'&lt;'n Pngi ·
nP&lt;&gt;rs. biologist s a~d chf'mists Pva -

company found lhf' M ~ 1rinf' Prott•&lt;·-

lion flranch of lh P EPA wi lling to

·1\•

Filling the tubes
A bunch of lhP spo rt s PX('('Uilves
at 7rnilh NPiwork werP sllllng
around lhP ronfPrPnrP tablP lt')ling
to comr up with somC' program ming to rPplarP lhP NFL football
gamPs. II was lhP Pighth WPPk of
thP strikP a nd ihf'y had trlru Pvf'ry·
thing from Ia crosS&lt;' to ladles' mud
wrestling, but for somP rmson they
just couldn't allract lhP audiPnCPs
to warrant the $150,1MMl a minuiP
lhPy wPrP c harging for lhP limP.
"I think l' vP got II," said DextPr.
"ThP Girls' Latin &amp; hool of Boston
is pla ying Our La&lt;ly of VIctory's
fi e ld hockey IPam on Sunday. It's a
gr11dgP match tha i g()('s back 50 years. With proper promos I think WP
could gPI propiP to tunP in."
"Who knows anything about
women's field hockey?"
"''ll bet you Howa rd dOPs. Let's
call him in."
"FivP minutes la ter- "Howard,
we're thinking of pulling on the
Girls' La lin -Our Lady of Vlctat')l
field hockey mat c h this Sunday, to
keep the crowd that likes pro fool·
ball. Could you handle the color?"
Howard smirked. "That is a silly
,question . Girls' La lin of Boston has

Ohio regents begin Vietnam vets
summerenactedtheenabllnglegls- for various kinds of medical proJ&gt;.
the advisory councU were Drs. Raylatlon under which the state will Jems - suspected as a cause of
mond Suskind, •Kettering Laboratoscreen veteJ:ans who believe that cancer, among other things - and
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)-Ohio's
ries and the University of Cincinnati
theywereexposecttothesubstance. ~ medical experts believe It
Board of Regents has launched a
College of Medicine (toxicology);
The implementation of the mea- - ·· may have caused birth defects
newly approved state program to
Martin Keller, Ohio State Universure was left up to the regents, who among children of the veteJ:ans.
assist Vietnam veterans who may
sity College of Medicine (epidemiolIn thenearfuturewilldeslgnateone
Under tile new law, the advisory
have been exposed to the chemical
ogy); Thaddeus W. Kurczynskl,
or more state medical schools to do council must consist of at least three
• defoliant Agent Orange.
Medical College of Ohio at Toledo
The regents on Friday appointed
the screening. .
Vietnam veterans and four medical
(genetics). and Jack Medalle, Case
Also, under tile program, thevete- specialists In thefleldsoftoxlcology,
Western Reserve Sehool of Media seven-member advisory council
rans wlll be referred by the state to epidemiology, genetics, and family
that will assist In a studyoftllescope
cine (family dynamics) .
federal agencies which may pro- dynamics.
of the problem and make recomIn addition to helping determine
•·'1e financial or medical
Oneoftlleveteranswhowlllserve
the scope and structure of the study,
menda lions for screening and other
assistance.
Is G.Davld Foley, Batavia, a chemthe council also will advise on the
assistance.
Agent
Orange
has
been
blamed
lsi for tile National Instit!Jte of
Ohio's General Assembly last
selection of sites for conducting the
Safety and Health who Is listed as 40
study. It will be followed by a report
percent disabled as a result of gun- on
th e
findin gs
and
shot wounds su!fered In the Sourecommendations.
theast Asia'confllct.
The Agent Orange legislation was
The other veterans are Richard co-sponsored in the Legislature by
Schultz of Cincinnati, a double am- Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, Rputee who Is employed by the Dis- Ashland, and Rep. Joseph J. Vukoabled American Veterans, and
vich, D-Youngstown, both of whom
Donald Lanthorn, Utica, a who are Vietnam veterans. Neither beworks for the American Legion.
lieves he was exposed to the defol·CINCINNATI (AP) - The yen Japan and a 40 percent subsidy on
Regents'
staff
members
said
both
Iant, however. ·
has declined 40percenl over the past
exports, McCammon said.
Lanthorn and Sehultz travel statefour years, giving Japanese car
''Though we are Instinctively free
wide and will be In good positions to . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
makers a price advantageover U.S.
traders, when you see a situation
make veterans aware of the Agent
firms, according to Ford Motor Co. like that persisting, you begin to see
Orange
program.
executive David N. McCammon.
some merit In import quotas. Free
Named
as medical members of
McCammon, vice president for
trade Is fine, but it has to be on fair
corporate strategy and analysis,
terms,'' said McCammon.
was here Friday to promote Ford's
The Japanses have agreed to
1983 models. Ford executives are llmlt tile amount of cars they
appearing In 126 cities.
market In tile U .S.
Can you top this?
Ford, McCammon said, can comMcCammon said that most other
pete with the imports in quality tonations have actual quotas on imATLANTA, Ga. (AP)
day. Price, however, Is another
ports of Japanese goods.
"Topping-out," the ceremony In
matter. It's not the labor cost differ"We're really the last of the big which a tree Is usually hoisted to the
ential but the ~ndervaluation of the
tree markets, which Is why they top of a buDding, 'Is a signal to the
yen against the dollar that Is the
have such a presence here."
community that tile iron workers
problem, he said.
Currently, the U.S. Dollar buys have completed the framework of
McCammon said the yen has un- about 2!ll yen. McCammon said
the structure and their celebration
accountably declined In value the
Ford can only hope that the Interna- can begin, ·according to Georgialast four years. The Japanesse also
tional monetary authorities man- Pacific.
have a low inflation rate, he exage to persuade Japan to allow lis
The company recently opened Its
plained, increasing productivity
currency to reach what heconsklers
new world headquarters here.
and a favorable balance of more realistic levels, perhaps :Ill).
payments.
200 yen to the dollar.
He sa1a tnose trungs snoutd make
Meanwhile, he said Ford expecls
the Japanese currency increase in
1983 to be a major turning point in
yalue, not decline.
the company's 8l-year history.
But the decline In the yen against
"I expect to see Ford cement in.ihe dollar means it costs the Japa- dustry ladership In five areas: pronese 40 percent less to build a car duct, quality, aerodynanics,
today than it did In 1978. Furtherelectronics and labor-management
more, theexchangeamountstoa40
cooperation," McCammon said.
percent tariff on !!oods imported to

deflation hurts
U.S. auto makers

gious conv ic tions Wf"I'C' contrary to .;,;,n~~

tons of dangf'rous ChC'mira l waslf'

Lakes. Showers are also predicted In a band from Louisiana and Mississippi north to Ohio, Michigan and Indiana. (AP Laserphoto ).

a llfPilme r('('ard oC:Wi wins against
lli!i lossps. UndPr ihP famed . but
V£'1)' undPrra tf'd M&lt;liY Mr(:rory .
thPy had four undPfm led ymrs. a
rr\f'ord tha hil s nPvrr lx'f'n s ur·
pasSf'S in lhP Npw England RP·
gional Co nfPrmrP. 1\Pg rPtlably,
and I must be candid about it, lhP
team has not ix'cn li ving up to lhP
high Pxpeclallons wP all had for It
at the beginning of lhl' ymr.
Nikki Harris, probably onPof lhP
most astutP and sklllro field hockPy
coachPs since Carry "ThP Stick"
Re nfrPw, who led KathPrinP Gibbs
to a 10 and 0 record In 19'l4. told mP
that the locker room problems Parlier this year belw('('n Roz Rogers
and Hilda Marton had ix'cn sorted
out, and she beiiPvru the tmm was
up for an Our Lady of Victory
defeat.
·
"Which. brings mP to a story
about Francie Barnard. Francie,
as you ·know, had been offered a
scholarship to Georgetown Visitation. and Dumbarton Oaks. Her
mother had played for Visitation In
1956 and made All-American. But
Carry had developed a knee Injury
on a skateboard and doctors had ·

A i-t Buchwald
told hPr sh&lt;• would nPvPr play fil'ld
hockPy again. ShP wPnllo an orthopNlir s pP r ia li sl namPd AlirP
McKPiviP who put in an arliflrial
knPP. AlirP MrKPiviP was a fri Pnd
of Nikki Harris a nd told hN FranriP could play. Nikki arranged for a
full sc holars hip for FranciP and
thai is why FranciP Is now playing
for Cirls' Latin instmd of CrorgPtown Visllation .
"Thanks, Howard, you S('('m Ia
know your fiPid hockPy."
"Our Lady of Vlctat')i had lis
gr·mtest yPars under SlsiPr Mary
. ThPrPSP Elolt('('(&gt;liJ, befW('('n 1941
and '!'!.l Sister M"ary used to smash
a pla yer's wrist with a hockey stick
PVPt)' limP thP player hl!..lhP ball
ovPr crossbars. In 196.~ VlciOt')l's
Mother Superior. Dorothy Tuberty,
decided to dP-e mphaslze · field
hockey after Eunice Shriver
bought hPr daughtpr hPr daughter
Marla a Must a nk convPrtlble for
scoring threp goals against
Madeira.
"Fortunately thP alumni rebelled, as field hockey was the b~ly
reason most pat'('nts sent their
daughters to_Our Lady of Victory,

and now they a rP bark In Ihe big
limP. If I may iniPrrupt a personal
noiP, I rPmPmtwr lhP afiPmoon on
OCtober t&gt;. 19'71, whPn Mary HPaly
In lhP classic contPst with Palomar
Normal ... "
"That's mough, Howard, you'v&lt;'
convlneed rrK' ."
"WPII, arP you going to go wit~
lhP Girls' Latin gamP npxt WPPk or
not'! " Howard askro.
"ElthPr thai or a hot"Nlhoe pitch·
ing match belwPPn lhP Flatbush
Odd FPIIOWS HomP and thP Sun
City Buildings.
''I'll nPvPr forgPt watching ttw
Flatbush Odd FPIIows dPfmt the
Ca lgat-y Nursing Homp In an ovPrlim P, In thai mPmorabiP SPrk'S IR
AnchoragP. Alaska. on .Jan. 4. 1947.
Flatbush had a onP armed throwf.'t·
named Skippy DanzlngPr and
Skippy had Jpft his favorite hot'S('shoe on thf' train. So he saw thif&lt;
Ca nadian Mountro Poll,'&lt;'mun anll
hP ... "
"Okay, Howard. wp'll gPI hack to
you as soon as W£' makP our

d('('islon."
"I'm sony. gf'nth•ml'n, but
have to IPII it lhP way II is."

r-------..DOONESBURY'
SOYa/P
~

IPIPN'T

54Y

. 1/VTTl
I

t:u,

BUT~

Officials look to
state for advice

ELECT

RONA~D

.......

---·-

USPS5~

RAVENNA, Ohio (AP) - Portage County officials have scrutlntzedtllebudgetfortwodaysandnow
are looking to the state for advice on
how to eliminate spending beyond a
projected $541,00&gt; deficit.
State Jaw prohibits deficit
spending.
Earlier fears that Jury trials and
the Navember election would bave
to be eliminated bave eased, county
treasurer Maunce Kline said
Friday.
With 2~ months left In the 1982
fiscal year, o!flclals this week said
the county's $10.2 mUllan budget Is
nearly gone.
· Early this week, the county's two
Common Pleas judge; began notifyIng lawyers that no jury trials could
be held untU 1983. ltC'OUklmean that
some criminal suspects_could be
treed because of a state speedy trial
law that mandates !reectom for people not brought to trial within 90
days. So far, 70 civil and crlmlnal
eases are In limbo.
The county's commissioners al·
loted $32,00&gt; for juror salaries this
year, but that was spent within nine
months. Commissioners decided
Friday to scrape together Jury fees,
even It It forces tile county !urther
tnlodebt.

Pubhshtc'd

K. CANADAY

GALLIA COUNTY AUDITOR

QUALIFIED TO SERVE YOU
17 years experie nce appraising Ga llia County residential,
farm , comm ercia l a nd industrial properties.
Majored in accounting at Ohio Uni versit y
U.S. Air Force Ve te ran
Former fire a nd casua lt y a nd life ins urance agent.
Curre ntly owner a nd operator of Canaday Rea lty, 2.5 Locus t
St., Gallipolis. Ohio
Life long resident of Gallia County. Presently resides on a
farm In Addison Twp.
Ronald K. Canaday, 50. was born in Gallipolis. Ohio, A~gust 16. 1932 . Son
Blanche L. Canaday, retired Kroger employee. Graduated from Gallia Academy
High School, anended Rio Grande College and Ohio University majoring in
accounting . Served 4 years with the U.S. Air Force in England. Married 20
years to the former Audrey Cooley. Two step-sons. John Gordon. an employee
of Kyger Creek Power Plant and Bob Gordon. machinist, Houston. Texas. Also
a very proud grandfather of a new littte granddaughter, Jennifer Gordon.

Patd fot by Cand tdale

Tremendous
Savings on Famous

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pnmium construction and materials yop can't see. This means that the beauty and
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I%7 ••

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,.

Pf{)f(r
!illY IT.
I

On this date:
-In 1701, Yale CoUege was founded in Branford, Conn.
-In 1934, Yugoslavia's King Alexander was assassinated in Marseilles,

ACRO·SS

Monday lllru ,rklay
tAM tot PM
saturday .f AM te S PM

STREET

448-9510

THE

france.

. -In 1968. President Johnson ordered Secretary of State Dean Rusk to
•
negotiations tor the sale of jet planes to Israel.
·
: -In 1975, Soviet physician Andrei Sakharov becametheflrstcitizenofbi&lt;;
~try to win tile Nobel Peace Prize.

\'

FOR RESPONSIBLE FULL TIME SERVICE

~Yen

Pmpl from paymPnt of cPrtaln fedPral laxPs. Then things c hanged.
ThP law didn't cha nge, bullhP poll I·
lea l almosphPrP c ha nged. On the
grounds that the univPrslly 's rPii·

MeanwhiiP, PnvironmPntallsls
wony that evPn lhP most mPtlcu·
lously operated la ndfills may PVPn·
tuall y allow poisons to lmk to lhP
surfarP or IParh down Into lhP wa·
IPr lablP.
YPI indus! t)' kC'&lt;'ps produc ing

WEATJQ;R FORECAST - The National Weather Service fore-

casts rain Sunday In a band from Colorado and Wyoming to the Great

By The ~lated Press
Showers or thunderstorms were expected and most likely to occur
Saturday night in southern Ohio. Northeast Ohio may esca pe the
showers entirely today. Showers will probably be widely scattered
Sunday. The threat of showers and Ihunderstorms will increase again
Sunday night as a cold front moves into western Ohio. Warm weather ,
will continue untU Monday.

As9oclated Press Writer

contributor ; lhC' university ~as ex-\.....

· sitC's.

••

By 'lbe A.s8oclated Press
An unseasonable tornado spawned by warm, moist air ripped
through a northwest Missouri shopping center, damaging several
buUdlngs as a system of severe thunderstorms crossed the lower
Missouri Valley.
No lrijurles were reported, but otller twisters touched down Friday
In Nebraska and showers and thunderstorms continued over a large
part of tile Mississippi VaUey from Iowa and lllinols to Arkansas and
western Tennessee.
Four to eight Inches of snow accumulated In tile BlackHlllsofSouth
Dakota, where a wlnteJ: storm warning was In effect, and snow dusted
the central High Plains and tile central Rockies.
Rain was scattered over the northern Great Plains.
Saturday's forecast called for showers and thunderstorms from the
Mississippi Valley to tile Atlantic Coast, espec1ally from Tennessee to
the upper Mississippi Valley. Raili' was expected for the northern
Great Plains with rain and snow In Wyoming and Colorado.
Sunny skies were forecast across tile Pacific Coast and Plateau
regions and across the southern Rockies Into the solithern High
Plains.
·
Temperatures around the natlonat3a.m. EDT ranged from 27 in
KallspeU, Mont., to 83in Corpus Christl, Texas.

Sunday showers for Ohio

By ROBERT E. MILLER

tha i forbids ini Prracia l marriage.
ThP uni vprsity does not bar black
studPnl s - indeed , it a nnua ll y en·
rolls a handful of black marrlro
rouplf's whose vocation is toward
lhP ministry - but its proscription
understandably is regardro as of·
fensive by black young people In
genera l and by many whit e persons
also.
OvP r a long period of limP, Bob
.JonPs Uni vprs il y rpcelvPd the -._~-­
sa mP tretmPnt undPr the Tax Code ....-:::
thai is routine ly Pxtendro to every
olhN religious or roucallonallnslilulion . Contributions to thP unlver- ii.'!i:::liiil
s il y wPre dPduclibiP by the

£48/F

rfoday in history·

val of the Commissioner of Intern~ I
RPvenuP.
That is thP nub of this case. At ti¥'
bedrock of our Constilutlon Is I~
comma nd that "Congres.' shall
make no law respectlnjl an establis hme nt of religion or prohlbltlnl!
thP free Pxerclse thereof." Time afte r time the high court has lnterpt'('ied this to mean thai tlie
govPrnmcnt must be ne utral whe~
rPiiglous mailers are concerned.

may not be unprecedented, but II
sure ly is odd.
In defending his non-client. thP
IRS. Coleman has his problems. II
may be easy to es tablish that both
"public policy" and federal law
prohibit racial Sf'gregatlon In a ny
Institution receiving ta x funds. All
well and good. But here the segrega tion, In whatever degree, Is the
dir('('l consequence of rPiigious be·
IIPfs , dPPply and sincerely he ld over
a long period of limP. On thai fact
thP lower courts were wholly
agreed. And uniPss Cole man Is pre·
parro to argue thai not to pay ta xes
is to r('('PiVP a tax subsidy, he Is in
trouble. Under that llnP of reason·
ing, PVPt)' church In America Is
"subsidizro" by lhP government .
and to that PXIPnl its rPIIglous doc·
lrinPs becomP subj('('l to lhP

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A;3

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

October 10, 1982

.-·

842 Second Ave.
.Gallipolis
44&amp;-1405
·'

.,

.

•

v

�October

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

Page- A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October

10, 1982

Jobless figures trigger candidate reactions
lagged recovety ~ "
Brown also said li6 p&lt;'rC&lt;'nl of th~
increase in Ohio unemploym~nt oc~
eurrl'd before Presidmt Reagan
took offi ce. H(' said :&gt;1 pPrCC'nt of the
"l'mploymcnt drop" in Cleveland,
:,:l percmt ln Dayton. 6.1 percent in
the Youngst own ~ Warren arm . 78
p&lt;'rcent in Akron and 100 p&lt;'rr ent ln

By.JAMES IIANNAH
1\,.;oclatt&gt;d Press Wriwr
A nnounr~ment of double-digit un·
cmploymmt nationwide has trig~
germ reactions from two Ohio
gulx•rnatorial ca ndidates. one sa v ~
ing recovcty is on the way and the
other drawing an analogy to a sink·
ing ship.
repot1cd Friday that unemploy~
Th(' Burea u of L abor Statistics
mr nt nationwide hit 10.1 p&lt;'rrmt in
SC'ptcmher, the first time th~
double-digit platea u has been
br~arhed Sin('(' AmPrica wa s
~ m e r gi n g fi·om I hi' Great Qe p res ~
sion in 1940.
"Asking Ohioans to accept theRe~
publican lh('m e to stay the teconomic ! course is like askin g
pasS('ng('r s to krep ondanr ingto the
band while the Titanic sinks lnto the
{)('('an... said Democratic guberna

Canton occurred just aft er the 1979
r ecession.
"There is other rhetoric from
some politicians try ing to blame lh&lt;'
presidmt and his economic policiPS
for our unemploym ent problem,"
Brown sa id. " I'm amazed that the
pt't'S id~nt' s critics. for all their wa il~
ing, have not proposl'd any new

aiiernatlves."
Ohio's unemploym ent rate for
September dropped slightly to 12.1
pPrcent. 0.2 percent lower than the
seasonally adjusted figure for Au~
gust. The bureau sa id 6.16,00:1
Ohioans wer e out of work in Sep~
!ember comparro to 60:l,IXXl in
August.

"That's good news for Ohio, but
the nationwide figures are too
high," said Republican State Sen.
Paul Pfeifer , who Is challenging in~
cum bent Democr at Howard Met ~
zenbaum for the U.S. Senate.
"Unemployment is absolutely too
high, and I think that has to be the
top national priority," Pfeifer said.

~~t'h~aun:~d~~-~~:; ~h~~~~~m

ploymcnt Ls " unacr~pt a bl)' high,"
Republica n gubernat orial candi ~
dateCiar en('(' Brown said in a statement that " th ~ prospect is that
unemployment will be coming
down soon lx&gt;caus(' !h{' r ('('()vcry is

aIread)' in pmgr ess."
Brow n s&lt;:tid inflation and intC'rest

t·ates ar c down. rea l wages and the
stock mark('! ar c up. and the dollar
is strong.
" The one bad mark is un e mpl oy ~
ment. " he said. " which has always

Mayme Adkins

" It's a tragedy, and it requires our
undivided attention ."
Pfeifer said he wasn't surprised
by the natlonal10.1 percent figure.
"I had anticipated it would be that
high," Pfeifer said. "I have assumed all along that there would be
some bad economic news as we approached the election. "

DAYTON · Mrs. Mayme Adkins,
Friday night in a Dayton Hospital.
Survivors include a daughter, son,
and six grandchildren all residing in
the Dayton area. and two sisters,
Mrs. Hazel Whit e, Rt.2, Patriot,and
Dorothy Stewart of Dayton.
Funeral services will be held at2
p.m . Tuesday fmm Miller' s Fun·
era! Home Dayton. Visitation will
be held ther e from 2~4 and 7~9 p.m.
today.

Ohio River water
quality improving,
. .
commiSSion says
MORCA I\'1'0WN . W.Va . tAP tTracPS of all bul two JX'Siicidcs in
fish takl'n from lh&lt;' Ohio Ri ver are
well below amoun ts found in the
m id ~ 1~ 711s and don't pose an.v health
hazard;;, accordin g lo lh&lt;• Ohio
RiVPr \ 'aJJpv· WaiN Sa nitation
Com mL..,s ion .
" Our SU I"\ '('_\ ' incliC'JI C'S &lt;:1 \ '('!)'
hf'a lth.\ · condition for lhC' t·ivPr. ·· bi -

DOUBLE
COUPONS

•REDEEM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY-SAVING
COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND MARK V AND
RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PUR~
CHASE THE SPECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER
ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE
REDEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
MERCHANDISE" COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER 49'
·IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE
COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM.
CIGARETTES AND CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE
EXLUCED BY LAW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO All
OUR CUSTOMERS, WE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE
COUPON" OFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE
AND ONE CAN OF .GROUND COFFEE PER SHOPPING
FAMIJ Y. DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 14. 1982.

DOUBLE TWE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS U,P
TO 49' IN FACE VALUE.
.

THURSDAY ONLY

OCTOBER 1.4

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ologist .John J.;pv·c&lt;; said .
Thr biologist said I hal in I he mid ~
1 ~ 70s it v;as not unu sualtora tr h fish
wi th lo parts JX'I' million of PCB
pi'S iicide. In lhr iai&lt;'.SI SUIVCJ', just
two fish sam piPS cont ainl'd pcs ti ~
cidP.S aiJO\'d J.S. Food and Drug A d ~

ROUND
STEAK

GROUND
CHUCK

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
FULL CUT

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

m in L.., tration sta nda r ds . hC'said.

U ~ S . D.A .

A carp r aughl nca r Pillsburgh
cunlatncd o.:l ppm of PCB. ~ ·1 over
the U.S. Fooda nd QS~g Admint slra ·
lion's toiPr amY· IPvcl of o ppm.
" Eating that on&lt;' fish everyday
rm ll,·doc•sn't prc&lt;;cnt a health problem ." the biologist said.
ThPol her JX'SI icidr found in levels
abov·r FDA sta ndards was c hlo rd a ~
nr .A cal fish taken ncar Louisv tllc,
K v .. cont atncd 051 ppm of thr pcs ti ~
cidr, while the F DA standard is JO ~

Stricter industri al regulations
and public awa r eness ha ve help&lt;'d
clm n 1he Ohto River of DDT. Keyes
sa id . Hr said thr chemica l has been
virt uallv washed from the riv('r lx'tw('('n Pillsburgh and Cairo. Ill.

LB

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COLUMBUS - Carlton E . Bur ~
nett , 81, Reynoldsburg, died Friday
night in Mount Carmel East Hospi~
tal, Columbus.
Surviving is a SQn, Glen of Rey~
noldsburg; a daughter, M axine Bur~
nett of Reynold sburg; two
grandchildren and relatives in Gal ~
lia County.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in the First United
Presby1erian Church, Reynolds·
burg, with the Rev. Craig Laurent
of!lclating. Burial will be in Glen
Rest Cemetery. Arrangements are
by Cotner's Funeral Home.

18 oz.
JAR

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i

Gallipolis1,9hio

Point Pleasant,

W.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Va .

GENEVA , Ill. iAPl- A 14 -year~
old boy "'-ho was kept a virtual pri ~
saner in his home because his
parents believed he was retarded
appears to have above-normallntel·
ligcnce, a state official says.
Preliminary tests indica te that
Bart Freemon, removed from his
parents' home Thursday, has
above-n01mal intelligence and no
physical defects, Paul Freed lund of
the Illinois Department of Children

and Family Services sa id Friday.
The youth's father, Bernard Fr«&gt;mon. a 51 -year-oldm echanical e ngl~
neer with nine other children, said
he and his wile, Joanne, believed
their son was retarded and kept him
away from school and doctors to
" protect" him.
"We tried to sheller him , we tried
to kcep him within our ring. within
our sight as much as we could,"
Freemon said.

While Bart sometimes made trips
to area grocery stores, " for the most
part he has stayed here with us. We
didn't lock him In a closet or any·
thing, but we tried to protect him,"
the father said.
The boy was discovered when
state officials investigatro an anonymous call to the Illinois child ~
abuse hot line.
Bart has been placed in a foster
home under the temporary care of
the Department of Children and
Family Senrices. State ln vestiga ~
tors , who ftled a neglect petition and
obtained a Circuit Court order, also

••'
•

Page

A-S

DATE AND DAY
AUTOMATICS

Harold Matheny, Jr.
Harold Otis Matheny Jr., 14, Rt. I,
Leon, dil'd Ftiday from injuries s uf~
ferro in an automobile accident on
Rt. 62 north of Point Pleasant.
Born Sept . 'l:l. 1968, in Point Plea·
ant, he was thesonofHaroldO.and
Erma Hart Matheny.
He was a ninth grade student at
Point Pleasant Junior High School.
Surviving in addition to his par~
ents are two brothers, Daniel Lee
and Christopher Allen Matheny,
both at home; paternal gra nd ~
father. Melvin Matheny, Leon; ma t ~
ernal grandmother, Famous Hart,
Point Pleasant: and several aunts
and uncles.
Funeral servi.ces wUI be con~
dueled at I p.m. Monday in the
C row~ Hussell Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, with the Rev. Herman
Jordan officiating. Burial will fol~
low in Leon Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funl'ral
home after 2 p.m. Sunday.

FLU - Influenza immunizations wiD he given to the public by the
Meigs County Department of lfealth Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
and from I to 4 p.m. The supply oft he immunizallon lsllmited and those
receiving it will pay S6 unless they are senior citizens or dlsahled In
which ca.•es the charge wiD he $4. The health department Is located on
the second floor of the multi-purpose building on Mulherry lfelghts in
Pomeroy. Shown preparing for Monday's business are, I tor, Dehorah
LaValley, Norma Torres, R.N .• and Carol Tannehill. R.N.

Michael E. McDonald
POMEROY ~ Michael E . McDonald, 20, 226 Union Ave.. was kitlro
in an early Saturday morning motorcycle accident .
Employed at the James M . Gavin
Plant , Mr. McDonald was born Feb.
18, 1962 In Gallipolis, a son of Harley
E . McDonald, Middleport , and Doris Eblin McDonald, Ariz.
Besides his parents, McDonald is
survived by a brother , James
McDonald. Arizona; matern al
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Eblin, Pomeroy; paternal grand ~
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Mash,
Middleport , and his former wife,
Donna McDonald, Rutland.
Arrangements are being made at
the Ewing Funeral Home.

Edward LStewart

took away four other Ft'{'('mon
children, leaving only a 19-year -old
living at home.
Freem on sa id he kept Bart se
eluded because he didn't want the
other children stigmatized by the
youth's learning problems.
" In retrospect," Frcemon said.
" it was kind of stupid."
Freemon said hr at first dcridro
to keep Bart a sccr~t becauS(' th~
boy was c ross~eyl'd . The affliction
disappear ed when th&lt;• boy was Yor
10 yea rs old . but it was too late to
suddenly bring him out of hiding, th~
father sa id .

BULOVA

County, Miss Thomas was the
daughI er of I he Rev. Kei I h Thomas,
pastor of the Leon United Methodist
Church and Hickory Chapel. and
June Crookham Thomas.
She att ended Leon United Metho·
dis! Church and was a junior at
Point Pleasant High Schoo.!.
Surviving in addition to her par~
entsarea brother, Keith Thomas II,
Leon; grandparents, Allen and
Faye Thomas , Leon; and two nieces, Michelle and Jennifer Thomas,
Leon.
Funer al services will he at 2 p . m ~
Sunday at the Leon Unitl'd Methodist Church with the Rev. Robert
Holland and the Rev. Tally Hanna
officiating. Burial will follow in
Leon Cem etery. The body will be

taken to the church one hour prior to
services.
services for
Friends m ay call fi·om 7-10 p.m.
Edward Leo Stewart, 69, West CoSaturday
a 1 the Raynes Funeral
lumbia, wer e held at 1:30 p.m. Fri·
in
Buffalo.
Home
day at the Fogelsong Funeral Home
with the Rev. Kenneth Watkins
officiating.
On vacation
Correct names and addresses of
POMEROY - The Meigs County
brothers and sisters includ~ in an
dog catcher will he on vaca tion
earlier obituary include William
Monday through Friday of this
Floyd Stewart; Toledo; Franklin
wcek. Residents needing servi ces
Stewart, Columbus, and Violet Stc~
, of a dog ca tcher are to contact
wart Ray of Columbus. Georgia,
Larry Taylor at 992- 6 116 ~
and Irene Stewart .. Wells of
Pomeroy.
MASON ~· Funeral

Herb Lange dies
MADISON, Wis. tAP I - Herb
Lange, 81, one of 111 chart er
members of the American Bowling
Congress Hall of Fa m ~. died here
Friday.
Lange livl'd in Watertown until
the tast thrce year s. when he lived in
Lake Mills.
He was the president oftheA .B .C.
Hall of Fame board from 19o1 ~62.
For more than J2 years. his bowling
congress average was 192.
He won the A.B .C. singles crown
in 19:1-'i in Chicago.
Memorials services were s~t for
1: 30p.m.Monday at the Schmutzler
Funera l Home in Wa tertown.

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CM SECOND AVINUI

Kriss Anne Thomas, 16, Leon.
was dead on arrival at Pleasant Va l ~
ley Hospital Friday following an au ~
tomobtle accident on Rt. 62 north of
Point Pleasant.
Born Jan. 2&lt;;, 1966, in Fayette

The Ohio Universit y School of
Dance will hold scholarship a udi ~
lions for Its maj or program on Sa t ~
urday. Nov. 6 at 1 p.m. at the
Putnam Studio Thea tre. Athens
ca mpus. For more information.
contact Shirley Wimmer. Director ,
School of Dance. Ohio Universit y,
Athens, Ohio, 4o701, t614i o94 ~;,()91 .

. . ....,

TIME

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241 THIRD

WAYSIDE446-1830
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5 LB.

4 STICK POUND
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PATRICIT- Clarence W. Fulks,
74, Patriot, diedat10:40p.m. Friday
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Nov. 11, 1!0!, In Gallia
County, son of the late William E.
:and Alice Swindler Fulks, he was a
retired Ohio Depart men! of Trans·
· portation employee and attended
•Guy an Valley Baptist Church.
· He married Dorothy Bane on
Sept. 14, 1935, and she also preceded
him in death on April 13, 1980.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Leonard (Jennie! Seagren of
King George, Va., and Mrs. Donald
(Mary) While of Mechanicsville,
Md.; three grandchildren; three
brothers, Ross and Manford, both of ·
Gallipolis, and Shelly of Dayton;
.and two sisters, Zellla Elliott of Gal·
llpolis and Mary Brumfield of
Dayton.
A sister also preceded hinn in
death.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday in the Willis Funeral
' Home, with the Rev. Bob Madison
: offclatlng. Burial will be In Perkins
· Ridge Cemetery, Lawrence
: County. Friends may call at the fun·
. era! home !rom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
. Monday.

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JUMBO ROLL ·

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MIDDLEPORT~~ Mrs. MildredT.
Beeson, 91, Middleport, died Satur~
day at VeteransM emorialHospital.
Mrs. Beeson was born on June 2.'i,
18911n Middleport a daughterofthe
late Edgar N. and Elizabeth ! Liz~
zie l Michael Thompson. She was
also preceded in death by her hus~
band, Plummer Beeson; two broth~
ers, Griff and John Thompson, and
two sisters, Wilma Davis and Jen ~
nie Wise.
Mrs. Beeson had been a memher
of the Middleport First United Presybterian Church since childhood
and was a Sunday school teacher
ther e for 25 years. She had worked
as a clerk in the Michael Dry Goods
Store and had been a bookkeeper at
the Brady Lumber Co. in Middleport lor a number of years.
Surviving are three nieces, two
nephews, several great nieces.
great nephews and cousins.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rawlings· Coats ~
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Wanda Johnson officiating. Burial
will be in Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Monday.

'

BornJuly7, 1%8, in Montgomery,
Ala.. she was a 1980 gra du a l~ of the
University of Kansas. was em ~
played by Macy 's Department
Store as a buyer and most recently
was gener al restaurant managN of
the Hya tt Hotel in Anaheim, Calif.
Surviving is her father . Hugh of
Gallipolis; a stepmother. Vivian
Ann Kirke(; and two sisters, Jo
Alene Kirkel of Lawrenr~. Kark
and Andrea Lynn Kirkel of Novato,
Calif.
G rav~s id e services will he held in
San Clemente. In lieu of flowNs.
donations may be made to the
Holzer Hospital Foundation.

Clarence W. Fulks

U.S. NO. 1

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CLEVELA ND I AP 1 - Low ~cosl
power gen&lt;'r atl'd ar Niagara Falls Ls
fu chng anothrr battle between the
Clrvcland Electric Illuminating Co.
and the rtty ~ow nl'd Muny Light
plant .
CE I wa s clear ed of antitrust
charges last year following a
lengthy court battle. The city had
r laiml'd CE I was allempting to ille~
gall.v monopolize thesaleof elec tric ~
itv ln Cleveland .
· But in a lett ert o theNur lear Regu ~
Ia tory Commission last month, the
city said CEI has implied that it may
refuse to,transmit power gener ated
at Niagara Falls for Muny Light.
That. the city said , would be a viola~
lion of conditions included in CEI's
operating license for the $4 billion
Per ry nuclear power plant , which is
currently under construction.
June Wiener , Cleveland's chief
assistant law director. has asked an~
Utrust investigators of the federal
Nuclear Regulatory Commission to
check CET's request for possible
violations.
CEI officials hav(' denied any
violation.
The reques t to the NRC resulted
from' CEJ's attempt to enter hearIngs between Muny Light and the
Power Authority oftheStateof New
York, trom" which Muny has been
receiving the Niagara Falls power .
Muny Light officals are negotiat·
tng with the New York company for
contract renewa l and ar e seeking
an additional agreement in order ID
provide. power to ar eas outside
Cleveland.
On Sept. 9, however , CEI asked ID
Intervene In the hearings In an at·
tempt to buy a share of the power.
Muny Light officials say the Inter- t
ventlon represented another ati
tempt by CEI to put the city's utility
out of business. CEI has denied the '
charge.
·

Mildred T. Beeson

GALLIPOLIS - Beth Ellen Kir·
kel, 24, died Oct. 7 in San Clemente
(Ca lif ~ l Gener al Hospital of acrid·
f'ntal ca uses.

Middleport

Tests prove hidden child not retarded

Beth Ellen Kirkel

95, a native of Gallla County died

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
SUN.DAY
OCTOBER 10
SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
THROUGH
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Gallipo!S, Ohio ~ Phone 446-9593 SATURDAY
'We Reserve the Rigfll to ~~ Quantity''
OCTOBER 16

SAVE DOUBLE $$
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Pomeroy

Area deaths

rJ~i~ii~·····~~~~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~-~~~~--~=======~:::;::::::;::;:;~=~~'

1 01

10, 1982

• VINTON- Verna Gleason,Jack:son Street, Vinton, died Sahirday
: morning in Riverside Hospital,
. Columbus.
· Born July 26, 1903, In Gallia
County, daughter of the late George ,
~ and TUlle MillerCardwell, shewas a
' retired teacher at Vinton Elemen•tary School, a memberoftheGallla
:County and the National Retired
: Teachers' associations; attended
; vtnton United ·Methodist Church,
1 and was a member of the Sunshine
:Class, ~ the church UMW, Vinton
Order of the Eastern Star No, 375,
~ and the WhlteShrineJerusalemNo.
1949 of Gaillpolls.
, Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m . Monday In Vinton United
Metlxictist Church, with the Rev.
Frank Chesebrew and the Rev. C.J.
.Lemley o!flclatlng. Burial will be In
Vinton Memorial Park. Friends ·
may call at the McCoy-Moore Fun·
. era! Home. Vinton, from 5-8 p.m.
today.
Eastern Star services by Vinton
OES N01 375 wiD be htild in the fun·
era! bomeat7t45p.m. today.
• In lieu of flowers, contrlbutloliS
may be made to the church.
' tl
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-P~nt Pleasant, W. Va.
Page

A-6

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Need history., photos
By BOB HOEFLICH •
Pam Calla ha n who is working
with the David ·c:~ I'l.efsef and'Associates arc hitect ura l firm of At hens
In the Middleport
redeve lopmen t
projec t needs history and pictures
of the busi ness
community.

Pam would es!X'Cially like photographs of the
ra nging over a long period of time.
If you have some historical facts or
photographs which you would permit to be copied for th e st udy,
please call 992-6782 a nd leave a
message for Pam who will be in
Middlepon the nex t three Wednesdays and will cont act you to get it
a ll nail&lt;'&lt;i down .
Mothers-in -law have traditionally been cast in roles of being "the
bad guy." However. things are
turning around a nd this year on
Oct. 24 marks the first officia l observance of a holiday. Mothers-in-

Law Day - a nd this has been
establis hed by Congress.
Pomeroy Vil lage offices have
now been officially moved to the
new quarters a t the former Pomeroy Senior High School. Wednesday, Mayor Clarence Andrews
pert01·med his first wedding in the
new location. The couple excha nging vows with Mayor Andrews officiating were Donald Elson Stobart
of Pomeroy a nd Rita Jea n Carr of
Middleport .
A wave of letters from former
residents residing in various parts

of the rou ntrv has arrived acrmpanied by newspaper clippings detailing marijuana growi ng in Meigs
County. Residents are not pleased
wit h the publicity the county has
received . One read&lt;"!- a nd for mer
resident wr ites: "Just hard to believe that lhC' marijuana grown in

Meigs Count v is known halfway
arou nd the wor ld."
Mr. and Mrs. Lora in P. Sterrett
left the community Friday and they
will be missed. Lorain has been associa ted with Crow's Steak House

for manv yea rs and Harriet worked.
in the F~ltz law offi ces for quite
some time.
The Sterretts left Friday and wi ll
be residing at Wadswort h, Ohio,
close to their son. Bill. who helped

October 10, 1982

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

Two killed, 40 hurt in car-bus collision

Pan grease fire causes
$800
damage.~
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;

Beat of the Bend

Starcher said they were taken
sometime in the past week.

GALLIPOLIS- A fire a t a Jack-

them get parked and moved the
past WC&lt;'k.
Ama nd a Carrie Holmes, threemonth·old da ug hter of Mr. and
Mrs. Will iam Holmes, underwent
surgerv at Retrea t Hospita l in
Ric hmond, Va .. recen tly. ~he Is doing well and has been returned to
her home.
Amanda is the grea t granddaughter of Mr: and Mrs. Aaron Kelton, formerly of Meigs
Count y, and the gra ndda ug hter of
Kaaron Kelton Austin , a lso formerly of Pomeroy. And just to
round out the local angle, Ama nda's great -aunt, Rhea Lozier, R.N ..
and he r great -great -aunt, Martha
Shiveler. bot h formerly of Pomeroy, have also been on hand during
Amanda's problem.
Victor C. Young III. of Young's
Carpentry, Pomeroy, has been returned to his E. Main St. home from
Grant Hospital in Columbus where
he underwent serious eye surgery.
Victor was injured while worki ng
on a roof. He wi ll be returning to
Columbus frequently for follow-up
examinations in the next few
weeks.

The Ohio Society to Prevent
Blindness Is recommending that
parents decorate their Ha lloweeners with face paint rather th an using the traditional mask 'whi ch
often obstructs vision a nd damages
young eyes when not properly fitted. The society offers the following
recipe for face paint: two teaspoons
white shol1ening, fi ve teaspoons
corn starch, two teaspoons white
nour plus three or four drops of
glyceri ne to make the mixture
creamy. Food coloring, a drop at a
time, ca n prod uce a ny des ired
colors.

:~~:~~~::~~:~~ ~~~i~ ~~ cit:e~~~h~~~-ai:~M~::=t;~;;:

$800damage, according to the Gallipolis Fire Department.
The fire department was called to
the apartmen t of Julie Weaver a t
12:35 a.m. , where a pan had overheated, igniting grease.
Several cabinets in the kitchen
ca ught fire, firefig hters said .
E ighteen firemen responded to
the call and stayed about one hour.
In ot her news, two recent thefts
were reported to the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department.
Marcella Taylor told deputies a
cassette player a nd two speakers
were stolen from her car sometime
Thursday night.
The car was parked on BulavillePorter Road when the Incident occurred. Valueofthecassette player
and speakers was set a t $lXl.
A cha in saw and come-along are
missing from the Texas Road residence of Archie Starcher. the depart men I reports.

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MON., OCT. 11, 1982
WITH REGULAR HOURS All DAY
TO SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS
BETIER!!

a

•
HO\IIECOMING QUEEN - 1982 Point Pleasant High School
;- Homecoming Queen Jackie UDy, daughter of Mr. \llld Mrs. CharHe
:., Ully, Point Pleasant, gets her crown adjusted by Stephanie VanV~ ranken, cheerleader. Principal Ralph Sayre crowned Miss UDy. Plc1' tured crown bearer Is Brandl Casto and Miss LUiy's escort, Robbie

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, SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - The
Oounty coroner says a baby who
~ed after her parents had her dell. ).'ered under water probably would
have lived Ifdelivered under more
ionventional conditions.
: Birth under water, a relatively
(lew
o! delivering babies, Is
to make birth less trau!Mtlc for the Infant.
_
,-. "It · was a perlectly nonnal,
{jealthy little girl," Spokane County
€oroner Lois, Shanks said Thursday. "There's no reason why she
ltould not have lived."
'Jj Tile Infant died Sept. 4 as she was
~livered tn a whirlpool at a Spohealth club owned by the

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been concluded, said pollee Detective Mike Schmidt.
A large tub filled with sterile water and kept at a regulated tempera·
ture Is supposed to simulate the
mother's womb. The child remains
In theaquaticenvironmentandsupposedly adjusts to the oulslde world
whUestlllconnectedtotheumbllical
cord.
Attributing the Infant's death to
the type o! delivery used, Ms.
Shanks said the chUd was probably
under water tor too long aod was
unable to "aerate'' her lungs when
removed !rom the water.
The Infant's death certtficate attributes the death to cardiac arrest,
not drowning.
Ambulance crews were called to
the health taclllty when the child's
!ather and several others were unable to get the chUd to breathe, said
Ms. Shanks.

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Ball for Representative, Bob Evans, Chairman, Bidwell, Ohio 45614

-

HANNAN HOMECOMING- Donna Hodges, daughter of!"· an~

tuppoied

r ! V FH

Buzz
Ball
state representative

19" CUSTOM SERIES TV• Y1904

lJnderwater
birth proves fatal
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:· Mrs. Glen Hodges, MOton, was crvwaal Mlll8 WUdcat ~~ Frld YnJg
' . a&amp; Hannan's Homeeomlng. Left, Is her escort, Douglas Sturgeon, son of
.: Mr. and Mrs. James Sturgeon, Ashton.

SPECIAL

three were transferred to Sealy in
fair condition, Ms. _McDonald said.
The bus, carrying the school's pep
squad, booster club a nd sponsors.
was returning to Ga lveston after a
football game in Clear Creek.

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• Real miser on electricityhot water-detergent

Thirty-six -~le from the bus,
including the driver, Marlene Canton, were taken to Sealy Hospital,
spokeswoman Linda McDonald

said. Five, Including Ms. Canton,
were admitted tn!alrcondltion with
cuts and brul,ites, she said.
Four students were taken to
County Memorial Hospital in Texas
City. Onewasreleased aod the other

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Prizes

1

SOUTHERN QUEEN - Miss Tonja Salser, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Salser, Racine, was crowned as the 1982 Southern High
School Homecoming Queen during a fine homecoming ceremony at
halftime of the Southern-Southwestern game Friday evening. QueenTonja's escort was Robbie Cunningham, son of Mr. and-Mrs. Robert
Cunningham, S:vracuse.

Ita! here saki the teen-ager was

~ad on a~val

~

TV- CARPET

APPliANCES

GALVESTON, Texas (AP) -A
high school bus returning troni a
football game collided with a
lngsp!rtscar, careened off a bridge
aod plunged 2D teet, ldlllng a teenage passenger and tnjurlng 40 oJ~~ers, ot!lclals said Saturday.
·
Also killed was the driver of \he
car, whtchwitnessessaldwasweavtngthrough heavy traffic on theGIIIvestQn ~useway bridge alJ9Ut
11: 15 p.m . FI1day when it slarnn1ed
Into the left side of the bus, then ~II
ott the bridge into Galveston Bay.
County divers, aided by thtee
Coast Guard cutters, pulled the
wreckage of the black sports car
!rom the bay three twrs later and
found thedriver'sbodytnstde, Coast
Guard Petty Officer Matthew Walter said. He said the driver's naQ1e
was beinlz withheld.
A sheriff's dispatcher who did not
want to be ldenttfled said early today divers were searching for 'second car that might have !allen l!lto
the bay. He said ft also was unclear
whether there were any passengers
In the sports car.
.
The dead bus passenger was ldentlfk!d as Josephine Temple, 14, o!
Galveston, a student at Ball High
School, which operated the bus. Dr.
Michael Warren, dlrecor of the

SWI!fV-

OHIO VALLEY BANK

ELLIOTT'S

Congratulations to Herbert Rei bel, acti ve Pomeroy resident, who
marked his 89t h birthday last Monday ... he's do ing wel l.
St udies are showing that we're
dri nklng more alcoholic beverages
as the economy worsens. Seems
like it wou ld be more logical to use
that money to pay the m ou nting
bills_ Oh, we ll. On the brigher s ide, .
laws apparently are goi ng to be
changed to protect the victim of
crimes and a lot of ex tra-strength
Tylenol has gone down the drain
loca lly. So do keep smiling ...

State Highway Patrol as the result
of separate collisions Investigated
Friday.
The patrol cited Kevin D. Jewel,
22. Rutland , fo r falling to kl'ep assured clear distance after an accident on Meigs County Road 3 a t
11 :29 a.m.
Bernice Nelson, 71, Rutland was
slowing for an oncoming bus when
her car was reportedly struck In the
rear by Jewel's car.
Ira Barcus, 28, Gallipolis, was
cited for OWl after a two-car comslon on Mlll Creek Road just north of
Ga llipolis a t 11:45 p.m . Frtday.
According to the pairol, Barcus
was backing from a driveway when
he s truck a southbound vehicle
driven by James D. Taylor, 37,
Ga llipolis.
Taylor's vehicle was slightly
damaged and Barcus' vehicle was
undamaged.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-7

MODEL 411

WE HAVE SERVED THE
AREA FOR OVER 46 YEARS!

lnstltlled

Now-$1299 ' -

THIRD &amp; PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS
PHONE 446-3733

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZAGALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446 8051
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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-8051

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Page-A·&amp;-

October 10, 1982

Deputies
checking
incidents

the river

'iim.es"' i.entin:el

Section~

October 10, 1982

The Bob Evan• Farm Festival Is
held annually to remind people of
the Early AmerlclUltradltlons that
are such an Important part of our
heritage. Visitors are reminded of
days gone by through old-fll,hioned
entertainment Wid tr-.ulitior".

