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Ssaliael
.'twenty-tour cases were proC..S W~ayln Meigs County
Coult ti&' Jllllal! Patrick O'Brien.
Filled wweJoeeph Reiser, Poroerqy, Dll aDd costs, :.1 days jaU,
llceDR IIIIIPfllded one year, DWI;
Kermit Clark, CooMIIe, $250 and
aJita. t11ree days jail, Ucense
llllpellded 00 days, DWI; Marvin
Tolliver, ReedsvUie, $100 and costs,
ftve days jail, $50 of tine and live
days II\IIPI!II(Ied, given :.1 days to
obtain Ohio Ucense, no valld OhiO
llceale; .Greg Hayman, Long Botian, $50 and costs, possessing rUle
aJI)IIIIUJition while hunting deer
with an over-under shotgun rl11e
Cllllblnatlon; Timothy LaWJ'I!IICe,
Lana Bottom, $100 and costs, five
days jaU suspended, two years
);II'(Jbl!tlon, cl1mlnal trespass; Steve
WDIIams, Rutland, :.1 days jail
suspended, one year prooation,
cwtl, telephone harassment. ·
Sharon Denney, Mason, W.Va .•
SlftO and CIJSts, tllree days jaU to be
suspended If Ucense is obtained
wtthln :.~ days, stx months probatiOn. falling to stop after accident,
llOOand costs, threedaysjaU,$50of
fiDe and jail sentence suspended If
llcense Is obtained within :.1 days, no
operator's license; Argene Anns,
Puneroy, $150 and costs, five days
jail suspended, one year probation,
falsification; Peggy Holman, Racine, $10 alld costs, running a red
light: Hetdl English, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, running ·a stop sign;
DonaidD.Combs,LongBottom,SW
and costs, failure .to control; JayS.
McNab!), MUiersburg, $25 and
~. .overwtdth; $.1J and costs,
llllll8fe vehicle; George S. Whited,
The Plains, $.li9 and costs, overload; and Gregory A. . Brown.
AlllvUJe, $'!) and costs, fallure to
._7, speeding; andLarryM. Wright,
Langsville, five charges of J)08Se"'l-
tngadeercriJBIUthl!rot, !IOIIailll!d
as required, 160 on each c~~art~e.
r---'------------_..;____,______1
l••t•ll•••till•n.:•t~•••t•l••••l-·!•1•111•'1111•1
_...
_.
CHRISTMAS
SALE
ONAU
TV'S and
APPLIANCES
.,
.Merry Christmas
TWO DA_
YSA· .E
i
12 NOON
UNTIL 7:00 P.M.
.
3 PC; SPORT SHIRTS
· VESTS, JACKETS, Ect.
;;;::
. .·
- - ·--·- ·.· -
.:.- !!::?-
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WASHINGTON (AP) Pentagon and 11early twp dozen other federal
agencies probably will mean fallure to meet a '
congtesslonal order to save $3 billion this year on
ltetns such as public relations and consultant fees, an
admlnlstratlon spokesman lndlcated Friday.
."We Intend tog~ a majority of the savings;: sal,d
Steve Tupper, a . spokesman , ·at the Office ot ·
Management and1 Budget. "Congress basically
ordered it and we'regolngtocomeupw!thasmuchas
we can."
S649S
FINISH
VENT RIB 12 GA. or 20 GA.
59 95,
~1
Judging of a Christmas home
Ugllllng contest' In Middleport wUJ
lt?mlngiOIL '
take place tonight.
The contest ts sponsored hy the
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
and the MiddlePort Garden Club
with prlzes to· be awarded In the
categories of religious theme,
overall, and outstanding door or
HIGH POWJ:& AtrroLOADa MODEL THO OEN'I'EII
nu · lllft.l:ll
'AUTO IIFLE
Residents are asked to have their
displays lighted by 1 p.m. when the
judges will begin a tour of the town.
~
WI,
.....
f
AUTO 10/22
"C..,OICI"
The holiday season many times
creates an additional need for blood,
unfortunately, due to accidents.
