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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FrldiY• October 30, 1911

Commission urges levy support
lJenrY Wells, preoddent of the
Melp County Commiaslonen, urge~ .
support of the ·addltklnal one mW
levy for the operatloo of lbe Melp
Counly Emergency Medical Service.
In an Interview, Wells llreued the
emergency service Jli'OIIl'8lll Will be
threatened If lbe .additional one mW
levy doea not paaa.
T!Je one mW will produce an aclditiooal $140,000 per year which wW
be uaed for vehicles, 1188, oil, Insurance, equipment and salaries for
three penona.
Wells also added that Wider the
present financial system the
emergeJ\CY service wUJ not be able,
to keep up with expenses without ad1

vebicle II atlitfed with an ·average of
ditional fwldlng.
three
trained volunteer emergency
Ji'Widl deri¥ed frGm the lavy will
medical
techalclana per run.
be ~ for emergency PIP' 1 also
Several veblcles ~ by the EMS
lranaportatioo for trslllfer of patlen"ta from borne to • hoapital and-or are tn need of repllcement, 110111e
with approdmately 90,000
llll1'linll home.
The Melp County Emergency ~ liliJea. A replacement
Medical Service (MCEMS) Ia com- vehicle coats cloae to po,ooo. Tbe 150
poeed of the former •olunteer vcluateers need adolltional training
squads located In Middleport, .10 keep ap with medical requlremenPomeroy, Syracuse, Racine, ts In ~tlent care. Calls since 1980
have lncreaaed approximately 30 '
Rutland and Tuppel'll Plab)l.
The EMS transports patlerita some percent over previous years.
If the levy does not paaa, residents
90,000 miles per year llld provides
service to some 24,000 resldenta per wUJ be aaked to contribute to the
operation of the emergency squad9
Ye&amp;l:·
Squads alao offer some 208,000 as W8ll done In the pa~. WeUa obhours per year, 24 hours a day, 8eftll served.
days a week, 52 weeks a year. Each

Crime up in most Ohio cities
. WINTER INSPECl'ION - Winter inspection of all
Melp County Oblo Departmeol of TraDSJMiriatlon
(ODOT) eqalpmenl was held Tbui"sday morning at the
slateiiJCbway garageonSR 7. The department's equipmeal (neept for mlDor repairs) passed with flying

colors. Meigs Cowily garage has on band 1,200 Ions of
salt and 300 tons of trealed grtls. Pictured are 1-r;
James Hopkins of ODOT, Marietta, Bernard GOkey,
Meigs County Superlntendenl of ODOT and Daa PenDOCk of OOOT, Marietta.

;r '·
.

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t(

CLEVELAND (AP) - FBI crinie 283. Aggl'llvated assault was up 7 12.7 percent frm 2,135 to 1,1164. Motor
statistics reveal that reported crime percent from 189 to ·212. Burglary vehicle theft was down 10.6 percent
In the first six months on 1981 was up was up 6.2 percent fiun 1,817 to !run 310 to 277. Araon was ap 182
In most paris of Ohio, compared 1,929. Larceny-tM!t was up 2. 7 per- percent from 58 to 158.
with the first half of 1911. Nationally cent from 5,818 1o 5,781. Motor
In Cincinnati, 17,039 crimes were
violent crime was up 5 percent and vehicle theft was down 9.9 percent reported, up from 15,23!. Murder
property crime rooe 2 percent.
from 827 to 585. Arson wu ap 7.1 per- was up from 18 to 20, up 11.1 percent.
In Cleveland, the only category cent from 164to 143.
Forcible rape was down 1.3 percent,
showing a decrease was forcible
In Youngstown, 4,4111 crimes were from 151 to 180. Robbery was up_ 8.6
rape, which dropped 11.7 percent reported, compared with 4,069 in the percent from 718 to 783. Aggravated
from 349 to 3INI. Murder was up 7.9 first half of last year. Murder was assault was up 5.2 percent fnm 810
percent fr&lt;m 1211 to 136. Robbery in- down 211.3 percent from 19 to 14. For- to 852. Burglary was up 9.4 percent
creased 33 percent from 2,832 to cible rape was up 10 percent fnin 20
from 4,098 to 4,482. Larceny-theft
3,?'76. Aggravated assault was up to 22. Robbery was up 42 percent was up 14.5 percent from 8,114li to
11.2 percent from 1,704 to 1,894. from 188 to 267. Aggravaled aasault 9,893. Motor vehicle theft was up 10
Burglary jumped 9.9 percent from was up 26.5 percent from 2211 to 286. ·percent from
to 850. Arson was
8,310 to 9,135. Larceny-theft rose 6.8 Buglary was up 49.4 percent from
down 26 percent from 123 to 91.
percent from 6,806 to 7,058. Motor 1,171 to 1,749. Larceny-theft was ap
vehicle 'theft increased 15.6 percent

rr=~===::=::::::====== College
Ohio State .. . • . • 45
Purdue ••••• • ••• 33

Alabama ....... 13
· Mississippi St. . • . 10

football

scores ==========~

Clemson ........ 82
Wake Forest •••• 24

•

\

tmts
Vol. IS No. 31

Middleport-Pomeroy:-Gallip.
o lis-Point .Pleasant.. ·
... ..-·

Copyrighted 1981

Iowa . •.•..••••. • 7

/fill/ .

\

Al'llon-

from
6,536
7,557.
6.9
percent
fromto588
to629.
In Toledo, 16,115S crimes were
reporle!l during · the six-month
period, up from 15,482 last year.
Murder was down 13 percent from 23
to 20. Forcible rape was up 10.9 percent from 110 to 122. Robbery was up
16.8 percent from 768 to 89'1.

\
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T~S ·

By ROBERT WINGETt'
GREAT BEND - The· $18.6
· milliop bridge, spanning the Ohio
River between Ravenswood, .W. Va.
and Meigs County, Ohio, was named
for former West Virginia state higbways commissioner William S. Ritchie, Jr. during 1!11 impressive ribbon-cutting and dedication
ceremony Saturday.
A turnout of some 1,000 persons

were on band for the loog-awailed
formal opening of the two-lane
bridge.
West Virginia Gov. John D. (Jay)
Rockefeller IV, concluding speaker
during the event beld·in the center of
the span, made the announcement
that the bridge was being named for
Ritchie, DOH conuniasloner from
198!1-71. Rockefeller lauded Ritchie .
for his public service
. and dedication
.

to improving slate roada.
"Bill Ritchie was at the helm of
the liighways department at the
beginning of our modem highway
program. He has continued to show
his dedication to our state through
his active support as a private
citizen for the issues important to all
of us," the governor said.
Rockefeller,
by Ravenswocid Mayor
Dittmar, ad-

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rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ELBERFELD$
HAL.L.OWEEN SPECIAL.$

::~n~"~m~~~ ~~~ :~~Ia~

BIG SAVINGS THIS WEEKEND ON WOM,EN'S AND
CHILDRE.N'S WEAR - MEN'S AND BOYS' .CLOTHING

was up 17·9 percent from 4,251 to
5,010. Larceny-theft was up 6.4 per-

REFRESHMENTS of coffee, doughnuts, sausage . sporlatlon. Debbie Halley was in ebarge of refreshaod toast were served Ia thooe attending the winter in- ments. Pictured are, 1-r, Wayne Stotts, safely superspection at the Meigs County Ohio Department of Tran- visor of ODOT, Marietta and Debbie.

•

· ·

J.'=%88~~~;%~f:i

Vinton school
time capsule,
n. J

lAI)IES' ITEMS AND AT OUR WAREHOUSE ON "
MECHANIC ST.

ELBER

Hymn sing slated

ture leads to nearby Interstate Rt.

N

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Rose
Genheimer,
Pomeroy ; Thomas Justis, Middleport; Velma Siders , Pomeroy.
Discharged-Gary Hysell, Patricia
· Cleland, Lowell Collins, Marie Dudding , Annette Boyd, Kimberly
Roush, Ilene Hall, Fred Miller,
Velma Reynolds, Ronny Parsons,
Virginia Thoren, Bonnie LeMaster.

Colwnbia Gas of Ohio customers
will see a reduction in their gas bills
for December under a quarterly gas
COlli recovery (GCR) filing today by ·
the company with the Public
Ull)ities Commiasloo of Ohio.
The decrease in the gas usage
charge is 8.74 centa per thousand
cub(c feet (Mcf) of natural gas, or
$1.14 on the average monthly
residential customer bill of 13 Mcf. It
results from lower supplier rates
end refunds.
The GCR, in accordance with
PUOO rules, allows adjuatmenta for
decreasesorlncreaaesinpriceaa
gaa company pays for gas p~r­
dlued for ltacu.stomel'!l. ·
Columbia will notify Individual
communltlea tn the state of the
c:11111ce in their reape..-ti¥e ratea
tJroucb letiAn to city counclla.
The quarterly computation, subject to mlew by the PUOO, has no
effect Cll Collllllbla ol Ohio's earnlnp IInce purdlued gaa cotta are
ra;owaed on a ~
bllil, wl!bDOmarbp.

'

~arriagelicense
A marriage license was issued to
James Nicholas Depoy, 22, Shade,
and Rebecca Dawn Thomas, 22,
Pomeroy.

See ks divorce
Kenneth II. Lawson, Syracuse
filed suit for divorce in Meigs Count;
Conunon Pleas Court against Wilda
Theora Lawson, Lancaster.

Emergency runs
The Middleport Emergency Squad
at 7:45 p.m. Thursday took Velma
Siders from North Second Ave., Middleport, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 11 :23 p.m., the Racine
Unit took Everett Grant from his

RIBBON CU'ITING - Willi lltree ~ ef the
ociBiors, (from left) West Vlrgbda Gov. Jay
ReclefeUer, U.S. Sen. Jelllllnp Raadolph and Wllllam

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30 1981 pubUahed tn
to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, Unl~ States Code, Sect':IT~

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT 29
Doris Adams, Gracie Baker, Irene
Beard, Estill Binion, Wilma Brown
Mrs. Roger Carpenter and son, Mrs:
Harry Castle and soil, Michael Curneulte, Joan Dayton, Mark Dodda,
Thelma Dowell, Cleona Edwards
Mrs. Dan Franklin and son'
Raymond Gooch, Eleanor Keels:
Harold Marshall, Rebecca Miller
.Ellis Myers, Mrs. Gary Norris and
son, Hazel Olsen, Bessie Phillips,
Don111 Pumpa, Betty Reed, Judith
See, Nathaniel Shaffer, Martha
Spriggs, Betty Sprouse, Mrs. Jerry
Taylor and daughter, Karen Taylor,
Mrs. Maunce Toller and daughter
Maggie V.:alker, Zeldon West:
Charla Whitt, Joba Woods, Lois
Young.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Flesher
daughter, New Haven ; Mr. and Mrs:
Robert Sigman, daughter, Bidwell.

=
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Ill

c

Served with
Choice of Salad, Roll
and Beverage
DINING ROOM ONLY

Tho
ds
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash
and
due
from
depository
institutions
usan
U.S. Treasury securiti
.. . •..... .. . ••. . . . .. .... .. ......•. . 738,000.00
Obligations of States a~ ~UU~al· ..... . ..... ..... .. . . .. . . . ..... .. ... . .... 2,056,000.00

OSU, Purdue,
C-1

subdivisions in the Uniled States . ~ . . • • . . .
1 188 ooo
All other uriti
· · • · · · ·" · · • · ' · · · · · · · • · · · · · · " · ' ' ·00
Federal f~
.~;i~u~;;
18,ooo.oo

=

so:':

.;w:.;.ud·································.

a¥':(e~ to resell · · · · · · · · · . · .... · • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . 1,850,000.00
Less J.no ex udingunearnedincome) •. •. ... .. . •.. . . .. . .. 9,744 000.00
~ N:~ance for possible loan losses . ........ . .... .. . .... .. . 9li:ooo.oo
Bank~,'i~i~~i~~· · ........ ....... .......... ..... . 9,649,000.00

.,

•cIll

!:
..I

.-..
•

2C

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

lfQQO,OO - -

. • • • • • • • • · • · · · • • · · · · · • • •. · · • ••••.•• ••..• • , . .. •.. ••.... 15.647 .QOQ.OO
Demand deposita of individuals

T:::~::=~-j~~~~~."

·······················~,430,000.00

~':'u":'ted? · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · .. .. •. •. ...... •.... . •.. . .. .... . u,099,ooo.oo

pos
tales Government. . . . • •.. . .. . . . . . .
'7 000 00
Deposita of Stateund political
" · · · • · · · " · · · · • · · · · .. ' ' ·
srtifu~edvislonsdolflin the ~nlhecksledStates .. . .. . .... ..... , . • ..••... ••. ...... . . .. .... 61 o,ooo.oo
C
1 an
cenc
· . .... ... .1..... . . .. ... 81,000.00
Tetal .-.;.....,Is
.. ...· . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . ....
0
~,....,.
•. • . • . •• •••.. ..•• . . . .. .. ....... " • • • • • •
14 .... 000 00
Total
d
nd
depos
·
·
•
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
Total :
d
Its . .. . . , .. . . . . .... . ' . , .... ..... . ....... 3 0118 00!1 00 ........
.
TOTAL

•

u::t'~~1::: ~~~~ .;«.;;~~d"&lt;it;b;~~)I81S.COI.OO14 254 000 00---

Conunon Stock

' ' .
a. No. shared authorized 5,000 (par value)
~· N~. shares outslandlng 5,000 (par value) •... . . ........ . . .. .. , ..... ..... . 125,ooo.oo

Business page,

u':.d:v'::.;.d·p,:,;,;i,; ~~d ·~~~-id; ~.;t;;.g~~-~i;,.; ················ ··.. ·....... .. 121i,ooo.oo

__u+ ..;!~~~rves .. •.. . . .. ..... .. •. . . . ....•• •. . ... . . .• . . . ... .. 1,143,ooo.oo _ _
TOTAL IJABIU'nESA;:; . .

UITY.CAPiT ......... ··· ···········' ······· 1,393,0011.00

c
Cl

Amountaoutalandingasofre~date: , AL .. , . . . . . . . • . .. .. . .... . .. ... 15,647,0011.011

c

488 000 00
Averagefor30calendardays (or calendar month) endlngWJth reportdaj;,: · ·: · · ·
' ·
Tolal deposits .. •. . . .... . . ·\ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .. • . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . .. 14' 312' 000.00

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Oct. 26·30

Low ~ll·~~

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PH. 992·5432
MAIN

.

Arladeatbll •••••.•••• 1).8

'"''nell ........·.•.. C.7
Cbs '"ed ......... D-1-7
ICIIItlr'llll • •••• •• ••• , ....
ll'lrlll • • . ... . . . • . • • •• c.l

JobnT. Wolfe-DinctGn

FAMILY R.STAURANT

Closed -"·

-~·-­
M T W T

Albert HID, Jr.

'

+ 14.

High ~!~·!!'

. .. .

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctrle8ll of this alatement of resources and ·
llabiiiUes. We daclare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our know!""• nd
belief Ia true and con ld.
'
• ....,e a

CROW'S

C-7
Dow Jones
30 Industrials

Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or more ..•. .. . . .... . . . . •.. ... ....• • : . . . . • . . . . . . . . . .

' I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Conditloo is true and correct to.the best of my knowledge and bellef.
Gary P. Norris
October 2'1,1981

Carro11 R. Norris

•

IMIIty'le •••.•••••• a.JI.al
~ ••••••••• Aoi~IN
..................... Coll-I I

'flb.ODe ••...•.•
(

I'

GAWPOLIS - Three men
named in 5eparate secret indictments Oct:27 by the Gallla County grand jury were all in custody late
Friday night, according to the Gallla
County Sheriff's Department.
Two of the men - Phillip D.
Downing, 22, Hilliard, and Alvin R.
Mitchum, 38, address unknown,
were indicted on three charges in
connecllon with .the death of Craig

H. Fisher, 25, Rt. 2, Patriol, last
Fisher was In the Caplaln's
summer.
Lounge, the bar adjoining the
Downing is presently in jail in bowling alley, when a bullet fired
Hilliard on a traffic violation, a from a handgun in the alcove of the
deportment spokesman ·said, while · lounge passed through the kitchen
Mitcbwn is being held in the area and struck Fisher.
Franklin County jail. Both were forHe was taken first to Holzer
mer employees of the Skyline Lanes Medical Center and later tranon Rt. 7 in Kanauga, where Fisher sferred to St. Mary's Hospital, Hunwas shot in the back around 2:30 tington, W.Va., where his condition
a.m. July 28.
·
(Continued onA-41

.----Tuesday's election
••

~=.."=.representing bank premises . ... . . .. ... .. . .. .. .. ..... .. ...... , 134,000.00

::» D.

SPAGHETTI DINNER

Natlon81 Bank Region Nwnber 4

I--~ TOTAL~TS··· ··· ···· · ·· · ·

&gt;- ~
!::: t:

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

·

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

Charter nwnber 9815

S. Rltdde Jr., ope11 tbe new bridle llllllltld for Rlteble
Saturday. Tile lall-free 1pa11 wu apeDed to traffic at
12:SOJI.m.

Three arrested.. after indictments ;
·two charged in Fisher shooting

REPORT Of CONDITION

Hospital news

fVfRY MONDAY NIGHT AT

..

There was, however, a large

Check minor wreck
Two cars received light damages
all :52 p.m. Thursday on the parking
lot, along the river in Pomeroy,
when a car driven by Kimberly J.
White, Long Bottom, backed from a
parking space into the right side of a
car driven by Roy D. Brown,
Langsville, Pomeroy Police report.

honor."
RockefeUer' s talk followed a
speech to Sen. Jennings Randolph
(O.W.Va,) who later joined the West
Virginia governor and Ritchie in cutting ribbons to officially open the
bridge.
·
"This bridge is here because of all
of you - the taxpayers," declared
Sen. Randolph, who also pointed out,
"this is a symbol of J\menca at its
best.''
·Randolph also noted that
$13,661,000 in federal lunda was
provided toward the total cost of
construction.
Ritchie, in his remarks, said "this
is probably the greatest day of my
life" and then predicted. highways
leading from the · new bridge "will
eventually be the route from the
mid....t to the southeast."
While many West Virginia state
officialS were on hand for the gala
occasion, including the governor,
Randolph and Commissioner of
Highways Charles Miller, represenlation from Ohio's state government
was noticeably absent. Ohio has not
fulfilled a commitment to build a
· new section of highway from Rt. 7 to
the bridge. On the West Virginia side

T1.

Racine home to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

A hymn sing will be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday at the MI. O~ve Church af
Long Bottom. Singers will include
Hannony and local talent The
public is invited.

Columbia
announces
•
pnce
cut

the ssme at 14. Forcible rape was

ded: "Bill is a good professional and
a good man, who deserves this

of the river, meanwhile, the struc-

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:00 P.M.

Meigs County happenings ••• ri~~~~!!~'::e~4·~;;t~":";;cen;;~f~;;~27~~~~~~~~~~~P~O~M~E~R~O~Y~
·

Elizabeth M. ·Gardner

a

from300 to357.

-

079

•

Area
death
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Steel Gardner,
94, formerly of Middleport and a
more recent resident of Poughkeepsie, N.Y. , died Thursday at the Central Duchess Nursing Home at WappingeroFalls, N. Y.
Mrs. Gardner was born May 11,
1887 in Middleport, daugh ~er to"the
late Edward and Lora Hicks Steele.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband, Larry Gardner, in
I~; a sister, Frances; a brother,
Clifford steele; a daughter, Laura
Wehrung.
Mrs. Gardner was a member of
the Mlddieport First Baptist Church.
Surviving are a daughter and sonin-law, Lorena and Rennie Pomatti,
New York; a son and daughter-inlaw, Robert and Geneva Gardner,
Delaware; a sister, Mrs. Eleanor
Davis, Youngstown; two grandchildren, four great-grandchildren
and four great-great-grandchildren.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home in Middleport with
the Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to 9
p.m. Saturday.

:~c~~~ft~~up~.&amp;~~n=
845 to aoo. Arson was down 6 percent

8 Sections 1 64 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . New s ~ per.

.Sunday, Nov . 1, 1981

m

!\ ·

CMU •••.••.• •.. 38
Ohio University •. 21

Ravenswood Bridge opens; named
for ex-DOH commissioner Ritchie

Today's
The hauntirig of
'Our House',

Dlinois ..... _.... 24

.in Meigs

••

wrap-up~____,

.in Gallia

By KEVIN KELLY
By BOB HOEFLICH
Tlm&lt;8-Senllnel Staff
.
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALUPOUS- Ga11ia County voters wiD faee three
POMEROY - Two county-wide tax levies - one
an additional tax and one, a renewal- will face Meigs levies, five school board positions, some unopposed
candidates and numerous village and township races
County voters when they go to the poUa Tuesday.
The new tax, a one mill levy,would be in effect for when they go to the polls Tuesday.
The poUa"will be open at 3&amp; locations from 6:30a.m.
a continuing period of time and would .provide am·
bulance and emergency medical service for residents. untll7: 30 p.m.
On the ballot wiD be a two-tenths of a mill renewal
The renewal is a .4 of one mW tax which provides care,
maintenance, treatment and hospltallzation of resideJ}- operating levy lor the Community Menial Health Cents who are suffering from tuberculosis at hospitals with ter. The center, which serves Gallia, Meigs and
which the Meigs County Commissioners have con- Jackson counties, also has·the levy before Meigs and
tracts. If approved by voters, the issue would be Jackson voters.
Tbe Guiding Hand School for the mentally retarded
renewed for five years.
In
Cheshire, which also operates the Gallco Sheltered
In addition, Meigs Countians wW vote on the
WorkShop
under the auspices of the Galli&amp; County
renewal of a .2 of one mill levy·for current operating
Board
of
Mental
Retardation, has placed before voters
expenses of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental Health
a
three-tenths
of
a mill levy for continuing operations
Board. Jackson and Gallia County voters will also be
at
the
school.
(Se'e
related story on A-3) .
voUng on that measure. The levy would be renewed for
This
is
the
third
Ume
the financially-strapped facility
· five yeal'!l.
18
attempting
to
get
the
levy paased. It was defeated onIn various subdivisions of the county, there are
ce
in
last
November's
election
and again in a special
seven lax·measures placed before voters. Five of these
election
March
17.
are renewals.
Addison Twp. residents wiD also decide on a four'lbe renewals tn the various subdivisions inclode:
Leilanon Township, one mill, five years, mamtaining tenths of a mW levy lor continued fire protection from
and operating cemeteries; Ollve TownShip, one mill, the GallipoUa Fire Department.
Four candidates are vying for three seats open in
five years, maintaining and operating cemeteries;
Pomeroy Village, one mill, five ye&amp;l'll, current ex- January on the Gallia County . Local Board of
penses; Racine Village, two mills, five yeBI'II, current Education. Claudia M. Lyon, Rt. 1, Patriot, Daryl W.
·expenses, and Rutland Village, two mills, five years, Sall8buey, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, Bruce S. Sloljt, Rl. I, Bidwen, and Carl B. Waugh, Rt. I, Scottown are seeliing
current expenses.
the
pDits now held by J .E. (Dick) Cremeena, Jimmy D.
There are two new tax levies to be decided upon by
Hill
and Dr. David carman.
voters of the Eastern Local School Dlatrict. Oae is a
carman realgned from the board in September when
three. mW levy for a continuing period for current
operating expenses. The second Is four mWa for five he moved out of the county schools district. Q&gt;emeens
years to provide lunda for the maintenance of wu dlaquallfllll from running this year and Hill bowed
facilities, purchasing of equipment and remodeling of out of the reelection race lut week. ·
In the Gallipolls City Schools Dlatrict, board memfaciiiUes.
bers
Dean R. Circle, a.JllpoUa, and John C. Wickline,
'l1lree wet and dey islllles will be settled in ColumRio
Grande,
are being challenged for either J1011 by
bia Townlhjp. These Include: shall the aale of malt
Joan
E.
Schmldl,
Gell!polia, a sullotltute teacher in lbe
bl!nriCe*. wine and mixed be'veralles br tbe package
city
and
county
ldlooll.
'
under permits which authorize aale lor oft1ftllllae
Rev.
Tura
llayel,
Ill
early
candldlte, Ill upped
-npllllll ooly, be pennlttecl? Shall tile llle ofnllit
out
ol
the..duriDI
tbe
awwer.
.
bel&amp; .... wine end mixed beveral• andlr permlta
RllllniDCIIftdi.1DNI
for
olllce
are
Janw
A. a..u,
'nklb iidbadw aale of oo-premile COIIUIIIItkill aaly,
Rt.
I,
VInton,
Golllpolla
municipal
cour1
judce
llnce
lid llldlr )111'111111 wbldl aulhortle aale for bulb ooum,
aod
GeUtpoDe
City
Ccimmllltlonera
PierCe
D.
MCl. P!41 laa and oil-pumlle CCIIIIUIIJIIUan be peuniUed tn
NrN• TOWIIIhlp1 Shill the ule al !1plrltuoua 'treedy and Mllea.IJ'. Epllnc.
A third _, 111the city eanunluloo will be vacated
. . . . by tbe llall be pennltted In Columbia Town.
(Continllld 111 A-4)

delegation of Meigs County officials
present along with U. S. Rep.
Clarence E. Miller. Given particularly high praise for their efforts
(Continued on A-4)

DEDICATION - Gov. Jay
Rockefeller of Wesl Virginia was
main speaker at the dedication of
the new bridge crossing the Ohio
River between Meigs County aod
Ravenswood, W.Va. Rockefeller
praised WUllam S. Ritchie Jr. , former West Virginia Department of
Highways commissioner, for bls er:·
forts to get lhe bridge started 111 the
19'1118.

News briefs.

• •

Gallia EMS shutdown off--for now
GALUPOLIS - Previously announced layoffs of personnel,
scheduled for Saturday, and the projected shut-down of the Galli a
County Emergency Medical Service has been delayed, EMS officials
saidSsturday.
·
According to a spokesman for that county funded and operated service, the recent receipt of collections and donations now make it
possible for the system to function at least through to the end of
.November.
On Oct. 22, for the second time in less than a month, EMS Director
Jinunie Evans was given authorization to issue lay-off notices and
prepare for closure of the service.
That authorization came in the midst of a !lind-raising campaign,
which has now successfully generated sufficient funds to maintain
operation of the service.

Ohio coal should be washed
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Gov. James A. Rhodes says he is introducing
legislation that would require washing of all Ohio coal burned in the
state to produce electricity.
.
"Washing coal before it is burned will not only improve the quality
of emisslcns from our power plants, but will also enable electric utility
companies to meet air quality control standards using Ohio coal,"
Rhodes said Friday.
A govem·or's task force recommended last month that Ohio adopt a
coal-washing program.

Rhodes signs sales tax law
· COLUMBUS, Ohio ~ GoY. James A. Rhodes has signed into taw a
bill allowing Ohio's counties to levy s piggyback sales ta ~ of 1 percent
without a vote of the people.
Currently, the limit on the add-on to the state sales tax is on&lt;Hlalf of
I percent.
Rep. Barney Quilter, 0-Toledo, sponsoi-ed the permissive bill under
which votel'll relain the right to petition for repeal of the piggyback.
The new law, which Rhodes approved Friday, becomes effective
Jan. 29.
Rhodes also affixed his signature to a measure conforming Ohio's
unemployment compensation slatutes to recent changes in federal
law. It carried an emergency clause, and became effective immediately.
f or Swncloy

n.

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WU•INII Ill~ ! ((

NOAt. U I De ....

&lt;-•••" .

· WEATHER J1'0RECA8T- The NaU..I Weather Service lorecaat
far . . - , pr ,'Ia ralllla lbe Ncn Ill weal, New Enclaod alld In a larlt
all•k II I tr.D Olde Ia lbe
tbe Gall of Mexico. (AP Luer-

..._to

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l

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. ...

~

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·'
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
v

•

commentary and perspective

Sunday Times-SentineJ

administration absolutely dedicated visory Board. A notable provision of
to reducing the federal bureaucracy. the act will bind the grasping banda
The law drifts onto the statutory of Budget Director David Stockbeaches on waves of austerity. Not a man: No matter what, the budget
noD-&lt;!SSentlal dime! It was signed by and staff of the administration cana president who constantly reminda not be cut below 1979 levels. And so
us of his preference for the private on, snd so on, aiJd so on. So much for
sector as distinguished from the tourism_ So much for austerity.
public sector.
On October 21, by a vote of 231-184,
·wen. The act will abolish the old the House killed what was known as
U. S. Travel Service, whose function - the Shamansky Amendment to The
was to encourage foreign tourists to farm bill. The amendment, had It
come to our shores. In its place the passed, would have put an end to the
'law crealea a new U, S. Travel and program of tobacco acreage allotTourism Administration to do the ments and commodity loans that has
same thing. This ''administration," operated sincel933.
G&lt;Jd save the mark, will be he11,ded
In the House the debate ran on for
by an undersecretary of commerce. hours. The chamber rang with
The agency also will benefit from an pathos, bathos and bum statistics.
assistant secretary of commerce. As the orators dwelled upon the
We are to have a . nine-member pllght of 171,000 small family far63The National Tourism Policy Act, Tourism Policy Council and a II&gt;- ini-s -:- or 300,000 or 500,000 or
'yQu will observe, is the product of an member Travel and Tourism Ad- 700,000 small family farmer's, for the
number kept escalating - the floor
of the chamber was flooded with
tears. 1'Man the boats!" cried
Speaker O'Neill. Only a roil-call vote
at· 4:45 foreStalled a tragedy of
ghastly proportions.
·
The principal speakers in opposition to the Shamansky Amend825 Third Ave., GalUpolls, Ohio
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
ment, as you will have surmised,
( 814) «&amp;-Z342
(614) 992-2156
were the gentlemen from the tobacco-growing slalea of Dixie - from
ROBERTL. WINGETT
Virginia, Kentucky, Georgia snd the
Publisher
Carolinas. It is an interesting thing
about these gentlemen: Ahnost to a
HOBART WILSON JR.
PATWH!TEHFAD
man, they are fierce defenders of
Executive Editor
Assistant Publisher-ControUer
free enterprise, free competition
and deregulation. Emblazoned upon
AMEMBER of The A~tiotla~ Pres11, lnlllnd Dally Press Auot'ialtion and lbe Amerlcan
their conservative coat of arms is a ·
WASHII'\GTON - There is a little
bit of bad In the best of us, so the
saying goes, and a little bit of good in
the W0111t of us. In our town there is a
little bit of humbug in practically
everybody. Consider, if you will,
three recent events.
The first has to do with tourists,
the second with tobacco, the third
with milk. 'Ole fourth verse ends
with a rousing chorus of "Doo't do as
I do, but do as I say."
Back in January the Senate approved the National Tourism Policy
Act. In July the House added some
amendments . .The biU went to conference in September. A few weeks
ago it reached the White House, and
'on October 16, with Mr. Reagan's
signsture, it became Public Law 97-

NewMpapf!t Publlshenc AssocJaUoo.

lEITERS OF OPINION are welcomed. 'J'bey shou.l~ be let~ll tbuo 301 wonis long, AU
!etten an- subject I• editing and must be signed wUh name, addre1111 and· telephone
oomber. No um~lgned lettert,~ will be pubUsbed. Leltelllllhould be Ia good baste, addrn:lioc
b1111Ue1, DOl PtrtiOilaJitil!l.

Sense, cents and nonsense.

Ravenswood Bridge

motto for the ages: "Get the GUJJ&gt;mint Off Oor Backs!" But on the afternoon 'of October 21, that
venerable motto had been turned to
thewaU.
While all this was going on, over
on the Senate side the greatest
showboat economizer of them aU,
, William ProlDllire of Wisconsin, was
intennlnably holding the floor. Tbe
senator's chief claim to fame lies in

his monthly Golden Fleece Awards,
given to especially deplorable eumples of governmental extravagance.
But on this occasion, what was the
senator's purpose? Why, sir, his purpose was to defend that especially
deplorable extravagsnce by which
millions of tax dollars are spent to
buy surplus milk snd cheese from
the dairy farmers of Wisconsin.
AI this point perhaps I should turn

purple, clear the old tonsils aiJd
fulminate ugainst the hypocriay d
man, but '1!1 years In legilllaUve
galleries have run down my reservoirs of outrage. This II the way
lawmakers have been, are now, and
ever will be, roll calls without end,
amen. You keep hoping to see principle rise consistently above politics,
but -after a while , you don't hope
much.
·

'Wilt, oow D'YOJ ~IK£ illiS? '~M ~~~PENT OF H UN17EP ST~TEs, GREETINGS.'...

the esteem of a large majority of
voters whose support has not waned.
Rea~·· popularity can be attributed to his genius for avoiding
the big mistake and for projecting a
steady, competent, sincer~. at-easewith-power image. He has gi£!: too,
for reducing great issue. to simple
moral principles. .
This gave him the political armamentto keep tbe Senate at bay at least until the AWACS confrontation. True, an occasional
senator would protest Reagan's
favoritism for the rich or criticize
the staffing of the great departments
and regulatory commissions with
business puppets.
Or some senator might he moved
to decry Reagan's assault on the
federal budget, for hell has no fury
like a senator whose pet project has
been cut. Or a complaint might be
heard against Secretary of State
Alexander Haig, whose baronial
swagger sometimes offended the
barons oftheSenste.
But in the pre-AWACS era, the
president's get-togethers with
senators had all the conviviality of a
White House picnic. Tbe AWACS
issue was the skunk that ambled into
the lawn party.
Reagan tried to win senators to his

By LOWELL WINGE'IT
The Ravenswood Bridge is now open for traffic and I am delighted lor
the people of f!avenswood, W. Va. They have long wanted a dependable
means of crossing the Ohio River. They have worked lor years to bring it
about and are to be thanked and congratulated.
' ..
This is the second time in my lifetime that Meigs County has been drawn
clOser to the social, economic and calturallife of its West Virginia neighbors
by a bridge spanning the gap created by the river. Tbe Pomeroy-Mason
bridge was built in the 1920s and dedicated with great rejoicing by .both
Mason snd Meigs citizens. It has proven invaluable, as has been demonstrated the few times the bridge has been closed lor repairs.
Ravenswood has indeed reason for celebration. The new bridge opens
the entire rich region of eastern Meigs to its merchants. Meigs County
people employed at the Kaiser Aluminum plant have also reason to
celebrate. The new bridge wiU lop off hundreds of hours and miles per year
in their trips to and from their jobs. But, sadly enough, I can't see any longterm benefit for other sections of the county. Meigs County has let opportunity pass by.
'
The Pomeroy-Mason bridge was the brainchild of the late Walter Compton, businessman and commissioner, snd W. F. Reed, banker. Tbey envision.~dRoute 33 as becoming a main artery \)£ trav~J,.__b~)Vj!en ibeliorth
and South. They traveled up and down Route 33 elilfSting support of business
and Civic groups along the way. The result was the first bridge to link Meigs
County with its West Virginia neighbor.
· When the Interstate 77 was planned to pass about five miles east of
Ravenswood, officials there started a move toward acquiring a bridge for
their town. The overall plan was to have a tributary highway linking Interstate 77 with Route 33 to Columbus. This would provide the most direct route
between the two Capitol cities. About 15 years ago a Racine group beaded by
Frank Cleland, Racine Postmaster, joined with the Ravenswood citizens to
promote the project. The bridge and about 17 miles of new highway were
needed to connect Route 33 at Rock Springs with Interstate 77. Officials,
business groups and civic organizations from every city and town between
Columbus and Charleston were coniacted and their response was enthusiastic. The highway departments of both slates pledged the funding.
Just when the entire project seemed just montha away, the Silver Bridge at
Pt. Pleasant collapsed. With it collapsed the inunediste plans for the bridge
and linking highway.
.
In the years that followed, Ohio interest in the project waned. AdAs you may have noticed, the
sketches. What do you think?"
. ministrations changed and so did the interest in any highway improvements dress designers are putting their
"It'sdivine, master. n
for Meigs County. But Ravenswood and West Virginia still kept the project name on every prnduct from pillow"I've filled the bust of the
alive. Former Gov. Arch Moore, Jr. aod Gov. Jay Rockefeller became in- cases to automobiles. So I shouldn't chOcolate with raisins, brought in
terested and the new bridge is the result. Tbey have built a modern highway have been surprised to see that Bill the waist with vanilla cream, and
from Interstate 77 to the bridge. The only unlulfUied part of the original plan Blass, one of America's leading
put butter crunch on both hips."
was caused by the failure of the present administration to honor the pledge couturiers was now designing
"QueUe inspiraUon! Christian
of their predecessors and build approltimately 12 miles of access highway chocolates.
Dior in his greatest days would have
linking Route 33 at Rock Springs with the new bridge.
The copy in the· ad read, "BUI · neverthougbt.of it."
The dream of Banker Reed and Commissioner Compton for Route 33 did Blass, renowned for brilllant Jn.
"Now look at this sketch. I can this
not become a reality because of the Great Depression. Route 33 in West terpretationa of American fashiqa,
'Evening In Vienna.'"
Virginia still follows ihe same course it did 50 years ago, improved in spots . has teamed with the true arlatocrat
but still basically the same. The Depression, followed by World War II, of chocolate, Godiva, to create a
"It's so gorgeous it makes yoiJr
created so great a change that flll'lhOr improvement of Route 33 was neglec- unique confectionery collection."
mouth water."
ted and finally forgotten altogether. However, the bridge remains as a
!low does a fashion designer
"Do you know what makea it difrealistic monument to the vision of two of Meigs County's outstanding creste a collection of chocolates? ferent fmn any chocolate you've
Maybe lllce this:
leaders.
'seen?"
Just aa Route 33 in West Virginia has been abandoned as a North-South
"WIM!re Ia the master?"
"Tell me, master."
highway artery, so wiU the tong and tortuoll8 road from the Ravenswood
"Hush, he Ia In his ateUer worldng
"I've put the null on the outside
bridge to Rock Springs be neglected in a few years. Melga County has been a on new bonbons for Mother's Day."
lite sequlna, ao that you can see - part of Ohio 182 years during which Meigs has contribated taxes to the
"Renee, come in here right them = y o ubite into the bonstate's coffers and has received little in return. With two exceptions, the away."
bon. Moe!
rs hide their null
Route 7 by-pass and Route 33 to D8rwin, Meigs County roada still follow the
''Yea, master.''
inaide the
te and you don_'t
same cow-patha and line fences they did when I was a boy.
"I belleve I've got it. L!l!lk at these know they're there. But If you put ,
. Imagine for a moment that you are a totirtst traveling from the South to
Colwn~ on one of the country's newest super-highways, Interstate 77. You
have been driving 56 MPH or more and have become accuatomed ~ that
speed. Then you crca the Ravenswood bridge and find yourself on a twolane road with curves which are dangerous at speeds half the lqalllmlt. 'i'be
result could wen be CClltiJIIele dlaaater. I would suggest the Melp County
emergency, ~quada equip themlelves with shovels to clean the debris fmn
the highway. Small wonder thallllOIIIravelers will cbole the lqer, but
safer, route to Pm'ilenburg and Route 110 to Au-.
'
Merebanll of Pwwi 01 and Middleport will loee !rade from the euten1
pert of the county. Ilia only 111tural for the folb in that aecllon to pmudze
the ,_... IIIAinl. Tbe only way that the new bridge will cmlrlbute to lbe
ecc~IOIIIie grwtb d. !he county II to attract enough truck and tour11t tnfflc
to offllllbe 1-- '111at will never be pallllble with the
nJada the only
accea to the brlclp.
.
Now It's up to kicalleaden whether the Ravenswood brldce proftlla
plus or a minul f~ .W,. County.
..·

a

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side by alternately back-slapping located, aU right, in Saudi Arabia.
and · arm-twisting. This was ae- Even as Buckley was leatifying to
cepted as the customary ordeal that the contrary, the Associated Press
senators have come to expect before carried an interview with Amin. Not
a crucial vote. But the president also only was the interview held In Saudi
conducted a "dislnformation'' cam- Arabia, but Amin said he was collecpaign that has left many senators 1·ling "a handsome monthly. sum"
smoldering.
from the Saudis.
The dissemination of "half-truths
But this is not what the State
and mistruths" has been chronicled Department's top specialist on Saudi
into an angry memo intended for key Arabia, David Long, had adviseil.
Senate Foreign Relations Com- He warned in an unpublished paper
mittee members. The memo, that ''Saudi participation in any subreviewed by my associate Lucette sequent conflict would be virtually a
LSgnado, charges that the com- necessity for both domestic and panmittee got "less than full stories" Arab poiitieal reasons."
from administration officias during
- The 8SII88Sination of Egypt's
the AWACS dispute. Here are a few President Anwar Sadat raiaed
specifics:
senatorial concern that MOSlem
- Sonie senators were disiurbed militants might also attempt a coup ·
over reports that Saudi Arabia had in Saudi Arabia. · "Military officers
granted refuge to Uganda's detested from time to time are reported to
dictator and mass IJ!Urderer, Idi have been involved .in plots against
Amin. Under Secretary of State the government," the men\oasaerts.
James Buckley was dispatched to Y~t the senators bad trouble getting
Capitol Hill to disarm the senators. reliable information on the stability
He solemnly avowed that Amin's of the Saudi regime.
whereabouts could not be conThe AWACS experience
finned .
illustrates, concludes the memo,
Yet other Slate Department of- "why we are skeptical about the
ficials, with less binding political assertions that we muat ·blindly fall
ties 'to the Reagan administraiton, in tine and ratify and accept
confided to the committee staff that whatever Executive Branch of-·
the abominable Amin bad been ficials say."

Designing ·chocolatea:s=====A=rt=B=uc=hwa=ld·

,.'•
'

the nuts, lllce so, it not only adds
"Wait, there's more. Look at this
luster to the outside, but it says, 'I'm one."
yours.'"
"A seashell chocolate7"
''I can't wait to see it ina bol:."
•'That's what it loob lite. Buf
"Now this is my daytime when you strip off the chocolate,
chocolate that you csn eat at a lunch there Ia a tiny white saltwater taffy
or a fancy tea."
ball inside. EHzabeth Taylor will go
"It's so simple and yet so chk"
nuts over this one.''
"I've put a tiny dash of Grand
Marnier in it so it will make you feel
"Now for my second layer, I have
naughty." ·
·. my big surprise. In the very center
"oh,master,onlyyou·wouldthink of the box I'm placing a coffee: :
·of putting a liqueur in a plain cream-filled star with a red chel'l'Y. ·
chocolatebonbon."
'
onthebiaa."
·.
"Now ,over here In the upper left"Mon cUeu. No wonder they call
hand corner of the box I've d~ you the greatest bonbon designer in .
a caramel. Built's not an ordinary the world."
,
caramel. One layer is brown, one
"I've saved the best for last."
layer Ia pink and one layer ts pepper"A perfect chocolate SfliUTOW'a ·
mint."
egg?"
·
:
. "The candy critics wUl go crazy
"Tell me, master. I can't stand the _
when they see it. Even Yves st. suspense."
laurent never put brown, pink and
"A jellybean."
peppennlnt in the same caramel."
"I think I'm going to faint."