POMEROY --Meigs County sheriff's deputies repo11 s his depart ment investi ga ted a hit -skip
accident Friday afternoon on the
Wolf Pen Road .
Accordin g to the repot1, George
H. Hart . 20, near Shade, was traveling nm1 h on the road at a high rateof
speed in his pickup truck which ran
off the leftsideof the road striking a
bush and mail box at the Arthur Jar\'is r esidence. The vehicle then
stt1lck and broke off a utility pole.
Hart was ja iled on charges of driving while intox ica ted and hit-skip.
Ther e were heavy damages to the
IP!t fi·ont of his vehicle.
Walter A. Ellis, Ru tl and, was
cited to Meigs County Cout1 on a
crimina l mischief charge after t1lnning his brother' s car through a
fence at the race track of the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Friday. Ellis
had been driving on the track and a
local horse owner shut the gate at
the track attempting to block the
vehicle in .
Investiga tion is alsocQilt inuingon
a breaking and entering of the Thomas Gannaway home at Rout e 2,
Vint on. A number 'or items taken
from the home have been r ecovered
and two suspects, brother s, ar e being held in the Lawrence County jail
after being arrested late Wednesday night. Names are being withheld pending filing of charges.
Also a Harley-Davidson motorcycle padlock has been found on State
Route 338outsideof Racine. Anyone
miss ing this typo of padlock may
contact the sheriff's office.

Bob Evans
Farm Festival

.'Vormal class hours
resume at school
\' INT ON - Vinton Elementar:c
School will resume norma l school
times Monday. accordin g to Jim
Chest nut , building principal.
Tht· school had been on split session' since Sept . 30 to relie,-e 1he
burden on teachers and student s
who han• been holding classes in
\'inlon 'sgymnasium .
The student s. ptimarily in grades
1-l wer(' removed from four porta ble classrooms at the school site
Sept . 14 aft er the Ohio Department
of Health found high levels of form aldehyde gas being emitted from
panelling. carpeting and glue holding down the carpeting.
(;allii! County Loc·al School Dis- ,
trict offi cials said Thursda)· if tes ting done mrl ier last week on the
Vinton portables and two at Nm1h
Gallia High School showed forma ldehvde levels had reduced, split sess io~s would be ended immediately.

RIO GRANDE- M.o re than 125 artisans-with dt•monstratiom;
varying from chair seat weaving and candle-making to jewelry
craftwork and glassblowing-are in Rio Grande this weekend to
exhibit at the 12 Annual Bob Evans Farm Festival.
Thousands of people travel to southeastern Ohio each day of the
three day event-which con('ludes today-and their agc~s and intt&gt;rt&gt;sts
are as wide and varied as the artisans featured at the festival.
According to the sponsors of the festival, the purpose of tht&gt; annual
weekend event is " ... to remind people of the Early Ameri(•an traditions that are such an important part of our heritage."

Enwrgc•ney runs
POMEROY--Three ca lls were
answered by local emergency units
Friday evening, the Meigs County
F mcrgcncy M edi ca l Serv ice

rPports.
At 7: 08 p.m .. lhe Pomeroy Unit
went to Rou tes 7 and 143 for Cathy
Manley and Lora ine Venoy, injured
in an auto accident. They were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospita l. Pomer oy treated Steve Ca udill
at the Meigs Stadium and Racine
took Richard Lyons from the Southern football stadium to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL

of more than 125 artisans who demonstrate their
crafts and sldlls durliig the festival. A.mong the crafts .

Banker guest speaker

demonstrated are sUversmlthbtg, dulcimer making,
lll!lther bumlng, antique photography and chair can-

MIDDLEPORT-- Roger Watson,
commercial loan officer of Bank
One of Southeas tern Ohio, Athens.
was speaker when the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club met in regu lar session Frida y night at Hea th
Cnited Methodi st Chu rch in
Middleport .
Introduced by Paul Barnet1, presiden1 of Bank One of Pomeroy, Wa tson spoke on leasing plans as a
alternative financing plan in contras t to purchasing such items as
aut omobiles, business equipment
etc.
Roger Luckeydoo, vice president ,
pres ided over the meeting in the
absence of Pres ident Dr. R. R.
Pickens.

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Titis is the farm festival's 12th sc!lo;on, and it's no
different: there is something for everyon&lt;'- Tires&lt;&gt;
youthhtJ s j&gt;ectators, for example, ru-e watching IlK&gt;
tobacco spitting contest.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted --Timothy Hysell. Ra cine: Calhy Manley, Middleport :
Rlchard L yons, Racine.
D!scharged-'Robert Scarberry,
Lawrence Scarberry, Jr .. Helene
Sayre, Wllllam Long. William East . erday, Eva Conkie, I rv in Miller,
: Patsy Laudermilt.

Perfonning the old· time art of clogging, a dance 1n which a distinct
rbytlun Is beat out hy foot, are the
Great Smokey Mountain Cloggers.
The Midnight Plow Boys, with a full
range of IMtnunentatlon, accom·
pany I~ cloggers.

Boosters to meet
The Eastern Athletic Boosters

wUl m eet Monday at7: llatthe High
: School.

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Octobner 10, 1982

Plans parenthood class
GALLIPOLI S - THe next parenthood classes offered by Holzer
Clinic Ltd. Obstetrical Department
wUI begin Monday and Tuesday,
Oct. 19 and 20, 1982 and held from 7
to 9 p.m . These classes are In series
.of slx , which when completed enabe

SAVE 10% TO 30%
TOPE'S CUSTOM DRAPERY
OCTOBER SALE
FREE MEASURING
FREE DESIGN HELP
FREE INSTALlATION
ALL WINDOW TREATMENTS ON SALE
Drapery
10%-30% Off SALE
Sheers
20% Off ENDS
Wooden Shades
20% Off OCT 23
Metal Btinds
20% Off
.
Vertical Blinds
20% Off

FURNITURE
Mlw GALLERIES

-r

COMMliTING A DOGGONE DRAG - It takes a sharp eye and a
steady hand to fight the traffic, and mayhe two set.' of eyes are better

RJce will be his lasr
LOS ANCELES tAPt - ' Mark Thatch&lt;'r, son of British Prime
MinisiC'r Margarf'l ThatchPr. sa~·s an UIX'Oming off-road auto race in
Mexico will IX' his last.
La st .Januarv . That cher . :!H. disap!J('ared for S&lt;'veral days in the
Sahara d&lt;'S&lt;'rl ·a fter his ca r broke down in the Paris-Dakar rally .
In the EnS('nada -to-La Paz rae&lt;' next month , he'll be driving a
four-whe&lt;'i -drive Dodge pickup over l.fXXl miles of re mote territory
1n the sjxtrsc·ly populatro western IJ('ninsu ia of M c'xico.
"Motor sports ha\·e been vet"\' good to me. I just have a lot of other
things 1 want to do ... sa id Ttwt cher. het·e Frida)' to promole the Baja
('\'('111 .

HC' deniC'd his d('(_· i ~ion to qu it ra c ing wa s innuf'nre&lt;l by ronce m
over his Sf'Curit\' and would not Sit \' w hether he had t1'Cei ved a death
threat from tho• Irish Republican Atmv .

Ruse: nor conrrovers ial
C I :-.IC I :--1~ ,\ Tl 1A P 1 -

PPte Rost' . one uf the scrappiest players in
ba S&lt;'ball . savs he'll lea,·e the hard hitting behind in his new off-

SC'ason rQ\('

as a t('\C'vision sports n:-poner and commentator.

" I won't IX' a controvPrsial g1..1~· ." said Rose. first baseman for the

By Aileen Clair e

NEA Food Editor
A new generation of cooks, ones
with less time to spend in the kit chen. are discoveting the uses of

pressure cookers. This is a moist
heat method of cooking and helps
turn less- tender cu ts of meat into
more tender fare.
A.' a general ru le, depending
upon the recipe ingredi ents, a pressure cooker is three to 10 tim£&gt;s faster than cooking with conventional
mel hods .
BEEF ROAST WITH
,JUlJENNE VEGETABLES
1 pound boneless rump roast
Salt and pepper
2 tablespoons fl our
2 tablespoons cook ing oil
I cup chopped onion
1 ~ cup dry red w ine
] ~ cup water
Jt\1 to 1 cup each julienne carrots.
ce lery, green beans and tu mips
Sprinkle roast wit h salt and
pepper; dust wi th fl our. Flrown

Philadelphia Phillles and a former member of the Cincinnati H.eds.
"I won't put anyone on the spot , or anything."
Don North, news director at WKRC-TV, said the station gave Rose
a one-year contract for an undisclosed amount without asking him to
audition because station officials were impressed with the way he
handles everyday interviews.
Rose starts work Monday in an agreem ent that calls for 25 stories
during the off season.
Rose played for the Reds from 1963 to 1978 before going to the
Phlllies as a free agent. He still m akes his home in Cincinnati.

Thinking over offer
PH ILADELPHIA tAP I - The music director of the Philadelphia
Orchestra, Riccardo Muti, is mulling a futu re job offer from London's Royal Opera House, but says It won 't affect his work here.
" I am ex tremely happy with my relationship with the Philadelphia Orchestra, its wonderful musicians, board of directors and
m anagement," Muti said Friday. Many musicians have served as
music director In more than one city simultaneously.
The London offer , made by the opera house's chief administra tor,
Sir John Tolan, was announced this week.
If Mull accepts the job, he would start in the 1986-87 season when
the current director, Sir Colin Davis, 55, steps down.

r

Preparing pressure
cooker beef roast
mra I in cooking oil in pressure
cooker. Add onions and brown . Add
wi ne and water and stir to deglaze.

Close pressure cooker cover secure ly. Place pressure cooker
cover securely. Place pressure regulator on vent pipe. Cook 30 minutes at 15 pounds pressure. Cool

pressure cooker at once. Re move
pressure regu lator and open pressure cooker. Put julienne vegeta bles in 4 individual foil boats and
arrange around roa st. Do not fill
pressure cooker over two-thirds
full. Close pressure cooker cover secut·ely . Place pressure regulator on
ve nt pipe and cook until pressure
regulator attains a rocking action
only. L et pressure drop of Its own
accord . Remove pressure regulator and open pressure cooker. Rem ov~· v-:ge tabies and
roast.
Remaining liquid may be made
into gr avy by thickening wi th 1 tablespoon flour dissolved in 2 tablespoons water. Thi s kitchen-tested
recipe makes 6 servings.

11•1

CORNER SECOND AT

OR. GEORGE W. DAVIS
OPTOMETR IS T · - - - -

of High Blood Pressure
You're probably aware of the
dangers of high blood pressure
to your health. how It can som etimes lead to heart disease or
stroke if not properly controlled .
You may not be aware that signs
of this serious condition can also
become evident during an eye
examination.
High blood pressure causes a
narrowing of the retinal arteries. There m ay also be a change
in proportion between the width
of. the arteries and that of the
veins, or indentation of the veins
by arteries which lie acr oss
them . Or there m ay be small
areas of herm orrh age, swelling,
accumulated nuld or atrophy in
the reti na. or a !sight swelling of
the optic nerve. There are m any
other signs of high blood pres-

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sure that your eye doctor can detect during an examination.
With medical treatment , blood
pressure can be reduced along
with the symptoms and the
thr ea t of m ore ser i o u s
consequences.
Having regular eye examinations not only helps to correct
problems that Interfere with
your vision, it can also help Identify other health problems that
need trea tment.

SANDWICHES

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Stall

say at 7::10p. m .

Just bark from Bella Vista. Ark ..
where they attended the :139th Inl antry Division, World War II,
reunion are M argaret and
Bailey. The reunIon was hosted by
Capt. Clay ton Little and about :,oo
attended.
To mak~ it a
rea l vaca tion , the
couple then tro•vPt,.n to Tulsa.
Okla. , wher~ they toured Oral Roberts University and then went on
to Houston , Texas to SeL' the Space
Center and the Astrodom~. before
l~avlng for Memphis, Tenn . and a
tour of the home of E lv is Presley.
And just the week before that,
Margaret was joined by her thrf'&lt;'
children and a grandchild for a trip
to Boynton &amp;&gt;ach, Fla. to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh Daniel. Margaret,
Debra Mullen and Ian, and Brenda
HyS&lt;'II. drove down and theri were
joined there by Keith, who new.
They took in m any sights Including
Dlsneyworld and St. Augustine.
No. Harry didn't just stay home.
He joined som e friends for a trip to
Canada.

Som~how appl~ butt~r mad~ ih
iron kettles ov~r o)X'n flr~s tastes
bett er . Several churches w ill IX'
making appl~ butt~r this week as
w~ll as the Senior Citizens Center ,
so you might get your order In if
you're Interested .

*******

111 lh e 1ntere~t of befl er vision

I rom I he oHice o f

already, Halloween parlies ar~ with us.
The Auxiliary of the Middleport
Fire Departm~nt held one Wednesday night with Nan Moore. longtime Middleport teacher. doing th~
judging. Th~ prize winners- M ary
Lou Hawkins, the prettiest : Debbie
Meadows, the most original: and
Ca thy Pow~ ll . the ugliest.
Quite a nice surprise for the 4-H
advisors att ending a recognition
banquet Tuesday night were the
p!'rsonalized mugs pres&lt;'nted to
each one.
Too often the advisors - and
clubs couldn 't do without them get lost In the awards of the
members. Not that they complain;
but isn't It nice when they get some
deserved recognition.

Firemen plan
fall carnival

while they m ay not have massmarket appeal, will hook any bright
adolescent. McKinley, the author of
" Beauty," an entertaining fictionalIzation of the fairy tale "Beauty and
the Beast," has launched an excit ing new series with her latest fant asy , " Th e Blue Sword"
( Greenwlllow) .
The story .combines advmtur~.
romance and connie! betwf'&lt;'n the
forces of good and eviL McKinley

breaks for a waliro city or lak~ refug~. draw one righ t into the book.
The tone of high narrative is injected with bits of sharp humor.
lending contemporary ap!J('ai to honorablt&gt; old modes.
Lloyd A lexander. on th~· oth~r
hand. questions some of that onc~­
upon-a-time chivalry wit h his lat~ s t
S&lt;'ries. Th~ firsl volume. " West -

specializes In daring, Intelligent herolnes, to which the protagonist
here, Harry Crewe, adds grea t
physical prowess and unsuspected
magical powers that save the army
she leads into batUe. Her king- and
eventual husband - Is more than a
m atch in strength and wisdom. an
appealing combination after some
of the anti-heroes lionizl'd in recent
literature.
McKinley has a gift forcharacterizing animals and describing landscape in vivid terms. The war horses
and hunting cats are as distinct as
the people, while the des&lt;'rt and
mountain settings, with occasional

mark," fea tures a first -class advepturestory starring Thea, Nickle and
their colorful comrades of the road.
But "The Kestrel " (Du tton) Is a si'·
que! that ~xpoS&lt;'ssomeoftheeffecJs
of thoS&lt;' swashbuckling bat tles fH ·
vorro in high fantasy . The plot atid
sty le arc ~ ll'gan t and somelim('s
humorous, bu t the anti-war the rn~
ca n IX' loat h-grinding at times. ·

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Make
Her
Day.
Send The Preserves Jar or
."
Salt Box Bouquet
Fbr MotherIn-Law's Day.

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But whf' n w :1:-. l hf' la s t tinw
told tlpr '! .lu s t s c• nfl thf'
rn'S('t'\ 't'S .l;tr or Salt Hox

c·o mt · in hc&lt;;nJtilul pon·t•Llin
contotint•r s with cb :-.:-.i(' hluf'
clf'll"l th·sign s to m.d.; t• tllt 'St'
ciC'Ii g htful kl't ' p .... ;d.; t· gi lt :-..
.lus t t·; lll or \'i.., it ou r :-. hop ,nHl ...__ _.._\"tlll C'; tn ... t ~ nd !hi:-. houqu('l ;tlrno:-.1 ; tn_
\ W IH •t t' i n lht•l . S. :\"k tw
llw l ' n 'SPtYt'S . l;tr tit' S; tlt Box Bouqut •l. Ht •t ', lll " t ' H·ith
Pompro_,. Flo\\·pr Shop. the • flow f'r ... ;tlw; t\'" t'Orllt' in
:-.omt' lh ing a s pn~ tt .\ · ;ts lhf' fl owf'rs tht ·mst•h·t·....

Sears he.avy -duty powder
laundry detergent re moves more soli than th~
nation s leading deter Qent . At Se.ars Service
Centers .and retail stores .

Mother-In-Law's Day, Sunday, October 24.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

·Th•· \\':1\· ,\nw• ic.1 St·nd -.. l .n\·t•"
106 Butternut Ave
PH . 992 2039

Pomewv.

or 992 572 1

OH

" We A ccept All MaJo r Cred11 Cards . and

L~===========1!=:==~W~i~re~F~Io~w~e~rs~A~I~m~o~st~E~v~m~yw~he~··~·~·====~~~~~:::Jl_

Charisma
chair event!
-~·1

Phone4i6-~

.IIIDIII.· In~IIS.

f SCHULT MOBILE HOMES t
16X60 and 14X68
t
t
82' and 83' MODELS
t
MOBILE HOMES
t, 3411K&amp;K
Jackson Are. 675·3000 -- Point Plea---t'

9 am til 9:30

substantial savings on
classic elegance
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TRADE IN YOUR OLD
WO·RNOUT TREADS
AND GET A ssoo REBATE

.

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unexcelled
for value. at

$12995

save even more .. buy twa far 239.95
Here\ .tn ouht.t tHJing opportunit y to en joy '&gt; PCLi. d '&gt;.t vi ng~ on
bc.tutilul tr.tdition .tl JCCl'nt ( h.tir .... l .tLh .t tl.t'&gt;'&gt;iL dt'" IJ!.Il with .til
c lcgJn l lrui t wood fini sh lr.tme .tnd d i ~ tim. tiv c c.utL' ~ ide.... L.tt h
craf ted for cndmin g lu xuty by I .UlltJU\ Ch.tri..,m.t Clt. tir . LtLit .t
&lt;:,Upcrb va lu t. : wr. tppcd up in co lorful , t.trc lrcc ve lvet.

comes to Rio Grande
;~

~f:Jf!_

f;;;~

11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
ALL THE PIZZA &amp;SALAD
YOU CAN EAT

' $349

Jeanie, Ohio Valley Bank's automatic teller
is now at the Rio Grande Branch for your
convenience. Jeanie makes your everyday
banking easier, quicker, and trouble-free ..
bei:au.e Jeanie is an automatic teller that
work's around the clock for you making
•· c:Uh.withdrawals, deposits, giving account
~; balances. aceefJ\ing loan payments and

Bring in your worn-out or outgrown athletic shoes and
we'll alow you $5.00 towards the purchase of any
athletic shoe in stock.

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JEANIE CARD
at any of

, year. You can make loan payments or dep-

J.nlnln

Oiits at any hour that is convenient. You .

Valley Bank's ·

High back

Four Locations

TRADE-IN GOOD ON MEN'S, CHILDREN'S
SHOES IN STOCK.

chair in

striped

••

I' p.m.

@~.~~;,Y,~.~~Yb~nk

•

Tues. Wtcl. Thur. &amp; Sit.

l'l•mb., : FDIC

•
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Get Your Personal

:. · Wrtf! Jeanie you can get cash from any of
your accounts. 24 hours a day, 365 days a

OFFER EXPIRES SAT., OCT. 16th

Store
lon. &amp; Fri. til

ROUTE 35

'

"", more.

CHILDREN UND.ER 6 YEARS

Sl,99

ca!' find out your balance on any account.
any time you want to. Plus. you don't even
have to be in Rio Grande, because you can
do most of th8se things when you're in
Gallipolis or any other city that has Jeanie..
All it takes is an account at Ohio Valley Bank
and your own personal Jeanie card. Now in
Rio Grande there's another reason to bank
with Ohio Valley Bank.... Jeaniel

Jeanie has come to Rio Grande!

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STORE HOURS:

"Special October Sale"

~"

l ~ouqut' l . l ~ot l l t·xJLUIUI'I ...

Geerge W. Davis, O.D.
458Second Ave., Gallipolis

Sunday Special

·sPRING VALLEY PLAZA

Alr~ady,

ture today Is th~ Increase in fiction
aim ed at adolescents. Teenage romance series such as Wildfire 1Scholastic) or Sweet Dreams (Bantam)
have proved that with proper packaging and promotion, young-adult
books ca n sell like records and lipstick. But what about quality? Is It
ali strictly escapist fa re?
In the 1960s and '70s, the rage was
problem novels- realistic portrayals of teens suffering through their
parents' divorces , their own sexual
problems, gangs, drugs, physical
unattractiveness of disabilities.
Now, wit~ a less rebellious generation, romances such as those m entioned above have taken hold, but
fortunately, so have much more
challenging classic stories.
Robin McKinley, Lloyd Alexander and Virginia Hamilton are all
fine writers whose latest books,

ap-

DONELLI'S
PASTA - PIZZA

By BETSY·HEARNE
American Uhrary As.'ill.
A m ajor trend in juvenile litera-

MERCERVILLE - The Guyan
Volunteer Fire Departrn~nt w ill
hold a fall fund -raising camival at
Hannan Trace High School
Sa turday.
The funds will go to completing
It can't be time to think about the d~pa rtment 's building, which is
Christmas, what with Hallowe&lt;'n al!'l'ady standing but needs insulaWhen Donna Boyd went to the
and Thanksgiving between. and th~ tion, heat and other necessities
Columbus Airport to m f'&lt;'t her pentemperatures hovering In th~ S&lt;'V·
. pal, Val Hunt of Leicester. Enginstalled .
enties. Or can it ?
An old~r fire truck has been purland. coming here for a two-week
Meeting this week to plan the an- chased, but th~ department also
visit. who should she see st rolling
nual holiday flower show w~r~
needs a tank truck to haul water.
through the airport but one of her
·
members of the Meigs County
One of the department's goa ls ts to
favorit e soap stars. It was "Sonny"
Garden Clubs. and on the same day · beabletoraiS&lt;'enoughmoneytobuy
of Search for Tomorrow.
Middl ~ p or t
a nd Pom e roy
Val Is enjoying her visit and will
fir&lt;' coa ts. hats and boots for thC'
Chambers of Commerce members
. be here another week before going
volunteers. Each outfit will cost
got together to discuss one grand
proximately $220.
home.
The carniva l's activities w ill
parade to usher in t~e SC'ason.
Being everywhere and being evrather than the usual two.
begin at 10 a. m . with a shooting
erything to everyone seE'm s to be
m atch. Lunch will IX' s&lt;'rvf'd at
The nower show date was s~t for
the candidates' goal In these few
Dec. 4 and o at the Rutland Civic noon. and games are slatro to begin
weeks before election.
Center and the theme will IX'
at 4 p.m . and end at H p.m . Som~
One place where many will be
" Christmas In the Count ry." The
games involvro w ill be dart balmaking an appearance Is the fifth
show Is more than flower arra n g~­
loons, frisbee throw. fish pond and
annual Candidates Night to be held
ments, it's cor sages, gift wrapping,
4-by-4 stamper pulls.
at the Senior Citizens Center on Oct.
An auction, country store. gos!J('I
wall hangings, decorations and
21. The Center uses it as a fund sing will also be held, in addition to a
raiser and Invites the public to-· cra fts.
bean and cornbread dinner at 4 p.m .
come and eat anything between
Now have a nic~ w('('k!
For furth~r informa tion. call 2."&gt;64::10 and 6:30p.m . and tht&gt;n hang In
672!l.
to hear what the ca ndidates have to

than one. In any event, this pooch has his eyes pealed for road hogs as he
zips along a Toledo street with his owner, Mrs. Nancy Sasse. (AP
Laserphoto).

-Sunday People-----------.

Teen writing to be enjoyed by all age groups

Community Corner
Southern state
visit comes to end

present during the dellbery of tiM!
Infant.
•
•
The cost Is $40 per couple. For
registration Infor m ation, call
Becky Sanders, R.N., course !Jt-.
structor, at 446-2509 after 5 p.m. or
on weekends, or Karen Wam sley In
health
at 446-5278.
'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- S-3

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

October 10, 1912

I

Phone
446-1405

842 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

�Page-B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

&lt; ;AI.I.IOLIS Wf'dd ing plans
h;l\·0 llr'&lt;'n compli'!Pd for !he marri ag&lt;' of TrrPsa L. C'hamlx'rs.
claughler of Flo.vd and Rulh
Chamber&gt; of (;a ll ipol is. lo Chrislophr•r .J. Elliol!. son of Emmell
anrl l&lt;l0anor l&lt;llioll . "l so of
(;"llipoli&gt;

Tht • CP tHllon_
\ · wi!J t;lkf' pl acf' on
Oct. ~:\ &lt;~I ~: .'\11 p .rn . at Hcxlnt•\ · L1ni 1C'd M ctht ld ist ( 'hurch, Hodt~f' \ ' . .- \
h ~ilf - ll o ur of prr -nuptial mu sic. will
pr&lt;'Ct'dt' tht' cr tT' m On\ IX'ginning at
~ p. m .

thP f'n gagcrnf'nl and ftt r! lwtmli ng
m~rTiagr nf thd r d ~ t U)..:ill t T ...\n
clrf'a .Ia to Scot! Do ug Lt-. :\.lil lt·r · tll
Ri n Crandi' . MiiiPr j _..., ! ht· '-On lll l&gt;r
:1nd Mrs. Rudolph i\·l lll tT til ~ k n 1
phis. Tt •nn .
( 'cxlk is ~~ g rad u.tlt• of ( ;;!l li; t
Af'adrm _
\ · High Sehoul :t nd .1 iunitW
at Hi u &lt; ;ra ndc· Col lt ·gP. ~h t • i_.... t•rn
pl o~·N.l ar lht · Ro b 1 -: , · :w~ Sau .. . :q::t·
Shop in H io &lt;;ra nch' \ li llt •r j_.., , 1
g radu dh' of' &lt;;Pner:ll Mc l .an t· 1\i gh
SchOo! in l·~ dinboro , P tL, t~ nd \\' P:-.1

Vi rg inb \\'f's lt •_,·; tn Col l&lt;&gt;g t •. ll f' is di
r f'&lt;.'I Or of collf'gl' rf' lar inns :t l Hi tt
( ;randt • CoJif'gf' d!HI ( 'omu ni l \ '
CoiiPgP.
A Ff'bruat;: wf'dclin g is fJLtnnt·cl.

-

-

~

,

ATHENS - Anthony Lewis. New
York TlmPS columnist and twice
winner of the Pulitzer Prize. will
give a Kennl'dy Lecture on Thursday at R p.m. In Morton 201 on the
Ohio University campus.
ThP Iitle of his free public l('('lut'l'
is "The Press and The Law."
Lewis won his first Pulitzer Prize
in 19:15 for a S('rl!'s of &amp;rticlcs h!'
wrol e for The Washing\on Dally
News aboul lhedismissal of a navv
employee for security purposes.
TheS(' articles ll'd 10 the employee' s
reinsl atemenl and became the basis for !he movie "Threc Brave
Men."

l&lt; r\·. Elwood D;tug ht f' n · of
Apo llo. P~L . unl'lt' of 11lf' bride·. will
j)f'rfor m lhl' C&lt;'rPm o m ·. Ellrn
[bu g hll · r~ · . aunr of thp bridt', \\'ill
/)(' oq.:::;rni sl , and r3arb. rr~ t Scali , St.
l't·!l ·rs hur g, Fl:r. . aunt of thf'
J-.:t'On lll . \rill b(' suloist.
Tlw r u:-; tom of tl fX' n c hurch w i ll
tx• obs('!'\'f'(] &lt;tncl ; 1 l'&lt;'Crption will
fo llt m· 1ht' Cf'n 'nHm.\' in 1ht• n•cf'P·
lltJ!l morn 1Jf tht ' chu rl'll .

Sh iveler-Petrak
I'OMFIUl\' - ~it all() Mr, .
( ;pnq:::P Shi\·l'lt'r .l r . Ci nc inn;tl i.

Lew is won his second Pulit zf'r

Prize for his cov0ragc of the Supreme Court while working for the

CAI.I.II'OI.I S -

Tu

OJX' Il

1110

~ ~ ~r:~ - s.·1 st·a . . on of thr Tri -Count v

Commun i!_\ Cnnct'rt A ssociati o ~
rnrmtX' r s will hf'ar thf' pia no art is:
tr~· of 1-:a r ll \os &lt;'. w ho, a s a pianist.
comJ.Xlscr ;~nd conduc tor. brin gs to
hi s cnnn' rts &lt;t prrformancf' w hi ch
is &lt;~ s di\·f' rs&lt;' as lhf' munv act iv ili&lt;'s
of hi s mu sic al C'&lt;Hf'f'r . Ros(' w ill!; •

\ · l'f'sidt ·nts . ;tn• an ltll'tnf'r Pomt·m _
nou nci ng lhf' t'ng; tg&lt;'t1lt'nl of thf' ir
d. tugllh' r .. l ;t_\- nt• .-\nn . to Thom:t s
l 't 'ILTk . Pf' tr: tk is tht' ... On of M r. ;rncl
:\l rs
CPtHg(' P t· t r a k. Nu nh
Olm.., tt '&lt; l.
T he \rPdding \\'ill be h&lt;'i cl [)('(·. II
in C"llipolb Oc! 17 a! :1 p.m . pPr:11 Sr. P;tul 's Churc h. CIC\ 'l'land .
f0rtning &lt;II C ; tllit.~ A cacl('l11\' High
Shi\·pJr r l'('t'f'i \' t'(] hrr R.S. and M. S. Sc hool Audit orium .
dt 'gr f'f's in S IX'ci~ll edu ca li fl n from
l ~ost • cli\·idf's his !itnC' am ong solo
th&lt; • l 'ni \'l't 'si 1_
\ · of Cincinnati ;rnd is
&lt;tnd s.\·rnp honk ,(,ruf'st apJ..H' a r~1 ncPs.
now Pmpln_
n"'fl b\ Prin cC't On Sctl nol
~wtin _g on manv O('ca sions as tht •
Di sr r irt llt'r fia nce' I'C'CI'i \'Pd his ;rss is!;Jn t musil' co ndu ctor for rhc•
ll .S. dt 'l-:! 1'1'1 ' in nul'lt •&lt;tr f'n g inf'f •ri ng
1'\ ll(' Toni ghl Show ""d rompo&gt;ing.
! ro m tht • l 'ni\'l 'r sil\' of &lt;'incinnari
&lt;~JT; rng in g ;tncl co-prOOuc ing m &lt;trl\ '
&lt;tnd wi ll n ·ct•i\'C' hi ... ma slc r 's dt•ft \ t!urPCI songs for HlP I-:mmy
g n •t• in !lli'f'll:tni c; tl f' ng iJH'I' rin g
I rom OhiiJ St;.rtl ' l 'ni\'&lt;'rsity in
D&lt;'('t•mh&lt;·r.
Thf' bridt '-t' l&lt;•(' l i" ThP g r&lt;~nd ­
&lt;lilu gh!t •r or fornlt'r Pnnwro\· n •sidt •nr s ( ;('{) r gt' illld J\ llx· rta s hi\'l•lt •r
LUNCH SERVED
;tnd th&lt;• b1&lt;' .l ;n ·_;tnrl RhP; r 1\tl \'C' t'S.
11 :30 - 2 :00

\

I

rrotters

tFy

•.

i\ w:trd winni ng CI1S "Ctpt a in Kan~ aroo " !clf'\"ision scriC's .
Thf' artist ha s h:rd ma ny of his
song s and composition s rPcordrd

anrl p&lt;&gt;rformc'CI in !hi' llnilf'd S!ali'&gt;

Mr.and Mrs. Price

and Eurorx· . Hf' !'('('(•ntl _
v compl&lt;' lf'd
!hr scorr for his first thra!rical
mu sical. " Nob od ,v ' s Pf'rff'c t ."
which will be pr0sen!r'CI by !hi' !-:q uit~ · l.ibrar~-.' Thf'atrf' at Lin coln
C0n!Pr in N0w York during I hi' 19R~
H.:\ sf'ason.
Hi s pi ;tn is lit · s!ylf's &lt;'nabh• him to
appl _
\ ' alI thf' subtl f't if's of a classic;tl
tPchniqur to t h&lt;' sponta nf' il y or con tPmporar_
\ · imprm·isation . H.osr
al so hi g hli ~ ht s original COt1l JXlSiti ons in his concPrl s.

.
.! il

"ThP most comforta ble
walking shoe ever made."

""

' ~

The
31e5~~ Shoe Cafe

:wu Sl'cond ,\\•e.
Lafa}·ette ,\ I all
Gallipolis, 0 .

Whirc-Roach

Davis
Ci\I.I.II'OI.I S -

\i t . and Mr&gt; .

Ha \ O:t\"i:-.. Hi11 &lt; ;r;~nd t' , a nnounn·
th&lt; · ft JI'!ht ·I Jming wt•dding ol tht'it
cb ugh!t •r . ~ ha ri ,\ nn. ru I Ct\ 1\llt'n
~a .\ T (' . "un of ltn_
\ · ,\ . S:nT t' ;t nd t lw
latf' D:trlt •nt · Sa\Tt· of C; lllipol i.....
Tht • o ~)(· n - chur f'h \\'Pdtl ing will bt •
hf'ld &lt; )('t ~.'\ at 2 p.m. :11 Si mJN IIl

Chapt'l t ·ntlr·cl :Vlr'!hrxli&gt;l Ch urch.
Hio (;rand(' . l lf'\'. Mat o..;o n w ill ufl i·
c itllf' lh&lt; · cf' n ' m on_
\ ·. Mu sic w ill

vrn

ix'gin " ' J· : ~!

A I'N'('ptiun v.: ill l'ollov.: a r ltl f' sru d&lt;'nl C'nmmunit _
\ · Ct'lltP r of Hi&lt;J
r ;r ~ tnciC' C oll f'~ t' and &lt;'ommunit _
\

Colli'gi' "'

Robinson-Jensen
C A I.I.IPOI.IS- Wi'dding pla n&gt;
of Chrr,v l 1'\ ohin son . c l:!u ~ h!(• r of
Mr . and Mrs. E arl W. Hobin son , :11:,
Oak Or., and Mark .l f'nsrn . son of
Mr. and Mr .... Don&lt;.~ld C. .J(·nst ·n .
Prpj)f'r Pikf' . h;tv&lt;' IX'('n &lt;·omplr!Pd .
Thf' w('(ld ing \viii bf' h&lt;'ld 0 &lt;" 1 . IIi
at 7: .' ~0 p.m . at (;racr U niiPd MPthod ist Church. ( ;;tllipoli s. Official in ~
atthf' douhlr -rin g c·f'n •mum· willlx ·
Pa stor .Jamc•s Fra zit •r ;tnd Falh&lt; •r
\Villiam M _
v &lt;Ts. Th&lt;· t'u . . ro m of opt•n
C'hurch will l:lt • nhs&lt;'l'\ 'l 'd .
Shmn•r s fiJI' M s. J·{ohinson w&lt;·n'
hf'ld b~ · TJmm _v lfrm:-; v.:orth. (;;r lli
JX.IIis; Mrs . .lamPs \-'/ il son o ne! M:w
guf'ril f' Dars1. Pt . PI C't t."-&gt; ilnl . W
Va .; Frrn Zuck&lt;•rman &lt;tnd Dt'bhit·
Muchni&lt;"ki . Ck vdand . and Mrs.
Frank Housr . !'vlrs. J·-lfor m.tn K obv

oncl Mr &gt;.
\.al lipolis

\\a v nr · lln gd o ll.

POMEHOY - I ' lans ha vt• ix'f'n
co mplt •!f'CI for th&lt;' wf•dding of .lt ·nniP While• of Long Ro11om &lt;Jnd H ~t\ ·nwnd H.oacll, Pomf'rn.\·.
·
ThP O(Jl 'tl ·(' hurch wt ·dding w ill
t; tk&lt; · pbct&gt; on S;~turtl:l _\·. Oct . IIi . at
~: :~tf p .m . at Middl&lt;' porl Church of
Chri st. Fifth and M;lin Strt'f"1s.
:\ h:tlf-hour ol prt&gt;nuptial or gan
music will ht · pn'scntPd b~' Hon
1\ sh. Thl' &lt;·t •n·mon.\ · will IX' p('r lorrTIPd h_\ Mr. Rob MPI1 on.
M; r1 m n 11! hiJnur \.viii bl: • Df'hi
llt ·nsl t'\', Long I ~J ll om . Jnd brid( •sm; lid ~ w ill bt• 1-\imt)('rl\ ' Whitr
l .on ~ Bo ll om . ;tnd Trudy \.-\' illLI'ms:
l )nnwrm·.
l ks l m ~tn v.·ill bf' H.obf'rtl-lf•nslt' V.
Long Bol!om . and thf' groo ni s m~n
~· il l hfo

Fallmlor hike
set by park district

5:00-9:00
NEW MENU ITEMS

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE
MON. &amp; TUES. - Charlie Lilly
WED. &amp; THURS. - Roger Elliott

Good coverage. good servi ce all ala good price . Thai's what
Sial e Farm IS famous for Call me
for details

NOW BOOKING RESERVATIONS
FOR YOUR HOUDA Y DINNER &amp; PARTIES

CAROLL SNOWDEN

417 Second Av e.
G.lllipolis, Oh.
Phon(' 446 ·4290
Home 446 ·4Sl8

•
Mr.and Mrs. Musser

S1. 11•· 1 ,If i ll Mtillldl Atl1 nm o hth • lnsw ;u1C t' Comp;my
liOitlt ' O II ICI '

Otoorwnr rtnr1

POMEROY - The wedding ceremony for Mary Beth Hawley and
WUiiam Thomas Musser was performed by Rev. David Mann at
First Baptist Church, Pomeroy, on
July4.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James E. Hawley, Pomeroy, and the groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Wlllam Rudy Musser,
Carpenter.
Given In marriage by her father,
the bride wore a white floor-length
eyelet gown trimmed with blue
Oowers. She wore a pale blue hat
with dark blue lace and flowers,
and carried a bouquet of white daisles, blue carnations and baby's
breath.
The bride's attendants were Barbara Custer, maid of honor. and
Mindy Musser, sister of the groom.
flower girl. Miss Custer wore a

llhno t!.

L1lil.' oi iJOOr/ n el{jhbot . S /.11 1' F. um 1~ /her e

.

INSUIANCI

v.~\Nrr'T

.f~R

&lt;;A I.I .I PO I.IS - 'i'h&lt;' 0 . 0 Mel n
Park Dis! riel 's Fall Colors
lfik&lt;• is s('h&lt;'Ciu lPd l or Oct. 17 at 1
p. m . at l·{accoon Cn'&lt; ·k Counr v
P;rrk . ln trrPstrd hikt•r s s h o ul~l
m&lt;'t 'l a t Shf'I!Prhou" P t\io. 1.
Thl' Park Di strict will pmv idP a
n ~tturali s l to lrad thf' hikt ·. ( ;roups
BrmvniPs. (;irl S(·ou! s. Rov
Sc·our s . .J.J-1 - &lt;tl'f' Pnf·our;l grd t~l
!_
\ Tf'

Preparation class
offered by clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
Ltd. Is offering a preparation for
breastfeedlng class for expectant
women interested In Information
on this subject.
The next class will be on Oct. 29
from 7 to 9 p.m. The cost Is $7. For
registration Information, call
Becky Sanders, R.N., at 446-2509 after 5 p.m. or on weekends; or call
Karen Wamsley In Health Education at 446-5278 between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday.

p &lt; tr t i c ip ~tt r.

For m orf' infor m;rti tm and to prrn •gistf' r. conta ct !hf' pJrk distri ct
officr a! ·l-lh-4111 1. (' Xtrn sion ;)f) _

WATCH NEXT WEEK
FOR OUR
GRAND RE-OPENING
SALE-A-BRATION
AT OUR NEW LOCATIO N
83 MILL ST.
NEXT DOOR TO OUR
FORMER BUILDING
!'

DINNER SERVED

l(otln&lt;'.\ \Vhi1 0. l.ong Hoi -

tom. and Mark \\'illi ~ tm s , Pom f'·
ro_\·. f{and_
\' B.oach and Darin
Ho~wh . Pomf'ro\ . \\'ill IX' th r
\ ·an H ~twlt·.\ · will bl:'
uslH ·r s. and H_
lht • rin g i.X';rn ·r. wilhTr rri Whitt' as
fl owf' r gir l.
( ;u('sl s \\'ill tx · rf'gistcr('d !)\'
( ' ind ~~ i\ ntlt ·r st&gt;n . I 1tl mt · ro~·- A n~­
t·rp tion will t)(' hl'ld in tht ' 1·hurch
lt •lltl\\'ship h;dl i mmf'flbtc•l .\' follow
ing tlH · cf' n ·m on_
\' .

October
Quilted
Ro·be
Sale
~~.

For recliner comfort,
beauty and value,
it's a tough act to follow

byFI.EXSTEEI.

.

SALE$3999 5

.

;.'

I

'I

'578

ROCKING ROOM
SAVER WAll
RECLINER

' ~• \

1-.

$4500

EARLY AMERICAN
ROOM SAVER
' RECLINER
20% DOWN

HOLDS IN OUR
CHRISI'IIAS IJ.YAWAY
FOR DELIVERY .
DECEIIIO 24th
I

I

.-,

' &gt;

,...

••
'

.

RIO GRANDE - An Income tax
preparation course will be offered
at Buckeye Hills Career Center on
· Mondays and Wednesdays from 7
to 9 p.m. starting Nov. 15 and end·.
lng Dec. 15. .
'lbe course Is tor new or lnexpe- .
rtenced preparers of federal tax returns. When s.u ccesst.ully ·
completed, .the course wm assist
the student In becoming niore proficient In preparing thi!S!! returns.
The tee tor thj! :»hour co~ Is
$W. Register at the Adult Education ()ff!ce'at Buckeye Hills Career
Center•. Registration will be ~en
f1Y mall or by visiting the office
-Monday through Thursday from 2
to 10 p.m. and Frtday 8 a.m. to 4
p.m .
Interested individuals may con·
tact the adult education ottice at
(614) 245-5334, •extension 252 tor

GALLIPOLIS - Ac l ivil ies for
the week of Oct. 11-15 at the Senior
Citizens Center are as follows:
Monday. Oct. 11 - Vinton Slle
Exercises. 11:30 a.m.; Chorus. 1-.1
p.m.
Tuesday. Oct. 12 - S.T.O.P.
Class, !0:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness.
11:15 a.m.
Wednesday. Oct. 1.1- Vinton Nutrition Education. 11:.10 a.m.; Vinton Bible Study; Card Ga mes. 1-3
p.m .; American Liter ature Class. 1
p.m.; Garden Club. 1 p.m .
Thursday. Oct. 14 Gallia
County Council on Aging annual
meeting and potluck supJX'r, 5:30
p.rrl.; Vinton Sile Cra fts; Bible
. Study, 1-2 p.m.
Friday. Oct. 15 - Yoga Class.
9:30a.m.; Art Class. l -3p.m .; Craft
Mini'Course. 1-3 p.m.; Social Hour.
7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrilion Program

Sets fund-raiser
POMEROY - A fund-raising
dinner for Dick Celeste will be held
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the LaSalle
Restaurant, formerly the Martin
Restaurant In Middleport. Speaker
will be Lew Nescott of Celeste's
staff.

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

:::!9800!':

.I

..

The Army ROTC Color Guard nt
Rio Grande College and CommunIty College Is available l o pet1orm
at official functions and ceremonies
throughout the Gallla. Jackson.
Meigs and Vinton county areas. according to M. Sgt. Raymond
Parsley.
The gorup will perform at approved ceremonies in the area free
of charge. Requests to appear
should be made to the Army ROTC
office a minimum of two weeks
prior to the scheduled event.
"Cadets In the color guard parl icipale volunt arily and att er\d rehearsals two lo three times each week ...
Parsley sa id . "Their efforts are directed for the most part towards
honoring the National and Sl ate colors at various college athletic
events. However. they will Jl('rform
at other approvl'd ceremonies free
of charge."
,
Students composing !he eli te
group include Beth Birkhimer of

Board to meet
_

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County District Library Board of
Trustceswtll meet at5p.m. Toes·
daymlheRareBookRoomofthe
Dr. Samuel l.. Bossard Memorial Library.

Greenfield; Stacy Evans of Columbus; Roger blnlz of Beaver; Ed
Moore of Cheshire; Shi r ley Neff of
McConnelsville; Roy Nickell of
Chillicothe; Anita Skeens of Plkelon; MichPie Stiffler of Plcerkington. and Mall Woodyard of Van
\Veri.
To ob! ain informalo n on having
!he color guard appear a! an area
cPrrmon,v ,

contac t

the

Army

ROTC program a! Rio Grande College and Community College at
1614 ) 2 4 ~Sri t

Sexuali ty education
offered by group
ATHEN S - In recognition of
Family Scxualil )' Education Week.
Planned Par0n !hood of Sou!heast
Ohio is offering a new program 10
teach parenls lo discu ss sexuality
with their lePnaged children. The
program, " Parcn!S Are Sex Educator s," is offered lhrough the ed uca lion deparlmc•n! and is avail able 10
any group ofparenls frec of charge.
The program lasl s for three hours
and can be srhrdulf'd during a regular mf'rti ng of an organizat ion of
iniC'res tr d parrnt s.
More informati on is avail able

from Judy Zudak al 59.1-3.175.

signed and baked the weddlngcakeo ~F;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;~
The bride Is a 1977 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and a
~ ----- -~
1981 graduate of Marshall Univer11 /( tUil;
sity. She is an audilor for Cooper s
/.1
' II
/
'
o!
and L ybrand. Columbus. The
I
•
..
groom graduated from Sherman
High School. Seth. W. Va .. in 1978
and will graduate from Marshall
Univeslty In December.

I

Just
Arrived!
Zorro

by

will serve the following menus:
Monday- Salisbury steak. pol atoes in jacket. spinach with vinegar . roll. butter. lemon pudding.
milk.
Tuesday - Ham loaf. au grat in
potatoes. tossed salad. cornbread.
buller. applesa uce. milk.
Wednesday - Chicken. po!ato
salad. baked ix'ans. roll. bull er.
choice of fruil . milk.
Thursday - .Johnny marzelli.
leltuce wilh cheese dressing, mixed
greens. bread. buller. fresh fruit,
milk.
Friday - Hot roasl beef open
face sandwich with gravy. whipped
potatoes. fresh fruil . salad wilh
cheese: bread. butter. brownie.
milk.
Choice of beverage served wilh
each meal. Serv ices renderl'd on a
non-discrimin atory basis.

DICIAL
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and shoulders. They carried heartshaped silk bouquets of yellow and
while cmprlsed of sweetheart roses
and Illy-of-the-valley.
Best man was cousin oft he groom
Matthew Arvon, Sylvester, W. Va.
Groomsmen were cousins of lhe
groom Marc Arvon, Nicky Pete Arvon and Pete Arvori. all of Whilesvllle. IV. Va., and friends of !he
groom Eddie Wiekle. Sylvester. IV.
Va .. and David Daniel, Whitesvllle.
W.Va. Taper llghterswer ecouslnof
the brideChrlstopherChestnut, Gallipolis, and cou~ln of the groom
Christopher Fincham. Martinsburg, W.Va. Rlngbearerwascousln
of the groom Andrew Fincham.
Martinsburg, W.Va.
All wore white tuxedos with a yellow sweetheart rose as a boutonniere. The groom wore whit e !ails
with a boutonniere of Illy-of-thevalley and a yellow sweetheart rose.
A reception was held in the church
dining room following the ceremony. A daisy and ribbon bedeckl'd
bride's table featured a ·four-tierl'd
yellow wedding cake surrounded by
heart-shaped cakes at its base. On
the bottom tier was a bride and
groom porcelain music box.
Hostesses for the r eception were
Debbie Arvon. Whitesville. Sandy
Watson. Becky Godwin and Clnda/
Mink, all of Gallipolis. Lou~
Shawver, Gallipolis, registered guests. The buffet was prepared and
served by the Deborah Unit of the
church. Mrs. Denver Walker de-

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floor-length gown of pale blue and
carried a blue carnation with
baby's breath. The flower girl was
In a gown of white and blue eyelet
and carried a basket of white and
blue daisies.
For his wedding. the groom wore
a white tuxedo with a blue carnation boutonniere. Best man was
Randy Riffle, and the ushers were
Dennis Musser and Johnny
Musser. brothers of the groom.
Mrs. Bea Kuhn provided prenuptial music on an organ.
A reception was held at the
church with Becky Kloes and Deb!
Hensley, sisters of the bride, serving refreshments. The three-tiered
blue wedding cake was trimmed
with white flowers and topped with
wedding bells and doves of white.
Guests wer e registered by Deborah
Dotter.