Meigs residents are asked to give
blood ai an American Red Cross
Bloodmoblle Wednesday, Dec. 26,
from 1 to 5::.1 p.m. at the Meigs
Sftllor Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights,' in Pomeroy. No appointment Is necessary.
four branches - Belmont, $1.1
mUUon; Ironton, $894,!J61; Lancas. •.er, $1.85 mUllan; and Zanesville,
$1.58 m11llon.
This .year's allocatiOns represent
an increaseofabout$50mllllonfrom
the total for the 198!-1984 academic
year. Thatnieansstudentswillhave
to pay through tuition and fres only
40 percent of the cost or operating
undergraduate lnstruo:!tlonal programs, compared wltl\ 42 percent
last year, officials Said.
The subsidies fo' the state's 62
pul!llc universities, branches, community . colleges and technical
colleges are based on official
enrollments for the 19SH985 aca'
demlc year. By law, the funds are
allocated to tile schools based on
enrollment estimates from the start
of classes in the fall untll December
when the Board of Regents Is
required to approve thE' exact
amounts,
The large Institutions already
have received about Mit of this
ypar's subsidies ot$7!11,034,659.
RUGER•~
Bloodmobile visit set
for next Wednesday
MAGNUM
HUNTER
S11995 '
Jtm/nii'D"
OPEN _SUNDAY
..
field 01111, Autol-. llhot
REIIIIIGTOII 12 GA. .
DECEMIEI .231D ,
Planned Parenthood
sets holiday hours
SJJ995
MODEL 11 00
.!
"•'"· l'laln lbP1't'f
12 TO 5. ....
'
The office or ~Ian ned Parenthood
will beopen on Dec.24from8: :.lto12
noon only and closed Dec. 25. It wUl
be open on Dec. 31 from 8::.1 to 12
noon and closed and Jan. 1.
The Meigs Bureau or Support
oltlce wlll be closed all day on both
Dec, 24 and 25 and on Dec. 31 and
Jan.1,
' ,•
~.
;
...... ..._.
.....
FREE _,
(2)
··~5wow .
SSOOO cU:rJans
HOLIDAY S10RE·HOURS
TO' • IM• awn
10:30 AM.
WOISIIIP SilVIUS
CNia(N SCHOOl PlAY
a•
OPEN HOUSE
5:00 P.M.
,,.
....
•.
•
.
FREE liFT WRAPPINI
3 P.M. DIC. 2•th
,..~
CAifrATA
{ !•
'
SAT, DEC. 22
SUN., DEC,' 2 3
9i3~·1:00
' 12·7
.
MIDDLEPORT
WE WILL CLOSE AT & P.M. DEC. 24
A MuttimedJa Inc. NIWcp • .,
The Defense Department aside, the departments of
State and Justice, as well as the United States
Information Agency and the Small Business
Administration, informed OMB director David
Stockman that no savings were possible In spending
on so-called "overhead" Items such as consultants',
public relallons and advertising, publlshing and
travel.
The agency that came closest to meellng the OMB
target was the Labor Departfl)ent, which replled last
month that It could produce 72 percent of the
requested savings, or $24 milllon out of $34 mllllon
requested.
·
C!aUih' the hoiiUy splrK and dllltrlbu&ed clothei, loys and
food for needy famlllelllll Galla Count)'. Deputy Asa Rucker carries a
bo~ of food from liB lltorage area lo one of more than 200famlllesaldedby
the a.IC!adon Friday'
A RJGifl' JOLLY OLD ELF
- ChrlsUnas comes but once a
year and w!lh Chri8tmas comes
Sanla Claus. The same Santa
hall been a regular vlllllor to
Elherfelds' In Pomeroy for the
past 35 years. He wW malle ids
last visit Sunday altemoon, t.ben
It's home to the NoJth Pole to
make preparations for that
magical sleigh ride on Christ-
----
mas Eve.
thaw, the sound of that traIn whistle
will probably be heard for six
months, " laughs Santa.
According to Santa, his wife Is
always buSY baking cookies and
looking after the elves· - making
their clothes and mending their
socks. She takes good care of Santa
too·and even combS out his whiskers
everyday.