.r

{

*

State Issue 2

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- It is
bureaucracy. P881ageofStalellsue
I will eJlCOIIrlllle eunpetiUon for .called State Iuue 2 and, If IIJIIK:ov'ed,
price and service as it Ia In 44 other It would make sweeping changes in
statea," aaldFrank I.Aehnert Jr., an lhe 'way the lines are drawn al-ound -·
Issuelsupporter.
Ohio's state leglalative and U.S. .
"Tbe insurance companies would House districts. .
lake only tiie ufer occupations,
Backers claim the prvposai, which
which would provide them with the wiil be on the Nov. S ballot, would
most profit. Tbe state fund would create a system for drawing thoee
have to insure the rest," said Tom lines that wollld eliminate political
Johnaon, president Of the Ohio manipulation - gerrymandering Manufacturers A88Gciation.
of dlstricta.
Tbe struggle Ia gusranteed to be
Opponents say It would do no such
the moot cootly election contest ever thing. Rather, they claim the new
in Ohio. Nearly $5 million alreadY syStem would create as many
has been raised.
problems as it would solve and give
SupPOrters of IIISue i, under the the governor extraordinary powers.
banner of the Ohio Committee for
," If voters pus State !saue 2, they
Free Enterprise · Competition, said will take the political funny business
in a pre-election finsnce statement · out of the process of drawing
tbey had recelv&lt;!d $4,302,9811 in con- legislative dlstricta for OlD' representribUtlonsbyOct.l4.
tatives to the Ohio General Aaaem¥uch of it came from some of the bly and the United States Conlireas,"
bigjlest llllllll!ll in the insurance said Sen. Paul GUmore, R-Port Clinbusiness: Fireman's Fund In- ton,inarecentnewspaperartlcle.
surance Cos., of San Francisco;
In an · Ofll9lng article, House
ford,
Travelers
Conn.;lnaurance
United States
Group,Fidelity
Hartand Guaranty Co., Baltimore, Md;
Aetns Ufe x C&amp;IIBity, Cleveland;
Insurance Company of North
· America Inc., Cincinnati.
Opponents, ·known as Ohioans to
Halt Inflation from Out-of.Siate,
reported contributions of fll88,299.
Almost half came from the millionmember Ohio AFL-CIO. other big
contribators included the Ohio State
United Auto Workers CAP CouncU
and the Employers Servtce A~
tuaries Association.
The costs could go higher.

Speaker
Boston, Vernal
said: G.
"In
RiffereaUno,
Jr., !).New
the
propoeal would make the process
more political by giving unchecked
pollticalpowertothegovernor."
Issue ZII Ia being promoted by the
Fair and Impartial Redistricting
(FAIR) committee, a largely
Republican group that has spent
about.$886,000 to pay people to cir: culate Its petitions and ~o buy advertising. According to campaign
spen~ reports, the bi~,est FAIR
contributors have been major corporations.
Tbe opposition comes mainly from

Berry's World

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"If Sollctsrlty goes on sttlke sgs/n, we ought to
haves few one-liners. ready for them:"

fl~be;:;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~---·······-~

Q IQ161%\6 11t:Rl]l\CI

CHES!llRE - Failure of a three- and the poasibility of near-closure. Magnone added, although it's still
tenths of a mill operating levy in Several personnel layoffs and redue- lobbying to get additional funding
BY Pf-1\LTZGRAFF '
Tuesday's election could lead to the lion of workshop services, along back into the budget.
closing of the Guiding Hand School with several other recomShould the school close, the
for the mentally retarded.
mendationa, were put Into effect by students will be absorbed into the
This was the message which · the 169 board last July to help the county's two school districts.
greeted a group of state . and local facility through the year.
However, the toss of tax revenue ·
mental retardation officials when
Dr.RudyMagnone,directorofthe from the James M. Gavin
they gathered at the school Friday Ohio Department of Mental Retar- generating will hurt the districts as
for a press conference.
dation, said local retardation boards Well as Guiding Hand.
As one of the three levies lacing · are responsible for up to 75 percent
Dr. Robert Zimmerman,
Gallia County voters on the ballot of the cost of operating its looal Gallipolis Developmental Center
this week, the Guiding Hand levy, if programs. OOMR provides an an- superintendent, agreed with
passed, will raise revenue to keep nualsulisidy to the local boards.
Magnone that GDC clients being
the school and the Gallco Sheltered
Magnone said the subsidy was in- trained at Guiding Hand wouldn't
Workshop, both located in the old creased ill Gov. James A. Rhodes' get the same educational . opBishop Fenwick Catholic High budget lor the next two yean, but 1portunities at GDC if the school and
School building here since 1973, in, wascutbytheSenatewhenltpassed workshopcJosed.
operation.
the budget last week.
"We li8ve 2Z clients in the
Rt. 35 &amp; 160 West
· This wUI 1M! the third time in a
"Very clearly; it's a local workshop, ao obviously they would
Gallipolis, Ohio
year the school, operated by the , problem," the director said. "We're have to come back (to GDC)," ZirnGallia County 169 Board of Mental attempting to get the subsidies in- merman said. "I don' t know how we
Retardation, has sought passage of creased to be on a par with the sub- could handle It - we're pushed to
the levy to keep the school going. sidles given to public schools for the limit on our programs as it is."
t - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·
This time around, Supt. , Loren education of their mentally retarded
Magnone was sCheduled to go .to
Phelps said the effort has been more students."
GDC later Friday to talk to staff on
low-key thsn before.
There is little else ODMR can do, merits of supporting the levy.
"We've been to every service· riFa:iiiiiaiiiiia:i:i:i:i:iaiiiiimiiaaiiiiim:i:i:i:iBBiiiii~i1
organization that will have us, so we
don't want to wear out our
welcome," he said. "We want the
voters to know we need them CANDIDATE FOR
that's !he tone of the campaign."
•
The school presently serves 35
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
students and 49 clients in the
workshop. The workshop operates
under contracts from local industry,
including Robbins snd Myers and
Federal Mogul.
In the year since the first defeat of
YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
the levy, the school has been
Pd . Pol. Ad . by Cand. 1
working under financial uncertsinty

Start
anew
Chrisbnas

heritage.

FRUTH PHARMACY

GARY F. HYSELL

TRUS.TEE

.

.,

SHOPPING
GALliPOLIS

Ohio Valley Bank, where.you can and
should expect more, introduces t(le

'

'

1TO 89 DAW MATURITY

DAILY INTEREST RATE
'

it•s all here
FRIENDLY SERVICE
•

SELECTION

•

NO WITHDRAWAL PENALTY
.'3,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
A coniU- r'8lliJfllhue agreement thai does
not racPre you to get loc:k8d Into a long&gt;-term
lme1l111ent. 'ltlu chooll fl1e term- from one to
89 dlys; you chacll the !mOUnt- from as 1it11e
as $3,000 to u much as $88,9991

--THI RISULT1--

--THIS IS I T I - Oh&lt;&gt; VBiay Banks Daly lnwstrnent Acc:oYnt as
an a~ernatlvl to Money Marl&lt;et rurds Is
par1ieularly attriiCtivl fOr the I!Tialinvootor wro
cannot or doel rot want to tie his moni'Y up In a
fixed rate tor lix months, two and one-haW years,
fooJr year~ or longer. •
!'Dr liiONinfllrniMion, • • or villi an, Ohio

......, lank oflloe.

FOR DAILY RATE

PIICMI

446..0631
.. Allfllo'ttl~l;fl ..q r , _ l ·~ 1'101
lnt&lt;d~,....,c,,...,~,.,.,

·Merchants
I
"'

••
..

I

the Ohio Democratic Party,
orpnized labor and others, which as
of 0c1: 14 reported speniUng less
lhan$1,000.
UndertheOhloConstltutiontoday,
a five-member.State Apportionment
Board has the responsibility for
reapportlonin&amp; the state legislative
dlstricta. Democrats control the
board by a 3.2 margin.
Tbe Ohio General Assembly, with
the concurrence of the governor,
redistricts congressional seats.
Democrats currently control the
House, while Republicans control
the Senate.
Issue 2 would create a new fivemember commission with two
Republican members, two
Democrats and a fifth chosen by the
other four.
II says the governor would lie
required to first divide the big cities
- actually census population tracts
of more than 5,000 people - into
"boil&lt;liJ:og blocks" that would have to

On!•"''

"rlllJIOiol ..,....., "' ""' • ...,~,
ln .. o._t ''" An ,...."!'Mn! •~··,..Jr,y \J~·'""

, Slllt\ Gro.n • ~.,..,. Dl)liQ~hnr•• ~..,. 1 ..a it turlll ql -1""'"'

'"'

Page-A-3

-

QUALITY

..--m

r

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - From
the opening bell a year ugo, the fight
over Issue I on Ohio's Nov. 3 ballot
has been a costly donnybrook for
very high slakes.
On one side is a coalition of the
nation's insurance industry giants.
They want· the authority to sell
workers' compensation coverage to
Ohio employers.
Defending the non-profit, staterun system are the companies -which
pay the bill and the labor unions
whose members benefit from it if injured.
Simply stated, .Issue I is a
proposed constitutional amendment
which would require !lie Ohio
General Assembly to pass taws
allowing private insurance companies to sell workers' compensation coverage.
Employers paid about $600 million
in premiums to the state fund in
1980, while about $500 million in
benefits were paid out. Total assets
of the fund were $3.1 billion.
Except for large companies that
self insure for job-related injuries,
the 70-year-old, state syslem has a
monopoly on workers' compensation. Forty-four statea allow
private insurei-s to compete.
Backers of Issue I say private
competition would make the entire
system more efficient. Opponents
say costs would rise, injured
workers would not get as gOod a deal
and the slate would be stuck
covering high-risk jobs ignored by
the private insurers.
"We need to get the system .out of
the hands of a government

Levy failure means GH closing

!!

AWACS 'disinformation' costs
Reagan .points with Senateu==Ja=ck=A=nde=r.='So=n
WASHINGTON - The ' relationship between Ronald Reagsn and
the United States Senate started off
in the clouds but lost altitude rapidly
after he began pressuring senators
to approve the sale of AWACS radar
planes to Saudi Arabia.
In the beginning, the Senate's
reigning Republicans saw in the
folksy, relaxed Reagan a president
of simplistic but assuredly conservative ideology and a vehicle for
their own political agenda.
They expec,ted him to .be an
executive, unschooled in federal
matiers, of narrow intellectual
horizons, of advanced age and
reduced vigor, wbo would turn the
daily operation of his presidency
over to Republican pros.
They underestimated him. If he
spends less time on the bridge than
past presidents, he nevertheless
keeps a finn band on the helm.
Reagan has steered the ship of state
straight Into the winds of controversy, holding to a relentless
Cl)urse, undaunted by the political
hazards.
Neither economic pressures nor
political tides have deterred him. He
just keeps sculling through the
squalls, unscathed by budget backfires and rnil!i-scandals, secure in

State ·lssue I ·

Page-A-2 .

74;--

.

AP news an.alysis

NOY- I, 1981

And a little humbug!=====~=·========Ja=m=es=}.;;;;;;;K=ilpa=trt=·c=k

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

�Page-A-4 The Sundav .Times· Sentinel

"'"'

Ravenswood·Bridge
(Continued from page AI )
in behalf of the long drive to get the
bridge were E. A. Wingett of Racine,
who first initialed an aU-out drive
while he was a teacher at Ravenswood High School in the early 1960s,
former Ravenswood Mayor Paul
Moore and Frank Cleland of Racine,
who chaired the Southern Development Corp., a non-profit group.
Paul E. QuaUs, Jr., bridge
dedication conunittee chairman for
the Ravenswood Chamber of Commerce, introduced the long list of
dignitaries present following the invocation and presentation of the
colors. The Meigs High and Ravenswood High School bands played
several selections prior to the start
of the ceremony and a group of
second grade students from Ravenswood, headed by -teacher Mary Dill·
.man, sang a series of songs.

Nov. 1, 1981

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

A celebration at the Ravenswood
Community Park followed the rilr
bon-cutting ceremony. The
festivities include singing groups,
dancers, talks by Wingett and
Moore, and free hot dogs and soft
di-inks. The celebration went on into
the late afternoon.
The toll-free bridge was opened to
traffic at 12:30 p.m., an hour and a
half after the opening ceremonies
were started.
The William S. Ritchie Jr. Bridge
was built under four contracts in
1977-81. The first contract was awar·
ded toW. P. Dickerson &amp; Sons, Inc.
which hegan work on May 16, 1977,
on three bridge piers. Brjstol Steel
and Iron Works; Inc. was awarded
the final contract for more than $13
million and initiated work on the
·superstructure in Sept.mher of 1979.

Three arrested

(Continued from page AI)

In Gallia.••

Nov. 1, 1981

(Continued from page AI )

appeared to be stable wttil he wor- grand jury after a two-day session
sened and died Aug. 16.
last week with negligent homicide,' by Richard MacKenzie in January, viUage council seats in Centerville,
The incident sparked an intensive tampering with evidence and having but a member will have to be ap- Cheshire and Crown City, and one
investigation which involved an a weapon while under disability.
pointed In his place. E.V. Clarke Jr., candidate apiece Is running for the
autopsy from the West Vir!linia
Mitchum was charged separalely who flied for the race in May,le£:1 the Rio GrBnde and VInton councils.
medical examiner's office in South with aiding and abetting Downing in area in the swruner after getting a
Gallia voters will also 'vote on a
Charleston, processing of evidence the three above charges. .
, job transfer. No other candidates · total of 52 candidates for trustees in
by the Bureau of Criminal In·
The spokesman said the depart- filedforthersce.
J5townshlps.
vestigation in London, Ohio, and a men! bad "caught a lot of hell"
Four candidates each are seeking
search of the Ohio River near
the investigation
becauile
didn't make
details known
at once.it r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Kanauga for the weapon used ui lhe . during
This was because disclosure could
incident.
A department spokesman said the have jeopardized 1he investigation,
he said.
gwt was eventually traced to the
Also named as one of the Indicted
Columbus area, where it was sold to
an individual. The individual was Larry K. Radclllf, 23, Rio Granreceived notification the gun was de, who was charged by the grand
wanted in connection with the ln· . jury with felonious assault in convestigation, a break the in- nection with a May Incident in Rio
vestigators were "very lucky" to Grande.
Radcliff is alleged to have
get, according to the spokesman.
The trail eventually led to severely beaten Robin Sloan, Rio
Downing and l'llitchum. The Grande, according to the departspokesman said Mitchum was the ment. He is presently in the Jackson
bowling alley manager and Downing County jail.
worked in cleariing and main- r~===:;;;:;;;::::::::;~
tenance.
The spokesman said Mitchum was
VOTE FOR
taken into custody by Franklin
Ea~
County authorities Friday tiight, and
is being held on Gallia County's
request.
'
Rio Grande village Counc~l
Downing was charged by the
Pd. tor by c;and.

Enuna graduated in 11134 from the
Henry Ford School of Nursing in
held a highly successful observance Michigan and until recenUy spent
of National Hwtting and Fishing Day her life in her profession. She
worked locally at Meigs General
recenUy.
Hospital for 20 years and at
The chapter exVeterans Memorial for-12 years.
tends thanks to
By the way, Enuna, and her
the Meigs County
brotner and sister, John and Mary
Fish and Game
Easterday, both of Racine also, at. Aaan., the Big
tended the International Easterday
· Bend Bass Club, .
Family
Reunion held this year at
Pratt ' s Meat
.
Frederick,
Md.
Processing, Route
Have
a
good
rest and a pleasant
BOB
· 5,
Athens;
Emma.
You've earned
retirement,
Seaman's Market, Athens; He~
it!
Bahr, R. C. Colli, White Distributing
· Co., Ronnie Smith, Holsum Bread,
And speaking of retirement.
: the Racine Gun Club and the Gold
The Nov. 28 presentation ofthe Big
Ridge Gun Club for money and
prizes which added to the success of Bend Musical Association's musical
wiU Jl)8rk my final role as director of
the day for the young participants.
the group .. After 28 years, it's high
Florence Clark Tedder, formerly time that I hang It up.
Meantime, the fall musical is getof Middleport, now a resident of
ting
off the ground with rehearsals
Kerrville, Tex., is back home
having
been held over Uie past
visiting relatives and friends. ·
couple
of
weeks. I hope you can see Will elect officers
It's Florence's first trip back in a .
your
way
clear to sit through one
long time and she's retired now so.
more
time.
This fall's show will have
MIDDIEPORT-Qfficers will be fj~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!iii!!~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
. doesn't have to rush hack home.
association
members who go way elected at a regular meeting of MidShe's having a ball renewing old
hack over the years with Joe Struble dleport Lodge 3113, Free and Acacquaintances.
again
to handle the emcee work.
cepted Masons, to be held at 7:30
A registered · nurse, Florence
Joe
- in contrast to his many · p.m. Tuesday.
worked at a hospital in Marion, Ind.,
many years before having a back in- previous appearances - will sing in
-'
jury which required surgery at the this musical and will bring on some r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
25
women
who
wiU
be
represen,
Mayo Clinic and led to ber early
·~-c-----~·
tatives of the dancing chorus lines
The G'reat
retirement.
MA~:!Florence is primarily with her from the time tbe association's
shows
started.
It
should
be
an
insister, Jean Null in Middleport, bill
also visits her brothers, Harry of teresting presentation.
In Today's Newspaper
Among others from way back who
Minersv!Ue, and Walter of Point
Entertains Nightly
Pleasant. Florence and Jean hope to will be on band will be Alice Nease,
Banjoist
BiU
Clark,
Gerald
Powell,
PLUS
get to Michigan a little later to visit a
Ramora
Boice
Young,
Bill
Young,
The
Original
couple more sisters, Ethel, a
Curly
Wiles
and
Sandy
Luckeydoo
as
registered nurse also, and Kathryn.
Meantime, it's a delight to have well as those , !rom more recent
years, Jim and Susie Soulsby, Susie
Florence hack in the community.
Abbott, Bob and Debbi Buck,
Friday &amp; Saturday
Carolyn
Graves Thomas, Sharon
Emma Adams, Racine, a long·
we are sorry lor any inconve·
time registered nurse known by Hawley, Linda Mayer, and others.
Sponsoring the final presentation
nience this · m·a y cause
m•nv. manv oatients at local
customers .
hospitals over the years, has retired. is'the Meigs Athletic Boosters.
Adults Over 21 Oolv
The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the
Izaak Walton League of America

G. (Mickey)
MORGAN

Murphq'~

Meigs voters to select officials
POMEROY - Meiga County
voters will select village officials,
school board representatives and
their township trustees when lhey go
to the polis in Tuesday's general
election.
Racine and Syracuse Villages are
loaded with candidates seeking election to village councils in their com·

Columbia - Gordon Perry,
William L. Sto~t. Carrol D. Wood·
gerd.
Lebanon - Denver 0 . Curtis,
Eugene G. Long, Cecil Wayne
Roseberry, Morris E. Teaford.
Letart - Don R. Hill, Thomas E.
Manuel, Herschel D. Norris, Waller
Herbert Roush, Wayne S. Wilson,
Lois M. Wolfe.
Olive - . Bernard L. Bennett, Clif·
ford Longenette, Robert L. Reed,
Everett L. Schultz, Lawrence W.
Swain.
Orange - Uoyd F. Brooks, Lester
M. Hawk, RobertS. Marcinko, Faye
P. Watson, Norman 0 . Weber, Dale
W. Welsh.
Rutland- Charles D. Barrett, Jr. ,
Robert G. Swick, Charles E.
Williamson.
Salem - Harley Grate, Terry L.
McGuire, Cecil L. Stacy, William L.
Thornton.
Salisbury - Guy V. Bush, Leroy
N. Eichinger, Gary . F. Hysell,
Donald L. Moore, Larry R. Thomas.
Scipio - Raymond R. Cotterill,
Eardld Dean, Danny B. Howard,
Eugene Phillips.
. Sutton - James Carnahan, Jimmy Joe Hemsley, Dennie Edison
Hili, Larry Hubbard, Otis F. Knopp,

JamesE.Ritchie.
· In the Eastern Local School
District, the number of candidates
match lhe number of seats to be
filled on the brulrd of education this
year. The two candidates are
William L. Buckley and Dorsel E.
l.lrkins. There are three candiddates for the Meigs County Board
of Education with three seats to be
filled. They are Robert B. Burdette,
Harold Lohse and George Perry, ali
incumbents.
However, ihe Meigs Local School
District has numerous candidates.
Six persons are seeking the two full
term seats to he filled on the hoard
this year. They are Robect E. Barton, incumbent; Ellen Bell, Roger
Manning Davidson, Robert R. Fox,
C. Arlimd King, Paul F. Thomas.
There are two candidates for an
wtexpired term to he filled on the
Meigs Local Board. They are Robert
E. Freed and Roher! F. Snowden, incumbent.
In the Southern Local District,
.there are five candidates for .three
fullterm seats to be filled this year.
They are Gary Dennis Evans, incumbent; Janet Sue Grueser, incumbent; Roger B. Hill, Barry W.
McCoy and Nancy L. Neutzling.

munities. Both villages have eight
candidates with four to be elected in
each town.
Syracuse council candidates are
Michael E. Ash, Kenneth H. Cundiff,
Malcolm E. Guinther, William E.
Guinther, Carl L. Hubbard, Edna
Marie Lavender, Frederick W.
Sisson and John T. Williams. Gordon
Winebrenner is unopposed for a seat
on the hoard of public affairs and
George E. Holman is unopposed for
election as Syracuse Villa~e
treasurer.
The eight candidates seeking election to Racine Village Council are
Robert E. Beegle, Earl E. Cleland,
Dale E. Hart, David L. Huddleston,
Cressa M. Shain, Carroll L. Teaford,
Charles C. Williams and SCott Wolfe.·
Charles L. Shain is unopposed for a
seat on the bruird of public affairs.
Rutland Village ha~ a shortage of
candidates with only lhree filing for
the four seats on council to be filled
this year. They are Richard L. Fet- /r~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
ty, Stephen E. Jenkins and James L.
Spangler. There is no candidate for
one seat on the Rutland Board of
Public Affairs.
In Middleport, five residents are
seeking the four seats on village
counciL They are Robert N.
Gilmore, R.; Dewey Horton, R.;
Marvin Kelly. R.; Alien L. King,ln- ·
dependent, and Jack Satterfield,
Democrat. In Pomeroy Village,
1 there are four candidates, all in·
cumbents, running for the four seats
to be filled on counciL They are John
•• A. Anderson, Betty A. Baronick and
William A. Young, ali Republicans,
. and Larry Wehrung, Democrat.
;. · Dale A. Smith is the only candidate
~ for two seats on the Pomeroy Board
' 'of Public Affairs.

'

There are races for township

1982 Models 11ave
Arrived•• • •

PUTA FOX

IN HIS SOX.

• FRI.-SUN.
LAST WEEKEND
OF THE SEASON

The SUperFox VIxen
super-heterodyne

OIL OF OLAY·

HALLMARKS

It's the choice of the pros - no other
radar detector performs so brilliantlY.
It delivers tiP to ten times the range
and sensitivity of ordinary passive
radar detectors. And with its built-in, .
high concentration focusing lens. it
won't pick up false signals. But if you
don't believe us, at least listen to santa
- "On Prancer. on Vixen!"

French Quarter

r~~~~~~$~~~g~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~

Stolen car found

OOPS! Ainvery
The supportive
Sentinel several
letter
POMEROY ··Meigs
sheriff appearing
ago boosting. passage of the .4 ·
deputies report a 1969 auio owned by days
of one mill tuberculosis levy in
Charles Baker, Coshocton, and Meigs County at Tuesday's election
stolen Monday evening in Tuppers ·appeared without 8 siLinature
. . That
Plains has been recovered. The letter was written byo well-known
vehicle was found parked on a street Meigs Local School District teacher,
in Parkersburg Thursday.
Bob Mattox, Route 3, Albany, tur- Jeannette
course, a renewal
of aThe
present
Thomas.
levytax.
is, of
ned in a report that after 11 p.m.
Friday individuals threw paint
Now do get out and vote Tuesday.
against his ·house on Route 143 in And when your candidate doesn't
Columbia Township. The incident is win, remember that's the time you
gotta keep smiling ...
being investigated.
Michael Trent, Route 2, Racine, r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
turned in a report that at I a.m. Fir·
i,ldaYhe fell asleep while driving west
junb•v t:imn • lfndin&lt;l
on State Route 124 near Racine. His
USPS52!).800
vehicle went off the road and struck
1\ MultimediB Newspapt!r
a utility pole. There were no injuries
Publi:ilied each Sunday, 825 Third
Aven\M!, by the Ohio Valley Publishing
but there were extensive damages to
Company- Multimedia, Inc. Second class
the car.
P')lrtH.IIc paid at Gallipoli s, Ohio, 4:i6!ll.

BOB'S
Upper Rt. 7

F.nl.t..orL&gt;d as !le('()ftd class maillng matter
at Pomeroy , Ohio, Post Office.

Soup dinner set

Mr mber ~

RACINE-The Auxiliary of the
Racine Fire Department will hold a
soup dinner and supper on election
day with, serving to start at 11 a.m.
and run through the day. There will
be chili. vegetable soup, bean soup,
hot dogs, sloppy joes, pizza, sandwiches, and beverages available.

The Associated Press, Inland
Du!lv PrL'SS Association and the
,a.m~ rican Nt&gt;wspaper Publishers

1\ss!leiat io n. National

Mv ertit~i !)g

RepresenUitive, Branham, 17117 West

Nine - Mile Rood, Suite 21H, Detroit,
Mich i~an ,

48075.

SUBSCRIPTION RAT~

One year .

Microwave oven

Kenmore® who~-meal model
with 3-stage memory, programmed defrosting and
delay cook.

)

'3614.!.

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SUPPORT OUR LEVY
.

.

NOVEMBER 3, 1981
PAID FOR BY

CHESTER PTO -~ RIV~RVIEW PTO
tUPPERS PLAINS BOOST£RS

. . . . . . . . . . .. $52.1Jl

SINGLE COPY

35 Cents

GALLIPOUS - The following
people filed for marriage licenses
this past week in GaUia County
· Probate Court.
Donald R. Wright Jr., 25,
Gallipolis, printer, and Brenda L.
Nibert, 19, Gallipolis, waitress.
John M. Carroll, 20, Gallipolis,
mechanic, and Karla R. Paulsen, 21,
Gallipolis, account clerk.
Darrell Green, 25, Crown City, .
Ohio Bell contractor, and Laurie A.
Wisecarver. 21, Crown City, at
home.

REMEMBER OUR.STUDENTS OF
EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

One week . . . .... ...... . ..... . . $1.00

No subscriptions by mail pennitted in

a..rge-c:a,...clty
washer

CUT $130

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.

OneMonLh , ...... .. .......... . . SUO

Marriage licenses

20741

CUT$100

refrlgeretor-freeaer

To fulfill future drilling programs write or call and be sure to include
property location and acreage that is availa~le fo.r l~ase . Also those
that have oil and gas leases that are due to exp•re W1fh1n one year.

By Currier or Mutur Ruu~

PRICE

26 c

46C

URGENTLY NEEOED OIL AND GAS LEASES

t~~P~-~0~.B~o~x~7~4~~~~P~H~-~6~14~-5~3~2-~0~10~1;;;;;;~1~ro;n~to;n;,;O;hi;o;4;56;38~~

Gallipolis

Across from the Silver Bridge Plaza

19.0-cu. rt.

CIRCULAR

GEORGE HALL

radar detector

trustees in ali 12 townships. Two
trustees will be named in each !ownship and the candidates are:
Bedford - David M. Brickles,
Leta Goodwin Hall, Robert G.
Pickett, Norman Wood.
Chester - Gary R. Dill, Thomas
0. McKay, Jr., Ralph W. Ours,
Raymond C. Teaford.

towns whcrc home ca rrier service is
avalla bl ~.

The Sunday Times-&amp; ntine\ wiU not be
resporu~ible

to carriers.

for advam.·c payments made

MAILSUMCRJPTIONS

Good looks.
You got yours from him,
so return the compliment.

Seiko Quartz

Swulay Only .... , ............ _. $2G.OO
Dally 11nd Suoday

•
Ollio 11lld We1t Vlr11:1nla
One year ............ . . .' ....... $33.00
Six month .............. . .. .... $17.50
Thrt.'t month.~ .................. $10.50

L.AYAWAl NOW

RMleiiOuUideOhiu
aDd Wnt Vlrglaill
One year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $JII.OO
•

Six: montM .. . .........•.... : .. $20.00
Three month.'i . . . . .
. , . $11.00

1
· 47 TB 1{2lS

Cut $50 23.0 cu. ft.

'495~.

'

.

•·

CIJT $50 Free·
arm sewing
head

134S

chest freezer

..

.•

20 p

'169"

.'
.f

.

•

,.

Buy at Reduced Winter Prices now and
your bike iiJ March, when you pick.it up.

BET% HONDA· SALES
Upper Rt. 7

Kanauga,·Ohio

,,

Spr•y atrpet

'134"
ZOTIIIOH

deserves your support

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE FOR CHESTER TOWNSHIP

;

;

RALPH W. OURS

X

Pd. Pol. Adv.

..

Re1110te COi at• ol
color TV

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

1'546t.t. .

.EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

57 c 4237

cleaner

-

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0

CUT $45 Power

ta-!::eo
'234"
payf~r

RALPH W ·OURS

....
&lt;

CUT $100

. small deposit and payfor It
l:lefore March 15th••••

421 second, Gallipolis

-·

'202"
_::::;;;;;..-- '1 c 91971

"NO INTEREST CHARGE"

t.

'260!!.

\

Layaw~y yours now ~lth a

TAWNEY
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With the tax monies in short supply for expenditure
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iour years has tried to avoid disa_p.polntment when some
projects could not be funded. Always willing to listen
and do his best. RALPH W: OURS seeks your approvi!l
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26 c 61811

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The Sunday Times· Sentinei-Page-A-5'

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

ISearS I
SMM.-.c-co.

SILVE~ BRIDGE

PWA
446-2770 .
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Open

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lAfayette Mall •:•
Gallipolis, Oh.
•:•
Daily 9: J0· 8: oo, sunday 1:00·6 :oo
Til Christmas

••••
UZJ

-

----- . ------~--"-"'
SIOR£ HOURS:

Mon.·lhu~.

9 am Iii 9:30 pm

fli.·Sal. 9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

�.·

..

·

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.

.

GALIJPOIJS-Atlastweek'san- Youndation Board in 11163. A past chairs the buildings and grounds conunittees.
nual meeting of the Board of president of the Jacksoo Chamber of committee and serves oo 'the
A p85l president of the Gallipolis
· Trustees of the Holzer Hospital
Commerce, be is active oo the Rio executive, finance, community Area Chamber of Commerce and the
Foundation, officers were elected Grande CoUege Bo8rd of Tnistees, relations and personnel relations Retail Merchanta Association, Tope
for the coming year, with Louis R. having served 88 president of the committees.
now serves as president of ComFord, Jr., of Galtipolis, continuing board for two years.
Thomas E. Tope is now entering munity Improvement Corporation.
88 chairman. Others re-elected were
Stiffler was secretary of tbe his fourth year 88 treasurer of the
Also ~lected to three year tefl118
John F. Stiffler, Sr., Jackson, vice hospital's board from 1972 until 1980, hospital's board of trustees.
· to cooUnue serving on the board
chairman; Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
when he became vice chainnan, and
A GaWPQiis native, he holds his were -MerrUl Evana, Charles E.
Pomeroy, secretary, and Thomas E.
has been a member of the executive bachelors degree from Ohio Univer- Holzer, Jr., M.O., Thom88 W.
Tope,Gallipolis,treasurer.
committeesince1968.
slty and is the owner-manager of Morgan, M.P., Warren F. Sheets,
Ford was elected as a board men\Theodore T. Reed, Jr. became a Tope Furniture · Galleries. He James A. Stiffler, E. Neal Taylor
ber in 1974 and became chairman in member of the hospital's Board of became a membor 1:4 the hospital and Tope. .
1978, after serving for two years as Trustees in 1968. He waa elected board in 1978 and w88 elected
Three members were elected to
treasurer. He is plant manager at secretary of the hoard laat year, and treasurer In 1978. He also chairs the serve a ooe year term oo the
the Kyger Creek Power Station of is now starting his second term in finance comin!ttee and serves on the executive committee of the board
the Ohio VaUey Electric Cor- that position.
executive conunittee, community along with the officers. They are J.
poration.
A lifetime resident of Pomeroy, he relations and joint management Tim Evans, Max W. Morrow and
A native of Brooklyn, New York, holds a bachelor's degree from Ohio
Sheets.
he attended Columbia University University and did two years of ~~-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
and graduated with a bachelor's graduate work in Banking at the I
degree in marine engineering from Graduate School of Banking of the
the United States Coast Guard
UniversityofWisconsinatMadison.
Academy. He served in the U. S.
His total career has been at the
CosstGuardfrom 1941 unti11947.
Fanners Bank in Pomeroy, where
Joining the Ohio Valley Electric he is the president and chief
Corporation as plant engineer in executive officer.
16
1954, he became the assistant plant , Earlier this month, Reed waa el~
PKG.
manager in 1968 and was promoted ted grand treasurer of the Grand
to plant manager in 1970.
Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons
A member of the American of Ohio. On the hospital board, he
KAHN'S
Society of Mechanical Engineers rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;~
since 1957, Ford is a registered 1
AMERICAN BEAUTY
professional engineer in Ohio and
RE-elect
Connecticut. He I'! active in local,
civic and community affairs, and is
a member and past president of the
Gallipolis Rotary Club.
Re-&lt;!lected vice chairman was
John F. Stiffler, Sr., the president of
FOR
StifOer Stores, Inc. A' lifetime
resident of Jackson, he became a
SOUTHERN LOCAL .
member of the Holzer · Hospital

N'S DELUXE
CLUB BOLOGNA

'199

CONTINUES AS BOARD CHAIRMAN -

Jr.,
Gallipolis, plant manager of Kyger Creek Power Plaut, Cheshire, bas
been re-elected chairman of the Holzer Hospital Fouodstlon's Board of
Louis R. Ford,

Trustees.

Emergency squad makes three runs
POMEROY--Three emergency
calls were answered by local units
FPiday and Saturday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
reports.
At ):56 a.m. Saturday, the
Pomeroy Unit took Bill Morris, 144
Mulberry Ave., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:28 p.m.
Friday, the Rutland Unit took Ooris

YOUR VOTE FOR

Haynes fromthe scene of an auto accident in Rutland at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
'About 2 p.m. Friday Alvin Walsh
was taken by tbe Pomeroy Unit from
Mechanic St., with a head injury, to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL He
was later taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
•

.

.

: ROBERT ~~z: GILMORE

GARY (DENNY)
DENNIS EVANS

Call me today.

Robert N . Gilmore, Chairman

I ~~

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Davls-Qulckel Agency, Inc.
Downing-Childs Agency, Inc.
McGulnneu-Stanley Agency, Inc.
Mullens .Insurance Agctncy, Inc.
Neal Insurance Agency . .
Saunders-Evans Insurance, Inc.
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Inc.
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The Wiseman Agency, Inc.
. Wood Insurance Agency, Inc.

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The passage of this very importaDt issue will
eliminate the cu~nt state monopoly by allowing the insurance industry to offer workman's
compensation on a competitive basis along with
the state fund, thus giving Ohioans the freedom
·
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The Independent lnstirance Agents of Gallia .
and Meigs counties ask for your ~Support in our
efforts to pass State Issue No.1.

•

PRIC~E~98'~LB~.,!_~e~E~FFE~CT~IV~E~SU~ND~AY~THER~U:?.~~~~

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$179

VOTE NOV. 3·, 1981

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SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
. Gallpol!s, Ohio
Phone 446-9593
'"lie ResetWJ the
~to~lim~-~~~~~~-1

USDA CHOICE

2%
MILK

State Issue 1
For
Against

'•

••

PRICE

BROUG.HTON'S

GALLIPOLIS C:ITY
BOARD OF EDUCATION
EXPERIENCED - CAPABLE
Paid For By The candidate

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LOUIS RICH FROZEN YOUNG

RE-ELECT

For Middleport Village Council
Commi1'1ee to Elect Gilmore

•

DELICIOUS .
APPLES

YINI ITIIIT, OAWI'OUI, OHIO

Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

We appreculte the patronage you have given to
u8 during the year. For this reason, we are offering . you some of the lowest prices we .have
ever offered to show you our appreciation. Take

'•

TO ATTEND

oz.

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"Your Vote and
Influence Appreciated"

Republican Candidate

IS A VOTE FOR PROGRESS.
LEfSPUT MIDDLEPORT BACK ON THE MAP.

.

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ARKET

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SLICED HAM

BOARD OF EDUCATION
More and
more women
are turning to
State Farm ...

... lOHNSoN·i$-S"fJPE
APPRECI TIO

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag-A-7 ·

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Page-A·8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-.G allipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

•

: Corea's jazz tWJe, "Spain," and
; later segued into "L' Arlisence,"

which the band performed in a 1978
contest show. This was followed by a
selection the band performed in last
5'ear'scontestshow, ~~Montero."
· Withtheassistanceofthemajoret·
.; ies, the hand went into a new
; arrangement called ''Indian Fire."
'
·
:
:
·

'

•

10·9,
1·6
c:=-r-""ir
The Saving

OPEN DAILY

Peter Townsend's combination of
rock with opera, producinll the
modem classic "Tonuny," was the
GARS marchers' next selection,
leadlnll into a more classical reo·
dillon of Richard Strauss'
"Zarathrustra," more commoilly
known as the theme from the film
"2001: ASpace Odyssey."
Brian Oglesbee, assistant hand '
director, then enwnerated the
band's achievementa in competitions, including first place in the
Marietta Band~Rama in 1978, first
place in their class at the
Pickerington Invitatlonal marching
band contest this past September
and a superior rating at a similar
conies! a week later in West Jef·
ferson.
.
The band ma~ched off the field
with a drill Jo the Hollies' inspi~ational hit, "He Ain't Heavy,
He's My Brother."
·

j

.

0

GAHS band seniors
.-· give final program
. GALIJPOUS- Hoping the faith' fulllked the show over the last three
years, seniors in the Gall.ia
Academy Marching Band rriade
: their final bow in halftime
: ceremonies at Fridey's Gallipoli:r
: Wellston game.
· The 26 seniors unfolded a sheel
; S:.ying "Hope you liked the show· GARS hand !978-lll" at the conclusion of the program, but nol
before they and their tlnderclass
• cohorts had put on another fine
: musical showcase, reflecting new
: songs and old favorites.
The show opened with Chick

Nov. 1, 1981

Sunday • Tuesday

SUNDAYS

Nov. 1, 1911
The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Pa!l.-

Place~~&gt;

: Present lecture

ATHENS - Health professionals,
· RIO GRANDE - Raymond C. clergy and family members can
: Matura of Rio Grande College and learn additional skills in caring for
: Community College will present a the terminally ill at a Nov. 5-6
; research paper entitled "Self Ad- workshop in Athens.
' vocacy by the Elderly: A Case
The Thursday evening session will
Study" at the annual Gerontology feature David Clayman, president of
: Society of America meeting in Kanawha Hospice Care Inc. of
; Toronto Nov. 11 . .
Charleston, W. va: and Dr. Warren
Matura received his bachelor's Wheeler, director of Hospice of
: degree from Rio Grande in 1971. He Colwnbus, speaking OQ hospice as
: acquired his master's from Ohio an alternative form of care for the
Universlty in 1973 and earlier this dying.
year finished work on his Ph.D. at
Fridey sessions wiU cover social,
the University of Floride.
emotional and physical needs of the
terminally ill patient and family and
the process of grief and
Bake sale slated
bereavement.

The haunting of Our House

BRA D

-·
Story by Deb Fos
Photos by Larry EwiD&amp;
and Deb Fox

GALLIPOUS .._ She did not see
the first ghost untll she had
worked there for two years, but
Mary F. Allison felt their presen·
ce an&lt;tknew they inhabited Our
House Tavern long before.
Located al 132 First Ave. in
Gallipolis, the building has been
the subject of much publicity, not
only because it is a state
memorial and the Marquis de
Lafayette once spent a night
there, but also because of its
unusual residents.
"There are two male ghosts in
Our House. One is General Munson and the other is Henry
Cushing," Allison, of 136 River
Rd., Kanauga, and curator of the
building for eight years, said.
Allison usually finds Cushing in
the kitchen area located in a
building just behind the house,
but Munson seems to prefer the
house, she said.
"Cushing owned the grounds
and the tavern, and Munson spent
a lol of time in the building
because the park down the street
was an anny camp and Our
House was a marine hospital, so
it's natural that they'd be here."
Our Holll!e is furnished and
decorated as it was when used as
a tavern and Allison conducts
tours which inform her audiences
of lhe history of the tavern and its
operation as well as its fur·
nishings and various events that
have taken place lhere.
But some tour Our House for a
different reason, Allison said.
"Some people come and ask to
see the ghosts.! have to tell them
thai the ghosts are very par·
ticular about who they want to

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MEIGS LOCAL
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WE NEED UNITY IN
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DRIVETHRU
CARRYOUT
709 First Ave.

•

hear."

f82

19 •

•

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•••

derstand. I'll leU them stories of
the ghosts, though, if they want to

•

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Ollce an acti"" meeting place Ia GaWpollo, lhe Our
Houae Tavern irr oow a ltirrlorlcal otructure rmd

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has been said that the subject's
follow whoever is in the
room. It also has been said his
mood changes.
"When we reach that room on
the tour of the house, the ex·
pression on his face tells me
about the people in the tour. One
time when in that room a mem· .
ber of the tour suddenly said,

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'The expressi on just changed on
his face.' I wasn't surprised,"

Allison replied.
olir House is state owned and
partially funded by the Gallipolis

..

Chamber of Commerce. According to Allison, when fwtding
was discontinued last March, a
painting of Lafayette in a second
floor bedroom cried on two ..,.
caslons. She found moisture teardrop~~ as she refers to it - on
the wall in back of the painting
and on the mantle below, No fur· · ·
ther moisture was fowtd when .
funding for the house resumed.
Allison is not the 'only person to ·
have wtusual experiences in the
house.
Martha Foster, who lives on
NorthiiP'Patriot Rd., worked at
Our Holll!e for about seven years
and was curator part of that lime.
While working there, she
discovered the house she and her
family lived in was built by
Charles Bailey and that he owned
Our House for 25 years. Foster
said Bailey haunted her family's
house and was often referred to

as "Granddad.''
"One day I was standing at the
bottom of the staircase in Our
House looking up the stairs at the
Sycamore tree in the back yard.
n was beautiful," she said.
"While looking, I wondered
whether Granddad had ever done
the same. Just then, I felt a hand
on my shoulder - a warmth and
- · a feeling that someone was there,

although I didn't see anyone. I've
· always Ihough! that maybe Gran·
dad was Jelling me he had stood
there as I was and he too had en·
joyed it," Foster said.
About four weeks ago, Jane
Ginther, of Gallipolis, was on a
tour of Our House and found her·
self attracted to a picture in its
attic. According to Ginther, while
in the attic she and the two persons with her, including Allison,
heard bells ringing in the room,
but there were no bells in the
room.