Rec. to

Thla naaon the bell lUI al the game 11 righl1n you' own
home. A FleutMI "Room Sav.t" wall 1ecliner 01 ''lo.fel''
lOCki ng recline! ollera auperb lu•ury whe!hef ~ou· re
warchlng TV 01 elllltchlng outlof a anooza. "Room Seve,· ·
a na ' 'Loaler'' recliner• can be plac«i just inches 11om the
wall and you still can enjoy lull tecllnlng cotniOit

October 11October 23

NOW

Gallipolis, Ohio

Gallia Senior
Citizens Calendar

THE LaSALLE

DAILY SPECIALS

Middleport

GALLIPOLIS- Pam McMahon,
Columbus, and David Price. Sylvesler. W. Va., were married In a formal. double-ring ceremony June~
at Grace United Methodist Church.
The wedding was officiated by Pastor James V. Frazier Jr.
The bride Is the daughter of Ruth
Ann McMahon and Nell McMahon,
both of Gallipolis, and the groom Is
the son of Bob and Georgia Price.
Sylvester. IV. Va.
Organist for the event was Edith
RDss and soloists were Steffi Purcell
and Mark l.eep.
The br ide, escorted to the altar by
her father. wore a formal gown of
white silk organza with a fitted bodice which featured a high-necked
yoke of English sheer net and Schiffii embroidery. A large Bertha ruffle of ChantUiy lace formed a cap
sleeve. The gown's natural walstilnedipped Into a "V" over the skirt
front. Adorning the skirt and the
attached chapel-length train were
Venice lace motifs and ruffled lace
tiers which were gathered at the
sides with white satin ribbons. She
chose a sheer mantUia with a
blusher and carried a heart-shaped
cascade bouquet of white silk sheet heart roses, stephanotis, lily-of-thevalley and accented with yellow
roses.
Matron of honor was Ann Sickels,
Gallipolis, sister of the bride. BridesmaidswereauntofthebrldeDottie Chestnut, Gallipolis, and friends
of the bride Tami Lilly, Hurrican.
W. Va., Tammy Walker. Bluefield.
W. Va., Kathy Lee. St. Albans, IV.
Va., and Paula Stover. Sylvester.
IV. Va.
They were attired in formal
gowns of yellow qiana with an empire waist and spaghetti straps covered by a long-sleeved j acket
featuring a peplum al the waistline
and a self-ruffle at the high neckline

Washington bureau of the NeW
York Times. He was chief of the
Times' London bun•au from 1965 to
1972.
Born In New York and a graduate of Harvard College In 1948,lkwis was a 1956-"7 Nieman Fellow Qt
Harvard specializing In law. He has
twice won the New York State &amp;ir
Association Press Award. He Is ttte
author of two books, "Gideonls
TrumJl('t." about a landmark case
before the Suprem e Court. anll
"POI1rall of a Decade.'' about
c ha nges In American race
relations.
Lewis teaches a course a1 Harvard Law School and Is considered
an exJl('rt on the constitutional
r ights &amp;nd duties of the press.

Walking Lady

Earl Rose to open
concert senes

Pomeroy

Weddings

Anthony Lewis set to speak
Chambers- Elliott

K IO C RAI'\DJ-: - !'vl t dnd \ l t'
&lt;;riff Cook of H io &lt;; r a nd t, . IIHWLJ IH't ·

October 10, 1982

Oct~ber 10, 1982

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

Engagements

Miller, CxJk

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or Your Money Back

Silver Bride
Plaza

446-2770

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October 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middlepart- Gallipalis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page- B-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Anniversaries

Astronomers glimpse seldom-seen quasar
• PASADENA, Calif. lAP) - Astronomers have reported the discovery of the most distant object
ever seen by man - a quasar near
the edge of the universe, so faint It Is
only a speck on a photograph.
" We are straining our eyes and
looking out toward the horizon ofthe
universe. " said Mike Klein, an astronomer at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory where the discovery by
American, Australian and Brttlsh
astronomers wa s announced
Friday.
The quasar is perhaps 12 billion
light-years away !rom Earth, ac-

cording to ~e way astronomers
commonly determine distance,
Klein said
" This Is an object that Is farther
· away than anything else we have
seen Iodate," he said.
Quasars, first seen in 1963, are
mysterious objects that look like
stars but seem to generate more
energy than 100 billion stars. They
apparently are closer to the edge of
the universe than any other cosmic
objects and are moving farther out
at incredible speeds.
A light-year Is a measure of the
distance light travels In a year - 6

trtlllon miles.
"Soyou'relooklngbackintlmeIIU!t light lett It 12 bllllonyears ago"
and shows only what the quasar
looked like at that time, Klein said.
That means the light began Its
jowney long before our solar systemwasformed4.6bllllonyearsago
and even before the birth of the

Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, 25 th
lins. Sharon. Robert and Lisa. Mr.
and Mrs. Henderson also have one
gra ndchild .
The couple was married on Ocl.
10. 1957 by .John Elwood al their
home. Mrs. Henderson is he daughter of Robert and Addie Burnem of
Letart Falls. Henderson is he son of
Clarence and Osie Henderson.
Al fred. ThP couple eques!S gills be
omilled.

children. Mr. and Mrs. RogPr Pul·

ATHENS - Abbie Hoffman will
appear in Athens at Ohio University's Memorial Auditorium In a free
lec tu re open to th e public
Wednesday.
The Oct. 13 presentation Is sponsored by the university's Student
Lecture Series. and Is scheduled for
8 p.m. with a 7 p.m. press conference preceding the lecture.
Hoffman gained national prominence as the leader or the Youth
International Pariy, the Ylpples,
an organization which sought to politically activa te all American youth
against the Vietnam War.
He recently emerged from the
underground alter spending seven
years hiding from authorities on

Crown
City P.O
.. 5: 15-6
p.m.;p.m.;
Eu4:30 p.m.;
Burel.
4:45-5
reka. 6: 15-6: 4o p.m.
Thursda y - Watt s, 2:30-.1:45
thrff' children . .l ack .J. Blazer of
Scioto Cou nt v: William H. Blazer of p.m.: Brick School Rd .. 2: 55-3: 10
p.m.: Addaville Elementary . 3: 15.Jackson Count)'. and .Jean An n Sto,·a ll of Columbiana Count y. Geor- 3:45 p.m.; St. Rd. 7 !Roadside
gia. Thrl'' have 10 gra ndchildren. Res!l, .1:5.'\-4: 10 p.m.; Georges Cr .
onP decC'asl'd. Jnd two great - Rd . I. II . 4: 15-5 p.m.: Bulavllle Tr.
Ct. . 5:30-6 p.m.; Plantz Subdv ..
grandsons.
Celrbration fest i ~ it ics were post - 6: 15-6: 45 p.m.
Friday - Kerr. 3-3:40 p.m.;
poned and arra ngements will be
annou nced at a later dale by their . Buck Ridge, 4-5: 05 p.m.; Jay Dr. I,
gran dd aughter. Mr s. Dav i d II. 5: 15-5:45 p.m.: f3ob McCormick
Rd .. &amp;-6: 15 p.m.
Woodall.

Mr. and Mrs. Blazer, 50th
CALLI POLIS - Claude and
Mary Blazer observed their ~JO!h
wedding anniversary on Oct. 8.
They were married in Cabell
Count y. West Virginia in 19.12.
Mr. Blazer was born in Green
Townsrup. the son of the lat e Peter
and Elizabeth Sea ley Blazer. Mrs.
Blazer is a native Ga llipolil an. the
daught er of Lewi s and Ethel Hemphill Angell.
The Blazers arr 1he parents of

. Bike-a-rhon ser
for Samrday
GA I.LIPOl.I S - The SL Jude
Children's Re,rarc h Hospital BikeA-Than is schrdulrd for Oct. 16at10
a.m . P a rt icpants should meet at

the Ga llipolis Coif Course at10a. m.
Greg Shra der and Lee Duteil are
co-chairmrn for this yea r' s event.
Sponsor ~ hf•rt s arc ava ilable at

local sc hools and the park district
offi ce• or hi' calling 44&amp;-4612. extension 'iii. Thr number of miles ridden
is up to the individual. A.ll proceeds
from thr ride will go to the continuing care and research lor the children or St. .Jude.
For more informat ion. contact
the pork dist rict office at 44&amp;-4612,
extrns io n

)f) .

Measle
research
pays off
ATLANTA !API - Measles has
spread sickness and death lor centuries. And 30 years ago, It was almost a universal feature ' or
childhood. afflicting nearly all
youngsters In the United States before their 16th birthday.
Measles epidemics killed thousands of Americans in the early
1900s. About 1.5 million people In
foreign countries still die each year
of the highly Infectious disease,
which may have emerged about
2500B.C.
But in the United StateS, the efforts of more than 150 years of research and nearly 20 ·years of
intensive efforts to vaccinate AmerIcans are about to pay off.
Scientists at the national Centers
tor Disease Control say this country
Is on the brink of ellmlnattng measles as a domestic disease. Measles
wt11 stlll afflict Americans, bu!ltwtll
be Imported from other countries.

drug-related charged.
While underground , Hoffman
adopted an assumed name, lived In
the Thousand Isllmds region of
northern New York, and waged a
successful "three-year battle with
the federal government concerning
the conservation of the St. Lawrence River.
For his efforts, Hoffman received public acclaim from Governor Carey and Senator Moynihan of
New York. He then returned to
New York City and served a oneyear prison term on a reduced
charge.
Hoffman Is the author of seven
books. His latest Is entitled Square
Dancing In the Ice Age.

Gallia
bookmobile
schedule
GALLI POLIS -The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library will
be at the following places the week
or Oct. 12 to Oct. 5.
Monday .- Ewing1on. 1:15-1:45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m .; Adney
Rd .. 2: 45-3: 15 p.m. ; VInton P.O..
3:30-4:30 p.m.; Bidwell. 5-6 p.m.;
Harrisburg, 6: 15-6:30 p.m.
Tuesday - Eno. 2:30-3 p.m.;
Rece, .1: 05-.1:20 p.m.; Africa Rd..
3:30-3:45 p.m.; Kyger I. 3:50-4:20
p.m .: Kyger II , 4 :2~4 : 40 p.m .;
Roush Lane I. II . 4:45-5: 15 p.m.;
Cheshire I , &amp;-6: 30p.m.; Cheshire II .
6:35-7 p.m .
Wednesday - Bane's. 2: 15-2:30
p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3: l 5 p.m.; M y·
ers, 1: 3().3: 45 p.m.. ; M er cerv Hle, 4·

How soon college!
Will

POMEROY - Homecoming
will be held at Carleton Church
on Kingsbury Road Sunday. Sunday school will be in the morning
with a basket lunch at 12: 30 and
the afternoon service to begin at
1: 30 p.m. Rev. Clyde Hinton
former pastor, now of Columbus'
will be the guest speaker. ~
Gospel Tones wtll be the tea tured
singers. Jimmy Evans, pastor,
Invites the public.

Milky Way, Our own galaxy, about
10 bllllon years ago. Current est!·
mates put the age of the universe.at
about 20 billion years.
" It's a little bit weird," Klein sail).
" It's as If your great-great-great
grandparents took a picture of
themselves, mailed It to you and It
just arrived today."

THE BIBLE ...

AMESSAGE

CROWN CITY - Kings
Chapel will observe family night
. Sunday at 7: :.1 p .. with singers
the Brumfield Trio. Rev. John
Jeffrey invites the public.

BAPTIZED UNTO MOSES
William B. Kuqhn

CLAY - A revival will begin
Sunday at Easterngate Tabernacle, two miles north of Oak
Hill on S.R. 93 In Clay. Services
will start at 7:30p.m. with Daymond Adams. evangelist. Pastor Ray Barker Invites the
public.

"And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea" (I Corinthians 12:2).
In the Authorized and the Revised Ve~ons lhe preposition unto (eis) is rendered,
but in the Greek it is rendered into (eis). Thisdoesnot present any problems asfar asbeing
baptued into (eis) Christ" isconcerned. Paul ismakingacompariSQn between Moses and
Christ (I Cor. 10:3-4). Since Paul ~ not as strict when he brings two ob1ects under one
position. usingthem alike in making an application. thecomparisoncan only be used in a
qualified sense. rather than the strictest sense.
The lsraelrtes "being baptized Uflto (eis; the Greek. into) Moses inthecloud and in
the sea," is used as a parallel to Christian baptism. Great light is put on the expression
"baptized unto (eis) Moses" by the strict use of the preposition into (~s) in the expression
"baptized into (eis) Jesus Christ" At baptism, one~ d~ivered from the devil(kingdom of
darkness) and brought into the union wrthChrist and istranslated into the kingdom of
God's dear Son (Col. 1:13). the true lawgiver and ~ader. The Israelites were completely
immersed or covered by the sea and the cloud. They were delivered from Pharoah and
brought into union with Moses, their lawgiver and leader. All israel were saved by the Lord
at their baptism and not before (Ex. 14:30). We can now understand the significance of
!heir being "baptized unto leis) Moses in the cloud and in the sea."
When the Galatians weie "baptized into (eis) Chrisr they were obeying from their
heart the farth, His divine instruction~ Being "bapt~ed into (eis) Christ," they had put on
Christ Puttinc on Christ in baptism revealed their de~re to become His redeemed people,
serving Him faithfully in the realm of salvation as the members of His saved body, the
church (Acts 2:47; Eph. 5:23). Baptism was a voluntary act of faith by which they were
tran~ated "into (eis) Christ" by the power and operation of God (Col. 2:12).
We cannot as SQme do, take the lower and less determinate sense of "into" or
"unto" and make rt mean "wrth reference to" or "pointinc to" that blessed connection
with Christ into which baptism brings us as His purchased possession. Th~ lower
inlerpretation holds no claim on the full meanin~ of into leis) as used in Romans6:3, 4; I
Cor. 12:13; and Gal. 3:27). Paul lilts high the exahed truth conceming the meaning and
influence of baptism SQ that there ~ no m~understanding or confusion. It~ by baptism
God haschosen to translate all faithful recipients into this beautilul union with Christ The
faithful recipients were "children of God by fa~h" (Gal. 3:26); therefore. their faith was
closely connected wrth baptism. !Had rt nol been for their faith (the one fa~h). they
would not have been baptized of the one baptisminto Chr~l "For as many of you ashave
been bapt~ed into Christ have put on Christ" is olfaith; but "Forasmany of you ashaVe
been baptised referring to or pointing Io Christ have put on Chrisr' ~not of faith but of
man' To quote I Corinthians 10:2 and apply Ihe preposrtion unto to mean '1oward, pointing
to. referring to or reference Io" in Romans 6:3, 4; I Cor. 12:13. and GaL3:27). istotw~tand
perver the scriptures. If we accept Paul's true teaching asused tn the strictest sense, we
can only accept Ihe preposilion into (eis) to mean entering into!

b

WATERLOO - Homecoming
will be observed Sunday at WaterlOO United Methodist Church
beginning with school at 10 a. m.
Morning service will be held at
11 a.m. with Rev. Darrel Fowler
and singing. Dinner wlll be
served at noon. Afternoon services wUI be held at 1: 30 with Rev.
Charles Herrell. Singers wUI be
The Gospel Four of South Point.
· Host pastor Is Rev. Everett
O'Neal. The public Is Invited to
attend.
CENTENARY - Evangelistic services will begin Sunday at
Cent enary United Methodi st
·Church with Chester Lemley.
He will address the 9:30a.m. services and hold services Sunday
through Thursday at 7::.1 p.m.
Singing wUI be provided by Mr.
and Mrs. Melburn Tackett Sunday and by Mr. and Mrs. James

HOOVER

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Headlight
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carpet selector

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SYRACUSE - Bob Ord, superintendent of the Southern Lo_
cal School District, wUI be the
speaker at the 7 p.m. Tuesday
meeting of the Syracuse PTO.

day at 7 p.m. at Faith Fellowship Crusade lor Christ. Boys
ages 10'!1 to 18 years who would
· like to join may attend the meetIng or call Scoutmaster Ralph
Day at 992-6244.

EASTERN Athletic Boosters.
7:30p.m. Monday at the school.

POMEROY - Twin City
Shrine Club will hold Its regular
monthly meeting Monday at the
Shrine Club In Racine. Dinner
wlll be served at 7 p.m . and all
area shrlners are invited ot
attend.

IMAGE SEEKERS. Camera
Club. 7: 30 to 9: 30 p.m. Meigs
Museum. No business meeting.
Bring cameras, demonstration
on framing.

512SecondAve.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446.9 235
Home Ph. 388-9691

RACINE Junior High Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30p. m.
Monday night at the school. Parents are encouraged to attend.
ANTIQUITY -A renewing or
Troop 241 Boy Scouts from the
R.aclne area will be held Man-

1.09

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

SPECTACULAR
ONE WEEK

NEW KIWANIS~ Don Hodge (right) presents Immediate
past president Tom Moulloll his Pre!ldent's Plaque after lnslallatlon of
new GaWpolls offlcerll Weduesday by Ninth District Lt. Gov. Bob Handcock, lrolllon. Bill Smeltzer waslnslalled vice president; Wayne Amsbary secretary and BID Milliead treasurer. A. R. Durose was named a
new director. Looking on Is Mrs. Moulton.

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. .Singlr Zig-Zag
. . . . 11136

STORE HOURS .
IION:-SAT. 10-9
SUN. 1-5

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Uses less energy than ordinary 3-way bulbs.

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

Save on our entire stock
of regularly-priced merchandise·• everything In the storel
Sale ends Saturday, October 16th.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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OHice Hours by Appointment Only ·
•

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GENERAL ALLERGIST

everything _
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1.18

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• ••

.·

CENTERV ILL E - There
will be an OAPSE Chapter 682
meeting Tuesday at 7: :lO p.m. at
Centerville Element arv . All employe&lt;&gt;s in the Ga llia County Local School District are invited to
attend.

POMEROY - The Ninth District Commander will be present
when Meigs !=hapter 53, Disabled American Veterans, meet
at 6:ll p.m. Monday at the chapter home, Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy.

7-ounce" paste o r 6.4-ounce· gel.

Sundly Ellffting

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

JACKSON -An Area X Associa tion meeting will be held
Monday at First Presbyterian
Chu rch, Chu rch Street. A potluck di'ilner will be served at 6
p.m. and the meetin g will follow
at 7 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - On Tuesday
a star party will be conducted by
Jim Morrison at Raccoon Creek
County Park shelterhou se. A
nigh-powered telescope wUI be
available to view the planets and
constellations. Star enthusiasts
are invited to bring binoculars .

MONDAY

C•ll Garland M . Davis
!i. undAy Morn1n9
B+ble Sti.Kty 9: JO
Worship It: •

KYGER CREE K - The
Kyger Creek Band Boosters will
meet Monday at 7:30p.m. In the
band room.

TIJESDAY

Open Daily 10-9;
Sunday 1-6

Butavllle Ro.d • P .O. Box 301
GALLI POLIS, OHIO 45631

Life insurance can help.

MEIGS County Jaycees, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the headquarters. All young men between the
ages of 18 and 35 are Invited to
attend .

MERCERV1LLE - Rev .
Ralph Workman will be guest
speaker at Providence Baptist
Church, Teens Run Road. Sunday at 7 p.m.

~~

agitator

EMPIRE FURNITURE

GALLIPOLIS - G.D.C. Dietary Department co-workers'
third annual picnic wUI be held
Sunday at the mental health center. 412 VInton Pike. All dietary
co-workers are Invited to attend
and take a covered dish. Lunch
will be served at noon. For
further information, call 44&amp;4761.

Calendar

1.18

Steel

$3500

GALLIPOLIS - Rehearsals
lor Gallla County Junior Miss
candidates wUI begin- Sunday
with other rehearsals to be held
on the next five conseCutive Sundays, according to Gallipolis
Jaycee Women. All practices
will begin at 2 p.m. at the Jaycee
Building. Any Interested Gallla
County senior girl may attend
the first rehearsal. For luriher
Information, call Susan Foster
at 44&amp;-7594, or Terl York, 2459418.

(for free Bible Correspoodence Course Write ...)

you
e ready
when they are?

IS OVERSTOCKED AND IS
HAVING A

Deluxe

Sisson Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. Rev. Pearl A. Castor, pastor, Invites the public.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-7

Our Reg. 2.1 7

EMPIRE FURNITURE

HOOVER
I

Pomeroy- Middlepart- Gallipalis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

SUNDAY

r-----------------------

Abbie Hoffman set to speak
Wednesday at Ohio University

GUYSVI LLE - Mr. and Mrs.
Harold L Henderson of Route 1.
Guysville. will observe their 25th
wedd ing anniversary on Oct. 16 a!
Monlle's Upholstery Shop on Dut ch
Ridge.
An open house will be observed
from 7: :!0 to 9 p.m. and will be fol lowed b_v a square dance from 9
p.m. 10 midnighl.
The event is being hosted b_
v their

October 10, 1982

I

..

�---·

orts

~imt~ •

NFL owners consider ending season

IIUTHU.

/

By DAVE GOWBERG

"One," he said, "Is to open the camps. Two, is to call
oUtheseason."
'
Another management source, who asked not to be
Identified, was more specific. He said the owners were
considering announcing about Oct. 18 that the camps
would be opened. And he said that If the players had "ot
returned In sufficient number by the following weekend, the owners would seriously consider calling oU
the season.
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle has said that
many owners believe a season of less than 13 games
would be Impractical. And tha.t weekend- Oct 24-25
- would be the point at which 13 would be the max!·

APSportsWrlter
NEW YORK (AP) - National Football League
owners, Increasingly restive about the strike that has
scrapped three weekends of games, are considering
Inviting players to return to camp then calling oU the
season If not enough show up, management sources
said Saturday.
·
Chuck Sulllvan of the New England Patrlots, chairman of the NFL Management Councll's executive
Committee, said In an Interview here that the refusal of
the NFL Players Association to drop Its demand for a
t~ge scale, had many owners- he did not specify how
•p.,ny- talking about two alternatives.

mum number of games thai could be played. (Two
games of the 1&amp;-gam e season have been played, lwo
could be made up, and three have been called oU.)
The owners· move seemed partially confirmed Sa turday when members of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
accused the Bucs coaching staff of caillng players to
determine If they would return to camp. A Bucs spokesman wouldneltherconflnn nor deny the report but
David Stalls, the team's alternate player representalive said: "They're trying to break the union."
For the third straight day Saturday, the players
asked for the resumption of negotiations, which broke
off a week ago. But the owners are Insisting that there

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By JOHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer

SOUTI:I BEND, Ind. (AP) Mike Johnston's third field goal of
the game, a 32·yarder with 11 seconds to play, vaulted lOth-ranked '
Notre Dame to a 1&amp;-14 victory over
Miami of Florida on Saturday and
kept the Fighting Irish unbeaten after four games.
Johnston, whose earlier kicks covered 29 and 42 yards, accounted for
all of Notre Dame's second-half
scoring. His winning klck followed a
'19-yard Miami touchdown pass
from Mark Rlcht to Rocky Belk.
The game-winner was Johnston's
ninth In as many trles this season
and dropped the 17th-ranked Hurricanes to a 4-2 mark.
Notre Dame took a 7-0 lead after a
tumble recovery deep In Miami ter ritory and held the Hurricanes
scoreless In the first half.
Miami took the second half kickoff and, with the aid of 34-yard pass
Interference play, tled.ltona 1-yard
pass from Rlcht to Glenn Dennison.
Notre Dame, unable to muster a
sustaliied drive through much of the
third quarter, regained the lead 10-7
on Johnston's 29-yard klck.
Riehl. completed a pair of short
passes In the fourth quarter to backs
Speedy Neal and Bell&lt; before unloading -the- 79-yard TD bomb to -,
Belk, who grabbed the ball at the30
and raced Into the end zone.

Is no polnl in reswning talks as long as the players stick
to their wage scale demand .
In a telegram signed by Ed Garvey. executlvedlrector of the players associ a lion and Gene Upshaw. the
union's president, the players sa id they would not
budge from the demand for the scale, with a leaguewide fund from which the m oney would come.
"You have a legal duty to bargain with us on wages
and we suggest you get started," the telegram said.
' " When you threaten to end the season if set tlement Is
not achieved by Oct. 25. you must understand that we
have only 14 days to meet your deadline. We stand
ready for round -the-dock negotiations starting
Immediately ...

Milwaukee
pulls even

WAJ'l1NG rr OUT- AS CaHfomla Angels
manager Gene !'lauch, left lof'el"lW!d, let~ out a
yawn, Reggie Jackson, rtght, and reliever Luis
Sanchez, third from left, stare out of the duft(lut at ·
Mllwaukee County Stadium Saturday as they walt

lor the start of their rain-delayed American
League Championship game against the Milwaukee Brewers. The game was delayed by rain twice
with the Brewers enjoying a G-0 lead. (AP.
Laserphoto)

MILWAUKEE tAP) -Moose Haas pitched a no-hitter for 5 2-3
innings and Milwaukee survived an eighth-inning grand slam hom er
by Don Baylor to tie the American League Championship Series at
two games apiece with a 9-5 victory Sa turday over error-prone
California.
Mark Brouhard, a late replacement for injured left fielder Ben
Ogilvie and startin g his first game in the M ilwaukee outfield since
Sept. 5, drove in three runs. two with a homer in the eighth, and scored
four times to breakanALChampionshipSerles record and tie a m ajor
leaguc playoff record.
The r ight -handed Haas. making his first start since Sept. 13. helped
the Brewers overcome an 0-2 pla yoff deficit in a ra in-drenched outing.
The Brewers benefitted from the unraveling of nearly every aspect of
California ·s game.
Only ene other team in the 13yearsofleagucchampionshipplay has
com e back after being down 0-2 to lie the series and none has won a
leaguc playoff after starting with that large a handicap. The 1972
Detroit Tigers tied Oakland at two games apiece. only to loseGame5.
Game 5 of this se1i es was scheduled for Sunda y afternoon. if thc
weather permits. Game4 wa s delayed one hour and 44 minutes at lhf'
start and twice delayed br'iefly during play .
Haas struck out seven and walked five. losing his no-hitter and
shutout with two out in the sixth inning on a Fred L ynn double.
Haas finally lefl the game aft er throwing 136pitches, thefinal oneto
Baylor - who set a playoff record with his grand slam homer that
ga~e him 10 RBls in the series. The previous RBI record was nine, set
by the New York Yankees' Craig Nettles in three games last year.
Haas left in favor of Jim Siaton with oneout in theeighthaftergiving
up five hits and crown ing a roller-coaster season that saw him lose
four of six in May, win four in a row in July and lose three of four m
August before being dropped from the regular rotation for Don
Sutton. Slaton retired the last five batters for the save.
The 26-year-old H aas was helped by a 16 mph w ind that transformed a Reggie Jackson shot in the fourth inning into a !!your at the
warning track. It was the only well-hit ball off H aas until Lynn clubbed
his run-scoring double on Haas' 99th pitch of the game.

Alabama rips Penn State;
Michigan whips MSU, 31-13

Diversified
Standard Leg Lift Bench

run with 2: 24 1eft in thehalfthat gave
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. tAP) the Crimson Tide a 21·71ead.
Quarterback Walter L ewis scored
one touchdown. passed for another
Michigoo 31, MSU 1:1
and set up a third with three key
runs and a tricky shovel pass, leadANN ARBOR. Mich. IAPJ-A II·
ing fourth-r anked Alabam a to a 42- Am erican wide receiver Anthony
21 victory Saturday over No.3 Penn
Carter set up two of Michigan 's
State.
three first-half touchdowns and
Lewis ran Alabam a's Wishbonc · scored one himself In the lhird quarto near-perfection in the first half
ter as the Wolverines rolled to a.11-17
and froze Penn State's defense with
Big Ten football victory over winhis slick fakes and cuts. The&amp;-foot-1 less Michigan Slate Saturday .
junior carried 13 times in the first
Cart er's 14-yard TD grab gave
half for 61 yards, Including a 4-ya rd
him 31 for his career, breaking thc
touchdown run with less than three
Big Ten record formerly held by
minutes gone In the game, and com- Indiana's Jade Butcher.
pleted 7 of 10 passes for 74 yards,
The victory left Michigan 3-2 for
throwing six yards to Joe Carter for
thP season, 3-0 in the Big Ten. Three
a TD on the second play of the seof the Spartans' five defea ts have
cond quarter that snapped a 7-7 been against conference foes.
deadlock.
He completed his brilliant fi rstGeorgia 33, Ole Mlss 10
half performance by running fi ve
ATHENS, Ga. tAP! All·
times for 40 yards and shoveling an
American Hersc h el W a lker
underhand pass to fullback Don
rambled for three touchdowns and
Hor stead behind the line for 13 m ore
149 yards to smash theSoutheastPm
to set up Lenny Patrick's 11-yard
Conference career rushing record

A good all around incline bench; featuring a leg
lift / leg curl apparatus a! an economical price.

Re~t. 69 99
Sport a Dept .

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bron1.e, 1ofld OrbatrOfl!;.
lnltluction bool&lt;lti included, .

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$599
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jen:lin:tl

as fifth-ranked Georgia overpowered Mississippi :tl-10 Saturday.
The Georgia defense frustrated a
potent Ole Miss offenS(&gt; that
punched out almost 400 yards in the
first th r&lt;&gt;e quart ers by coming up
with eight turnovcrs, including
scven pass interceptions.
• Walker, a 221-pound junior, lifted
his career tot al to4 .1 58 yards. break ing the former SEC standard set at
4.0.15 by former Louisiana State star
Charles Alexander in four seasons
beginning in 1975.
OU 34, Ball SlaW 7
MUNCIE, Ind . I APi -Quart erback Donny Harrison completed 18
of 26 passes for 21Y2 yards and a pair
of touchdowns Sa turday, sparking
Ohio University over Ba ll Stale 34 -7
in Mid-Amcrican Conference
fool balL
The vic tory moved thc Bobca ts to
:1-2 overa ll and 2-1 in lcaguc ac tion .
Ba ll Stat e slipped to 1-4 and 1-2 in the
conference.

•

FACEMASKING - Ohio stale's RAin Jordan Satuftlay In Columbus. Missing the tackle Is Wlscon(28) Is grabbed on the facem&amp;M by Wisconsin's Jody sin's Kyle Bordland (12). O'DonneU wasntit called for
O'Donnell (44) on a sweep In the~ quarter of play a facemasldng penalty. (AP Laserphoto).
'

B~dg~rs .enri OSU hex, 6-0
. many In a row ·t home since 1967.
ByGEORGf,':~DE
The Buckeyes: sc. -eless streak has
AP 8&amp;*11111 Writer
OOLUM,BUS. Ohio (AP) ..._Tall· now reached six quarters this
season.
back Jolin Wllllams ran 1yardJor a
!OUChdown on WisconSin's openb(g I Wl.sconsln; H In the league and
lerles Saturday. leading the 3-2 overaU, relied on Its defense In
heavy rain to send the BuckeYes to
Badgers to ~ ~'Jig Ten. football
111e1r third defeat 1n 11ve llllflle5 this
~ over Ohio State and entllni
year. OllloState 111-lln the BlaTen.
5t )'1111'1 rlloikwln cOlumbus.
Wli!\OOSin quarte!bac~ ..Randy
, It maJ1a!d the ftrat time Wlacon·
lin won Ill ~ye&amp;n ofplaylngatOhlo Wright opened the game with ftve
~dlum: WJaconslil had lost , 18 ~tralght completions, breaking· a
t1me1 111\d l1'llll8&amp;'!il three ties In , school recoril with 15 consecutive
~Ill t!le11181111T1lthbonelhoe. completlans over two pmes. Greg ·

a

• 011111 Slate dllljljli!d Ita third !lohlfllstablllhed the Wllcmaln~
bDnlf declllap, the llrit ciX'4 wltb 12 lltral&amp;bt complellona
time tile Buckeyes had lolt that ·over tlu'a! games In 19'14.
.
\ '
'. '

lllilfllbl

'

.

( ;

·'·

-

U l

The Badgers drove !ll yards In
their 14-play touchdown serle~,
Wright connected on three straight
pas!!es for 41 yards In the drive. Ohio
State failed to post Its 87th straight
home sellout with a little over l,rol
tl&lt;:kets unsold. Despite the poor
weather, a crowd of 88,344 watched

the contest.
Ohio State, last shut out by UP-A
17~ two years ago. drove Into w1s- _
cons1n ten1t~ four times In the six ..
ll!rleS t11ey hacfthe ball the QPel\lng
half. !lowever. the Badgers' r:Je.
lillie stiffened each time and never
penilltted the Buc~~eyeekiier thin
thelr9.
&gt;I

MORIARTY CARRIES- Larry Morlaliy, FB,
Notre Dame carries ihe ball for a three yard

(31) ol

.,,

�The Sunday Times-Sentinel
October 10, 1982

Gallipolis controls football
in 29-0 victory over Meigs
By KEITH WISECliP
POMEROY - Behind an a w~­
so m ~ rushing att ack, the Gallipolis
Blue Dt&gt;vils leapt&gt;d bar k Into th~
SEO AL titl e r h as~ with a
homecoming-spoiling 29-0 win ovPr
a game Meigs Maraud~r ~l~ ve n
he r~ Friday night ~fo re V !Xlpaid
fans.

touchdowns. and tallied three extra
points. two on a run and another by
a kick. Kor ab has now mounted 45
point s on the year.
Halfback K en Ru ss~ ll led the
[){&gt;viis in ru shing with 129 yards in
19 tot es whiiP adding a six -pointer
on a J:l ya rd jaunt. Fullback Aaron
Sa und ~ r s added
yard s in nine

n

carriPs.

A third quart er arridentai onEnd Tim T awney gr abbed all
side kir k recovered b~ th e Dt&gt;vils'
Beaver Stephen s followin g GAH S' _ thr"" of Korab' s completions for o1
second touchdown allowed Coach ~~ ard s .
Tailba ck Mik~ .Jackson led the
Tom Kora b' s c re w to reta in poss0S·
sion , resulting In another Gallipolis Maraud er s in rushing with Oil yards
in 17 ra n ·ies while -full bark Chris
scor e on the third period 's final
Burdette chippt&gt;d in with :!0 in fi ve
pla y . Meigs did not run one play
from scrimmage in the third quar - trips.
First Half
ter . GAHS r an &amp;I plays from scrim The [)('viis stoppt&gt;d Meigs for
mage. M eigs ra n :19 plays.
" I thought that wa s th~ turning seven ;·ards in thret' pla ys and took
over on their own 32 following a .10
point in the ga me." said Korab.
;•ard Burdette punt.
"We ca m e out fiat. but play very
Aft~r a Korab bomb int ended for
well In the second half. Some bad
play-ca lling on m ~ par1 stoppt&gt;d us .Jim Beaver fell incomplete on th ~
game's rtrst pla y. GAHS sta yed on
in the first half. " added Korab.
the ground 10 straight pla ys in goAll -purpose quarterback Scott
ing 6R yards to pa ydirt. Korab
Korab r an for 114 yards in 10 ca rsneaked in from onf&gt; yard with o: 16
ries, passed for ol mor~. scored two

left In the first quarter. Korab
booted the extra point .
Meigs drove to the GAHS 21
where quart erback Nick Riggs was
thrown for a 12 yard loss by Larry
Arthur and BPaver Stephens as he
attempted to pass on fourth and
five.
GAHS punted. then turned the
ball over twice following Meigs'
punts on it s next three possessions,
all near mid-field. Meigs' Greg
Ta ylor came up with the ball both
ti~PS. once by an Interception and
the other on a fumble recovery .
Meigs drove to the GAHS 19 after
the second [)('vii turnover, but lost
the bali on downs as Kevin Isaacs
knocked down a Rick Chancey pass
on fourih and nine.
Second Half
Starting from their 17, the Dt&gt;vils
went R1 yards on 14 plays for the
ga me's second score. Going the distance ent !rely on the gorund, Gallimore than 12 yards. Korab, Saundpolis never gained tpgs than two or
er s. and Russell shared the running
Continued on C-3

-~outhem ends leagUe losing spell, 36-8
·

BYSCOITWOLFE
RA~ - "It's been a 1-o-n-g
time!," . bellowed an enthusiastic
SoUthern Tornado fan following
Southern's Lmpresslve 36-8 home_coming : victory over a young

GIVE AND GO-

Scott Korab (13)

hanlh off to Ken RusseD (23) during Friday's GAHS-

Southwestern team in Racine Frlday evening.
In fact 11 dates back to the 1978
season since any Southern Tornado
football team has won an SVAC
league game. That year the Torna-

·does went 6-1,lncludlng two league
wins, before financial problems
brought that season to an abrupt
halt with three loop tUts remaining.
Southern's closest brush with victory carne last year when theTorna -

does tied Southwestern.
Amongst a background of cheering fans and a chorus from t(lf victory bell, a happy Coach Bill Porter
commented, "Isn't this beautiful!
Tonight we put together ~ complete
team victory. Everybody on our
team, including those on the sidelines, made It possible. Our boys
really wanted it (the victory 1and it
was all theirs."
Coach Porter continued, "We
beat a good young team tonight .
Southwestern Is an excellent young
team, that's going to go a long way .
They have a fine coach and have a
bright future ahead'Of them."
Southern's Wade Connolly, junior
talleback, reached "player-of-the
week" status with a a superdetermined effort that netted hlm
two touchdowns, a PAT run, and
two key interceptions. Connolly
gained 85 yards on just 11 carries
and caught four passes for 57 yards.
Connolly proved to be just a spark
in Southern's fireworks as junior
quarterback Tony Riffle, Sophomore Greg Nease, and Dennis Teaford aLso helpt&gt;d Ignite a Tornado

led Blue Devil rushers with 129 yanls.
yanls rushing and 51 passlng.

r~M~el~p~foot~haD~~g~ame~~at~M~araud~~e~r~St~a~d~lurn~··Russe~
. ~~uiiP.!P.Iiiii!!P.i.iiiiiliiiii

.

~.

SoYithern battled to a penalty
plagued 8-0 halftime lead highlighted by sloppy play by both clubs,
then went on a second half rampage
that left both the Highlanders and
the caplclty crowd in awe.
· After several possession changes
in which both clubs moved the ball
well, Tony Riffle booted a 52 yard
punt. Teammate Pau'-Harrts ran it
down at the two, putting Southwestern in the hole.
SWHS moved out of its precarious
position only to have another drive
stall. Two Highlander drivpg
stoppt&gt;d on a Connolly interception
and a Glenn Y ung fumble
recovery.
SHS got on the scoreboard first
Continued on C-5

=·••
••
r:
~·

LOOKS FOR RUNNING ROOM - Junior running back Brian Allen (10) looks for some additional
yardage against Southwestern defender Joe GUbert

I

Gallipolis.•.
#

•

'

and Beaver Stephens (62) on this play. TraiHng play
are Marauderr&gt; Scott Pickens ( 110) and Chris
Buroeye
1~1 ). GAllS w.on, 2!Hl. - Keith Wilson
.,., l t l
photos.

,JACKSON RROliGHT DOWN - MeiW&lt;' Mikt•
,Jackson (:!0) who led the Maraudt•rs in rusWng with
:;x yards, is brought down by Ga!Ua's Kev Isaacs (1!5)

Grid
standings
'l't:,\M

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

1\U. (; ,\ 1\U:."i
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Continued from C-2
chores with Korab running the last
eight for the TD.
·, · Steve Wolfe, subbing for the
'-- shaken-up Korab, booted the PAT
off to the left. GAHS led 13-0.
Wolfe then kicked off, but almost
.,,missed the ball, squlbbllng It per' : fectly just 15 yards downfield
, where Stephens pounced on it for
, • GAHS.
This time, GAHS went 46 yards In
; nine plays to breal&lt;. the game opeh.
: ' Russell scampered 13 yards, the
drive's longest gain, to notch the six
• points. Korab circled right end for
the two extra points. GAHS led21-0.

(25) Friday night. Southern posted Its first SVAC victory since the 1918 season, 36-8.

Meigs penetrated GAHS territory to the 14, but once again
couldn't cross the goal line. The
drive's biggest gain was a 42 yard
pass from Chancey to Shawn Eads.
Jim Beaver ended the drive intercepting at the one.
With subs from bot~ sides on the
field, GAHS added insurance with
35 seconds left on a 16 yard run by
Dave Garber. Kev Isaacs added
the extras on a run.
With the win, Gallipolis goes to
4-2 overall and 2-1 In league play.
Meigs drops to 2-4 and 2-1.
Coach Charley Chancey thought
the Dt&gt;vlls were impressive. "They
played real sharp. We played all
right, but mental mistakes when

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The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3

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

�October 10, 1982

October 10, 1982

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

Page- C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

s~o~u~~m~3rn ends losing spell inside conference, 36-8...

North Gallia drubs Eastern;
Kyger Creek wins first tilt
VlNTON - " Thi s is loo easy,"
orw of Norlh l.a llia's players was
h ~ar d co mm ~ nllng midway
lhrough lhl' Pira l ~s· i:I-Odr11bblngof
clt'fending SVAC champion Eastern
hN~ Friday night .
The Pirales scored early and
often and nevpr lei up. ThP win left
Nor1h Gallia ar :&gt;-I overall. and provi ded lhe PiratPs wilh !heir firs!
league viclor-,· of lh~ season. Easl em g""s to 2-i ovt' rall and 0-1 insid~
1hP ! ~ague.
Mosl of l h~ first quarter was
sro rciC'ss as thP P ira tes drovr into
Eastern 's territ ory. were repelled.
and then slowly rega ined ground on
the Eagles. With .1:22 left on l h&lt;'
clock. junior back Scott Pickens
connec ted with senior Ken NPal for
a :!'! )'ard touchdown pass . The try
for ~xlra points fa iled .
The Pira l ~s scorr'&lt;l again in the
last fi ve seconds of 1he period whPn
senior Mike Mays grabbed a pass
and ran 6.''&gt; ya rds to paydirl . A con·
v~rsion nm b)' Nort h Gallia 's lop
ru s h ~ r . Eric Penick. who has mon:than 700 va rus so .far this season.
was successful. putting home team
on top. 14-0.
The Pirates ca me back early in
the second qua rt er when, with 9:43
left . PickPns pulled a quar1erback
sneak on the three-yard line. A pass
from Pickens to Mays was good for
rhe extra two points. II was 22-0.
Despil~ Eastern' s effort s to ga in
ground. the Pirates conlinued their
scoring rush. With6: 13remainingin
th~ first half. Pickens pulled another
quarterback sneak on Eastern 's
one-ya rd lin ~ for his second score.
H ~ was also succPss ful on the two
point conversion . That made it 30-0.
La ter . with S('('()nds remaining, a
iO-ya r'd r11n by Penick into Eastem 's endzone wa s called back. duP
to a penally.
Penick scored again wilh 5: 491eft
in the third canto when he blasted
through Eastern's defense from
four yards out. A try for extra points
failed. and Ihe seore was 3&amp;-0.
East~ rn 's offense was stopped rl'peatedly by the powerful Pirale
defense.
With 1: 1"&gt; left in the game, senior

back Paul Hollingshead ra n
through another hole in Eastern's
defenS&lt;' for a 9-yard 'I'D. Hollingshead then kicked thr EP. making
the final score 4.1-0.
AI that point. Piralt· Coach John
Blake emptied his bench. In the final
seconds of lhe game a successful
charl(e into Eastern 's endzone by
sophomor·e Pirate back Mark Foreman was ra iled back.
Penick finished the night with 135
)'ar'ds r11shing in 21 trips. Hollingshead had l ffi )'ar'ds on 14 carries.
Pickens passed for 17'2 yards in
seven allempts and Ma.vs had 1ffi
ya r'd s wit h lhree ca tches.
Easte rn 's top 11JShPr was Troy
Gut hrie, who recorded iO .va rd s on
12 caniC's.
Defensively, the Pirates were led
by Ken Neal. wilh 14 lackles, and
sophomore Bill Ha rden. who had 13.
The Pirates ret urn to act ion Friday wh~ n they tra vel to Southwest·
ern . Eastern hosts K_vger Creek.
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Bohcats Stop Wildcat.'
MERCERVlLLE
Led by the
hard running of sophomore fullback
Steve Waugh and the first half passing of soulhpaw quarterback Chuck
Vogel.lhewinlessKyger CreekBobcats snapped a five game losing
streak here Friday night by defeat ing host Hannan Trace, 14-6.
The win spoiled the Wildca ts'
homecoming celebralion while extending their losing streak to thret'
games.
Following two exchanges of possession. Coach Mark Hartman 's
Bobcats began what proved to be a
successful drive at their42yard line.
Nine plays later. Vogelfaked up the

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page C-5

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

17. OO) ill the second quart . h
th~ Tornadoes march-' 60 e' ~ etn0
"" yarus
paydlrt, capped by Connolly's
three
_, h' .
rd
Riff!
b
II
ya scamper.
e u "" rsway
into the endzone carrying severa l
HI hi d
f01. th ·
.
e two pornt
g ani ers
convers on
·
.
k' k ff C .
0 ~ thJe ens~rn~
. rc ·O • oach
·1ac
ames
.'ghlanders mr' handled a ball whtch dropped them
back tothe nineyard lrllf. Thedetermined vlsit?rs marched'91 yards for
a score In erght plays. Steve Pelfrey
faked a dive Into the line thPn ran a
sweep for a 36 yard TD run. A Pelfrey to Roy McCarty PAT reception
wasgoodforan8-8tie.
Just two plays earlier, David

middle thl'n rambled around his left
side for a two yard ·m. Waugh then
added.theconversion for an8-0iead.
Th£' biggest gainer during th£'
march was a :l4 yard pass completion to Waugh.
Kyger Cret'k got the ball back
three plays later on a Waugh
interception.
Midway through the second period , Coach Brett Wilson's Wildca ts
began moving but a determined
Bobcat defense threw Jeff Barnes
for a seven yard loss which snuffed
out lhc rally. Mike Beaver's punt
put KC in a hole at its five yard line,
however , Vogel connected with
Waugh and running back Duane Air
shire for two clutch fi rst down plays.
The Bobcats reached the 43 before
quick kicking the ball away. On the
first play following the kick, Larry
Edge grabbed a Mike Rossiter pass
ending that drive.
Nl'ither team moved again until
Hannan Trac£' reached paydirt wllh
6:30 left in the third period. Behind
the hard-running of junior Jeff
Barnes. theWilcatsgot back into the
SV AC contest. Barnes picked up 19
yards, then added four more before
going the last 21 for the Hannan
Trace TD. A run forth£' conversion
was stopped.
Following Dav£' M artin 's det'p
punt on the Bobca ts' next series.
Hannan Trace took control at the 15,
but Melvin Clagg was dropped for a
three yard loss to the 12. A fumble
ensued with KC's J .D. Bradbury
pouncing on the loose pigskin.
Four plays later. the Bobcats had
their second touchdown on Waugh's
fi ve yard run. A run for the conversion was stopped inches short oft he
IPft goalline phy lon.
Kyger Creek practiced ball control most of the fourth quarter as the
vlsllors used 12 running plays, two
passes and a costly encroachment
penalty by HT to keep poSS('SSion.
Hannan Trace rega in control in
the last minute. but suffered two
major yardage losses on fumble recoveries totaling 24 yards.
In recording his first varsity
coaching victory Coach Hartman
said, "We controlled the line of
scrimmage this week. We were
"fired up" from the time we arrived,".
Kyger Creek, 1-5 goes to Eastern
Friday night while Hannan Trace.