The elves. have to work har:d to
keep a full inventory of toys. They
also have the joboftaklngcareotthe
reindeer bam which Is out behind
Santa's house. They are supposed to
keep it nice and clean butSantasays
(Continued on page. A3)
MON, DEC. 24
. 9:30-5 P.M.
TUISDAY
WEDNESDAY
CLOSID
Merry
·RESUME
RIG.
HOURS ·
304-675-2911
laser uranl11m enrichment technology subniltted
deployment plans last month. The agency concluded
that the plans were requests for Investment and
deployment of the technology prior to rellab111ty
'
By ROBERT E. MilLER
A....,.eted t>n. Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Derriocrats , are . rolling In- money,
whUe Republicans are mC?re than
UJ,tXXI In debt, accor4lng to
post~Iectlon campaliiJ llnlance reports ftledFridayw!ththeSecretary
of State's oftlce.
.
I·
TheOhli>DemocratlcPartyUsted
a balance of $459,733 after spending
)leavUy on Us candidates In the Nov.
6 eli!ctlon, while the ReJ~Ublican
State .Central and ExecutiVe Com- ·
mlttet reported a balance $14,529
1
and debtlot$43.144.
Republicans currently bc\ld only
one atatewlde 9tric.'e- a seat on the
COLUMBl!S, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste Is talking more and
more like a salesman as he met
with newspaper editorial boards
and reporters around the state
during the past week.
"I've spent more time than I
should looking over the shoulders or
Cabinet members and staff, getting
caught up in the nuts and bolts of
state governmerlt rather than doing
the Olll! thing which only I can do,
and that is to be tbe Number one
salesman tor for the state of Ohio,"
Celeste tOld the Columbus CitlzenJOUI11al on Friday.
Celeste Is reminding reporters
and edltorsofwhathe'sclone totulflll
the promises he l1llde he waa
elected two years aao - to I'I!!IC'IIe
the state fnm bankruptcy, aet
Lotlt4MI lletweea ·Potld .Pieuaat 6 MaMa nlltt
I
Gov. Richard Celeste's commlttee
· listed a balance or $01,686, Secre-
· tary of State Sherrod Brown listed
$89,438 and T,reuurer Mary Ellen
Withrow, ~.577.
Friday's reports showed peinocrats outlpenl Republlcanl $f03,142
to$.11,166 ln ~99 races tor the Ohio
House. Democratl emerpd with a
59-40HoulernaJor1ty.
ft N•xt &e
"""y"''
.... '
'
'
ll
'
I
tlon board~ in the counties in which it
gave, .funds to GOP Senate
candidates.
· Republicans won the only two
statewide races on the Nov. 6 ballot,
both tor Supreme Court justice.
Reports showed that the top spender
among the four candidates was .
Supreme Court Justice-elect J.
CtaJa WriJht.
.
However, the reports showed that
Wrllbt waa outspent by his Democratic opponent, incumbent Jllltlce
James P, Celebrwz.e,ln the wlllllng
days ot the campal_p,
The candidates were l'l!qUln!d to
me by • p.m, Friday a U.St of their
contrtbutionllllld e11pendltures coverlni 10 days belore the election.
wrtiht. a Franklin County comlid! plealcourtjudp!, repcrtedtllat
In \Ill! Senaie, won by Republlcilnl, Democratl reported receipts
ol$266,926,expendltur8ol$%17,2.11,
and a baiJnceof ••721.
· The Senate Republican Cmunlttee, which helped bankroll a
campalp that wW liVe them an
J8.15 edle next yeaF, did not file a
reportwlthBrown.
GOP ...,."_ James 'l'llllnl
• aaldthelnlfPelnotreqllln!areport
tobeftlldwttbtbntallt.Htaalclthe· durll!atheperlodhe~S91.422
,461. canrrilttee IIJed repona with elec- ln conll1butlonll and spent $114,1!1.
Democra&- .
AmiiW 11181e
· clall, ,AttameY General
Celebnq.t! 8lloWtd ihe
,_ ..........., war cheat with
Open Mon. thru Sat 9:30-a.m.-7:00 p.m.; Open Sun.12 Noon tD 5:00p.m.