"Suddenly I felt sick. I was
nauseus, had a headeche and was
dizzy. It fell like someone had
taken a torch, lit my feet and the
flame was going through my
body," Ginther said. "llelt faint
· so I sat on the stepa. Before that
I'd been very interested in
everything about the house, but I
didn't care anymore. I knew

everything.
"There is a picture on the steps
of a man with a stern look on his
face. It scared me and I left the
house.
" I was sick for two days, but I
knew I had to go back to _the
house. Mary and I retraced my
steps and as we tried to go up to
the attic, we couldn't get the door
open. M.ry said, 'They don't

want you up there.' I said, 'I
know.' We tried the door agalil a
while later and it worked.
"While upstairs I looked at the '
picture of the stem Jookln8 IDID.
I remember I sail!, 'I think I'd
like him if he'd lighten up a little:"'
Just then, his e.preSIIon
changed. I couldn't believe it, but
I felt better and left the houae. ;
•'While I was in lbe courtyard, i
had the feeling I WSI bo!inll wa£.
ched and had to tum around til
look. In the attic window I saw
smokey image. I looked at Mary
and then at the figure agalrJ .. II 1

a

•

was gone."

Ginther said she believes the
person in the first picture she
looked at tried to take over IJeio
body but was WISuccessful.
.
"I feel drawn to lhe Our House ,
- like there's a piece of me then:.
I'm comfortable there now, but I
don't wan! to go back to the attic,'' she said.
Allison said no ghosts at the
house have talked to her, but she
expects them to when they
become more familiar with her.
She said she has been touched by
a ghost, however.
"While giving a tour this
mer, I felt a ghosts touch my
shoulder. I couldn't see him, but!
could see the indentation on my
shoulder. I supposed he wanted
me to know he was there, but not
tbe others on the tour," she said:
· One of Lafayette's coats is
hung on the door of the roorp
where he spent a night. Allison
said the coat has beeo the subji!Ct
of many cameras, but nQt
photographs.
'"He (Lafayette) doesn't
always allow pictures to be takell
of the c'"'t. Sometimes people's
cameras will break or they'll
Juive camera problems whife
trying to take a picture of th(,
coat, but the camera will work
later, .. she said.
''One time, when giving a tour
to two men, one kept flirting with
me. There was nothing I could do
about it so I just went on. When
we got to tbe kitchen, the rocking
chair he was standing in front of
started to rock and hit his leg. I
said, 'See, the ghosts of Our
House protect me.' He didn't
bother me after that.
"I'm not afraid of the ghosts
here. They're like family."
Our House will be open today
from I to 5p.m., but will he closed
after that until spring. However,
group tours may be arranged
through the,winter by contacting
Allison at 446-0846.

sw»-

"

...
.

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE•.•

DO YOU HAVE THE ONE FAITH?

'

By WiRiam B. Kughn
God has given one plan of salvation to al l. It consists of hearing
(Mtt. 11 :.5). believing (Mrk. 16 : 15, 16), repenting (Lk . 13 :3 ), confessing (Mtt. 20 :32, 33) , and baptism (Acts 2:38) . It is simple, 'easv to
under stand, and must be obeyed by all!
Hearing precedes believing, while repentance, confession, and.
baptism follow believing. The first r equirement is hearing the word
(gospel) beca use this is the only way faith is received, "So then faith
cometh by hearing, and hering by the word of God" (Rm. 10 :17). At
this point. faith is receiv ed , the faith (-'.ontidence and conviction) that
moves you to complete your obedience by repenting, confessing, and
being ba ptized.
The word of faith commands repentance: You must repent or
perish, " I tell vou, Nay : but, except ve repent, ve shall all likewise
per ish" (Lk . 13: 13, 5} . Repent means to change or turn from . You
repent by having change of mind (wi ll) resulting in your turning from
the vil e way of life.You turn from Satan to Christ and from sin to
righteousness . If you do not repent, you do not have saving faith!
The word of faith commands confession: You are to confess
Christ, " Whosoeve r therefore shall confess me before men, him will 1
confess also before mv Father which is in heaven" (Mtt. 10:32) . You
are to confess Him as the Son of God , "Thou art the Christ, the Son of
the living God" (Mtt. 16:18; Acts 8:38) . H you do not make the con· .
tess ion . you do not have saving faith!
The word of faith comma.nds baptism: You are to be baptized for
the remission of sins, "Repent and be baptized everyone of you in the
name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins ... " (Acts 2;38). You put
on Christ by baptism, "For as many of you as have been baptized into
Christ have put on Christ" (Gal. 3:27) . Baptism saves, "The like
figure whereunto eve.n baptism doth also now save us ... '' (I Pet. 3 :21) .
If vou have not been baptized for this purpose, you do not ~ave saving
faith!
.
Any individual who does not obey the gospel, the source of the one
faith, does not have the faith pleasing to God. He Is seeking, through
doctrines of men or his own feelings, to direct his own steps and
establish hi s own righteousness. He may boast of his great faith, never
doing the will of God. This Is not saving faithl His faith comes from the
doctrines of men. and saving faith dosenot come from this source. The
one faith (saving faith) comes from God's word! The faiths of your
choice come from the doctrines of men! Faith is of God but failhs are
of men! Which faith do you have when it comes to God's plan of
salvation! 11 you obfy His will. it is saving faith! If you refuse It, you
are deceived, arid have not the faith!
(For Free Bible correspondence Course Write .... J

25 for 6.96
50 for 12.66
75 for 18.96

(II 0l

Bulavillo Rood o P.O. Bo1 308
GALLIPOliS, OHIO 45631

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

, w.._..•.,.
7:tt

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..
..
'

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100 for 24.96
Our Reg. 2 27

(114)

1.67~~~dle

68.88

. Terry KWchen Towels
Woven check cotlon. 16x26"
Dlshelolhs, kll.

5·pc. Card Table Set
34" fol ding fable. four
cho~rs . Steel-tube fr'a me.

89~

Add 2.50 for
or slide or far
imprinting.

(115)

Scripto Mighty Match

Thunder Bolt 22

· scripto disposable
bulane lighters. Save!

22 long rifle ca-rtridges.

Remington Thunderbolt

..

000

Smle Price

Sole Price

2.37.0.

O_.glnallqulpment
Spin-on Type FIHers
AC Delco!, Mopor! and
Motorcrol!! oil fillers lit
many General Motors.
Ctjrysler and Ford·cars.

~+' ;X;H ~~ of ~~Hal

~
...

1.17

~mout' Carburetor And
.-1 System Cleaner
12-oz.' size. Helps stop
stalling and rough idling.
~elps remove gums. vor·
nish and moisture.

•

'

"A OE.

,. , .. ,•

•"'

·-

.. tile .........._
tldl fll'4' l!fl " ... Ollr
• - kllct r•, ._... Ia a ...-.• aaw:llaalliMIIII
tile lllala ~ .....,., AD' IB . , . _ - wMI ...

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tHe house's dining roou and it

Our Reg.

••••••••••••••••

SMncUy Morn'-1 • ·
IIIH91Mif f1.
WonNpM :JI

.A painting of Munson hangs is

believed by muy lo be haunted.

eyes

Black • Decker' Jigsaw
Culs wood. metal. plasllc
more. Double-rnsu la fed

·1

'

Sets workshop

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!tel' , . . . . . . . . . . .,a....,.~.-llme~

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�..
Page-B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va.

Nov . 1, 1981
1981

a

t
1!\~w

l

f

•'

~
'&lt;;;,~.

SlORE fiOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 1111-IO pn1
Sunday IO .am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

'l• \

..
~"t

Clay-Sheets

grandchildren attertded.
Also celebratiilg their wedding anniversary were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Feustel. Mrs. Feustel is the
great-granddaughter of the
Hayrnans and she was married on
their anniversary, October 23.

Baxters observe ·35th

. .

-"

'

Rev. and Mrs. Lewis

PRICES GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 7, 1981

Clay_, Sheets.
GAUJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Clay, Gallipolis, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Danette'· Jo, to LaiTy Alan Sheets,
11011 of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Sheets,
Gallipoi!S)l
The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
· oi f!:yger Creek High School. Her
finunl'e iS a 1980 graduate of Kyger
Crt't'k High School. ,
The wedding wW be December 12
ol Old Kyger Church in Cheshire.

PRE-HOLIDAY

Recliner Sale
LA·Z BOY and ACTION
(Waii·Hugger and Rocker- Recliners&gt;

OVER100
IN STOCK
Heavy duty fabrics and
vinyls, even leather!
Colors A!' lore!
(L_a,y-Away Only 10% Down I REG. $429 SALE \

'32

j

.,...
.

Mr. and Mrs. Baxter
POMEROY - Nonnan and Gilda
Ronchi Baxter of Pomeroy have
returned from Italy where they
spent three weeks visiting relatives
and friends.
The trip was a part of their 35th
wedding anniversary observance.
Mrs. Baxter, a native oi Italy, and
Baxter were married on July 18, 1946
in · Racchiuso. Baxter had been
stationed there wilh the U, S. Anny.
On Sept. 30 the couple jetted from
Columbus to New York to Milan,
Italy from where they took a train to
Florence to visit Mrs. Baxter's only
surviving sister, Maria Merlo. From
there they went to Northeastern
Italy to Racchiuso to visit nieces and

THURMAN--Diane Bowser ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Boswer, and Jackson T. Walker, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde B. Walker,

agiculture !l"aduate student.
The couple's present address is
apt. 4, 307-Birch St., Champaigne,
Illinois 61820.

nephews, and on to Venise where
they
several
days sightseeing
to Florence.
beforespent
returning
Early on their trip, they were
joined hy their oldest daughter,
Renata Papadopoulos of Cleveland,
who, toured the country with her
parents. Renata was born in Italy
and it was her first trip back there.
Before going to Italy, Mrs. Shirley
Wright of Athens and her sisters,
Tina Jeffers, Athens, Route I, and
Mrs. Papadopoulos entertained with
an anniversary party at the Wright
home. Th~ Baxters also have a son,
Charles, of Parkersburg, six gran·
dsons and four granddaughters.

VINTON- Rev. and Mrs. John P.
Lewis will he celebrating their 50th
wedding anniversary with open
house Nov. 7 from 2 to5 p.m. at their

T-Bone Steak......~•.
MIXED

fI ;~~=======~~;~~~~~~~~~~-~-

USDA CHOICE

.

,

Round Steak.......L~
Eblin, Mora

!ann home, Vinton.
In retirement, Rev. and Mrs.
Lewis are serving the Wilkesville
United Methodist Church.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Mora, Pomeroy, Route 3,,
are announcing the engagement of
their daughter, Janet Mora, to
Gregory Eblin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Eblin, Laurel Cliff.
The bride-elect is a 19M graduate
of Eastern High School. Her fiance is 1
a 1973 gradu.ate of Meigs High Schoo)
and is employed at Krogers in
Pomeroy.
A spring wedding is being plan-

You II look good and feel great.

.1/3 OFF

ANY PERM

OVER '25.00

ned.

Quality Never Goes
Out of Styl_.

Good Til Nov.'i4
!

$} 99
.••

T1p Steak............~~. .
BUCKET

$
249

·

Cube ,Steaks.....~.~~.

.

EN_TIRE STOCK

LEVI

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CORDU,9Y

RENEWAL ...
NO INCREASE
. ... RENEWAL

JEANS,

Although the word Renewal does not appear on the sample ballot
below, this is a renewal levy. The two-tenths of a mill levy is the
same amount which has been in effect for almost 10 years.
Because we are exercising our right as a taxing authority for the first
time, the wording, "an additional tax", is necessary but misleading. A
yes vote will not increase your taxes.
PROPOSED TAX LEVY
GALLIA·JACKSON-MEIOS MENTAL HEALTH BOARD
A Mljorlty Afllnnltl.. Vall II N-onry FOr P......
An additional tax for the benefit of the Gallla·Jackson-MaiQS Manta I Health Board for the purpose of
CURRENT OPERATING EXPENSES for said Board at a rate notex~lng two-tenths 10.2) mill lor eaoh one
dollar ($1.001 of valuation which amounts to two cants (10.021 for each one hundrtd 1$100.00) dollllt ot
valuation. for live 15) years commencing 1Q!l2.
.
FOR THE TAX LEVY
AGAINST THE TAX LEVY
Peld For B~ L~;t DoMnont
The GaM,a - J.cl;.a.on . M.~g~ Nwnta1 H•alth brd • John C Ricf . Cha1rrnar.

"

,.'

12 oz.

LightfootWilliamson

. I'

JUNIOR SIZE

pastime is so .
popular, he adds, that demand for
new systems II arowJng hy 50 per·
cent a year in the United States and
at an even greater pace in foreign
countries, while demand for game
cartrtdg• iB doubling ea!=fl year.

.·w·1eners ............!~:.

~- ·-

Giv~ your spirit a lift with a new hairstyle.

NEW YORK (AP) - Americans
are playing more games at home
than ever before.
More than 5 million video game
systems have been instaUed in
·American homes, according to Jim "'
Levy, president of Activlsion, a
desigPI!r and seller of videO-game

·

FRENCH CITY

Layaway Too!!!
Weekdays 10:00 to9:00
Sundays 1:00 to 6:00
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Let JOUr good looks
go to your head

Fun and games

49

Fryer Parts ......... ~';.4

FURNITURE Open All Day Thur.
SHOWCASE
Daily9-5
•
Mon. &amp;.Fri. til8 :
Third at Olive Sis., Gallipolis, Ohio
446· 045

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

Thunnan,
were married
4 at
Trinity Lutheran
Church July
in Brookville.
Reverand Robert BaU officiated
t11e doubl&lt;&gt;-ring ceremony .
Given in marriage by her: father,
the bride wore a white gown with a
sweetheart neckline trimmed with
white embroidery, a full skirt, train
trimmed with embroider and a
finger·tipped veil. She carried a
white Bible covered with a bouquet
of hite roses and baby's breath.
The maid of honor was Barbara
Bowser, sister of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Barbara Lynn
Hanaford, Terrie Eastman;~ Carrie
Walker and Dawna Jo Kiesling.
They wore light blue satin dresses
of oriental print and carried
bouquets of light blue and white carBest man was M. Steven Moses.
nations.
The usbers were Patrick · G.
Kroger, Jeffrey R. Weaver, John W.
Bowser and Kevin Walker. They
wore light blue tuxedos.
Flower gire was Kelly Fisher. She
wore a white dres trimmed in light
blue.
Margaret Keane was regiSter
hostess. Reception hostesses were
Shirley Hahekost, Susan Dean, Judy
Fitzwater and Carol Lunsford.
A reception was held at the church
following the wedding ceremony.
The couple took a wedding trip
which included Ohio, Michigan and
Ganada.
The bride attended Miami University and received a B.S. from
Wilmington CoUege. She is em·
played at the University I Illinois
Hospital as a medical technologist.
The groom received a B.S. from
Wilmington 'College and is at the
University. of Illlnois as an

LlI.

$

USDA CHOICE. TAILLESS

Mora-Eblin

:style

~.f.e

Lewises celebrate 50th

Mr. and Mrs. Walker

"

POMEROY, 0. ·

i

Bowser and Walker wed

'

.. ~

1

Mr. and M_rs. Hayman

~-Thll electronic

W. Va.

Engagements

Haymans observe 53rd
GAWPOiJs - Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Hayman, Route 4, Gallipolis,
celebrated their 53rd wedding anniversa·ry with diMer held October
25 at their residence.
Many of their four children, 17
grandchildren and 17 great-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio--Point

.....

Yellow Onions..;.5

SIZES 3 TO 15
At Least Seven

,.

I

HAWIHORNE MELODY

t

.:.-

..

Ughtfoot

Great Fall Colors

JM)

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Ughtfoot are announcing
the. engagement and appnl&amp;chlng
· merrtage of their daughter, Cherie
Lynn, to David Lee Wllltamson, son
ol Mr. and Mrs. Bill L. WllliamBon,

DAYS ONLY

Rutland.
• The bride-elect is a 1980 graduate
~ Meigs High School and II ~n­
·tly employed at Bank One
Pomeroy, Her fiance II a 1m
graduate ol Meigs llltll School and

. SMALL GROUP,
SASSON
.

Knit Shirts
. and .,

Sweat Shills

, ~OFF

·'

'

.
'

I'

$11.00 lnd $22.00 VIIUII
.r
Solid colors with Sas!IOn Logo.'
Sizes S·M· L.

$} 79

Homo or 2% ·Milk ...

$'1 999\\
REG. 129.00

~ALLON

DARI FRESH

'

l·

is employed at Gavin Power Plant,
Olelhln. He II in the Reaerve

National GUard.
· The Weddillll will take place
·Saturday, Neill. 21, al8:311p.m. at
New Bradford Chareh ol Chrllt.
~ 4, Paii•DY· Millie wW begin
.AUp.m..
·
• The c:llltam ol open cburcb wW
Glarved with open receptiGn tm'-liatel)' fol1owlnl In the
h nent.

.n

,

.
Pepsi Cola••••••••••••
2LITER

PILLSBURY
16.5

oz.

$Jl 9
Cream........ ~.~A;.. .

Ice

.

BEnY CROCKIR

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PKG.

69c

MAC. &amp; CHEESE
7.25

oz.

$ Qg

~ Cottage Cheese::.o:..l
FlAVORITE

·cake Frosti

.

·4/$1

!!!!!!:!!!!~

FLAVORITE

CAKE MIXES
18.5 oz.

3/$200

Limit One Per Customer
GCIOII Only At Powell's
O_tfer EXP.Ints Nov. 7,1981

SUGAR
5 LB•

BAG

$}39

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 7, 1981

!!!!!.!!!:!!!.!~

�,., '

• Page-8·8- The

ipolis, Ohi&amp;-Point Pleasant,

Times-Sentinel

w. va.

Ncft. h 1981
•

Coming Events

Sunday
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, will confer
the royal arch degree Monday at
7:30 p.m. All royal arch masons
invi""!. .

GAWPOLIS Area Jaycees
purit, · pass and klck ·contest,
Gallia COWJiy Junior Fairgrounds, 1 p.m.
ADDISON Free Will Baptist
Charch will hold a quarterly conference Saturday. Dinner will be!
served aild there will be! special
singing and preaching. All are invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, Middleport, will meet at 2
p.m. SWidaY for a practice
session. A second practice will be
heldonNov.1at7p.m.
RACINE - Concert by Bruce
Stalnaker Slone, former resident,
7 p.m. SWiday at the new Racine

Wesleyan United Methodist Church; public invited.
ORANGE TWP. - First annual
.bow shoot starting 10 a.m. Sun. &lt;IllY by Orange Township Volunteer Fire Dept. for two age
groups, 10 through 17 and 18 and
over, two claSseS, bowhWiters
free style and bowhWiters.
RaglstraUon 8:30 a.m. to 9:45
a.m. Road sigris. will be out to
mark locaUon.
EVANGELIST Robert Stewart
. will be the guest speal&lt;er at a

revival·at the Bald Knobs Church
(county road 31) Nov. 2 through
Nov. 8 at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Featured singers for the week
will be "Singing Cavaliers" on
Monday, "Sunrise" on Tuesday,
· local talent on Wednesday,
"Gospel Tones" on Thursday,
"Hymn Timers" on Friday, "The
Messengers" oo Saturday; and
the "Singing Cavaliers" again on
SWiday. The public is invited to
attend. ·
GALIJPOlJS - Journevmen

Riverby Calendar
Exlllbil for the month of November, starling Tuesday, November 3,
!981 - Two Part Exhibit; 1)
Eighteen works of William Missar of
Chicago, IU., including pastels,
watercolors, acrylics, etc., recipient
of many awards during the Annual
River Recreation Festival Exb. and
2) The Common Thread of the
Loatian Hmong. Fifty-three pieces
of needleworks including wall
coverings, table mats, belts~ purses~
etc., depicting the heritage of a
small colony of Laotian textile ar·
lists, through the Ohio FOWldation
on the Arts, Inc.
Gallery Hours - Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.;
Saturday and Sunday, 1 p.m. until 5
p.m.
.
November 3, 9:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m.
- Complete the Block Printing
Workshop with Janet Byers as instructor.
November 7, 1 p.m. - Third
session of Docent Monitor program
for all November monitors.
November 9, 8 p.m. - First in a
series of five consecutive Docent
classes, to be held on Monday
evenings through December 7,
chaired by Jan Thaler.

@6

November 10, 9:30 a.m.-11 :30 a.m.
-Workshop in the creation of Bread
Dough ornaments ; instructor, Janet
Byers. No charge for workshop, but
pre-registration required; call 44111903 or' 4411-31134. Ornaments will be
created at this workshop and painted the following week (11·17).
November 11, 4 p.m.-6 p.m.- New
starting date for Children's Theatre
classes to be taught by Joe Ballou
from Athens. Fee for eight week
course, meeting each Wednesday af·
ternoon, $25. Call Janet Byers al4411!003 to register; 7 p.m.-9 p.m. New starting dale for Adult Theatre
Playwriting classes, taught by Joe
Ballou from Athens. Eight week
course meeting each Wednesday
· evening. Fee $30 for members of the
French Art Colony, $35 for nonmembers. Call4411-!003 to register.
November 16, 8:15p.m: - FAC
TrusleesMeeting,Riverby:
November 17, 9:30a.m.·ll :30a.m.
workshops,
taught of
by Bread
Janet
Second
in the series
-Dough
Byers. Bread dough ornaments
created the week before will be painted and completed during this
second session; 6 p.m. - FAC Interdepartmental Meeliug, Riverby.

QuaM at Bell Chapel OIUrcb 7
p.m. The Rev. Donny Johnson
wtU bring the message. Paator
Everett Delaney invites all.

Monday
hold its November meeting on
Monday, Nov. 2 at the Ohio
Valley Bank on Jackson Pike at .
7:30 p.m. All members and
prospective members are invited
to attend.
BIDWELlrPORTER PTO will
hold its November meeting 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the school. A
representative from 0. 0 . Mcintyre Park District will be
speaker.
TilE ATHENS CO!I"IY YSCC
will sponsor its November forum
on Monday, Nov. 2, at tile
Weslern Sizzlin' Steakhouse. This
month's guest speaker will be

Mary Bradley from the Ohio
Department of Liquor Control.
Ms. Bradley will outline current
as well as proposed legislation'
reguting the use of alcoholic
· beverages by Ohio youth. LWich
will be at 11 :30 a.m. Ms. Bradley
will speak at 12: 15 p.m. The
public is invited to attend!
GALIJPOIJS - American
Legion Lafayette Post 71. will hold
a regular meeting Monday, Nov.
2, at the Post's home on Bob McCormick Rd. Time of meeting is
7:30 p.m. All members are urged
to attend.

Methodist Charch sponsored I1Y
UMW. Bazaar begins at 9 a.m.
with dinner at 11 a.m.

=~llc';;~v~. chocolate.

I~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•1

IANKRUPJCY/CHAPIER l3
.,

OF
COURSE

CHRIST U.M. C.

(Wage Earner PlarO

No fee for Information:

REVIVAL

Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N. Maggied
Allorneys-At·Law
88 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH. 43215

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

12·1 p.m.-Mid·Day Meeting, praise, Worship and Teaching.
SUBJECT: A Pattern for a Fruitful Life/Jesus' s Concern lor the
People.

·

5:30·7 p. m.-PRAYER AND WITNESS VISITATION.
7:30p.m .····· · ··· ... ...... . ........... .... REVIVAL SERVICE
•NOVEMBER 4th, WEDNESDAY:
·12·1 p.m.-Mid-Day Meeting. Praise, Worship and Teaching.
SUBJECT : A Patern for a Fruitful Life/Jesus sets the Example.

(Paffernl .
5: 3G-7 p.m.- PRAYER AND WITNESS VISITATION
7: 30p.m ... · · · · · · • · · · · ... . .. . ... . . .. ... .... REVIVAL SERVIC!;
NOVEMBER 5111, THURSDAY:
12-1 p.m.-Mid-Day Meeting, Praise, Worship and Teaching.
SUBJECT : A Pattern for a F=ruilful Life/A Strategy far Today! ~

7:30 p.rn: · • · · · • • • · · · · · · · · · . . .. . ..... .. ,,.,. REVIVAL SERVICE
NOVEMBER 6th, FRIDAY :
12•1 p.m.-Mid-Day Meeting, Praise, Worship and Teaching.
SUBJECT: A Llfntylo Conduclv.e to Llvlnt lht Folthlul Life/The
Centralltyol the Holy Spirit.
7:30p.m. · • •·• · · • · • • • • • • • · • • •....... ,.,, •• , . REVIVAL SERVICE
NOVEMBER 6th, SATURDAY:

t-11 am.-Coffee Hour Shllring, Praise, Worship and Teachlnl.

SUBJECT: A Conolflont Spiritual Life and Dovollonol LlletHow ·

Ta.

.

.

7::10 .. .... . , •• • REVIVAL SERVICE ... ....... . YOUTH NIGHT I
Bfff aQCI Melanie Beachy: "Rainbow Minlatrln" Providlnt the mualc
IIIII nilhl.
NOVEMBER 7th, SUNDAY:
t:45-10:4S a . m.-sunuy School
10:45-11:45 a . m.-Wenhlp Service, "Rilnbow Ministries" tudlnvlhe
-llllp.
.
CHRIST UNITIED MIETHODIST CHURCH
J MiiHSGUIII of Gafffpolfa.,ltate Routt 7, IESR, Ba•104A• GafHroolfs,

on.

BAZAAR Tuesday at the
Kroger Store in Pomeroy from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. A bake sale will be
held in conjunction with lbe
bazaar. A bazaar will also be held
on Nov. 5, at the same location.
Sponsored by Syracuse
Presbyterian Church.

ding, biscuit, buller, milk.
· Tuesday - Cubed pork steak,
fried apples, cole slaw, sliced
peacbes, bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Wieners, mashed
pula!oes, sauerkraut, cake/fruit
sauce, cornbread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Scalloped chicken,
buttered carrots, spinach, red
fruited geistin, bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Tuna casserole, buttered broccoli, green eans, mixed
fruit , bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register in advance for your
lunch.

·-

Another field goal by Clark, a 38-yarder, brought the Boilermakers to
Within four points, 24-20, going into the rmal period.
'lbreatea BrukaWIIy
Ohio State threatened to break open the game with two toucl)downs
in the first minute of the fourth quarter. A :»-yard pass to Thad
Jemison set up a two-yard touchdown by Tim Spencer, !ben the
Buckeyes recovered a Purdue fumble on the 23-yard line to set up Anderson's second touchdown catch lin the first play from scrlnunage.
Campbell's eight-yard touchdown pll88 to Steve Bryant closed the
gap to five polnta, 38-33, with seven minutes remaining. That touchdown came moments after the Boilermakers recovered an Ohio State
fumble on a had snap for a punl.
Bryant, who earlier scored on a 32-yard pll88 from Campbell, also
set up the Boilermakers' first touchdown in the fourth quarter with a
17-yard reception at the Ohio State l·yard line. Wally Jones then ran in
for the score.
Schlichter's touchdown pass to Frank made the score 45-3;1,
breaking a Ross-Ade Stadium scoring record by two teams. Campbell
then directed a final Purdue drive to the Ohio State 12-yard line before
Marcus Marek made an interception in the end zolie with just over a
minute to go.

year.

Schlichter Sblnes
Schlichter also scored one ·louchdowtr and passed 29 yards to John
Frank for the Buckeyes' final touchdown. For the gsme, the Buckeye
senlcr passed for 336 yards, giving tile two quarterbacks a total of 152
yards.
Schlichter scored the Buckeyes' first touchdown on a 14-yard fWI
two plays after Anderson's blocked punt gave Ohio.State the ball at the
Purdue 16-yard line in the second quarter.
Purdue lied the game 17-17 early in the third quarter on a ~yard
field goal by Tim Clark. The Buckeyes went allead to stay, however,

SWIMMING
POOLS

College wrapup

·~

r

HOUDAY POOLS .INC.

Central Michigan
rips OU, 38 to 21

PARENTS Of GALLIA COUNTY
Your vote is needed to elect an honest and
open representative that has the nee&lt;ls of the
Gallia County children at heart. I am a conservative and not a big spender.

ATHENS (AP) - Central
Michigan all but eliminated Ohio
1
University from the 1!1111 MidAmerican Conference Iitle picture
here Saturday by defeating the host
Bobcats, 38-21. .
. The loss left Ohio University with
a 3-3 mark. Toledo knocked off
league-leader . Miami, 17-10, thus
CMU and Toledo share first place in
the MAC standings with identical f&gt;-1
· records.

DARYL W. SALISBURY
Your Vote and Support Appreciated
Paid for by the Candidate

SPECIALI

Or the problem may be the
light-bending
ability of the eye. It
What happens when one eye or •
may
do
too
good
a job.at bending
both eyes are nearsighted? The
the
light,
causing
the image to go
nearsighted eye focuses on an object too soon. The image is sharp out offocus.
Nothing can be done to shorten
when it enters the cornea, the
"window of the eye.'' But it gets the distance between the front
out of locus by the time it t~aches and the back of the eyeball.
the retina'. This is the innermost Nothing can be done about its
lining of the eye that sends the light-bending ability. That's the
way ,)you were bOrn. But an eye
image to the brain.
examination
will sliow how these
• There are several causes of
problems
can
be corrected by
nearsightedness. One is an
wearing
properly
filled glasses.
eyeball that is longer than normal, measured from the front of
the eye to the hack, where the
tn lhe .nteresl of betler yjs/on
retina is located. It is too long to
/rom th11 olflce of
hold an image in focus by the
time it,reaches the retina.
George W. Davis, O.D.
458Second Ave., GaUipoUs
Phone 4411-2236

·-----

Meigs Local School District
Vote~'$, I need your support and
vote Nov. 3, so I can be returned
to office· as School Board mem·
her.
I am dedicated to serve you
and your children's needs first.
Second, I owe it to all of you
to see your tax dollars are wisely
spent.
I've been a Sch09l. Board
member off and on since before
cons~lldation.

Thank you,

lllinois 24 Iowa 7
CHAMPAIGN, lli. (APJ - The
Illinois defense forced three key turnovers Saturday, and quarterback
Tony Eason turned two of them into
touchdown passes to lead the Illini to
alll-7 victory over Iowa.
l.owa dropped to :1-2 in the Big Ten
and sllpped from first place. Illinois
Improved its conference record to 42 and remained within striking
distance of Big Ten leader Ohio

WAREHOUSE 'SALEII
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Our Warehouse Will Be ·Open
Until 8:00 p.m.

Stale.

All PRICES F.O.B. OUR- WAREHOUSE.
Bring Your Truck and Save or
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CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE FOR QUALIFIED PERSONS

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CALORIC GAS RANGES

.

Bowllag Greeu13 Keut 7
BOWIJNG GREEN, Ohio (AP) Safety Martin Bayless' 21-yard fum·
ble relum provided Bowling Green
with its lone touchdown Saturday in
a 1:1-7 victory over Kent Slate in MidAmerican Conference football.

MSU Z6 Indiana 3

North Carolina 17 Maryland 10
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (APJ - A
20-yard touchdown pass by Scott
Stankavage with 1:30 remaining , after North Carolina. recovered a fumbled punt, gave the ninth-ranked Tar
Heels a 17-10 victory over Maryland
Saturday.
Ball State 35 EMU 13
MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Sophomore
quarterback Doug Freed passed for
three touchdowns and ran for
another Saturday as Bali State outscored Eastern Michigan :lf&gt;-13 in ·
Mid-American Conference football .
Pitt29Boston24
NEWTON, Mass. (AP)- Pitt, the
nahon's second-ranked football
power, built a commanding lead on
the passing of Dan Marino and
withstood a fourth-period challenge
by Boston College for a 29-24 victory
Saturday.
Clemson 82 Wake Forest 24
CLEMSON, S.C. (AP)- Tailback
Chuck McSwain rolled for 90 yards
and three touchdowns as the thirdrsnked Clemson Tigers mauled
Yia~e Forest 62-24 in an Atlantic
Coast Conference footbail game
Saturday.

•

Cowboys, Eagles In key tilt
teams at the end of the year that
hadhbeaten us," Philadelphia Coach
The Dallas Cowboys have been . Dick Vermeil said; "I told them that
wailing for today's game a long Ume becau8e of that the Cowboys might
- since last Jan. 11, to be exact. not be corning to Philadelphia
That's when the Philadelphia Eagles respecting us and we should try to
burled them and headed to the Super take advantage of it.
"I didn't consider us superior to
BowL
. Thal20-7 victory, built on Wilbert the Cowboys ... I wasn't trying to set
Montgomery's 194-yard ruabing per- anybody up."
,
Coach
Tom
Landry
said the
Dallas
formance, left the Cowboys feeling
they had somehow been suckered in- , Eagles' victory In that Natiooai
to complacency by, of all people, the Football Conference championship
game was due in part to the Cowboys
Eagles.
"I just told them (the Eagles) in having just played in two supermeetings that Dallas was a better charged pisyoffs - a 34-13 pounding
team becaUse .they had beaten the . of Los Angeles that avenged a 38-14
AP Sports Writer

roinp by the Rams two weeks
earlier, and a 30-27thriller in Atlanta where they scored two ms in the
final3:04.
"When you play an emotional
game, there's a tendency to have a
letdown the following week," Landry said. "That's what happened to
us in Atlanta .

'

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WlltoDSia 5Z Northwestern 0
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Quarterback Jess Cole ran for two touchdowns, and Troy King rushed for 91
yards and another licore; leading
Wisconsin to a 5~ college victory
over Northwestern Saturday as the
Badgers remained half a game out
of first place in the Big 10.
Wisconsin, :;.a overall and 4·2 in
the Big 10, scored on its first three
possessions.
Northwestern, 0-8 this year and 0-6
in the Big 10, tied a national major·
· college record with its 28th consecuUve defeat. The mark was set
by Kansas StBte in l!HI and lied by
· Virginia in 1960.

Ciacltmat117 Tlilane 13
EAST LANSING, Mich. ( AP) CINCINNATI (AP) - QuarJunior quarterback John Leister terback Danny Barrett ran for one
fired two touchdown passes and touchdown and passed for another to
Morten Andersen booted four field · lead the University of Cincinnati to a
goals Saturday as Michigan State
17-13 victory over Tulane in a nondrubbed Indiana 26-3 in a Big Ten conference foot bail game Saturday.

-durlllg first balf action Ia West Lafayette Saturday.
OSU wo"' 45-33. (AP J.aserphoto),

GOING DOWN - Ohio State quarterback 'Art
Schlichter (II),goes down for a 12 yard loss at the haltcis of Purdue free safety Marcus McKiDDle on a bUb

By BRUCE LOWO'f

BURGET PRICED ·. ITEMS .

Purdue led 7~ after one quarter on an 11-yard touchdown pass from
Campbell to Cliff Benson that capped a 61-yard drive on the Boilermakers• second pn~sesslon .
,
Buelleyea Esplode
·
But starling with Bob Alba's 53-yard field goal, tbe longest of his
career, the Buckeyes scored on each of their first three possessions in
the second quarter. Ohio State scored 17 points in a 4'1.-minute span
that included just four plays from scrimmage.
Less than two minutes'after Atha's field goal, Ohio State regained
the ball when Anderson blocked a Boilermaker punt and ShaWl Gayle
recovered it at the Purdue 16-yard line. Two plays later Schlichter ran
14 yardsaroWid left end for the Buckeyes' first touchdown.
Purdue had to pWII the ball again after Its next series stalled.
Schlichter then lofted a 47-yard scoring bomb to Anderson on the first
play from scrimmage.
The Boilermakers closed within 17-14 at halfUme following a 711-yard
drive on their.·next possession. A pass interference penalty against
Olllo State and a 46-yard pass to Benson gave Purdue first down at the
Buckeye !4. Five plays later, f6llowing a Purdue holding penalty, a 12yard gsin and 17-yard .loss by Campbell, the Purdue quarterback connected on a 32-yard touchdown toss to Bryant.
For the first half, Schlichter completed nine of 16 attempts for 161
yards, while Campbell hit II of 16 for 176 yards.

on their next poasession as Jimmy Gayle scored on a two-yard plunge.

By STEVE HER:\IAN
AP Sports Writer
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (APJ - Cedric Anderson set up one
touchdown by blocking-a Purdue punt &amp;nd scored twice on passes of 47
and 23 yards from quarterback Art Schlichter Saturday, leading Ohio
state to a 45-33 victory over the Boilermakers in a regionally televised
BJg Ten Conference football game,
The victory left Ohio Stale in undispUted first place with a 4-1 conference record, and overshsdowed a brilliant passing performance by
, Purdue's Scott Campbell. The sophomore passed for three touchdowns
and a school record 516 yards. The former Purdue record was 431 yards by former Bollennaker quarterback Mark Herrmann at Iowa last

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Bucks outlast Boilermakers, 45-33 .

POMEROY - The COAD senior
nutrition program menu for the .
Meigs Senior Citi;ens Center for this
wed&lt; has been announced. It in-

November. 2, 3 and 4
Mon.·Tues., Wed.
\ ··

• OF THE HEART &amp; SPIRIT
REV. JERRY NEAL, PREACHING
REV . DEAN BACHELOR, PASTOR
NOVEMBER 2ND-7TH
NOVEMBER lnd, MONDAY EVENING :
7:30 • • • · • • · · • · • · · • •. , .... . . . .. ... .... , ...• REVIVAL SERVICE
NOVEMBER 3rd, TUESDAY :

--

1-221-5379

MEIGS LOCAL ·
SCHOOL DISTRICT

INVITES YOU TO .•..

Nov. 1, 1981
r he Sunday Times·Se ntinei-Pa~e- ·

'

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i

The

*******

OSCAR'S'
.

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Presbyterian Church will sponsor
a bazaar Nov. 3 and 5, at the
Kroger Store in Pomeroy. A bake
sale will also be held on Tuesday,
Nov. 3. The event will be held
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday,
Nov. 3, all p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

TilE NEARSIGifi'ED EYE

For Your Dining
and · Listening
Pleasure Every
Friday &amp; Satur·
day, starting at
8:00P.M.

FORE'ST RUN - Women will
have soup, sandwiches, dessert,
beverages at tile Forest Run
United Methodist Church all day
Tuesday,eleclion day.

CENTENARY
United
Methodist Church will hold a chili
and soup sale Tuesdayfrun 10:30
a.m. to 7 p.m. There wtU be
homemade chili, soup, hotdogs,
cakes and pies. All proceeds will
go toward the new · fel)owship
room, wbere the event will take
place. The public is invited.

----OPTOMETRIST----

His Keyboard Are Backl

446-9010

CHESTER - Eleclioo dinner
and bazaar Tuesday at Chester

bread,
hotdogs,
sloppy
joes, ;
will
consist
of beans
and cornhomemade pies, cakes, coffee,

menu
Monday -

REEDSVILLE
Ladles
Auxillacy, Olive Township Fire
Department bake sale at fire
house in Reedsville on eleclioo
day; also hot dogs, coffee and hit
chocolate; starling lime8a.m.

Tuesday

mERE WILL be an election
day dinner at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Qay Saint, Tuesday with serving
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. The menu ,

COAD
cludes :

TilE GA!JJPOLIS AAUW will

ARMAND

For Reservations Ca II
Gallipolis

GAL!JPOUS - The French
Colony Olapter of DAR will meet
Monday at 1:30 p.m. at the home
of Howard R. Need, il61 First
Ave. Ruth Thomas of Rio Grande's Engllsb Department will
have tile program.

DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

and

POMEROY - Annual O)'&amp;ler
supper of Drew Websier Polt 31,
American Legion; oboervance
wW honor aU World War I
veterans; 11art1 at 8 p.m. World
War I vets .-ling lranaportalion contact a member of
Commander · Gerald Rought at
119U937.
.

_,

0 ll'l 110
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Atllnll. at New. Orlluul
~It Miami

a;;;r,;;.:t..~y

.. Cind""oll
NY
Jollol
NY~
lllo Pr I
ot f'llllburll1

-........
ot Plill'
a.- ._.
a.,

Robert F. Snowden

Dotnll .. lAo .......
Qty at ... 01110

Paid Pol. Adv. by Candidate

....,

-a.~oaw~
Dlllold .. ..
\j

b:lt~

..

RESTRAINT- Steve Lltbiaeber of Belloa College,
· ript, laldles 011to Wayne Dlllartela of the Ulllvenlty

of Pltllbargb to elld a first quarter nm Salunbiy Ia
Newtoa, Mull. Pittwoa,%9-%4. (APLaserphoto).

Notre Dame blanks Navy, 38-0
, The victory. broke a two-game touchdown pass to Tony Hunter:
Notre Dame loelng streak and lifted before the loog strike to Howard·
the Irish record to 3-4 while Navy's with a litUe more than three minutes:
three-t!ame winning streak ended, left in the hal!.
. .
leaving the Middles with a r..3
Harry Oliver booted a 37-yard:
record.
field goal for the only scoring in lhC·
Navy was bottled liP completely in third quarter to make it 3Hl. Kief
the first hall and Umlted to ooe first left tile game after the third quarter, .
Navy.
down.
The Mlddlea did not Cl'lll8 into and finllbed with 13 completions ill
Howard, making 1111 first start at
Notre
Dame
territory WIIU the third .23 attempll for 225 yards and lhl!
· Notre o.me, caught a 34-yard JIUI
quarter.
best game af his career.
:
lronl Klel to oet up the game's flnt
Klel IICored Notre Dame's first · The lrlab scored another . touch-·
kiUCbdown, toot Ill eatkround
JJ yard&amp; for 1 toudldown. lftt...W.own on a one-yard aneak. Af· down mldwap in !lie fourth quarter:
and IbiD GW'Ifl I liS-yard Klel )IIIII tar JIOnrd wail on his ehd-ai'OIQid on a »yard pus fr'om Tim Koea~l
touchdown, Klel laarled • :rl-yard to LlrTy Morilrty'
for aliU anatller toueldoWII•
SOU1H BEND, Ind. (AP) Freshmall split end Joe Howard
scored two touchdowns and. Blair
Klel burled a pair of touchdown
passes Including one of 52 yards to
Howard Saturday to lead Notre
· Dame to a crushing :1&amp;4 victory over

,,

'

�Page--C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nov. 1, 1911

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

effort saying, "It was a great effort
on our parLa 'total ' team effort.
Everybody was ready to play tbe
baDgame."
Going into the game we were very
~nlident that we could win! We
knew we had to have a complete
team effort. We had a lot going for

a

us, but at tbe same time we had lot
to·- Rose said.
North Gallla look tbe opening
kickoff on ita :Ill. Three plays later,
the Pirates were halted.
Roger Blaoell handled the Pirate

North Gallla then salled into •ear.
After grinding out vainsble yar:
dage on the ground the Pirate of·
fense went Into Ita spread offense In
an effort to throw the Eastern defen-

punt cleanly, but after a hard hit had
the baD knockBd IOOII!l. A mad

game.
The play waa nulllfled, however,
on a cllpplng penalty.
'&gt;.
ContlnuedonCS

rr============================================::.