.
Ntda Scampered 60yards for an apparent
""' lh_e
. score• but as he crosse~
TD plane a costly clip votded hrs
effort
. .
.
The frnal two chaplers proved Ia
be short for the hustling HighlandSo h
ers as ut l'm started to dominate
the action. With 7:18 remai'ning in
the third frame, Riffle slammed
into the endzoneand Connolly added
the PAT on a run . It was 16-8,
Southern .
A strong defensive attack bv SHS
stopped SWHS cold where the Tornado offense again went to work. At
the 2:17 mark a Riffle- to-Connally
pass and Nease PAT pushed the
score to 24-8. In the final frame, Rif-

fie uniPashed a 28 yard aerial to
Jason Hill in the endzone with th&lt;'
PAT '11
. n vor'd . Th ~ Ia st score came
with 5. 59 left on a Riffle five yar'd
Th PATkl k
I ked
run . e
c was b oc
.
Every Southern player saw some
action as coaches Bill Porter and
D
arrell Dugan substituted freely
throughout the fourth frame.
Nease had 101 yards in 13 ca rries
and Keith Cook 30yardson 7carries.
Pelfrey led SWHS with 53 yards on
seven, David Nida was 12 for40, and
Jim Burnett 11 for 27.
Receiving-wise Connolly was 4
for 57, Richard Lyons 1 for 20, and
Jason Hill 1-28. M cCarty was 3 for
3.').
Richard Dugan had 6 tackles for

Southern. big Dennis Teaford had 7
unassisted tackles and 7 assists,
Rusty Fl agg had 8 assists, Tom
Cummins 7. and Cook 6.
So
•
uthem s Wade Connolly had
two interceptions and Glenn Young
a fumble recovery. Southwestern's
Greg Terry and Bernie Kilgore

blocked a punt while Randy Layton
and Kilgore r~vered fumbles.
Southern travels to Hannan Trace
next week while SWHS challenges
,
North Gallia. Both tilts start at 7:30.

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BREAKING TIIROUGH- Eric Penick (28), North
Gallla's top rusher, tries to shake off a tackle by an
unidentHied Eastern player in the Norlh Gallia-

lfflQfOVB

Eastern game at Vinton Friday. The Pirates avenged
their 21-0 loss to Ea.tern last year with a 43-0 shutout
over the Eagles.

y_our

1-3-2 hosts Southern.
Sl.at~hs

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Dayton will host
cage tournament
DAYTON, Ohio tAP I - The Uni·
versily of Dayton Invitational Tournament has becom~ lhe Merrill
Lynch Classic, taking on corporate
sponsorship to offS&lt;'IIhe increasing
cos t of staging the annual winter
holidav basketball tournament.
" II has been our desire since I he
incPpl ion of I he in-season basket ba II
tourn a m~nl in 1972 to bring team s to
the tournament that give our fans
the interS&lt;'Ciional flavor of the ou t-·
slanding baskl'lba ll being played in
the count ry." university vice president Tom Frericks sa id Friday.
"With tra w l costs being what
they are today, it was becoming
mor e and more difficulltoentice the
quality teams that we wanted and
our fans WC'l1' used to S('(ling.

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Meigs wingback. Chasing play Is Larry Arthur (60,
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Gi\HS won, 2!Hl.

BIG GAINER - Meigs' junior fullback Chris
Burdette ( 41) gained 19 yards on this play against
GAHS Friday night. Looking on L• Joe Penin (21) , ·

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RECEIVES PASS - Eastern player Cliff Griffith (23) receives a pass
while Norlh Gallla's Mike Mays (84) closes in for tackle during Friday's
SV i\C opener at North Gallla. The Pirdles defeated the Eagles, 43-0 .

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220 Second Avenue

PH.
.,

11

I

It's the most important gas furnace )&gt;reakthrough ·
in over 40 years. The Pulse furnace slashes your
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other fossil fuel furnaces. Payback on your ,initial
investment takes jyst a few heating seasons. If we
can't convince you, your current high he,ating
bills-will! Call or see us today.

ILIC:TLIIIIC:

I

I
I

knn"' u~. Wt· ll 111 .1 ~\'

o.,..,., fol
.....
_,

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\•

'

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.Gallipolis, O";

...

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...

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• • Color Monnor System
• AfC ... Automatic
Frequency Conlrol
• 100\ Solid Slate Chassis
• In-Line Block Matrix
Plclure Tube
• VHF Pre.Sel Fine Tuning
• 70 Posnlon "Click-In" UHF
Tuning
• Alllomatlc Col01 Control

•••
,'.
'•

c..
'••

'

$27500
0

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17'·it;.go,.., COLOR TV
wo10ut nnlsh

2802

or high lmpoct plosfK::

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ONLY

Large capacity washer II Heavy-duty transmission 1m No-krnk dratn hose IT.! Ttmed dryer
with selections up to 80 minutes 1EJ 4 Venting
options mJ Separate start control

·llil

$327.

1111 . 10.6 Cu. ft. capacity llill
IOihcrent foam insulation l'l1l
Manual defrosr ril Trilon
cabinet. liner .aod inner door

fill 2 l~e trays ril Full-width
cabtnet shelves, one adjustIll
· drawer fill

Model ssot tCB
.

lOW
ju
t·

I •••

$365
.: ·

Washer Model WLW30008

S286
$
OUR LOW PRICE . . 239
OUR LOW PRICE .

Dryer Model DLB12508

1::~.~ 525 ~~PAIR

M

�October ,0, 1982 .
Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

Ironton defense shines in
•
28-0 victory over Jackson
JACKSON - Ironton' s poweliul
Tigers journeyed to Jackson Frida y night and intercepted four
passes enrout f' to a 28-0 vic tory over

the lronmen .
Ironton's defense so dominated
the contest that .Jackson managed
just five first downs. one in the first
half. and limited the lronmen to J7
ya rds rus hing.
On the second play of the game.
Iro nton intercepted a .JHS pass and
moved 7H yards In 12 plays. capped
by Mike Smith 's four ya rd touchdown run . Rya n Ai nswort h kicked

the first of his four successful
placements.
The Tigers struck twice in the fi .
nat six minutes of the first half
when Mark Hixon scored from the
four va rd line with 5: 19 left and

Smit h from the one with just 15 seconds rPmaining.
The firs t drive rovered 80 yards

in 11 plays and the second was a 50
va rd march In nine plavs.
. Mike Smith startled · the crowd
when he intercepted a Jackson pass
in the fourth period and returned II
9~ yards for a touchdown. only to
have it called back on a clipping
penally.
With 9:42 remaining in the contest the unddeated Tigers staged a
time-consuming 1R play 65 yard
march. capped by Mark Hixon's
one yard TO run.
Ironton's offense collected 24 first
downs. 352 ya rds rushing, and completed three of four passes for 59
~' ards.

.Jackson. with several injured

Hixon. a rrserve tailback, was
moved to fullback this week to rPplace John Pemberton. who suf-

. \ th
dE'ep thl gh b11115e
n
e

a

Tigers'

15-13 triumph

over

Gallipolis.
Ray Varcallc and Brad McCorkle each netted 20 yards for the

WAVERLY - The Waverly Tigers entertained Green County, Kentucky's Musketeers Friday night
and scored a 22-14 loss at the hands
of the visitors.
Following a scoreless first pe-l
rlod, the Kentuckians got on the
board first when Darrin Law broke
a 58 yard touchdown run with Tim
Simpson kicking the extra point.
The Tigers took the lead wlth3: 32

point s.
Jeff Dennis intercepted a pass
and ran it back :l9 yards to payd irt
In the first period .
In the second quart er Trucco
booted a 27 ya rd fi eld goa l and Mike
Crothers scon.'CI on a two ya rd run .

In a weird third quart er. Logan
had the ball for just four offensive
plays. but scored 21 point s.
Mike Jones ran one yard for the
lone Athens· touchdown just before
the ha lf ended to make It 2:1-6.
Then came the third quarter in
which Roger Klump picked up a
Bulldog fumbl e and returned it 25
va rds to paydirt. Jeff Ogg pounced
on a fumble in the end zone. and
Keith Geiger ran back an Interception :10 varci' for the final Chieftain

left In the half when Jim Thomas
ran one yard for a touchdown and
Andre Pursell ran the two point
conversion.
Greenup's Chuck Morton tallied
on a one yard run In the third quarter and Simpson passed to PhU
Teveto for the two -po int
conversion.
Waverly came back with Pursell
scoring from the three yard line,

.High school ' football scores

IronmPn.

Score by quarters:
Ironton
7 14 0 7-2H
Jackson
0 0 0 00

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE

The contest never did materialize
Into the classic confrontation that
many thought it would be as Winfield took advantage of six Falcon
turnovers to vault the Putnam
Countlans back into the Class AA
playoff picture.
,
Winfield scored 14 first quarter
po!nts before exploding for 28 more

ByTIMDAVJS
It was a sweet homecoming vic-

tory for the Point Pleasant Blg
Blacks as they posted a somewhat
surprtslng 17-14 trlumph over the
previously unbeaten MUton Greyhounds at Sanders Memorial Stadium Friday night before a
capacity crowd.
On Milton's flrst possession of the
game it was faced with a fourth and
ten at their own 11-yard line. With
Milton in punt formation. Kevin
Smith broke through the offensive
line to block the punt giving Point
Pleasant the ball at the Greyhound
10-yard line.

2 Ohio Approved Feeder Cattle Sales
OCTOBER 12 and OCTOBER 26, 1982
BOTH SALES ARE ON TUESDAY EVENING
STARTING AT 8:00 P.M.

Freshman Keny York kicked
the two extra point s following the
Logan scores.
, In running it s unblemis hed
league 'mar k to 3-0 Logan finished
with nine first downs. HiO yards
rushing. and completed four of 11
passes for 45 yards.
The losers netted 13 first downs,
41 yards on the ground , and hit
seven of 24 aerials for 111 yards.
Dave McBride topped the Logan
rushers with 75 yards on eight tries
while Danny Trevas led At hens
with 51 yards on eight carries.
Score by quarters:
Logan
\.1 10 21 0- 44
Athens
0 6 0 0- 6

The Wahama White Falcons
came plummeting back to earth
Friday night when the W_il!!!eld
Generals burst the Wahama bubble with a thorough 48-0 gridiron
· win which damaged the White
Falcons' playoff hopes while enhancing those same dreams held
by the victorious Generals.

SELLING ALL BREEDS AND KINDS OF FEEDER CALVES, YEARLINGS AND DAIRY. ACCEPTING CATTLE DAY BEFORE ON
BOTH SALES FROM 12:00 to 7:00 AND 7:00 to 1:00 DAY OF
SALE

FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact the Stockyard at 5922322 or 592-9789, for Mike Crouse or Rodney Howery; or call
Rodney at home at 698-7231.

Three plays later Senior tailback
Mike Patterson eluded several
Greyhound defenders and hit paydirt from six yards out with 4: 49
remaining In the first quarter.
Kevin Smith added the PAT giving
PPHS a 7-0 lead.
Midway through the second period PPHS was faced with third and
six at their own 14-yard Une. Scott

CONSIGN YOUR CATTLE EARLY!!!

Heath captures Class AA title
in Rio Grande CC lnvitationa

-

NallollllilocU)' l.ei!Pil

NYUk&gt;s
New~
PhUadelpl\la

Craig Lt•ntl . :!:Xth . 1~ : 1 ~: Dan ;\dkln!&gt;.. ~ \ s t.
:lfl:l\.1: Dav id ( 'a rJ)(' n t('r . :1:.!nd . '_'1 1:07: Dan
Dn&gt;ssf'l. ~th . 'l!I· JK. ( ;ordon Splf'lf' . h9th.
:! J· JJ, W ~ Ml'&lt;'k.". Kl.o;t , 2:.!:1Yl: ~ott Smit h.

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Hartlll'd al Buffalo
Washln¢on at Phl1P&gt;Iphla
WlnnlpeR at Chkago

J

IS ANNOUNCING

4-2
!'&gt;-45

5-31.2 5-:1'1.1

Offensive plays

48

Score by quarters:
Pl . Pleasant
MUton

511 '

1 1!&gt;ll 0-)1
0 0 14 0-14

uper Special

$10 •

While They last

.

Midnite black, short bed, V-6, auto .. w/ overdrive. 1625 Payload,
PS, PB, AM/FM radio. Tahoe equipment. white lettered tires.
Much more.
Extended Cabmobel, Apple Red and White. V-6. 4 speed, PS, PB,
jump seats, P235 w/lettered tires, AM/ FM radio. Deluxe twotone paint. Super sharp truck. lots more.

IN STOCK
1983 Chevrolet Caprice Classic 4 Dr. Sedan
1983 Chevrolet Impala 4 Dr. Sedan
1983 Celebrity, Citations, Cavaliers &amp; Chevettes

ALSO 1983 OLDSMOBILE 98, 88, Cutlass Supreme, Cutlass Ciera, Omega, &amp;Firenza. Plus ......
A few 1982 Models at Tremendous Savings.

GALLIPOLIS

Check With Us For Details on Chevrolet- Eastern Airline.

BUY NOW AND FLY

CANDY REGAL
BROWN

Bob!!

•

Reg. $5,599

__

walv('f'!l rur ttl(' pui'JDS('of giving ti'IE'm
IIK'Ir UriC(rldltklnal reil'ases. Sold U&gt;s Fll·
klns, outtll'ick'r. to thl' Hl roshlma To;ro
Carp In Japan. Smt BIU('(' Robbins. Lar·
ry RDII\'ichlld. AU# RU lz. pltchtonand
Mark DNotrt . lnlk'krr, 10 F.\'ansvllk&gt;of
thE' American AssociatiOn. Purchas«&lt; ttl'
contracts ol Mark Dacko. pUctKor. J('ff

NOW

PROMOTION

$4,995

Your Dealer On The River. ........ .

Kl"'l&lt;¥:a. outlk&gt;ldt'r. from f.\'ansvUIP; and

Olartcs Nail. pltchl'r, Wa l!t&gt;r Sl!nP POOk',

SIMMO_NS

catl'hl'r and Barbaro Garbl&gt;y. ootfk&gt;ltrr.

tmm

Btnnln!~!am

ol

the'

""""""· _,_,

Soothl'm

,Gold Wing•

SAN OTEGO PADRES - Namt&gt;d Fmt
Whitacre. spl'('ial pro)ens dll"N"Ior.
MSIIEIIIAU.
NadauiBMIIdhd AIIIOCiatkln
CHICAGO BUU.S Tradro Ray
Blumt', RUard. tothl'San Dk11o01ppers
lor furure corY&gt;IdPratlons.
PISTONS - s~.w~ro Ricky
fl,mr, prd, to a multlyt&gt;ar rontract .

lnt~rstate•

BETZ HONDA SALES

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY. INC.

KANAUGA, OH.

UPPER RT. 7
- - - - - - - - - - - ----- -

PH. 992-6614

Pomeroy, OH .
Mon.-Fri.
8:00 to 9:00

Saturday
9:00 to 5:00

-

AaAGt.a

CIWO'ION!IIIIP 8EIIIE8

THAT HE Will RESUME HIS MEDICAl PRACTICE .
AT 155 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDlEPORT, OH.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1982
HOURS WILL BE :

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday &amp; Friday
9 :00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Wednesday 9 :00 a.m. to 12:00 Noon
PH. 992-6800

-·G.w

"Ceiling Dealing" Days Special!

Yes. we're d ealing on
Armstrong ceilings like never
before.
We've brought the prices
way down on selected Armstrong ceilings- including •
some of our most popular
patterns and styles.
Come in now and save a
bundle. But you'd better hurry:
Because "Ceiling Dealing"
Days won't last long!
Offer ends November 13. 1982.

AMDICAN LEAOOE

I1---------------------------·
Free smoke alarm or
I
fire extinguisher when
1
1 you
buy a selected
1
Armstrong ceiling.
1
I
1
1

I
I
1
1
1

1

Callbrnla fl,. Mltwaultet :1

~sG.n.

CaUhmla ,4, Mltwaukee 2, Calltornla
k-ads 5«'rlcs 2.0.
Friday'lfGamt'

Mllwaukfrf' ~. California .1. California
lrad! SP.1t'! H
Ruftday't~G.wne

Calllornla at Mllwaukft&gt;, iii'I('('('!ISal'
NATIONAL LEAGUE
"'~'•Ganw

1
1
.
1I

tnnln~

1886"

. \::· -___ ,

All savings
guaranteed

in full.

RUSH SQUARE COLONIAL SAMPLER

NOW PAYING
12% ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
Minimum Deposit $1 ,000 for One to Two Yeors. lntemt paya,
ble Monthly Of Quarte~y. l!ffectiw annual yield, 12%

ollre retardant
•acoustical
•washable
• natural look

•l2"x12" tile

· ot2"x12" llle
oEarly American
·sampler look
•acoustical
IO'x12'
Room

CONSTITUTION

$9120

•Williamsburg
scu lptured design
with antique-gold
tracings oacoust\cal

Opposite the Post Of,ice
GallipoJis

.,

n..,

- , Point Pl...nt, W
675•..Va.
4
Monday·~nday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., ·Sat. 8 a.m. · 12 noon

· .·

'I

HAVE ARRIVED!

·
Sq. Ft.

PRICES START AT

BAHAMAS!

A sk ilbout o ur Sp ecial Gilt

W1th any ATC vehicle.

NOV. 15-19, 1982
4 NIGHf 'cRUISE
P\.US 2 EXTRA DAYS
IN MIAMI AT NO
ADDmONAL ·
COST

' (GeU few Detd•l
1

I

44f-C)699

HO.Iod by ...... MeMn

l.ocll ..... Counoolor II

, 1lie Olllpolo AAA

.,

,.•.

Wa~!NTJY
Acoustical ,.' New
· grid-hiding · design.
Flr•reterdltnt. •

..53~.

c.

..

Ft.

\

. I

•

'

YOUR A TC HIADOUAITERS

BETZ
7

iol

I

$695

40

Carolina Lumber ·&amp;' SUpply Company
312, Sixth Street
· · Store Hours:

I - ~~

•i . .

New grid-hiding .
design .. Washable.
·
Acoustical Fire-retardant •

1983 ATC's

cush10n insole and warm

supple leathers. F'irat class
lootwear ... on any turf.

·u8 .

10',,2. ~
Room

·

$U8STANT1AL Pf''_'J..Y F'OR EARLY WITHDRAWAl

GALLIPOLIS SkVH.GS &amp; LOAN CO-.-

•t2"x12" tile
orandom abstract ·
deSign
oacoustical

;.

tanned cowhide upper . It looks
every btl the quality boot it rs.
Whal you can't see, you have
to feel. Inside. only your foot

knows the luxury of berng
surrounded on all stdes by
leather·lmed paddmg . Your
tool snuggles down rnto the
unsurpassed comfort ol deep

ALL THE WAY TO THE

'll' .~~ ~~- .J\·~i
~'
66$

.·".. .'1--1.:.;; . .

At a glance. you can see the
hne leather and expert craftsmanship. A custom lormed
oulsole is permanently bonded

s-sAmerikanis...

1

Armstrong

Well-bred to be as functional
as it is handsome.
to the special wate r-resistant

I
.1
1
1

Just bring this coupon into our store. and ask for
details about this extra "Ceiling Dealing" Days
bonus!

The classic

AU ant a at St . LouiS, rained oot after 4\.s

·1

Buy 150 sq. II. ol Annslrong·s lire re lardanl Headliner '. Chandelier· . or
Maslers Collection·• Ceilings. and you'll gel a smoke a larm or lire
extinguisher - free! (Gel another tree smoke a larm or lire extinguisher whe n you buy Annslrong ins\alla\ion materials to1nslall
lha l ceiling )

~--------------------------Save now on these limited-time
"Ceiling_DecrJing" specials.

"Safe
Savingr
Since

•. Phone 446-3832

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

ocmorr

Playoff
_..._results

Top off ·a .10 'x12' room for as little as $68.40

1-42

CHEVROLET S-10
4 WHEEL
DRIVES

DETROIT TIGERS ...:. Pltl('('(l Rick Pfo.
ters and Jt&gt;rry 1\JTTI('I'". outfk&gt;l«rn, on

Nrw J('f'5('Y 3, New York ftanA£'111 2
DAroU .1. Mlnnt'!Ota 3
Nfow Y1.111 lslan&lt;Ws 6. Edmonton 4
Siluldqi0Jm81
Plnsllil'f(h at Boston

DR. JAMES P. CONDE

19.1
14-36
2

4-2

Pena!Ues-yards
Punts-avg.

For You,

f)iday'118portll ~:tlonii

StLouis

Interceptions thrown
Fumbles Lost

Just the One

Transactions

~

o 1
1
5
0 1
I
4
l'\mytht DlvWon
VanC'OU\'M'
1 0
1
.'\

ON()
ON(/

F:•irta nd

~

:l
1.1

116

2Zl
2-4
0

SEE THE ALL NEW 1983
HONDA INTERSTATE

"1\tesda,y'IIGUM

0

Edmonton

Brlprr

7

t.ll

Y~passlng

Total yards
Passing

M
13
25-17

/

St. Loul&lt;&gt; at Atlanta, If nfCCSSary

Toronto
Drtrolt

'! TI

:no

0

PP
6
38-93

UPPER RT. 7

St .Louis at Atlanta. II nect'l88ry

'2

~

Firs! downs
Yards rushing

The Truck Of The 80's

I

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

~'IIGIU'nf!

6

Chic~o

(;rN'nriPid

nos... ~n ior

THEY'RE HERE!

Other pier lenglns available ar spec,al pric e3.

St.Ululs at A.Uanta, f nl

5

Buffalo

1111

\Kl
191

Montrrol

Boston

l'ninl...
;;

Ml.(;ilmd
Falrfil'ld Union
Tu~ · araw ;•s \ 'a llf'\'
Cirl'lf'\'illf'
l m nl nn

• Excellent picture
quality at extended· VHS
play speeds
'J:.120
\Yttilo They Last.

SuJrdat•Garne

12
6
9

Ad.r.rnt DlvWon

~kath

'

0 Point Pleasant.
rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;~
Following that score Milton
~
started its only substantial drive of
While They LllaU
the first half. The 'Hounds moved
Magnevox YR-8318
from thelr own 27-yard line to the
PPHS 12-yard line ln 12 plays.
Three passed for 39 yards and the
help of an Interference penalty
against the Big Blacks aided the
drive. On second down at the 12 and
Pure chrome.
1: 48 remaining In the first half, SePure
color.
nior Randall Corrie plcked off a
Todd Fugate pass at the four yard
High qiM!Ity,
line and re~rned the Interception
p&lt;Jre chromium
M- VR-13118-H""' YHII Aoc~&lt;:-,llhl
dlorklt video tape.
to the PPHS 16. The Blg Blacks
Se.rch, sun Frame, Eteetrontc
and Buut~n Digital ChXtt and Time
started what was to be their final
• Cleaner, sharper
TimtOff.
images
scoring drive of the night at that
• Truer, more life-like
point.
color

NYRanjl;'('n020680

day morning.

(;altipo\i.'i l'f'SU\1."

2 1
1 0
1 0

WashlnJI'IOO

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

Tt•am

On their next pmeuloo the o Winfield 101111.
interfered with the locals plans.
Generals marched 'II yards in 18
Moments later the Generals
Substitutes played the better part of
plays before scoring on a foorth struck again with Scott Melton the half for the wiMers with a 19
down nine yard paaa from Dennie scoring on a 42 yard nm With Akers yard run by Bill Combs being the
Bannister to Roger Harrab. Once ltlctlng the eztr.~ point to make it
only score of the second half. The
again Akers split the uprights for ~with 7:55 remaining in the half.
extra point attempt came up short
the point after touchdown to give Winfield reached paydlrt twice
leaving Winfield with a 48~ adWinfield an early I~ advantage more before the hall ended with
vonta•e when time expired.
with :40 remaining in the first Harrah scoring on a ~ yard punt
STi\TL..,,f"S
Department
quarter.
,
return at the 5:57 mark and again
\\ All
\\1~
Flrs l down!'
))
The second period proved to be
with 2:22 remaining on a 47 yard
'
Ya rds r1l.sh\ng'.!'! l-li' T;- \'lh
disastroiiS for Wahama with the pass from Mike Barber. Akers
Yard.~ passin~
Uti
'11
Total varU s
I I~
:t!b
Generals scoring 28 points on two made one PAT kick while BiU
Passtrlg
i- 11
long passes, a 34 yard nm a d a 55 Phellx missed the other giving the
lnt~{"('ptl ons throv•n
Fumblf'S- Iost
) I
yard punt return. The first score of Generals an insunnountable 42-0
" '!
Pcnaltles-vds
II \lr.
1·'!(1
the quarter followed an Interception halftime lead.
Puni s-a\'_g.
I 2R It
of a Mark Roush paaa which gave
Wahama threatened to score late
orr. plays
14
S.'Ort' hy qu:u1t'r"':
the hosts a first down at the WHS 38 in the first half and twice more
Wahama
0 0 II II- t!
yard line. Bannister conneclell with during the final two periods but a
W\nflf'1d
1·1 :.')( 11 li-11'
Harrah lor a 38 yard strike and tile li~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w
passing duo also teamed together
for the two point conversion for a 22-

Scott Rutherford moved · the
PPHS offensive to the Milton 12
yard line in four plays. Rutherford
ran lor 19 yards and hit Jeff Rife
again this time for 44 yards In setting the stage for Kevin Smith with
nlne seconds before halftime.
Smith came on and kicked a 29yard field goal boosting the PPHS
lead to 17-0 at the half.

Frktlu"' • Gaane
Atlanta at St.Louis, AKl rain

w... ""'*'-"

WLTPFFA~

Coach Jack Pa.vton's Ga lli polis
Blue Devils. petiorming without
their top runner ;Greg Ad kins t fin ished nin th in the 1H- team meet
with 2.'&gt;6 points.
One-hundred and fi ve runners
participated in the 5,000 meter ;:u
mile I event . held in connection with
the Bob Evans Farm Festi va l.
Gallipolis. now 6H-2H on the yea r.
will take part in the Southeastern
Ohio League meet Oct. 19. at
Jackson.

Rutherford dropped back to pass
and hit Jeff Rife on a slant pattern
across the middle. Rife dld the rest,
cutting through the Greyhound secondary racing 86 yards for a touchdown with 5: 43 remaining in the
half. Kevin Smith spilt the uprights
with 5: 43 remaining In the half.
Kevin Smith spilt the uprights with
the extra-point making the score 14-

'lbur!'lday'11 GlUM
St. louis 1. Atlanta 0, St. Lo.ils IMds
s.rrles 1·0.

NFL results

~tlrd .

AB a result ol the Winfield vtdory
both Wahama and the Generals
emerge with ~I season sliltes aiiil
despite the one setback on their
record each squad is still yery
much in the playoff picture. With
jiiSt lour regular season pmes
remaining either squad can Ulafford another setback and Sttu
retain their playoff. hopes.
After suffering through the
demorallzinglosso!Troybelorethe
game even started the White
Falcons added to their misfortune
by fumbling the ball away on their
first offensive play of the game.
Winfield took over on the Wahima
22 yard line and scored their first
touchdown on a two yard nm by Jay
Perry. Paul Akers booted the ellra
point to make it 7.() with 10:21 to
play in the opening period. '

Scoreboard ...

Armstrong

RIO GRANDE - Heath High
School ca ptured Class AA honors in
the 12th ann ual Rio Grande Invitational Cross Country meet Sa tur- ·

during the second period to lay
claim to a 42-0 halftime bulge. After
a scoreless third stanza the
Generals dented tile end zone once
more before time expired to take
the 48-G decision.
Wahama never really got things
in proper perspective even before
the contest got underway when
during pre-game warm-ups their
leading rushing and second leading
tackler on defense, Todd Troy
suffered what may have been a
broken ankle after stepping in a
hole on the field. To complicate
matters even more, the White
Falcon second leadlnJl rusher and
their top scorer, DoMie VanMeter
suffered a knee injury which
sidelined him after being a participant'ln the game for a scant two
minutes.

Big'Biacks upset sixth ranked Ho~,!!ds

I

score.

Wahama Suffers game, player Joss against Winfiel~.-...~M·~·~··
By GARY CLARK

but the Important conversion pass
failed .
The Musketeers, now 3-5 on the
year, put the contest away with 1:00
left when Chuck Griffith scored
from the one and Simpson kicked
the conversion.
Greenup led In rushing 239-132
but Tommy Thmpson hit eight of 16
passes for 110 yards to keep the Tigers' offense rolling.
Law led all runners as be accounted for 189 yards on 24 carries
while Pursell paced Waverly with
Wl'SII'f'\' llko N. 21. Col. Franklln Hls. U
otdo iUlftSd•ooiFoolhall
Wf'SUun 12. Plkl'fon 1-1
56 yards on 12 tries.
ByThl'AModalfod flr'fM
WN!tlill«' m. Ba., . 7
Score by quarters:
Ft1day'~ ~
Whl;'(if&gt;nburlif: :l.!. Minford ;
Whllrhall 2M. [)(&gt;tawm't' o
Greenup Co.
0 7 8 7-22
Wl'ltstoo~'ll. Aif•kanck'rll
Wl&lt;'kllffC' ?.l'wtnsburJ:It
W Holmi'S +iii. CO!\tvx1on U
WJimlnl{fon :JI. Tf'a,Vli VaL 7
Waverly
0 8 0 6-14
r--w_.''_"_'""'
_· _,_~._c._
·aM_
· ""_.,_
, _ _ _ _ __::w.:::1Uant:::,:~:::.'·;:::""::::"::."·::.•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Logan undisputed league
leader after 44-6 victory
ATHENS - The Logan Chieftains took over undisputed first
place in the SEOAL Friday night
with a 44-6 trouncing of the winless
Athens Bulldogs.
The Chiefs intercepted four
passes and recovered fi ve fumbles
as their 10 year jinx over the Bulldogs continued .
At hens has not defea ted Logan in
football since a 21-0 verdict in 197'2
when the current Athens head
coach. Lcs Cham plin. was an
Athens high school halfback . Logan
owns a H-0-2 rero rd during that
span .
Friday was a Iaugher for the
Chiefs as they scored on the second
plav of the game on a 61 yard run b.v
Dave McBride and Mitch li·ucco
kicked the first of his ttu·cc extra

October 10, 1~82

Greenup_topples Waverly

players watching from the sidelines, managed five first downs. J7
yards on the ground. and hit five of
17 passes for 56 yards. Four were
intercepted .
Smith led the Tigers in rushing
with 15-\ yards gained in 24 at tempts. Hixon added 106 yards on
17 cartles .

fered

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Gallipolis, Ohio

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio f'oint Pleasant, W. Va.

'IIONDA
SALES
.,.

'

KANAUGA, OH .

�October 3, 1982

ational

Ohio high school football results

~

...

~{

.•• ••:: ~~-;
'

. . . 'Jt

EI...KS RUNNERUP- The Elk spon,ored team
was runm•rup in the GallipoUs Golf A..,_o;oclation's
Wednt'Sday match play this past summer. Honored
a.~ part of tht• annual award presentations at a han·

MEN'S FIJGHT WINNERS - Winners of var·
ious flights in the men's competition tlds summer at

tht• Gallipolis Golf link.• honon.&gt;d at Wednesday's an·
nual hanquet wert•, left wright, R. D. White, Dr. R. D.

!

U

• I

~ .

1 • ••

quet Wednesday night at the Gallipolis Shrine Club
were part of the team, Chick Conley, ,Jerry Myers,
Don Houston, and Ron Carmichael.

Thomas, and Tom Wiseman. Back row, left to right,
Charles Neal, George Pope, Rusty Saunders, and
Brett Epting.

Local bowling
Skyllnt•rM IA'all(lll'
Sepl. :to, I!IK'l
Shmdln~r~

T4•oun
lkadqu;tr!Prs lt11
11aird ancl F'uliN HP&lt;Jit \

Cc•ntral Tru .~ r Bank

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Vlllagr ln...
Tllf' 1-:lk.s
Mrl1onald \
(;avin Plant
No. -l

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No. :,

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lti

Ci•ntral Suppl_v
10 '!.!
Rob 1-:\':ms Farm
H :.!-1
Mil'had and F'rlf'ncl:.
ti 2fi
Villa.tw In:-.. won l'ight poi nt s lmm Tt•a m 4.
Hig h howlf'l' fm Villa.(!!' Ins . W i l.'i H. Watson
wllh

:,n

HIJ;!h howlc•r for No. -1 was S. Ha.'iSl'·

man with .J~Y.1.
Thf' E lk.s won !-&lt;iX point s frnm Ca v in Pi ani.
High howiC'r for Tht' J.:tk..; wa s 0 . BurnC'tl with
~-,.111. High tx1wiN for C ;tv ln Plant was .1.
KC'nnn:lv with 4~ .
TC'arri ~~ won si x points from Bob Evans
Farm . Hl!.!h bowiC'r for No . ~) w;~s H . (.('mon
with ~-410. lllgh bowiC'r for Bob Ev:..uto; Farin
was .I . Wright wllh ~m .
f"C'ntral Trust Bank won si x point.o.; from
f"pntral SuJlPI ?-~ . High OOwil'l' for&lt; 'C'ntral Trust
ll tnk wa... 11. I 'C'triC' with ~t4ti. llil!h bowiC'r for
Ct·ntni Suppi_
\' wa.o.; H. .lack.'\On wllh ~~ l l tlrd and FuiiC'r HC'alt~· won sl.'&lt; points
fmm Md &gt;ona id's. High t)()WiC'r for Baird ;uld
FuliPI HP&lt;J!t.v was fk•rn&lt;.~rd HollC'v with ~2ti .
l·li):!h lxiWIC'r fm MC"Oona icl 's W;ls ..l. W&lt;JtTf'n

WEDNESDAY NIGHT GOLF WINNER..&lt;; - Brett Epling, left,
and G"&gt;rge Pope, right, of the Redman Inn were on hand Wednesday
night to rt.ccive awards on behalf of their team for taking first place this
pa.•t summer in the Wednesday night golf matches.

with ~1\ ·1.
IIPadquarh ·l-s l l u· won s ix points fmm Mi·
c hal'l ,111(1 Frie nds . ilig h bowk'r for Hf•adquar·
IC'I"S RaJ w,t!&lt;. U . ( 'lnm·h with ~h"1 . High howk'1·
fm Mlchaf'l arn l Frif•nds was D . Williams with
cl-17.

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Allt'fl K 1-1. PuultUn~ 1U
Alllann• 1-1, N. Cunton 1:.!
Anthony Wa yrw· 41 . lltJY&gt;'ling l;rwn J:l
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i1. lli! mlltun Nt •~o~· Mi ,rm l. I l H. pl.rlf~l .rl
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Ill. f'~lof'l, l St W1 ·n1W'lin. IH~IJ. l • ·~f
Sulll \'a n AI;K'k Hll.'f'f' 114-11.

,

........

'·

Polnbl

Thl' Fabric Shop
Custom Prints

2R
tl
IR

and ChrV.
No. :l

l.l
1:!

'

Simmon~ Old!!, Cadillac

High tt&gt;am gamt' ~ CUstom Prlnl 764;

Two's Company 76.1: Twlis Company and
Simmon.• Okl, Cadillac and Chov; 746.
Hl$th tE-am thl"f'e-gamH- Twos Company

22JI: Simmons Oklo, Cadillac and Cbov. 21'15:
. No. 2 2100.

t

J06 N. Second .

fresh look."
The gubernatorial forum sponsored by the Clncln·
nati chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, TheSocletyofProfes·
sionai Journalists, drew a capacity crowd of about 350
people. A panel offour reporters questioned the candl·
dates for a little OVPr an hour.
Outside the Cincinnati Club, where the candidates
appeared, about a dozen anti-abortion demonstrators
carried picket signs denouncing Celeste's stand on
tax-financed abortion.
Another dozen demonstrators. representing the
Ohio Socialist Workers Campaign Committee, protested the exclusion of socialist candidate Kurt Landefeld from the forum .

STOCK GAINS CON'l1NUE on the
Door of the New York stock Exchange Friday keep
Its wlld rally alive, overcoming some seUing at mJd.
Session to show another strong gain by day's end. The
Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials, which had

cUmbed 58.78 points Wednesday and Thursday, rose
an additlonall2.!rl to 978.&amp;1 by 3 p.m. Friday. Volume
on the NYSE totaled 99.58 million shares with an hour
to go. The fall day's record of 147.00 rnWJon was set
Thursday. (AP Laserphoto).

By JAMES PELTZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- A quick glance at the numbers ·
posted by Wall Street and Washington this past week
poses a striking paradox. Can those two centers be
looking at the same economy?
They are, but with different colored glasses. And
there lies a crucial factor In judging how they
compare.
The latest dismal figures Washington reported were
collected last month, or In August. A.nd they showed a
weak economy offering little Inkling of being ready to
charge out of the recession.
But Wall Street acts on expectations about tomor·
row, next week, next month. A.nd the market was
jolted by two new expectations that sent stock prices
and volume to record levels: that Interest rates will
continue to faU, and that because they will fall. the
economy will improve.
Whether Wall Street's glasses area bit too shaded In
rose remains to be seen. But the underlying reasons
for its optimism did reflect a definite change In
thinking.
Foremost was that the Federal Reserve will tern·
porarUy avoid tightening credit availability just be·
cause the money supply grows faster than it would
Uke, according to sources close to the central bank.
Previously, money growth above the Fed's desired
targets raised fears that the Fed would immediately
step In, drain reserves from the banking system and
force the cost of money up.
The central bank's temporary new stance reflects
Its thinking that certain measures ofthemoneysuppiy
could be altered In theweekstocome, the sources said.
The closely watched money measure, M1, contains
cash In circulation and checking accounts. M2. a
broader statistic, Includes savings accounts and mo-

ney market funds .
But recent legislation will lead to creation of savings
accounts on which some checks can be written. A.nd
more than $30 rnlUion In All Savers Certificates, now
listed under M2, expire this month. and analysts are
not sure where that money will end up.
In any case, the Fed signaled late Friday it was
aiming for lower rates by cutting its discount ratethat on loans to financial institutions- to 9.5 percent
from 10 percent, the lowest level since Nov. 3, 1978.
MeUon.Bank in Pittsburgh, the nation' s 15th largest
commercial bank, quickly followed by cutting its
prime lending rate to 12.75 percent from 13.5 percent.
Most other major banks earlier in the week pared their
prime rates to 13 percent from 13.5 percent.
With fears of a credit crackdown by the Fed having
temporarily abated, the markets rejoiced.
Volume on the New York Stock Exchange exploded
to a recordl47.07rnlilionshares onThursday. The Dow
Jones average of 30 industrials, boosted by a 37.07·
point jump Wednesday, the second highest ever, recorded a 78.ll·polnt gain for the week, also the second
highest ever. to close at 986.&amp;'i.
Bond ' prices soared and market interest rates
tumbled. The rate on three-month Treas ury bills
traded in the resale market, which began the week at
9.72 percent, was quoted at 7.41 percent Friday.
Above all, the markets ignored discouraging news
from Washington and elsewhere, such as a September
unemployment rate at 10.1 percent , the first doubledigit rate since 1940; a meager$66miilionexpansion In
consumer credit in August that was evident in the
sluggish sales posted by the nation's majqr retailers In
September; and a report from the Conference Board
that consumer confidence remained at "relatively
depressed levels" last month.

Swedish navy continues
search for submarine
A Defense Staff spokesman Friday confirmed a new
type of magnetically attached acoustic signal device
had been used, although apparently with little success.
Also being used were at least two, four-foot mini-subs
that could carry a television camera or explosives.
Olof Palme, Sweden's newly-elected SoclaUst
prime minister, said he would not hesitate "to put Into
effect means that would damage the suspected in·
truder." He did not say under what circumstances
such action would be taken. He said he has no set !&gt;ian
for handling the case If the submarine Is brought tot he
surface .
Navy spokesman, Capt. Sven Carlsson, said the
submarine tried to escape Thursday via the northern
exit from Hors Bay, about20mllessouthofStockholm,
into Myslng Bay but failed to break through the anti·
submarine net stretched across the 500-yard passage.
He said the escape effort failed . There was speculation
the submarine rruiy have been damaged In the
·
attempt.
"The captain of the submarine probably did not
know the net was there," Maj. Bengi Sjoholm said. "U
the submarine were to use Its sonar, we would notice it
Immediately because our helicopters are probing con·
stantly with listening devices. Sothecaptalnjust took a

By DICK SODERLUND
Associated Press Writer
BERGA NAVAL BASE, Sweden (AP)- TheSwed·
Ish navy has Increased efforts to force a suspected
Soviet-bloc submarine to sU:Iface, but a week of depth·
charge attacks failed to dislOdge the mystery vessel
from Its hideout beneath Hors Bay near asecretSwed·
Ish naval base.
"We are moving as tough as possible under the
circumstances. We give no warning shots and are
bombing closer to the Intruders than previously," Lt.
Col. Evert Dahlen of the Swedish Defense Staff said
Friday .
Swedish patrol boats have dropped at least 30depth
charges near the submarine In efforts to force It to the
surface. Officials said no depth charges were dropped
Friday.
'
The navy disclosed today three powerful mines
were detonated Thursday, possibly by the sub, al·
though they could have been touched off In some other
way. The mines are part of a permanent minefield In
the military restricted area around Hors Bay.
As the hunt by 40 surlace ships and 10 helicopters
near the top-secret Musko naval base entered its second week today, the navy said It was Ukely a second
foreign submarine lurked outside the bay where the
first vessel was trapped by heavy steel cables of an
anti-submarine net.
Officials refer to the trapped sub as a foreign vessel
without Identifying the country. But it Is widely belieVed It Is a Soviet-bloc vessel, and a Soviet Ilyushin·~
reconnaissance plane has monitored the chase from
over the Baltic, according to air force s'ources. On
Friday, the Swedes set up a jamming station to prevent possible communications betWeen the plane and
the submarine.

chance.''
After the collision with the net, navy ships dropped
five IDpound depth charges. The submarine appar·
ently crept back to tlle 200-feet.&lt;Jeep part of Hors Bay
and continued Its hlcte-and·seek effort to elude the
Swedish flotilla and .Its explosives.
Carlsson also confirmed a second submarine was
detected Thursday afternoon trying to get Into Hors
Bay, apparently to aid the trapped vessel. He said
there were "definite indications" it was still lurking In
that area.

...

,

...

'•

PREPAREDNESS - A boat with Swedish sold!·
ers is headlag towards a position somewhere on the
shores of Ibn! Bay, Stockholm, Sweden where the

hunt alter he suspected alien submarine entered its
second week on Friday. (AP Wirephow) .

.(

Tylenol extOrtion letter may have been hoax
t

ONLY

13" Color TV
Remote
Control

~6
I
High Ind. 1{31'TW - Ek'fly BatC'V 1t4 : Bar
bal'a Whifllngton IA-1; Ann C.rovPr Hi2.
High Ind. fhl'('('-games,- Barbara Whit ·
(lng1on 4KJ: Ann GJ'OV('r466; Belly Batey 440.

G

$11,900

Mod. 403

Sl&lt;yllne BowllnK ........
Sopl. Ill, 1911'1
Mo-K Glori"'

,

This stately sedan features a metallic dark blue exterterior with matching vinyl top.
Loaded with factory options such as power windows. seats, door locks,
AM/FM/Cassette and much more.

I

bowling

TWo's Company

"DEMONSTRATOR"

On piember 1, we had 40 new cars in
stock. On September 30, we had 15. On
October 8, we had 10. We want to have
"0" on October 15· ~ Hel~ us do it!!!

II

~a)

'82 BUICK ELECTRA SEDAN

SALE PRICE

PWA .

FOR SEINIC£
IEARI. I!OfiUCKANO co. PHONE 446·2902

October 10, 1982

The figures create a
paradox, or do they?

DleHarc:r

&gt;. lllk•~l

..._ ~ Ji h

lmprovement,it'samovement.lntherightdlrectlon."
race, said Gov. James A. Rhodes could affect the
Celeste called that "Allee In Wonderland" rationale.
outcome of the Nov. 2 election if he becomes more
"To talk about recovery Is to misread the reaUty that
Involved In the campaign the rest of October.
"H Gov. Rhodes Is actively Involved In the last three
most Ohioans have toface," he said.
"H Clarence Brown thinks that going from 653,()))
weeks of this campaign, he certainly will make a
difference," said Celeste, who lost to Rhodes In the
(jobless) to 636,1XXJ Is a terrific sign of hope, he Is
misunderstanding what happens when these- f i g u ( I' E
vernor's race four years ago.
are put together."
,.
He praised the four· term governor for his attempts
Celeste said those statistics do not Include peop
ate jobs, and said "his love and affection for this
whohaveusedupthelrbenelltsandwhonolonger
,
a elsunbounded."
.
·
officially listed as unemployed. He likened Reag
Brown said R!todes has advised him and probably
appeal for people to keep faith with his economic
will become more active In the campaign. But he said
program to "asking the band to keep playlngwhllethe
he would not try to emulate Rhodes or his approach to
Titanic goes down."
the governorship because "We've got new problems,
andanewgovernorwilladdressthoseproblemswitha
Celeste, who Is considered the front runner In the

Sl9° 0 OFF

How tht'y far...d
t '! ru

By TERRY KINNE\'
Associated~ Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Ohio gubernatorial "debate" between Democrat Richard Celeste and Republican U.S. Rep. Clarence . Brown turned Into
show-and-tell time when the subjectofunemployment
was raised.
When It was Celeste's turn to speak Friday, he
whipped out a chart s))owlng unemployment rates
since President Reagan took office, and blasted what
he characterized as Brown's naive attitude toward
jobs.
"Ohio's unemployment was down from 12.7 percent
to 12.5 percent -down, whlle the rest of the nation was
going up," BroWn said. "While that may not be 11. big

Two aramid belts that
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weight for fuef~con­
omy. 2 polyester radial
plies. PI65/75RI3.

Sitlsi.J&lt;tlon Guaranteed or Yau&lt; Money lock

J"ennnt~ Section [Q)

Candidates Brown, Celeste meet face to face

ISearsl

Dl4JOI

1Jimt11·

·' .

1-LeSabre Sedan
1-Eiectra Sedan
1-Regal Coup~.

1-TlOOO Tudor
2-6000 Sedans
2-Gran Prix
~-Century
1-Phoenix Tudor
Sunday Shoppers te1come. Come In &amp; Browse

clined to be Identified.
By JOHN I)OWLING
Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner said the
AIIIOCiated PI'Ell8 Writer
ClflCAGO (AP) - A man linked to an extortion . man, whose name was not released, had been quest!·
letter against the makers ol Extra·Sire!Jith Tylenol oned and was not among "eight or nine" prime sus· .
after seven deaths from the cyanide-tainted drug may pects In the seven kUilngs last week.
The' man was questioned by FBI ·agents for two
have been framed Ill a hoax byfoi1Jle!'employees, two
hours Friday atternoon1 said his lawyer, Thomas A.
prtcago newspapers rworted today. . ·.
· The letter, sent to McNeU Consumer Products Co., 'Foran, former U.S. attorney in Chicago. He Said his
nianufacturer of the best-selling pain remedy, thrl!ll· cUent submitted to questioning voluntarily and prolaled a second waveofpolsonlngs wiless the company VIded handwriting samples. ·
The Chlcago TribUne and the·Chl.cago Sun-Times
dlipoetted $1 nilllion In an accoont at the Continental
reported, today that the lnteiVIew prompte!t tnvestlga·
Diinols ~atlonal Bank &amp; Trust Q&gt;. of Chicago.
The bank account, which had been cloeed, was tors to explore the po8S1blllty that the letter was a hoax
tra~!oa"fonnerlysuccesstul.•tockbrokerwhobad by disgruntled former employees ot the man.
Investigators have vlrtuaUy.ruled out any link IJe..
suffered conllderable tlnanclal reverses," said a fed, eralla~ e~dcXoement tource In Wuhlnlltim Who~

•••

tween the letter and the poisoning deaths.
"Our guess Is that It's totally unrelated to the polson·
!ngs," saki the federal source. "These tag-alongs
happen all the time."
·
Fahner contlrmed Friday thatjl.n Investigation of
the extorllon threat was "a completely separate mat·
te(' from the polson probe.
The letter was· the latest In a series of leads that
apparently have riOt yielded results for more than 100
teder~. state and local investigators who have been
investigating the deaths s!rice Sept. ~' Investigators already hild discounted links between ·
the Clitcago.area deaths and two Incidents In other
states: thecyanidedeathinAprtlofagraduatestudent
in Phlladelphia, believed to have been a suicide, and

tt)e non-fatal poisoning of a California man who said he
took Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules containing
strychnine.
Pollee say they believe the strychnine poisoning was
a "copy-cat" case, even though the California man
said he bought the medication two weeks before he
was poisoned.
Meanwhlle, Johnson &amp; Johnson, parent company of
McNeil Consumer Products, said Friday It would des·
trOy about 22 milllon bottles of Extra-Strength Tylenol
capsules with a retail value of $79.2 million.
Robert Knlffen, a spokesman for McNeU, said that
Includes 11 mUllon bottles previously sold to' consumers and being returned, and an addltlonalll mllilon
being returned by retailers and distributors.

••

�'

. .... 111' .. .

October

Page-D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentin~l

I

1982

4

Giveaway

....

-

Pomeroy- Middleport-:-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

October I 0, 1912

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

-

9

Wanted To Buy

11

Wa pay cash for late model
ANY PER SON who houny- clean used cars.

'

thlng to give awoy and does

There wHI t.. no charge to
the odvortlaer.

WANTED: female vocolllt.
bau guharllt. for poo rock
Call WHkenda. 304-

tiona In the Senior Nutrition pansion program. weare hir· ties . Quallficatkm s: meat
In
t h o certification standards for
Program. Salactad appli- l n g

furniture. gold, silver dol-

16 Ooidllah . Call 446- lara, wood Ice boxes, atone
4634.
jars, antiques, etc .• Completo houuholda. Write:
2 Plrt Beagle puppiea 1 M.D. Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy.
mole, 1 female. Call 6J6- Oh. Or 992-7760.
6702.
----------------

1- - - - - - - - -

NEED 3 people to sell Raw·
liegh &amp;: Mr. Groom pro·

ducta. Call Dabble Sayre at
304-896-3319.

1- - - - - - - - -

Gold, silver, sterling, je 3 month old kittens to give welry, rings, old coins&amp;: curaway. White with long hair. rency . Ed Burkett Barber

be interviewtng for both
management and part time

ter, flower girl; Md Brian Anderson, crown bearer.
Front row - Todd Adams, Mand~· HiU, fr.,hmen;

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP I - StaiP [)(&gt;\·eJopmcnl Director James
Duerk says a rpeent depa nment sur-vey shuws 11 will cos t Ohio
communities at least $11 billion to upgrade det eriorated public
facilities.
In a speech to Operation TOPPin Cincinnati. Duerk said a method
of financing the improvements will ha vetobe found . OperationTOPP
promotes cooperation berween management and labor on construction projPCts.
Duerk sa id passage of legis lation sponsored b.\ Gov . .James A.
Rhodes in 197o would ha ve earmarked $1 billion for capital improvements. But the proposal wa s defeated b)· a o· 1 margin at the polls.

Ohio unemployment claims up
COLUMflUS. Ohio tAP 1 - The Ohio Bureau of Employment
SerYi('('s says an estimatPd JR7,();6 claims for unemployment com·
prnsa tion were reponPd in Ohio for the week ending Oct. 2 under all
federal and state programs.
Administrator Gary E. Stein sa id Friday that this is up li.7 percent
over the preced ing week' s total of .362,626.

:Rhodes in Water Hall of Fame
O~INN A'n !API- Gov .. James Rhodes has been inducted into
the Ohr Water Hall of r amP.
..
In tting Rhodes Friday, the Water Ma nagement Association of
Ohio id , " His \is ion of Ohio has played a major role in the legisla·
lion. financing and development of the state's water projects.··
The associa tion presented distinguished service awards to Wayne
Nichols, director of the Ohio EPA . and Daniel Ga lbreath of John W.
Galbreath and Co.

Woman given 120 day sentence
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP1- A woman who spent the night in a ca ve
with rwo of her children and a 14-year-old boy last April has been
sentenced to 120 da vs in jail.
But Franklin County Municipal .Judge Sidney Golden said he will
modify the sentence against .16-yea r-old Sara Agnes Wilburn if and
: when he receives assu rance she will undPrgo psychological treat·
. ment and obey the rulrs of Franklin County Children Services in
· visiting her fi ve ch.ildren.
Mrs. Wilburn had pleaded guilt)' to charges of attempting to endanger children and attempting to inter1ere wilh custody. Her attar·
ney said she sought shelter in the cave beca use she had been evicted
from her home.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND 1AP 1-The winning number drawn Friday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number'' was 597.
The lot1ery reported earnings of $750,266 from the wagering on the
game.
The earnings came on sales of $1,078,(!)7, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share $327,791, lottery officials said.

Gallipolis-Pomeroy area.

4:30 PM on Octot..r 20.
1982. An Equal Opportunity

Employer.
Need 6 local persons to help
teach &amp;: nil craft classes. No
experience necessary, good
earnings for those who qualIfy . Interviewing next 3
weeks. WriteTri Cham. P.O.

Box 2266, Columbus, Oh
43216 .

1- - - - - - - - -

PUPPIES 304-882-3380.

Mother's final gift horse drawn carriage
CINCINNATI (API - Rodney
Ramsey once said he had never rid·
den a horse and buggy. His mother,
Barbara, remembered that this
week after her 22-year-oct' son was
murdered.
She thought , too, of the funerals
she had seen in movies about New
Orleans.
Mrs. Ramsey's last gift to her son
was a funeral caravan led by a
hoi'Se-{jrawn carnage and a jazz
musician ."
"Since he was slain like that, I just
wanted it to be something dlfferent," she said . "I was showing my
love to him in a way that wasn't
grieving. It took a lot of people's
minds off the grief.'' she said.
Ramsey was shot in the head Oct.
3 near a park where he took his
children to play.
A 17-year-old youth was held by
police in connection with the death.
When the funeral procession
came out of the Beams of Heaven

Baptist Olurch on Friday, pallbearers hoisted the casket atop the black
velvet-draped carnage.
Sir Herbert Jackson, the church
pianist, stood atop the carriage
playing jazz on a saxophone as the
driver, Elmer Fair, coaxed the
team of horses through the West
End and on to Spring Grove
cemetery.
A procession of 26 cars followed
very slowly.
Factory workers stopped to
watch. A trumpeter in a house along
the way blew a few bars in salute. It
was the way Mrs. Ramsey wanted
it.
''They acted like he was someone
In Congress," she said.
She followed in a white limosine
with her son, father, daughters and
her son's widow, Patricia.
"You do cry, but you should rejoice," she said. "It should be a happy
occasion. Anything he done, he
wanted It done big."
Though Ramsey's funeral was

out of the ordinary for an ordinary
man, It may have started
something.
Funeral director Roger Nutt, who
handled Ramsey's funeral, said he
had received several calls about the
horse-drawn carnage funeral by

FOUR t..eutiful kittena. to
good home, call after 6.

304-676-2474.

Friday night.

TO good home in Country,

AKC, Gorman Shepherd, 2
yoora old, 304-773-6062.

He said people liked the Idea, adding: "I doubt If I would be suggestinglt. It takes a lotoftlmebutpeople
may be requesting it. I'm looking
forward to doing it again."

TWO port Beagle puppiea, 1
malo. 1 female, 304-6715·
6702.
ONE -two year old male rabbit for pet or breeding only,

304-882-2741.

CAW

Jury awards couple $1 million
GREENVILLE, Ohio (AP) - A
Darke County Common Pleas Court
jury has awarded a Greenvllle couple more than $1 million as result of
a 1978 traffic accident which left one
of them walyzect.
Judge Lee Bixler said the award
Thursday to Richard L. and Jacqueline Seas Is the largest he can recall
in the county.
The Seas had sought more than $6
million from Richard Lee Delay of
Arcanum, Lewis Howell and L.&amp;L.
Howell Inc. of Greenvile.

-ADt'
IIIII

Delay was driver of a milk truck
owned and operated by Howell and
his firm, which collided with the
Seas vehicle on Ohio 502 on Jan. 31,
I 978.

6 Lost and Found
- - - - - - - - -lcFOUND: Sat of koya at ,41
.yard sale. Fri. Owner claim

et 606 S. 4th St. Moaon or
call 304· 773·6380.

Seas, 44 and now a paraplegic due
to accident injuries, was awarded
$846,IXXJ. Mrs. Seas was awarded
$215,1XXl for the loss of her husband's
consortl\IItl, and $5,299 for tnjwies
and medical expenses.
There was no immediate decision
on a possible appeal.

from their arandpuents and Eva was 88 years old when
she passed on. From Racine, Ohio take Co. Rd. 28. Watch
for sale sians.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Cupboard with glass door, highback bed, spool bed, pump
organ, oil ·iights, lanterns, dressers, sewing rocker, kitchen
coal stove, stands, wa sh bowl &amp; pitcher, baskets, copper
wash boiler, chest of drawers, misc. hair combs, old dishes,
churn, misc. chairs, couch, wagon seat, treadle sewing
machine, and lots more.
"MISC."
Step ladder, misc. garden &amp; yard tools, push lawn mower,
plow, single tree, and extension ladder.
ESTATE OF EVA ARCCHER-Case No. 23881
RUSSEL ARCHER - EXECUTOR
Jim Carnahan
Dan Smith
949-2033
949-2708
Eats - Cash - Positive I.D.
"Not reponsible for accidents or loss of property."

1--;_-------+--------- - --11

choker chain, answers to

AUCTION

LOST - Prescription sun
gln111. Saptembitr 26 In

Shoneya. Rowerd. 304·
1715·21 36 (!r 676-4433.

returns indictments

7

SATURDAY, OCT. 16, 10:00 A.M.
On St. Rt 7 in Tuppers Plains (sign in yard)
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Dining room su~e. library table,
treadle sewing machine, baby stroller, Victrola, wOOden wardrobe,
pictures, rocking chair, chandelier, wooden bed, vanity, dresser,

boiUes.

Yard Sale

Garage Solo Oct. 15 &amp; 11.
9:00-6:00. 36 Burkhart
Lone, Oolllpotla. Cool etovo.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (API-A
federal grand jury has, for the second time, returned indictments
against three men in connection
with the failure two years ago of
Huntington's Metro Bank, federal
officials said.
U.S. Attorney David A. Faber
said the indictments, handed up Friday, replace others quashed last
month by U.S. District Judge Robert Staker, who ruled thattheorlgi·
nal grand jury was Improperly
empaneled .
Named in the five-count Indictment were two former officers of
the bank and the husband of a director of the bank, which was reorganIzed as the Heritage Bank after the
state banking commission closed
the institution In September 19!ll.
Charged were fanner Metro president Billy Rex Whaley, 52, of Huntington; former vice president and
senior loan officer Karl Franklin
Bennet1, 49, of Huntington; and Robert Alexander Blackwood, 60, of
Atlanta. the husband of former di·
rector Carolyn Blackwood.

elec . heater, humidifier.
tools. clothing. antique picture framea and much more.

6 bedroom house. Good

neighborhood . Fully

equipped kitchen . Uncoln

Hill. Pomeroy . 614-9923489 after 6 p.m.

4 family-437 Oront St .. Mid·
dleport. OH . Monday only. 9
to 1?. Urge selection of

-------·lciteme.
Oigontlc yard aale. Harold
Brewer residence . Sat. Sun. -Mon. long Bottom.

Oh.

··-~ -

•

t

t_EAN

. ..

·'

'\r'· ''1't - - •.•:'··'

. UP

'

.r·!._

.. L"•·
NOE'-'
_,..... • •H•,;H
IJ ~r··1.1

ON

In Southern Foott..tl build·
lng in Roclndlat,, Oct. 16.
10:00to 4 &amp; Sun., Oct. 17 2

•

to 6. Proceeds toward foot-

,..

boll_
building.
.:_
__:_____ lc-

"v ;,,

THE •· '

Gene Riggs residence lo·

cotod top of,the hill on Rt. 7
above Eoatern High School.
Oct. 11, 1982. Running
through Oct. 16. 1982.
Home Interior ltema. fall &amp;

~

'

winter clothing and many

free clothing ltema. 614986-3596.

Ave. Pt. Pleasant. S•turday.

9 untiti?

F1RST - This Ooat which suggested scrubbing
the Southwestern Highlanders away and presented Friday. Personnel on the 1Ioat Included 'lboeretlll
hy the freshman class of Southern Hl~h Sehool won Bing, Melissa lhle and Dixie Dug!UI.

B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Fri. night It
tho Hertford Community
Center. Truckloada of new
merchandlll avery week.

Conalgmenta of new and

uHd merchandise alwaya

welcome. Richard Roynolda
Auctioneer. '275-3069.

_9

,.-. .

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WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·
·ture and Ant!qu·ea of 'ell
:kinds, oalt Kennlth Sw,ln.
-441-3158 or 2111·1917 In
,the ..,.,inga.

fol~ teW#JW•e ll!ZCIN,..ea. ••

IJI•&lt;K~IIorH ~

II v... &amp;I WD

llhc"•""'l

Wanted To Buy

Cl•uifiM ,._.,. t:uoer ,.,.

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11•

u.oo·l l - T_ .. , _,..,.
Ufltii_A. So•M!I

•Buying Gold. Bllver. Ptatl·
· :num. old. colna, scrap rlngl
·• oHv•rwore. D•lly quoteo
'avellobl•. Aloo colne • coin
:.,ppl,_ for llit•. Spring VII·
•r.y Trading Co., Spring Yal·
:J•y Pluo. 441· 8025 or

1.1.

, ...__ . . . . . _ _ !

•441 -~021.

3 Announcement•

3 Announcements

IWEEPER end - • me- Gun ihoot. Recine Gun
Cl\lb. Every Sunct.y auortlng
1 p.m. Fectory ~hokod guna
ery,· Dwll Yecuum C,_n.,, only.
·~elf mlr. up O'Hrgea - - - - - - - - Cr- Rd. Cell 441-0284. . Golf Leaaona. John Teaford.
Di'a Croft Supply, Spring . ·chnter. Ohio.
Yelley
441·2134. .
.
Winter houra: Monday thru Am•rlcen L•glon, New
frtdey 10 to e. l•turday 10 Hoiv., W.Y., Tu• .. Oct. 12,
to 4. All ~oaaatlch auppti•, 1112 et 1:30 p.m. tiOO.
D.M.C.
· eckpot.

•""'•
•-lr. "rte, end
.,.,1111. "'* up .,d cr.tlv.

_..,are

SAT., OCT. 16, 1982
10:00 A.M.
This is the last of 1 luge family who has kept everything

Loet mole, black &amp; white
Botton Torrr.r. lower Five
Mila, Gel!. Ferry. weorlng

Federal jury

F'rtcla)'. l'lowlq Hlllld•ader RIIJIII1'1111er
JaiJII!8 Leonard, Robert Rlflle ud Ala Crllp.

ESTATE AUCTION

Coaey $76. Reword. No
queationa aakod. 304-676·
73B9.

PI•••·

3 Announcementa

3

,,

,Announcemanta

Cerburator for Kawaikl
171i·F7. 304·111·1147.

"" . ......... .,..,Ill.:.
.....

low' coli H..tt~ ln.,,;;; RaCine Fire D--'·.... o n r
end M~l..,. ....,...... .,.,
,.;
elao R1tir11ment Propllfne, ........ ...... o.c. •
. Rumley Jneuran"" A,..oy ,p.m. In ........ ,.......
. 441·3320.
' chore. 12 ., ...,. ...........
·ic-

PERMANENT
, HAIR REMOVAL
'rof•..,lonol El•otrolyola '
C.ntw, A.M.A. lflprowed,
Doctor refwolo, by oppolnt·
"*'t only. 304-S?I-1234.

·Only.

; Aptirox. 20 tone of ....rlent
' ' 'll...rlty hey for tt.orobredo.

otov•. ttmo~y
, ,-_,d "felt• mix. write lilt*
•. iJOto eo pot.

._.orrw,.
ret•.

-----....:....·ic- .
~:,

11ey ...d """"

.... , .4Potnt .........tll...
ZOO Mlln lt. 1'1. ,.....
_.,WYZIIIO.

,

.

lJutift Attic 1- E........,
l ()pen Oct. 11 frolll 11-1.

.' ,flOOD ueod .r.ctrlc typew·
•• .4'1Mr. 104-171-31511.

· ~ondey-Prl4'ey. · lit. 124,'
'outold• of RICin•.·

·,

I

HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCEllANEOUS: SiRnaturecirculatinRoil heater
(like new), elec. range, gas heating stove, Frigidaire dishwasher,
saddle and bridle, sofa bed, 3 couches. 2 recliners, li~ng room
chairs, iolding chairs, Rollaway bed, hoopital bed, chest-of·
drawers 3 lloot lamps, air .purifier, 2 stereos, telephone table,
electric 'appliances, sweeper, 3 irons, skillet toasters, sandwich
toaster, mixer, toaster oven, misc. knick-knack shelves, tool chest
golf cart. 2 walkers, washstand, and much more.
Also consignments by neighbors
lunch by Alfred livestock Club
Not resonsible for accidents or loss of PfOperty.
Charles Callaway-Owner, Ph. 667-6656
I. 0. "llac" llcCoy-Auctioneer, Ph. 98~3944

t-;::========±========;1
ESTATE AUCTION

ESTATE OF THE LATE LENA NIDA
156 MORRIS AYE .. ATHENS, OHIO
Morris Ave. is located between Stimson Ave. and East
State Street. Exit off U.S. 33 at Stimson Ave. Exit. turn
onto GrantStreet and ao one block to Morris Ave. and sale
location. Watch for signs on Stimson Ave. Just one block
from Rax Roast Beef.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1982 at 11:00 A.M.
Very good quality Household furnishings, Antiques &amp; Col·
lector Items will be sold at this Public Auction in order to
settle the Estate of the late lENkNIDA. Mrs. Nida was 70
years of aae at the time ofhlrpassinaand wasalongtime
employee of the. Athens City and County Health Depart·
ment. Everythin&amp; in the home has been very well cared for
and very clean. A very abbreviated li_stin&amp; follows.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTOR ITEMS
Outstandinc Walnut Victorian Marble Top Bedroom Suite:
Magnificent (3) piece Walnut V1ctonan Bedroom sutte all
with full marble tops. This suite includes very fancy bed with
carvings, turnings and applications. Dresser with large bevel
mirror and commode, ail very fancy and in excellent condr·
lion.
OTHER ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS: Nice (8) piece
1930s Walnut Dining Room Suite which includes htension
Table, 161 Chairs and Sideboard; pice 1930 three piece bed·
room suite; oak candiestand; open oak bookcase; nice oval
top with drawer, lyre Base stand; round oak lam~ table;
beautiful marble smoking stand and floor lamp; Whtte sewing machine in nice cabinet; several pieces Fenton art glass;
pressed compote and other old pattern glass; pair Huil _vases;
Bisque items; frosted etched stopper decanter; Enckson
ashtray; tail grape bud vase; stemware; (3) Goof us vases; Donaghho jar and other jugs and jars; high chair; nice flat top
trunk; depression plates &amp; bowls; Art Nouveau lamp; frosted
glass shade•&amp; female table lamp; damaged Hummel electric
lamp; Plus Many Unlisted Items.
·
HOUSEHOLD FUR"ISHINGS AND GOODS
· .Kenmore heavy duty 70 washer, only about three years old;
Sears auto. dryer; G.E. combination refrig.•freezer; Hoover
upright sweeper;.Whitehouse aas range; pair of nice maple
beds; metal folding chairs; small appliances; SilverSeal cook·
ware; wood office desk &amp; chair; linens; books; Rowe sofa
., chair canning jars; metal uttlity cabinet; decorator and
floor lemps; Pius Mu~h Not listed!
"Good Cltlli Salt"
•
Terms: Cash Day of Salt or Check with Positivt I.D.
·
·
·
luiiCh Avallllllt
1
.
Attorney for tiM 'hlltt; IICHliD IIOOKS
At~tns Coui!IJ .Prollltt Co.rt CaN No. 32992
.'
EXECUTOR: IIOIERT IIDA
AuctlonHr: OniE OPPERIAI
P.O. lox 504
lopn,·Ohio 43131 .
Phones 614-315-7195 - 6.14-347-4142

and Developmental DisabiliSuperintendant

Ohio

De-

1. Starting oolorv $1,000 partment of Mental Reta rda ·

per mo.. based on perfor- tion and Developmental
man ce for these who Disabilities. (Master degree
qualify.
essential). Responsibilit ie s;
2. We offer group hoapitali· Adminsitar day to day operazation and profit sharing.
tion of services provided by
3 . No layoffs, no ltrikea.
the Board. Salary negotia4. Management positions ble. Available immediately.
evollable.
Contact Mr. J ames Holley.
6 . High school education Vi ce Chairman, Gallia
and car required .
County Board of Mental Ra·
6 . Complete training.
tardation and Development
For confidential interview Disabilities, P.O. Box 14.

Buckeye Com1Unity Services ia looking f a coordinator for Its
alii a· Meigs
Foster Care Network to
serve developmentally disabled clients. A degree in
Social Work or related field
is preferred; 2 years experience, and acce11 to a mo tor vehicle and travel are
required. Send resume to
Julia Kramer. P.O. Box 604.

Jackson, Oh 46640. Equal
opportunity employer.

------------------~----------------,

SALE--SALE--SALE--SALE

good home. housebroken,

YARD aale. 2406 Lincoln

PFA-8o It niUgh SehooiFutureFarmen of
AJnertea UMd a "~ the IUghlanders" theme In
their lldrd ,._ IIIII* of the Southern Homecomtn1

cants will be responsible for
monttorlng food nrvlce operations at Older American s
Act Senior NutritiOI'\ Sites in
tan Southern Ohio counties.
They also will write reports,
plan menus, and provide
technical a11i1tance and
training . Applicants must be
a certified registered dieti·
tian . Work hours and salary
negotiable. Send resume to:
Administrative Aaaistant.

cations mutt be received by

wontatogotoTheTop. Be
home, 304-676-6860 after
4:30p.m.
Wanted -Used coal &amp;: wood financially independent.
Call 446-4273 efter 5pm.
atove. 614-742-3186.
COCK -A-POO. malo. to
676 ~ 6489 .

Sun'ey says $11 billion needed

'·• •

Becauae of our unique ex -

large truckload sale of top quality silk flowers below wholesale
cost
'We have bought the entire stock of a wholesale company in
Northern Ohio."
This ~ a once in a lifetime chance for Rorists, Gift Shops, and the
general pub!~ to purchase top quality silk llowersallow, low prices
by the dozen or by the case. Th~ week only, October lOth thru the
16th. Monday thru Friday 1:00 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00
a.m.-4:00 p.m. or by appointment
·
CALL 698-6592

IMMEDIATE
OPENING
For part-time Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA). Excellent wortl·
ing cond~ions and benefits.
Salary negotiable. Interested
applicants may phone 614·
992·2104, ext. 245, or write
to Velerans Memorial Hospital, 115 East Memorial Drive.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Attention Ad·
ministration. Equal Oppot·
!unity Employer.

C,"l' K C.HI\
.I f I Wilt I

g II
llt It
I I It
14 It
I[,

f

I

R9&gt;
'll 20
'[] 45
'I) 70
\II 90
1 19 90
PO MEROY
lA NDMAR K
614 992 218 1

Household - Autos and Livestock
DATE: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16
BEGINNING AT 10:00 A.M .

DIAMOND
SNINGS

TOOL AUCTION
SATURDAY EVE., OCT. 16, 1982
7:30 P.M.

Brrng your wrle. Numerous1tems lor her: lamps, clocks, ktttens in .
baskels banks, knrves, and miSCellaneous toys lor the chrldren . .
Sponsored by Southern F.F .A.
Eats served by the F.F.A. so come and help out.
•
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan ·
949-1033
949-2708
lonnie Neal

367-7101
Cash
Positive 1.0.
Eats
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property."

CHAIN SAWS
SALE
PRICES

HOUSEHOLD: Aliomatic washer.and drver. t uprighl lreezers, 2
chest type freezers, 2-2 pc. lrvtng room Surles, Suburban wOOd
stove, large roll-away tred, metal dresser, breakfast table sewrng
table oak heboy chest. oak dreser, oak washstand. oak h&gt;boy
w/ mirr&lt;J, cedar dove tail blanket chest, bookshell, old oak bed,
school desks, 12' counter tgp;, several clocks, large 12 pace china
set (W.H. Grindley Co.. England), swing set. several bicycles, plus
~her household items.

AUTOS: 1- 1969 VW (needs some work). 1969 Ford crew cab
pickup runs gOOd, 1972 VW 411 sedan, gocd cond~ion, Turt Till
rdooller 8 HP, good condition, 2 lawn mowers.
WMB£R: 2x10, 2xl2, 2x8 p~ned, plus some ~her lumber and
firewood, 1200 lo 1500 used blocks.
PWS: 2 bee

h~es

and supplies.

TERMS Of SALE: Cash or certified check or personal check w~h
Pfoper I.D.
Owner, Dave Yoder - lunch Served
MUSTARD'S COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
JACKSON, OHIO
286-5868 or 1229
Terry Uoyd
Preston Muslard
. App. Auctioneer
A~~:tioneer

ESTATE AUCTION

AI\IP lOAN COMPANY

PIB1NEER

LOCATION: Take S.R. 279 East from Oak Hill, turn left at grave
yard onto lrotiah Rd., go two miles.

FARM ITEMS: llresh Jersey milk cow w/six week old hetfer call, 2
year old Jersey criES to be fresh soon, I yearling heifer Jersey
criES. I pure breed Saanen bil~ goat plus 3 more goats and kid,
chickens, rabbits. ducks.

Limited
time
offer:

localed at the Vo-Ag Building at Southern High School in
Racine. Ohio.
TOOLS: 'h and l\ a11 tools,drrll press. grrnders, v, and l\ socket sets,
screwdnver sels. Barnng pullers. hacksaw. 4. 5. and 6 rnch v1ces.
come-a-longs. prpe wrenches. splrttrng mauls. hammers. torque
wrenches, in pack sockets. hammer handles. C-clamps, v1ce grrps.
pliers and lots more

ALUM . ROOFING
SPECIAL

IR f I

PUBLIC AUCTION

Blended Rate Program
NO CLOSING POINTS
and
BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATES
could SAVE you up to $1000
or more on homes currently
financed at Diamond Savings.

992-6655

3 Mile West of Albany, OH.
Comtf of 143 and 50

good with children, 304-

Buckeye briefs

.

plea. Male. Part Terreir and Clocks. phones. fans. quilts. nel to aggressiv'ely sample
part Cocker Spaniel. Must paintings. baskets, banks, and sell Hickory Farms of
go together. 843-3171 .
coin machines. oil&amp;: electric Ohio fine food. Retail aolea
lamps, ·railroad Items. war experience preferred. Apply
8 week old tiger ltripe fe- Items, weather vanes. tools. in person at the Old J .C.
male kitten. Litter trained, knives Ill swords. marbles. Newberry location . 63
uaed to t..ing handled. 614- base-ball cards, Indian artl· Court St., Gallipolis. Oh .
992-2249 .
facts. coFnic books, post Hickory Farms of Ohio.
cards. pocket watches, gold
PLAYFUL &amp; healthy 8 woek &amp; silver. Osby Martin. 614- LOOKING FOR ambitious
self.. motivated person who
old kitten s need a good 992-6370.

conaulting dietitian poal ·

Area Agency of Aging· Dla·
trict 7. Inc.. P.O. Box 978, call 446-0437 Friday or Cheshire. Oh. 614 -367·
Monday from, 10-4.
0102 .
R ~ Grande College, Rio
Grande, Oh 46675. Appli·

Hickory Forma of Ohio will

Edna Cormon -61 4-992- Shop, Middleport. 992- poaltlon for their Oolllpolla
Chrlltmoa Gift Canter, Oct.
6809.
3476.
12, 1982 from 11 until 6.
2· 10 week old block pup- Old furniture, gla11 81 china. We need top quality person-

Racine. Picturt&gt;d are 19X2 attendants and queen can' dldat"' and tht' ir L'SCOrts. Standing are .Jenny Carpen-

Help Wanted

Tho Area Agency of Aging DISPLAY MERCHANDIS· POSITION AVAILBLE Su·
Dlatrict 7. Inc.. Ia now ac- !NO Expending, mull be perintendent. Gallla County
cepting application• to fill able to start Immediately! Board of Mental Retardation

cotand 3 10 wk. old klttena.
All heolthy, ... toke all or Tobacco poundage.
extra money
will give away separate. Call 446-3692.
PIHaent &amp; Now
614·2 46·9488 or 446Hevon area. 304-675-1429
4184.
BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old or 304-882-2646 .

escort, Steve Patterson; Miss Willis and escort, Allen
King; Dixie Eblin and escort, Ray Green, and Kim
Fraley and escort, Todd Cundiff. At the front are the
crownbearerandflowerglri,NathanBaloyandAmlty
Dixon.

11

'Help Wanted

Free to good home female

MEIGS HOMECOMING COURT-Pictured Is the
Melp High School homecoming queen, Renee Willis,
and her COIIrt honored In pre-game activities at Meigs
Stadlwn Friday night. From the left are Rowena
Averlon and escort, David Averlon; Cindy Crooks and

Help Wanted

11

pl.ca an ad in this column.

Amy Littlefield, Tony Deem, juniors; and Sandy
Harden, Kevin Teaford, sophomores. Back row Senior candidates and escorts: Tyrone Brlnager and
Lori Warden; Jerry Wolle and Becky Lee; Queen
Tonja Salser and Robbie Cunningham; 1981 queen
Sherry Bee~le and Jay Rees; Queen candidate Angle
Glenn and Terry Patterson.

11

Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gena Johnaon
eny other thing for .. le may 446-0089
not offer or attempt to offer

ROYALTY AT SOUTHERN - 19H2 Southen1
!Ugh School homecoming &lt;1ueen Tonja Sal~cr is pic·
lured with her court foUowing halftime ceremonies of
the Southem.Southwesten1 game Friday evening in

Help Wanted

W . Va .

1074-14" bar. 3.1 cu . in. list S249.95 .................. SALE '189 .95
P-16-E-16" bar. 3.1 cu. in. list '329.95 ....... ......... SALE '289, 95
P-28-E- 16" bar. 3.1 cu. in, countervib. List '349.95SALE &lt;$3'29.95
Farmsaw- 18" bar, 4 .0 cu.in ....................... ................ .. '369.95

RADIANT KING

UL A!lilf iiVI'II

KEROSENE HEATERS
LIST

BTU/HR ................ 1189.95

RK-100S, 9,800
REMOVABLE TANK
I
RK-220, 11,1100 BTU/HR ................ 206.95

$159.95
$186.95

REIIII.QVAB~E "tANK

RK-500C,

SALE

$226.95

BTU/HR ..............1256.95

GRAVELY TRACTOR &amp; SERVICE
• THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

MANNING ROUSH - OWNER
204 Condor St.
PH. 992-2975
Pomeroy,
OH.

SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1982
10:00 A.M.
The estate of Archie lope will be sold at auction at Vinton.
Ohio beside Raccoon Bridge.
Case No. 17440
ADMINISTRATOR-DANNY LOGUE
Gas Station 76 - Hardware Store
Contracting Equipment - Household
CONTRACTING EQUIPMENT
450 Case bulldozer . diese(-ailanf!le blade, new pinsand bustings,
0530 diesel Case backhoe wtth t buckets, 20 It 4 axle Itn trarler,
1979 Chevy Scottsdale pickupw~h topper, 49,000 miles, smaiiV·8
motor, 1981 Chevy Malibu car, 31,000 miles, air, ps, am-fm-8
trac~ Equipment to be smd at 1:00.
All NEW HARDWARE
All s~es of stove ptpe, assorted elbows fo&lt; stove, shelvingreducing
adapters, damper controls. flood tiRht bulb~ I 'A jn. black plastic
water'lin~ aoo It rolls, lurnace fitters, paint roller kits, lly &amp;
mooqu~o insect killer, mouse traps, Dragon Oust, cau~ing guns,
cattle water trough, Myers shalklw well pump and tank (like new),
several' frostproof outside faucets, 2 minnow saver pumps, new
rol~ of (Opper tubing stainless steel double sin~ house trim, all
types files. chain saw files. all kinds electrical parts, several heat
tapes, several putty knives, app. 30 new 20-30-60 amp breakers,
assorted carded botts &amp; screws, several plumbing parts, assorted
valves, groond key valves, all types of galvan.ilW.fittings to be sold
by the box, J bend · Straps· Ptraps for sinks, P.V.C.pipelittingsof
all kinds. 3 and 4 inch Y's and T elbow~ 11 dratn ptpe, flare type
fittings of all kinds. hot water tmk pop off valves, pressure
switches, hot water tank heating elements, hot water tank lhermos·
tats, assorted watch bands, barrel belt latches. new Myers pump
he.Is, heavy barn do&lt;J hinges, 4 pc. Mason dr~l M sets, dryer
cords, sand paper, assorted boxes of new nai~. mar~ngchal~ 3ft.
assofled all .thread IXllts, lawn mower bla&lt;tes. boxes of Arrow T-50
staples, mas~ng tape I roll6 gauge wire fuel oil furnace tips, lawn
mower mufflern, Ft valves, p~ cement ail types of sm~l plastiC
pklmbing fittings, assorted smaTI hinges, klg chatn connectors, 50
It garden hoses and MORE.
GAS STATION
Heavy duty Marquette battery charger, Victoi adding machine
flu&lt;Jescent night light, I h.p. meat slicer, hammer sl'ovel~ hand
tools, fkl!J fan. cash register, exhaust fan, elti:tric prcduce scales
(Toledo), nice Pepsi Cola pop cooler, 2 real mce4x6 It double glass
doors, Marketeer beverage coolers, air chiesel, I! inch air in pact
IIJil. b.rery tester, large threader set Creeper space heater.
·
AKIIQUES
Marlje top dresser, antique chairs, nice what-not corner stand, old
German straight raz&lt;J, leather-top end tables.
HOUS£HOLD
4 'chair dinette set, Ghesl type and upriglrt deep freezers, Mr.
Coffee maker, bedroom su~e, d~hes, skilletS, eann11g Jars, 2.older
refrieerators, bumper pool table, fuR size bed, 12 inch B&amp;W TV,
nice apt size electric stove, hot plate, electric heater.
TERMS
Cash- APPICMd ClltCk - Out ottawa buylrs 1or llrpr items
brine ctrtHied dltc:l This is .. tllltt Ale.
,
•
THIS Will B£ All All DAY SAif
Auction• - 1onn1t llllll-367·'7101
. AdminlstJator - 318-9939
·
Call lither numlltr for aPPointmtnt to loolt It contrlctin&amp;

....luiiCII.......
.
MIWd bJ Vinton lllptlst C!Mcll. Not responsible for

ICddlnf Of loa of P"lf*IY..

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1982-10 A.M.

BUCKEYE WOOD
PRODUCTS INC.
SCOTTOWN, OHIO
(Ohio, W. Virginia , Kentucky border nea r
Huntington, W. Virginia)

DOUBLE SAWMILL OPERATION
AUTOMATIC
MACHINERY &amp; EQUIPMENT
- SHOWROOM CONDITION 2 CLEERMAN HEADSAWS - LEFT &amp; RIGHT - w/ BERRY FEEDS,
FORESTALL MODUAL MILL, FULL TREE CLIPPER w/ GENERATOR,
MORBARK CHIPPER, MORBARK DEBARKER, CORNELL EDGER,
CORNELL SLAB SAW, PLUS CONVEYORS, ETC.

- TRUCKS-yARD &amp; ROLLING STOCK
2. CAT 910 FORK LOADERS, 2 J.D. 350 DOZERS w/ 6X BLADE &amp;
WINCH, 1 LOW BOY TRAILER w/WINCH, 2-40" TRAILER VANS,
2-40' FLAT BED TRAILERS, 2 INT. TANDEM TRACTORS, 1 GMC
SINGLE AXLE TRAILER, CAT 944 LOADER.
PROPERTY TO BE SOLD BY OWNER
BUILDING TO BE SOLD.

Java Center. N.

'

14082

(7161

457·3005

•

�Page- 0-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

11

Help Wanted

18 W anted to Do

R10 GRANOE COLL EGE &amp;
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Secretary II t o Comptroll er
Mu st show ev tdence of p er

formance of secreta ria l as
stgn m ents
( Sch e du I a
typl'19 &amp; s hort hand prof•
cten cy testmg wtth OBES
J ack son or Galhpolt s offtce )
$4 25 per h ou r e ntry rate
Employer patd beneftt s

Oeadlm e for app hcat ton ts
October 1 1 1982 Mak e ap

General Hau lm g and Tr as h
removel Se rv1ce Reliabl e
and dep end abl e Ca ll 446

3159 alter 6P M 256 1967

FIRanGia l

21

phcatton at Off tce o f Coord•
nator of Personnel All en

EQUAL EMPLOY MENT AF
FIRMATIVE ACTION
EMPLOYER
Cleanmg lad y app ly 111 per
so n at Bes t Western W1lllam
Ann M otel

by Larry Wnght

'N' CARLYL E'"

G'IN::.N, K.T, I '7-#~R
I DoDN'T S'fep
ON 1-lo S lAo I.. ON

In g r ou nd co nc r et e pool on 2
ac r e lot Al so has a 3 bdr att
co nd1t1oned house w1th full
basement 2 WB fireplaces
n ew ca rp et W o uld con s1der
lower v alu ed property m
trade or w1ll fm an ce w1th
low down payment and 10%
Int er es t r educed S5 000
lo cated 12 3 Garf1eld Ave

PURfbSel

Earn S700 S1 200 m o nthly
o pcra t1n g your ow n part
t1m e 111 hom e bus1n ess
Ouahf y for co mp any ca r
travel ret ir ement pr ogra m
Repeat profits on co n suma
ble products Do esn t mt er
f ere w 1t h present
employment Not door t o
door We tram yo u Ca ll

HOME LOA N S 14% f1xed
rate l eade r Mortgage Oh1o

only 1 BOO 341 6554
WVa 614 592 3051

Ca ll today abou t h av m g a
M em M ac party Ea rn free
toys fo r C hr~ stmas 614

23

742 3094

Buck eye Commumty Serv •
ces 1s look mg for a coord m a
tor for 1t s Ga lll a M e1g s
Foster Ca re N etwork t o
serve d evelop m entally d1 s
abled cleent s A degree m
Sacral W o rk or related h eld
IS preferred 2 years ex pe
nence and access to a mo
tor vehrcle and travel are
r equered Se n d resu me s to
Juh e Kramer P 0 Box 604
J ackson
O h 1o
45640
Equa l opportunity
employer

Profess i ona l
S e rvices

992 7579

C&amp; l Bookkeepmg
Bookkeepmg &amp; tax ser v1ce
fo r all types o f bus messes
Caro l Nea l 446 3862

PIA NO TUN IN G &amp; REPAIR
Ca ll B1ll Ward for appomt
m ent
Ward s Keyb oa r d

446 4372

Real estate

Test for Pt Pl easa nt
AVON
G1ve you r se lf a
C hr~ st m as
B on u s
Se ll
A vo n Earn good money set
your ow n ho ur s Ca ll 6 14
69B 7111 co ll ect
JUST graduated &amp; un sur e
abo ut your futu r e? The West
V~rg1n1a Arm y N at 10nal
Guard ca n help you de c 1de
W e ar e look •ng for h1 gh
sch ool se n1or s &amp; gr aduates
to tr arn m co mmun1ca t10n s
adm 1n1strat10 n supply m e
chan1cs
&amp; m a ny ot h er
fi elds If you qualtfy you ma y
be ellg1ble for an enli st m ent
bonus and co ll ege o r Vo
T ec h assistance Be one of
W es t V1rg1mas be st
For
more mformat1o n ca ll 304
675 3950 or t o ll fr ee 1

800 642 361 9
12

Hou se for sa le or rent al pur
c ha se
Fa~rv 1 ew
Sub
diVISIOn 614 992 5348 or

614 992 2064

Gov ernm ent J o b s SB 342
to S57 500 a year Thou
sa nd s of vacancres must be
filled 1mmed1at ely Govern
ment e mp loyment offers
you excell ent pay p leasant
work l!f et 1me secun ty ea rly
ret~rement
w 1th sup ert o r
pens1ons A new up to date
government JOb gu 1de has
JU St be en publi shed Shows
h ow easy 1t tS to get yo ur lo
ca l state feder al dream
JOb fa st So no matter 1f you
are a hi e clerk or phys rc 1st
truck dnve r or heli co pt er pt
lot yo u must get o n e or
more sa t1 sfac t ory JOb o ffer s
w1th m 90 days or money
back M en women a ll ages
skill ed or uns k1ll ed Send
525 to Wo rl dw1de Emp loy
ment Serv1ce 107 Oel a
ware A ven ue Su1te 14 70X
BuHalo N ew York 14202

2 adults only
0338

Ntce 3 o r 4 bedroo m l
sh aped h o m e fully ca r
p et ed ba th and a half ut1hty
room and a large 1 ca r ga r
age Cen tral arr gas fur
nan ce
dishwasher a nd
d •sposa l Very eas y t o ma1n
ta m on a al most V, acre level
lot Loca ted o n At 35 close
t o H o lzer H osp 1tal W1th an
assumab l e B 'l. l oan

Redu ced E•ght roo m hou se
2 lot s co rn er lot 6BO S
2 nd M1ddl ep ort 514 500

Call 614 992 2602

M1ddl eport Sale leas e op
t1on 3 bedroom dm m g
ba se m ent ga r age N1 ce
ne1g h bor hood Ow ner f1
nan cmg 540 s 614 992

2517

1- - -- - - - - --

HOUSE M eadowbrook Ad
drtmn 3 bedrooms fam1ly
room w1th hrepa lce cen tral
a1r basement p hone 30 4

675 1542

4 bedr oo m home assuma
b le mortgag e 7 % perce nt
mt er es t 1/ • m1l e on left At
62 south off At 2 Potnt
Pleasant Phon e 304 675

5265

3 bedrooms bath and 1h by
owne r
ph o n e 304 675
2623 aft er 5 p m S42 500
new furnace

1- - - ---.:______

NEED t o sell 6 room ho u se
w1 th a~r cond 1t10n 1ng gas
heat st ove w1t h refnge r a
t or 2 large lots l arge garde n
spa ce 200 yards o ff o f mam
road rn Clift o n Wtll sell

cheap S15000 304 773
9192

CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEL S OUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLIS
AT 35 PHONE 446 72 74
1973 14x65 N ew wa sher
dryer rang e carpet und er
p1nn •ng Por c h aw n1n g

Good cond SB 000 1 304
882 2441
79 Bayv1ew tra1l er 1 2 x 66
Take ove r paym ent s Pho ne
614 9 49 2 446 Ca ll eve n
1ngs af te r 8 C harl es R1t ch1 e
Older m ob1l e ho m e B K 3 6
fatt co nd1t1 0 n
Mu s t be

moved S11 00 985 4454

USED MOBIL E HOM E
576 271 1

SY RACUSE - Welt kept home on extra lar ge lol5 bedrooms d1ntng
room and k1tchen are spac1ous Krtchen IS lully equ1pped mcludmg diS
OWNER MOVING - 2 weeks and you could be rnth1s 3 bedroom
large l1v1ng room ut11tty room and add on mob1le home w1th corner lot
Owner am1ous to work terms l et s talk Askrng $16500
HOM E ON APPRO X 2ACRES - Bashan &amp; [agle Rodge Needs
handyman \4'\ 1nterest available Ask1ng $25 000

VACANT 3 BEDROOM &amp;RICK HOME - lovong ooom has

woodburnmg hreplace I'11 bath hardwood lloms well constructed and
msulaled Ask1ng $35 OOJ

NICE FLAT LOT IN RACINE - Good coan area One 3 bedooom
mob1le home rented and second tra1ler spot Ask1ng $17 000
RENTALS $220 to $250 pnce ran ge plus deposr1 m Pomeroy letart

SE RVI CE

Hom es offi ces small bus1
ness and rental pro p ert• es
Resonabl e reli abl e H ave
references 614 992 620B

am:l Rarcne

CA LL US TO BUY OR SE l l
Nr1ncy J a spers -

- -- - - - -- -lc-

A sso cratc

Real Estate - General

Want ed to Do Exp m o th er
w1ll babysit tn her hom e M a

Vacancy 111 boardmg home
for elderly Roo m &amp; board
reasonable 614 992 6022

or 614 992 6748
13

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
NEW LISTING - Racone - Buoldtng sole or traoler lot Approxo
malely 2 1/3 acres of whoch mos11s wooded wolh a septiClank
Water and efeclroc are avaolable $5 000

Insuranc e

SANDY AND BEAVER In

PRICE REDUCED - On thos beaulolul brock and Ira me ranchwtlh
a full basement three bedrooms 1'h baths lamoly room and a
farge noce layong lol on Fatrvoew Blended rate loan av~tlable Now
$47 SOil

Are you paytng to mu c h for
your hospital hea lth m su
ranee
C a ll Carr o ll

Snowdon, 446, 429 0
15

PRICE REDUCED - On lhos two story home wtth almost new
sodong and rool lour bedrooms 2\? baths mce front pore~ back
patoo and on good netghborhood Now $29 900

Schools
Instruction

Karate the uhtmate m self
defence all pnvate les so n s
Men. women, &amp; ch1ldren In
struction thru black belt
Alao avat11ble Karate unt
forma puchlng •nd ktcktng
balga. and protectiVe equrp
ment Jerry Lowery
Asso-

35 Lot's &amp; Acreage

32 Mobtle Homes
for Sale

Tw o acre lot s 150 ft road
For sa le o r rent B1 N as hu a frontage ctty water, behmd
m ob1le home 3 bedrooms 84 Lumber Call 304 675
fr o nt de c k off kit c h e n 6873 or 675 3618
woodburner stove and re 1- - - - -- - - - fr~g e r a t or tn c luded Ca ll af
TH A EE ac r es
f e nc e d
oer 5PM 614 245 9226
12x60 tra1l er well septiC
sy st em Letart 9 000 00
Redman sec ti Ona l hom e Call 304 895 3605 or 614
28x 70 3 bdr 2 baths frre 367 0612
place and ap pliances Ca lll - - -- - -- - --

36
10 ac r es 1 2x60 tra1ler plus
2 new r oo m s C rty w ater
n ear R ac •n e 614 949

H enry E Cleland , Jr , GRI
Jea n Trussell
Dott1e S Turner
Off1c e

a.

cottH Karate Studoo. 143
Burlington Rd , Jackson,

Oh CaU 614-288-3074

i--

preferred. near
Mason bndge

Pomeroy,

rn Clifton
773-6962 or 773-5775

General

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
PHONE 446-3643

I
I
I

2 bedroom fu rnrshed
Adults preferred No pets
Oeposrt requtred 614 992

B J Hanston. Assoc - 4464240 Eve
Clyde Walker, Assoc 245 5276

[B

ftAliOI

phone 304-675 6730
GARAGE

apartment

fur

qulrod 514-992 3647

noshed. call 304 675 3459

2 bd room mobrle home on 1
acre of ground Prefer older
couple or couple wrth one

45

Furntshed Rooms

child only S200 mo plus
deposot 614-742 2753

Furntshed room $115 ut1lt
t1es pd , stngle m ale share
bath 919 2nd Ave Gallt

8 • 30 mobtle home 1 V1
bedroom. surtable for 1 per

polos Call 446 4416 after 7
PM

son, $135 month 550
dapooot 614 985-4454 or
992-7479
46 Space for Rent

2065

33 Farms for Sale
45 acre farm pl enty o f
t1mber all mmeral nghts all

44

45631

41

For sa le one and half ac res
more or less ap prox1mately
600 f t road frontag e o n
Co ra Cente rpo mt Ad near
Ce nt e rp o 1nt 53 000 00
Ph one 682 694 4

Very n1 ce 2 bdr dupl ex
hou se Furn•sh ed M am St
Ch es h~re S 185 permo wa
ter p a1d Call 614 2 45

RT
IN RIO GRANDE - $38,000 - You Wlll
get an excellenl buy on lh~ attractiVely remodeloo
3 or 4 bedroom home on agood locatiOn on US Rt
35 Has mamtenance free vtnyl sidtng lormal dtn
on g w/ buon on hutch lull basement nat gas heat
($55 budget) screenoo 30' porch New bath, stor
age bldg &amp; 'A acre yard Call Clyde Walker

5818

4 rm &amp; bath n1ce garden
space With o ut bu1ldrng lo
cat ed 110 4th Av e Ca ll

- PRICED TO SEll AT
- Oneof the besl (tf nol the besQ buy on
market Over 1700 sq ft of INtng area tn
lh5 attractNe 3 bedroom ran ch off Rt. 588 In
eludes large latnt~ room wtth fireplace, deluxe 1
krrchen
INtng room, elect heat, 2 car garage
1
I
acre
Owners must sei!Call Jtm