The -C. and S. Bank Santa Says:
The 1982 Christmas Club Accounts are
now open, and .again this year we will give
the 50th payment free when you have made
49 payments! ·That's right - 50th payment free! ·
Where else, but the Bank that's "Always on
your side". • • • •

25 Court Street

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...

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Silver Bridge Plaza

•

Spring Valley

GOOD/_YEAII
: · PIRATE SWEEP - Witb leading blocker Paul Hollingsbead (70)
i.;,dlng lhe way, Bruce Shriver (11) · glliDs some yardage against
~tern's solid wall defense Friday night at Eastern. The Eagles earned
~share of the SVAC cbampinsbip with a 2HI victory.

The Sunday Tlmes-Sentinei- Page--C-3 . ·
.

.

E

NG
II

Department
FirstdQWns
Yards rushing

10
166
66
232

137
47

Yards passing
Total yards

184
21
8

Passesatt.

Passes' completed
I nterceptlons
Fumbles-fumbles lost

e16"·24" guide bars available
eAutomatic and manual chain oiling
• Displacement 3.55cu. in. (57.4cc)
• Chromed chain
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3
I

3

1·1

2·0
5· 50

Penalties
By Quarters :

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

Bonzo -leads lronmen over Marauders-.

WID • • •

Continued from C-2
The penalty seemed to take !be
steam out of the Pirate sa11s and the
10 P'-Y drive, wblch was their
biggest of the half, was thwarted after 48 yards.
.
In the moments that followed both
clubs exchanged possessions until
Eastern took over wilh four minutes
left in the period.
That came when Roger Bissell
made ooe of two key interceptions
for Eastern.
With I; 26lefl in the opening round,
John Riebel sprinted into the end
zone untouched from four yards out.
AMike Hauber kick followed to complete the 10 play, 48 yard scoring
drive, thus giving Eastern the Hf
lead.
.
All was quiet for nearly a quarter
with the exception of some excellent
punting hy both clubs. North Gallia's
Bruce Shriver booted one spiral 53
yards and Easterner Mike Bissell
blasted a towering punt 63 yards to
put the Pirates in the hole.The ball
changed hands six times before
Eastern started Its second scoring
drive.
·
The Eagles went 49 yards in three
plays for their second score.
The scoring play was one of the
most dramatic plays of the season as
Mike Bissell sent a perfect spiral
downlleld 37 yards to the great hands of end P.G. Rifle for the touchdown.
Wolfe subbing lor the 'injured
Hauber kicked a line shot through
the uprights for the PAT, the score
stood 14-6 atthe half.
SECOND HALF
The second ball was just as exciting as the first with some very intense moments for both clubs.Again
both clubs exchanged possessions
several times on loss of downs.
Following the opening kickoff of
the hall North Gallia marched 58
yards, but, P.G. Rifle came up with
one of the key plays In the game- an
interception that he ran to the NG 40.
After giving·till! ball up on downs,
. North Gallia established another
drive that threatened the Eastern

slve frOnt Oo the oecond IUCh play,
Eric Penick broke l0011e ar&lt;lUDd tbe
eod ADd rambled to yards for wbal
appeared to be !be flnt score ol the

acramble followed. North GaiUa hod
secured the ball few Ita first big
break.

Pomeroy

·E agles

Eagles earn share of SVAC crown with 21-0·victory
se of the gA!De, the seventh-ranked
By Seotl Wolfe
EAST MEIGS - The SVAC Eagles clearly emerged as· the
showdown was as exciting as one premier power, both In the region
could expect, but when the final buz. andtheSVAC.
The gigantic win boosts the highzer had sounded, it was Eastern who
flying
Eagles to a perfect ~ mark,
claimed a dramatic 2HI win over
4-6
withing
the. league, while the
North Gallia's Pirates ilfter the two
Pirates
dropped
to 7-1-1 and 3-1
powerhouses locked horns here
witbln
the
league.
.
Friday evening before an estatic
overnow crowd.
Coach Arch Rose enthusiastically
At the finish things were . commended his domiriating Eagles
statistically even, but over the cour- lor a great game and complete team

..

Nov. 1, 1981

5· 5(

A small down payment

will hold your purchase
till Christmas.

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RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Lew Jenkins dies
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -

Pomeroy
992-2054

Lew

Jenkins, who became lightweight
boxing champion of the world in
1940, died at the Oakland Naval ~
Regional Medical Center. He """ 64.
Jenkins won the lightweight Iitle
May 10, 1940 .with a third-round
. knockout of Lou Ambers at Madison ·
Square Garden. He held the liUe
til Dec. 19, 1941, when he lost to •··~•
my Angott in a 15-round decision.
Over his career, Jenkins bad
bouts, winning 47 by knockout, lBIJy
decision and five draws.
·

·985·3308

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360 Second St., Gallipolis, OH., 446·0699

No trade needed

• Goodyears best-sethng b1as

""'' .
ply t1re

• The strength of 4 full plies of ool·vester

PRICE

Slza

982 SHORT BED ·cHEVY TRUCKS!!

issue you a rain check. assuring future delivery at

• ft oad.nugglnQ tread
• Srnooth-ricling pol yester cord

Wt,.;cwalls slightly h1gher

THIS WEEK ONLL.A SHORT SALE FOR

the advertised price.

oi,$ 150F E1· ·

b!Mikwall
2-ply load ran¥• B,

plus 11.153 FE .

SALE PRICE

RAIN CHECK-If we sell out of youi' size we will

·'

Pre-Season Val

EMERGENCY ROAD SERVICE

Eliminate Winter
Tire Changeoverf

ALL FISHING EQUIPMENT IN STORE

• Hard-pulling deepseated tread cleats
• Effective in slush,
snow, and hard pack
• Builttough to re~ist
the hazards of winter

THArS RIGHT, 1982 CHEVY TRUCKS AT SAl£ '
PRICES. JUST IN TIME FOR FALL HAULING NEEDS.

Sale Ends
Nov. 25

342 2nd Ave.
Gallipoiis
446-2691

113 Court St .

...J-::':"::::-J Size P166/I!OR 12 Blo•ckw•oll.l

;;a.·:.o-:-:-1 Pluo $1 .40 FET.

• All season tread design lor
traction in mud and snow,plus
qu iet highway ride
~E~.O :'~-!!'-"~-

• Gas-saiJing radial constructiori
• 0\/er 10.000 gripping edges
lor traction

AREN'T ALL WE ARE ...WE

Save On Hard-Pulling, Suburbanite fll/YJ.Bt81 Tires
MAINTAIN STOPPING DISTANCE

SAVINGS ON ALL 4-PLY SIZES!

....
Pl66!801113 -··~,2- otJ, Ioiii

,_I, piUS II.._, FE!.
1«1 t1ade needed

• Hard-pulling deep-seated ·
tread cleats

• Effective in slush. snow. and
hard pack
• Built tough to resist the

hazards of winter

A78-13
078-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78·14
6 .00-15
F78-15
G78-15
H78·15
L78-15

BlACKWALL

SALE

WHitEWALL

IALE

PRICE
$31.90
$40.80
$41 .80 .
$43.95
$48.10
$37.95
$43.85
$48.10
147.70

l'tiiCE

$34.15
f42.85
$45.00
$48.70
$48.30

$48.30
$41.90

-

112.85

-·

-m.
Nolrodo
$1.71
12.06
$2.24
12.37
$2.52
$1 .86
12.44
12.59
12.84
13.07

1982 CHEVY C-10
6.2 Liter diesel, 4 wheel drive, automat ic w/ overdrive, almond

exterior, AM radio.

•

(2) 1982 CHEVY C-10
6 cyl. , 4whee l drive, A speed w/ overdrive, AM radio, almond ex·

terior.

·

1982 CHEVY C-10
6 cyl,, 2WD, auto., AM radio, muchmore. Red eKterior .

front-End
Alignment

$J9

6cyl ., 2 Wo, 3 sp . manual , sliver exter ior .

•

Parts and

• ur.

llllf.oly COIIItrucllon
thump, even wtt.n tint

TEl
John P. Fulh.

BATTERY

be.lrlngs . Inspect hydraulic system ·
Add fluid &amp; rOild test cor · Moot U.S.
ca~s. some Imports.

.

Applied By Qualified
Personnel
•Best In Startin&amp; Power
•Lon&amp; Ute
• Maintenance·Free
Group 3·24
3 Year

WanantJ

~_

4300

Helps protect metal from salt - Helps
prevent ruat on new e~rs. Helps rust
lrom spreadin; on older cors • All
vulnerable

areas spny coated.

Compact Cars

426 Viand Street
Poin·t Pleasant, w. Va.

SIMMONS

.

-"'I aul.

MIIGS
•

·-···-

.

· THE RIVal

PiuU1.50 fET llld ·
old tire.
.
111&lt;1 rtllllonoe o1

'""!!'"
IIO=r
QOrd • Tilt IIO&lt;formonco
• Tilt
of

lining, all 4 whetls · New Irani greiH

seals . Resurface drums . Repack front

BY YOUR DEALER ON

STOP

RUST·
PROOFING

Addillonol ports
and
urvlcu
..,.. If llltdld.

DR
4-WHEEL DRUM: Install ntw broke

. We Also Have a Good Selection of Used Trucks, As Well •
As a Few 1981 Standard Bed 1f2 and:~~, Ton Trucks, Many
with 6 Cyl. and Automatic.

• Inspect all four tires • Correclair PAIIII.Ire
• Set fronl wheel camber. cuter. and toe
to proper alignment • lnlpect IUIP8flaiOn
and .steering syatema • U.S. cars and
impOrts with adjuttable auapenaiona ~
Includes front-wheal drive. Chavettae,
trucke. and. can requiring MacPherson
Slrul correction extra.
·

242 W. MAIN

'

adllhooal

setVices etna
H needed.

7

$ 988

2-WHEEL FRONT DISC: lnsloll new
front broke p~ds and ;nose seols ·
Ruurtac• front rotors · Repacks front
-1 beoriii!IS . lnspocl calipers and
hydraulic system . Add fluid &amp; rood tesl
car. (Does not Include rear wheels).

PROLONG TIRE LIFE, BOOST MPG

Shaker Grate, Blower,
Screen, Asli Pan, 1f• Steel.
5 Yr. Guarantee.

BRAKE
SERVICE·
Your Choice

EX IDE

OLDS•.CAD.-CHEV, INC.

675-3930

Pom_.,,ow.

301 E. Main St.
PH.992-6614
· Mon.-Fri. ·
I A.M.-I P.M.
II

S11turday
IAM,;SP.M,

,..

\

'

�"
Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bonzo leads
Continued from C-3
terceptlons.
The Meigs defensive line sianuned
the lid oo Jackson's attempts to run
the ball Inside, and the three JHS
running backs averaged under two
and one-half yards per carry. But
the Ironmen on the offensive line
gave Bonzo time to pass, and when
the protection broke down, he
scrambled until his receivers broke
loose or else he sprinted downfield.
The senior quarterback was nine for
14 passing, gained 31 yards on the
ground and, on defense, picked off a
pass that set up the first \ouchdown
of the game and prevented a Meigs
touchdown late in the fourth quarter.
Jackson opened the scoring with a
spectacular pass play in the waning
seconds of the first quarter. A Bonzo
interception of a Bob Ashley pass
gave the ball to Jackson on the
Meigs 18 yard line. The Ironmen
were stopped cold by the Meigs
defense and two penalties, and laced
fourth down and 12 on the 20 yard
line.
Bonzo dropped back to pass on the
fourth down play, scrambled to his
left under pressure, and lofted the
ball into the end zone as the
Marauder defensive line was closing
in. Jackson's Allen Collins was

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

waiting in the end zone, perfectly
covered by Ashley,
The two players, evenly matched
in height, jumped together for the
ball and both got their hands on it, ·
but Collins was able to maintain a
hold oo the pigskin to give Jackson
the score.
Collins booted the extra point and
the Ironmen led 7.0 with 53 seconds
remaining in the first ·quarter, and
the balf ended with no other scoring
threats.
Meigs roared into the second half
with a 39-yard kickoff return by
Roger Kovalchik that gave the
Marauders excellent field position
ontheJHS49.
The Marauders moved down the
field on runs by Kovalchik and Chris
B\ll'(lette as the offensive line of
Mark Boyd, Gary Nakamoto, Greg
Taylor, Randy Murray and Mike Edwards blasted big holes in the
Jackson defense.
Meigs moved to the 20 yard line,
where they faced fourth down and
five. On the second crucial fourth
·down play of the game, Ashley dropped back to pass and found Jon
Perrin over the middle. The pass
was right on the numbers and Perrin
struggled through the defense to the
goal line to put Meigs on the
scoreboard.
The Marauders tried for two points, but Ashley's pass was over

Nov. 1, 1981

· Kovalchik's head as the lronmen incl KovaJciilk 81'11bbed one paaa for
secoodary covered the play well, . seven yards.
and Mel~ trailed 7to hith 7:441eft . The lOIII drop! Meigs record to
mthelhlrdquarter.
four wins and five 101111 overall
On the Maraude~s· next three and tbree in the SEOAL. Next
poss ion, Jackson agam toot ad- week Meigs finishes the season by
vanta~e of a Meigs turnover, by faclnl! Waverly at borne.
pouncmg on a fumble. The Irorunen
Statistics
fashioned a well-executed drive of Deportment
'M
J
three runs and five passes to score. Flr!tdowns
8
13
69
107
Bonzo dumped a short pass off to the Yards rushing
.Yards passing
20
u
team's other co-captain, fullback Total yardage
89
121
Mark Fenik, who scurried 20 yards Passesattpt.
14
20
9
9
along the right sideline for the touch- .Passes compt.
Interceptions ·
0
1
down. Collins kick put JHS ahead 14 Fumbles
2
1
to 6 with I :20 left in the third quar- Fumbles lost
1
0
Penalties
1-15
4·40
ter.
By quarters:
Jackson clinched the gsme with a Meigs
0 0 6 ~ 6
time-consuming 13-play drive !bat Jackson
1 0 7 6-20
ended, once again, with a Bonzo to r~;ilijj;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~--1
Collins aerial TD strike with 3:40
remaining in the game. Unlike the
STATE FARM
first Collins scorlnl! catch, however,
this time the receiver was wide open
in the end zone as the Meigs secondary suffered a fatal lapse.
The hold was bobbled on the extra
"
point kick, and Meigs trailed
20-6.
Tbe Marauders tried to retaliate
INSURANCE
in the final seconds, and Ashley com®
pleted a pass over the middle of the
defense to Scott PiCkens that netted
FOR INSURANCE CAU
53 yards. The completion would bave
given Meigs a touchdown if· Bonzo
had not turned on the speed to catch
Pickens from behind. The 'Meigs
drive stalled, however, and Jackson
sat on the ball as time ran out.
Kovalchik was the leading rusher
in the game with 57 yards on 14
carries, and Burdette added 24 yards on six carries. Pickens~ single 53yard reception gave him the most
yards among the Meigs receivers,
s.. F. . , ..... ~:~~~~... c.,.., ·
Rick Chancey added 36 yards with
..... Ofllw . ............ ,.....
five catches, Perrin pulled in one
Lllr••
fiOOti~­
Stwfw Fum ,. ,_,._
oass for 20 yards and a touchdown

·ALLGOOD DEALS

MUST

TOANENDNEW

IT'S THE LAST Ma'ITH TO BUY A

40-TO 80-HP'JOHN DEERE TRACTOR
AND EARN SSOO OF JOHN DEERE MONEY.
AND '10Ull SAVE ON FINANCE CHARGES·

All good deals must come to an end. So buy a new
2040, 2240, 2440, 2640 or 2940 Tractor before
November 20, 1981, and you'll still qualify for $500
in John Deere money you can spend for goods or
services at our store. And, no finance charges will
accrue on p.urchases until March 1, 1982.' The
sam~ finance waiver off.er applies to new
implements purchased with the tractor.
But a good deal isn't all you .get with a John
Deere 40· to 80-hp tractor. You also get a tractor
with outstanding lugging ability, tough drivetrain
and "extra" features like closed-center hydraulics
that get jobs done faster.
So gelin on a good deal now. You'll save.

..........

MEIGS

A

12

TOTALLY
NEW DESIGN
IN
MEMORIALS

'This finance of.fer may be wilhdrawn at any t1me.

, Write For Free Brochures Showing .
Memorials in full cot or' witt\ sizes and prices listed. .

.SWISHER IMPLEMENT

.LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

co.

Love to bowl ~ut hate to keep score?
'

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agicScore
SKYLINE LANES oHers
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Because your (third) game is on us.
OFF~R GOOD MON~AY THROUGH FRIDAy
•

. 1 P.M. TILL 5 P.M. THIS OFFER
EXPIRES ~OVEMBER 30, 1981 • .

ALL NEW 11th FRAMEo
.

COCKTAIL LOUNGE
.

.

_HAPPY HOUR 4 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
ANNOUNONG

.·

LEARN
TO BOWL- . -- --

·EXPERT
INSTRUCtOR AVAII.ABI F MONDAY
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THROUGH FRIDAY, 1 P.M. nL 5 P.M.

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•

.'

Ohio-Point

LARRY .IURDA NIGHTLY
' -BEGINNING NOVEMBIER 2ND

record of Z06 yards. On right Is Ken Russell (23)~
R~kel defeader on right Is Bill Norris. - Brenda
WilBon photq.
·

EBERHARD SETS SCHOOL MARK - Gllilpolla
tsllback Brian Eberbard (44) rushed for 246 yards 11119
trips agaiDBt visiting WeUstoa Friday algbt to break
Pete Neal's 10 year-old single game school rusblul{

WATCH THOSE HANDS- SouthwesterD'8 Steve
Pelfrey puts the stop oa Southern's Wade €Gnnolly (22)
during Friday's SVAC game at Southwestern.

Southern rallies to tie
Southwestern team, 14-14

GAHS clinches second
place after 55-6 win
GAWPOLIS - Gallia Academy
Higb School clinched a second-place
finish in the 1981 Southeastern Ohio
League standings following a ~
victory over visiting Wellston on
Memorial Field Fridsy night.
A Blue Devil vict.ory over Athens
at Athens Friday will give Coach
Torn Korab's Gallipolis crew its best
conference mark in seven years.
Coach Paul Blankenship's Golden
Rockets were no match for the
speedy Gallians before a gQOii-sized
parents night crowd. Six different
players scored for the Blue Devils,
now lH overall and 5-1 inside the
league.
• Wellston, playing GAHS for the
• final time following a 57-year unin. terrupted series, dropped to 2-7.0
·overall and (l.6 in league play.
• Wellston will host champion Ironton
: in its last SEOAL game ever Friday.
: · Friday's contest was marred by 22
penalties totaling 192'k yards. Fifteen infractions. were against. the
home team ( 112'k yards). Wellston
• was penalized seven times (80 yards).
One GAHS player was ejected for
spearing on the opening kickoff after
. GAHS was penalized 15 yards for not
getting the game started on time.
Both teams hid long touchdown
plays nullified by penalties.
Sets School Mark
Gallia's Brian Eberhard, Sl!Jlior
tailback, established an individual
school rushing record for one game
with 246 yards in 19 trips. The otd
mark was 206, by Pete Neal, against
Logan in 1971.
··

Gallipolis scored on Its first play
from scrimmage when QB Scott
Korab ljit flanker-halfback Phil
King with a 67-yard strike. King
kicked tbe extra point (9:57). It was
7.0.
Aaron Saunders' seven-yard run
(3:42) made it 13-0. King again split
the uprights.
A .50-yard Scott Massie to Dale
Lambert TD toss was nullified by a
WHS penalty.
GAHS scored four more times in
the second period. Fullback Willie
Wood crashed ove• from the one
(10:14) . King's extra point made it
21.().
King returned an intercepted pass
40 yards (8:01) to make it 27.().
· Wellston got on the ·board when
Scott Massie hit Todd Montgomery
with a 73-yard strike (7:25).
ScottKorab's 22-yard sneak (5:37)
increased Gallia's lead to :!:H.
Peulty Nullifies Score
Alter a 61-yard punt return touchdown by Phil King was nullilied by a
penalty, Brian Eberbard raced 37
yards and King kicked lbe point after (3:49) to give GAHS a 4IHi halftime advantage.
_
Eberhard's 62-yard scamper
(8:58) in the third period put the
home team ahead, 47-ll.
GaiHa's Tim Tawney tackied Dal~
Lambert behind the goal line for a
two-point safety to begin tbe fil!al
period..That made it 4!Hl.
Ken Russell's 4-yard plWlge (9;05)
completed the game's scoring.
In 53· plays from scrinunage,
GAHS rushed for 342 yards and ad-

PATRIOT - Trailing '14.() going Southern team, c&lt;&gt;-eoached by BiD
ded 116 passing (three of five com- into the final stanza here Friday Porter and Darrell Dugan, in check
pletions) for 458 total yards. GAHS night, visiting Southern erupted for throughout the second canto,
14 points in tying Squthwestern in an finishing at halftime with a 6.() score.
had 19firat downs.
·Eleven different Blue Devils took SVAC contest.
Things began to take off again
A three-yard run by South- midway into the third quarter when
turns carrying the baU.
Wellston had the ball 49 times. The western's Scott Lewis led tO the first Don Carr scored on a two-yard run .
Rockets rushed for 121 yards (34 scoring of tbe homecoming afiair .
An extra point was ea'rned by twin
Lewis' touchdown came after a 70- brotherRon Carr.
trips)' and completed four of 15
passes (four intercepted) for 119 yard march in four plays by Coach
However, midway through the
yards, giving tbe visitors 240 total Jack James' Southwestern crew into fourth period, Southern gained its
Toms do territory.' The extra point first touchdown when 156-pound
yards. WHS had nine first downs.
attempt failed.
DefeDBive StaDdouts
back Dave Talbott landed safely in
During that march quarterback the Highlander end zone after a 11&gt;
Doug Brown and James Griffin
recovered two Wellston fumbles. Randy Hammond connected for a 41- yard run, making the score !H.
With one minute left in the game,
Phil · King had two . pass in- yard pass to back Steve Pelfrey and
a
25-yard
pass
to
team
c&lt;&gt;-eaptain
Southern
tied tbe Highlanders on
terceptions, Tony Armstrong and
another 10-yard Talbott run, but a
Jlnuny Beaver one each. The latter Don Carr.
Southwester~
pleased its kick for the extra point was no good.
suffered an ankle injury on the final
_homecoming crowd by keeping the
Talbott proved to be the game's
play of the game.
top rusher with 131 yards, while Ron
Jerry Eutsler had at least two
Carr tallied up 70 yards and Pelfrey
sacks, and caught two passes for 49
68 yards for Southwestern.
yards for the winners.
Dave Talbott led all rushers with
· Lambert paced the Rockets' at131 yar-ds, 88 in the fourth period.
tack with 92 yards in 25 trips. He alSo
Allen Tucker added 46. Junior
bad 56 yards on four punt returns.
quarterback John Porter was inMontgomery had 75 yhards on two
jured early in the contest so signal
pass receptions.
ALL GAMES
Statistics;
TEAM
W L T POP

Area grid
standings

Department

G

W

First downs
Yards rushing
Lost rushIng
Net rushing

19

315

9
130

33
342

9
121

5
3

15
4

Pass attempts
·Completed ,

Intercepted by

Yards passing

Total yards
Plays
Return yards
FlJmbles
Lost fumbles
Penalties
Punts..

4

0

116
458
53

119
240
49

161
1

0

87

2
2

2·59
•

0 6 0 Q- '6
14 26 1 6-55

'

knee

test.

It wu reported that Bacon, a :no
pound J!nebuater, could have reluJ'o
ned the ..,oond ball, but was held out
by CGich Bob Lull.
Frldly the Tlpno received the
openJrw ldckotf and drove 81 yards
1D live playa, capped by Bacon's u
yard touchdown run. Jlnuny Morris
ldcked the polntlfter.
.
With 8:21 remainlnB lD the first
period Jlmnly Morrll raced 31 yards, then added the pl6twDillll
·
On the first play .of the second
penod, Morris pleted off I Chieftain
· pua and raced 116 yards to score, IU
• be milled the kick.

With just over one minute
fe!Tlllining in the baH, Morris !allied
his third TD oo a 18 yard run, but
again missed the placement.
Following a scoreless third quar·
ter, junior Mike Smith scored from
the five and the kick falled IJ88in.
Tismo added 'the llnal Tiger Sj!Ore
on a one yard run with6:39left.
Playing against the Tiger sube the
Chiefs gOI on the board with 1:46left
when Eric Griggs scored from the

one.

,,

" l,;;,.. ••

Athens
Wellston

2 7 0 191 274

Gallipolis
Jackson
Pt. Pleasant
Rock HUt

103
112

131
156
103
91

155
200
2 6 1 114 223

Logan
1 1 1 49 237
Non·SEOAL results:
Coal Grove 14 Rock Hilll3
Logan , W . Va .• 18 Pt. Pleasant 6
SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
Ironton
Gallipolis

L T POP
6 0 0 282 67
5 1 Q 169 73
3 3 0 124 124

W

Jackson
Waver tv

3 30105148

Meigs

3
2
1
0
13

Athens
Logan

3 0 85
3 1 93
4 1 49
" 0 88
23 2 99S

Wellston
TOTALS
Friday's. r.esults:
Waverly 13 Athens 6
I ron ton 40 Logan 6
Jackson 20 MeigS 6
Gallipolis 55 Wellston 6
Nov.6games:
Gallipolis at Athens

112
123
130
218

99S

calling duties were shared by Allen
Pape and Greg Nease.
Southwestern also lost its starting
quarterback Hammond to inj~ries.
His replacement was freshman Jeff
Burleson.
Defensively, C.T. Chapman, Dennis Teaford, Tyrone Brinager, aruf
Allen Tucke~ were each credited
with a fine game for Southern.
The Highlanders will host Hannan
Trace Friday, while Southern faces
cross-county rival Eastern at home

riext Saturday night in the final
games of seasonal play.
The tie left Southwestern last
year's co-SV AC champs with a 2-6-1
record while Southern is 0-3-1.
••
Oepartnient
s ' sW
First Downs
Yards RuShing
YardsPassing
Total Yardage
Passes Attempt ed
Passes completed
1nterceptions
Fumbles
Fumbles L,ost
Penalties
By quarters :
Southern
SW

7
167
16
361
6

1
1
1
0
3·25 · ·

.
By Gary Clark
BUFF AW- Astrong aerial show
by Buffalo of Putnam's talented
junior quarterback Eddie Harris
proved to be too much for the
Wahama White Falcons Friday
night as the host Bisons captured a
2H2 decision in the season finals for
both teams.
Harris completed 10 of 22 passes
A strong aerial sholl' by Buffalo of
Putnams' talented junior quarterback Eddie Harris proved to be
too much for the Wahama White
Falcons Friday night as the host
Blaons captured a 27-12 decision in
the season finale for both teams.
The win capped a successful campaign for the Bisons who finished the
year at 7-3.
Friday's loss left the White
Falcons with a 5-5 slate for the year.
The While Falcon offense which
had been virtuaUy non-exlstant,
suddenly came to life following a
Shawn Pa~h fumble recovery.

1~

f3
.0

·2

:o

7·60
,
0. 0 0 lol- {4
6 0 8 o---;14

White Falcons lose 27-12
'

:~

1(1
201
f,83

.

.

paug!l p_icked up the loose plgskll!
and returned It to the Bison Z3 yllj'd
nne. Following" a loss of a yaril
Kevin James hlt Estel .Lavencte.r
with a 24 yard touchdown pass wllb
4:32 remaining.
:
Wahama, on its next series._..
sustained their only real drive of
the night by going 71 yards in ali
plays for six more points. Four
consecutive Kevin James aerials
and a 15 yard penalty aided tile
Fl!lcon Drive with James hlttlqg
Lavender once again for the touch,
down this time covering 16 yards;
STATISTICS
Department
w
First downs
6
28·45
Yqrd ~ ushing
Yards passing
88
Total yards
133
6· 18
Passing
Interceptions thrown
5
I· I
FumbleS-Lost
4· 46
Penalties· Yds
6-26.0
Punts·avg.
52
Off. plays
Score by quarter s:
Wahama
0 0 0
Buffalo
0 13 1

B
1~

52 · lqJ

tempt at the Tiger 35 yard line in the
~t:
third period.
lo-22
The win lifted Waverly into a tie
•0
with Neigs and Jackson at 3-3 in
2-1
Ironton at Wellston
5·-15
league play while Athens dropped to
Jackson at Logan
4·35..7
sixth place with a 2-3-1 mark.
1'1
Waverly at Meigs
The Bulldogs tok a 6.() lead in the
Hurr icane at Pt. Pleasant
Rock Hill at Symmes Valley
12....... 1
2
first period when they marched 97
Fairland
at
Coal
Grove
1-:21
yards, capped by Kevin Schwarzel's
three yard pass to Danny Trevas. A . - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ; conversion kick failed.
Waverly came back in the second
quarter with a 71 yard drive that ended in the end zone when Marvin
,-_ '
·Harris oaught an II yard TO pass
from Tommy · Thompson. Don
Welch's kick put the 'figers_on top 7-

In running their record to 9-o and
6-0 the Tigers roUed up 18 first
downs, 301 yards rushing, allll completed three ol seven passes for 73
yards.
'
6.
The clock showed 3:30 remaining
The Chieftains, now 1-H and 1+1,
neUed 13 first downs, had 142 yards in the third quarter when Thomas
rushing, and hit on 10 of 22 passes for romped in with his fumble recovery.
However, the Waverly defense
112 yarda with three intercepted.
fought
off three Athens scoring atTlllllo Plcecl the Tlgen with 93
tempts
in the fourth quarter, the last
yards oo aeven carries, Morris bad
when
a
Schwarze! pass was batted
85 oo ·nine tries, and Bacon finished
down
at
the Tiger 20 with just eight
with 80 on five carrles.before his in. seconds remalnlng.
jury.
Neither team waa able to move the
ErleGrtcpled the Lopn runners
ball
on the groWld as both clube
with 38 yarda Clll3 carrlols.
showed
53 yarda rushing.
Score by quarters:
0 0 0 8- 6
However, Thompson completed 10
Lopn
14 12 0 12-40 of 22 pasaes for 114 yards while Schll'llnlon
wane! hit on seven of 17 for 77 yards,
with two intercepted.
Waftlt)'IIA*-1 1
Jl'lrst dOwnl favored Atheni12-IO
WAVERLY ·- Jim "Truck"
'lbomu, a • po•ud Jun1ar t.dde, whlle the top ground pjners were
raced 811 yarda with I fllmble friday Andre PurleD with 46 yards oro 15
nlcht to 1Ift Waverly to a IN vletory Waverly l'i&amp;YS and Chris Cavole netted t3 yards oo 12 tries for Athens.
onr the Albena Bulldnp
Beore by gurten:
'l'llamu' IIIOIIIIIIt of ....,. 8ooo-s
when BulldoC qaarterbltt Kevin Athena
0 7 8 G-13
8dnranel couched up the baB when WlilveriY
hit by Cbac! A1lllon 1111 a ... at-

'

Meigs
Waverly

9 0 0 336
7 2 o 218
s 4 o 194
5 4 0 180
5 4 0 84
4 5 0 13.4
4 5 0 130
4 5 o 118

2-50

Score by quarters :

Wellston
Gallipolis

Ironton
coat Grove

lS-112112 7·80.

Ironton ,has at least share of
loop title; Waverly 13-6 winner
. IRONTON - The Ironton Tigers
: clinched a share of the 19111 SEOAL
gridiron tiUe and kept alive their
: hopes of attaining a berth in the
: state playoffs with a ~ victory
. over Logan Friday night.
CurrenUy ranked third in the state
: in Class AA play, tbe Tigers also
: hold a sUm margin in the state compuler ratings, but need the right
combination of Wins and losses by
three other teams in the region to
• gain the coveted playoff berth.
· Friday's win Oiler visiting .Logan
. came· high as sophomore sensation
Pierre Tlsmo suflered torn car- tllages in his
and ..w undergo
surgery this week.
Tlamo has been a defensive safety
aU year for the Tigers and carried
the "baD seven times for 93 yards
against the Chiefs before the injury.
Also, senlCII' · fullback Dennis
Bacon was knocked out with nine
minutes remaining in the secood
period and did not return to the cOn-

Southern rallied for two fourth period touchdowns to Ue
the Highlanders, 14-14. BlU Bahr photo.

OHIO VALLEY BANK

TAX-FREE
ALL

·:.,

Rate Effective thru .Nov. 28, 1981
Minimum Deposit: $500

••
•
•

tax-free *
Substantial
1

penalty

:~:d~:w,•1 .'0oo

for

~

premlillture

lor individuals, up
$2,000 on joint returns.
.