I

I
I
446 3870
I
I
I
I
I
l
2602
992 2288
I
I
Real Estate - General
I
I
I BEST BUY IN TOWN APLACE TO UVE -1
- En1oy
1 I day long but espectally tn lhe 1
I lormal
a shady lot mce b''o'"w'" 'N••E._R_. lamtly room or
3 bed
ce, cenlral Ktds evemng wrrh the moonbeams reflecting off the
STUTES
Dl
~ l•. l can playdtmng,
nppllng waters One of the best locations tn I
on a relrF"I NANCI NG car garage, Ohto's
and curtao
_ ___ • lloored atttc town and one of the fine older homes tn town that
REAL EST ATE ~ I drapes
for $65 000 - Owner financong avaolable Call Ike dates back to around 1840 The owners spent 81
monlhs remodeling. repatnng rebulldtng &amp; redeco-1
Wtseman
I
rahng (Has new roof lloors beautiful oak kttchen
Bonnie Stutes-Realtor 446-4206
I operatton
RT 325 - 160 AC FARM - Former daory 3 zone HW heattng syslem, wtnng. 2 new
1
Approx 80 ac crop 65 paslure 36x50 etc I Theowners look employmenl out ol town and
James Stutes, Assoc. 446-2885
stlo &amp; 150 lb lobacco base 2 story 4 bed have pnced lhts property less than what they have 1
I barn
Dallas "Jim" Love 446-2627
room home has had some mce redecorallng, New on ot Call Ike Wtseman for more tnlo
kt!chen 2 fireplaces basement plus nat
I equtpped
SCENIC ACRES
gas
heat
(lree
lor house) plusoncome lrom gas OWNERS WILL FINANCE -LOW, LOW INTEREST I
9147 Acre Farm open &amp; wooded Approx 55 acres tillable
I well Call ClydegasWalker
- Ownrs anxtous for an offer on thts 4 bedroom I
rema~nder on pasture &amp; !Imber Has road lrontage on Shelton &amp;
ranch
town Has equtpped Mchen.full base I
Garden Ford Roads Raccoon Twp Excellent lor farmtn g or
I 174 AC FARM -Cattle larm located on loncoln ment near
huge lamlly room, ftreplace, 1\\ balhs &amp;
development' 7 room larm home Large closed tn porch Huge
Ptke 10 mtles from lown Approx 25 ac crop 115
Nat gas heal &amp; large yard Only $44,000 I
barn small tobacco barn cellar bog shed detached 2 car garage
I
pasture, 30 woods 40x50 barn 1300 lb tobacco Call Jom Cochran
Approx 1961 lb tobacco quota lor 1982 Very good farm ltrs!
base 6 5 PH limestone sool 2 slory 3 bedroom
I home
time ever offered for sale
has famtly room, dtmng room, ealon kttchen 18 ACRES &amp; HOUSE-LOWER RIVER RD I
&amp; carpeled throughout Rural water, 2 spnngs 'Stately 4 bedroom. 2 story home tn city schools.
Posstble mig assumpllon Call Clyde Walker
Has 2 woodburners, lamlly room, equtpped M I
chen, 2 balhs 2 car garage and 8 acres wooded
LISTED - Owners wtll gove tmmedtale pos Wtll sell house &amp; 3'h acres al reduced pnce Total I
I JUST
sess10n on !hts 3 bedroom modern home on Rt pnce lor all $61,900 Call Clyde Walker
I
775 Has equopped krtchen l'h bath dtmng room
I basement,
2 carports plus I 'A acres w/ htghway 5 LOVELY ACRES - OWNER MAY FINANCE - I
llrontage Southweslern schools Call Clyde Walker Very attracttve location near Rto Grande tn City
School Dtst The 5 acres lay excellent for horses &amp; I
I -9V&gt; /oBrand
~SS~MPTION - KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS cattle 2 outbuoldtngs The 3 bedroom home has
new hsttng located "" an attractive 12 foreplace LR krtchen &amp; balh Call Oyde Walker I
I
acre tree studder\:n \.\ C,£.\) oedrooms, famtly $39 900
FIRST TIMEt
I
1'oom woodbut ~\..V .oew carpet. full balh &amp;
This charming home has been placed on the market Country
I
plumbed lor 2nu oath on lower level &amp; equtpped 358 3RD AVE - Owners must selllo seltle estate I
sentng 1n the coty Lots of large trees plants and seclusoon It s no
I krtchen Call for appotntment Call Jtm Cochran Solod 2 story bnck tn avery convement location tn 1
ordonary home 3 bedrooms lormal lovong room &amp; dtmng room
lown Has 4 bedrooms, eal tn krtchen, ltreplace,
modern kitchen Beaultful famoly room fintshe&lt;J tn solid cherry
I
RT 35 - HIGHWAY FRONTAGE - BRICK lormal dtmng, sludy, 1\\ balh full basement nat
wood Large laundry room
room or workshop l arge covered
RANCH - Very mce bnck home thai has had gas heat and garage Pnced to sell at $42,000
porch ovenookong the cily ol Gallopolls Outslandong well
excellenl care &amp; housekeepmg Includes lovely
I
maonlaoned home and gardens'
equtpped krtchen &amp; dtnmg area I \? ceramtc REDUCED TO $43,500 - ANTIQUE LOVERS~ I
I basement),
baths. lull basement (lifetime guarantee on dry You'll lall tn love wrth th5 charmtng turn of the I
plus century 2 siCK)' home lfs localed on an tmpresstve
I acre yard natOnlygas,$57cent000atr, 2wtthcar garage,
poSSible loan I acre lot wrth tall trees and has beaut~ul oak I
woodwor~ 4 bedrooms lamtly room, dtmng room I
I assumptton
w/ hutch eqwpped krtchen, new bath, basement
POSSESSION - 112 AC &amp; MO- and much more Owners wtll help finance Call Jtm 1
I IMMEDIATE
BILE HOME- Ownersilave translerred musl sell Cochran
1973 12x60 2 BR mobile home srtualed on
I lhts
over I acre oft Rt 160 Has fully equtpped krtchen, RT 588 - NEW LISTING - Spac10us 3 bedroom I
I bath
w/shower 14x70 cone pad, 8x24 covered ranch '" an excellent location tn city schools. Has I
porch. underpinned slorage bldg, &amp; underground lull basement. lamtly room fireplace, 16' master I
u!lllltes SHARP' Must see to apprectate Call Ike bedroom I \? bath, garage, crport plus40'x60'xl5'
Wtseman Pnced at $15 000
htgh butldng w/20x40 attached shed (Excellent I
lor tractor lratler work) all located on I \l acres
0 33 of an acre o n Lmcoln
P1k e E l ec tr~ c hoo k up Idea l
for trail er S5 800 Ca ll44 6
7934 af t er 5 30 PM

House or tra•l er lo t 111 Brad
bury Water gas elec trr c
septi c tank Ca ll 6 14 992

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom&amp;
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call

992 7479

Mobrle home and lot M•d·
dleport, Oh wtth vtew of the
nver, large &amp; queet 614

Pome roy 2 bd room unfur
mshed house S 195 mo
Secunty deposit S 100 plu s
ut1ht1 es After 6 ca ll 614

1

bath~

I

0

v

$3 050 DOWNPYMT - 16% INTEREST - Pay
ments ol under $300 mo !doesn't mclude taxes &amp;
tnsurance) Rooecorated 2 story 3 bedroom home
located less lhan 12 mtles from town Thts 5 an
older home tn better than average cond &amp; offers
famtly room dtmng room woodburner basement
rural water cenlral a11 &amp; more $30,500 Call Ike
Woseman

$60s Call Clyde Walker

846 2nd Ave . Gallipolis
Ref preferred Call 446
2215

2nd

MObERII
HOME
3 or 4 bedroom~ mce hvtng room, eat-tn kitchen, famtly room, full
basement Thts home has been very well kept 2 car garage Priced
'" the 40s

(
\

-"

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olovo St . Gallopolls Couch, loveseat and
cha1t, $199 , wallhuggers
$126 • bunk beds wtth bun
ktes $170 , box spnng and
mattress
$ 1 00
Frrm ,
$120 recliners , $80 9 x
12 linoleum rugs $22 , ma
pie rockers , 849 , wnnger
washers , refrrgeratora
dtnette sets, chest
dressers, bunkre mattress

tor. Call 304-675-5104 or
67&amp;-5386
Ntcely furnished mobtle
home. central atr, 1 m1le
below ctty overlooktng nver,

odlllts only Call 446-0338

Fttlt floor unfurn11hed apart ment lnqutre at 631 4th
Ave , Galhpohs

S40 Call 446-3159
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

3 bd room apt tn Meddle-

washers, dryers refngerators, ranges Skaggs Ap
phances Upper Rever Ad ,
besrde Stone Crest Motel

port Equtp krtchen $160
mo plus security deposit

614-992-5692

446 7398
1 bedroom apt furntshed ,
uttllttes rncluded
$186
month
Mtddleport
614

2 bedroom furnrahed apt

apt

6804

2 C78 - 14 black wall snow
t1rea $40 1 16ft span an
tenna w1th rotar S46 1 3
yr old Wh1te Westmg hoase
stove. self clea nmg $460

un~forms

For sale Coonhound 3 yr
old, black and tan female ,
$100 360 chevy motor,

$25 Call 614 245-9578

Coal, wood , or fuel od fur
nance &amp; 275 gallon fuel otl

tank Call 245-9588

Call 614 379 2571

54 Mise Merchandise
Plastic Sept1c Tanka State
and co unty approved 1 , 000
gal tank pr1ce &amp;340 Other .
s1zes m stoc k haul rn your

pockup truck Coll614 286
5930 Jackson Oh RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Wo od burnmg add o n fur
nance Still 111 factory crate

&amp;460
1216

Call 1 614 256

30 ' gas range, 575 Call
446 4419
Kenmore w as her heavy
duty, General Electnc heavy
duty dryer Whtrlpool frost
free refrtgerator, Magtc
Chef self-cleamng gas cook
stove. wh1te full s•ze bed
wtth new box spr~ngs S. mattress $700 or beat offer

Call 614 256-1750

Real Estate - General

FAMILY HOME - Three bedrooms I \? balh
home. ~vel lot Gallipolis Features large deluxe
lamt~ room wtth stone heatalater firep~ce Com
plete krtchen Low upkeep low budget gas and
~ectroc. Procoo reduced $58 900 '
#192

noturo Call 446 1171

Call614 256 6816 or 614256 6747
F!Fewood Cut to length
Delivered 1n dump truck
loads or may be ptcked up tn
yard Crown Ctty , Oh June

toon 553 &amp; 218 Call 614256-6245

30 days
1207

Call 614-256-

whote, S125 00 304-675
1805

One woode n gun cabtnet,
holds f1ve guns Double
glass doors 6 shelves btg
drawer m bottom Complete
With locks, $75 or trade for
pop gun or nfle or trade for
freezer or refngerator
freezer Can be seen at Rt 4
Texas Ad , Box 25, toward
end of Road house on htll

1 --------~­

20 gallon aquanum Full
hooded ltght All accesso
r~es Frsh heater loader all
846 or trade for gun Can be
seen at Rt 4 Texas Ad , Box
26 , toward end of Road ,
house on htll

1- - - - - - - - - -

Sears Best w1ndow shade
63 ' wtde S20 Foam back ,
edges bound carpet. color
venous green, 9x12. $20
37 venous 81181 movang and
storage bo•es, all for &amp;26 4

304 -675 -

homes, houses Pt Pleasant

Ne lla Sm1th, A ss oc - 388 8251
Bob France, As soc -446 1162
John Fuller, Realtor-446·4327

Real Estate - General

M~GHEE
"R~

Broker Auction ee r

LIF E

INSURANCE
Call 44&amp;-0522 Anytime

Beth Null 245-9007

BloiR 427 - $30s mamtenance free ~ dmg lenced back yard
lamtly 'onentoo neighborhood Thts ts a very clean 3 BRhome Call
for appomtment

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION• - Two story home presently
betng used for duplex could be easily converted to ~ngle famoly
Chooce locatiOn near Washngton School Call lor de!atls1

WE WANT TO LIST
YOUR HOME

BMR 389 - Thos line home has 4 bedrooms and os located close
to town You wtll hbavea large lot wtth a country atmosphere and
have all the coty convemences Call now1
BMR 398 - Owner translerred and must sell thts 3 BR ranch
Close lo lown mcludes deluxe 18x36 tnground pool Call for an
appomtmenl loday'
BMR 413FJ - Mmt farm located 1ust oft the Appalachoan hoghway
near Jackson 3\? acres m/ 1wrth an older two BR home several
outbuldtngs IUS! roght lor leosure ltme or full time llvtng

446-3021
4371/z 2nd Ave.

BMR 414 - 12x60 mobtle home sttuated on I acre plus lot
Includes lurmture has rear patiO w/ cover converted fronl deck
12x24 garage wrth storage

Gallipolis, Oh.
Steven Holmes, Assoc.
388-9762 Evenings

BMR 416 - Want a note 3 BR r&gt;nch style home wrth alop ol the
ground pool Fonanctng a possoble 8 50% mortgage assumptiOn' 11
so, call now

Real Estate - General

BMR 418 - Bnck &amp; frame sttuated on 5 acres Includes 3
bedrooms I ~ baths lg lamtly room wrth fireplace and wood
burner, lg llvtng room dtmng room and deluxe krtchen Call lor
detailS

HOBSTffiER REALTY
Geo. S. Hobsletter, Jr
Broker

NEW LISTING- BMR 420F - Thts fine home tsonly three years
old It features 1400 SQ ft of ltvmg space, wrth 31arge bedroom~
1\? baths, large ltvmg room and a lov~y krtchen wrth dtnmg area
full basement Prteoo at only $60,000 On yes, I am sure you wtll
also entOY the 24 acres of land rt sits on Owner financtng

Ofloce Ph 742-2003

con~dered

BMR 421 - Posstble loan assumption at 8'h% tnterest Ntce 3 BR
ranch on lg llat lot Pnced at $35,000 Better call on thts one loday 1

OWNER HAS REDUCED lhe pnce by $1,000 Modern 3 BR ranch
style home localed along Grahafll School Rd Attached, healed
garage. cham link lence, ITK.derli appliajlces Ppce $39,000

8 RM. WEll KEPT modern home tn Galhpohs. Has garage apltn
rear, l'h bath~ modem appliances. Buy all for $85,000.
2 ACRES WITH MOBILE HOME, concrete bldg. and old -farm
house I.Dcated along Story's Run Road Priced low lor $10,000
LOOKING FOR A BARGAINim 2 BR mobile home situaled on I!
acre ot land alOng Ohto River Only $7,500 00
•

I

side; situated on I acre lots I
W.. seplic tanks. Call lor more ,
~
'
'
v tma Nl~lnsky, Assoc.
Cflervl Lemley, Assoc.
, ,PitGIIe 742-3171

INTEREST FREE LOAN - Owner wtll finan ce wrth down payment
at NO tnterest or sell onland contract Good l 'h story homelocated
at 2129 Chestnut St . Galltpol~ Call lor detat~
#1028

~wf

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

p-742-3092

OUTSTANDING BUY - frame home wrth alum sodon&amp; 2 bed
rooms bath localoo on town Only $8 500
#0085

275 gallon tonk S150 Call

Real Estate - General

•
COMPACT AND COMFORTABLE mobile home near Tycoon lake
Owner has used ~s retreat and t~excellent condition $12.500 tXl
•
20 ACRE FARM tn Oh10 Twp 6 rm ho~ I bath, 1,200 lb
tobacco base Pnce mcludes Cub trattnr All lor $35,900 00
Wood Realty, Inc.
32 Locust St., Gallipolis
446-1066

;

LY Fantastoc 2 bedroom 2 bat~ home on approxo
mately 80 acres woth peace and quoel 2 beaut~ul
slone fireplaces barn shoo stocked pond Par
toally wooded Owner woll finance qualtloed buyer
#173

INTEREST FREE LOAN -Owner wtll carry wrth no mterest wrth
down payment or land contract at 12% onlerest Two story ~lon~l
tn town Beaulolul entry lormal donong brock patiO
#1149

Good Stagier fuel otl stove &amp;

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

Mile homes to be fimshed tn·

COUNTRY LIVING - 1973 Vondale mobole home 12 x60 2
bedrooms 59 acres Southwestern Schools
#0015

1- - - - - - - - - -

Real Estate - General

and Gallopolos 614-446
8221 or 614-245-9484

Jf, liT. 143 - Two double-

NEW LISTING - Ntce ranch m town, 3 bedrooms vmyl stdtn&amp;
carport mce neoghborhood
#1435

h"b caps fo! GMC 4 whool
drove PU 520 Call 446
3948

218 &amp; Rt 553, CrownCoty
Oh Call 614 256 6245

614

MIDDLEPORT - Close to
stooppmg and parlt Uke new
three bedroom home, large ltv·
mg room, famtly room w1th fireJilal:e, new carpet. gas furnace
Asking $45,000
NEAR liT 7 - Five rooms and
bltft home sits on approx 2'-'
acres, spnng waler, apple
trees, grape arbor, gas heat
Asking_JI5,000 00
CHEmR - Beautiful brick
alid cedar 3 bedroom home
F.. basement 2car garage on
approx. 760 acres. 'l4 mtles
from Cl1esl!r Asking $75,000
POIEROY - SUPER BUY on
t1t1a 6 room home on Brick
SIJeel. Payments as low as
$125 aflerdown payment Ask!J $12.000 00

FAMILY HOME - 7yrs old excepttonal n~ghbor
hooo Metgs Counly Orange Twp Fealurs 5 boo
rooms 3 baths 3 showers lamtly room ltvmg
room deluxe krrchen large deck two car garage
corner lot So much more' Pnced lo sell

Whtrlpool washer $110 ex tra mce Whirlpool dryer
$90, extra mce Guaranteed

APARTMENTS . mobolo

'

1 boys cub scout

loke now Call 446-8143

erator. gas range, electnc
dryer Corban &amp; Snyder Fur-

F1tewood $25 00 p1ck up
95% hard wood Jet At

992-3590 Moddleport
Apartments
6548

Firewood
Slab s $ 10
pickup, cut up slabs 816
round wood $20
Rt o
Grande area Call 614 246

10,000 a1r condrt1oner &amp;
atero Call 676 7379~

charrs 1 hv1ng room couch 1 -----~---­
all excellent cond lnqurre at
918 2nd Ave , Galltpolts

814-992 -7206 or 304882-2566
New furmshed

Furmture for sale Selltng
cheap Couches end table,

Ben fr•nkltn Coal &amp; Woodburner stove Good cond

Rt 7 Nonh Gallopohs Oh,
446-0475

2 Early Amencan wtngback 614 245 5329

992-7177

I '

.

MVFGI!il!l!llti!!

Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr apanments for rent HUO program available A -One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Real

I

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

1076

1- - - - - - - - - -

614 256 6506

I '
I '
II

I'

eff1

TWO tra1ler lots water and
sewer furntshed 304 676

Deluxe garage apartment 1
bdr , centra l atr, Ftrst Ave
no pets, ref requited Call

II
I

I
I

furmshed

clancy opt Apt 4 729 2nd
Avo Adults only 446
0957

1
I'

I
I
I

floor

446 0322

61 Household Goods

TWO door refrigerator .

0338

II
II

CHANCE OF A LIFETIME - RESIDENTIAL. PROFESSIONAL OFFICES OR BOTH - Attractive 2\?
story, 12 room house on 2nd Ave tn the heart ol
the proless10nal busm~mrnunity Includes 2
krrchens, 21? baths,.lull basement 2 car garage
Top quality conslruct10n when butft and good
matntenance makes thts a solid mvestment A
JUST LISTED - Energy efftctent quality butft 3 stately atmosphere-Is provided by the large rooms,
bedroom, matntenance free ranch tust 2 mtles hardwood llooo, fireplace, etc Call Ike Wtseman.
west ollown You wtlllove the care thts fine home
has had Includes 2 stone fireplaces. 2 ceramiC tile 13 AC. - 3 BEDROOM HOME - 2 mtles from
balh~ wtfe approved krtchen, full basement lamlly . town you ftnd th~ very mce home with barn and
room w/ bar, new effictent nat gas furnace, 2 car dher outbutldtngs, about 'h the house 5 new garage plus large covered porches &amp; 20x40 tn lhe rest has been completely redone tn excellent
ground pool Call Jtm Cochran
taste Nat gas, cent atr, neYf beautiful krtchen with
appltances. Cl111dren can have horses. caltle or any
9% MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION - 1.5 MILES other farm activity and still be a city ~tcker 1
NORTH OF H.M.C - Family SIZed 4 bedroom $69,500 Call Ike Wiseman
bnck ranch located less than I mtle off Rt. 160
Has equtpped kitchen &amp;·dt~e. famtli room ~ 509 OAK DR. - ~autilul 3 or 4 bedroom brick ' - '
~rge and has ntce fireplace, full basement 5 par- ranch that has everYthing, Thts top quality home
lially fin~hed, and also has workshop Utility room (jfers hardwood &amp; teak floors, some new carpet
and krtchen, over 2 acres olland tn ntce wooded superb decorating, 2 bathS: 2 fireplaces. lormai
setting. Priced tn $60s. Call Clyde Walker
dtmng, lamH~ room, deluxe k~chen, full basement,
plus excel)lional landscapmg and large healed
161'! ACREs-! MILE SOUTH OF RIO GRANDE poa Much more Call Jtm Cochran
- Attractively remodeled &amp; redecorated 3 bed
1
room bnck &amp; frame home on Rt. 325 Has family OWNER MUST SEll - May help finance with 101'11
room, 2 baths, large dtmng room, Aa room, lull down payments to qualtlied buyer 4 bedrooln
basement woodbumer, 2 car garage, plus some ifwne tn C!!Y school district lUSt mtnules from toWn '
ntce rollmg land with 600' highway frontage, on lbwer Rtver Rd Has fireplace full basement a"'
~stocked pond, large bam and several frurt lrees. garage $34 900
'
,
CaM 8 J Hanston
'
1

Tratler lot for rent on matl
route mtlk route, school
route and on ntce level
ground B1g lot on good road
and close new road See
Della Stall laurel Creek Ad

Small furmshed eff•ency, 1
professaonal type male only
Center atr &amp; heat Call 446 -

1

I

TIP TOP SHAPE!
Just a httle prettter lhan so many Modern 3-4 bedroom bnck
home Formal dmtngand hvtng room large krtchen Full basement
Large 2 car garage Workshop and barn Stttmg on 5Bacres, more
or less ol landscaped grounds Spnng wtll be breathless heret
Owner will help finance 10% lnt Rate

992 5949

Furn1shed 3 r prtvate bath

Houses for Rent

Used Fum1ture
bookca se,
ranges chatts end tables,
recliners and TV's 3 m1les
out Bulavdle Ad Open 9am
to 7pm Mon thru Fn . 9am
to 5pm Sat

61 Household Goods

House coal for sale $24 ton

Apartment
for Rent

dryer Call 446-4383 days.
446 0139 ovo

Bvntals
35 Lots &amp; Acr eage

Tra•ler lot on farm State At
7 , near Crown C1ty Call

2 bdr downtown, all carpet ,
complete k1tchen , all elect ·
rtc heat-atr cond • Washer-

lor S65 000 Call614 379
2566 or 614 379 2538

frames $20, S25, &amp; S30

The Sunday

Blue Ridge Mounta•n f~re
place Inserts now In atock at
Sw11her Implement Co , St

USED APPLIANCES Refrog -

Aohlond-Uplond Rd Gallo
polls Forry, 304-675-4088

W ant ed out of state buyer
need s hou se or apt burld•ng
w1th owner fmancmg Wnte
Bo x 1 006 m care of The Gal
ltpolt s D a•ly Tnbune 825
3rd Ave
Galltpohs Oh

Queen sets, $196 4 dr
chests $42 5 dr chests
$64 Bed frames, $20 and
$26 10 gun Gun cabmets
$360 dmette cha1ts 820
and $26 Gas or electnc
ranges $326 Baby ma
tresses, $26 &amp; $36, bed

W. Va.

$200 00 256 1493

etc Call 446 3937

TWO bedroom house tratler

I' '

..

THREE room furnt s hed
apartment , aer condrtton
utlltttes patd Pnvate en
trance
$225 00 month,

2 bd room furnrshed mob1le
home Pard utrhtres Adults
only No pets Daposrt re

lEAl.lOR

61 Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
12x66 2 bdr mobile homo Thre8 room furnished fJpartSob McCormock Rd Secur- mant. adu lts. no pets, Pomt Sofa , chair, rocker. ottoIty dep and rof required, no Pleasant Call 304-675- man. 3 tables, lextra heavy
by Frontoor), $685 Sofa,
pou, water paid, et 86 per 2453
charr and lovese1t. *276 U
.!::::=:,
mo plua utllltoeo Call 446
Sofas and cha1rs priced from
4491
New Haven 3 bedroom un
$285 to 5895 Tobloo, $38
fum apt 304 882-3356
and up to 8125 Htde-a2 bdr fully furnoshod, adults
$440 and up to
only woth air Call 446 Unfurn~shad apartments for beda,
5525 queen slzo. 5380
4110
rent
Ca ll Automoteve Rechners, $176 to $326 ,
Supply, 8 toll 6, 304-675 lamps from $1 8 to 565 5 II f..__...
2 bdr tr8ller 1n country Call 2218. 304 675-6753
pc dtnettes from 879 , to
614-256-8813
5385 7 pc . 5189 and up
Furntshed apts
Adult s
Wood table w1th srx chatrs
For rent two bdr house m 304-675 2257
S395 to 5650 Dosk5110
city, full basement , carHutches. $300 and 5550 ,
peted, adults, no pets Call ONE bedroom apartment m
maple or pine frnrsh Bed Henderson , partly fur
446-0968
room su 1tes - Bassett
noshed, 304-675-1972
Charry, $795 Bunk bed
2 bedroom trailer Real mea,
complete wtth mattresses.
adults only Brown's Tratler TWO bedroom apartment
5250 and up to $395 Baby
Parte. Monorsvollo 614-992- Newly paented Qu•et netgh - beds. S99 Mattresses or
borhood
Reference re
3324
bo• spnngs full or twrn ,
quored 304 576-1962
$58 • form, 568 and $78
2749

Ike Wtseman, Btoker, 446 3796 Eve
Jtm ~chran, Assoctate, 446 7881 Eve

Apartment
for Rent

614 256-6484

992-6 191
949-2660
992-5692
992 2259

_[H

Flnlohing charm, akin care 11o
modeling ciao- Alto Lollagetl 1 thru 14 For
mare into call GaH McHugh
at 814-992-7440

2 bd room unfurniahad. car·

peted $100 deposit. odulto

Real Estate
Wanted

OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE - Is part ol the charm ol thts 75 acre
larm and owner desperately needs to sell ThtsISadeal you can't
re~sl Home has lhree bedrooms new balh and septic system
N1ce btg barn and approximately five pnmtttve campsites Near
the new bridge $52 000
REALTORS•

Large house In country Free

gas 614-992-5443 or 814992-5572

44

446 6630

MIDDLEPORT - Athree or lour bedroomhome wolh aforeplace m
the donong room large master bedroom almost new lurnace new
watet tank new carpel throughout Askong $31 900

Phone 379 2204

alter 4 446 0571

1

NEW LISTING - Racone - Approklmately one acre ol noce fayong
land whoch osset up for alraoler wtth septoc lank drolled well public
water and eleclroc Also a new two car block garage wolh storage
ooom and a concrete paloo $8 000

surance Co has offered se r
v1 ces f o r f1r e Insurance
cov erag e 111 Galha Co unt y
for almos t a ce nt ury Farm
hom e and per so nal property
co¥erages are ava il able to
meet 1ndtv1dua1 n eeds Co n
tact Fost er l ewr s agent

Ntce home 2 mtles from Gal
ltpolls lower River Ad Ref
01ce lawn, c1ty water Call

In Raclhe-2 bd room homo
Completely furnlahed $360 Utohtlea paid Plua
doposot 614-949-2801

Pom~roy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Mobile Homes
for Rent

~

6329 or 667 3402

son 304 773 5758

Call614-256 1413

October 10, 1982

Houses for Rent

(~c

PH 843 2075

H av e vacan cy for elderly
man or woman m m y pn vate
hom e at Tupp er s Pl arn s
G oo d expe n e n ce
667

6 room house m Eureka un furniShed Oepoatt requtred

41

gara~

CENTRAL REALTY

614 949 2129 or 6 14
992 6040
CLEANING

TAl ST ATE M 08 1LE
HOMES USEO CARS
TR UCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES
CALL 446 7572

Real Estate - General

Tr ee tf!mmm g &amp;-re moval

•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'h acre. three bedr home.
basement , ctty s chool,
county water Call 216·
734 3734, evemngs

II

Call 614 367 7248

Offe r ed by Boa rd o f Tru s
tees R1 o Grande Co llege
R1 o G rande Oh10 remova l
of two ( 2) ho uses located on
the former Bem an property
5 1 B East College Ave R10
Grande Oh1o
Sealed b1ds
w111 be accepted '" the off1 ce
of Bu smess M an ager All en
Hall Rto Grand e Coll ege
unt1l 2 00 PM October 22,
19B 2 at wh1ch t1m e b1ds
w1ll be o pened read and
evaluated for removal of
bot h houses Remova l o f
h ouses must be m ade o n or
befor e N ovember 1 5 19B2
D~rect b1ds to R1o Grande
Co llege R1o Grande Oh ro
45674
ATTN
Bu smess
M an ager Hou ses may be
v1 e wed by appor ntm en t
o nly contact 614 245
5353 ex t 2 17 Th e co llege
re ser ves the rrght t o rejec t
any and all b1d s

Houses for Rent

·-------------------1
WISEMAN

S47 000 Call 675 7547 al

For sa le by owner 3 bed
room home large famrly
ro o m S5 000 down ass um e
9'h % 44 000 m o rt gage
M onth ly payment s on l y
S4 2 4 Send letter ex pr ess
mg Int erest to Mr Gemmell
723 1 North Rrdg e Road
M ad1son Oh1 o 44057 or ca ll

Call 446

41

Real Estate -

t or 6PM

hwa5heo Askmg $32000

Sttuattons
Wanted

614 992 2517

Small furmshed house 1 or

216 '428 5320 alter 5PM

31 Homes for Sale
Wanted M ale teenager o r
adu lt t o wa lk German Shep
pard mormng and evenmg
Good pay Middl eport 614

Mtddleport Rent, lease option 3 bedroom. dmtng, ftre
plac e basement, garage,
mce netghborhood $360

onfo 614 992-7284

If you r home IS too small
w1ll accept o n lar ge r home

22 M oney to Loan

Houses for Rent

Sa le or rent , Pomeroy 6
large room house 1 bath .
basement Call for more

446 1988

Accoutmg manager
Ac
cou ntm g deg ree &amp; 2 y r s eK
per1enc e pr ef err ed
Send
resume al ong w 1th work and
salary h1 st ory t o BoK 2000
1n ca re of th e Ga lll pol1s Da1ly
Tobune 825 3rd Ave Ga l
l1pohs Oh 456 3 1 Rep lys
held m stn ct con f1d en c e

41

Call 446 1546

8usoness
Opportunoty

Hall Room 4 Inc lude com
pletton of apph cat ton forms
and subm iSS IOn o f letter of
•ntest and r esu me
AN

31 Hom es for Sale

1982 .

W. Va

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

BMR 422- Ntce ranch located on Roush Lime ts pnced to sell al
$38,000 Large LR, 2 BR, kttchen tncludes range, eye-level oven,
dtshwasher and dtsposal Call to see
BMR 423 - In town location Walk to school Large two story
home tncludes 4 bedrooms, hvtng room, dtmng room, formal
enlrance, lg. country krtchen, full basement wtth lamtly room. 2
fireplaces, plus more Call for details
BMR 424 - 2 plus acres with a very mce 3 bedroom ranch sty~
home. You wtll love lhe country atmospohere Possible loan
assumption

•

BMR 425 - Executive type bnck home, tn French Provnoal
Featunng 2,100 square feet of hvmg area on the matn lloor plus a
lui walllout basement Th~ fine home ~ one of a ktnd tn th5 area
Be the first to see th~ one ~II now
BMR 426 =-~!~iced nght at $37,500 It has an assumable loan
with orily 91!% inlerest. We are talking about a very clean, 3 BR
home silualed on nrce 11at lot ln a family oriented neighborhood
00 lor complete delails.

1
on the market 3
bedroom ranch wrth krtchen livong room large
lamt~ room maon bath, ulohty room large covered
palto and lrool porch Th5 home sots nestled on I
acre of lovely landscaped lawn
#135

WE OFFER YOU THE BEST - 9 acreestate Sprong
loo stockoo pond 3 bedroom brock 3'h baths
large walk on closets Foyer livong room famoly
room krtchen bar breakfast nook formal donong
basement 2400 sq It Green Townsho"
#148
LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN1 Then look no l u~her
42 acres 5 roomcotta ge Dugwell Mostly woodoo
~rgan Twp Rock bottom proce
#130
OPEN WOODED AREA - 7 56 surveyed acres
close to lheOh ~ Rover Can be usoo for lois $6 000
#164
NO INTEREST - LAND CONTRACT - Owner •
wollon gto lmance lh~ 41 acre farm wrth reasonable
down payment wtlh NO INTEREST 2 story 3 boo
room home large barn cellar shed and ch1cken
house Tobacco base Proced $40 000
#141
7 5 ACRES wolh double wode and older house
Partoally wooded Rural watet Pnced on Ihe 20 s
Owrter lonancong,
#180
OWNER FINANCING' on lhos satoslyon gwell kept 3
bedroom home fA ool furnace county water
dnlled well and dug well Stalehtghway I ac land
well groomoo Close grade school superoor country
store $18 000
#162
THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL HOME - Clean w~l
kept four rooms and bath utolity room breezeway
carpo~ Gas lurnace crry waler You must see lo
apprecoale Proced on the $20's
#155
OWNER OF THIS 3 bedroom ranch needs aquock
sale Woooburner 3 acres more or less Hook up
for mobole home Pr ~ed at $24 900
#182
LOVElY VIEW ol tre riVer and proced under $30
Th5 l'h story home has 3 bedrooms I bath
krtchen and lwtng room wtlh f11eplace Pa~ basemen! and 3~ acres ol land Located on Honey
suckle Lane
#124

DONi OVERLOOK OPPORTUNITY - to see th•
excellent ranch only mmutes lrom town 3 bed
rooms 2 baths new krtchen wolh osland lormal
domng room 2 car garage central aor Plus 2 acres
ol nocely landscaped fawn Coty sch oo~
#12 1
REMODELED HOME plus 20x40 buoldon g whoch
could be usoo as a pa~ ll\inl oo commercoal Home
has 2 bedrooms 1 ballll•ong room dmong ooom
and krtchen Oldeo I car garage and a good buy
Pnced on the $20s
#179
SOMETHING SPECIAL - Beauloful brock 3 bed
rooms 2'h baths lamory room wolh loreplace
sunken llvtng room rormal dmrng room wood
burner formal entry Central aor &amp; ontercom sys
lem Double car garage &amp; large lot 2 200 sq It
lovon g space Coly sc hoo~
#113
lARGE SHADE TREES suooounds lhos older 2 story
home 3 bedrooms lovongroom lamoly room or 4th
bedroom donong room krtchen I bath. utoloty room
and cellar room Home on process of beong res
tared 75 acre lot
#178
POSSIBILITIES abound on lhos solod oldeo 2 story
home 7 rooms and blh (aoge garage pfusc arpo~
could be usoo for busoness Noce block storage
buoldong Cellar house and srtualed on 4 lfat lots
Woll sell wol h 2 lots oo4
#158
COTTAGE HOME located mIre coly 4 oooms and
bath down 2 oooms m aMoc Need of repaors
#128
MEIGS COUNTY - Move lo I he country Neat and
clean small oldeo reonodeloo 2 bedroom hoone
Noce bog screened on back porch loo enjoyable
even ongs Cella~ house wolh storage ooomabove 2
car garage and 11-1 acre ol lawn
#161
LOAN ASSUMPTION - Wolh alow down payment
you can assume the present VA loan on th1s remo
deloo 2 bedroom home Well msulated Outbuold
ongs 1 acre mooe or less Pnced on Ihe 20 s
#176
NEVER GIVE UP cause heres the hoone you re
lookmg for I •, story 3 booroom home 2 acoes
Large gaoage and work shoo Mobole home hook
up Kyger Creek Schools
#119
REDUCED $8 000 and procoo too quock sale S m~l
home and 37 38 aco es Appoox 823 lb tobacco
base Home consosls ol 2 bedrooms lovong room
foreplace 1 bath large krtchen added ooom to
back and part basement
#132

SUPER STARTER - Th ~ neat and clean 2 boo
room home would be perfect lor first lome buyers COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 3 story commercoal
or retirees Hastust been remodeled and ts conve Mdtng Parttally remodeled Over 6 000 sq It on
men!~ klcated lo schoo~. shoppong etc Proced m forst floor Good retaol sales locatiOn
#134
the $20s
#998
ACREAGE - 2 acres more or less Ntce place lor
WHAT A BUYIII Newly decorated mobtle home. 3 your new house or mobole home Rural water
bedrooms ~rge INtng room &amp; krrchen. laundry avaolable
#961
room &amp; ballt Wtll rent lol Near Rto Grande
#168
~11 .000 - For only $11 000 you can own your
PRICE REDUCEDt $8,000 Ready lo take over own 3 bedroom mobtle home srtuated on '? acre
Jusl hook up the electnc. 2 acres more or less Rural water Secludoo locatton
#171
Good levellenced lot Postble owne(s ftnancmg
#999

AMERICA'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER. CENTURY 21 ."
to\tHt\tllt! 1

!NPII'INI•f-NTIYOWNFDAN\!I!t'fjAlll!
00

\

'

�.. ~ ·~"'·
Page-D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant

October ·

W, Va,

1982

October
54 Misc. Merchandise 55 Building Supplies
Fiberglass slide up garage

purposes . Flat porceli an
enamel coated . 4x8 thru 4 x

Excellent condition . Call
evenings

260 6 cyl.

and

12 . Prices. $7.00 to $9 .60 .

614-667-30B5 .

tainers.

56

.JB3
t AK 832

59 For Sale or Trade

Zenith stereo with 8 track &amp;
cassette. turn table . Also re cords , speake r, and stand .
Also Hobby horse &amp; mens
clothing . Call b e1ore 7 p .m .

614-992-301B .

DRAGONWYND CATIERY
- KENNEL . AKC Chow puppies , CF A Himal aya n, Persia n and Siamese kitt en s.

Ca ll 446 · 3844 after 4 p .m .

HILLCREST KENNEL ·

Kenmore washer &amp; dryer .
$160 . Also Frigidare re1rig erator . $1 10. Call614 -742 -

Call 446 -7795 .

Homelite string trimmer
$76 . King Trump et S225 .
ttonda Trail 90 motorcy cl e.

Judy Tay lor at

Q60. All like new . 614992-7539 .
Call Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices .

304-675-1293
Hoover portabl e washer and

dryer. 304 -675 -4B74 .
$35 . truck

load . 304-675-1B2B .
FIREWOOD , cut, split &amp; del ivered, S25 . a lo ad . 197 2
Ch evy Impal a, 2 door . hard ·

top. 304-675 -147B.
BUYING and selling u se d
heavy equipment (agricultu ral , construction . mining,
chemical industry , etc .)
through consignment tor a
national company . Starting
at $16 ,000 . value . Call Ro bert l Harper . 304 -675 ·

1293.

5967.

614 -367 -

7220 .
AKC Brittany Span i el
puppues, make good bird

304-675 -2693 .
Engagement &amp;: Wedding
ring, Art ca rv ed , one -third
carat . l ennox crystal , go·
blets &amp; sherbets, " Desire"
pattern , never used. 304-

675-3730 .
CAMOUFLAGE . new U.S.
Army c l ot hing , boot s.
packs, U .S. M .C . caps. dam aged rental c lothing $5 . do z~tn .
d en i m wear . 1re e
delivery -samp l es shown ,
ca ll in orders city o1 Pt . Pl ea sant , Sandhill Ro ad , State
rout e 2 nort h , phone 304 676 -3334 Pt. Pleasant be·
1ore 10 a.m . C:laily- only .
Sales display Sam Somerville's warehouse , 7 miles
east Ravenswood . !New Era
old route 21) open 1 :00 7 :30 p .m . Friday, Saturday,
Sunday , (M on day
evenings) .

5100 .00.

Armstrong , net wall . lino leum used 1 month ,
17'10 "1f. 9'10" . phone

It tl
61

Farm Equipment

Farmhand grinder - miX er
with sheller attachment ,

$1,500.
5515 .

Australian Shep herd pups ,
mother is good ca ttle dog ,
ca n be registered . 304 -895 -

Ba ckhoe will 1it just about
any tractor . $3.000 . Sand ers Auto Sales. 1st &amp; Syca ·
mor e St ., Gallipolis . Ca ll

shots. 304-675-7B77 .
57

Musical
Instruments

2 65 Massey 1erguson trac·
tor . 9ft . disc, 3 row bottow
plow_
s, 300 gal. sprayer,
plastiC mulch layer brand
new . Will sell together or se parate . Call 446 - 1700 .
850 FORO farm tractor for

614 -446-3375 .
DOWN spouts , gutters from
2 -story house, $10 . Ttvee
pair wooden outdoor .ifJut ters, $10 . each . 304-675 -

6751 .
55 Building Supplies
Building materials block ,
brick . sewer pipes , win dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters , Rio Grande, 0 . Call

614-245 -5121 .

We will MEET or BEAT any
legitim ate price your receive
on any new piano or organ .

BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO ..
61 Court St .. Gallipolis. CaiJ

N_E W Id ea no. 10, 1 row ~o rn
Picker , good condition
priced $1695 . located nea;
l eo n, call Huntington, 304 ·

736-6170.

Dove guitar

LOWREY

304 -

63

2.8 ACRES - 6 room home
near stores. out of all floods.
Basemenl with garage, balh
and all util~ies. $25.000
SYRACUSE - 2 level lots and
older 7 room home. Needs
some repai~&gt; bul w111 sell
reasonable.
TUPPEIIS PLAINS - Modern
8 room residence on 2 level
kis. Bail!, gas furnace and
equipped kitchen. Asking
$31,500,
I'C)IEROY - 4 large rooms,
bllh sundecll. basement and
IQi lot for only $17,10).

Hou~Jnr;

He.Jdqthlffl ''•

E111

,.

DbL

3•Pass

Pass

Pass

,.
s•

Soal

Opening lead: • A

By Oawald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Here is a slam hand from

a high-level team match.
We won't show the bidding
at table one ercept to report
that North and South bid to
five clubs and had no trouble
making seven by the simple

64

(NEIISP APD IINTIIRPIUSB ASIN.I

71

Hay &amp; Grain

BARLEY 1or cover crop or
1eed, also wheat and rye, call

1980 Pontiac Firebird. AMFM cassette, air, $6,000

firm. Coii814-266-169B.

organ - Gen i e,

firm . Coil 446-394B.

Int ernational combine. Call
304-675 -323B .
614 - 388 - 8483 or · 614 Tranapvnallyn
- - - - - - - - - lcAUTO harp. $60. 304 -675 · 471 -1472.
2B35 .
- - - - - - - - lc- 71
Autos for Sale
HOLSTEIN HEIFER
CALVES . 614-992 -519B.
1979 Pontiac Sunbird 4
58
Fruit
Pure bred poll Charlois 600 cyl. , AC. AM-FM otero,
&amp; Vegetables
l b. bull . Spring ca lf. 614· 48 ,000 miles. axe. cond .
37B-6152 .
Caii446-7B3B or 446-13B7
German Ridg e appl es . Red
and Golden Deli cio us, Rom e
Bea uty and Wine Sap , $7 .50
bu sh el. $4 .00 % bushel .
Corner of LeG rande Blvd .
and Portsmouth Ad . Call

446-B59B.

Autos for Sale

1976 Monte Corio 69.000

21 steer. 600-700 lb. &amp; 93

•

GREEN beans . $5 .00 bu ·
shel, pick your own . 304 675 -3 618 or see CBC Gas,
Gallipolis Ferry .

Registe red Nubian male
goat. 5 years old . Papers in cluded. $90. 2 year old femilking
male goat
. $60.
, rebred
Shade
, -614
now·

696-12'34 .

6 Holst ein Heifers . Ca lf
tested . Average weight 800
lb. 1969 International 2 ton

truck. 614 -367-7533 .

2 registered polled Here1ord
Yearling bulls . 304 -675·

APPLES - Fitzpatricks Or ·
chard s has plenty of picked 3431 or 304-675-3030 .
apples for appl e butt er or 1or
winter storing . Vis it our or · TWO Holstein hei1ers. 14
ch · d on St.Rt. 689 or call months old. Hoo: Caii304-

669-37B5 .

a1ter 6.

1978 Fairmont Ford, extra

clean, good cond .. 81,996 .
Coil 448-47B2. Gallipolis.
19BO Chevy luv 4x4. Coil
448-3229
1971 Buick Good condition .

Good tireo. 8300. Call614·
367-723B .
Real Estate -

1970 Chevy Monte· Corio ..
a.c.. U60. 814-887-30B6 .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1977 Ford Grenodo, 2 dr.
81,900. 814-742-2362.

Ft~N~~~~TES

g;ys~:j,~~~~~~

lllllllllil~jii

446-3636 ANY HOUR
Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
~~ -·-... Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

BEAUTIFUL BRICK - Enormous lain1ly room wtlh custom buill
b11ck fireplace. Ceiling fan. equipped k~chen has dishwasher.
range and ref11geralor. Snack bar separales kilchen from dining
area. 3 bedrooms. 11h balhs. EKira large utilily room wilh ample
slorage. 2 car garage. Narlyanacre. Kyger Creek area. Thishomeis
1n eKcellenl condilon. $52.000. JUST LISTED'
EVERYONE IS LOOKING for a few acres near town ... and here il ~~
SIX ACRES. 2 bedroom home w/ additional-room lhal could ea~li
be converted lo third bedroom. Large living room. Hange ana
rel11geralor in k~che n. Slorage bldP. City Schools. $27,500. jUST
LISTED'
VERY COZY - 3 bedroom home on Lower Second Avenue, walk lo
shopping, park. schools. Family room, eat-in kitchen wilh range
and relri&amp; Fully carpeled. Gas ouldoor barbecue grill. tow mainle·
nance vinyl sid1ng. carport. Super buy al $36,900. JUST LISTED'
COMMERCIAL BUILDING on Eastern Ave. Owner has priced lh~
building for quick sale, $27,900. Lol ~ 40'• 150'. Block w~h brick
Iron! bldP.. 20'x40', has walk in.cooler. air cond., 1\ibafh. Storage
bldg_ Greal location for any lype bu~ness.
GALLIPOLIS - Two bedroom
frame ranch. eat-in kitchen has
range and refrigerator,
40'x 150' lot. Good starter
home. Excellent for retired coopie. $13,900.

rHONE 742-2003
GOOD STARTER HOME
f'lice price. 2 bedroom frame
home w~h one bath. New wir·
ing and full basement Drilled
well. 1 car garage, nice back·
yard. Located in AntiQuity.
Price REDUCED to $11,000.00.
ST. ROUTE 143- Lei us show
you lh~ lovely Barringtoo
home. Add on family room, 3
bedrooms, 2 full bath~ extra
nice kilchen w~h double oven
and island range. Low utilitie~
Situated on 1.88 acres wilh 3
buildings. Asking $36,900.00.
Owner will con~der offer or
some financing available.
POMEROY - Lovely 3 or 4
bedroom home w~h detached
carport. Extra nice backyard
with fruit Ires- This home is
really in good shape and ~ has
aluminum siding and storm
windows. Natural gas furnace.
Some furnishings are included
in the sale price of only
$27,000.00.
LARGE CORNER LOT - New
wiring. new ·ceilings and dry
wall. low utilities and low Ia xes
are only a few amenities of t~is
lovely 2 bedroom, one balh
home. tt has aluminum ~ding
and a nice kilchen wilh stove,
refrigerator, washer and dryer
included. Look loday al only
$30.000.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-371
Velma Nicinsky. Assoc.
Pho"" 742-3092

General

STROUT. REALTV Inc.·
Jill~~

LARIAT DRIVE - OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - Lovely 3 Br, I story, 15x21 lR formal
dining fuR basement wrth 14x27 family 'rm. fin~ hed in .knotty pine, 2 fireplaces, 42 It rear
screened 1n p!Jch, garage and 100x3001ot.Can be
bough! w~h or wrthout furn~ure. As~ng $59,500
w~h 25% down and 12% on lhe balance.

RIO GRANDE - Corner lol. zones commercial,
140x156, all utilrties available. Ready for your new
business.

STYLE ... ELEGANCE ... A WAY OF LIFE - Firsl
t1me on l~e market br th~ like new conlemp!Jary,
3 or 4 BR s, 2 balhs, large open LR w~h fireplace &amp;
RIO GRANDE AREA - Rio Centerpoint Rd. bearned ceiling;, kitchen indudes range. t:NI &amp;
{Cherry Ridge), approx. 75 acres woodland. fronts relng, full basement. wrap-around deck, cedar
IJI 2 rds .. counly water available Owner may help Siding. 12x24 above ground pro, garage, barn &amp;
10 acres near Eureka. Oty schoo~.
finance. Priced lo sell at $400 per acre

RECREATION LAND - 25 acres m/ 1, mostly
woods, fronts on Little Raccoon Creek &amp; Slale LOG CABIN :- Very unique, old hand-hewn log
beams, sleeping loll, large stone fireplac~ modern
Route 325 near Tycoon Lake. $15,000.
barn, 14 acres woods. localed in lhe Wayne NaASSUME 8'1&gt;% LOAN - Love)y ranch al the edge I!Onal Forest. 20% down.
of lown 5 pnced lo sell at $49,900. Features are 3
BR., I \7 baths, large LR w~h WB fireplac~ modern GAS STATION &amp;GARAGE- 131ft. fronts on Stale
k~chen &amp; dining area, laundry rm .. garage &amp; gas
Route 554, corner lol over 3IOO·sq. It, 5 bays,
heat. Call for appointment presently used for aulo. lract!J &amp;farm equipment
reprurs, partial finanang available
RODNEY-CORA ROAD- Approx. 30 acres wood·
land located 3 mi from Rodney. County waler
available $12,000.
L-G-C-A-T-1-0-N - 620 4th Ave., 4 BR, 21h baths,
BUILDING OR MOBILt HOME SITE - Approx lariJ! LR, formal dining rm.,'complete Mchen ldh
51h acres located on the Graham School Rd., d~p., t:NI compact01, relrigerat01 and 13Rge. 6
county waler, over 300 ft. road !rootage. Green fireplaces, g;rage, new aluminum siding and storm .
Grade School and Gall~ Academy Hi~ Schoo. window~ Shown by appointmrot only.
$10,900.
LOC;ATION PWS QIJAUTY should desrrile this
PERRY TOWNSHIP - 78 acres. 15 A. Simms lovely 3 BR br!dl ranch. Speciallt!alures are 1
Creek bottom. b~ance raling pasture &amp; woods, liJI! LR &amp; Hining rm .. equipped kkhert, Bi bllhs
nice modular home.lariJ! barn, several other build- . laundry, QUilty carpel, cent air &amp; an oversized
~~o~co base. corner of SR 141 &amp;the Vernon ~~on U.S. 35 West~ shown by

2

byHonriAmoldandBobLH

~~~;pment

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"8e11utiful, Custom

Buill Garages"
C111

1or

siding

free

estimates, 949-2801 ot"
949·2160.
Ne Sunday Calls

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
'Wtlonsllld~inl

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

V'

±

Heating

~ewiring

All Work Gu.ranteed

152 3rd Ave.

Answerhere:[

EXCAVATING
- Dozers

WHAT M06T PEOI"LE

DO WHEN THEY
M5Ei
F'AMOlJ5
\.51~S~:E1'f!!JAl.l. 51AFC

AI mak• ond models
Antenna lnttalfotiort
House C8Ns and shop

I I I )mTo[ I I)
("""--Monday(

I Jumbles · HYENA
Yester day s

..

BEGINNERS STAINED
GLASS CLASS
446-3199
After 5:30

A nENTION BU51Nt55tM

BARTIS SIGNS OF COLUMBUS
WANTS YOUR BUSINESS

New Ceramic Shop

Electric - Neon - Hand Lettered
Silk Screened and Service
High Quality - low Price

Georges Creek Rd .. 1h mi. off Rt.

MAKE ME PROVE IT!!!

71

Autos for Sale

lfrM Esti.,alosl
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

1
,

J·l 4 ·tfc

SEs:~~st

From the
Heater
Core to the l.arpst Radiator.
Radiator Spetialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 YB. Ex-ience
"'"
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC
'
•
Pome o Oh
r y, ·
Ph. 992-2174

8100. available at local

ALL AGES
TRIPS WEEKLY
· leautiful Goll Courses
Driving Ranges
Call John Teaford
Chester

Also
PRO SHOP
CLUB REPAIR

CHARM &amp; SPl!NOOR IN GAlUPOLIS
Eleganl spacious rooms is yoo~&gt; in I his 2 story home in the City
School District. LariJ! family room. living room, eat-in krtchen,
laundry room, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, garage. fenced yard. full
basemrot plus much more. Th~ home is a pleasure lo show. Gall
today for an appontment.
•
#549

Open Year Round

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

196B ton pickup priced on
inspection . 76 Mazda 4 cyl.
gas saver . 304-675-5162 .
1972 4-door Maverick .

-

5B12 .

Sizes !tom 6'•6' Up
lo 24'K36'.

All Makes

• Dish·

washers

• Ranges • Refrigerat-

ors
• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

matic. 304-675-6505.

ln suiJted Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

1976 FORD 4 door sedan.

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
10-6-llc

J&amp;F

--"'-·

CONTRACT! NG

OHIOVAUEY
ROOFING

power steering, power
brakes. air conditioning ,
cheap, good condition , 304 ·

45B-1B54.

'

ectump truck 18f'Vice

-ing and reclolming
•Racine and Syracuse
-hookup

Wort&lt; lnoured ond
Guaranteed

PH. JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

elloofing of all types
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Y rs.

experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834 .. 94!1-2160

4·20 tic

52.4oo 304-675-2B36 .
1975 LINCOLN Mark IV.

ELECTRIC
_SERVICE

And Home Maintenance

• xcevirting

WHAT A DEALI! $27,000
Corne see for you~&gt;elf. Cozy 6 rooms and bath. washer, dryer,
d~hwasher. refrigerat!J, woodburner. and all like neW. Sl01age
buiding and 2 car carport. Kyger Cree~ Schoo~.
#552

MILLER

48 ,000 miles. loaded . 304 ·

458-1B54.
76 CHEVETTE, 2 door.

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
·
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

~=====~I0~/7~/~Hc~~=;=~;:=;:;=~::;~======~J~-7~-t~fc~

W~h all the charm of Yesteryear and alltheconveniroce ofToday!!!
120 acres more or less w~h a modern~d 6 rm. alum. sided

CONSTRUCTION
Homes extensive

carelree home Living room, or 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. countJy
~chen w~h breakfast bar, ulilily bid&amp;. tobacco base. frurt trees,
and mineral rights. Won'! last. Call today.
#553

R• MASH
CONSTRUCTION

lOOKING FOR PRIVACY?
WE WOULD LIKE TO SHOW YOU THIS ONE
Wooded setting at CharaaisHi I~ overkxlking I he lake Siep into Ihe
enlry on the second level and view the beautrtul alrium from lhe
level below. Th~ contemporary unique design is a decorator's
dream come lrue. Indoor pool offic~ well eouiooed k~chro w4h
bui~·in 100(1 i$!~1111. ~xtra large liv. room, imported tile fkxlr grace
the Sp!Cilus lam. room, 7llrep~ces, 217 balhs, balcony on ~ont ol
both levels. Call for a personal showing and find out the many
detai~ too numerous lo mention in th~ ad.
#531

CHIMNEYS

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning 1eatured by Haf1elt
Brosthers Custom Carpet s.
estimates. Call 446 -

Masonary work . Logu e Con tracting, Rt . 1, Ewington .

Call 614-3BB-9939 .
CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION . Constr .. roof ing , siding, spouting ,
1encing, painting , repair s &amp;
cleaning . 446 -2000, call before 8 and a1ter 5 :30 .

Trucks for Sale

with

extras .

614 -949 ·

2544.

CALL AL
742-2328

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar , and

RINGLE 'S SERVICE o•perienced mason, roofing , car ·
penter, electrician , general
repairs and remodeling . Call

Water Wells. Comm ercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

1979 Dodge Powerwagon
150, 4 wheel drive, 36 .000

ADVANCED Seaml ess
Gutter -Doors. 01fering continu se guttering, seamless
siding, roo1ing , garage
doors, 1ree estimates, 614 -

miles, 304-675-416B .

69B-B205 .
PAINTING interior &amp; ellte ·
rior, 1ree estimates. 304 ·

675-112B.
EUGENE LONG

:Superior Sidil!l Co.

3.85 ACRES OR 18
In Green Twp. close to Gallipol~. farm home Screened in froot
porch, glassed-in back porch. Perm slooe sKiing. chicken ]louse, 2.
st!Jage bldg;. Lots of shrubhery and trees. Priced lo !ell See this
lovely land an~ couni/Y borne
.
•
11534

: · VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
: Complete Gutter won.
: C~mplete Remodtlin&amp;.
' . . . of Ill types_
:Weibel in home - 20

DUTCH COLONIAL
Siyle, beauty, charm, comfort -all describes this home. 4 BR, 211
baths, equipped eal-in krtchen, family room with tireplac~ formal
living and dining room. You won'l believeth~ home unless you see
il IIJ yourself. Make vour appointment today to walk into the
enlrance of one of the most lovely homes m the area.
..
#322

: Y~R

FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 143-3322

CARPENTRY &amp; remodel -

ROOFING
H.

ing. siding. painting , some
electrical &amp;: plumbing . 304 ·

676-29B9 .

L. WRITESEL

e (o llft{'r~

82

e ( nwm1 pm• t"
e New nr Rr·p.l!r

74

Plumbing

Motorcycles

el',,tnflnq

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or949-2U3

Cor . Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3BBB or 446 ·
4477

7 14 tl r'

84

I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
Nice comfortable home w~h n~e lariJ! shade lrees. Concrete front
porch, lots of fru~ trees !apple, cherry, plum and pi!JIC~). grape
arbor, raspberry vines, good garden land, all level. In Green Twp.
Rural waler, 2 car g;rag~ fuel oil FA furnace. Basemen!, barn
l&gt;a~1prox. 16'x24'. Priced in lhe $20's.
#491

htwttftC~Itira&amp;

' MiddfopOrf, Ohio
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
in October
Wld.-Dnft .Nite
(Ill draft beer ~ prict)
Thurs.-Pool Tourn. Nile
Daily Specltls
, Not Mentioned
Open 7 days a.week
Carryout Iller &amp;
. • Wine Awilllble
Extra Special
Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 t.o
Drinl any drink
for I low price
Phone 992-9913
10·3·1mo.

8 ACRES
_
Wrtlin 10 min. drive to downtown Gallipol~. Cily School SysletlJ.
Has hookup for the mobile home. Gallia Rural Waler, eloctric and
~ic tan~ nrte li~t on pole. 200 ff. frootage on Graham School
Rd. Timber. Blikl1ng s~es. Call Now.

Mn

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant ~ nice size building lots w~h all ulil~ies lhere tot size
101.8 by 1712. Better gel'um now.
#456

1980 Oddsey , good cond .

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing&amp; Siding Co.
Route1
Long Bottom, Dh. 45743
985·4193
9-15·1mo.

z,

OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk into format entrance wilh open staircase lo· this
completelY redecoraled home locatEd in the city. Wrtlin
distanl:e to shoppin~ area 3 bedrooms, 2M baths al]d ch;rmino
llrl! ltidlen SpaCIOUS living room wrth WO!ldburning fw' ljllam :1
This &amp;!1Cilus hOme has a natural gis FA. furnace like new.
Immediate posession. We're \piling for yuur call

460 HONDA. 304-675 6909.

Plaster Craft and
Ceramic Bisque
Teachers,
Scout
Leaders and Organiza·
1ions, Come In and
Package . Deals.
counts Available.

Dis-

LESSONS STARTING
CALL or STOP IN
TO SIGN UP.
SALE ON
ORNAMENTS

71

o

.A utos for

1

,

: , VINYL Ia ·ALUMINUM SIDING
e1n11 'n'WI ...rm Doort
. .
.Storm W'•ldarwl •R plu ..u WMdowa
•fMw RO!Iftng

1

'!.

...
J

JamesK_..
Ph. .992•2772 .

fl .. &amp;60.00 ea. Call 446·

7322.

a.......,...,lhlnt.

9-22-1 mo

,,

Pomeroy . 992 ·22B4.

77

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE . Call 614-367-7471
or 614-367-0691 .
Need something hauled
away or something moved?

We'll do it. Call446-3159or
614-266-\967 otter 6.
Auto Repair

Now Hauling house coal,
lump or stoker up to 8 ton .
Umestone, top aoil , 1ill dirt .

SPECIAL Complete enamel Call614-387-7101 .
paint jobo !Tom 8300. Sun·
JIMS Water Service. Call

Auto Trim Cantor, 446- Jim Lanier, 304-876-7397.
1888.

Camping
87 Camero 250 engine, 78
Equipment
body good' cond.. needa
point, oaklng t900, negotl·
ble, lncludea 87 ..maro Starcr,111t fold-out, uud
perta. C:•M 114-448-4117 twice, excellent cond.
or 742-3113.
1241.5. located Main and
le~ond, Mlddtoport, Ohio.
117li C:h;y..., CordoN, 2 814-882-2128.
.
door, Nd, blocl&lt; vlntl top, ••·
cellont running condition, IW ·FOOT, aolf contained
noo. Call 814-388-1151 . truck Cllt'lptr, *660. 304.
112·3110.
1111 Cutleao
Dlo·
aol with
WIU IV. ft, aolf contained 4rucll
conaldor older ..r u trade cempor, · 1550. 304-112ln. 114·742-24tl.
3110.

-

Freelstlmatel '
:

PU toppers. one Bh. two 6 '12

roofs installed from $225.

1810 Chevy for oale fair

INSULATION ,

,
REMODELED COUIITIIY HOlE
In !lhio Township. sets on 2 acres more 01 less, h~ =;:~
sidin' 3 bedlooms 10d barn. Priced $21,900.See by

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Take A Look At Our

t.:=========~

J&amp;L BLOWN

-'

76

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs .
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,

85

cond .. partly rootorod. Call
;~~==~~~~~~~§~~~=~~~~~ 814·448-1817.

*146

• ~· -

304-675-3773 .

992-2663
POMEROY, OHIO

buildings

691 Miller Drive

lNG SERV

INDUSTRIAL•COMMERCIAl•RESIDENTIAL
•Scolchgard 3m
•Carpel Cleaning
•Insured
•Furniture Cleaning
•Pel Odor Removal
Upholslery &amp; Vinyl
~Fasl Drying
•Acoustical Ceilings
•Propane Buffmg !High Speed)
•Insurance Work
•Furnilure Moving Included
Water, Smoke, Fire
•We Rake Pile

FALL SPECIAL

•FREE Friendly Eslimales

lOA PROfESSIONAL SERVICE CALL:
14 Hour [met goner Set'"'

II NoAnswer

446-206 2

446·2642

SOLUTION

f - - ----------1

NOTICE
Lowest
Prices
Ever
On

r.r::-r:-r.:=

New)4' Wide
MOBILE
HOMES
From
$9,995 .00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
With 2 Location s

Rl. 93 North
Jack son, Ohio

286;3152
or
Cor ner 2nd &amp; Viand
Pt. Pleasa nt, W . Va.
675 -4424

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Gene Smith, 992 -6309 .

304-B95-3B02 .
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

Nu· Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility

Gene's Steam Carpet Clea n Scotch Gaurd - Fr ee
estimates - spring specials -

removal. Call 675 - 1331 .

1975 Ford. F 150. Loaded

BUILT AND
REWORKED

ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

ADVANCED

r

Bill's

Marcum Roo1ing &amp; Spout ing. 30 years &amp;kperience .
specializing in built up roof .

truck. 225. 6 c. 3 spd .. and
62 Pontiac Tempest. 4c .. 3 304-675 -20BB . or 675 ·
spd . Best offer . Call 446· 4560 .
9393 or 446-7595 .

&amp;

FREE

PAINTING · interior and exterior, plumbing, roofing ,
some remodeling . 20 yrs .

19B1 CHEVETIE, 4 door, house calls. Call 576-239B
automatic, AM -FM , radio ,
or 446-2454 .
low mileage, 81f.cellent con dition. 304· 773-65B6 .
F &amp;: K Tree Trimming , stump

For sale or trade 65 Dodge

FIREPLACES

Cuslom kilchens and
balhrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

hatchback. very clean, see at
395 Jackson Pike, n81f.t to
Ha11elt Carpet Co .

72

L

ciol and residential. free
estimates. Call 614 -25611B2.

1979 FORD Mustang Cobra. loaded. $4500 . 304- 2107.
676-7752.

;
~==~====:=9§·~10§
· 1~m~o~.~~==========~~~~~==~~~~~====~ 1976 PONTIAC Grand Pri•.

BEAUTIFUL SETTNG, BEAUTIFUL HOME
PWS I ACRE PWS
8 rooms plus lull basemrot, 2 full baths, with shower~ family room,
living room, ~ining room. nice step-saver krtchen. 3 01 4 BR.
lennox heat pump, also coal and wood burner furnace. Nice
landscped yard All oflh~ for only $53,900. Needssmall amount of
W!Jk lo fin~h th~ NEW HOME.
11532

telf.tured ceilings commer ·

9 13 1 mo.

445·4868

Call 614-3BB -9622 or 6143BB-9B57 .

75 Monza 2 • 2 . 4 cyl, auto -

UTILITY BUILDINGS

• Washers

Call Collect 614·871-4242

Sat. &amp; Evening

Free Estimates

STUCCO PLASTERI.NG

e•p. Call 614-3BB-9652 .

4 brl; 71 Charger 3B3 Mog .

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 12'xl6'

Home
Improvements

81

(refundable( 1-714-669 0241 ext . 1855 1or direc·
tory on how to purchase . 24
hrs.

a1ter 6 p .m . call 304-676 ·

ALL STEEL &amp;

ler,h;vc

gov't sales in your area . Call

70 Camero good cond . 350 -

FOR FUTURE USf "

dition S4BOO . 304 -676 3009.

JEEPS , cars, trucks under

~==::;;:;;:~9~-3~0-~ll~c~~~=~~~~==~~======~2~-2~6-~tlc~i 304-576-2174.

Begining or Inter.

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

71 Motor Home, good co n -

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 leas ekpensive cars in
stock .

~

KOUNTRY K LUB
FALL GOLF TOUR

79

1967 vw Beetle. 8450.

~~~riT~:

1
\
st. ARUTt.n 4P&amp;omTRerUoCy,KDH

firin~ .

!l'~ ~PRDVEMENTS

PH. 992-2478
10·3·1mo

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

7.
Duncan Supplies. greenware.

back - A CHANGED MAN

l.JrJt or Small Jobs

9-20- 1 mo. Pd

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
Or 992-7121

BASIC ADMIRE GENTRY

JEANNifS CERAMICS

Answltf: He tell like this after his laundry finally came

1

Call 446·851 s or 441··0445 ·1
affer4 :30p.m.

Ph. 446-2716

.

=}~;~::

Lennox Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning . All Types
Insulation Electrical
Wiring .

)

r-.._

Vy
I\. ~

Ll

-Water
- Sewer
- Gu Lines
-Septic Systems

Oeweyne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith

0

~nc:t,::.t

#544

•'

~

=~~~o;,~cks

Chester, Ohio

-holi•I 10•1UHII won
-CMcrlle won

6.94 ACRES
VACANT LAND OFF RT. 35
Rolling land - beside Old U.S. Highway 35. In an area that is
developing fast. Rt. 35, short distance wesl of Gallipol~. Gel~ now,.

.

I I

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

NASKEY'S
FURNITURE
Stripping &amp;
Refinishing
446-3896 or

ltcensed tleclrician

~========~~========jt~~~~~~~~~ 614-949-27B9 .

COUNTRY HNOME
&amp; 40 ACRES M. &amp; L
8 room country home- 5 bedrooms, bath. shower, some carpetin&amp; dr~led well w~h pump. Nice loba'\:co barn. Two corn cribs.
Garage All mineral rights goes. Several nalural spring;, some fru~
trees. Located on Slale Highway. Priced on~ $30,00.00.
#543

'j

TILMI

Electric

.

~COLKUN~

PH . 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTIME
101711 mo

i-

IN GALLIPOLI5-WALK TO SHOP OOWNTOWN
6 rooms. 3 BR, full basemrol nice lariJ! fronl porch. No upkeep.
Vinyl siding Nalural gas furnac~ nice large shade trees, low !axes.
Home you should check on.
#530

011~. .

AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

J·ll ·lfc

39 ACRES IN CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
Frame 4 room cotlag~ balh, eat-in k~chen. Assumable IO;!n.
Tobacco base. 8921bs. Lots offru~ lrees All mineral rights go.Oay
Township. Phone for alllhe delai ~.
#545

•

FREE ESTIMATES

service avaifoiJie

1#407

.- '

Syracuse - Racine
Area

PASOUALE
ELECTRIC CO.

fonT!

GRACIOUS LIVING
GOOD HOUSE
IN ACOUNTRY
SENSE
ATMOSPHERE
RETIREMENT OR
Tru~ gracious family living can
STARTER HOME
be yours in th~ beaut~ul 4
Comfortable,
neal home w~h
bedroom home approx. 8 miles
from Gampolis. The k~chen ~ a lariJ! living room. eat-in Mchen
lllUimel's delight Unbelieva· w~h buin-in cabinets. 2 bed·
rooms, st01age room. bath and
ble dining rooom and family
carport. Very convenient locaroom. Blin 101 the most d~·
tion.
Call for further detail&amp;
criminaling homeowner. 20
11533
acres. Pastureland. Horse sta·
ble Another 73 acres available
Many, many amen~~s.
. #542
WOW! $39,900.00
WOW' 9% owner financin~ Wow' 3 BR. 2 balhs. central air, garag~
stllage buildin&amp; all fum~ure induded. 5 minutes to downtown
Gallipol~ Oty schools. Large level lot

.

rx

1

I

(X
;. Now the
lrTange the circted lifters to
==~~~~~~~~~~ ERPICHj
surpriae answer. as suo·
1
1
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
S&amp;W TV
PULLINS
L-L_C&gt;...L~L..J,__j
goo!OdbytheaboveCIIIoon.

A PL\CE IN THE COUNTRY

HOLIDAY PARK - 2 Camping lots. furnished 26
It
Tr!tNood !ravel traiiEJ, shetter house. utility
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Greal family home
buiding.
counly water. sewer, access lo Raccoon
w~h 3 B1&gt;., 2 baths. 15x27 LR w~h gas fireplace:
lariJ! modern k~chen w~h raniJ!, self-cleaning Creek. PriCed for a quick sale
oven. OW and d~p.. laundry w~h washer and
dryer. pa~ basemen! and over 6 acres of land al LOVELY BRICK &amp;FRAME RANCHER plus78 acres
the edge of lown.
of land in Cheshire Twp.offe~&gt; lotsof good living for
your gr011ing family. Home is just like new w~h
PRICE REDUCED TO $32.900 - 50 acres more 1438 sq. ff. of living area plus an atlached garage.
or less near Etrek~ approx. 15 A. grassland, bal- 2 spacilus B~&gt;. 2 baths. 18x27 tR. 10x24 kitchen
ance wooded. nicely remodeled 6 rm. and bath w~h relri&amp;. d~p., t:NI. 'double oven and raniJ!,
hom~ WB fireplace. stove, refri&amp;. several oulbuild·
washer and dryer stays in launijry. Land. ~ mostly
ing;. Owners leaving lhe area and would like a romng pasture land w~h approK. 25 acres wooded.
quick sale

MoBILE HOME PARK IN VIL·
LAG£ Of CHESHIRE - THIS
COULD B£ THE BUSINESS
OPI'OIIIUNITY YOU HAVE
BUll WAmiiG f.oR. CAll
FOIIIJICOIIE FIGUII£5.

Farm
Parts &amp;Service
· 1 J·llc

PH. 99Z-7181
or 949-2182

9·20-1mo pd .

MORGAN TOWNSHIP - L1ke new 2 BR hom~ 4 $18.000 - NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD - 4 bed·
y1&gt;. old, slove. refr~, a11 cond~ioner, WB stove, room soctilnal hom~ must selllh~ monlh to settle
20•30 barn wilh carport, 2 sheds, almost 2 acres. estale. Call for Appointment.
As~ng $21.900 w~h an assumable loan. Be lhe
fi~&gt;t to see lh~ one.
GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 33 acres m/1 on Slate
PRICE REDUCED TO $69.500! BUY BELOW RE- Route 160 near North Gallia High School. Mostly
PLACEMENT COST. Over 2100 sq ft. ollivingarea. clean rolling grassland. stock pond, 3 BR ranch
Th~ all brick rancher offers 3 BR's· {master ~ lype home with luH basemenl, good barn. Out of
16K22). 3 balhs, 14x24 LR w~h fireplace. 13x25 town owne~&gt; says SELL
family rm., form~ dinlog rm.. galley k~chen in·
eludes double ovens. Corning lype counter top · BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - 132 acres mostly
raniJ!, OW &amp; disp.. gas heat, cent. air, attic fan &amp; clean hill pasture, good fences, I ll stO!'). hom~
much more. Located in lown on Spruce St. Exten· lariJ! barn, tab. base. fronts on 3 roads near Mud·
s1on. Call Ranny Blackburn foi a personal showing soc~ Price reduced lo $64,000.
12 ACRE ESTATE w1lh a "Dallas" flavor. Rat! fences. stable.
swlinming pro, garage/ workshop surrounded by beautiful level
land. Visually e&lt;citing b11ck home. Sunken galhering room, fainily
room w1lh glassed shelves and fireplace. eleganl formal dining
room. Four bedrooms or three plus a study. 21h balhs. Akilchen
Ihal prointses lo turn a noVIce cook inlo apro Nulonework center.
double ovens. d1shwahser. range and breaklasl boolh cusloin
destgned by Chandlers. Custom drapes, plush carpet. AHached 2
car garage. E•pens1ve1 Yes. bul tmposs1ble lo replace for lhe
ask1ng p11ce.

Backhoe Service

Br....

Real Estate - General

.CANADAY
REALTY

'll
Eber and Bl

Aulttorized John Deere,
New Hollond, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Real Estate - General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Geotlf s.HoilsleHIIlr.

H&amp;G SEWER
HOOK-UPS

BOGGS

Senices offered

'ftjfjl~rn'it ~THATICRAM&amp;LEOWOADGAME

~ ~ INU'!J~ e

I wanna be just
like him when
I grow up

IIESIDENTS
NEW SEWER
HOOKUPS

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

11% FINANCING AVAILABLE - 5 YR.OLD
SPLIT-LEVEL - Fealures 4 or 5 BRS, 3 baths, 30
ff. LR. 2 family rms., 2 woodburning fireplaces,
lariJ! k~chen and dining are~ 2 car garage, one of
lhe county's nicesl poo~ {20x50). and a lruly
profesionally landscaped lot. Localed on Debby
Drive. Owner says sell ... so call RANNY BlACKBURN for a pe~&gt;onal showing You'll be pleased
you did.

·Business Services

Antique cor. 1963 Pontiac.
New paint &amp; upholatery.
814-992-6949 .

BB2-2073 .

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. 2nd Sf.
Phone
1-(614) -992-3325

POMEROY - 6 room home
with 3 bedrooms. bath. base·
menl. nat. gas heat. on level lot
near st01es for $17.500.

Nortll

miles, some rust, $1,200

General

3ACRES - of trees. water lap,
elecl11c and gas avatlable. Will
sac11fice al $4.500.

Wttt

livestock

7311 .

OOUBLE - Bolh rented. 6
rooms and bath 1n each. Good
for wr~e-oH All ut1li11es 1n Mid·
tfleport for 1usl $27.000.

•...

304-675-1B07.
Gibson

Build your owo_ garage
241l24 all lumber fumished ,
$695 . Can deliver. Barn
panern also . Call 614 -886 ·

NEW LISTING - 4 yr old 3
bedroom b11ck home 1n !he
woods. Fam1ly room w1lh hre·
place. 2 balhs. l~rge fronl
porch and large rear sundeck
One acre level lot. $62.900

+103
SOUTH
• A K 10 2

er'pedlent of drawing
trumpo and then linasin&amp;
succeulully lor the queen or·
spade~~.
.
At the other table North's
double of one boart wu a
neaatlve double ...ranleelna lour spade~~ and some
value~~ In dlamoada. Eut
Jumped to t1trft bearU and
Soutl! closed the blddln&amp;
with a jump to m spades .
A line contnc~ but thiJ
champion managed to blow
it. He ruffed the heart lead,
put down biJ ace of spade~~
and continued with the 10.
Eut loolt hiJ queen and
led a club. South won, but
bad no way to pull all
trumpo and then aet to run
the clubs. He wu down one
lor a 25 IMP swing alnce he
lost 12 IMPs instead of aain·
ingU.
South had overlooked a
simple safety play. Cub one
bi&amp;b spade, enter dummy
with a diamond, lead a amall
spade. Once Eut followed,
the I O.spot lineae would
guarantee the alam. South
would play clubs, dlscardlns
hearta from dummy.
Eut would ruff the third
club, but there would he no
way to keer, South from
drawin&amp; the ut trump and
running the rest of the clubs.

sale. S1 .500.00. 304-576·
27B4 .

11 :30 -4 :30. 614 -446 ·
2174 . Aft er - 304 -67'56531 .
SEARS 3 wheel bike . excel l ent co ndition , $90 .00 .

• 982

• K 10 6 4
• Q74

Call 614 -246 -

446 ·B640 .

AKC reg istered Schnauzer
puppies, Poodle puppies ,
S150 . eac h . wormed &amp;

• J 10 9

EAST
.QI63

t65
+UQJI!t
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

''""*

dog. $125 Call 614-379 2630 .

354B .

•s

.AQI111

phone 304-676 ·1704.

POODLE GROOMING. Call

675 -323B.

LITTLE J o hn add on furnace ,
$200 . Sears 12 ' 1ibreg lass
boat , 4 1h HP mot or. S350

FOR trade 70 VW , good con dition , rebuitt e ngine ,
13 .000 miles, 1or tractor in
good working condition,

''"" IQppllvw

446 -06B7.

MAYTAG wringer typ e
wash er , $5 0 . 304 - 773 -

WEST

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Doberman s pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

2352 .

10.1-12

.J974

Pets for Sale

742-2231 .

Real Estate -

.,

NORTH

Sales.

trailer axles. C J 6 Jeep top .
Utility trailer . For sale. 614·

REFRIGERATO~

Reedsville. Oh .

..

1989 Chevelle 39.000
mllea, PS, PB. air cond ..
good ·~nd . Call 448-8830.

Times-Sentinei - Page- D-7

The

Ohio- Point Pleasant W . Va .

Autos for Sale

71

South missed safety play

614 -37B-6296 . No Sun .

Ford engine,

Oak 1irewood

BRIDGE

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
have a good supply of Ken ·
nebec potatoes on hand .
19 .00 per 1001bs. Your con-

Metal sheets for all building

door. Electric dehumidifier.
446 -0094
weekends .

58

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Aile .. Gallipolis.
4411-7133 or'448-1833.
MOWREYS Upholotory At.
1 Box 124. Pt. Pleasant,
304:876-4164.
FURNITURE repaired. "".
tiq~• reStored . . cuJtom ca·
bln.ta, 304-875-3871 altar
5 p.m.

ACROSS
1 Trumpet's

sound

6 Evaluates
11 Portions ol

medicine
16 Loud noises
21 lawful
22 Avoid

23 Indolent
24 Commonplace
25 lmilate
26 Weaker
26 Vacillate
30 Status
32 Greek teller
33 New Eng.
State
34 Vehicle
35 Footllke
part
36 Tip
37 Haul with
ellort
38 Transgress
40 Teepee's
relatives
42 Worm
43 Mature
44 Rest s. m
a way
45 Pronoun
47 Testity
49 Not any
50 Obscure
51 Sculpture
54 Stow person
55 Deposits
56 Hindu
guitars
59 Goal
60 Abstract
be1ng
62 Wine casks
64 Domest1cate
65 Near
66 Go - alone
67 Rocky hill
69 Mountam
nymph
70 lndelin1te
number
71 Macaw
72 Ordinance
74 Downy duck
76 Gal ot song
77 Halt

78 Declare
79 Garden
flower
82 Of the mind
84 Escapes
85 liberate
86 Ready'" lor
sleep

88 Classify
89 Rip
90 Beer mug
92 Counted
calories
94 Restaurant
workers
98 Damage
99 Transfixes
100 One of the
Stooges
102 Sils for a
port rail
103 lamprey
104 Harvest
goddess
105 Chickens
106 Oetents
108 Ooze
109 Note ol
scale
110 Faroe
whirlwind
11 1 Do an
usher's jO b
112 World
Series· goal
114 Talk , mod
style
116 Succor
117 Garden tool
119 Grant use ol
120 Fru it cpe
122 Hospit al
attendants
124 Mod's home
125 Deposit of
sediment
126 Flight ol
Mohammed
128 Pinch
129 Bridge
131 l et it stand
132 Concealed
133 Parts of
books
135 Timid
138 Everyone
139 Mountain
lake

140 Distant
141 In favor of

142 Dlphlhong
143 French
article
144lake of
puzzle fame
145 Military
student
147 Web·footed
birds
149 Greek letter
150 King of
birds
152 Avoid
154 Astound
156 Irritates
158 Gambler's
capital
159 Drinks
heavily
160 Partners
161 Grain to be
ground

OOWN
1 Reproach
2 Social
outcast
J Mature
4 Sun god
5 Cloth
measure
6 Recommit
7 Avoided
6 Hornpipe
dancer
9 Aclor Asner
10 Stitch
11 Plunges
12 Units
t3 Weight of
India
14 Teut onic
deity
15 Band of
color
16 Short hit
17 Inquire
1B Greek teller
19 Entire range
20 Hils hard:
Colloq.
27 Super sport
29 Church part
31 Pub potable
36 Containers
37 Kind of

bean

39 Wander
40 Exact
41 Blemish
42 Joins the
race
43 Decays
44 Location
46 Guido note
48 Milf.ture
49 Require
50 Coin
51 Goes by
water
52 Powerful
person

53 All
55 Weighting
devices
56 Coarse
hominy
57 Street show
58 Plays the
lead

6 1 SoH drink
63 Paper
measu re
64 Hammer or
tongs
68 Recovers
70 Post
7 1 Dislike to
73 Thin COOkieS
74 Paradise
75 loose
garments
77 Sandal
feature
78 Too bad 1
80 Prissy
81 Snood
83 At present
84 Tolls
87 Require
89 Surgical

sow
90 - the
work s
9 1 Candle
92 Force
93 Kind of COjl\

orqu~ /

95 Form r Russian r ler
96 We•rd
97 Winter
veh1ctes

99 Toll

101 halted In
spirit
105 Pay att ention
106 Shut up
107 Protecting
tooth
111 Graceful
bird
112 Animal coat
113 Journey
115 Plays on
words
116 Snakes
118 Gemstone
119 Hold on
property
121 Circus
apparatus
123 Another 33
Across
125 Thoroughfare
126 Lease
127 Concurs
129 Transactions
130 Fold
131 Capuchm
monkey
132 The under world
134 Dawn
goddess
136 Detest s
137-BreMt
ingredient
139 Part of
a forest
140 Diminish
144 Antlered
animal
145 Onnking
vessel
146 Scott1 sh cap
147 Ship
channel
148 UM of
energy
149 Actor
Wanac h
15 1 Fta ·s
ne1ghbor
153 Behold•
155 Another 33
Across
157 Negative
prefl~t

�...
e-0.8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

October 10, 1982

BEAUMONT. Texas lAP) -A
34-year-old woman sentenced to
death lor slaying a 3-year-old boy
has asked thai her appeals be
stopped and that she be executed .
Linda May Burnell. one of two
women on Death Row In Texas,
wrole Sl ale Dislricl Judge Larry
Gist of Beaumont requesling that a
court -appoinled altorney file a
"rlghllodle" case for her.
"I don'llhink ll's fair for a court to
hand down dea 1h and then make the
inmalewail oul an appeal,"she said
In the one-pagP, handwritten leiter.
Gisl said he will meet this week
wilh Joseph C. "Lum" Hawthorn,

Mrs. Burnett's court-appointed attorney, and a representative of the,
Qistrlct attorney's office to discuss
the request.
She was sentenced to death in
March 1979 for the July 1, 1978, kidnapping and shootingdeathofJason
Blair Phillips or Woodward, Okla.
The boy and his parents, Elmer
and Martha Phillips. were visiting
the boy's grandparents, Bishop and
Esther Phillips in Winnie, a sm all
town about 30 miles west of Beaumont. Their bodies were found in a
common grave near Fannett nine
days later.

Joe Dugas, Mrs. Burnett's boyfriend, also was convicted of the kll·
ling and ts also on Death Row.
Dugas had been divorced from
Elmer Phllllps' sister.
Dugas and Mrs. Burnett were
trled only for the boy's.death.

laws! It shouldn't be a law (that) a
person has to appeal. It would save
tax dollars, plus give the person (inmate) theirrlght.to choosetoappeal
or not," she wrote.
A prison chaplain tried to discourage her, she said.

Mrs. Burnett told Gist she asked
Hawthorn about being allowed to ·
die and he told her Texas law requires an appeal of death sentences.
She asked the prtson attorney about
her request and he told her the same
thing, she said.
"Judge Gist, It Is time for new

"He feels I would hurt famllles of
Death Row inmates. I love (the chaplain) more than anyone on this
earth, but I feel I have to t:Iy to
change this law," she wrote.
"If you will not help me, I'll ask
someone else. If you can't help me,
tell me who can," she concluded.

~imes- Jttdintl Section ~

siness

Woman wants death sentence carried out

Bane One continues growth
with Morrow County bank
COLUMBUS - Peoples Baqk of
Mount Gilead, Ohio, which has tolai
assels In excess of $58 million, has
agreed In principle to affiliate wilh
Bane One Corp., a multi-bank holdIng headqua11ered In Columbus.
The agreement between Peoples
Bank and Bane One was an·
nounced by Roger A. VanHouten.
president of Peoples Bank, and
John F. Havens, Bane One chair·
man. Peoples Bank operates lhree
banking offices in Mon·ow Counly.
Under lerms of lhe agreemenl.
when the affiliation of Peop!PS
Bank wilh Bane One occurs, share·
holders of Peoples Bank will receive a lax-free exchange of Bane
One common shares having a lola!
market value of approximately
$7,302,400 for the 160,!XXI shares of

Nine die in
truck-van
collision

CRO\\'NED-Jknet• Willi,, daughler ol Mr. 'wd Mrs. Harold Willis of ·
near Pomeroy, was erownL•I 1982 Meigs High School Homecoming
, Qtll'en al the Meigs Stadium Frida.v night. Performing the honors on the
righl il Meigs High Prindpal ,James Miller wltile Miss Willis' escort,
Allen King, looks on. Tht• Meigs Mauraudcr Band provided the musical
setting lor the introdudion of the queen candidatges in pre-game ceremonies. The t·andidalcs entered Ute field riding in antique autos.

LEMOORE, Calif. !API -Eight
children and their bus driver were
killed when a churc h school van collided with a truck that had swerved
lo miss a stalled car, officials say.
Among those killed in the grinding head-on accident were the wife
and lwochildrenoftheCalvaryBaptisl Church pastor, the Rev. Leonard Silva. Two children, Including
Silva's third child, survived.
The van was traveling from Calvary Church in Avenal to classes at
a school opera ted by the Sequoia
Baptisl Church of Visalia.
Shprlff Donald Bengtson went to
I he hospital where families of the
dead gathered. '
"II's going lo be a terrible experience for them 10 have to live
through," Bengtson said. "Having
children in a Christian school, I assume I hey have a strength thai a lot
of other people wouldn 'I have ...
We're jusl grieving, a real
lragedy."
The accidenl occurred when a car
crossing four-lane Stale Route 1~
sl alled with its rear end In the slow
lane for weslbound traffic, California Highway Patrolman Frankie
Baul ista said.
Trucker Tony Larios Castro, 20,
of Fullerton. swerved left to miss the
ca r bul his brakes locked, Bautista
said. The big rig skidded through a
concrele divider and slammed into
I he church van traveling in the slow
eastbound lane, the patrolman
added.

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GROUNDBHEAKJNG- Ground was broken Friday afternoon for
llw &lt;·onstntction ol a $U million Medical Office Building at Pleasant
Vail&lt;•y Hospital . Arehitccl for lhe addition, which i• expected to start
thl' fall and lw completed in early 19!!-1, is Clint Bryan. General coni raetor is ,John Roncaglione. -lack Buxton. chairman of the hospital's Building and (;ro,mds Con1mittee and a member of the hoard of trustees, and
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··our sur\"f•_,. indicatPs a vpry
heail hy condilion for lhP ri\w." bi·
ologisi .John K r.,·rs said.
The biologisl s;licllhal in I he mid·
1970s il was nol unusuallocalch fish
: with 15 pa11s p&lt;'r million of PC'B
,peslicide. In l hP ialt·sl SUf\"f '). j us!
,,two fi sh sa mples conlained pesli·
cld..s above U.S. Food and Drug Ad·
minislralion slandards. hr said .
A ca rp ca ught near Pillsburgh
1conlainC'd o..1 ppm of PCB . .:\over
, thr U.S. Food and DrugAdminislra tl on's loierance ieVPI of' ppm .
··Eating lhal one fish everyday
really doesn't presenl a heailh proh:tern ." Ihe biologist said.
j· The other p&lt;'Siicidt&gt; found in levels
above FDA slandards waschlord a·
ne.A ca tfish la ken nea r Louisviil(',
Ky., contained 0.51 ppm of the pesli ,
.clde, while !he FDA standard is ..10.
f Stricter induslrial reguialions
t ~nd public awareness have helped
~. _ ·clean the Ohio River or DDT. Kt&gt;yes
said. He said I he chemical has ber-n
,, ~
·
ually washed from the river b(&gt;.
n Pittsburgh and Cairo, Ill.
, . ··:: • "Industry and the public are so
!!nuch more aware of potential, longierm, harmful effects of pesticides
·these days," K eyes said. "There are
much tighter controls over their
use."
Thea Townsend. commission spokeswoman, said Friday that the
' 'samples were taken last rau. The
1'+,·~ -results were not released until this
~- (." month because FDA tests took
~- ~ fonger than expected, she said.
~ J~ t:he said the results of the testing,
,·· · '
by 15 state and federal agen'· _;.-,
and coordinated by the FDA,
were not received by the commis~Ion until early September.
)
Samples taken forthewaterstudy
.,
~e from locks in Illinois, Indiana,
• • •t(entucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and .
West Virginia.

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
118TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

WINTER COAT SALE
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

THE ARCADE - Kim Smith and her lunchtime
companlon Bmce Noggle survey the bustUng Arcade
In downtown·Cieveland from the second level of the

.~n d .,..,,n!&lt;'r

CLEVELAND (API - Brass
ralls gleam under thousands of
glass panes In the arcade that only
a bridge builder would touch a century ago.
"This Is the largest arcade of Its
type in this country. The only one
larger in the world Is the Milan
(Italy) train station," said Harvey
G. Oppmann, who Is only the fourth
owner of The Arcade, buUt tor
about $900,!XXI and opened In 1890.
"I get kind of mushy about it,"
said Becky Glallourakls, owner of
Thea Bek's Greek Restaurant.
"I've been here every day for almost a year and I still can't help but
appll'Ciate it. It's beautiful.
"I had wanted to be downtown.
Once I came in here, that was it. I
knew I didn't want to be anywhere
else."

During our Anniversary Sale Save on Quatity
Outerwear for Men, Boys, Ladies, Juniors,
Little Boys, Girls and Infants.

Avery Ian Becker, an attorney
who. practices in the Colonial Arcade, said he walks across the
street to The Arcade for lunch every day.
"I come over here to forget about
the office, daydream, read the
paper or prepa1e a final argument," Becker said.
The atmosphere of The Arcade
makes people friendly, he said.
"Look at these people," Becker
said, pointing with his cigar to
nearby shops. "These people are
nice, those people are nice, that guy
over there will makf: you a ring."
Oppmann and two partners
bought the structure four years ago
from the Alfred A. List family for
about '$3 million. The Lists had
bought It In 1946 from Lazard
Freres, a financial brokerage firm

Dve-tlered buDding. The landmark Is the largest arcade In the country and second largest In the world
hehlnd MUan, Italy's train station. (AP, Laserpholo).

in New York City, which had gradually acquired some holdings of the
John D. Rockefeller family and
other original Arcade investors.
"I'm a fourth -generation Cleve.lander. I remember this building as
a child," Oppmann said In his
second-floor office in The Arcade,
which .has space for more than 300
shops and offices.
Monthly rent on oHtce space Is $9
a square foot while retail areas cost
. $12 to $16 per square foot in The
Arcade. Comparable downtown
space rents for $10 to $12 a square
foot, while offices in new buildings
are about $17 a square foot.
"It's not the biggest building in
town, but It's probably one of the
most unique," said Oppmann, adding that The Arcade was the first
building on Ohio's list of historic
landmarks.
Oppmann said the new owners
wanted to renovate the five-tiered
building and Its twin 10-story office
towers without des troying the
structure's character.
They strlpped and polished brass
raWngs and chrome trim and r eplaced all 2,700 wired panes of
glass, each measuring 3 feet by 4
feet.
" We did a lot of basic restoring.
We painted everything and revarnished all the woodwork. A lot ofthe
opaque glass was replaced with
clear glass In store.and office windows, he added.
When Oppmann bought the
structure, It was about 50 percent
occupied. It Is now 80 percent
rented.
The bullding originated from tbe

meeting of two men in 1886 when
Cleveland had a population of abo;lut
250,!XXI and was becoming a major
industrlal center.
John Eisenmann was acting superintendent of Cleveland parks
and an engineering professor at the
Case School of Applied Sciences.
He met one day withJ.M. Curtiss, a
real estate broker.
Curtiss told Eisenmann about an
arcade he had seen in Toronto, Canada. Arcades had been built in Europe and the United States for a
century, but Curtiss wanted Eisenmann to design a more elaborate
structure.
He told Eisenmann that several
people were Interested in helping to
finance an arcade project, including Rockefeller.
While studying in Munich and
Stuttgart, Gernnany, Eisenmann
had specialized in architectur~l engineering- the physics of weights,
materials and stresses. That experience would prov!! to be useful in
The Arcade project.
Arches have a powerful outward
thrust, and designers used horizontal tie rods to offset the thrust. EIsenmann wanted to create an open,
high arch for his arcade. So he designed the thrust to be carried to the
main floor beams from strong, m asonry walls.
Eisenmann took his Idea to
bulldei/s, but a number of contractors refused to even bid on the project, which used a system of trusses
ins.tead of the conventional cross
bracing.

f h1 ., t bulous new ta cket

hm1ted® by London
I r,g · h,J., ,, ruggt&gt;d and ready
pqly i ·~ r erl cotl on ' hell with .1ll the
t umu ~ .1

:· .

qu1hPd KodOfill® lin.n·l( ·in

hot h hody .md sleeves.

two ,years, said the ICC action
erful railroads a key part of the
would be appealed to the federal
nation's transportation system.
·courts In an attempt to reverse it.
The Interstate Commerce Com The merger "will destroy rail·
mission approved the merger last
road competition In·the West," BiMonday of the Union Pacific, Misagginl declared in a statement.
souri Pacific and Western Pacific
The ICC decision marks the Ia·
railroads despite strong opposition
test in a series of mergers in recenl
from competing rail lines that such
years that have resulted In the creaa marrl.age would harm
tion of a number or large, powerlul
competition.
,
railroads. Some industry analysts
Jnstead, by a 5-1 vote the ICC said
believe eventually the country will
shippers and the public would bebe
criss-crossed by only a halfdonefit from the emergence of a rail
zen raU lines.
line that wlll have 22,8Xl miles of
Taylor acknowledged at a news
'track and span 21 states from Puget
conference·that he would not be surSound to the GUlf Coast.
prised (f additional merger re"With tlJis decision the commisquests
were submitted,
sion ha"s endoi'sed a private-sector
particularly by raUroads forced to
proposal that will enhance eHIcompete with the large rail sysclehcy and cqmpetition while protems. But, he warned, the ICC wiU
·vldlng lmproyed service to
not aullnlatically approve merger
shippers," declared ICC chalnnan
.
requests.
·
Reese Taylor.
"Large scale combinations of~ . Nonetheless, the commission has
type 'we've appoved today will slim- , made clear it favors the trend toraU cohsolidation.
ulate · Intense rail · competition
EarUer tlJis year it approved the
which wlllinevttably lead to further
n\eraer of two.successtui railroads
·consolidation attempts/' ICC vice
.._ the Southern RaUway and the
chairman Reginald GWiam told
Nortollt &amp;. western RaUroad. That
' reporters."
.
' .
was proJl1Pted by the eme~­
"The clear ~: .. is that the
gence of the CSX Corp., the nation's
transportation industry ts undergolargeSt railroad In tenns of track
. lng a f"urlqamerital chaJiie," GUmileS. as a result of a 1l81 merger
Ilam said:
Within hours of tl!e decision, Ben~ two other suc&lt;.'CSSful 'railroads,
·, jamln F. Blaalnl, cllalnnan of~
the Cheule System and the Family
' Southem PacWc Railroad, which Un"es Rail System.