to

EM:II DEPOSilOII INSURED UP TO $1110,000 BY lHE FDIC
~::~~more from
..

~~~~--------~~---------------~~~~~~~""
,....._: FDIC

:
•

�•

Nov. 1, 1911
Nov. 1, 1911

The Sunday

Kyger Creek 34-14 winner
·o ver Hannan Trace eleven
CHESHIRE - Senior fullback whoin seqior Mike Waugh rambled 31 ped.
With juat secondsJeft, the Bobcats
Tim Barr broke loose on a lis yard yards. Greg Webb added the conscored again oo a 42 yard run by
ID- run igniting the host Kyger venioncultlnglheacoreto1U.
Kyger Creek to a 214 lead at the . senior Troy Edwards. Bradbury's
Creek Bobcats to a lopsided. 34-14
baU
when aenior quarterback Rob kick made the final acore, 34-14.
victory over Hannan Trace here
Friday night. The win kept Coach Waugh coonected on a 10 yard ,. •Kyger Creek'• offenae C&lt;llllrol the
Deryi Well's Bobcats in the running scoring pau to wingback Craig contest racking up 22 fil'lt downs and
for second place in the loop starr Rlchanll. Bradbury again booted 4081otal yards.
the EP.
The Bobcats end their 11181 season
dings .
Neither
team
was
able
to
score
in
Friday
at North Gallla while Han-'
It also avenged defeats to the
the
third
11anza
oot
the
fourth
was
nan
Trace
travels to Southweatern.
Wildcats of Coach Larry Cremeens
in each of the last two seasons.
full of scoring.
SIIIISIICS
KC
Kyger Creek senior running back Deporlmonl
HT
Barr's run came on the third place
22
••
ani
h
First
downs
9
ded
Ed
M
of the game. Sophomore J.D. Brad·
oote en
a "" Y marc
Yards rushing
89
389
with a four yard run. A run for the . Yards passing
4
bur)' made it 7~ by kicking the EP.
19
..08
Tolal yardage
137
Kyger Creek struck for its second conversion was sloppell.
7
six-pointer in the opening stanza
HannaJ1 Trace got its final fD on a ~:::: ~~~~~
:
3
with lour minutes left on Barr's 10 ·-io yard drive in,nine plays which en- Interceptions
1
1
0
0
Yard run capping .a 65 yard drive ·in . ded' on a four yard ID p88l from Furnbles
Fumbles los I
5-205
o'
1,0 plays. Bradbury again hit the quarterback Kelly Petrie to end Penaltles
3-35
uprights.
TobySheets.
.
Byquarters:
A run for the conversion was stOJ&gt;HT
0 8 0 6-1~
Hann an Tra ce got on the
KC
1&lt; 7 0 13-3~
scoreboard in the second period

Pt. Pleasant_drops ·~8-6 decision ·
MOORE ON THE GO- Kyger Creek's Ed Moore
(44) I'IIIIB full speed despite lbe 'awaiting arms of a
would-be Hannan Trace tackler Friday night at

Cheshire. Moore scored one m Lo lbe Bobcats' 3H4
win. (ShawnThomas pholo).

Philadelphia dismantles Cleveland
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Philadelphia 76ers' National Basket·
ball Association opener turned into a
Iaugher, but at least the 14,102 fans
who showed up earned a free breakfast.
Julius Erving scored a game-high
27 points as the 76ers took command

lind pauing. The 1&gt;-3, 11)1).pound
senior canied five times and picked
up 1112 yards, almost baU of Logan's
210 for the night.

Fields, who threw 10 yards to Kerr
ny Ross for the 'Cats' secon.d ID,
comple\&lt;Jd seven of 14 attempts for
72 yanll. ·
Logan scored all its jlllints in the
first half, and speedster Greg Nelms
scored in the first quarter when he
returned a punt 52 yards.

Austin triumphs

have ticket stubs for a game in
which Philadelphia scores at least
125points.
Center . Darryl Dswkins' basket
' 'We wanted some raw meat, and
with
less than two minutes to play
we got it," he said.
put
the
76ers at the 125-point plateau.
The Sixers have an agreement
Dswkins,
who ,got three quick fouls
with McDonald's this year to
in
the
first
period, had 15 points and
provide free breakfasts to fans who ·
five rebounds in 19 minutes of
playing time.
"I got out there ~nd it didn 't seem
no different because Caldwell

early in the game Friday night and
defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers
1211-104.

Sports DeSk

LOGAN, W. Va. - Coach Steve
Safford's Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks
dropped their fourth grid contest in
nine starts here Friday night as the
Wildcats posted an HHivictory.
Logan's senior quarterback Greg
Fields ran for one touchdown and
passed for another as the Wildcats
won for the third straight time,
Fields led the Wildcats in runnin~

Point Pleasant · got a fourtbquarter mona 12-yanl run by Mike
Patterson. Point had more first
downs 12 to 11 but the Big Blacks
had
101 yards rushing.
Earlier last week Coach Safford
suspended five players including
four starters for a ~lolation of
training rules:

oniy

Score by quarters:
Logan
Pt. Pleasant

6 12 0 D--18
0 0 0 6-• 6

Registration deadline Nov. 6

STUTTGART, West Germany
(AP) - Tracy Austin defeated
Yugoslavia 's Mirna Jausovec 6-2, 6GAUJPOIJS - Registralion · is
1; while Martina Navratllova topped underway at all city school district's
Anne Smith 6-2, 6-2, to move into the elementary schools for the 11181 ~
semifinals of a $125,000 Grand Prix Rinky Dink basketball season.
tournament.
The program is for fourth, fifth
In other matches, Sylvia Hanika of and sixth grade boys and girls. Both
West Germany heat Jo tiurie of boys and girls leagues will he for. Britain 6-1, 6-4; and Romania's med )Vilh practices at local schools
Virginia Rilzici defeated Joanne and games held at Washington
Russell7-6, 6-1.
Elementary School and the GDC.

(Jones) wasn't there," Dawkins

said.

Registration fonns are available
at school offices or at the Gallipolis
M!lflicipal Building, 518 Second Ave.
Registration deadline is Nov. 6 and
practice starts in late November.
Volunteer coaches are also
needed. Anyone interested should .
contact the recreation department,.·
446-1789.

cinnati Reds, who

compiled the best
overall winning:
perce ntage

ba se ba ll,

in

th e

fraudulent mini series,

semi ex·

citing playoffs came a very drab fall
classic between two old powerhouses, the Yankees and Dodgers.
Could one really be enthused by
the egotistic Yankees led by the over
wealthy George Steinbrenner, cocky
Reggie (candybar) Jackson, multimillionaire Dave Winfield, and those
other nea r supernatural players?
Then, on the other side, is the
"ever'' kis!:iing rotunda nt Torruny
Lasorda who once held a cheesebeer party after his dub defeated
the Reds by a lopsided score in a sort
of 11 rub-it-in" contest.
If those two situations a ren't bad
enough, we as TV viewers must contend with the Hwnble Mouth, him·
self, Howard (Yankee lover) Cosell.
From his reaction in the fifth inning Wednesday night when the
Dodgers took a 4-1 lead, one would
have thought Cosell was owner of the
club and had already conceded. His
cry towel o·emarks left no doubt of
his Yankee affiliation.
He was always putting in comments regarding Steinbrenner and
his manpger, Bob Lemon. Feeling
sorry for Lemon, making trades for
Steinbrenner and apol ogizing for
New York's inept play.
When will Roone Arledge wake up
to the fa ct there's two much Cosell selling himself - and too many
people in the booth for the benefit of
the nation 's sports fans ?
Now to my baseball love - the
Cincinnati Reds. It appears two
frontline players, Dave Collins and
Ken Griffey, •will be playing elsewhere in 1982.
Collins has announced his in-

How the top

ranked tea ms in The Associa ted Press

Ohio high school football ratings fared:
CLASSAAA

l , Cinc innati Moeller, &amp;-&amp;&amp;, played at La·
tewood St. Edward Saturday.

a.

10, Sanduaky,
28-14.

&amp;-1.(1,

beat

CLASSA.I

1. Y - Moonoy, 7-04, ployed al
C.Veland Sl. ~,.. So-y.

According to Collins, before
signing a new contract with his new
club, he will negotiate on the basis of
position. He feels the Reds not only
don't appreciate his talents, but
have been playing him out of
position. Therefore, Collins wiU seek
a contract putting him at either first
base .or leftfield. Things are really
getting out or hand.
Griffey, on the other hand, who
may still he negotiating with Reds'
president Dick Wagner, is expected
to wind up in New York City either
with the Yankees, who else, or Mets.
Rwnors persist over a Cincinnati
talk program that George Foster
may end up ln someone else's outfield next season. Foster is in the
final'year of a three year contract
and has visions of an even greater
bundle than the $4.5 million landed
by shortstop Dave Concepcion.
According to the rumor mill,
Foster could go in a package With
Dan Driessen and a pitcher, Paul
Moskau or Mike LaCoss to the Texas
Rangers for Buddy Bell, catcher
Jim Sunburg and possibly an outfielder, say, AI Oliver of Portsmouth.
Another report has the Reds
trading Frank Pastore and' Ray
Knight to the White Sox for outfielder Chet Lemon and Southpaw
Ross Baumgarner. We can't see Cincy giving up on Pastore yet.
There is little doubt changes will
be forthcoming.
· Cincinnati's management was not
satisfied with the play of the Reds'
outfield this past season. Too many
balls fell or were misjudged.
Something has to be done.
We feel it is time Wagner did
something to improve tbe team.
Even though it had the best overall
winning percentag~, at times, the
Reds looked terrible.
Let's replace this disgrunted perfanners with new blood. Since the
" aUenda!l(!e keeps going down .
seats are pretty easy to find on
weekends. If that trend continues,
there won't he enough money to pay
the players.

I

&amp;, Urbana , ~ . belt London ~10.
' · Daylocl Roth, ~. beal lloyton Colo-

nel White 47-'.
7, Akron St. VIncent-St. Mary,
1-l.fl,
beat Mentor Lake Catholic l&amp;.fl.
11 , Nel a onvllle-Yort, M-0, beat
McArthur Vint.orl County 51-0.
9, Columbua Watlenon, 7·1.0, plaYed ~
lwn!NB St. Cblrlea S.turday . .
10, Hamllton Bldln, 7·1-1, played Cinclnooli McNicholas Satutdly.
·
.

'

I

•

1a.

L. It Ford, Jr., the Dayton Power and Ugh! Co. as ·
plant manager at Ohio Valley Elec- assistant cootrol operator in the
trlc Corp.'s Kyger Creek station, Is .operations department and was
announclnethepromotlonoffourof Pl'OJliOiedtocontroloperatorinJune
Its employees, effective Oct. I.
Charles E . Wood has been
promoted . from assistant shift
GAWPOIJS _ Ralph Baylor,
operating engineer to shift operating
engineer.
son of Mrs. Lee Tyler, Rt. 1•
Wood joined OVEC in November G8Jliolla, lind R. C. Baylor of Zanes1964 as a tractor-diesel operator in -viUe, Ohio, has transferred to
the yard department. He trans- Columbia, S. C. as manager-trainee
!erred to the operatioos department wi:';~d':u.S::.t.t spring from Rio
in May 1955 as an auxiliary equip- Grande College with a bachelor of
ment operator and was promoted to
assistant control operator in science degree. He is a memlJer of
February 111511, to contro~ operator in Alba~~~~~:~~~; has ac-

He Ia a graduate of Russell High
School, RUMell, Ky., and aerved siJ;
years in the u. s. Navy. He Ia a
member of the American Legion _
VFW lind the Legloo of the M._;
and has been ~dent of Kyger
Creek Employees' Club for 11 years.
He lind hil wife Sam! reside in Point
Ple8llllllt and are the parents of lour
children.
Dayton L. Briggs has been
promoted from equipment operator
to unit supervisor. Briggs joined
OVEC in June 1118t as a laborer in
the labor department.
He transferred to the operations

May '· 1958engineer
and to.massiStant
shift
operating
January 1967.
Wood ls a · graduate of Raccoon
Townshlp High School and aerved
three years in the U. S. Anny. He
and his wife, mary, reside in
GallipoUsandaretheparentsoffour
children.
_

department
in January
1971 as toa
utility operator'
was promoted
auxiliary equipment operator in October 19'12 and to equipment
operatorinMarch1976.
He is a graduate of Cadmus High
School, Cadmus, and served iD the
u. s. Anny rrom 1915-47 and again

Baylors placed

Bill N. Fugate has been promoted
fnm unit supervisor to assistant
shift operating engineer. Fu_gate
joined OVEC in December 1954 from

cepted Kelly,
employment
with law
the
Jackson,
Holt and Farrell
fl.,n in Charleston, W. Va. She
gradUated last spring with high
honors from Marshall University,
Huntington, W. Va. with an
associate degree in applied science
asalegalsecretary.
She was a majorette while at Marshall and a member of Gamma Beta
Phi Honor Society and Phi, Beta
Lambda Sorortty.

The Commercial

RIGHT!™

w-

..
.,'·
'

per
gallon
'Cumm colors ollghtly hlghor.

Right now when you purchase two
or more gallons of Devoee
WONDER-TONES'" Interior ·
Flat Wall Pcdnt you get this
Devoee Paint baseball cap free.
But hurry oHer ends 11/7/11

.......

-29 QUAUIY TESTS
In WORIH DOING RIGHt

'

We the underalilnOd dlrtc:torl, attest the~ of this RepGrt of Can-

dltloo {lncludiDC !be IIIPPCJrtini!ICheduiN) and declared tbat It bu been exIUIIiDed by us &amp;ad to !be best of -llnoWiedle and belle! has been .-.red in
coof01'111811ee with the inltructiona and II true and tGi I ec.t,
.
PhiDip L. Papa
tbarlllll. Holler- Directors
DoaaldL Cnnce

AND ·"
675-1160

Skn Haus: Mond~Jfrid~J, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
I

MEMORANDA
Amounll outstanding as of report date
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of
,....
.
1100,000 or more . . . .. ..... . . .... ... . ..... : .. -.. . . .. .. . .. . .. 2,7811,0011.00
Average lor 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total deposits ... ...... . ' ' .. ....... .. ' .... " .. . .. . ' '' ...... . . 38,018,000.00

'

SUP-PLY COMPANY

of

ASSETS

'

·-CAROLINA LUMBER
312 SIXlH STREET

Federal Reserve Dlalrlel No. 4
o1 Galllpolls 1n tile s•te of Oblo aad Domeatle SuiJIIdlarleo at tbe business OD September .,1981
.

1 the undersigned officer do hereby declare that this Report of Condltloo
(inci:.UO, the supporting schedula) Ia true to the best of my lmowledge and
belle!.
€«net-Attest: Wayne L. Nld!ly
Eucutlve Vice Prealdent • Cashier

.
.

Wade spoke on the indications and
rationale for using hyperalimeDtation. Hla talk included case stodies
with emphuis on fluid lind elec.
trolyte awareness.
·

to yard supervisor. Bob MUla joined
OVEC in December 1964 as a plant
guard. He transferred to the yard
department as a coal handler in May
11155 and served in various positions
in that departmen\ before being
promoted to harbor boat operator in
July 1972.
He is a graduate of Middleport
High School and served two years
with the U.S. Anny. He Ia ~member
of the First Southern Baptist Church
in Pomeroy and Is active in Eastern
High School athletic program. He
and his wife -Joyce reside at Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and are the parents of

The new system provides more
flexibility to eligible operators and
makes the acquisition of the study a
more integral and contiguous part of
the normal pennll application
process.
The program helps operators who
annually produce 100,000 tons of coal
or less from all operations.
aperators who feel they qualify and
who plan to submit a new penni! applicatioo sometime in the near
future, ·should write or call Don
Povolny at the following address for
more .information: Divlaioo of
Reclamation, Small Operator
Assistance Program, Building Jl-,'1,
Columbus, Ohio 43225, telepho!Ul

FRYE BOOTS
·

r~thr~ee~chi~ldte~n~.!!!!!!~!!!!!!~(~61~4~);466-48l~~50~.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~
MeJTill Lynch Presents 8 Free Senunal'
' On the .
®
.r~~h
Management
Accciunt
Fmancial SeJVice .
~
-

''

8 • 8

b
b
t
may e t e mos
. - .• .
c

important financial
innovation in years?'
ForrunR. Oct. 20th. 1980

Coah and due from deposltocy institutions ..... ... . ...• -... , . . , • 3,241,000.00
u.s. Treasury securities . .. . . .... ....... . ... .: . , ......... . ... 6,317,000:00
Obligations of other U.S. Government
. agencies and corporations ..... .. .... .... , .. ...... ...... ... . 5,340,000.00
Ob!igations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .. ... .. , ....... .... . , . ... , ...... .. . . .. .. 8,135,000.00
Federalfunds sold and securities purchased
·
·
under agreements to resell . . . . .. . ..... _. ... ..... .. .. .... . . ... 1,250,000.00
lAljlns, Total (excluding unearned income) . . ... . . .. . 17,352,000.00
Less: allowance for possible loan losses , .•• . . . .. ... .. . 195,000.00
t.oans, Net ............ . . . . ......... . .. . . .. .............. . 17,157,000.00
Bank-premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises .. . .. .... , ... .. .... . .. . 941,000.00
All other asaets .... .. .... .. ......... .... ...... . .. ... .. ........ 973,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .. . .. .... : . ..... , ..... . .... .. .. . .. . .. . . . .. · · 43,354,000.00
LIABILITIFB
Demand deposits of indivio;luals, partnerships,
and corporations . . .... . , .......... . , ... . .............. . . .. 5,448,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
.
. ·
partnerships, and corpQ!'&amp;tions .. .. , ... ..... ... .... .. .. ..... 31,336,000.00
~-of United States Government ........... . . . . .. ... ...... . . 52,000.00
:~Stales and political subdiviaions
in the United Stales .. .. . ................. ................... 1,577,000.00
Certified lllid'offrc'US· checks . . ....... .• • .- ... . . .. .• •.... . .. . ... . 179,ooo.oo
Total Deposits .... .. ....... .......... . ... ........ .... ...... 38,~000.00
a. Total demand deposits ..... ...... .. .. ........... .. 6,470,000.00
··
b. Total time and savings deposits . . . . . .. .•..... , .. . . .32,122,000.00
All other liabilities ... ·.. , ............ ............... .... ... .... 531,000.00
TOTAL UABILITlES
(excluding subordinated notes and
·
'debentures) . .. . ... . .... . .. ... .... . , , •. . ,... , .. .... .... . ' ... 39,123,000.00
.
EQUITYCAPITAL
Conunon stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,800
b. No. shares outstanding 1,800 .. .. .. . : .. .. ...... (Par Value) 800,000.00
Surplus .. ... .... .......... , ........ .............. ....... .. .. 2,850,000.00
U.ndlvided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves ..... .... , ..... .. ... . . ...... .... ... . 481,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ...... ,. ,., . . ... . .... ........ . ... .. 4,231,000.00
TOTAL UABILITlES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL .. ..... ......... .. . :;......... .. . .. .. .. .. 43,354,000.00

FREE

MORE THAN 1WO CENniRIS oF
MAICES DEVOE TIE PAifT 10 PICK
©1111_pew. &amp; A.ynalds Co.

port) .

::?.~:.~':n~nu:;I~~~;;;;;MEN'S

promoted from harbor boat operator

from 1~. He and hil wife Marian
reside in GaWpolls and are the
parents of fOlD' children.
Shirley R. Wells has been

Funded by the federal government, the program Ia adminlatered
by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resourcea through its Divlaion of
Reclamation. started in December.
19'19, SOAP has already 8B8Isted
more than 4G coal operators with 75

POINT PLEASANT - Dr. John
Wade, ear, noae and throe! (ENT)
apecWlat, and Robert G. HockeDberry, RPh, Pleasanl Valley
HOipltal pbarmadBt, -uy coodueled a guest lecture at Roane
General Hoepltalin Spencer, W.Va.
These prolessionall from Pleuant
Valley Hospital addrelfed_ members
of the medical staff, llll1'ling stalf,
and the hospital pharmacisl of
hyperallmentation (nutritional sup-

and Savings Bank

IT'S WORTH .

0.0.

5, Beallovllle, - . ..., Coldnll 7-4.
o, Tiffin Calvert, 1·1-4, plo,. Cutolla
Mar.P.rett. Saturdly.
7, ReediYtllo -...,, M4, beol Vlnlon
North Golllo Dol.

Cldlo, ~Y·
7-1-0, ...,. .. - ·
z. Cleveland . ldlne, ~. played at eye' North
t, New
Badoeye Centnl. ~
Alllln&lt;e Solunlly'
""· belt Cony f.1
f,
"""!.\..:wn
~·Houle,
IApl1e.t..o,
.... lost to
10, ........... 7-1-tl, ...... ot ......
4, Wa~
, delphll Tulci111w• Ca~c Saturdly.
Wllminl(lon 21·11.

!"""""·

CHESHIRE -

at Kyger Creek

free agency.

water

Loram King

Promote four_

CJWU,EI E. WOOD

8IIJRLEY R. MIU8

BILLN. nJGATE

•

2, Upper Arlington, ~ . beat Gahanna
10&lt;1.
3, canton McKJnley, U.O, played Toledo
Scott Saturday.
4, LakewoOO St Edward, 3-().(1, ·played
CinclnnatJ MoeiJer Saturday.
CU88A
5, Qeveland St. Jmeph , 84(1 , plilyed
I, Newark Catholic, 14-0, played at Jolin• stown Northr'6dge Saturday.
Youngstown Hayen Saturday.
"~,
Way-.vWe, N-0, beat
Yellow
11 Gahanna, &amp;+0, lost to Upper Arlln,l.t·
Sprlnga &amp;4-0;
·
lon 10&lt;1.
3, New Phllldelphla TIIICirwu C.dJo.
1, Colwnbwl East.rnoor, M-0, beat Colie, U.O, play• Struburg Slb:ardly.
lwnbwi We•t •fl.IJ,
4, Marl• steln Mlriotl, &amp;.fl.l, Ued Cold·
Cincinnati Prlncel.on, 1-1-o, beat

Hamilton 40-7.
t, DOver, 8-1~. best Ashland 47:15.

DAY'l'ON L. BRIGGS

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON OF

tentions to play out his option for

I ~ How they fared
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPl -

COLUMBUS - Tbe Small
Operator Aallatance Proaram
(SOAP) bu been rt!YUed to provide
faster and more convenient aervlce
to Ohio's small COli · strip mine
. operators.
'lbe program Ia deviaed to aasist
eligible operators to acquire needed
hydrolos!c-geolo8ic !lludlea required
by the state before a mining permit
!a issued.

State BaDk No. 983

Who really cares?
By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
T.S News Editor ·
So the 1981 World Series has
finally ended. Who
After a two
month baseball
strike, a disappointing second
finish for our Cin·

At conference

Revises program

'·

POINT PI.EASMT

SlturdiJ 8 u. to 12 naan
•
'l .• '

Merrill4'nch invites you to a f~ seminar _on Th~ Cash
Management Account (CMA), the fmanCJal semce that le~s
you control your money these six ways:
Continuous investment of idle funds to earn dividends
at current high-yield money market rates or tax-exempt
income, if you prefer.
Instant access to all your invested cash at any time, anywhere in the world. ·
~mmediate a~c~ss to a line of credit based upon the value
of your secunttes.
.
Check-writing privileges. Menill Lynch is not a bank: Bank
services are provided by Bank One of Colu~bus, Oh1o, N. A.

1

2

3
.4
5 A special VISA(ii) card accepted in 152countries.
A monthly sta!e~ent to summarize all securities, check and
6 VISA card act1vtt1es.

The seminars are free. But spl!,ce is limited. So reserve your seat today.
Date: Thursday, NoVember 5th Time: 7:30p.m.
Place: Holiday Inn, Gallipolis, Ohio .
Tht Cash Management Aa:oum prO!P'am is proprietary to Merrill Lynch, U.S. Pat~nts Pending

�Pomeroy-Middleport-,Galllpolls, Ohlo-,Polnt Pleasa.nt, w. Va.

Page-C-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•'
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Nov. 1, 1981

..

Ohio farmers face poor crops, fa11ing prices

I

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•

. GALUPO!lS - About one half of
; the labor required for the production
• of burley tobacco involves stripping
; and preparation for market. During
i the past year or two several com' panies have begun to markettobac; co stripping machines. We'll see
: them used in Gallia County for the
; lirsllime this faiL
• All area tobacco growers are in: vited to a farm demonstration of
several of these tobacco stripping
' machines this coming Tuesday
1

! evening, November 3. The demon·
:
:
•
:

stration will be beld al Jim f!aughman's farm, located 10 miles south
of Gallipolis on Ohio Route 7. The
demonstration will begin at 6 p.m.
j andlastuntil8:30p.m.
• The meeting has been arranged
! through the efforts of Glenn
: Graham, Buckeye Hills Farm
: Business Planning Analysis In• structor and the following com: panies and individuals. I ) Sperry ; New Holland (Tobacco Leaf Strip' pers - Carter Tractor Sales,
.· Gallipolis. 2) Tobacco Machinery
; Co. of Ky. (The Stripper) - Vcrlin
; Swain, Crown City, Ohio. 3) The
• Ring Tobacco Stripper - McCarty
; FarmSupply, Ada, Ohio.
' There will also be baling of tobac----- -·· --

--

~-

co with an air press. .

--.- -----

"

There's still time to enroll in the
Ohio State University Farm Income
Tax Management Letter Study
Course if you get your $6 into us this
week. Now that November is bere
we'll start mailing the individual
leSsons. Tbe course consists of
weekly letter-lessons mailed from
the County Extension Office starting
now, through late January. Ther~
are nine lessons plus a comprehensive problem and an "Update" letter on the new tax
legislation passed in 1981. Each
JesSon includes several review
questions .. A self-check key comes
with the next Jesson. The letter·
study approach lets you read and
review at your own pace, in your
own office or Jiving room.
About 25 farm families enrolled in
this course a few years ago. Much of
it is still the same but has been
reviewed and updated, however,
there are three lessons on
depreciation and investment credit
which have been almost totally
rewritten. The ~ enrollment fee is
used to cover postage and printing of
the material. Don't forget to enroll
before the end of this week.
·

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Homemakers'
Circle Annie Anyboldy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An expect, wiD cause · to volunagrieullural econcm11t 18)11 sagging !arilY leave fanning ~- of a
prices coupled with poor crops this lack of IDccme."
year may force 10111e Ohio fanners
Barr said the llllimatecl out-of·
out of bualnela.
pocket and flzed Investment foe com
Ohio State University professor is ~15 por aere. The figure is $257
Wallace Barr 18)11 bad weather per acre for ID)'beana.
combined with lncreaslng producThe eetlmltes are baaed on
tion are narrowing the profit per · average production of 120 buahela
acre the state's farmers can expect. per acre of com and 31 buahell per
to eam on Ohio's chief agriCultural acre of soybeans and can vary ·
products- com and aoYbealll.
widely from fann to fann.
·
"Weather is the kind of riSk farWith last year's near-record crops
mers take, a riSk of their investment in Ohio a faint memory. farmers
to the vagaries of the weather," wbo predicted In the sprtnc that per·
Barr said,
acre yield would plummet are fin..
"A season like this, coupled with ding their forecaats right a.o rain.
the rising COlli of production and the
Barr said Ohio farmers are being
falling market prices a fanner can
hit with a one-two punch.
"This year, Ohio farmers have
had a double 'wharruny' working
against them. The first whammy

Making pumps sound ·

was weather that wa.o first too wet to
plant and then too dry to grow,"
Barr said.
"Tben tbe aecond ~ lJ the

tremendous C1'Gp8 that are beln8
estimated for other stales In the
Com Belt, jpcludlng what are ex·
peeled to be bin-busting record
crops In IUlnois and Indiana," he
saJd,
Those big yields wiD keep prices
for com and soyl!eana at low levels.
Homer CarteJ:, a statiBtlcian with
the Ohio Crop Reporting Service,
said excessive rainfall in May and
June - u much u 22t percent of
nonnalln parts of the state - kept
fanners from planting in the spring
and early swruner.
"II was just too wet to get into the
fields, and some Ianners who had
planted in late April and early May

Local feature

then hid to go back and replant,"
Carter said. "For Instance, by JIIM
1911, farmers hid nearly 1011 percent
of the corn planted and about 75 perceDI oftbe soybeans in the ground.
"Tbls year in June, there ;wu only
:II percent of tbe soybelll crop pianted and 110 pereellt of the corn," Car·
ter said. ''Theil we had 10111e dry, hat
weather in july and A~ that
didn't help the growing-. Ooce
the cropl are in the ground. there
· isn't lll)'lhlag a fanner can do to accelerate the growlna procea."
The Crdp Reporting Service 11
estimating this year's Oblo soybean
crop wiD totall01.5 millkln bulbela,
a decrease of 25 percent under the
IBM level of 135 milllon bushels; and
361 rnillloo bushels of com, a drop of
18 perceDI . over last year's 441
-rnilllon bushels.

••

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-D· I
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohlo-Poirit Pleasant,
Nov. 1, 1981
·

Di..

w. Va.

I::
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•

Tile conaer •'- al the Vlata
Elemeatary School no HI ,. OeL
. , 1111. Laat W........y, hre da,a ,
before the IIIII Ullllverury II ~ '
dodlcaU.. al lbal bnOdlwe, .....U..
dllcovered, wldle demolllflln&amp; lbe .
tlruclllre, a Ume ca[IIQie iDIIde lbe
..

CGnlefltont.

-.

Annual awards w~(l highlight
37th soil -conservative fete

LOS ANGELES (AP) - When 8
pump gets the shakes, Keri Templin's ears perk up - even though
the unit may be half a world away.
Templin's job at Borg-Warner
Corp. is to diagnose and corri!CI m:
GALUPOIJS
One of Gallia
dustrial pumps that vibrate too
much. Before he devised his County's outstanding !ann families
technique, sophisticated equipment . will be honored by Gallla Soil and
had to be transported over long Water Conservation District during
distances to make the.diagnosis. Of- the annual meeting Thursday, Nov.
ten the equipment would be 5, at Green Elementary School.
Goodyear Tire ind Rubber Comdamaged in transit or shipment took
so long the customer had to shut pany . will present an award to
another of Gallia County's outdown operations at a financial loss.
Templin uses a sensing device, an standing farmers.
Kenny Tomlinson, Ohio Departamplifier, an inexpensive FM converter, an ordinary tape recorder ment of Natural Resources, Division
and telephone. Although there are of Wildlife, Gallia County game
still times when on-the-spot. analysis protector wiU present the Wildlife
might be required, he says, the Conservation Award to a Gallia
telephone system takes care of a County citizen that has promoted
wildlife conservation for many
large percentge of problems.

years.

The GaUia Counly Conservation
Club will present awards to three 4H clubs for the promotion of wildlife
In their booths at the Gallia County

Junior Fair. The top three 4-H clubs
promoting conservation will receive
awards from Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District.
Gene Derickson, ODNR, Division
of .Soil and Water Districts, deputy
chief for administration, Columbus,
will handle the election of supervisors to the board of Gallia SWCD.
Displayed during the evening will
be · a queen size handmade quilt
representing Ohio's 88 counties.
Elich county made their block
representing their county. Galli a

Soil and Water Conservation District
Ladles Auxiliary highlighted Gallla
County with a picture of the bandstand in the City Park.
The Ohio Federation of SoU and
Water Districts Ladies AUiillary did
the quilting.
Winner of the quilt waa Phyllis
Hibinger, a five year member of
Gallia SWCD Ladles Ausllliry.
Door prizes, dooated by area
businesses, will be awarded during
the evening.
Tickets are ~ and may be pur·
chased at the district office, Reservations are due Nov. 3. No tickets
will be sold at the noor.

"

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Vinton school demolition
uncovers 'time capsule'

f••aturing

fly BF:TIIE CLARK

Extension Agent.

VINTON - "Time present and time past are both perhaps present in time
future," wrote T.S. Eliot. ·
Sixty-six years ago, the people of Vinton collected bits of their present and of·
fered thefll to the future, for consideration as elements of the past.
Th.ey knew then as we know now: that memory travels into the past and
imagination into the future; so, they placed a time capsule in the cornerstone of
their new elementary schooL
Sixty-six years later that capsule - its metal shell now rusted, its contents as
old and time-worn as the building itself - was accidentally discovered as
workers brought down the walls of what had served as a center of learning for
the village of Vinton.

H1imc Ernnnmi&lt;'s

GAL!lPOUS - If you're looking
for do-it-you~self projects, then
cauiking and weatherstripping are
two that will save you a Jot of money
compared to the small investment in
materials. Even in a properly insulated home, air leakage can account for up to one-third of the
: hearing costs.
What areas need caulking'
Wherever two different materials or
parts of a house meet at a stationary
joint, such as around windows,
doors, foundatlon, siJJ.o;, chimneys,
water faucei.s, vents, electrical
. outlets and pipes.
Caulking compounds are available
· in standard 11-ounce cartridges
which fit conventional caulking
guns. The lwo most common kinds of
caulking compounds are butyl and
latex. Latex is suitable for most
. jobs. Because butyl is more nexible,
. it may last a little longer. Built costs
· more. There's also the putty kind,
but this may not last long enough to
"lie-w.ortH the effort.

To caulk, follow the directions on
the label. Be sure the surface is
clean before you begin. And the outdoor temperature should not be
below 45 degrees Fahrenheit.
Weatherstripping around doors
and windows is important, too. A
crack of only 1/8 inch all around a
standard front door is equivalent to
a four-inch by seven-inch opening _:
something you would normally
never tolerate in your home.
There are many types of weatherstripping available. Felt weatherstripping is ihe least e~pensive but it
wears out more quickly than some of
the other types. Metal weather·
stripping with a vinyl edge is
probably the most durable. But it's
also the most expensive. other types
include foam, rubber, nexible vinyl
and thin metal weatherstripping.
For more information on caullting
and weatherstripping·, ask for these
publications at your County Ex·
tension Office, ( 446·7007) "Caulking" and "Weatherstripping
Doors.''

: Burley price support available

....

·'

; GALUPO!lS - Price Support .
. will be available for all burley tObac. co packed in bales from the 1981 and
subsequent crops, according to Hoke
Leggett, vice president of·the. U. S.
. Department of Agriculture's Com, modity Credit Corporation.
: Leggett said price support will

Further information and a copy of
tbe final regulatory impact analysis
is available from Robert Tarczy,
analysis division, room 3754-.S,
USDA/ASCS, P.O. Box 2415,
Washington, D.C., 20013, or phone
(202) 447-6733.

: continue to be available on burley

Can down computer

: tobacco tied in " hands," the
traditional manner.
As in the past, individual bales of
; burley tobacco are required to be
• identified by a uniform iden: tificalion lag 1-li/8 inches wide by 3~ 1/4 inches long attached with a wire
; tie showing at least the following in·' formatlon : {1) warehouse
registratlon number ; (2) basket
· ticket number ; and 13) number or"
· bales of the lot.

•

PLYMOUTH, Mass. (AP) There could be more than I ,oob 26cent parts in one $500,000 computer,
says a spokesman for Pixley Richar·
ds, an electronics-industry supplier.
."It only lakes one rnis)lllgned 26cent part to down a computer," he
sid. "It could happen if the P,&amp;rt is ·
just .001 inch out of place. For com-'
parison, a hwnan ·hair is .003 Inch
wide.u

UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL .,c-':""'

'81 Chevy Monte Carlo
5,200 miles. White, Stereo, tilt.

'81 Buick Century, 4 Dr.
..

Air, burgundy,low miles.

'81 Chevy Malibu

'10,000 miles, loaded. Sharp.

'81 Buick Regal, 2 Dr•.
'

12,000 miles. White.

'81 Ch., 4 Dr.
4 spd., burgundy, 9,000 miles.

miles,

air,

burgundy.

V-6, air. am -fm, 8 track, 25,812
miles.

'78 Olds Cutlass Supreme

..
'

''

•'

1'·
•
'

1-15'x9' Sliding Door, 1-3'x6'8" Service Door, 6x6
Pres. Trtd. Timbers. 29 GA. Painted Steel Siding
(Choice of 12 Colors) with 5-year warranty, 28 GA
Galvolume Steel Roofing with 20-vear warranty, 4
Sky lites.

'544000 TOTAL ERECTED PRICE
Prices Include Tu • Delivlly

'••

Many other bldg. sizes and options ~vail able .

•

IRON HORSE BLDRS.

•J

•'

'.

..,

15141 MIDDLE FORK RD.
LAURELVILLE, OHIO 43245
' 614-33H745
!

8495

1

~795

Black/Carmine Interior, air, p;s.,
cruise, tilt.

17,180 miles, air, green.

7695

$7695

'80 Olds Cutlass L S. Sedan

4dr., air, AM-FM, Prem. tires .

Air, rallye wheels, loiN miles.

'80 Chevv Citation Sedan ·
Air, blue, nice.

$7995
SS395
.$5295

'5495 54995

4995 '54680

1

'5495

'80 Chevy.Monte Carlo

'80 Chevy Caprice Ctassk:

'8495

~595

1,127 Miles, 4 spd.

'78 01c1s Omega 4 dr.

'

5

'81 Clw:uelte, 2 Dr._

39,000

'•'

8295

4dr., air, burgundy, low miles.

'79 QtEVY MONTE CAROO

''

8495

5

~

'81 Chevy Citation, 4 Dr.

7995

1

'1

IS

WAS

WAS

4995

5

C-lANK ·FINANCING
UP TO 48

'80 Pontiac Panix Tudor
· Air, tutone, L.J. Sport . .

'80 Datsun Pickup

'6995

'6295

'7495

'6995

?495

'6695

'6495

SS995

'6995

5

•

I

5995

•
.'

'·

- -

laylag Ill the Vboton Elemelllary 8cbeal oa

Oct. 311, 1915. Tbe building, wllb ....U. parliaUy slandlog, Is plctnred along the horizon.

Alm•t exactly 16 yean after the ~edlcalloo of tbe Viatoo Eleme11tary School, workers begao demollllblo&amp;
lbe structure. Tbe Gallla County Local Board of
Edocalloo determlneti Ibis year the bblldlng woo.· 11•
loo&amp;er sale to bOUle students.

·-

'6495 55995

5 spd., blue, low miles.

'80 Chevy Luv Pickup
4 wheef drive.

Last Tuesday - following more than a year of study
that led to a final determination by the Gallia County
Local Board of Education that the building was no
..&lt;longl!r safe to house students - actual demolition of
the structure began.
On Wednesday - two days prior to the 66th anniversary of the dedication of the building - workers
discovered a rusted metal box, with dimensions approaching one foot by 18 inches by four inches - in the
corner stone of the building.
Time had had its way with the capsule - rust had
stripped away some of the protection offered by the
metal shell. Inside, partially destroyed by the subtle
force of the changing seasons of 66 successive years,
were found objects of importance to those who had
dedicated the building to the future more than half a
century ago:
A copy of the New Testament, three editions of the
villages' newspaper, 'The Vinton Leader' (Jan .7, 1914;
Oct. 21 and 28, 1915), a transcript cif the 'Gettysburg
Address,' a Masonic Calender, a list of the charter
members of an organization 'whose name is not quite
distinquishable and what appears to be the remains of
a letter, or letters.
The board of education is handling tbe documents
carefully. Representatives of the Gallia Count~
Hi~orical Society have been notified of the discovery.
A permanent home - a place where they may rest,
protected, for another 66 years - for the capsule and
its contents is being sought.

,.
j

'

'6995

'6295
.

'80 Chevy Malbu Sta. Wag.

.

'6995

9,000 miles, showrooiT! new.

.. ,

-·
. ''

REGAL
Limited, 19,000 miles. Showroom
·
cond.

'79 atEVY BlAZER
Auto., fir. Cheyenne pkg., black.

••

MINT

SAVE

'7495

'6995

·65 MORE
1973 TO 1982 IIOOFIS

Sunday ShoppetS Welco111e

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FOWMI iDIIde lhe lime cap~llle were: !
a copy of tloe Now Testamnl, a
tcrlpl " the 'GeltJibut ""*-.' •
lllree copies III'Tbe Vlaloa I lder,':

tru-:

• Mual!lc c.lender, • Uot .. ...•

ebarter

memben

al

erpalllllloll, ud what .......

••'

t.:.t

N 111e 1ez•l• of a letter, • ......._ ·:

•

�•

:

=P=a::ig'=e-=D=·=2==T=h=e=S=u=n;;;d;;;a;;y=T=im:;;::e:s·;;;S;;;e;;;n;;;11;;;ne;I========~P~o~m~eroy-Middleport..:..Gelllpolis, Ohio-Point Plea sent, w. Ve.

.~ t t PJ ...' ~

*allipolii lliarp .....-

••

DEB FOX, the Times-Sentinel's
newest newsroom slave, transported
. ol'. Sam out to the elegant new Perfonning Arts Building, and she took
a picture of Ocasek in action back of
the lectern in the auditoriwn. Dr.
Edward L. Donovan, dean, presided
and, after the learned conunents of
the panelists, opened the meeting to
the 300 mostly students who were
there. (Panelists besides Ocasek
were Dr. Charles Alexander of Ohio .
University and Dr. Marcella Barton
of Rio Grande College/Community
College. ) Ask for the Thursday, Oct.
29 Tribune if you're not a subscriber
or if you want someone else to see
Deb's writeup of Ocasek.

.IT WAS IN 1959 that Peeps first

Jiiel Ocasek; both entered lbe Senate
of Ohio the same day and struck up a
close personal and political friend·
ship over lbe next four years. The
Akron district kept electing Ocasek
but the Ironton-Portsmouth district
erased Peeps and put Oakley Collins
bark in his old job as state senator
for southeastern Ohio. Ocasek held
!he new constitutional positioo of
President of the Senate until the
people changed the political complexion of lbe Ohio Senate. At the
same time the voters put the G 0 P
back in the majority. the Democrats
ganged up oo their leader and put
Ocasek out - they gave their leadership job to Senator Meshel.
MAURICE P . .GOODEN, ll:H
Rossiter Lane, Radnor, Pa. 19087, is
searching for the death record of
Susan Gooden some time after 1883.
She was 86 years old in 1883 and was
a War of 1812 pensioner. This war
record for her husband, Thomas,
shows the name in his file spelled not'

France wu in revolution, and the fr~om and
challenge ol the New World had made a laating
impression upon Dr-. Sall8rain. In October, 1790,
he moved with a group of 5IJ,l French aettle11 into
Ule . Ohio River valley, to fOUnd lhe town of
GalliDOlis.
.
·ol' 19'12, Dr, Sa1UIIrain was in the biWeaca~
a malaria epW:IenUc which took the Uve!l of tun
grand nombre d'inhabltanta:" in GaUipo&amp;.
Because of dlsease and other distresses, the fortunes Of the Ohio town went from bad to worse,

sii childnn ill St. Louis, In 11100.

Dexter man
gets cited

Lewis

Fin·ley.

~x·

No

t

WESTERVIlLE - More than 5110
school boards from aU over the stale
will be represented at the Ohio
School Boards Association (oSBA)
Delegate Assembly on November 9.
The participants, meetinl! at the
downtown Sheraton Hotel in Columbus, at I p.m., will consider
association resolutions, legislative
~-'
policies and positions, and other
issues vital to educational advancemenl in lbe upcoming year.
Representinl! the Gallia.JacksonVinton JVS school district at lbe
Delegate Assembly wiU be Dean R.
Circle of Gallipolis. The Monday
meeting of the delegates is the first
event of the 26th Annual OSBA
Capital Conference and Trade Sbow
to be held at Veterans Memorial and
Sheraton tintel from Nov. g.:12. Some
4,600 school board members,
superintendents, . school
adminiStrators, treasurers and olber
education practitioners are expected to attend tbi.s year's conference. The four-day program Is
designed to give these officials an
opportunity lA&gt; exchange ideaa and
gain insight on the major ls.oues that
will be facing educatioo in the up.
coming year.
Among the major issues under
consideration by the OSSA Delegate
Assembly will be whether or not to
support leglslatioo which wouid
authorize boercll of educetilllllo purchase calulrophic accident ·111surance COIIei'8Je for jluplll and to
support lePiatioo which would
allow ocbool dlltrlctl to detMmine
I whether or not to provide IJreakfut
progiaml for pupj!B.
Featured u spelllen et the 1881
I capital Conference Include fonner

Iranian hostage, William F. keough,
who Is now Director of Interg\,vemmental Alfairs, U.S. Department of ·
Education; 1981 National Teacher of
the Year, Jay sOmmer; Dr. John
Porter, president, Eastern Michigan
University; Atlanta Braves pitcher
Phil Niekro, who is also national
chalrman of the Spinal Biflda Foundation; Chicago Tribune educatioo
ediiA&gt;r, Casey Banas; and Jean Tuf·
Is, Assistant Secretary for special
educatioo and rehabilitative services, U. S. Departmenl of
•
Education.
The ls.oues to be addressed during
lbe · fOUN!ay conference include:
student discipline, the UBe of Qubetwo way TV; working with split boards, tuition tax credits, negotiations
strategies and much more.
The Ohio School Boards
Assocletion represents all but one of
the Ohio's 739 boards of edncatioo.
Circle ·will alao chair a panel
dlscuasloo on "DiJcipllne - Fair
But Finn.'' The JIIU)el1sts will he tw~
proleaaors from lbe Cleveland state
University's
Department of
Education.

Collections up
. Both collectiCHlB of retail and
motor vebide sales tax receipt&amp; for

Seplember, tbla year, were up considerably over September, 18111, accordlni to tbe teport of Slate
Tteuurer Gertrude o-bey.
.
Retail lllelta reclljp(l Win! up
50.13 peittiiil, frcm$74,111.• 1DIIeptember, 181D, lA&gt; tm,liUD Ia 8lpo.
tember,llllaadmaaneblc:lelllel
tax receiPII nre ap II.Jt JIIICtllll,
fiUii '",IIJ,7t Ia Sepfen•bar, 1111,
to$71,8211.821n8eptember,J.I.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted-Kethel Hatfield, Dexter.
Discharged-Dora Wood, Mary
Stewart, Alice Clark.

year
lith.
him.

Thariks for all the
memories
In which you've play8CI

Wednesday co~cert

• part,

EAST MEIGS-The Eastern High
School Marching Band will stage a
concert at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the high school audltoriwn. The
publfc is invited.

nearest
And deArest

hearts ...
Tllolnki for

Thtnkl

our

all

the

for

Ill

11\ol'

memories
'
Thai time can never
dim,
We never can repaY you
For !lie loy we hid with
YOU I

POMEROY-The annual election
of the Meigs County Fair Board will
be held from 5 to 9 p.m. Monday at
the Meip County Eztenaion Service
Office. A regular meeting of the
board will ·also be held at the extension office at 8 p.m.

The James Calvin .Smith
family would like to thank. tre&amp;passing without written
those who helped us in our permission on Woolhan
time of need during the loss .Farms at Apple Grove.
of our loved one. Our ap·
preciatlon to our families NO hunting &amp; trespassing
and friends. Veterans on Bright McCauSI&amp;nd
Memorial Hospital, Ewing Farm opended by Wool han
Funeral ·Home, Rutland Farms.
American Legion. ThankS
to the pall bearers, Rev. No Hunting or Trespassing
Keith Adkins, and the Bub·
Kenneth Watson farm.
bv Fife singers. Our thanks on
without
written
per~
to the Carleton Church.
mission
.
Kenneth
1
Botch)
Also to the ladles who Watson.
'
prepared the foocf · For
those who sent cards and
flowers, visited, or just

..

CARD OF THaNkS
Wt Willi 10 lllanlc Ill who
lleipecl II lilt II ... tlllla
dHit1 ot our Belovecl
- · Mlf .SI. Clair.
We think ..,... frltnda.
Mlj)ldoon
rtiiiiVH
tor !lie remtmbroncu
at .............
preytro. a &amp;pociol
lilillkl tw lilt mlnl&amp;br,
tilt Atv. Wiiiiom
NIW1Mn1 fa Gerald

a""

MIDDLEPORT--A
special
meeting of the Melp Local School
District Chepter Ill the Ohio
AuodaliCII Ill Public School Employes will be beld at 7:30 p.m.
Tueaday at the. Metp Junior High
School in Milldleport.

a""

-·· "-" ...

,.,.

..... •wtn• P-al
_,

/

I'OMBROY-A repler ,.Wiiil of ,
Pwiavt ..,.... 188, 0rc1er o1 I
Fnlrm Slar will be beld at 7:• .
p.m. 'fllll!daJ. Duel en PIYIIble at '

.

fa

""

)1111~

._....., a"" to JaM
- K-It Wtlltn tor

t1111r . tietp. Tilt kllllf- .
···II
Iii til

r:WIN- f:.......

Pllllllll Kolll '"" lerntalaKton.

'

WANTED

BVDYBODY

can or Wrltt Todty

Shops the
WAIT AD WAY

DIXIE ENERGY CO.
P.O. loxMJ
Woosbr, Dh. 44191
21 .. 264-5612

IN MEMORY Qf'

fOSlER
GRANDPARENT

EARL H. OEM

t.

NOV. 1979
Remember This!

FORIUCkeYe
COMMUNITY

Nov•mber. Reserva~
lions must bl made In

'Oct-..

MM11N
IWAIN

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

AIICJIIIII SEIVICl
,

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1981
10:00 A.M.
Locatecl ot Jackson Production Credit Lot. U-r
Route 7 !n Front of !lie Airport.

1

•••v•cn

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

to

.....
ea•-••*""

And no one k - Ged
n....., loy alone,
II ltkta pain Ud
IUfferlnt
~
To Iiiah Ul Hil ownl

.....&amp;.:~~~~~~
byt
Iotty
"' Fa1111)V

tJ,m,

1a111tty til
~

111r1e.

... fur- lliferlll......

luctiaye C..111111111'

llnllltlaiii._.IOII'

fiOI'IUIIItp •~~~~mr.
I
I

t

very good company for

older person. Not good
around children. Call 614~
742~2360 .

31h month old female Blue

Point Siamese kitten. Call
614·992·7138.
Puppy io a Qood home. 675~
3970.

Mother and mixed puppies,
golden Retriever with
papers. 675·3628.

child'S chair, trunk, Slone tars. oil lights. square
table, chest of drawers, beds, .white provincial
bedroom suite, Whlte maple drnser, quillS. ·

Blue .Tick Beegle type dog.

HOUSEHOLD"
Coppertone Slde·by-Side refrla., couch, love ·seat,
chair, table &amp; chairs, Zenith color T.V., pictures,
lamps, chairs, stands, auto. washer &amp; dryer, oval &amp;
round rugs, portable Sing_e r seY(Ing machine,
sweepers, linens, dishes, pots, pans, small ap·
pliances, wood, twin beds, arm chair, luggage,
chest of drawers.
"MISC.''
Safe, set of ladders, air ~ompressor, rollaway bed,
and misc. hand tools.

Found In Silver Rld9e area.

If

Call614·985·012.

Kroger

In

J)lrklng lot. Pomeroy. Will
the man who p!cked It up

please return it to Kroger

olf!ce or call 30H82-3559
collect.

LOST· Foxhound,

white,

female.

If

CASH
DANSM1TH

solid
seen

please call J0.4·773·5405

PUBLIC AUCTION

Male, white poodle. Child's
pet. Call615~3913.

LARGE 2 DAY SALE
SATURDAY, NOV. 7 AT 7:30A.M.
SUIJIDA't, NOV. 8 AT 12:00 NOON
• PENNSVILLE, OHIO
ON S'J:. RT.3771N MORGAN CO.
Take St. Ri. •o soulil out Of Zanesville to Me·

7,_ _ _.cY'-'1"-nl=5.1,_1"!e'---

Alley Sale between Millers

Wareh!mes. Nov. 3. Fur·

nlture, drapes, coats,
spreads, glassware, jeans,
baby clothn, &amp; misc . .

Connelsville or take St. Rl. 60 narth out of MarleM•
to McConnelsville, cros1 river through Malt• on St.

Rt. 78 we&amp;l lor 2 miles- ot lop ol hili lilY 111ft onto
St. Ri. 377 to Pennsville at the BILL JANES FAR·
MS.

Basement Sale 212 Jackson

Pike. Friday and Saturday .

to

5.

EATS
JIM CARNAHAN
949·2708

JIM BROWN, Apprentice
"Not responsible for accktents or loss of property."

FOUND-I male German
Shepherd In Jerrlcho Road
area . Call675·5203.

10

POSITIVE ID

949-2033

of~

ter 5~ p.m .

&amp;

·
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"

Applla~ces,

Selling the complete Inventory and equipment of a
large gift shop and sundr.v store such as office
equipment, office supplies, modern lighte-d
showcases, display racks, · filing cabinets, Esper
elec. cash register, VIctor adding machine, 3'12 ton
air conditioner, (ewelry, glassware, l.ot cameras,
clocks, toys, thousands greeting cards, 'truckloads
toilet articles. gift Items, candy, tobacco &amp; cigaret-

housewares, books, tovs.
tools,
sheet
music ,
cushions, rugs, pony saddle
and much more.

Pallo Sale 3 miles out

Bulaville. Clothes. antique
furniture, glasswear. Call

tes, baby !!ems. sundry lrems like vitamins, cough

146~ 1132 . Sat.~?9:30· 5:00.

•

Garage Sale lot. time
Brown houu belllnd B!d~
well Posi Office. name
brand children's clothing~

&amp; cold medicines. first aid items, oral hygiene

•

Items. m!sc. household !!ems. etc .

.

cntndlse: Lois of good fltms lor Chrl&amp;imas gilts ot
auction price&amp;. Duo to J)lriclng ioclllllts tile com·
pillfo store has bttn movtd tollio tbovelocollon at
!lie BILL JANES FARM In Pennsville, Ofllo.
Nollilnll shown btlort diY Of Hit. Lunch on·

sizes 3 thru 8. Gas range,
dinette set. &amp; m!sc. ' 388~

876'1, Oct. 31,9 ~ 5.

This will be 1 large 2 diY sale ol. all ·new mer·

premises. Terms - Cash or check -w /positive 1D

each dly of Hit. Not rupon&amp;lbie lor accidents.
Bill Jonu In cllolrge of Hie.
AUCTIONEERS
Bill Janes &amp; AIIOCIII-Phone 557-3411

Inside yard sale. 4.54 S. lrd,

Middleport, Ohio. ThUrs.
Oct 29 · through all of
following week.
Yard sale- 3 family, Nov. 2,
3, i. Yellowbush Rd.,

across from the Freeland
Norris residence. 9 to ...
Rain cancels.
·

ANTIQUE AUCTION

silver,

and fringe benefits In the
Worth, Tx. 76101.

I

best Sell Avon. For more
Information call 7A2-2354,or

446·3358.

Fulll!me tempory position

for LPN licensed In State of

Ohio in the WIC Program
at the Gallia County Health
ext. 59. Weare an E.O.E.

Baby siMer needed 1 to 2
davs a week. Call446-0026.
GET VALU,IU!LE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier ~ Phone
us right away and get on ·

the ellglbl!lty ,list at 992·
21.56 or 992·2157.

LPN needed, excellent
benefits, paid vacation and
holidays, retirement plan,
disability, hospitalization
available (free after one
614-667 ~ 3196 Ar ~

cadia Nursing Home.

Albany, Oh 45710.

Opportunity
BE
YOUR
OWN
BOSS ... own a
highly

P,rofltable Jean &amp; Fashion

Shop offering top labels

like
Klein,
Jordace,
L.evi ..plus, training, fix·
tures. lnventorv and more.
Call
Mr . Summers,
Prestiage Fashion toll free
$180 Per Week Part Time
at
Home .
Webster,
America' s foremost die·
tionery company needs
home workers to update
local mailing lists. All
ages, experience unnecessary . Call 1-716·8-42·

6000. Ext. 6423.

tswear Shop! Offer the

latest in jeans, denjms and
sportswear. $11,950.00 includes Inventory, fixtures,
etc. Complete Store! Call

Mr. Lee, TOLL FREE 1·
800-874·4780.
Trailer Park, 15 spaces
plus 3 bdr., brick home on
approx. 3 acres, will divide,
$150,000 with 50,000 down,
owner will carry. Also park
owned trailers available In
Jackson. Good cash flow.

can 286-l_ow.

Money to Loan

22

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Finan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
Professional
Services
Piano tuning and repair,
Love vour neighbor tune
your · Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards KeybOard . 446·4372,
GallipoliS.

..-.-..-.TUNING-

;-:-;--

:-;-;-;-:-;--;-;--:~.

lane
Daniels, Associate :
Brunlcardi Music. Phone
PIANO

whe.e! cha!r. 712·2266.

Room, board, and laundry.
Elderly
preferred .
Reasonable. Call 614.-9926022.

or

3 bdr. house in city ·with
16x32 in ground pool . Fenced in yard, plus extra's,
$61,500 or best offer. Call
4-46 ~ 7197 .

Beautiful brick ranch, 3
acres MIL on Centerpoint·Gallla Rd . 9 per cent finan .cing. Low down payment.

614 ~992~ 2082 .

Ask about special rates.

HARPER Adult Care

Cen~

ter-prqvlding the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like atmosphere.
Vacancies now avallible.

call J0.4· 675~ 1293.

Mobile home roof paunting
and anchoring. o and w
Estates . 675·3000.
·

2079~

SANDY AND BEAVER

In~

surance Co. has offered
services for fire "insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In··
dlvldual needs. Contact
Harry Pitchford, age11t.
Phone .t46·1427.

5913.

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ~
can ~

celled?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992~ 21AJ

wanted to Do

Wanted to do sand blasting.
Old cars. trailers and

smaller Items. Call ~~827A
after 5.
Babysitting In my home,
Bidwell .area, weekdays.

Call388·9783.

sitt!ng ~ ln

my

2571.

I

(ldd lobs and delivered
firtwood. 675·3292.

PHONE 446-3643

HOUSE-Meadowbrook Ad·
dition. J bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement. 304·675·

1542.

.

.

~-

By owner, home in Mason,
WV. 1 1i2 story, 4 bedroom,
large living room with
fireplace, dining room, kit·
cheD, large sitting room,
full size basement, all carpeted, total electric, sitting
on large lot. For more In formation call773-5241 .

PLEASANT

ES

- A

very attractive 3 bedroom brick. This
home has beautiful decorating, w/ b
fireplace, equipped kitchen, nat. gas,
cent. air, 2 car garage &amp; corner lot.
Priced in SO's.

The Roush home at 2515
Mt. Vernon is for sale. Call

the son at 614~ 927 · 5413 .

MOBILE

HOMES • KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT
35. PHONE 146 ~ 3868 .

I1

12 NEIL. Just Listed this Immaculately
remodeled 2 bedroom 1 floor plan in
town . Good neighborhood . Home has
new kitchen, bath with shower, cellar,
large garge &amp; nice flat yard . Vinyl
siding. Nat. gas heat. 30's.

TRAILER For Sa le. 1977

12x60 Elcono $6800. Underpinning and new
awnings. 446-1548.

&amp;co.

)im owen
Inc.
.
REALTOR
906A East Stille St.
Athens, Oh.
Ph. 594-3543
8·33 PRICED TO SELL
... carrvout, C·l &amp; C-2
licenses. Located on the
Ohio River. Owner will
consider financing to
qualified buyer.

A·14 MEIGS CO. 149

acre farm lust west of
Rutland : 7 room home,
new wiring, plumbing,
barns, fruit trees must see to appreciae.

G· 4

Tastefully

decorated for you to
move ln. Split level, 3
bedroom on 5 acres m/1.
Free gas &amp; one year
home warranty .

Ci· l · Just Listed. 2
bedroom home on 2 plus
acre• close to Ohio

owner will help

.

t2x60 ·mobile home fur·
nished. Washer &amp; dryer.
central air, $5,500. Cali 367·

0416.

1. 12x60 mobile home. 1,
UX65 nat. gas, 2 bdr .,
beautiful river view. Clean,
carpeted. Call John Foster

446·6642.

2 bdr. mobile home 1 ml.

from HMC . Call 675·6020,
after 5 446~ 2200 .

For sale or rent 2 112 acres
suitable for mobile home
has county water and sep·

tic tank !nsla!led. Call 2.56·
1705.
2 bdr: mobile home for
sale, reasonable , Call 4146-

6325.
1969

3 bdr., 12x60,

fur ~

nlshed_, 2 air cond., &amp; appliances Included, $3,000.

Call 146·1703.

·

-Private
3 bedroom
dutch bi-level offers a wrap-around
deck, 2 baths, large famllv room, 2 extra partially finished rooms in
basement, central air &amp; 2 car garage.
60's.
NEW LISTING - Nice family sized
brick home on Rt. 160. Has -4 bedrooms,
l'h baths, huge family room, f ireplace,
large formal dining room, eQUipped kit·
• chen &amp; full basement. 2 car garage &amp; l
acre yard. Low interest rate mortgage.
$62,000. Make us an offer.

I

OWNERS DESPERATE - Must rent

or sell this nearly neW 3 bedroom home
now . Brick lvinyl siding, tamlly room,
woodburner, city school ·d ist. All for
only 6% down. $44,900.
101 ACRES - If you enjoy your privacy
w/lots &amp; lots of woodland then you'll enjoy this farm near Thurman. l ncludes a
large 3 bedroom; 2 story home &amp; 2 small
barns . 40's.

RIO GRANDE- 3 or 4 bedroom home

right on campus. Has HI::! bath, family
STONE RANCH - A spacious 4 room, fireplace, full basement, nat. gas
bedroom home overlooking the river. l'leat, garage plus nearly a~ aCre:. Cold
Owners have priced well under market be used as rental. $38,900.
value. Has family room, fireplace, 3
baths, dining room, nat. gas, cent. air &amp;
2 car garage . A must to see.
BRENTWOOD · DRIVE · Bargain
family sized home for onlv
WASHINGTONE ELEM. - Cozy 2 priced
$46,500. Has 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2
bedroom home located in city school f ireplaces, full· basement. huge famllv
dist. Has fi r eplace in living room, large room, rec. roorn, nat gas, cent. air, &amp; 2
kitchen, '12 ac . yard. 91/:z% assumption . car garage &amp; fenced vard . Hard to
20's.
believe? Come &amp; see for yourself.

HOME

&amp;

6 ACRES - Located off Rt.

325 north of Rio Grande. 2 bedroom
home in need of some minor repairs.
Quiet scenic rural setting. has wood
burner, full basement and rural water.

OWNER MUST SELL -

A good op·

portunlty to buy a home w/low down
pavment 4 bedrooms, fireplace, full
basement. Located in citv school dist.

PRICE REDUCED - The owners are
anxious to sell this cozy 3 bedroom
maint. free home on Rt. 1..1. Has new
vinyl siding, new nat. gas furnace, new
h.w . tank., new carpet, new linoleum ,
etc. owner may help finance. $44,000.

2l9 ACRES - Priced at S300 per acre.

S34,900.
. Excellent tocetlon, large paved road
frontage, tobacco base &amp;. several acres
910 w. COLLEGE - A quality 3 of crop 8. pasture &amp; woods. This Is a
bedroom brick ranch near Rio Grande dandy .
campus. This sprawling home Offers a
large family room, fireplace, equipped 160 ACRES - Former dairy operation
kitchen, formal dln!ng, 2 bath&amp;, 2 J)IIIOS near R!o Grande. 50·60 ac. crop, 70 ac.

CAKE DECORAnNG

&amp; 2 car garage. Nearly 1 acre lawn. Call

for appointment. 8'12% assum~tion .

Pency wedding
IIIII ell OCCIIIOn •
'
.

CAU.IUiljiE
UU212

•

- - - ·-- - - ·

EXPERIEICED

WAfiiTE D-Cuftlvatan for
t~lluMr A or
CUll. - - JtllyiUa Woody
~~.RT.1 ... 4,0na,

Call Faye Williams, Realtor Associate,
(Evenings) 245·5096

.

Real Estale- General

2 bedroom house on 1 acre,
2 miles back of. New Haven
on paved road, tully carpeted, self contained water
and septic system. 882-3267.

'

FRONT IIUIIIPif' tor 1973
Ford Mav.-lclt. *'112~
3236.

Ohio. Cali 384-6301 or 314·2301 :

.

576 ~ 1711.

W!ll dO house cleaning. 882·

•

Immaculate 2 bdrm. home, large living room, eat-In
kitchen, bath, utility closet, abundance of closet
space, covered patio, located on 1 acre m-1. $39,000.
Jan Gettles Realty, 15 East "A" Street, Wellston,

S28,600.

•

I

FINANCING ARRANGED
FOR QUALIFIED BUYER

Or rent-3 bedroom fur·
nished home on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big leVel lot.

.....
:;'

Just arrived- 2 used mObile
homes, 2 and 3 bedrooms,
priced to sell. can be seen
at the former K and K
Mobile Home sates. Now
owned and operated by D
and W Estates. 675-3000.

.

New 3 bdr. house with
garage and full basement 146·7572.
US,OOO. Owner will help ·
CLEAN USE D MOBILE
finance. Cail-446-0390.
Real Estate- General

1969 Kirkwood 12 x 65, 2
bedroom, stove, carpeting,
air conditioned. very nice
condition. Cail675·2427 .

Large historic home on
beautiful corner lot. 6th
and Main, Middleport. 992-

T. RI ~ STATE

Insurance

675:3862.

949 ~ 2860 .

HOMES. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile 'homes. CALL

Horries for Sale

1977 Victorian 14 x 70 tw'o
bedroom, family room. all
electric. Call 675-3987 or

Bv owner. Nice 2 bedroom
ranch type over 3 car
garage. 527,500. 13 pet. i nterest available. 949-2801 or

Wanted: Someone to carpool frOm Pomeroy or Mid-

:u_

Real Estale-General

1 full bath. $3000. Cali 675·
2600.

32-·- -Mobile Homes --- --for-Sale
-- - - --

yard. Call 614 · 992~ 5971.

1972 Schultz 12 x 65. 304-675·
2907.

baths, familv room . Full flee trailer, hot water
basement. garage. · 949- heater, ac, fuel oil furnace,

TV service calls. Call 992·
2031. Also used color TV for

hldn, sc:rap
batteries,

In Mason Countv

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2 1966 12 x 45 New Moon of-

Will do rug weaving. $2.75

dleport to Robbins and
Myers. Day shift. Call 614·
992·2602.

992-2156

BY OWNER : i bdr.. sPlit·

level, living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·ln
kitchen, lg. famllv rm., 2
112 baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, S7~,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call.u6·9403.

Phone 379~ 2729 .

Your own Jeans and Spor·

614 ~ 742-2951

Ellm Resthome. ·Care for
handicapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us. Equipped.tor

Babv sitting,
near
Faodland, any age, meals,
snacks, toys, safe home,
references. Ca II .u6-7U6,
Wweekl~ . .

tln'l G-ral Sfore, Mid·
dl-t, Ohio. 992·6370.

446-2342
675-illl

23

Widower retired to small
farm, average income,
jogs, hunts, fishes, gar·
dens, hoping to contact
healthv
non-smoking
woman under sixty five
who likes outdoors. Replys
please give phone no. and
address. Pertinent In·
formation to P .0. Box 102,

11

HOME.

In Meigs County

0

Krautter 1304)675 ~ 3473 .

Situations Wanted

13

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

•••

,,----,,

l·IIOQ-527-64-43.

the

4m.

China, OOid, sliver, COins,
wetchn. chain&amp;, etc. Mar·

metats,

come PLUS cash bonuses

12

L'

Business

21

hOme. Dav ·or evenings.
have references. Call .446-

sterling,

itwelry, r!no•. old coins &amp;
currency. Ed .Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport. 992~
3176.

Raw furS,

-·

-·"

11
Help Wanted
HEAR US OUT! Texas
Refinery Corp. offers an
opportunity for high in~

Will do baby

. t- ~ _Wontedtoiluy

Gold,

-: : ..::.: ~ ·: .-!-

year). Call

S76-Applt Grove
77:J-Mason
882- New Haven
89S-Letart
937- Buffato

o

Department. Call olol6·o4612

Cedar chest w/claw ~t, drop·leaf stand, library
table, spool bed w/matchlng chest of drawers and
vanity w/stool. dressers. WOOd chairs, oval stand,

Found: male medium size

Y•&gt;

JACKSON PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSOCIATION
Term&amp;: C11h- Chock w/POtillve ID
LH Jolln1011, AUctlonHr
Not Aespon&amp;fblo for Ace-

Ofllo.

Small male black &amp; tan
dog, Shepherd Jype. !n
vicinity of Ri. 218 off Rt. 7.
Call .u6~ 1233.

"'

Clay Calf Stalls. 10 Milk cans, Water Pump, Ford 3
·
Pt. DISC 7ft.

An 8 raom houselull of ·furniture has been consigned
to be sold and has been moved to the Senior Citizens
building on Mulberry Heights In Pomeroy, Ohio.
· Watch for signs on St. Rt. 7 Bypass and In Pomeroy,

• Lost and Found

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

'•

Area Code 304
675-Pt. Ple•sont
4SI-Leon

In Ga"llia County

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

· available December t, 1981

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1981
10:00 A.M.

ol58 ~ 1727.

---,,.,•

Pomtrov
tts-Chetter
:W3-Porttand
247-letart Falls
•••- Racine
Mason Ca., W.. Va.

Sts. Pt. Pleasant. WV.
Phone 675·4424.

Pomeroy. 992'-2689.

-

Meigs co. Area COCII

614
'192- Middleport

o14J-Gillipolis
367-Chethirt
lit-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guvan Ditt.
643-Arabla Dist .

bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven, 1-4 x 6S With 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader U x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, , ..
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B V• S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and VIand

ton .

Why settle for less. Sell

PUBLIC AUCTION

Part Labrador pups. Phone

per

614

742-Rulland

Dellverd lo Ohio Pallet Co .•
Rock Springs Rd .,

Bumper for Ford Tractor, Fox Model2100 Chopper

terson Portable Head Gate and Squeeze Chute, 2

Poo dog . While and apricot.

$10 .50

!n

Gallia Co. Area Code

1971 Darlan· 12 x 65, 3

sliver

CH!P WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10'' on largest
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab .

un·

Bashan area . -Reasonable.

dOllars. wood lee boxes.
stone Iars. antiques. etc ..
compleie
households.
Write: M.D. MU..,_, Rl. i,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-7760.

Gallipolis area. Regardless
of experience, write C .J .
sears, Pres., Box 711 , _
Fort

w/Corn Head, Super H Farman Tractor w/mounted
2 Row Ford Picker, ~.D. Tank Sprayer w/Booms &amp;
Pump, Dunham End Loader w/4 ft. Bucket Com·
plete, 5 Bottom DM! Variable Cut Plows, 2 Row 1H
Corn Picker Mod. 2 PR. Iff. IH Transport D!sc, Pat~

1 year old female Peek-A·

gold,

baths.

Located

l:llll&lt;aified Page• cover the
followiiw telephone uclutnge11 ...

985·4351.

i Ft. Pull Type Brush Hog, J . D. Wagon, Dunham
Lehr 8 fl. Harrogator w/hydrollc cylinder, Ford 3
pt. Blade, Wagon Gear, Farman H w/IOidet, 30 ft.
Hay Elevator w/electrlc motor, N. 1. Hay Rake,
Boom Pole, Big Blue Manure .Spreader. PTO Drive,

J.D. 2i T. Hay Baler, Ford 3 Pt. Mowing Milchlne,

Part Terrier puppies. Call
-"6-.. 977 after 5 weedays.

Lost: . purse

Pb. 992-6370

ftJrnlture,

11h

derp!nned .

any cond. can :U7·0560.

·PUBLIC AUCTION .

Kittens. Call446·4477.

6

GENERM. SIOR£

C:...l»d&amp;Oin

~

To werll wflli cllfldcen
wflli mental rmmtl•..........._
...
Ciutle1
.
-ot ltaat 61 ' " " til
-lncame .UIRflltla

'
Wt m~11 ail llolvt Gllr
quoto, Our portion
ond&amp;hare
Of "crou:n to urrv"
And 11 burdens
btlr"- •

Will have in&amp;lde boollia
IVIiilble by !lie 111 of

NEED MONEY? I need
fumlture. New, used or tn· ·
tlque. Also buy!ng g._ss.

lnM•morl•m

{I

t

OIL &amp;GAs
LEASES

thought of us on ihat day.
To lhose who helped In any
way, God Bless You All.

2

Special meeting

thlatlme.

to

memories
Thlt are alwa_ys oUrs,
For they recan so m•ny
Special moments we've
known.

Annual election set

Dues due Tueeday

.

For they are IIWIYS

5110 .

room.

BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old

Rabbit, reg. white New
Zealand, buck. 1 1/2 years
of old. Call215·5i.S7.

Levy will provide
street lighting

Circle to attend conference

FlEA MARI&lt;ET

column. There will bt no

cepllonsl

1968 Richardson - l i t
Home. 12&gt;65. N!ce 2
bedroom, eKpando living

... Washers &amp; dryers, most ·

EARLY
SEASON charge to the advertiser.
SPECIAL Deer slugs, rem.
12 gauge, 25 lier box. $9.97. Black &amp; white dog, 2 yrs.
Spring Valley Trading Co., old.
Call 146.0112.
Spring Valley Plaza, 146·
8025.
Wh!te · long haired female
cat
&amp; three kittens. COli
No hunting or trespassing
on the following farms: 2.6-5024.
Ralph Jeffer, Paul (Jakel
Jeffers, Calv!n Waugh &amp; Lab. Retr!ver pup. Call 215·

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

bless
each
and
everyone.
Children and
Grandchlkiren

CASH PAID for CIHn. late
,_! uMd cars. Smith
B~lck· Pontlac, GAllipolis.
Ohio.
1 Call ii6~2282 .

I

TRAPPER We have a com ~
p!ete line of trapping sup· ANY PERSON wno has
plies. Traps, dve, wax, and anything
to give away and
lures.
Spring
Valley
does
not
offer
or attempt to
Trading Co., Spring Valley offer any other
lt11ng for
Plaza, 146·8025.
sale may place an ad In this

&amp;hapiro also sent ~along four
typed paragraphs concerning Dr.
For bulk delivery
Saugrain, and they started off that in
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel. call L.~mdmark,
October, 1790, the Doctor at St.
GALIJPOUS - Two people were
992·2181 , Pomeroy, Oh.
Charles, Mo., near St. Louis presennot seriously injured in a one-a~r
ted William Clark and Meriwether crash near Rutland late Friday
Lewis with soine barometers and night.
Stolen Property. Antique
thermometers. &amp;hapiro says that
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the state
kitchen safe. Antique
he went to college with the late highway patrol said Burlln 0 .
dining room cabi(let. Two
Harold Wetherholt, who developed )11ullins, 43, Dexter; and his
rocking chairs. Other
·items. Anyone knowing or
the Tribune into a modern daily passenger, Deborah Mullins, 23,
seeing this furniture being
newspaper - Harold's mentor, · Dexter, were not treated at the
hauled In the vicinity of
William Giddings Sibley, converted scene.
Flalrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is
it from weekly to daily hack before
The patrnl said Mullins was
offered. 675 ~ 1302.
Harold was born.
driving westbound on Rt. 124, threetenths ·of a mile west of the village
POSITIVI LV no hunting on
RICHARD A. LAKIN, Vanro- limits, at 10:18 p.m. when he lost
the old H. C. Brown Farm
Fairlield Road, had not missed a control of his vehicle oo a curve,
opposite Racine locks
Letart, WV. Signed Bill Me·
mue Devil football game for 35 went off the right side of the road
Daniel.
years when he w~nl to the hospital a and collided with an embankment.
little while back. He's home now.
The car then overturned.
Call the Scottish Inn for
weekly or monthly rates on
Moderate damage was reported to
rooms or efficiency apart·
DARRELL BROTHERTON, his vehiCle and Mullins was cited for
ments. 304-675-6276 .
youngest executive in the Times- DWI.
Sentinel hierarchy, was born in
The patrol investigated a minor
Racine Vol. Fire Dept.
South Carolina, educated in the tw&lt;&gt;-vehicle accident near Gallipolis
sponsors
a shotgun &amp; rifle
public schools of the state of Friday night.
match every Sat. liight at
"Jawja," and was working for
6:30p.m. at lheir building
According to the report, R. Keith
at Bashan. Factory choke
Multimedia in Tennessee when they Anderson, 18, Hartford, was east12 guage shotgun &amp; open
sent him up here to Gallia, Meigs, bound on U.S. 35 near the in·
sight 22 rifles.
and Mason. A son of the old South!
tersection with Rt. 160 at II p.m.
Apples, Honey and Sweet
when a deer jwnped out onto the
UTILE BO PEEPS is the name road.
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
'
:
:
I
·Cider.
Grimes. Romes,
r
Gal., and Red Delicious,
suggested for the new Peepshouse
Anderson swerved left to avoid
- - PUbn~ -Notice--Staymen Winesap. S5.25
Public Notice
puppy by A. Don Pope.
collision and went into lbe path of an
per bushel and up. Cheaper
NOTicE OF
nual compliance level of In volume. Fitzpatrick Or·
eastbound tractor trailer. driven by
AVAILABILITY
S48.206.00
is satisfied. chard, SR689. Phone 614· Ashby L. Wllllams, 26, Staunton, Va.
OF UNCOMPENSATED
Eligible persons are those 66'1·3785.
. The accident caused slight damage
SERVICES
who are in need of care and
Vete-r ans Memorial whose family income does Widower retired, average
to both vehicles.
Hospital, located at not exceed the current Income, ;ogs, hunts, fishes,
Troopers said a trailer attached to Mulberry Hgts., Pomeroy, poverty
Shade, $24 and costs each, speed;
ih come guidelines gardens, hoping to contact
Ohio, will m'ake available established by the Com· healthy
Robert Roush, New Haven, $10 and a vehicle driven by Thomas R, Ram· S48,206.00
non · smokino
in
un · munity Serv
Ad - woman under Si)(ty five,
costs, speed; Walter Arnold, Langs- sey, 24, Point Pleasant, was south- · compensated
services ministration
who likes outdoors. Replys
bound on Rt. 7, tw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a mile during the fiscal year
ville, $20 and costs, no registration;
definitions. This notice
please give address, phone
south
of
Bulaville-Addison
Road,
at
which begins January 1. published pursuant
Ray A. Fassnacht, Cincinnati, $75
nUmber, and pertinent InII: 30 a.m. Friday when the trailer 1982, and ends December Federal Law set forth at
formation. Send to P.O.
and costs, no operator's license;
31,
1982.
Uncompensated
CFR 124,505 Noilce
Box 102, A!bony, Ohio
Ronald Parsons, Bidwell, $250 and came loose, went off the right side of services will be available Availability of Un 15710.
the road and struck a guard rail.
upon request to eligible compensated Services.
~osts, three days coofinement, licenpersons on a first·come fir·
Moderate
damage
was
done
to
the
(ll)l , ltc
se suspended 30 days, FBI; Earl
Free art class lessons. Call
st-serve basis, until the antrailer
and
Ramsey
was
cited
for
in614 ~ 992 ~ 7192 .
Starkey, Gallipolis Ferry, forleited
secure load.
_,.,,,
guns, spotlighting.
Card of Thanks
Stall$ for rent. horses boar·
Forfeiting bonds were Patricia M.
ded, paddocks. pasture, In·
CARD OF THANKS
Clarke, Richmond, Ave., Torn
door e:~eercise area, tread·
Wt wish to thank all our
Card of Thanks
mill. S45 per month. Call
Brown, Wapakoneta, David R. Cunfriends, neighbors and
61~ ·661-3405.
relatives who helped In
ningham, Marietta, David L. Fryer,
We would like to thank all
any way during the loss
our friends, neighbors, and
Oakdale, Pa., and James I. Jooes,
of our belovecf Mothf:ltr.
PERMANENT HAIR
relatives for food, prayers,
Ruth
A.
Spires.
Those
Middleport, $40.50 each, speed; ArPOMEROY-A tax levy renewal
cards, and flowers after the REMOVAL
wllo
brought
food,
thur E. Harriaon, Pataskala, and
loss of our son and brother Professional Electrolvsls
flowers and stood by in
being voted upon in Potneroy on
Joseph A. Bissell . Your kin - Center. A.M.A. approved,
prayer and sympathy in
George Cundiff, Minersville, $380.50 Tuesday will be listed on the ballot
our time of need.
dness was greatly ap- Doctor referals, by apeach, DWI; Earl Starkey, Gallipolis
for ~nt expenses. However, Special thanks to the
preciated . Mr . and Mrs. pointment only. 304-475·
Ferry, $26.35, spotlighting.
Willis Funeral Home,
Joseph E . Bissell and 6234. Tuesday. Thursday,
Village Clerk Jane Walton notes that
the organist, and to Rev.
familv.
Friday &amp; Saturday.
the levy, ooe mill lor five years, Alfntd Holly for his consoling words, 11nd the
provides mooey lor Street Ughtinl! in
pallbearers. May GOd
NO
hunting
&amp;
no

the town.

A/C, fuel oil fumance. I full
balil. 53.1100. Call 675-2600.

Creek Rd.

Terminate 26 cases
POMEROY - Eighteen defendants were fined and eight others
fmieited bonds in Meigs County
Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Stephen Baloy•. Pomeroy, $10
and costs, running stop sign; Roy
Marshall, .Racine, Ben Cotterill,
Rutland, and Donald Yost, Rutland,
$250 costs each, forleited guns, spotlighting; Paul Hayes, Racine, $21
· and costs, speed; Richard Stone,
Pomeroy, $25 lll)d costs, speed;
Jerry M. Johnsoo, Racine, $10 and
c-osts, failure lA&gt; yield; Hilbert
Parker, Middlepori, $250 and costs,
spotlighting; Jeffrey Peckham, Middleport, $20 and costs, speed;
Michael Struble, Syracuse, and
James Roberts, Vienna, $23 and
costs each, speed; . Edie Shepard,
Mason, and Matthew Queen, Rt. I,

1~ 12x.l5 Now Mom office
trailer, hot water heater,

ShOOt Rac!ne Gun
Call Gun
Club. every sun. startlng
446~ 0294 ..
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
guns only .
ATTENTION DEER HUN ·
TERS. come In and
register now for our Big TRAI;'S and TRAPPING
Buck Contest. Spring supplies. Gene Hlnn,
yalley Trading Co., Spring Amesville, Ohio. 614-448·
6747. Dally anon p.m.
Valley Plaza, ii6~ B025 .
~roes

The Sunday Tlmes·Sentlnei-P•g-D-3

Time

~

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Ruth A. Cowl.,., 32, Gallipolis,'·
charged with expired registration,
forfeited $35 bond.
Charged with left of center,
~ Evelyn S. Cox, 33, Rt. 2, Patriot, for·
felted $30 bond.
Roy L. JOiie80 25, Rt. I, Crown
City, charged with failure lA&gt; give an
audible signal, fined $15.
· Charged with DWl, the cue agalllst Inna N. Childress, 49, Proc,IA&gt;rville, was closed, sUbject to .
reopening.
.
Valll!hn E. Facemire, Gallipolis,
charged with hitsklp and reckless
operation, both cases closed, subject
to reopening.
·
Charged with DWI, WQmer D.
McGuire, 38, Rt. I, Patriot, fined
$300, sentenced lA&gt; four days in jail,
driver's license suspended for six
months and placed 011 six months
probatioo.
Btadley S. Rogers, 19, Gallipolis,
charged with squealing tires, fprfeited $30 bond.
Each charged with faUure to obey
a traffic control devic~ and forfelting $30 bond each were Al~en R.
Wallis, 55, Southside, and Katherine
F. Haffelt, 59, Gallipolis.
James Goody Sr., Rt. 2, GallipollB,
charged with nonsupport, case continued to Nov. 4.
Charged with DWI, Jay Rail Jr.,
49, Rt. I, Cheshire, case continued to
Nov.9.
Forfeitinl! bond for speeding
were:
Vernon W. Hoot Jr., 19, Bidwell,
$28; Mandy S. Wells, 18, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, $27; Karen L. Sinunons,
22, Gallipolis, $30; Elmer R. Parsons, 29, Gallipolis, $25 .
. Harry L. Pngh II, 20, Rt. 2, Bidwell, $25; Rachel D. Pullins, 36, Rt.
2, Bidwell, $28; George H. Justice,
38, Snga'r Grove, $27; Hilbert N.
Foreman, 18, Pomeroy, $27.

SOUTHWESTERN QUEEN Teresa Arrowood, a llelllor, wu
crowned bomecOIIIliig queeu
Friday night at South-1'11
High SchooL CereiDODI"" were
held prior lA&gt; the ldckoff of the.
Soutbem&amp;uthw""lei'D game.

~-

They'll Do It

W!l!!!!lloluy

SWEEPER and -!ng Horses, ponies, horse
mechlne repair, J)lrts, and trtlltr, riding !tuons. Hoof
supplies.
Pick up and Hollow 61i~6tll-3290.

Court.

MAURICE SCHAPIRO lOlA
Eighth Street Crystal City Mo.
' 63019 sends us'a clippinl! of ~e 3F
from'the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
It has a two-column oil painting of
Dr. Antoine .Sangrain, who was
prominent in the early llfe of
Gallipolis. The write-up recognizes
his Gallipolis experience with two
paragraphs far down in the Story:

and Saugrai.n, seeldng new opportunilr and
challenge, moved on to Louisville, Ky., before he
finaUy seWed with his wife, Genevieve, and his

.

GAUJPOUS - Seventeen caaes
were terminated and two conUnued
Friday in GallljiollB Municipal

only Gooden but also Goodin,
Gooding, and Goodwin.

Pomeroy-Middleport ·Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Ve.

sifieds
-

Judge ends
17 cases

Ocasek stands big thrice;
.
Rio audience hears senator
By J · SAMUEL PEEPs
GAUJPOUS - State Senalor
Oliver Ocasek is a big man. That
statement suffices as it stands. But
he is big physically, taU and
muscular. He is big mentally, able to
U1ink on his feet. He is big
oratorically. with a gold~n voice
whtch .needs no mecharucal amplif1catton.
More . than . those dimensions,
Ocase~ IS big m the heart of one J.
Samuel Peeps.

Nov. 1, ltal

RIO GRANDE
t room, new siding, carpet, fumece and

water heeter: Approx. 1ecre. 549.500.

pasture, be~lance ln WOOds. Barns, silos,
tobacco base, gas tease plus an older

remodeled i bedroom homo . Frontage
OWNERS WILL HELP FINANCE - on 3 roa&lt;IS !nclud!ng Rt. 32S.
over 2,000 sq. ft. of living space !n llle
brltk &amp; frame home. Has family room, 165 AC. VACANT LAND - Apprvx. liD
2 flrep!acn, equipped kllcllen, full oc. crop, 65 ec. PISturo, tiOO lb. t-.co
batmen!!__ clll"'tral air, garage &amp; 2.3 ba. ., gas teue, n~ral water, 2 bemt.
Rt. 141 rood lrontllif,
acrn. Cny schoOls.
·

. ,.
,. t •'

·'•.'

•
..

,.

�·-Sunday Times-Sentinel
JS .
MOBILE home located in
Camp Conley, extra nice

and clean. phone 30.4· 895 -

Lots &amp;

~-- --~

5 13 · 592 ~9175 .

'I

LOCATED ON RT. 35 NEAR HOSPITAL
WATCH fOR SIGNS.

4208 ~

Call Immediately

1 acre lot Kemper Holl ow,
solar ease ment, financing
available. 614·592-5639 .

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your paymen1'. Can
be converted sing le home.
City w ater, will consider
land contract, 675· 1883 9·5
p.m.

(Jim Elliott)
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, Ohio
286·31S2

LOAN SSUMPTION 9'14% INTEREST- Move In

now. Spacious tri-level. 3 BR, LR, t&amp;mity room,
large modern kitchen, 2 baths, natural gas heat,
central air, deluxe fireplace, two 4!ar garage,
Superior location . Close to hospital .
1191

198114' Wide

41

Large 2 story house in
Pomeroy . For further in·
format ion call 614·992·2272.

446 · 1578 ~

4 room house. Adults only .
Syracuse, Ohio. Ca l l 614·
992 ~ 3981.

2. bedroom home in Mid dleport. Deposit requ ir ed.
Caii6JH92 ~5914 .

I

____ ____

2 bedroom all electric ran ·
ch sfyle hpme. 1 mite from
Rac1ne. References and
d&lt;•po,sit required. Available
. 15. Caii61H49 ~ 2B49 .

ALIVE AND.ACTIVE

Family of five, six, seven or more members who
have outgrown their present home and have $30,000
or more in home equity . If you earn from Si22,SOO to
$28,500 per year. not including overtime, you might
be able to qualify to own this lovely, new brick and
wood 4-bedroom, 2·bath contemporary home near
Pomeroy with finished family room and gas heat for
only :

8% INTEREST AND

.

rooms and bath, full
basement, stove
and
33
Farms for S~le
furnished.
t or
a.s ACRE Farm for sale. 3 ~~~~p~~JJ. required . Call 614·
BR home. Will take proper ·
ty in town on trade· in. Free
gas and royalty check . For
bedroom , furni shed
appt. call 379 ~ 2613 .
at 2103 Jeff er son
required . 304·
IS acres, tob. base . 14x70
mobil e home, 3 bdr., 2
baths, 529,500. Call 256 ~
2 bedroom house, fu ll
1156.
basement on Viand Street.
67J ~ 6803 or 67 5 ~ 3797.

31 __ Lots ~Acr_eag_e_

_

8.4 acres, rural water, 5 mi.
from town. Call446·1158.

NO DOWN PAYMENT!
CALL: R.C.S. REAL ESTATE CO.
Bill Childs 992-6312
Craig Swenson 593-5571

3 bdr. house, 2 baths, fully
carpeted, SJOO plus deposit,
35 Chillicothe Rd ., no pets.
Call 446~37411 or 256~ 1903.

We will be having several
homes tor rent, lease or
with option to buy
I
wltilii n the nexl tew weeks.
2 bdr. house at 2129 Chest~
S200 per mo. &amp;
nut St. Call 446 · 259~ or 446·
references &amp;
7013.
.
For more In·
II Strout
Cheshire River Front
House. .t1 bdr., 2 baths,
large kitchen with dish· 3 bdr. unfurnished house,
washer , full basement, close to town. Family room
fireplace, $275 mo. Deposit, with fireplace, low cost nat.
ref. required . Call 1-614· gas heat. 446· ..240 or 446448·3821 9 to 5 Mon .·Frl . or 9655.
614-448·2555.

ice 3 bedroom house near
Two car garage and
buifdif1g. $300. 675·

Unfurnished tlousetor rent,
1 . bur., 5160 mo.. dep.
required, no utilities paid,
no pets. 57 OliYe St. Phone
Nice 2 bdr . house for rent
fully carpeted . Call . 256 ~
6413.

OFFICE 446-7013

B_M R_ lll Restricted building lot in dty sc hool
di Strict , 0.64 ot an acre. Call now

ENJOY THE WEEKENDS tngum River.

BMR 386 - Quiet country home on •12 acre lot in:
el udes. 20x~O barn with loft and partial basement.
You Will en toy this one . Reduced to $25,900.

CHESHIRE AREA large lot ~

Nice ranch with basement,
11042

CLOSE TO TOWN rnustsee.

Beautiful new doL,bleiwlcje,
.

Now -is your chan;e to live in town tor
less than $40 ,000 . Three bedroom home near

G .A H .S

NEIGHBORHOOD RD. full basement.
CHESHIRE AREA furniture stays.

COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
WE ~ELL IT ALL '
REAL ESTATE &amp; CHATTELS

I

RODNEY- 2 lots set up for .. rental mobile home
spaces.
1 0165
GOOD BUY- Frame home, fully carpeted, needs
repair, ownerwnats offer. .
lOllS
UPPER ROUTE 7 - Block building and lol for
restdentlal or.commercial.
11016
HAPPINESS FOR SALE - New ranch, brick &amp;
frame, family room~ flreplace.
1 1495

BMR 139- REDUCED- Two story home on Se·
cond Ave. Aluminum siding, 3 or 4 bedrooms.
Reduced to $22,500 . Call for details.

1

LOWER RfVER ROAD - -Nice ranch, 3 bedrooms,
.
l74f0
fireplace, garage.

BMR 402 - 37 Acres bare land, 1.401 lb. tobacco
base,· 30x30 tobacco barn . Check on this one!

BMR 389- This fine 4 bedroom home Is located in
the city school system. You will enjoy a large lot
with a total country atmosJ;~here, and the same time
have all of the city conveniences. Call now.

•

S·U·P·E·R L·O·C·A·T+ O ~ N ~ WILLOW DRIVE An exceptionallr ni ce home. Professionally landscaped. Featunng a large rust ic family room w ith
massive stone fireplace, ~ookshelves, bav window
and beamed ceilings, Large spacious formal entry
Modern kitchen with pantry, · formal dining room
and living room . Everything for your co.mtort. Set·
tl.no on the eclge of town on a semi-wooded lot
Shown by Appointment. Priced In the 60's !
·
TIRED OF YOUR JOB?- Be your own Bossi Now
you have·the opportunttY to own your own business I
A welt established businesS with complete Inventory
and a 1973 G.M .C. service van. National Service
Center Warranties. Several commercial contracts
In force. Owners will helf' finance 50% an cion the
fob training If needed! Call for more details. $30,000.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY- 6 acres of WOOdland
1 mlfuoum of Rio Grande on St. Rt. 325.

BMR 404- New Listing- City schools, newly carpeted and painted . This thtee BR home is priced in
the lowS30's, a great buy on today's market.
BMR 405 - Great location I A very nice ranch style
home with a full basement wllh .family room . Main
floor has three BR's, large living room with a cozy
brick fireplace. All situated on .43 of an acre and
only two miles from Gallipolis·.
BM~~ 40' 1.25 acres m/ 1 located close to
Gallipolis. Frontage on Route 160 and Bulavllle Rd.
Owner will help finance.

BMR 409 - Top of the line split foyer. This fine
home includes 3 bedrooms. 2 full baftll, Iaroe den
with fireplace, heat pump for year 'round comfort.
See this fully carpeted home now. Priced at ontv
$69,900. Owner will help qualified buyer with very
aftractive financing ,
BMR 395- Three bedroom nome on Neighborhood
A:d., situBJtid on 1 acre mort or IHI. tnciUdlll two
mobile home pads. Reduc~. Call lOt' detalfol
BMR 381 - Owner flnanclno DrObable, Three
beclroom, large familY room with fireplace. Natural
gas heal avg. bill $32.00 month last year. Call for
complete details I
BMR 407F - Just Lilted - 30 acr11 m/1, &amp;ltuated
with frontage on Raccoon Cr .. as well as frontage on
blacktop county hlgll',yoy.

Mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
11016

BIDWELL- Nice older home, large level lot, with
,
11572

BMR 399 . Two story , home present·
ly being used as duplex, could easily be converted to
single family. l!holce location in Gallipolis. Owner
will help finance.

BMR 397 · - Owner says sell , and he will do the
financing at 1~o. It is an income.producin,g duplex.

Lovely ranch with pool,
1 1556

or without furniture.

BMR 398 Close to town 3 BR ranch
on lg . fit .. lot includes detache(j 26)(26 garage plus
18x36 in·g~ound pol . Owner tran sferred .
·

BMR 400- Check this one. For only $8,500 you can
buy a two BR home w/rural water and bath .

1001'

RIO GRANDE - Beautiful4 bedroom, dining room,
1 5550
custom cab.

HMR l75 - Pr ice greafly reduced on th is 3 BR brick
r anch. Situated on large f la t lot. Call for derails! .

BMR 403- New Listing - 1981 Mobile home on ren·
le1d lot. $10,900. Nearly new .

Conage on Musk·

IN TOWN For sale or rent, ranch With furniture.
10021

13MR JY l - Th is house has recently been r emod eled
inside and out. has· basement, heat pump tor year
around comfort, five mobile home pads, lots of fran·
tage on Route 7 plus an equal amount' on the Ohio
Rive r . : his one could be a money maker , Call now.

IN TOWN Wood fence.
6 ACRES -

Ranch with lull basement, iot with
1 D2f5
LOTS AND ACREAGE
Two mobile homes, stcjragebulldings,
.
10014

SUPER FARM - Lar~ house, several buildings,
195 acres, call for detailS. .
10175

,.

NICE FARM ..,.- Gooct house, 2 large barns, some·
boltom land, 142 acres.
1IN TOWN -

~.

JOUTHERN HILLS
23 Locust St•• Gallipolis
Phone: 446·6610

I
Real Estale-General

Large tract of vacant land, •verel
.

2\la ACRES- GOOd building or mobile home site
Addison Twp,

leo-'

GOOD FARM - Two lar~ barns, nice pand,
11211
beautiful rolling lend, 150 acres.
YOUR PRIVATE FARM home, lorQe born, 43 acres.

BeautifUl · Colonial
~

10121

ROAMING ROOM- Good building slit, 8~ ac'res,
1 ••
Graham School Rd.

LB. SR.
216 E. Second Street
Willis T. Leadlng~om, Realtor. Ph. Home 44H539
Phyllis Loveday, Phone446· 2230

KYGER CREEK
ATTRACTIVE ALL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
BRICK HOME II
Modern 3 BR ranch
Enjoy
the beautiful O~lo
home approx. .t11J2 yrs.
River
from
this
Thermopane win ·
spacious~
· cheerful
storm doors, FA
house, J bedrooms, 1•12
furnace, with central
baths, large living
air, kitchen has built-in
room, eat·ln kitchen, 2
cabinets, stainless steel
fireplaces,
full basedbl . sink and dining
ment, 2 porches, plus
area. FUll basement
many extras. Phone fo.
with patio doors. Rural
d~y for details.
I 505
water system, garage.
Call now.
1379
IN CROWN CITY
Nice .4 room frame house with a bath. Eat· in kitchen
with . metal c~binets ana double sink. Ftuel oil
heat.ng stpve. Locatert on nice city lot near ctlurch
end grocery. Priced to sell!!
1511
DRIVE A LITTE, SAVE A LOT
3 BR, full basement, white aluminum siding, fuel oil
F .A. furnace, JO'x«r barns, hlngled roof, lofs of
young peach and ~ppletrees. All this' "reduceG to on·
ly $14,900.
1452

PRICI REDUCID- Nice rolling land,5acros.

2

0

E1111ings CaD
Patricil Smith, Assoc. 367.0228
· ~ Bloln11, Rultllr, 446-2599

John fuler, Rlllbr U&amp;..Q27

•'

'

I

I

Ho using
1/e.ulqu.llturs

•

Located
In citysection.
of GallipoliS,
close3 toor~:~~E~
and
business
10 -rooms,
modern kitchen with lots of cabinets,
garba~ diSposal, electric table top ran~.
dining room, family, recreetkwl room. Just lots
room . Central air, natural gas F .A. furnace, central
P.A. system, fireplace, planter In home. Yaung apple and peach trees, flowers and shrubs and a lot
more. MUST SEE THIS CIT'!: HOME.
, 1391
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Looking for that perfeCt home? Look no more. Four
bedroomS, Jlh baths, 23'x18' . living room, 20'x2...
fa'rnily room, extra nice country kitchen with all the
latest conveniences. Gracious living with Approx.
3450 sq . ft. living space plus a beaullful POOl on 3.2
acres of wooded land. Much more: call for your ap·
polntment.#
·
504
DREAM NO MORE
Like 'Ne"w-Bi·Level
We have that special dream home with modern kit·
chen. with 'lots of buill·in cabinets. dishwasher and
stainless steel sink, I full both, 2 hall beths, llvlno .
room, family room, din lng room has patio doors
leading to sun deck, fireplace, air condition ing,
thermopanewinc:tows and In mint condition.
1424

1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts . Equal
Opportunity Housing . Call

1

b~roOm ~partrnent. No

pels. John Sheets, 3'h mile
south of Middleport ·on Rt .
7.

256·6520.

Trailer ~pace on Iaroe semI
private lot, free waler and
sewage In Pt. Pleasant.
615·1699.

APARTMENT
Callol-46·0390.

Tra iler lot for rent or sale,
complete hookup. Mason,
Secon&lt;l St: 773-5751 or 773·
9520.

for

Rent.

i" BEDROOM

apartment,
kitchen furnished, HUD
program, utilities paid, if
qualiflecl. 30.4·675·510.4 or
soroguo, Iaroe rooms
Pt. · Pleasant.
reterencet. 1·
or 1·6l.ol·263·
45

Furnished Rooms

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

3 bedroom furnished up·
stair~.

. 101
1i. Main

POMEROY.O • .
992-2259
NEW LISTING 2
UNIT APT. BUILDING
-' ·1n Pomeroy In good
condition. Each unft
rents for $150/month,
plus 5 gara.oes for extra
Income. $19,500 . •

'.

NEW LIST&lt;ING
Almost a manslon .
Large older home in
good condition . .4·5
bitdrooms for the
growing
family,
beeulllul foyer and
living room. tamll~y
room &amp; large kitchen a.
d)nlng room . Stately
home lor 54.5,000.

,,'

2ACRES-4ROOMHOME
.
12'x65' MOll I.E HOME
Live In one. rent the other. Rent now coming Is
$175.00. month. 2 acres of wood, own water aystem.
F.A. gea furnace. Noce modern kltcllen. All ofthla
lor only 523,000.00.
.
C·O·U·N·T·R·Y
bedroom home with fireplace
Remodelt&lt;l · H
located on 53 acres of tillable and pasture ·land
pOnd, born. lor~ metal building, tObacco bast Ali
this lor me fOW, low price of $.42.900. Call for
details.
1 .,.
21ACRES VACANT LAND
Hunter's Peredlst. LOll of bufldlng sites along old
State At. 7 feeing 1110 Ohio River. Loll of timber
LOll of value lor lllow prfce.
1

NIW LiSTING- NEW
MfNI I 1 - ' Mobile
home ser up on acreage.
·Cllll about this one.
$17,900.
OWNER SAYS SELLREDUCED PRICE One of the' nlcast homes
In Middleport with 3
blldrooma, l'h baths,
fVII baNment, central
.. r. ancl tully Insulated.
PafiiiiY room and 2 car
ver-. All thfs far
lOw price of 137.500.

niore

w

IIEDROOMS-JACRESM.OR L.

me

.

Olfltr

IAITiiiN DISTRICT
- TUPPERS PLAINS
"'t'" A ~ starltlr ·nome
:i llodrooms. beth,
Mlfclltn, ltvlno room and
orport •on approx. :V.
acre 101. Separate otlllty
and a garden space.

""'lh

.

~

112.SUO.
'
RIALTOll
. ' Honrt 1 . Cfelond, Jr.
tfHm
-TI'UIMIIMf-,.._
OollltTu..-m-Nn

Oftlafti-Uif

a ·JD
0

'

,,

Deten11ve genlul
NORTH

IO-U-I

•KJtl
• J1

•uu,.
• K

I!AIT
• 10 7 4
• AK QIf II

• tl
•AlGal
tru
•Qilllll
••
SOOTH
•AQIII

~

Household GOOds
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, ot~
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, s275 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from 5285. to S795. Tables,
SJB and up to s109 . Hlde~a ~
beds,S340., queen size, 5380 _
Recliners, $175. to 5295.,
Lamps from SIB . to 565. 5
p~ . difettes from S79., to
$385. 7 pc .. $1". and up .
Wood table with .4 chairs,
5219 up to 5495. Desk SilO .
Hutches, $300. and $37S .,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites - Bessett
Oak , $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795 . Bunk bed complete
up to $350 . Captain's beds,
with maHresses,
s2so.beds,
and
S27l,.
complete . Baby
$99 . Mattresses or bb x
springs, full or twin, SSB .,
f irm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $·195. 5 dr. chests, $49 ,
4 dr. chests, $.42. Bed
frames,$20.and$25.,10gun
. Gun cabinets, $JSO., dinet·
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
1 t 1
5295 o
ore ec r C ranges,
· rthopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses. $25 &amp; $35 ,
bed frames $20, S25, &amp; $30.
Used.
Ranges ,
refrigerator s, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am tospm, Sat .
446 ~ 0322

Pheasants and
Amherst Pheasans,
( ~~ne 304·675·2961 alter

Oswald .Jacoby end Alan SOntag

WIST

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

ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL- IN TOWN -New
listing- Make an appt. today to see this very im·
pressive quality br ick ranch .with a country at·
mosphere. Family room, fireplace, beautiful kit·
chen, dining rm ., 3 BRs, 3 baths, 2170 sq. ft. walk in
closets. Lots and lots of elCtras . Loan assumption
possible.
1903

The Sunday Times· Sentinei- Pag ......I&gt;S •

BRIDGE

•11•
t Q

51

'·

MODERN furnished, 1
bedroom
aJ;~artment .
Adults only, no pets, call af·
ter 4:00, 304~ 675 · 3788 .

w. va .

+I

304~ 675 ~ 53116 .

Available. 1 bearoom apt.
for rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts.; Middleport.
992-7787.
2 bedroom furnished apt.
992 ~ 5434, 992·5914 or 304 · 882 ~
2566.

OFF ICE space or small
business, available Novem·
ber 5th. 1508 Jefferson. call
304-6 75· 1435.

Mobile home in city central ·
air and heat , adulfs only,
dep. .u6·0338.

992~7721.

.AK14
Vullltrable: Both
Diller: Eut

Wnt
Piut

Nortll Eut

s•