MARKEI'ING DINNER MEETING - Some 100
cmployt&gt;es of Fruth Pharmacy store; bt foint Plca.unt, Gallipolis, Wellston, Huntington, W.Vu., and Mil·
ton, w.Va., gathered for a dinner mt'Ciing recently
where,Jack Fruth, company pre;ident, divulged plans
for the finn's biggest-ever Chrl&lt;Jma.s merchandising
promotion. Fmth said live tr-.actor-trailer loads of
some 200 different gill' for under s:m each, haw ar·
rived lor tlw.• promotion. Items for the ~ale arc provided through the Chicago-hascd Division Sak.." Co.
Eddit• Maupin, Division Sales a....slstant to the president, and Calvin Haney, regional sales manager, wl'n'

: ·

·

Umbrella A
$11.00 Value

pn..,..ent for tlw.• dinner and Maupin told Fruth rmployCC~; promotion material for the sale includes a
fuU-color calalogu&lt;• and that somt• 40 pharmacy
chains, t'OIISlsting of more than X:~l ston,; nalionwidc,
arc par!it!Jlating. Fruth said item' purcha.'K.'II for the
191!2 Christmas sale repres&lt;•nl' the large,;( single merchandising vt•nture ever undertaken by Fruth stores.
Pictured with some of IlK' salt• items on display for
Fruth employC(.." to view aft.cr the dinner meeting are,
from left, Haney, Fruth, .Jim Fisher, head of advertisIng and merchandising for Fruth stores, Maupin and
Don Pullin, who operalt,; IlK• Gallipolis ston•.

Athens Messenger, cable
firm to try video format
ATHENS, Ohio !APl - The
Alhens Messenger has announced
plans for a pilol projPCI in whi('h il
will join wilh Coni inental Cablevi·
sion 10 present texts of local news on
Athens Cable TV Channel 12.
The venture, which sl arts nexl
monlh, was announced Thursday
by G.Krnner Bush, publisher of I he
daily newspaper, and Charlcs .1.
Younger of Findlay, vice prcsidenl
and general manager of Conlinen·
Ia! Cablevtsion of Ohio.
The Messenger said il will bl' 1he
flflh newspaper in Ohio to inlroduce
a cablecasling service, and lhal

Alhens will bf&gt; I he firsl markel for
· such a projl'CI by Conlinenlal
Cabil'vlsion.
The channel will hc known as
"Messenger 12." and will cons lsi in·
ilially of all lexl news of specific
inlerrsl lo lhe Alhens area. Time
and local wea l her infmmalion also
will bf&gt; fealurrd.
"We are rnlhu siaslic aboul lhis
new opporlunily lo provide an
added dimension lo our lradilional
newspaper services," Bush said.
"While we have been evalual ing
lhc possibililics for newspaper ca ·
blecasling for some lime, lhe

longer -mnge polenlial and direclion of eiecl ron ic publishing is slill
largely unknown. Our goal is a qualily communily scrv ic0 supplement .
ing I he Mcsscngerwilh limely news
and relaled communily infornna lion 24 hours a day."
Programming for I he news channel will original e from !he Messenger building. The Mcsscnger's
staff will wriiPand rdil for I he channel as well as fori he newspaper.
News will hc prcsenled in a series
"pages," or scrf'Cns. of l exl. Each
series ofpagPs of informa lion will bl'
compuler-conlrollC'd 10 repeal a
number of limPS f'VPr:v 2-t hours.

By H. JOSEF HEBERT
J\sSoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government, agreeing to the
merger of three western railroads,
Is sending another signal to the indust:Iy that It considers l;u-ge, pow-

trt m 1 &lt; )utdoor.,

rl~lH ' ur pockets •.nd .;,naps. HiddPn

pies Bank's communily which will
have lhe benefil of a S:~l million
lending limil. agri·ieasl ng. equipmen! leasing. lrusl services. lnlernalional banking capa bililies and
olher specialized and expanded
banking services... Va n Houlen
said.
Bane One. which has 22 affiliale
banks opera ling 190 banking offices
in 28 counties. has total resources of
$4 .6 billion.
In addilion. il has commercial
banking organi zalions wilh 10
banks. operaling 1U9 banking offiCE'S in Ohio. and total resources in
excess or $2.1 billion have agreed to
join Bane One. These bank affilialions are subjPCI lo regula lory and
bank shareholder approval.

Forget about proper locationthe Arcade's just a fun place

I

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ward

Silver Bridge Plaza
Sunday 1:00 to 6:00
Weekdays 10:00 to 9:00
Use your Cox's Charge Card,VISa, Master Card of ~ican Express.

. meraer

•

JOINS ST&gt;'WF · -

. . . . . Ja,rob&amp;

Yvonne
hall. joined the

..., of Endwlted . Mirror
..._, Slllqn. A 1B82 Buckeye
HJIIII
/CelMer pwluale,
1111e wlhdd to the lllop'uxper-

c-

tlllela~IQ'·

'

..

$4299

~~~~AL

fall

'

'

WAS s4995

:

.

Peoples Bank.
AI a markel value of $40.7' per
share of Bane One common slack.
lhls would mean an exchange of
1.12 shares of Bane One common
slack for each share of Peoples
Bank . The currenl markel price of
Bane One common slack, which Is
I raded on I he na Ilona I over· thecounter markel. Is $40.75 bid- $41
asked. Bane One's currenl dlvi·
dend is al I he annual rale of $1.80.
The affllialion of Peoples Bank
wilh Bane One and I he exchange of
Bane One common shares for
shares of Peoples Bank will be subjecllo prior bank regula lory approva l a nd bank shareho ld er
approval.
"The affilialion will lx&gt;ndil Pco-

This hatchback model is extra clean insideand out. 4 cyl., 4 spo., power steering,
power brakes. Only 16,584 low miles.

Rail mergers may indicate trend
... THIS POPULAR
TAN AND BROWN
FOLDING UMBRELLA .
FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN.

OCtOber 10, 1982

.

'
• ·-4--

has been llahl!ng

~

ihe ~r fqr_

TOP AGENCY - Jack Paris, left, Independent atandmg1181esohnobllehome,renlerwtdhomeown.cr
Agenls Deld manager, ·recently presented Ruih Am lnsurt11100. Their sales were part of AU-state lnsur-.wYeaupr, cenler, 111111 BU1 Quickel, rtp&amp;, oflhe Davis- ce's Great American Homeowner campaign.
Quldrel Agency o1 Pomeroy, with certificates In out-

�Page- E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 10, 1982

October 10, 1982

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

From high brow to grand ol' opry range of fun

THE COLON\' TIIEATRE had its first movie on Nov. 24, t9:n. The
film was "Vogues of 1938'' and starn•d Warner Baxter. The Wheeler
family ran both the Colony and the Gallipoll• Theatre from 1937 to the
1000s, wht•n til(' Gallipoll• Theatre dos.•d. \\1. 0 . Atkinson and Cora

Withers won a conl t&gt;st to name tlu.• Colon.)'. which of course camt&gt; from
G&lt;illipolifS' tw ing a Frl'nth "('O)ony ."

PEEPS. a Gallipolis Dairy:

Our House museum attracts
1,300 visitors, 9 from abroad
mar BIPnnerhasselt. and lost his
son to the Blen nerhassetts in an
ugl~ and violent cus tod~ suit : Dr.
Petit was known for his quick

By .J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Sheti)' Corbin.
the curator of Our J-l ousr museum.

rep011s toot' Sam P('('ps on an end·
ance and activities at this ancirnt
inn on First An'nur a stone's throw
above thP Publ ic Square. 0\wall
alfendance is about

temper.

LOUIS VON SCHRILTZ.ofnoble

um.

G&lt;·rman stock , was a Roma n Ca tholic' priest who I'C'll in love. renounced his CIC'rical orders,

The musru m h;1s hi.id gu('sts

married her. and fled to America to
escape punishmPnt for thi s act. He
ramP with the French 000.

fmm 28 states:
Al.t iMm,t. ,\ rvo n.l . ( ',tlth• rnt.t. I 'olm ,t t ~ t .
11t'l.tw.tr(', Cri•tngl.t . ll ml,tll
Florida . h:t •n ! tw kl . !ll int1h. lnd t.!ll.! ..\l.tt'\
l.tnd . Michtg.tn . ;'\1innt ·~ t1Lt
,\lt ~~IJU I'I . ;'\•[t)OJ,t n .t , :'\( •/JJ.J , J.i.J . '\t '\1 . /t •l
'('\ . \t '\1 ;'\k~i( 'O, \ot1h { '.trolm, t. OhiD
Pl' rllb l ')\',lfli a. TPx:l ". \ '11'!-!'i nid. \\'t•' r \ 'irg-1
ni.t . \\'1-..: ·o n .~in . On•g-!!n . dnd L'l,th

SHELLY CORBI N reports bela! ·
edi)' on the Saturday. Sept. 18 can·
dlelight concert in the courtyard,
anracling 165 patrons. They en·
jo.ved recreat ion of the hospitable
rw•n ing \vh ich Our House tavern
Continuro on E -.1

NI J\E FORE IGN countries ha\'(•
had re presentatives at Gallipolis'
Our House museum: Bra zil. China.
England, France. German.\·. India.

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - By the 1930s live
entertainment In Gallipolis had decllnro to a few traveling ~~~
groups and the
"'""'
show boa t s th at .
ca me eac h
summer . Whil e
In the earl y 20th
century Gallipo- lllllllllill ·
lis could attract such " high brow" groups as
Chicago. Opera Company, by the
1930s the town had to settle for the
stars of the Grand Ole Opry which then includro Uncle Da ve
Macon, Curtis Poulton, Deford Bai·
ley and the Delmore Brother s.
Of th e showboa ts only two
stopped in Gallipolis on a regular
basts - Billy Bryant's Showboat
and Captain T . J. Reynolds' "Ma·
jestl c. " Some may recall that in
1936 Gallipolis also hostro the fam·
ous "Major Bowes Amateur Hour"
which came to town on board the
showboat "Goldenrod." The main
reason that live entertainment declinro in popularity was motion pic·
lures. particularly o,; hen "t he
talkies" came into being.
0
Ti\LKING MOVIES became so
popular in Gallipolis in the 1930s
that it became evident the town
needf'd a second theatre besides the
Gallipolis Theatre tin the Masonic
Building). With that In mind Frro
Wheeler (who beginning in 1919 operatro the Gallipolis) bought In 1936
the old Pries tly Building and had it
torn down. In its place Wheeler had
erec tro Ga llipolis' first structure
built for the exclusive purpose of
showing movies.
By the way the first " talking pic·
ture" in Gallipolis history was
shown at the Gallipolis Theatre on
Ja nuary 15. 1930 and the film was
"Hooky Tonk" starring Sophie
Tucker. Lila Lee, George Duryea.
and Audrey Ferris. there were two
shows that night, one at 7 p.m. and
the other at 8: 30p.m. The following
week came " The First Command"
with William Boyd. Other popular

J . P R BGREAL: m his day
doubliPss W&lt;J S as out standi ng as thr
name Hol zf'r is toda.'&gt;.

STORM DOOR

~:::..

mit h. and hr had l}('f'n sil\'('!'smith

to King of l··ranrr before the
French Rt&gt;,·olut ion.
GL: I LL\l ':-IE DLJDL: IT mm'l'd
to thC' Frenrh &lt; ;r&lt;.~nt, which now is
Sc ioto Count~' . aftrr scouting \vith
Col. Sa fford. His progenv are
French :i()(J folk. ol' Sa fford wed
Cathl•rinr CamPron. a Frr nch girl
with a n English namP. Safford wa s
the best W(J(JC!sman in Collipolis .
JEA !' PJ&lt;TIT wa s a ph~sician
who moved from Gallipolis to Ma ·
rietta. becamf' a partner of Har·

Bag Stll! may
va1y wtlh IOCdttOI\

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or more.

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Untmd

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CAULKIJI&amp; _____ 1.39'""
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tnt!ucln: All h~m h~ • t0011 nQ • tt1m •
~
16"•7 oat age doo• • ~ett1ca1 11· 11 s•dtng

1

manual transmissio n
• Rec ltnmg bucket seats
·Ful l m srrume nt atto r

Meers
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I Code Requu e mer11 ~
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Ar1y rhar1ges
local codes may alter pnce

HEATERS

Pre-Fmtshed

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•p 1not1 Only
tr,tr Room

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159

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PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Frost Whilt.2'•4' Lav ·tn _ _

each

42 Gillon Eleclrlc- 98.94 ""
52 0111111 Elmrlc-149.84 ""
40 Gillon G11
124.84 "''
HIGH ENERGY EFFICIENT
WATER HEATERS
52 0111111 Electric _ _ 159.84 ""
40 Gill Oil Gil
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26.99 each
30'_28.49 "'"

Middleport, OH .

FLOOR COVERING

~!~-TWWJ CARPET

3.119 so ,,

Foam backed. Scorch Gard · lor easy cleantno
IIJO'fo nylon lor tong wear Chotce ol colors

SALE! SAVE 277so ON
A MODEL III SYSTEM

Cui ai}d-~~P Carehee

SCULPTUIIOI CARPET _

The Suburban ite XG 'Has
Broad Ladder -Type Cleats
In The Center With Dou ble
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For Steady Pulling Power
In Mud And Snow

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Our Bes1 tntenor

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list Price

HAlL lTD IAXHY

FLAT WAll PAIIIT _ _ 9.99 ''"""
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Lare•
TUTUIIE PAUll _ 8.99 2 oallan pat I

KITCHEN
CABINETS
The buuty
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PAY FOR

KITCHEN CABINET SALB

6.84 so ,,

TREATED
DECK allack
LUMBER
Remis ro t. decay al'ld

MARY D. PEEPS,Apt. lOl at
4~7 North ~th Road, Arlington,
Va .. 22207, arrivro 0ct. 6 for a visit
with her brother, J. Samuel Peeps,
and his spouse. She was born Feb.
27, 1903, In one of the little houses on
Third Avenue just below Croar
Street In Gallipolis.

WASIDNGTON (AP) -Leonard
C. Y aseen was recenlly elected a
trustee of the Smithsonian's Hirsh·
horn Museum and Sculpture
Garden.
Y aseen. a collector of modern art,
lives In Larchmont. N.Y., and Palm
Beach, Fla.

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Trustee named

2.55 '""

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Come in to Ford Country for complete sales, service and body
shop . We will pay top dollar for good. clean, used cars and
trucks.

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protectors aoatnsl motslure damage
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ATLANTA (AP) - Everyone, if
he or she lives long enough, will have
at least a !ouch of osteoarthritis, according to the Arthritis Foundation.
Most often associatro with old
age, osteoarthritis Is a degenerative
join I disease and the most common
of the over 100 fonns of arthritis.
Usually It Is mUd and occurs In the
weight-bearing joints such as the
knees and hips and In the hands.
" People develop osieqprthritls
because their joints wear out, either
from an Injury or simply from tbe
normal process of aging," says Dr.
Frederic C. McDuffie of the foundation. 'The question we're trying to
answer Is why, under similar circumstances, some people develop
osteoarthritis earlier and more severely than others and why some go
through life with almost no trouble
al all."

24c ,. "

~o w er

POlYETHWIE FilM
IO'x25' Roll
S'xiOO' Roll

16'x7'

· 5 Ol HO V·S • ll ·speed

14\l,c ,.,

The lltgller tile A· Value tilt gle&lt;ller the •nsulalmg
R-Value lac! sheers on ltle

each

have our third and final session until Nov. 15. Times arp the same- 6
p.m. to 9 p.m.
The classes will be hPid in the
basement of the PCA building on
upper Rt. 7. The PCA building Is
just across Rt. 7 from Captain D's.
There will be a ten dollar registrat ion f('(' for the classPs. We think
you will find the classes arP worth
many tim es the registratio,n fee .

The Right Tire . . . Goodyear. The Right
Name . .. Appalachian Tire. There's A Store Near You!
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I SUBURBANITE XG 1

Arthritis can
affect everyone

INSULATION

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PAT HILL FORD

'83 MUSTANC CT

AS A DELICIOUS conclusion to
the concert,~ lavish dessert buffet,
'
'
complete
with the favorile confec·
tlons and beverages, of lhe early
19th century, was servro under the
trees.
THERE WERE many folk from
Gallipolis and Gallla County, of
course, but others came from as far
away as Columbus, Delaware, Wa·
shlngton Court House, Marietta,
Marion, Newcomerstown, Cincinnati, and Lakeview.

429

Oc!.

the offi ce between 6 and R p.m .
Then allowing two weeks lor the
cane and stuff to get here we are
planning the fir st class to be on
Monday evening, Oct. 25, from 6
p.m. to 8 p.m . It will take three ses·
slons to finish your chair. so the SP.
cond session will be Nov. 1.
Because there will be a Junior
LeadPr 's meeting the following
Monday evening we will not plan to

THE EVENING began with candlelighl tours of lhe Inn's public
rooms, which were resplendent
with fall foliage and flowers. The
Ohio VIllage Singers !hen per·
lormro: they gave a concert of
music, dances, and songs of the
18th and early 19th centuries - the singing was In the courtyard, in the
brickro-ln area back of Our House
museum.

I

each

lng classes.
You will needf'd to bring your
thalr lo I he Extension office at 1502
~stern Avenue on Monday even·
lng.,
11, so Denise Shockley
o wtll be teaching the classes)
see what materials you will
eed to do your chair. She will order
the materials for you so you should
be preparro to pay for your m aterials Monday evening. We will be In

Contlnuro from E·2
once was famous for .

-

lQ&amp;B4

GaiDa County
El(lenslon Agent
Home Economics
GALLIPOLIS - Many people
who were not able to come to th&lt;'
class on chair caning that we had
last August have askro us to have
another caning class. but In the evenings. For those of you who
missed I he daytime classes In August we havp plannro some even-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- E-3

Our.•.

ooN'1 {JET Jt~~TER
8v oLD MAN. sALEJ

THE BOSS
IS BACK!

HEJ\RY CL:SHJ 1\G built Our
House in 1 H1~. \\'hen most of the
French :i()(l had gone rl se\\'herP.
JOSEP H De\'ACHT \\'CI S Pari.\'
Galipolis' wa tchmaker and s iJ \·Prs ·

,

LUMBER&amp;
HOME CENTER BED

'j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

MUSTANG GT
NOW AT .....

Evening canning classes
planned by extension serviCe

-------------------------------------

N f' \ \ · G u i n f' a . P J k i s 1a n , a n d
Lf'hanon.
[

OL'R HOL'S J&lt; museum has had
dPscendant s of six of thr Frrnrh
;;fll: .J . P. R. Au rmu. llemY Cushing. Cuillaume Duduit .. loseph Dr··
va c ht . Jean ( ;ilbt&gt;rt I \•ti t . an cl Loui s
\'ictor \'on !'c hr iltz.

\·

Gallians will
exhibit animals

6' White Aluminum Patio

By Bettie Clark

. , Homemaker's Circle

The premiere was the Idea of sevand the Colony did not.
er
al Gallipolis residents who
The Inside area of 85 by 45 feet
dressed up like movie stars and
was dlvldf'd Into three sections with
were motored to the Colony by
two upholsterro aisles. The original
chauffeurs. In the late 1930s the Colseats were made with rro velour
ony even showed a movie filmed In
material. Unlike the Gallipolis, the
Gallipolis about Galllpolls. The
Colony had no ceiling lights, but
"movie short" wsa the idea of local
used what were 'callro r ainbow
people and showed the various his·
lights. Murals decoratro the walls
torlcal spots of the city.
of the Colony. As to the sound and
Mailing address of James Sands
the screen system , it was pretty
Is Box 92, Clarilsburg, Ohio 4311ll.
much the same as the Gallipolis.
The screen, In fact, was almost exacUy the same size.
THE REVIEWS OF the new
building were generally favorable.
Bob Evans Hidden Valley Ranch
Wrote the Gallipolis Tribune: " The
Colony Is big and comfortable and . of Bidwell and Dianne Forgey,
Thunnal\, will be exhibitors at tbe
such a crrolt to Gallipolis."
The first movie at the Colony was 1982 North American International
Livestock Exposition. Officials of
shown on Nov. 24,1937 at 7p.m. and
the Exposition said that Bob Evans
featurro the "Vogues of 1938," a
Unltro Artists technlcolor film star- has enterro seven head of beef and
Dianna has entered· four head of
Ing Warner Baxter. Jerome Cosheep for competition at the North
wan, Helen VInson, Mischa Auer,
American International, an event
and Alan Mowby. The Colony was
which will take place during Nov.
open every day wl th three shows &amp;-19 In Louisville, Ky. The NAILE
It had four on Thanksgiving. ·
IN 1938 THE Colony was the will be held at the Kentucky Fair
and Exposition Center.
scene of a "Hollywood Prem,lere."

films In 1930were: "A Thing Callro
Love" with Constance Bennett;
"Her Wrodlng Night" with Clara
Bow; and " The Big Pond" starring
Maurice Chevalier.
WHEN WHEELER'S new theatre was completro In November of
1937 (work began In November of
1936 but was delayro because of the
flood In early 1937), he conductro a
contest to name lt. Suggestro
names includro: Wheelereel, Two
Wheeler , French Palace, The Frederick, 0 .0 . Mcintyre, Oscar Eagle
(After Gallipolis' most famous actor), Lafayetle, Palace, Roosevelt,
New Deal, Mickey Mouse, The
Wheel, French Colony, and King
Wallis.
W.O. Atkinson and Mrs. Cora
Withers both suggestro the name
Colony and It was their name that
became attachro to the new movie
house. The two winners won six
month passes to the movies.
THE COWNY WAS not as big as
its neighbor (Gallipolis Theatre) up
the street for It seatro only 600whlle
the Gallipolis had J.(XX) seats. In addition. the Gallipolis had a stage

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

doors. Superior cons11uctlon includes hardwOOCI
1rame.111011ise-Wrenon joints Sell dOsing htflOeS
Orawers operate on3 pomt nylon roller suspertSIOn
system
~
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• CCR-81 Cassette Recorder (26-1208)
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A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION
'

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PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND DEALERS

Sale Ends 10/25/82

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The Slihlt 028 Wood Boss •plenty of muscle for any culling
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There are lots ol chain saws on the
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Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

October 10, 1982

Polygraph test helps wrong Toledo man
TOLEDO, Ohio lAP) - The moment he opened the door to his
home, Floyd Fay remembers, he
knew he was in big trouble. Fay was
just waking up - to a nightmare
that would last five years.
"They knocked on my door. When
I opened it, there must have been a
dozen cops standing therewith shot·
guns and revolvers pointed at my
head, " Fay, an Akron native, recalled of the early mornlng hours of
March 28, 1978.
A few hoursear!ler, Fred Ery, 26,
of Perrysburg, co-owner of a beverage center, was working in his store.
A man wearing a skl mask walked
in carrying a gun. Minutes later,
Ery was sprawled on the floor, shot
in the shoulder, life pouring out of
him. He died about 1:45 a .m. Two
hours later, the pollee were knock·

lng on Floyd "Buzz" Fay's front
enced to life, would walk out of the
London Correctional Institution on
door.
Fay, then 26, was charged with . Oct. 30, 1!8&gt;, after a break in the
aggravated murder, tried and con- case.
victed for a slaying he didn't
In Karlsrueh, West Germany, a
u.s. Army serviceman knew the
commit.
His conviction in August 1978 was truth about the Ery murder. But it
took investigators more than two
based on two elements. First, the
years to flnd it. Interviewed by
dying declaration of Fred Ery that
Wood County authorities overseas,
the masked gunman was Floyd
the soldier admitted driving the getFay. The second element was that
away car in the anned robbery that
Fay fail e d a polygraph
went awry.
examination.
Two men later pleaded guilty to
But as the prison doors clanged
shut behind him, Buzz Fay made a
the murder. The serviceman was
promise to himself - a promise of given immunity from prosecution.
Fay credited tireless work by his
freedom.
public defender, Adrian Cimer"I knew from Day One that I'd get
man, for his ultimate release. Ciout. The system just couldn't work
merman is now h1s roommate.
that way. One day or another, I'd
During h1s time in prison, Fay
walk out of there," Fay said.
became a "jailhouse lawyer," reIt was30months before Fay, sent·

searching the law and the polygraph that locked thekeytohlscell.
"I sent the polygraph results out
to a bunch of people, and when the
results came back I knew I was onto
something," Fay said. "Everyoplnlon I got back was different. None of
the so-called experts agreed."
Since then, Fay has carried on a
one-man crusade against polygraphs. He has filed a $40 mllllon
lawsuit against the Perrysburg pollee department that investigated
the murder and arrested him. Also
named in the suit were the state
Bureau of Ctimlnal Identification
and Investigations, a polygraph ope r a tor a nd Wood County
commissioners.
Fay is optimistic about the case,
filed in U.S. DlstrlctCourtatToledo,
and expects a trial date to be set

to stay
ByQOBDVORCHAK

A"filiiclated Press Writer
PJ'ITSBURGH (AP) - Women
saythey'reln the coal mines to stay,
even though they're still fighting for
acceptance nine years after the first
woman broke the sex barrier in a
male-dominated world.
"We went from being a novelty to
a eo-worker," says Michelle Miller,
34, a former elementary school
teacher with a master's degree who
has worked five years for Bethlehem Mines.
"I think women havemadeaposltlve impact," adds Miss Miller, a
shuttle car operator. "Togetmeout
of the mines, the 'godfather' would
have to make me an offer I couldn't

soon.

Job hunting tough for convicted felon

MAN WRONGLY CONVICI'ED OF MURDER RECALL'&gt; PRISON -

Floyd " Buzz" Fay says from the first day he was imprisoned for a
murder he dldn't mmmlt, he wasdetenninedtoagain lind freedom. Two
men later pleaded guilty to the death of a carryout owner. ( AP
Laserpholo).

Employment counselor
no longer enjoys job
LORAIN. Ohio !API - Not so
long ago. Leo Gilles. an employ·
ment counselor in this industrial·
ized Lake Eric port . still enjoyed his
job.
""It used to be a joy to come to
work .·· sa id Gilles. ""My specia lty is
helping disa bled veterans get some
sort of work . Now. all I can do is
listen to them and tell them there's
nothing."

Toda)·. while city officia ls hope
for relief from a rcinvigorated econ·
amy and a congressman's cam·
paign for defense contracts at a
local shipyard, about one-fifth of the
people in Lorain are out of work.
Just three years ago. Lora in . the
state's lOth largest city. seemed al·
most immunp from the econom ic

ills of the Midwc&gt;st.
In the cent er of town. U.S. Steel
Corp.'s Lorain-Cuyahoga Works
employed about R.OOl. Another 7.00l
worked at a Ford Motor Co. van and
car assembly pla nt on the west side.
These two la rge plants. the economic heart of the city and county.
were operating a t or near capacity.
As recc&gt;ntly as December 1979. Lorain' s unC'mployment wa s just 5

percent.
Then the bottom fell out.
Van and ca r sa les weakened .
Steel orders fell off . Sudddenly. Lorain County found itself facing the
sa me problems as Ohio's other in·
dustrlal centers.
By July of th is year. the coun ty's
unemployment ra te had reached 19
percent , with 24.1.12 people out of
work. The steel mill now employs

aiJOul 4.00l. the auto plant about
4.500.
The Ohio Bureau of !Cmployment
Services office, where Gilles works.
has been moved to larger quarters.
"When people hear rumors tha t
Ford or U.S. Steel may be hiring,
they come in right away. but it's
hopeless." Gilles said . "Those places have so many on layoff to call
back before they can hire."
Other industrial areas in the state
were not as bad off in July. Cuya·
hoga County. which includes Clevel a nd , h ad 10 .4 pe.rce nt
unemployment . The rate in Frank·
lin Count y, which includes Colum·
bus. was 9 percent, while Hamilton
Coun ty. including Cincinnati. had
10.6 percent unemployment.
Among Ohio's industria lized
counties. only Mahoning County,
which includes Youngstown. had a
compara ble unemployment rate
with its 18.6 percent.
And Lorain Mayor William
Parker says hiscityofllO.OOl isactu·
ally in worse shape than the stat is·
tics show.
"We're worse than the county. "
said the Republican mayor. "The
balance of the county is diversified .
Elyria llas a lot of diversification. I
think you can safely say unemployment here is about 21 percent."'
"Unemployment at the millis the
worst I've ever seen it . and I sta rted
there in 19.17," said Mart in Tomasek. editor of the weekly Lorain
Labor Leader. "People who say
we're in a minor recession are fooling themselves. Wei:fe in a
depression.··

LANCASI'ER, Ohio (API- For
Bradley C. Cox, it may be tougher to
find a job than it was to get out of
prison.
Cox, 23, says he always stumbles
over the question on job appllcations: "Have you ever been convicted of a felony?" He always has
trouble accounting for two years of
Ills llfe. And he admits he sometimes panics and !les about his past .
Eight months ago, the Fairfield
County native was freed after two
years in jails and prisons for rapes
and robberies to which another man
confessed.
It was hard work getting out : Cox
had confessed to the crimes. Add to
that his being a high school dropout,
being AWOL from the Marines
when arrested, and being behind the
wheel of a stolen car.
Last November. having failed to
convince a Fairfield Coun ty jury he
confessed only because of extreme
police pressure and after having
pleaded guilty in an Athens Coun ty
case, Cox faced 77 to 275 years in
prison.
Seeing no hope for the future, Cox
planned to kill himself. He said he
studied methods and almost had the
perfect opportunity. because hiscel·
!mate was in solitary and he was
alone.
"By the time everything had
broke loose, I was readytogoforit,"
Cox says.
" If you're hea lthy, you're not going to commit suicide. It took me a
good while to get to that stage ... I
stored everything in my head that
hurt ... all the harHssment.
""I didn't. I'm glad . I would have
went to hell automatically. You au·
tomatically go to hell for that.
" I went through everything that a
l!ue rapist went through." he
added. expla ining that rapists are
among the least respected crimi·
nals in prisons. "As a matter of fact,
they treat a murderer better than a
rapist."
Cox said being assigned to the
medium-securi ty Lebanon Correctional Institution instead of a
tougher prison was part of the deal
that induced him to plead gullty in
Athens County. But he lived in constant fear that any trouble at all
would prompt his transfer to a high·
security jail.
The prison doors were opened by
the confession of another Fairfield
County native, jon B. Simonis. Si·

Thursday, October 14th:
Come hear Merrill Iwoch tell
•
how to manage your money m
today's changing economy.

But Kip Dawson, a 37-year-old
miner who once worked 3$ a secretary and a printer, says that women
miners are still paving new ground.
"Every man has to prove himself,
but it's different with a woman. A
woman has to prove herself a lot
more," says Miss Dawson.
"Trying to get accepted by the
guys is just as hard as the work,"
says Donna Lllley, a former seamstress who has worked at Republic
Steel Corp.'s Clyde Mine in Washington County for two years.
By the end of 1981, 3,556 women
had been hired to shovel coal, lift
posts o run machines ln underground coal mines. But women
make up only 1.25 percent of the
workforce.
"We're talking about a revolution
in America's coal fields ," says
Betty JeanHall,dlrectoroftheCoal
Employment Project (CEP), a nonprofit foundation in Oak Ridge,
Tenn., that helps women get hired
and keep jobs in the mines.
Women worked in family operations and company mlnesduringthe
Depression and World War II. But
government records show that no
women had taken the required miners' entrance exam, which is broken
down by sex, prior to July 27, 1973.
Sometime between then and the
end of 1973, a woman, her name
unknown, was hired in West Virginia to become the first officially recognized woman miner. ·
"She's an unsung hero," says.
Joyce Dukes, assistant director of
the CEP. "We'd like to sing her
praises because she opened a lot of
doors for women."
Many coal companies allow
women only because of court .
orders. But getting a job isn't the
only problem for women who toll in
the grimy pits.
Inonesurveyof59womenminers
selected at random by the CEP, 76
percent said they had been propositioned by male workers, 53 percent
said they had been propositioned by
their male bosses and 17 percent
said they had been physically
attacked.
But for many women, the wages
make minlng an attractive job. A
laborer earns $90.78 a day.
Ms. Lilley doubled her pay and
improved her benefits by entering
the mines. "I feel my time as a
seamstress was wasted,'' she says.
"lll'dhaveknown then what! know
now, I would have tried to go to the
mines right away.''

99.9% RETURN
ON INVESTMENT

A
LTHOME

GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples flied for marriage licenses
thls past week ln Gallia County Pro'bate Court.
Charles L. Shaver, 34, Rt. 2, Bid·well, unemployed, andAnitaF.Javins, 39, Rt. 2, Bidwell, housewife.
Harley E . Patterson Jr., 21, Point
Pleasant, unemployed, and Patricia D. Ward,l6, Gallipolls, student.
Stephen W. Boldrey; 34, Albion,
Ill., self-employed, and Marilyn S.
Compton, 22, Albion, Ill.,
beautician.
.
Waldo C. Nance Jr. , 19, Rt. 2, Patriot, laborer, and Tammy L. Cade,
16, Rt. 1, Northup, student.
Dale E. Geiser, 21, Rt. 1, Vlnton,
professional upholSterer, and Joan
E . Roberts, lB. Galllpolls, at home.
Louis E . Cox, 39, Rt. 2, Galllpolls,
concrete fln!sher, and Shirley B.
Helmandollar, 33, Rt. 2, Gallljlolls,
·housewife.
David Stewart, 22, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, unemployed, and Elizabeth Nibert, 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
· unemployed.
·
Kenneth R. Bloomer, 43, Galllpo- lls, mechanlc,andVe!maS,Cemlnl,
39, Rt. 2, Patriot, nursing assistant.
James·E. Rich, 28, Galllpolls, re!r!gefatloo techniclali, and Rebecca S. Bllrger, 29, Vienna, W.Va., .

Phone for reservations to the Merrill Lynch Seminar : " How to ManaSc Your Money in Today's
( 'hanging EconomY' It \ fr ee, hut -.catmg i ~ limited, ~o 3 l' l today.
Not just anothrr koclurt

\orne tOpics we' ll mvcr: What to do wnh money you want to h-ep:\'U/f'. H ~w 10 gct_htgh
1m crest witho ut tym g'up your money. An mve-;uncm you ~ h ould av01d tf you rc m a htgh tax
bra..:ket . And mo re.
You'll also rC'l:civc a free copy of lm't'\lment iJ" or u Chun~m~ b.n nomy - a 16-pa,gc_book let
wuh facts and fi gur ~ to help you dcctdc whiCh mvl'Stmcnt s you ~ h ould choose and avotd nght no ~t.
Chlnge brinp opportunities
.
Tht· pa.~ t year can be ~ ummed up in one word. - c h~ngc. The way 10 go might be '&gt; lock s one day.

Trea, ury Bills the nex t. Or an mvestment tacttc you ve n eve~ _heard of ~fc;&gt;rc.
.
Hut this Ourry of change ha'&gt; also brought n ~~ OpP?rtumlles. For htgh tnterC!il. Growt h.
Steady mcomc. And for small i n ves t or ~ to pantctpate m markets that had never before been
ava1lablc to them .
H ere' ~ how to be sure you can attend this impon.ant seminar: Phone (304) 512·9312 or .
loll frer In Wesl Vlrginil 1·800.642·3557; lA Ohlo 1--800-624·3563 for reserved seats. Do tl now
and be sure there's a place for you.

Dale: Thursday,

October 14th Time: 7:30p.m .
Place: Gallipolis Holiday Inn S~ Barbara Hoeft

I
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Attn: Barbara Hoeft
P.O Box 2429
1035 Third Avenue71721

Telephunr~· -------------

Huntington, Wv -

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mobile hoine in on trade when you
purchase aUnibilt home.
Stop By And See Our New Models
Free Appraisals On Your Mobile Home

CALL EVENINGS
FOR

APPOINTMENT

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Coole hear Merrill Lynch
tell how your mone:Y
could work harder m
1982.
Mail to: Merrill Lynch

SAVE DOWN
PAYMENT
BUY DIRECTLY
FROM OWNER

992-3267 OR (304) 675-2516.

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Point Pleasant, W. Va .
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aune.

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Jury lrial cancelled
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The Melp COOnty Jury trial set

Mtmlll)'M"tl Plfl'cr FtMtr I Smith l.,c.

tor'IW!Idl)'hubeellcance)led,Ju- .
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GROUND BEEF••.•..•..•.•.••••.•••••••.•l~~ $1.

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fht ' Semi nar 1s your chance 10 learn betler wa y~ to mve&lt;.t your mo ney fro m pr o f~\ ional\.
•1h\()/u telv f ree.
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Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

refuse.''

valency diploma. Maybe that job
monls, the so-called "skl-mask, raLlfe is calmer for Cox now than it
will come.
pist, " had confessed to at least 80 has been for years. He says drugs
He says he would like to work as
rapes in several states- including led him todropoutoflllghschool. He
an
auto mechanic, but admits that
the three tor which Cox was doing
says love caused him to go AWOL
such work is hard to find . Some
time.
and make the trip that ended in his
weeks, he says, he applies to as
Today, a portable color television arrest in Fairfield County.
many as 30 places. Some weeks, he
u. .he !lving room of the farm borne
He sees a young woman whom he
doesn't go out.
near Lancaster is the only souvenir met shortly after his release. And he
of the Bradley's time ln prison.
~ls~~~~~fo~r:_:a~hlg~h~
sc~h~oo~l~eq~u~l-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
And as long as there's daylight
and it's wann, he likely will be sitting at a picnic table beneath a fullgrown sugar maple. His lean
6-foot-3 frame barely fitting in a
lawn chair, Cox usually sits facing
west, squinting as he looks across
the crop-and meadowland.
The farmhouse is a new home for
the Cox family. And Bradley's father, Charles C. Cox, 56, has remarried. In fact, Johann Cox married
into the famlly shortly after Christmas 1981, during the struggle to free
Bradley.
She and Bradley's father had
been acquainted throughout the
trial. and she was the first to spot a
newspaper account of how Simonis
might have committed the crimes.
Theirs is an image of a family thaI
is very close, perhaps closer than
most because of the ordeal of waiting for Judge E. Raymond Morehart to clear the way for Cox's
release Jan. 22.
liT !IU% FUEL EFFICIENCY.
"I had to convince her what I
KIIIO-SUII" POI!1QL.E HEATERS COST
knew Brad was," theelder Coxsaid
YOU JUST PE-S PER HOUR TO
of the days before there was hope.
OPERATE.
""She never really knew Brad until
operate. smokeless and Odorless In
ObVIOUSly, you don't !Ike to see
operation. safety-teste(! and listed
your neatlng dollars wasted. so get
he was released. But she stood by
a heater tnars virtually waste-free
bV Underwr1ters LabOratories.
me as if Brad was her own son. She
-a 99.9% f\lel-elllctent Kero-sun
Get a 99.9% return on your heating
was my rock a thousand times."
portable neater. Near1V an me
lnoesb nent. see an 01 our Kero-sun
money you spend on tuet returns
The famlly has retained an attorJ)O&lt;tllble neaters to&lt;lay.
to you as neat. And It costs Just
ney to see if there is any legal redpennieS per hour to operate.
ress, but so far no lawsuit has been
mere are Kero-sun portable
KERO-SUIP HEATERS SAVE YOU
filed .
MONEY WHILE THEY KEEP YOU
kerosene neatersiOr everv kina 01
WARM.
nome ana business. All are easy to
Cox had confessed to the Fairfield
Coun ty crimes, but contends he was
COMPLETE STOCK OF ACCESSORIES
coerced into it after 7 ~ hours of
interrogation . He says he pleaded
AND REPAIR PARTS
guilty to the crimes in Athens
Coun ty because he doubted his
chances of acquittal after his other
conviction.
The Lancaster police department
defends the actions of its investigator and issued a statement finding
there was no "deceipt or trickery."
The police note that Cox took a polygraph test during his arrest, and the
tests showed "deceptive or gul!ty
information."
He also had appealed his conviction and lost before being sent to the
penitentiary.

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'

Page- E- 8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

October 10, 1982 ;

Students very interested in classmate's criminal trial
CLEVELAND I API - A small
group of college students sat ln the
federal courtroom, taking notes. doIng clas~ work or doodling while
their classma te was questioned by
federal prosecutors.
But this was no field trip. The
scene was their classma te's crlrnl·
nal trial for refus ing to register for
the rnllitary draft. And they had
more than a casual interest.
Many of the Goshen College students who sa t through the four-day
trial of Mark Schmucker expec t to
face similar prosecution. Like
Schmucker. they are Mennonites.
To them. registration would betray
the beliefs of their religion.
Even before the jury returned its
verdict, the studen ts said they were
sure Schmucker. 22. would be found
guilty. They were right.
"This case really had two levels
(the law and religious beliefs),"
said Byron Becker, a 21-year-old
Goshen senior who also has refused
to register. "Unfortunately, only
one was allowed to be argued in
court ."
Unlike the two young men convicted before him, Schmucker
claimed hls religious beliefs and upbringing as a pacifist crea ted a conflict with the law ordering him to
sign up for a possible draft.
He was allowed to remain free on
a $2,00l signature bond signed at his
arraignment. Sentencing Is set for
Oct. 19.
Mennonites historically have
been known as members of the
"Peace Church," which opposes
military serv ice of any klnd. Officially, the chu rch encourages
members to seek conscientious objector sta tus.
Schmucker took his resistance a
step further, refusing to sign a registration card. He testified tha t makIng himself available to Selectlve
Service was a step in preparing for
the U.S. military.
"As far as the U.S. government
r eads and understands the law, the
Issue for us goes back again to the
fact tha t we had made a commitment to the kingdom of God," sa id
the Rev. Donald Blosser, a Mennonite pastor and one of three defense
witnesses In the trial.

" In most cases, the church and
the sta te have no conflict. But here's
a case where the government has
questioned following Jesus," he
said. " It's not that they (nonregistrants) don't.want to follow the
law, It 's that they can't."
After his testimony, Blosser
joined the Goshen students In the
courtroom. During recesses, they
spoke freely with anyone who questioned the M ennonite rel!gion or
why Schmucker would risk a j ail
term when he could end his troubles
by signing a registration card.
" One difference I put between us

and most of the other groups resisting rnll!tary registration Is that we
generally agree lhat the governmentIs good and that It has a role ln
society, " said Eric Mlller, a Goshen
student.
Miller. 19, has refused to register
and has been interviewed by FBI
agents. He expects to be lndlcled.
"Mark was interested in testing
the law, " Mlller sald. "Some of the
rest of us are interested ln getting a
chance to explain our actions In

thought Schmucker's defense attorneys covered all possible arguments within the l aw.
" I don't see any little things that
could have been done differently, "
Becker said. " The question for us Is
how we want tomakeourcases. One
posslblllty Is to do what E nten E ller
did and present no defense at all."
E ller, 21, of Laverne, Callf., was
the first man convicted of falling to
register under the Military Selective Service Act. He was ordered to
perform 250 hours of community
service work and register within 90
days of his Aug. 18 conviction.

court."
Becker, who also has been threa tened with prosecution, said he

The second man corivlcled, Benjamin Sasway of VIsta, Callf., was
sentenced to 2~ years In a
mlnimum·securlty federal prison
camp.
Jon Nofziger, another Goshen student, registered, but said he withheld hls Social Security number and
plans no further cooperation with
Selective Service.
"None of us are out looking for
laws to break and we don't flnd any
pleasure In It, " Nofziger said.
About 300 Mennonite nonregistrants from about 25 states
share Information through a new-

sletter that began at Goshen during
the VIetnam War.
Officials at the college, a fouryear liberal arts school in northern
lndlan!l, have said Schmucker wW
be able to flnlsh his biology degree,
even If he Is Imprisoned far from the
school.
" I don't think Mark Is an excep.
lion at that point," said John Lapp,
provost at the 1,mstudent school.
" The vast majority of our students
are conscientious objectors to war, ·
but no matter what decision a stu·
dent makes, we will support him In
any legitimate m eans possible."

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A guide to local
television programming
October 10 thru Oct. 16

A guide to area .entertainment

:..A- urnace

MONARCH
QUALITY SINCE 1896

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U/arm 0/orning
COAL HEATERS

Union
wants
new job
proposal
WASHINGTON !API -The National Farmers Union says Congress should pass new job
legislation to remedy what it calls
"the obvious failure of Reaganomics" to cope with the nation's festerIng economy.
In a harshly worded sta tement
Issued Friday, the NFU's ninemember executive committee said
the Labor Department's report that
unemployment climbed to 10.1 percent In September was "a shameful
testament to the cruel economic
experiment " conducted by the Rea·
gan administra tion.
The September unemployment
rat e was the highest since 1940,
when the United States was emerging from the Great Depression. In
all, nearly 11.3 rnlllion Americans
were out of work.
Administration officials, while
deploring the high rate of joblessness. said President Reagan's economic policies are working, as
evidenced by declining Interes t
rates and other indicators.
Reagan, who was In Long Beach,
Calif., said, "We're going to accept
responsibility in this administration
for finding jobs for all the 10.1 percent" who were unemployed.
" What we must guard against Is
those who would try to make apolitical football out of this," he said .
But the NFU said that Congress,
which Is scheduled to meet In a special session following the Nov. 2election. should bury Its political
differences and pass legis !a lion
"that wlll put American workers
back to work."
"Congress must put away the
painful stickpins of the voodoo economics doll and return to sound economic policies which wW put
Americans back to work and restore prosperity to America's _,
farmers who provide food for the ·,

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30"x30" ....... ~ .......... Sl3.99
32"x42" .................. SI8.99
36"x36" ................. S18.49
36"x54" .......... ..... .. S29.95

'

Filmeter
Page 8

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

.

lunch pall."
The commlttee said It supported
back -to-work jobs proposals "which
would help rebuild the nallon'spubUc capital base of roads, bridges and
other public structures. "
Summing It up, George W. Stone,
NFU president, said, "Congress
must act, since this administration

MASTERPIECE -John DuU!ne, voted ~·s best televl!don actor In 1981, retums to the
screen as an Idealist teaeher, discharged from the Anny for shellshock, who anives at an English
boys' school alter World War D. 1be 13-pari mlnlserles opens the 12th season of MohO Masterpiece
'lbeatre, and.!s scheduled to premiere Sunday, Oct. 10, on PJI!!. (AP Laserphoto).

STOVE .BOARDS

95

•••

$74999

We also carry a complete line of Stove Pipe
and Amerivent Triple Wall Pipe and
Accessories.

The Corona 17 -OK S
Portable Kerosene Heater
17,600 BTU/hr., heats
approximately 640 sq. ft.

";::;~
lll~.r~;;: . J

$69595

Sale Price only

Hollywood
Page 7

(9900·81

Bum less ito~
enJoy more~
with _a Kll!l _

$39995

COAL &amp; WOOD HEATER
WITH BLOWER

LUMBER

(614)
FlEE PAIKING
5 P~. Friday Nltht. Til 11100 P.M.

446-127~

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