~~~

PIH

PtH

P111

Sod

:: .

Oponln&amp;lead:•D

By oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa SoDtll

In yesterday'• article we
mentioned that really good
deferwe It frequently a mat-

&amp;enlus at work.
Eut'l two beort op!IIIDI
bldwu-Df--k
lWO bldl lDYtnted by Rlcb·
ard Rio~ illltsl ucl
popullriJocl by two of the
1reat early maoten of
contract, Howard Scbenktll
and ll:ddy Hymes, In 1842
and 1811. Today ne.orly all
American ~~~ uae tbem
u do many ordinary play·

en.

Tile two bid did not keep
North and South from 101Un1 to pme, built did 101
West off to a &amp;oocl oponfn1
lead.
Eut took two top bllrtl
and ohlfled to hil llncleton
oltlb. South wu pretty '"""
lhat tbe club wu a liDJI•
ton. He alto knew that Weat
would hold the diamond
Soulh hod to play lhreo
rounds of trwnp1 t9 pull
Eut'olut tooth.
Then he led a low dla·
mond from uummy to hil
queen, but West wa1 rtady
1 H 1t
wlth h!J &amp;en1Ul Pay.
e e
lhe queen hold. That &amp;ave
South one diamond trick, but
he could not a:elaaecond. He
had three low cardl to ruff
in dummy. but only one
trump to ruff them wfth and
came up one trick 1hort.

aee.

0

piece Ludwig drum set, s
symbOls, all stand, har·
dware~ Phone 675~5295 after
5pm.
BUILDINGSalfactory . All
parts accounted for. All
structural steel cerr les full
factory
guarantee .
Smallest building ap·
proximately 1200 SQuare
feet. Must move lm·
mecllately and will sell
cheap. Call Johnny l(alen·
ski loll free 1·800·2411·0065 or
1 · 800~ 2AS ~ 0321.

Firewoocl. $20 pickup and
for 1 ton truck load
delivered . Phone 576·2010,
Topper for 8ft . pi ckup, will
sell Or trade . Call 516·2069.

t~te~r~o~f~&amp;•~n~1 ~. ~H~e~re~w~e~tn1"~""~'p~·~,.~·~..~rTER~~P~Rtn:~-~·~~tlJ]ii~E
..

...

GOO
. D
S
U ED
A P·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers ,
refr igerators ,
ranges . Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave. , 446-7398.

---··- - -- - - - -

USED REFRIGERATOR.
Corbin ~ nd Snyder Fur·
nitur e,
955
Seco nd,
Gallipolis.Call446·1171 .

gray. SSO . Phone
5 pm .

1675~ 3875 affer

Sl
Household Goods
THE TRADING POST 92
Olive St., Gallipolis. Open 9
to 5, 6 days a we ek. Range,
refrigerator~ wood burn ing
stove. bed room suite,
desk, dinette set, couch,
sofa, beds, coffee &amp; end
tables. side by si de ref. -· - - -- - - freezer~ tools, washer &amp;
clryer, hide·a· bed, &amp; 8 ft. For Sale: 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC septic
glassshowcase.
tanks. State and County a~
proved .. Total weight " 300
Special on new recl.iners. lbs .. Haul in your pick·up
$79,95. City Furniture. truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
Located across from Post Service. located 3 miles
Office in Pt. Pleasant. 675· South of Jackson on St . Rt.
2608.
93. 2116·5930.

- - - ·-----'
_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __,.R"'e,_•,_lE
00,s tale

Nice furnished 3 room
apartment . 7th Street.
Adults ~ 675 ~ 3811 .

&lt;

-

,o
J

•.

General

CANADAY
REALTY
25
Ohio

TWO bedroom apartment,
$175. plus utilities. on 21st.
Street, 304~ 675·1174.

•

Locust St., lialhpolis,

:or£~~

STROUT REALTY, Inc.

~EALTO~·

Jill~~.

BEST BUY IN TOWN- Stylish 2 story
home was built in 189.. and must be sE.&gt;en
to appreciate. Large open foyer and
stairwaY, LR, dining rm .. parlor, com·
pletely equipped modern kitchen,4
BRs. 2112 baths, new siding, garage,
nea·r SchoQis, s!lopping, etc.
~ACKSON COUNTY FARM 106
acres MIL , approx. 30 A. tillable,
balance pasture &amp; woods, nice 2 story· 7
rm . home, new o40x80 metal barn.
several other buildings, must sell soon.
Call tor other deta"lls.

39 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tillable postureland, some limber, plenty ofsprlno
water, 112. mtle frontage on Prospect Church Road
Phone fQr l,ull details.
·
1 4tJ

mrl-ator, d l - Itt. Air Condit'- and
lurnllvre. Rural water, nice lend for ~ vel'lltn
All of mit for onty 522.500.
1 .,;

1

NEW LISTING- Total
elec. 3 bedroom dbl .
wide with 2 baths. Nice'
outbUildings, cellar and.
1.88 acres. Near town.
JustS37,9QO.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice
3 bedrooms, 2112 baths
and J level lots. Full
basement, lots of good
carpeting, hot water
neat and 2 car garage.
Exce.llent shape. ·
2 YR. OLD COUNTRY
HOME - Over I level
acre with small trees. 8
room ranch _' h.omq,.
family room with wood
burnln~
fireplace. 3
bedrooms,
several
closets, ' lovely car ~
petlno•. 2 ·full bams, end
2 car garage. ·
BUILDI,.G LOT - All
utilities, level .or can be
uHCI as a trailer lot. ln .
town nelr schools and
stores.
3 ACRES - On gOOd
country road. I deal for
your future. Raise a
garden to offset the high
cost of living .
ASSOCIATES: HELEN
L. TEAFORD, SUE P.
MURPHY, G.ORDDN B.
TEAFORD.

WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME

II!In
ARNOLD ST. - 2 nlcelevollohl, $.4,000 or lioi,SOO,
GOOD LOCATION - Close to town; 5 acreo bUilding
life,
I ...

J bdr. apt. for rent In Rio
Grinde. Call 1-682·7056.

2 bdr. apartment unfurn .,
In Crown City. Ohio. Call

Pleasant,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call
992·7A7'1 .

1-(614)-992-3325

PH. OFFICE 446 7699

15600

RT. 511- lo'.l acre lot, only 13,000.

Small furnished house,
adults only. Coll-0338.

TWO beclroom apartment
in Henclerson , 304·675· 1972.

Phonl! .

• Joan Boggs, Phone 446·3294

Mobile home. Wx70' 1976 F-.n, I~ bethl Underplnnlno, Iota of bullt·ln atblntta range

RIO GRANDE- Nice lot, 78'xlc10'.

1 bedroom apartment fur·
nished, . adults only, ref .
Call 446·3791.

Furnished apts, nice• . 1
bdr., adults. steam heat,
5220 utilities pd. Call olol6~
4416,efter 7PM .

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV. 773~5651.

For rent, 2 bdr. house on
Roush Lane in Cheshire. no
pets. Call 446~ 1527.

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY

I .NSURANCE

428 Second Ave.
Call446·0552 Anytime

13MR 391

IMMACULATELY kEPT - Just like neVI( custom
~u~lt 14x70 mobile home. 3 bedrooms, large lovely
hv.ng room, modern built· in kitchen. dining room,
all. car~ted, large covered patio. Storage bu ilding,
9x10 With good dry cellar all sitting on H~ etcres of
ground. Shown by appt. only . Priced in' the low $20's .

For rent. 3 bdr. house on
Rt. 160 near HMC, no pets,
5225 mo. Call 446~ 1521,

446~ 7886 .

BMR 391 - Price reduced. Owner wants it sold
now! lOxSO mobile home situated on a river front
lot. Excel lent .buy for newlyweds.

D~CTORS - HILL- IT's Autumn in the Country Th•s lovely new home radiates the golden hues of
fall overlooking fall colorful trees which create a
picturesque settinQ. From I he livinQ room of 18 to 20
ft. of glass. This very r?lush _home features 3 large
bedrooms, formal dining and formal entry. mOdern
built· in kitchen featuring a bubble window, 2 large
full baths, basement, 3·car garage. Home has in·
tercom stereo system. A very well built. home of
r~re quality . Sitting on 3.2 acres in a super loCation.
C1ty schools. Shown by appt. Priced in the $80's.

3 BR HOUSE. located 125
State St. Sec . Dep. and Ref .
required. Call 446·0254
everting$,

216~730734 .

2 bdr. apt. for rent. Call446·
3937.

Apartmomt
for Ronf

$150. per month plus
utilities. Must pay deposit.
No pets. Available Nov. 1.
2 bedroom trailer. Adults Call 614~992~5511 after •
only . Brown 1s Trailer p.m.
Park. V92·3324 .
Apartments . 675·5548.
2 bedroom on Sandhill
Road. 675·3834.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes.
houses.
Pt.
Two mobile homes. 2 Pleasant and Gallipolis.
bedrooms, 2 miles out of 614· 446 ~ 8221 or 614-24~·9'4114.
town on Rt. 2. $1110 deposit.
5175 . p~r month plus 2 bedroom twin single In
utilities. 675-3000 or 675~ Pt . Fl'leasant at 205 Poplar
6277.
Street . S200 month plus
deposit. 1-614·263-8322 or
614·263 ~ 2669 . .

For rent located in Oak
Hill. s rm. house. Call after
4PM 682~6010.

For sale or rent. Lovely 3
bdr. house in country set·
tlng . ConYenient
to
Gallipolis or Rio Grande:

Broker-Auctioneer
LIFE

2 bdr. unfurnished 12X60
mobile home on Jackson
Pike, Ref. &amp; dep. Call ~~
4229.
.

roomr workshop,
room, deluxe kitchen.
storage building. IMMEDIATE
PRICE REDUCED.

FOR LEASE OR RENT·
Modern 3 bdr. ranch near
town. S300 . per month,
deposit &amp;
references
required. Call S.TROUT
REALTY 446·0008,

5 rm . house in Gallipolis.
Call 446 ~3945 after 5PM.

~
room hou se, batt),
hallway, utility room .
small apartment. Call 614·

JOHNSON'S
MOBILE HOMES
INC.
___._

WANTED I

614-992 ~ 2288.

Financing
Available
5 year
Protection .Plan
Large I nvenlory

__

Houses for Rent

4 bur. 2 112 bath bl level
with POOl off Rt. 3.5. Calf
Wisema·n Real Estate
Agency. 446·3643,

Modern 2 bedroom home.
Very nicely decorated . E)(cellent neighborhood, must
have references
and
cjeposit required. Phone
446·4159 after 5: PM .

Apartmemt
forAent

fur~

nished, clean, convenient
locatiOn, upper .Rt. 7, ref . &amp;
security dep. Call245-5818.

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedroom furnished
apartemnt. $125. Naylor s
Run. Security deposi t. Call

Call AI
Leisure

caii4A6-~.

3 bdr. mobile home,

24 ACRE S with 250 foot
river front,ag e.4 Room
hou.se, 5 mileS from Raven·
swood bridge In Ohio,
phone 614 ~949 · 2286.

210 Eastern Ave.
Phone 446-3547

3 bur ., double wide. con· ..
. . - - - ,A:cpa
= rt::-m
" "e'm
--,t- venient location in City
for Rent
limit$, furnished, new car·
pet a. drapery throughout, J beclroom apartment in
all gas, all utilities paid ex· Middleport. $150. month. ·
cebt electric, ·no pets; no 992·5691.
mor'e than .til, ·ret '&amp; d~p.
req. S350 per mo, call 446· 2 bedroom apartment, fur·
3547.
nished. Over- looking Ohio
River. Brown's Trailer
Park . 992~3324.
12x60 2 bur .. 5 miles from
city Racc90" Creek Rd. 1h clouble house. 2 bedroom
Gas heal, no ·pets, SI6S mo. fUrnished.
Deposit
plus dep. Call 446·0822.
requried. Adults preferred.
No pets. Caii61H9'1-2749.
Trailer for' rent
on
Bulavllle .Rq. and a space.

2:00 P.M. 10 4:00 P.M.

f rontage. Call co llect 1· 457.-

Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 BR House Tro ller for
Rent. Call olol6~ 1052.

2 bdr. moblte home turn.. 2 bdr. mobile ho'me for rent 1 2 bc:lr. apt .' ~cJean, modern
W/0. SIIIO mo. &amp; dep. $100. In town. Call-0318.
,
furniture, Main St.,
Just outside cfty limits,
Cheshire. Sec. dep. &amp; ref.
Phone 446·4757 or 367~7118 .
Call245-5818.

SUNDAY, NOV. ·1

PRICED
REDU CE D
,$415.00 per acre, Ly dia
Hollow Rd . 45.6 acres, city
water available, 400 ft,

''

42

446·9510. .

OPEN HOUSE

nor even$1.000. Do what we

I.
I

Pllmerov-Middlepori-Gallipolis,

42

down, owner will finance,

did Call

1

Mobile home for renl. Call

Would you like to own a
home Of your own. We
didn't have 110,000 for a
down payment nor S5,000

New 1981 14' Wide

1911

by Larry Wright

39
-.,67=.= ======'"- -l callafter 3 p.m ., 256·6413.

NOTICE

-

Nov. 1, 1981

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ~"

~OT S · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek. all
utilities available. S300.

~-

w. Va.

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

A~rea ge

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

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - lOll acres m/ 1,
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20
A. tillable, balance woods, tob. base . .
owners wi II help finance.
CLAY TOWNSHIP - Raccoon Creek
frontage, 1112 story, .4 rf!15. and bath
ctown, upstairs unfinished, good barn,
oarage, shed, near Blue Lake, city
schools. Asklng$.42,500.
··
FARMER'S FARM - One of Guyon
Township's finest. 106 ocre m/1, ap~
pro)(. A5 A. fertile bo"om lan·d, balance
pasture &amp; woods. Nice modern kitchen .
&amp; fam. rm . 1&lt;txl8 LR , attacped garage
mails 56x10.4, also Included ls 20x2.ol
steel garage, w~Jrkshop &amp; several
sheds. Owner Is retiring &amp; will help
finance.
START RAISING lo GRAZING, 132
aCre pasture farm, mostly rolling &amp; hil·
ly grassland with approx. 10 A. wOOded,
lots of springs, Ph story home has A
rms. &amp; bath, large bar11. tobacco base,
fronts on 3 roads In Walnut Township.
OWNER FINANCING AVIIIofLABLE :RemOdeled home Include&amp; 5 rms, &amp;
bath, carPort, stove, refrlg., dish·
washer, mobile home pad. almost 6
acres on 588 2 mi. from town. $30,000.
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acres, ap·
prox. lf2 tillable and 112 woods, old 2
story farm home In n'eed of repairs,
barn, shed,s fronts on U1 . Owner finan cing available at 10%.
PRICE REDUCED TO $35,000 ASSUME IV• LOAN - OVer 1500 sq. fl.
of living area PLUS a full basement in
this 3 BR ranch. pwner Is leaving the
state and IS anxious to sell. Make
YOUR offer first. Located on Ingalls
Rd.
•
,
MAGNIFICfi&lt;NT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr. old lf)lll· level features 4 or 5 BRs, 3
botho, 3f) 11. LR, 2tamlly rms., 2. woo&lt;1~
burning fireplaces, lerge kitchen and
dining area, 2 car gar-. one of the
county's nlcHt paola (20x50) and a.truly
protoalonatland1Cafled lol. Locetec:l on
beflby Drive, Owner NYI stll ... 10 cell
RoMY blackburn far a personal
-1111- You'll bt piNitd you did.

I . .,

1\.

1\' 1\J v

446-3636

Ron Canaday, Realtat Audrey !Canaday

~ealtor

446·3636 Susan GiHiam Assoc. 245-5208

•
'.
•

.

OWNER WILL FINANCE - Great
family home with 3 Brs., 2 baths, 15x27
LR with gas fireJ;~Iace , large modern
kitchen with range, self·cleaning oven,
DW and disp., laundry with washer and
dryer, part. b~sement and over 6 acres
of land at the edge_of town .
PRICE REDUCED TO 137,9001 Nice 3.
BR low maintenance home is less t~a.n 3
yrs. old and features large LR, d•nmg
rm ., kitchen, bath, part basement,
utility bUilding and almost 2 acres near
Route 218. City schools.
•
LOVELY BRICK lo FRAME RAN ~
CHER plus 78 ACRES of land In
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
tivlng for your growing family. Ho'!'~ is
just like new with 1438 sq. ft. of llv1ng
area plus an attached garage . 2
spacious BR ' s, 2 baths/ Bx27 LR, 10x2.4
kitchen wittl refrlg., disp., OW, doub!e
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays 1n
laundry, Land IS mostly rolling pasture
land with approx. 25 acres wooded. Call
for aPpointment.
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fron·
tage on State Route 588, Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfielcl Rd.
Excellent for farming or clevelopment.
Older 5 rm. &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
silo Included. owners will consider selling smaller tracts of short term financ·
ing . Call for more information .

~ sell

beautful ibiHBs.

12 acre estate iNilh a "Dallas" flavor. Ran fences, stable, swimming pool,
·garage/workshop surrounded by beautiful level land. Visually exciting brick
home. Sunken gathering room, family room with glassed shelves and fireplace,
elegant formal dining room. Four ·bedrooms o'r three plus a study. 2'1• baths. A
kitchen that promises lo turn a novice cook into a pro. Nutone work center,
double ovens, dishwasher, range and breakfast booth custom designed by Chandlers. Custom drapes, plush carpet. Allached 2 car garage. Expensive? Yes, but
impossible lo replace for the asking price.

RIO GRANDE AREA - Rio Center·
point Rd. (Cherry RldgeJ. approx. 75
acres woodland, fronts on 2 rds., county
water available. Owner may help
finance. Priced to sell at$400 per acre.
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP ,... 17.6
acres mil vacant land, fronts on Raccoon creek and the Tom G.len Rd. Ap ~
prox. 31 tillable and lhe balance wood ~
ea. Under s.tOO per acre.
BUILDING OR t.lOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx. 5'h acres located on the
Graham School Rd., co. water, over 300
ft. rd. frontage, Green Grade School &amp;
Gallla Academy H lgh School. S10,900.

FINANCING "'

WALNUT TDWNSHI P - Beef , hay lo
grain farm.IO acres, m/1, approx. 35 A.
good cropland, 10 A . woods, balance
pasture, good fences, 9 rm.lbath, home
was buill In 1872 &amp; has been partially
remodeled, 50x50 cattle barn with con·
crete floor, large silo with auto.
unhlader, several sheds. large pond,
sprlngo, standing crops go to new

ENTERTAIN EASILY or hide out in your second
floor bedroom with a good book . .Exceptional lover

owner.

A VERY SPECIAL cozy home with lot~ of illce
touches . Family room has fireplace w1th slate
hearth soft plush carpet, custom plant window.
eat-in ' kitchen with range and dishwasher. Full
basement, gas · heat. Cent. ~ir cond. City schools.
Owner will ·finance on _land contract with $6,000
down payment. 20 yr. term at 1~ Interest rate .
Monthly paymenl ~. 36. S39,000 .

has bridal staircase... powder room . Spacious llv·
ing and clinlng rooms. Kitchen .has isla,nd r~nge,
bullt·ln oven ... breakfast nook w1lh view of bncked
courtyard.' Pea~eful environment in lhe heart of the
c'ty , Assumable mortgage . $.54,9()0.

LAND CONTRACT - Owners have
been transferred out of state and must
sell this month, Lovely 3 BR ranch "YIIh
LR kltchan. laundry, garage, almost
c.irpat and flat lot, wllhln walking
dlatance of Clay School. Easy terms lor
a-filled buyer.
'

nr-N

~ ~. "

c ~( R lJ R1\J

, "' uGlHJ

t

MITCHELL ROAD - $45,100 -'- Great location.•
shopping, Holzer Hospital, 3 year old brick ranch
0.. one-half acre lot. Eet·ln kitchen tully equipped.
Fully carpetec:l . Attached garage. Electric heat
pump. Highest electrfc bllll ..t winter 559.00 .

THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS cOOking would
be a joy in this beautiful, efficient kitchen, counter
space gator~ plu• range, dishwasher anct diSJ)05al.
Spacious tiv1ng room, 3 BR, 2 full baths, full base·
ment and ettached garage. Two brand new homes
located in Green Acres Subdivision just completed.
You can choOse your favorite carpet colors. $56 ,000.
·· Based on conventional financing at 16%, 3 vear
R .O.M., 25% down payment. 1 year buy down.
.DAIRY FARM OR BEEF CATTLE ... $187,00G Good
prOduction farm . 60 acres tillabl~, eo pasture. rest
timber. 2 ponds, also frontage on Raccoon Creek.
GOOd fences . 1050 lb . tobacco base. JO'x75' loafing
shed wittf concrete floor . Milk shed with pit. Other
bldg . for hey storage. Very nice 3 8R, trl-levei home
with formal "dining and family room . This Is one of
the best producing and cleanest farms in the county .
BULAVILLE ROAD -llOO,QQO- Prime building
sites.. 149 acres .. Frontage ~n Bulaville, Morton
WOOds and Yale College Roads ..60 acres tillable 15
pa~ture, rest timber. NiCe 3 BR ranch home.. eai· in
kitchen, storm doors and windows. Also ot room cot·
tage with trailer pad for tenant or rental. 2 barns,
chicken house and other outbldg. l(oy~r creek
Schools, 6 mil~ from citv.

...-.
.'

0'

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..

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,.

�~---

Ohi-Point Pleasant, w. va .

Page- D-6-The Sunday Ti mes-Sentinel
S4

S4

Misc. Merchand ice
Coal furnace, tubular gr&amp;te

Baseball Cards· Sets
1981 Topps $18 .00 726 car·
ds.
1981 Oonruss $17 .SO 600 ..
1981 Fleer$17 .50 660 ..
1981 Fleer error set $ ..2.95
24

with

blower,

tractor

wheels. 197.t Plymout h,
1970 Buick motor and fra n·
smission. 1956 GMC t r uck .

Caii61H49·2638.
Beauty shop equi pment f or

cards

two employees. 2 wet
stations wi th bowls, 1

1980Topps$20.00 726cards
1979 Topps$28 .00 726 ..
1978 Topps$35.00 726 .
1977 Topps$40.00 660 ..
1976 Topps sso.oo 660 ..
197SToppsS90.00 660 ..
1974 Topps$95.00 660 ..
1973 Topps $120.00 660 ..
1972 Topps $225.00660 ..

br own and l white. 2
h ydraulic all pu rp QSe
chai r s, gold . 4 dryers and
chairs, 3 gold i!nd 1 blue. 1
r oller tray . 1 fl oor m at .
Sup pl ies and other small
equ ipm ent. $2000. Cal l 614·

Spr ing Va lley T r ad ing Co.
Spri ng Va lley P laza, 446·

742·2360.

8025:

For sale : 8 ft. pool table.
E:xcellent shape. Call 614·
667-3333 .

Firewood f or sa le split,

stac ked,

.

a. delivered . s:m ~

la rge pickup load. Call .u,.c,.

-F-irewood . P ick-up truck
lo,id.. $JO, delive red a nd
stacked $35. Ca ll 61 4·992or
614-949 ·2171.
For •sa l e 73 and up 5006
Chevro let truck pa rts . Leona rd Bass, Syracuse.
Power steering c hange
over, power brakes, etc. Discont inued cabi neJs, top,
Oliver 88 trac tor, make stove, hood, s ink . $1200.
good pul li ng trac tor. Cal l Da le's Ki tchen Center. 675·

. 8535 or 446-7993.

~ 8 8 · 968 4.

·-

- - -Rea l Esta te- General

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066
Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, ~ealtor, Eve. Ph. 446.0971
Mose Canterbury._Associate 4~~~~!

Minolta camera SRT 102
wi th 50MM, vivitar 15 to

Ra tl iff Pools &amp; Service.

Complete sale5. service,
260MM, auto zoom, 2.8wide pool covers. a nd win·
a ngle wi th all a ccessor ies, terization kits. Call ~- 132•
$300 or best offer . Call 4-463142.

Restauran t

r econd itioned by RADCO.

2 used chai r s, ha ndsome
living room style, a ll

Call 304-523-1378.
WVA.

upholster ed p i nk velvet ;
good as new. Orgi na l S325
ea . for $75. Tope Furniture
Gallaries. Second &amp; Grape,

Firewood-spl it, del ivered
and stacked. M hced wood

Ga ll ipolis. Ca ll 446·0332.
.Hi'lob il e ho me ax le's,
wheels S6S.OO ;ea&lt;:h. Colt '38
speci a l, Colt 32 spec ial, and
S&amp;W 38 Spec ial. PhOne 245·
5065.
Water pu mp, tra iler hitch.
Call446·2599.

Hgtn.,

~. 000

with

2

home

Garfield
walking
distance f ro m down
town Ga ll ipol is. Large
ga rden a rea, one car
garage .

Co mfor tab le

liv ing

roo m . di ning
room and kitchen. Ideal
fo r one or two persons .
Pri ce $25,000,00 . .

NE W LISTIN G 2
acres of land wi 1h th is
beau tifully
fin ished
brick hOme. 2-3· or 4
bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths
with showers, ful l base·
ment, nat. gas fi red, hot
wate r heat. asbestos·
s la t e r oot, co ppe r
flashing, 2 car attac hed
ga r age wi t h open ·
crs ... Th is is a QUALITY
1 BO 1L T home a nd you
wiil be proud to own it !
Pri ce in $80s.

assumable mar·

NEW LISTING
All
the comforts for modern
livi ng but Wi th the
solitude of the cou nt ry.
3-bedrooms, 1ivin9 rm .,
dining room , utili ty rm .•
moder n kitchen w/oa k
cabine ts, 2 ba ths, 14'X18'
master bedrqom . Approximate ly 50 fru it
trees a nd 6acres of land
near Raccoon Creek. All
lor $78,500.00.

Heifers. CaU Tom Hamm ..
614-949-2574.

....

· -:
64=.= =
H=a y=&amp;
:::G
==
r a=in==-

will

I I

$65 per cord or $35 per half

cord. Ha rdwood $75 per
cord or s..a per half cord.
Call for quotes on large
quanit les. Phone 245·5478.

r

~

~

71
1978

Autolor%-le
Plymou.th

8

• .. -~

Craftsman cha i n saw, 18'
ba r, runs good. Call 446·
8181 .

.,Iho--.

~ onango lho

a.- IOIIOfl 10

- "'t- -

· •I!'V-

INSULATED topper tor
sale or trade, 30•·576·2018.
14" TIRES. 2 Winter, 2
regular. 304•675·2580 .

'72 PONTIAC, E &lt;c. cond'.
See on Chlll ltothe Rd.,
Allred · Holley's Troll or
1
Park.

WOOd lathe·S ha per· Table
saw· 2·Tra ller a )(les &amp;
fi res. Phone 446·1288 after
1PM.

GRAVELY 2 wheel model,
e lectric start, 30" mowe r ,
$800 . 304·675-4435 alter 5

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
i ndoor· ou~door facilities.
Also AK,i; Reg . Dober·
mans. all446-7795.

p.m .

sa

Fruit
Vegetablel
APPLES·red &amp; yellow
deli c ious Winesap and
Rome, S6 .00 a bushel. No . 1
potatoes $6.00·50 pounds,
Rayburns
M!rket ,
Kanagua, Ohio.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
aoarding and groo'TIIng.
A K C Gordon
setters,
English Coc ker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.
Have 3 male Cocker
Spaniels to breed. 2 blonde,
1 red, good blood line, AK~
registered. 446-9372 after
5:30PM.

Firewood split &amp; delivered.
$35. truck toad, or $65. a
cord. Call 614·843-2933 or
614·843·2452.

Jeans,
Shirts
Slacks
Shoes,

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thurs., I Fri. 11 to 6. Tues. ,
Wed., I Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special .

CALL:

3 a luminum awnings. $25.

LANDMARK

Fr igi dai re full size por·
ta ble or built · in dish·
washer . Harvest gold. $50.
Sea rs ·women' s 10 speed
bike SS5. 985·3505.

GOOD SOIL
DELIVERED
CALL BETWEEN
I A.M. &amp; 5 P .M.
446-1142

~-

~ ·· ·

61

6wk,s. old pigs for sale. Call
256-6505.
REGISTERED
Poll ed
Hereford heife r and bull
calves, phone 30H73-5405
_a fter 5 p.m .

__ ,_. ___ , . .....
_ .,.... ..... ..,..

FOR . SAL·E-One proven
Herd Hereford bull . Gentle,
for vears old, call 30o4·882·
2242.

Farm Equipment

1963 Ford 881 Diesel trac·
tor. 742·2421.

A KC

Dachshund,
Pomeranian and POOdle
pups, 304-895-3958.

-~-------~

OEALER WANTED. Steel Pigs. $20 each~ Lawrence
buildings, for 'your area to and E:lle n Rice, 10 Mil e
handle our commercial and Creek Road, Rt. 2, Leon,
agricultural
pre·engineere· ·wv.
AKC registered, 5112 mon·
ths old, male BoKer, rea l d steel bul1ding lines on a
nice, hea lthy, $200. 304-576· part time basis. GOOd Weste rn saddl e, 15 inc hes,
·profit. , Call 614-294-3273 . good condition, $75. 576·
2186.
8:30a. m . to6p.m .
2728.
WE:EK old Dachshund
1700 Ford 4 wheel dr ive 8 week old pigs. 45·50 lbs.
puppies, S85. 304-882 ·2982.
tractor . Excellent con- had shots anc1 wormed. Ex·
dition. Call 614·247·3752 al- cellent pigs. S25. each. 614·
RABBITS &amp; 2 cages, $45 . ter 5 p.m.
667·3493.

- ---·- - - - -

614-992-2181

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

..
Real Estale

e.

Livestock
30 Hol stein heifers, calf
hood vaccinate d, A. l.
breed, 3 freshen in Jan .•
balance March 1. Call 304·
273-2848 .

63

Gene ral

:,___ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __.R~ea~I..!E;.!stale

ROGERS
PAW &amp; COIN SHOP
601 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, W•.Va ., ord
state liquor store.

~ ive r .

$45,000.

to

76 Camara, V-8, PB , P S,
AM -FM cassette. $2,800.
Eure ll Auto Sales. Rt. 160 &amp;
554 . Caii388·975A.

Culloden Nursery
Spring S.ltl
Wtll VIrginia's
"GrHtflt Nursery"
lltiUIIIUI
Canadian
Htrwlocks,
Scarlet
Mlplos, Sugar MIPIII,
Pin Olks, Japenest and
;Chinese Crabs, Grun

1975 Ford Granada. Good
cond. Exc. gas mileage,
uses no oil.
Pric ; .:
negotiable or will trade for ·
large truck. 985·4351. '
'

Nu~ Prlme

.Ash,
1

GOVERNMENT . S'UR ·.
1.
PLU S
CARS
AND
TRUCKS
.
"fOY/
AVAILABLE thrq ugh
'
govern""1ent sales, uncter ' I
I
$300. Call 1-714·569·0241 tor
your directory on how to , 1
purchase. Ope n 2A hours.

'
'
''
'

'

!

1979 DODGE Aspen, call •
before 2 or afte ~ 5, 304·675·
1969.
.. '

.

General

Pink
fard Pear,
Spreodlng
All nursery stock
ed to Mil. 25% off
r;»av Purchases.
AU sizes Df flowering
trees
lo .
bloom
Designing &amp;
Services,
ree
Estimates. Nursery Is
,h)cated 1 m lie out
CUrlev's CrHk Road
an tho loll lletwWuleyan
Ground. Only
from Ntw Hlgn. Mall.
•T roller load dtllvoriH.
Scotll Bluograu ood
•vallablt.
74H996

replacement

AluminUm &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmtt scrHn rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
buildings
691MIIIerDrive

~

-

BIU'S ·
Home Improvements
Nu-Prime Replacement
Windows, Storm Win·
dows 'a nd Doors, Patio
covers,
Carports .
Mobile Home Ac ·
cenorles .
Free
Estlmat11.
691 Mllltr Drive
~~6-2642

. . One

21 Stir

--

NEW LI STING -

151
ac re farm. s ituated nea r
Vin ton. 50 ac res bottom
land. woods. has 3·
bedroom house. new
heat pump . Needs some
work . Black top road to
front door. Also, has lg ,
b arn and 10 0'x20'
stor age shed. Owner
will se ll some far m
equ ipmen t. Ca ll for
more inform at ion.
NEW LISTING -

Neat
3· b ed ro o m . c ottage
locat ed in Bi dwel l.
Sit ua ted on 166'66' lot,
·with anothe r 166'x66'
lot. Buy a ll lor sa,soo.oo.
BEE N
a com·
b ina tlo n home a nd
bus in ess opportun'ity,
we ha ve it! Located in
downt ow n Ga llipolis
and zoned commercia l,
but wi th residenti al use,
too. Ni ce, nea t 1.424 sq .
ft .' hom e w ith business
bu ildi ng in .rear. Owne r
will help finance ~ or
finance ent irely w! th
25% down payme nt.
Th is is a t:~ua lity piece of
rea l esta te. Let us show
· it to you today!
IF Y O U HA VE
LOOK tN G tor

MO BIL E HOME IN
VI N'TON , has en tra nce
lot, 2 bedrooms. 2 baths
wi t h car po r t a nd
covered porc h. All fo r
$~5. 000 .

LOOKING . FOR A
SMALL BUSIN E SS
building with an apa rtme nt overhead? We
"have just listed this
bulld ing on Olive St. a nd
sell ing it fo r $17,000.00 .
Be tter look; a t .. thi s Of1 C
today ! !!
~

'

'r

FOR ' RE NT 2
bedroom a partment ad·
jac ertt to golf course.
Refr ig. and r anoe furnished, adults only. No
pets .

drive.

building. Priced in the $40' s. Roush

NEW LISTING - Slur·
d y, bri ck st ructure
loca ted a long Rt. 160 in
Vinton. Formerly used
as financ ial business
building. 1,11B 5C1. ft., 2
rest rooms, 6,620 sq. tt.
pa rK1ng area ; anve· m
window. use as is or con·
ve rt to home wi th large
security vau lt. Priced to
sel l $53,000.00
NEWLY RENOVATED

be d r o o m ho m e,
s i tu a t e d
on 43'x 17J' lot, just
waiti ng for yo u to come
e n j oy
th e
new k itc he n a nd bath .
New t.a. na tur al gas fur ·
nace and al l new carpet.
If you 're interested you
ca n ha ve it all for
S29.900.0Q.

J

PER F ECT LOCATION
for sm all business or
rc:&gt; mone t ~ n d move into.
Loc&lt;ued on the ma in
corner in E:w ington , lot
size approx . 56x170'.
Buy this propert y now
for $20,000 .
VINTON
2
bedroom home, si tua ted
, a long Rt. 160, FA tur·
nace, 50'x2A9' lot, ideal
be g inn e r
ho me or
re tire ment home for
$15,000 .
IN

COMMERCIAL BUILDING In downtown
Ga llipoli s, 3,795 sq , II. of
floor space, rear en·
traRce from service
alley, a lso side door en·
tra nce. Re nted apart·
menf on 2nd floor. Jrd .
stor y storage . Call for
more infor mat ion,
HOUSE FOR RENT -3
bedrooms. 2 baths,
located 127 Garfield
Ave. $265.00 month.

., ,.l

,.
'J

CHASE

COMPLETE PACKAGE - 1972 14x65
mobile home, 1 acre of nice level lawn,
county water, OW{' septic tank . Priced
at S16,000. All you have to do Is move in
this neat. clean home.
1159

AWAY ~

bedroom ranc h. 'h baths,
room, stone fl r pelace.
backyard, pat io, well decorated,
convenient location . Possibility of
loan assumption . MidSSOs .
1851

NE
peace and quiet
of this 3
ranch. Includes
most of
1 ac re. Plus 2
bedroom mobile home. .storage
building , Cellar. Mid$30s.
lf860
ALL? -

75 Chevrolet 112 T PU , 6
cyl. , $700 or best offe r . Call
388·9783.
.

'.,

r ,_,,

"

-·
' ..

· 1975 Plymouth Valiant
Custom. 'ps, orr, depen·
dable work car. wurdltzer
pionci with leolher top. Call
614-992-7~15:
\

..
MOR~ISON'S

Auto sales.
Henderson, WV. Phone 675·
· 157~ or 675-2881 .
: 1tn CAMARO 304-675·2819.
. 1977 Camero. 675-2819.

The n you must see this home to apprec iate its value. Central air, beautiful
stone chi mne y for woodburner, 2 car
garage, basement, nice garden space
and lots more on 1 acre m/1.
IIU

ACREAGE
NEW LOTS - You can afford CION to
Hospital. Rural water available. Lot
size approK. 100ft. x 115ft. $.4,000e,.(h.
ItII

LOTS

FOR

SA LE

BUILOING LOTS - 14 loll folol,
100' x 120' lett s ide of road, 120' x 100'
right side of road. Nice 1111 loll.
Modular homes welcome.
lli7
INTEREST RATES HIGHI - Loaf&lt; 11
this.' 2 prime a(res set up for mObile
home. $10,000. Owner will finance wltft
$5,000 down, 12% A.P.R. lor ID
$71 .74 per month. Refinance In
years.

VACANT AND
SECLUDED,
older 2 story home, goad condition,
Jon acres end priced In the S20s.
Home has family room, living room,
dining room. kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 1
bath and ttfilitY room. Located on
Route 233.
filS

VIEW OF THE RIVER- New Lilting
- Two story, three bedrooms, family
room With sliding doors, garage, '
n.!ltural gas. 2 lots. All this overlooldng
the Ohio River. Newly painted. Very
cleon. Call today. Low $30's.
#912

FARM S
NEW LISTING - MOTIVATED
SELLER ANXIOUS to mCMI out of
stole. Dwher re&amp;pOnoive to special
financing, Over 41 acru. 2 story, 3
toedi'O!If\'1 homo. 16 tillable acrn .
1800 lb. tobocco bose. Lorge tobocco
barn. s-40.000.
,
RtVIRVI~W

ACRES- Buy lhl&amp; brick
ronch end 2 acrn OR 25 ocrta. 4
bedrooms, 2'1.1 batllt. tun b i l l - .
llnott car garage, lomttv room · With
tlreptoce. Farm hlo toblc:co bait, drill·
od wen, barn and mart.
1154

•

RESI DENTIAL

"'
'.&gt;

.... '
~

RESIDEN TIA L

LIT US SHOW YDU tills home end
u acres overlooking the Ohio R lver. ·
Thll hos new carpet, vln~l
sldlngl dlshwaltler, ranQe. Easv ac·
cess to rlv~r for outc;toor pleasures.
Easy flnonclng. Call tor appt, 1794

.MAKE HASTE - This 3 bedroom
home could be YOUrs. LR, FR, both
kitchen, front porch, ga?age, work
shop. Over 3 acrta setting, ohode
tr-. well establllhod. Exceptlonol
extro lots. All Within 3 miles of
Gallipolis.
1119

WOODREA~TY,INC.

32 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS

I

•

•

\ :,

&gt;;

...

''

·- ,J

..

.

' '.
JUST LISTEDI - Gain equity lost by
repolrlng this ~ bedroom home on the
edge of town. Home has - n Iburned,
but Is r•polroble. 3 ocrn.
consider helping with llnonclng. 1901

ow- wm

' ·"t

I.

1975 Chevy blazer 350
automatic, $1 ,100. Calf" 256·
1668.
1976 Ford E xplorer 250,
auto .. 4-wheel drive, new
tires. fiberglass topper,
$2.650. Call446-9285.

__
---1979 Dodge PU , 6 cyl ., stan·
-· ,_

-~--

dard, camper top, exc.
cond. , 53,.500. Eurell Auto
Sales, Rl. 160 &amp; 554 . 388·

115-

131Eoqolrod
f4f

141!-

%7211-

.,.._

1431MW

18!2

152-

once

155Formlll

~

....

52 SlrokOI

54 Comek'lto

56P-

!14 ""*-·

95folls
98CogiVM1
01
97W~

99-

l&lt;nlgtol

100 Top 01 . .
head

tOt Fortho-

Ill Autfio&lt; Anp

48-...me

110

s1=ad;

col2
""""
11
-

.,=..82 0rwtt UM ol

120~

83Sopolll0
MMITdog.
88 Ololllln

121 RancMn

tracll

122' 123F-

_....

I124~
:HI __

...

121 ......

130Bol....,

50~-

1

$

114 Ollot

5355Phorm.'l

, """"

.,,

New Homes - eKtensive remodeling.
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7 SIJ

12"

•••

171-

88Dock
811 Young hOg

DOWN

f~ol

73KIIon
75-od

5 .t.aab'•

enw•••

•

107-od
, 108 More IMn

c:hui!I&gt;V

........

110"~

111 Season
112Metlll

•

IPIWb••
1GMOUtuid

1fa12 t)pool

13-

14-

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12&gt;~:40

71L-.y
n-o1a1

a~=
Summod""

.....,

14-Ut' 0 "N
IICww;u;de.
Ior-

IO-

as..._

I

Rldittor 5ptCIIIIII
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Exptrltnct

Tra nSmission Specialist
Rebuilts-Repai,rs
Seal Jobs
Open Sat . &amp; Sundays
Located smiles nortn of
Albany on fi 681. on the
Ott le Scott Farm .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

664-6310

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. "2-2174

If no Ans. ca ll742· 2070
10·8·1 mo. pd .

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
EKcavatii10
Septic System•
water. Sewer &amp;
Gil Lines
• Dump Truck
eTrencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Let George Miller
check your present tlec·
trieal system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Ph. 992·7201

Call 742-3195

I-

. Trailer
Driveways .
, specialy. Dl·t••••r
· Trench Service.
Gas &amp; Water Lines
1

JIM LUCAS

Ph. 742·2753

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

For au of your, wlr·
ing needs.

2·8·ttc

10·12·1 mo.

~.ep This Ad f~

APPLfANCE
. SERVICE
Coli Ken Young
For Fast Service

985-3561
PARTS AND SERVICE

All MAKES
•Wash9n
•Dryers

•Ranges

•Disposals
•Dis hwashers

9-5-tfc

•Hot Water Tanks

1t7 eo..
hominy
119 Urge on
121 Bllsketball
1Nm

122Br-.n
eo1uory
123Chlmllo
125 Pen name or

t23Acroa
127 That man

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S . Rt . 5(1 E,"I

Custom kitchens ancrapplianc es,
custom
ba throom s. r emodeling.
plumbin, electric, and
hea ting.

G U'I' SIIille. Ohi o
Au_lhori J ~ d Jo hn Dl111H',
New Holla nD, 8ush Haq
F.nm Equtpml.'nt
De.l ler
F ARM E QUI PM E NT

PA RTS &amp; St: RVICE

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992~6011

130 Hunllng dog
t3t CaaoMIJ
133 Dlreotlon
1380uebe&lt;:

USE D E QUIPME N T

1- No. •100 DiCII!I F ord

992-7656

_..

P1c:kcr

8-20-ttc

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
___Addons and

remodeling
_ Roofing an&lt;J gutter
work
_ (ontret work
_ Plumbing and
eleelriol work
(Free Estimates)

Tr.lcfo r WI Cab
MO D· 401 0 Oicsrl J . D. Tr ~c lor
MOO· Jll I Row New ldl'll corn

V. C. YOUNG Ill
99H2 150l"992-73 1•

Pom• ror . Ohio
9-J().tfc.

1 J lf r

138 Faithful
140 Cl1.afleciQM

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

mom.

14A.z..ts'awtte

148148Tcoin

150 Llber•t•
151 Goo.

153 Soli lood

154S.

143Down

158 AMtiM

158 Greei&lt; lottot
11111ye'
fl3~

p1.

115 word for

HAIR REMEDIES
Stytists: Ma.r k Mora
._nd Cindy Cuthbertson.
New Hours:
Mon . 11:00-7 :00

Box 65, Portland, Oh.
Ph. 843-4912 '
u.oo Monthly
Serving the following
townships : Lebanon,
sunon, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bedford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutland,
Harrisonville and Mid-·
dleport.
10·12·1 mo.

187 NFL -=ore

81

Home
Improvements

Tues. II :G0-5 :00

Weds. 10:Q0-8:00
Thurs. ll :ot-8 :00
Fri. IO:Q0-5 :00
Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-3021
Appointment• not alwavs
nec;nsary, Fomrtrlv Kut·n·Kurl

IMuty s..,.

VInyl B. Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Coli tor trH siding
ostlmatu, 949-2101 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Calis

10·28·1 mo.
81

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com·
mercial a nd residential,
free estimates . Call 256
1182. .
.

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · qualit'y a nd ser·
VIce, cal1675·1582.
PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs . exp. Coll388·9652.
Bl NG'S CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION · Specializing
In cOncrete driveways,
sidewalks ,
patio,
basement, garage floor'$
and etc . Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 3677891.

Home
Improvements

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding . 30
years e x perience, Free
estimates . Remodeling .
Ca ll388-9857.

3·11-lfc

'

~-

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4-46-&lt;42011

;;...

WILSON
BUILDERS
AND

PAINTERS
ALSO

82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTE R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
PhOne 4-46-3888 or 4-46·4477

A clun furnace 5aves
money. Have your furnace
cleaned. Clll675·2158.
8.!__,- Excavoll!!l..___
BACKHOE and Septic tonk
Serv.l ce. Lorry Slden ·
strlcker. 675-5580.

:::=-=--=--=-=:::=====
El~trlcal - - -

14

a Rtlrlll!'ollon

SEWING Machine repairs,
ltrVIce. Authorized Singer
Salts &amp; Service. Sharpen
Bill Hawks. Chimney Sclosors. Fobrlc s~op,
sweep. Free nt. Call 4-46· Pomeroy. 9f2·22S4.
9531 or 388·8571 .

•

·'

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6·15-tlc

5·7·11c

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

CAPTAIN STEEMER Ca r·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Cu.s tom
Carpets . Free estimates .
Call.u.l-2107.

•'

·'

'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

13Re • 1

-·---------·-

.. '''
"

RADIATOR
SERVI.CE
From the Smallest
He~ter
Core
the
Larg11t Radiator.

DEAN'S AUTOMATIC

114Wooly
116 Bundle

---- ··-- -·

7-,IMd.,lg.

Sizes
" From lOxlO"
SMALL

ro

143 ........

72 Open • gilt

9754 .

.

TOM HOSKINS

129 Fabric

For sale or' · trade. 1973
1969 Mercury Monlego, Suburban . Call 61H92 ·
42,000 origlnol miles, 302 5971 .
. . VI, •eood tires, baHery,
body d•mogod. Best otter.
'1976 Toyota Pick· up, 45,000
675-3510.
mile . e.x·c ellent condition.
$3100. Cai i 61H98·6t21.
CAR lilt ' $400. 39 Chevy
_ltdon $1500. 304·576·2602.
1971 pickup truck . F irst
$500 gets it. 675·1302.
1975 FORD Country Squire,
42,000 actual miles, in ex· 1977 · Chevrolet pickup
cenent c~ltlon, owner truck , automatic, VI, good
Wlllllnanco. 30H75·3030 or tires, new brokes, 51875.
' 675-4332.
905 Mossman Circle,· Pt.
Pleasant.
' 1971 Fdrd Folrmont, good condition, good gos
' miiNge, ~ cylinder, 4 73
Vans&amp;4W.D.
:Slltod. cute. 182:3145.
1979 Jeep CJ7, 6 cyl., IUfo,
quiiCira .trac. 21,000 miles,
lt.s Cervalr Monza. new $4.500. Coli Jtff 388·H34
~ Hret, bill 1o1nt on the evenings, work "-16·«112
slotrlng, fair condition. lXI. 159.
675-1413. '
1951 WIIIYI JHp. 1800. 576·
lf13 Dodlt Swinger, stan! 2«13.
• 6, automatic, with air,-·
67~ •
.
74
Mel!! crctes
1m
Ul
H - Scrambler,
1974 vo~~&amp;swauen. good conctHn.
•7J'-17tll
lifter 5:30.
cllttall. 67HI$3.

-

•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•20 Yrs. exper ience

128-portlont

51Cokl
5181ay

•d' ..

115~

-""'

... ~CO&lt;d

duoo

113 AddltioMI
114Sd....,...

1181AoKojoll

...

157.........,
1511 Sun gad .

,.eq, ..

1180...

11C

....

105Kind01

117T-

IIIISA..,_ .

f53-

1118prlng

57 Clll* belltla
59-

87~

40~1ol

01IDZ-t03Uino

107 - • .....
IIIII..._
IIOS.I2

·

lion
31-

42 L.ohlon

47Qwtel -

72 __T!U!~~!_O!._~~! - _
1976 Chevy 2 1/2 ton dump
truc k, heavy duty 16 ft .
bed, twin hoist, well equip·
ped, low mileage, ex . cond.
Call 304-372·6390, Riple y,
WVA.

12-god
139hoft-

1111Cr.-

:!lla-

148-

45Long-

- · - - - - - - - -·-

II

921mor

-..-··--.. _
-

-"'Ool

71TinefL - '

Qif

40 Like: Fr.
., -Dorado
43FIII-

fDZ-

lng

26Long. -

m oglolrato

98-trac:ll

17C...

77-Nallll

Farm Buildings

CONSTRUCTION

•Roofing of all types

and

t7:.0

134~-

38-

39Mohom-

Storage

76-

ALLSTEEL

ROUSH

___.,..-

-...... ··---_ 44--_
- ·- ___
..-_ -.........
.....
f70-- ·- 3-2-- 70-·---- 13_....
--- - .. ..

74-

147Aia._

ma1lc:lll
func:11onl

Concrete

15-

obcoul

l4'38au.nol

--

CHESHIRE- KYGER ARE'A - 2
bedrooms. living room, kitchen and
bath. Good condition. Approx. 20
yrs. old. Hardwood floors, rural
water: fuel oil furnace, natural gas
is available. GOOd area, priced
reasonable.
1188

132._

f45-

37-- .

Pr ic e

72 Aer'•

1719Tol&lt;ldly
90Gol-

35--

gas heat, centra l a ir.
Off·st reep par k ing in

Cawl

23~

lliJh*,
a joins

...,

Carport.

OHIO VALLEY
ROORNG

And Home Maintena"ce

-~~" · --·--------

22 Ponot

7-...

25 IN's neigh-

sch ool sr

------- _.

Carpentry, building
remOdeling, 675·2440.

..
.......
-.,.,_
_135-,._ ".......
711-- t:rrll.. "--1.10.

33 Mod's digs

LOoKING TIME IS OVER - Buying time is. . hecel.A~soon as you see
this sharp 3 bedroom home . Equipped kitchen, family room, wood. burner,·well insulated. Rural water.
Flat lawn. Low S40s.
•N861

Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic T1nks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560 ,
1·7-1 ttc

10·2·1 mo.

SUNDAY·PUZZLER
1VIIIItor

Av e.,

.

Water- Sewer~ E

Ph . 304·773-5131
Mason, w. v a.
10·8· 1 mo. pd.

_!

Ph. 949-2160 or 949,2482

LOCKSMITH
Serv ice .
Residential, automotive.

~~~~~~~~~~~::==F:r:•:•:E:s:li:m:a:t:e:•=~ 882·2079.
Emerge ncy service..

0...
30 Ati::Ohlllllit
32NH'snolgh-

.

TRENCHING
SERVICElectric

• Re modeling

GENE S
CARPET
Cleaning . SpP.Cial rates for
Nov. ana Dec . only . Call
now and save. 614·992·6309.

446-2,642

SOLUTION

NEW LISTING!- Ready for you Is !his
2 bedroom ranch on approx. 112 acre.
Plentv of kitchen cabinets . Built-in
range and oven, dishwasher, disposal.

RINGLES' S SERVICE e x·
perienced mason, rooter.
carpenter , electri c ian.
general repa irs and
remoQeling. Phone 304·675·
2088 or 67 5-4560.

Stark' s tree trimming and
removal. Insured . Phone
576·2010.

windows
Storm windows &amp; doors

17&lt;ln&gt;w

NEW LISTING TAKE ONE
LOOK and you will be sold on this 3
year old ranch. 3 bedrooms, llh
baths, basem e nt . Vinyl s iding , Ove r
24 acres pa rtiall y wooded. Give a
ca ll today to see this one.
1881

REESE . ~

CQNTQCTORS

992-6259

Water wells. Cornme rc tal
and Domesti c. Test holes.
Pumps S~les and Service.
304-895·3802.

12 . . .eiUH-

$30.000.00 .

10·7· 1 mo.

D&amp;M
eAiuminum &amp;
Vinyl Siding
• Kitchen Cabinets
eAwning
•Roofing
• Pa inting

..

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772

Call Alter 4 P.M.
992-76!6
.
10+1 mo.

TV Sets

.•Siding

gr ocer y, r. hUrc heS and
dow ntown a r ea . Nat .

c ar po rt .

etnsu1111ort
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repl1cement
Windows

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS

Sale.
NEW PHONE 'NO.

77 VW bug, good cond. Call
256-6313 .

Con venient

loca tion

Used

Aluminum Siding

Above Wholesat,

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
N(M
OPEN for
Color

training. work guaran·
teed! Save up to 30 to SO per
cent on heatlnQ bills. Free
estimatM. Call 286·7171 or
286·5740.

1979 Mallard camper. 21 ft.
self contained, sleeps 6, all
in ex c . cond. with shower.
Call245·5238.

--------''

AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biut on... Re-FiniSh
Restock, parts. etc.
Buy GUnl 1G'Ho

BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl B.

--·---~-- ~====±::====±=====

NG - 2·
c ottag e
4th

As hworth lnstalleme'nt
Service. This week special
Armstrong acertone vinYl
$7.86 Installed. Phone 446·
8019. All work guoranteed.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, I.stump removal . 675·1331 .

21-0&lt;
I

Now Picking up runk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid lor auto bodies,
scrap Iron •nd metets.
1 mile west of Fa lr·
ground• on Old Rt. 33.
Mon .-Fri. 1: 30 to4 :00
After Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564
111-12-lfc

RON' S Television Service.
Speci8ti zing in Zenith and
276 Sycamore St.
Motorola , Qua zar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2J9S
Middleport, Ohio
or "-'6-2-tSA.
I L ______9_·2:._1_·t_lc_

1976 Grande PrJ )(, ' air con·
ditioning. good cond., good
tires, AM· FM 8-track . Call
446-8203 or 446·4835.

1977 Cut las Supreme SaJori,
T·top, power windows, p.s ..
p.b., reclining buckets,
velour interior. Like new.
$4,500. 992·6362.

S&amp;W
GUNSMilHING

SCRAP

&lt;Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
B. Metal)

Cell 4-46-2801 lor termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
est imates. Bill Thomas.

1974 Thunderbird loaded
wi t h extras. AAsk ing 4 ,
$1 ,700. Phone 4-46-7393.

•
.y EAR

.WANTED TO BUY

Fre nch City Painting
Residential, comme rcia l,
interiM, exterior, paper
hang ing , and texure d
ceilings. Ph . 367 · 778~ or 367·
7160.

675-4378

2•E-

b ed room , modern home
~~tuatcd on 1 ncre lot
ove r l ooking
tne
bc.luti tul Ohio River .
Located along Ohio

Ouallly Autobody &amp; Paint
work . tnsurance work
wel com e . Sunroofs in·
stalled from S200·S230. Auto
Trim Center, 446·1968.

The Sunday Ti m

.Business Services

FERRELL 's WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
ma l nta ina n c e
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

A &amp; C Home I nsulatlon.
Inc. No J ob to small or
large. 2 yrs. experience &amp;

614·446· 2716

POMEROY

set ga1VIIf11Zed cattle
racks for small pickup such
as Datsun. Alter 5, 985-3510.
1

1978 Dodge omnl4 ~ ·- · hat· ··
chbac k, automatic, powe~
steering, excellent cond .
Phone 245-5617 ..

. AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47Ft. Working Height
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Third Ave.

King sma ll pot bellied
stove . Abou t 3 ft . tal l, pipe
with da mper. $80: 742·3147 .

.

good cond . Call379·2726.

New woodburning ad-on
furna nce, still in fa ctory
ca rton, hea ts large home.
5450. Call256·1216.

Fue l Oi l fu rnace, 140 BT U,
$250. Ca ll379·2617 .

Mr . Leggs Blue
$12 .99 pr., Western
Sll .99 ea .• Lad ies
$4. 99·$5.99. Ba iley's
Middleport .

pattern. 742·

Volare1 • -

Real ni ce 22 ft. trailer for
sal e, exc. cond ., se lf con·
ta lned with showe r, $2, 150
or will trade for sma ll
tru e~ or car of equal value.
full size awnin g goes with
trai ler . Call446·2459 .
Firewood for sal e. All ha r·
dwood. $35 pick up load,
stacked and de li vered . Ca ll
446-9607 or 245-5506.

Sole or Trocle. 2 s....ul SP
7500 Stereo speakers trocle
for 4 wheels &amp; tires toll!~-

l5 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
COII446-38"
or 446·.3010

w. va ,

I mprovtm.-nts

&amp; AcceuoriM

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

12-4-38, 13·6-38. Rear !rae- ;J
tor tires. 1 tube. Call ,, ... · ~
949-2~1 - ,
,
,.-

.1

AutoPom

76

CHARL IE'S SALVAGE \'
Auto parts, auto repair,
'--~-------~------..:.._:
_ _...,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~wrec ker serv ice, buy
·
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 4-46-nl7.

d

1000 bushel dry ear corn. 1

ze ni th 23' color TV $75.,
looks new. Refr igerator
good, $65 . Wringe r t ype
washer depe nda ble, S65.
Pla tform rocker, good, $15.
Phone 4-46-1A68.

each, $65. for a ll. More in·
for ma t ion call Leonard
Bass, Syrac use . 992·5006.

NEW LISTING
Na tural wood sidi ng
d ecorates t his 3·
bedroom ra nch. style
home situated in a
woode d
area
. overlooking th e vtAJiey
ad jace nt to Ke rr· Belhel
Rd . Spacious l iving r m.
area. · County water, ·
elec rric neat, · 10%, ,30

Shifter

Services ·Offered

1"4 head Holstein Springer'

lb. Pneumollc fork 1111
si de

Ohio--Point Pleasant,

LlvHiock

5, 3001b. Holstein heife rs. 8,
2001b . Hols tein he ifer s.
Phone 388·8523.

GLIBE

sacrifice. Ca ii61N23-6873.

· -- -- -

BEDROOM
situated on
Ave. wi th in

63

,.........,., __

For \lale Quilts hond mode
lor Christmao gifts. Jewell
Nldoy, 4-46-3861 .
E lectrlc wheel chair good
coricl .. Honda 7G troll bike.
Caii24H3....

equ i pment

Closing Out Sa le. Fur·
ni tu re . Endi ng Nov. 6, 41
Nei l Ave., Gallipoli s: Call
446·8067.

COMFORTABLE

u---lour-.
--.
.--.t10-

M is(, Mer chandice

•

.,.

Nov. I, 1981 .

JACKS REFRIGERATION. atr cDf'ditlon service,
commercU!tl, Industrial.
812-2079.

--'t

" Interior Remodeling"
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone 992-2771
or 992-7093
10-28·1 mo.

a} =.~· ~~-n ~r~l}t!_~i~g- ..
JONE S BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Ca ll 367-7A71 or
367 ·0591.
NOW HAULING house cool
&amp; limestone for dr:lvewavs.

Call lor estimates 367-7101 .

--- ..... --- - ·-- ·- -·- -·

IJ =:_ ==u~~~tiri ::TRISTATE
UPHOLSTIORY SHOP
1163 Sec. Avt.. Gallipolis .
"-16·7833 or 4-46-1833 .

-- -- ---·- ---

MOWREYS Upholste r y P •.
!Box 124, PJ ..B s• nt , 30&lt;

675·4154 . -

''

�•

I

Page-0-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Nov. 1, 198l

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

Struble new Middleport postmaster
•

Millie

Alire Fife

SOUTII CHARLESTON, Ohio Millie Alice Fife, 116, of 122 N.
Chillicothe St., South Charleston,
died at 9:20a.m. Wednesday in Community Hospital.
She was born in Gallia County,
Sept. 1, 11190, a daughter of Edward
and Mary Rile Creamer.
Survivors include ·thre e
daughters, Mrs. Lois Chevalier of
Gallipolis; Mrs. Dorothy" Besecker
of Springfield and Mrs. Mary Rogers
~f Xenia; 10 sons, Gerald and
Donald of Springfield; Dale , of
Wheeling, W. Va.; James of South
Charleston; Robert of South Vienna;
Luther of Cedarville; Walter Jr. of
Arkansas; Ted · and William of

MIDDLEPORT ~ Ralph R.
Peyton, MSC l'oelmlllter Mulger,
Zanesville, 8IIIICIUilCI!I the lppolntment af Joeeph Struble to the

Charles L. Stacy
POMEROY-Charles L. Stacy, 119,
a fonner resident of Harrisonville,
diecl Oct. 15 at Dallas, N.C. He is the
brother of Lutchie stacy Riggs,
Pomeroy. Funeral services were
held in Dallas with . burial in a
cemetery there.

Elias W. Sisson

GAWPO!JS - Ellas W. Sisson,
84, of Rt. 1, Bidwell (Porter commun.ity), died Saturday morning in
Holzer Medical Center following an
extended illness.
Born Oct. 13, 1897, in Porter, son of
the late Nelson and Carrie
Wetherholt SisSon, he was a retired
Xenia, and ~aurice of London; Iarmer and teacher.
several grandchildren and gr~at­
He was twice married, the first
grandchildren; and a half-brother, time to Mildred Schlotterbeck, who
Raymond Roush of Cocoa Beach, also preceded him in death on Nov.
Fla.
10, 1972, and to Elva Huss, who surThree children and her husband, vives, whom he married June 25,
Walterj are deceased.
1977.
Calling hours were from 2 to 4 and
Surviving are two sons, Richard of
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday in Junk Funeral · Los Angeles, Calif. and Charles of
Home, South Charleston, where ser- Rl. I, Bidwell; a stepson, Richard
vices were held at 2 p.m. Friday by Huss &lt;i Claremont, Calif.; a
the Rev, M. C. Scott.
daughter, Mrs. Mary Hevener of
Burial was in Greenlawn Lima; 10 grandchildren and a greatCemetery.
grandchild; and a brother, Stephen
of Porter.
Margaret S. Davis
He was also preceded in qeath by a
sister.
BIDWELL - Margaret S. Davis,
Funeral services will he held at 10
67, Rt-1, Bidwell, (Evergreen Coma.m.
Monday in the McCoymunity) died Friday in Pleasant
Wetherholi-Moore
Funeral Home,
Valley Hospital.
·
Gallipolis,
with
the
Rev.
Earl Hawks
She was born March 23, 1914 in
officiating.
Burial
will
be
in Mount
Gallia County to the late John and
Zion
Cemetery,
near
Gallipolis.
Mae Sharon Mills. She married Paul
Davis, July 26, 1936 and 'he survives Friends may call at the funeral
along with one son, James of Grove- home from 6-8 p.m. today.
In lieu of Clowers, contributions
port; one brother, WillWI1 S. Mills,
may
be made to the American Heart
Columbus; two grandchildren, four
Fund.
great-grandchildren and two stepgreat-grandchildren also survive.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Monday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral H9me in Vinton with Rev .
Denver McCarty and Rev. Jerry
· Neal as officiating ministers. Burial
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio tAP)
will follow in Vinton Memorial Park.
Three
of four men charged in the .
Visilatlon will be held at the
killing of a Mahoning County reserfuneral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
ve deputy have been bound over to
today.
the grand jury following a

WILli

881igned

&amp;din&amp;

perlod(adly U

delivery IIIJPI!rvilor at the Marietta

1'1111 Olftce.
. Struble hu been active Ia . , .
community aemce. He Ia a put
commander o1 Drew Webller Post

poaltlon ol pc111muter at Middleport, eflec:tlve Oct. 17.
struble was selected through the 39 American Legion; firefighter in
U.S. Pcoltal Service Merit Promotion the P&lt;meroy Volunteer Fire DepartProceaa and competed witb four ment, and put chief af the Pomeroy
other manag'l~Jl~!Dt candidates, in- Emergency SQ\IBd. He Ia an elder in
cluding penons from California, the Trtnity Church where he is also a
Georgia, and Dlinois.
member af the Trtnity Choir. Other
A !onetime career pootal em- activities include the Voices of
ployee, Struble entered the postal Uberty, the Big Bend Minstrel
service at Pomeroy, March 16, 1982. Association, Pomeroy Alumni
He was transferred to Athens Association and Emcee for the
August 31, 1!1'14. During his tenure Pomeroy Chamber of Co!iunerce.
there he worked in virious clerk He is a certified fire training and
assignmenta and was acting super- EMS instructor.
visor of delivery service for six monstruble is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
ths.
ClarenceJ. Struble, tot W. Main St.,
On Dec. 2, 1977 Struble was ap- Pomeroy. He is married to the forpointed officer in charge at Albany, mer Martha W. Terrell and resides
where he served until he was on Mulberry Helghta, Pomeroy. The
promoted to postmaster at Rutland Strubles have one son, Michael, wbo
resides in Syracuse with his wife,
June 3, 1978.
During that period of IJme, he was · · Patti, and son, Evan Tyler Struble.
He replaces Paul Case! who
assigned to the Racine Post Office as
officer in charge for five months and retired.

NAMED MIDDLEPORT POSTMASTER- Joe Slnble, well-bowD
resident of Melp Couuty, hu been ......, .. pootmuter for the vlllatle af
Middleport. He replaces PaDI Caael.

15.graduate :from classes
\

JACKSON - Fifteen emergency tification to the basic EMTmedical technicians from Jackson Ambulance level.)
and Vinton Counties were graduated
The SEOEMS Program, ac. from the Southeast Ohio Emergency credited by. the Ohio Board of
Medical Services Advanced EMT-A Regent for Advanced EMT·A and
Program during ceremonies Oc- Paramedic Training, is .headed by " GALIJPO!JS - A GallipoliS man · Police investigated two other traf,
tober 25 in the Vintoo County Com- David Brown, D.O., medical direc- was cited for DWI following a one- fie accidents Friday.
munity Building.
tor. Mry J . Holtzapefel, R.N., EMT-· car aecident Friday night, acAccqrding tc the report, an
All graduates are now slate- P is program director. Course in- cording tO Galllpolis City Police.
unknown vehicle, while either.
certified to perform the advanced . structor was Dorothy Neutzling,
The department aaid Donald R. parking or unparking, · struck a
techniques of administering in- R.N.,EMT-P.
Cheney, 18, was making a left turn parked car owned by Jeffrey L.·
travenous fluid therapy under
Gregory M. Fuller, SEOEMS from Chatham Avenue onto Central Leming, Rt. 4, Gallipolia, at the'
authorization of · a licensed operations director, assisted by Vin- . Avenue at 7:15 p.m. when he ap- Commercial and Sevinga Bank, 25
physician.
ton County Commissioner Ralph parenUy lost control of his vehicle, Court St., at !0:33a.m.
The program incorporates 30 Wortman, awarded diplomas to: - went left and collided with a cedar
The other ·car left the scene,
hours rl. classroom instruction Theresa Cochran, Debbie Graham, tree at the Mary Barcus residence, . leaving the Leming vehicle with un-.
covering assessment procedures C. Thomas Hebn, James Hutchison, 28 Centra) Ave.
specified damage.
. ·
and principles of I.V. therapy. An Bouny Morrow, Judy Pelfrey, Janet
Officers aald Mark A. Pr)ce, 18,.
Cheney was not injured in the acadditional 20 hollfS of clinical ex- · Stanton, Anita Yates, Glenna cident, which caused moderate Rt. I, Cheshire, was unable to stop
perience and physician certification Dickey, Katherine Helm, SilyWard damage to his car:
his vehicle in time while north~4
of competence completes the course. Hill, Sharon Jackson,' Robert
In other matters, officers were in- on Eastern Avenue atll :58 a.m. an~
(These 50 hours of training are in ad- Newman, Joy Rife and Sherri formed by Walter Coffman, struck the rear of a vehicle driven bY:
dition to the !)().Hour Emergency Wright.
_
Galllpolis, his home at K and K Dollllll J . Sanders, 34, Galllpolis.
Victim Care course required forcerMobile Homes was entered around 1
Sanders was stopped to make a
p.m. Friday. Cash, clothes, a leather left turn into the Bob Evan8 drive-in
bell, pols and pans, food items, a when the crash occurred. Sligh(
jewelry box, a ring and a cartridge damage was reported to Sanders:
preliminary hearing.
car and moderate to the Price
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Top
The conference committee, mean- belt were removed.
Reserve Deputy John !.itch Jr. legislative leaders have made some
Myers,
Rt.
I,
Scottown,
told
vehicle, .and Price was cited foi .
Jean
while, is scheduled to meet Monday
was killed last week while tran- progress toward resolving Ohio's blg afternoon to try to resolve the many the department she had parked her assured clear distance.
:
sporting a prisoner from the hospital budget diSpute.
The
Gallia
County
Sheriff's
Depar•
the
Old
Brick
Tavern,
234
car
at
smaller changes made by the Senate
to jail.
lment was informed a car owned bY .
But Senate President Paul E . . in the House version. There were 197 Third Ave., Friday night arid when
Charged with aggravated murder Gilbnor, R-Port Clinton, aald Friday
Barbara Simmoos, Kissimmee; ·
she
returned
at
12:05
a.m.
Saturday
of them altogether, Gillmor aai1.
wi.th specifications for the death that mucb remaina to be done on big
found the car had been entered Fla., was stripped by UnknoWn perpenalty if convicted was John Glenn, ticket itemS such as school and
sona at Simmons' IQC81 residence on
Earlier, Riff~ aaid he and Gillmor through the driver's side and her
19. His half-brother, Robert Glenn, welfare spending.
purse
was
missing.
Rt. 554 near Eno Thursday night.
agreed that before the conference
25 was charged with escape and
Also cited by police overnight
The
department
aaid
it
is
also
Gllhnor, House Speaker Vernal G.
aggravated murder, while Chester Riffe Jr., O.New Beeton, and the committee can malte any sub- looking into a vandalism to a car
were Patay A. Hurley, 411, Rt. 1,
Phillips, 22, was charged with com- Legislature's two finance chalnnen stantial progresa, the leadenhip owned. by Eugene L. Wood,
Cheahire, theft; Timothy s. Stanley'
plicity to commit aggravated mur- pored over the CGrttroversial tax should try to agree on spending Gallipolis, who aaid the passenger
18,
Eureka Star Route, a:ceulve
der. They were bound over to the hike-appropriations package in two levels for the 1118HI3 biennium, and. side window was broken while
noise;
Eddie .Siders, 18, Gallipolis,
then the tax increases needed to
grand jury on. Friday.
parked
in
the
Ohio
Valley
Bank
lot
aaaault,
reatating arrest and .dlsorseparate meetings for mlire than fund them.
Estee Harris, 19, waived the
during Friday night's Gallipolis- . derly conduct.
four hours .
preliminary hearing_and was bound
Wellston football game.
Acting as spokearnan afterward,
over to the grand jury on a charge &lt;i
aaid "Soine of the items are r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
compliciiy to commit aggravated Gillmor
moving closer together. But we still
murder.
.
A fifth person, Zacharis Terrell, haven't solved the bit! ticket items."
He aald tlle informal group, which
19, was arrested Wednesday and is deliberating separate and apart
charged with two counts of o(&gt;. from a six-member Senate-House
structing justice in connection with
committee named on the biD Thurthe case.
·
·
sday, plans to meet again next
Tuesday.

Charge man with DWI

Trio hound over
to grand jury

Herman Johnson
GALIJPO!JS - Services for Herman (Red) Johnson, 78, Long Beach,
Calif., formerly of Gallipolis, who
died at his residence Oct. 'El, will be
held at I p.m. Tuesday in the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.
The Rev. James Rainey will officiate. Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends msy call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Monday.
·
Bom March 2, 1903, in Gallipoli_s,
.son of the late Alden and Oma Criner
JotmSon, he was a retlred baker once employed by 11\e Mootz Bakery
Co., Gallipolis.
Surviving are a son, Ray ,of Norwalk, Calif.;. five grandchildren; a
brother, Paul of Bucyrus.
Three brothers and a sister also
preceded in death.

receive honor in Grand Council.
In 191M Isaac L. Oppenheimer was
appointed Grand Sentinel, and in
1912 he was elected Grand Master of
Grand CouncU of the state of Ohio.
Oppenheimer was one of the
originators of the Ohio River Electric Railway and Power Company in'
1900, which served Pomeroy, Middleport, MinersviUe, Syracuse, and
Racine. While he lived in this area
he was also appointed a member of
the town council.

Brinker, wbo is very active in
Ma:tonic circles, has been a member
of Racine Masonic Lodge 461 for
nearly 35 years. He is a knight of the
York Croos of Honor; a lhirtysecopd degree Mason; past· Excellent High Priest of Pomeroy
Chapter; put Conunander of Ohio
Valley Commandery; past
President of Twin City Shrine Club;
past Patroo of Racine Chapter Order of the ~ Star; past Wat-·
clunan of Shepherda of Mary Shrine;
past Deputy Supreme Watchman of
Shepherds and other supreme appointments of the White Shrine &lt;i
Jeruaalem; a member of Kni!llt'
Masons &lt;i Ireland. Brinker has held
an appointive office l!f Slzth Arch Jn.
. spector with the Grand Council since
19'1'1. He~ allo appoinled with the
Grand CouncU alnce 19'1'/. He wu
also appointed by the Grand Council
of New York u their llepreaental!ve
in Ohio in 18'19. ·
1

,

Brinker is 1 retired dille!

enp.r haviJic worked 211 yflln lor
Union Barge Ulle, Pi1t11Jur1b, I'll.
end ~lea Ilia own
~In Rldne. He, IIIII Ilia wife
N11011111, bave Uved In Rldllt lor the
put • )'811'1. 'l1ley
the pennia
ol lhne children, Joann, Joe and
RGnnle.

He now -

Aerobic
El!erclser
-JOI. .r
and

GE 19''DIAGONAL COLOR TV '

with AUTOMATIC FREQUENCY

November 1 thru November 7

A guide .to area entertainment
Includes complete

listings

Cableview,
page ~1
Soap Opera Review,
page 9

00

Regularly '439

·Price
Slashed to

'389~
GE briap good thtnss to !ife.·
..

TV Mailbag,
page 15

•

CONTROL

/

Mechanic Street Warehouse
r

activities and events,

Area Happenings, ~
page6

u:e

Brinker chosen Grand Sentinel

I

ProgreSS m·a de on budget

Brinker is first Grand ~entinel from area
RACINE - Jesse E. Brinker, Past
Illustrious Master of Bosworth
Council46, Pomeroy, was elected to
the position of Grand Sentinel of the
Grand Council of Royal and Select
Masters of Ohio Oct. 5 at the Grand
Council Session in Colwnbus.
Brinker Is the first Grand Sentinel
elected from this area since the
Grand Council Law required in 1912
that the Grand Council be elected.
Meigs County's Bosworth Council
has had one other member to

A schedule of area progr8mming,

Old Brick Tavern, page 8
Serving Gallia, Meigs .and Mason Counties

'

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