.
•
pursue development of the advanced centrifuges or
the laser technology, or neither. It Is to announce Its
choice next May.
Atotal of 745oftheless-advanced Set I1I ~ntrtfuges
are In a Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Plant near
Piketon, Ohio,
Celeste 'sells' Ohio ·
Ohlo~coort.
.
testing,
"We asked them both to meet with us this week to
discuss the criteria for revtslng,the deployment plans
to get a more acceptable level of risk for us and then to
resubmit those plans In January," Longenecker said.
The department Is py!ng to decide whether to
secretary for uranium enrichment, said both the
producers of the advanced centrifuges and a new
Dems ltave huge 'war chest'
Pt
· Gr.ce Church Choir
DECEMBER 24
10:30 P.M.
Euchsrllt
Oh.
GOODS FOR THE NEEDY - '11le Galla CouJtly Deputy SllerUf's
~allan
I
JENNINGS
!ERr
ICES
DEC. 23
7SoctioM60P-tiOCOQII
ask
WASHINGTON (API - The manutacturei'B of
centi1ruges for a urallium enrichment plant near
Portsmouth, Ohio, have been asked to sutxnlt new
plans for deployment of advanced centrifuges, a U.S.
Eriergy Department otflclal said Saturday.
John Longenecker, !Jeputy assistant energy
GOLDEN EGG'
BANK
IEGISTEI
FOI
EdiiGitals ., ......... ........... .. , A-2
8porta ................... ......... C.I·S
Uranium centrifuge makers asked tQ submit new plans
$18995
FOR THE IIDDIES
IEb GOOSE
l)e,dlw ..... ........................ . A..f
the conversation, didn't laugh at au.
By NANCY YOACHAM
11mes-Sentlnel Staff
· Santa once asked a little boy If he
POMEROY - For the past 35 always ate his vegetables and the
Christmases, the same Santa Claus boy exclaimed, "My mommy never
has beer) making special visits to fixes any vegetables!" Santa hohoed again. The boy's mother even
Meigs County.
laughed
too.
He lands his sleigh on the roof of
Santa
tries to be helpful to
Elbef!eld's Department Store In
chlldren.
He
.says he can often guess
Po!r¥lroy, takes the eleva tor downstairs (because there are no how old they are because he's had so
chimneys or fireplaces) and then much practice. If they arejustabollt
· seats himself In a cozy, Santa Claus ready to start school, he will ask
type chair, and waits for · the something like, '"Do you know how
children.
..... } . to tie your shoes?" If they don't
He enters so quickly and quietly know, then he tells them t.o start
that store employees seldom even trying and if they learn by
know he's arrived. However, when Christmas, leave their shoes under
the Uneof clllJdJ:enstarts to form and the tree so Santa will know to )pave
the l!lggtlng begins, everyone knows them something extra ntce.
If the children are already in
that Santa's on the scene.
school
, Santa encourages them to
Santa -lays chlldren haven't
try
and
do their best. One young lady
changed much ln.Jhese 35 years.
Informed
Santa that she dldn 't llke
''They'restlll chUdren and they stU!
school
so
he reminded her that
ask tor dolls and trains and trucks
and candy,'' althougl\hehasnotlced grown-up Ute Is often called the
that' many of today' s tykes are "school of hard knocks." His wish
asking tor electronic games and for her was that she would enjoy
computers. "And this year the Uttle being young and going to school now
girls are asking for things that grow because that Ume only comes once
In cabbage patches and many llttle in a person's life. "When you enter
boys are asking for Michael aackson the school of hard knocks, you never
graduate," Santa muses.
dolls."
Some of Santa's chlldren bring
Says.Santa, "The boys and girls
they've drawn and colored
pictures
always remember to thank tne for
for
him,
This always 'makes him
the hug and the treat that I give them
happy
al)d
he takes the pictures
before mey leave too."
to
a
giant
size bulletin board
home
Whenchtldreilslt on Santa's knee,
where
he
keeps
them
thewholeyear
they koow for sure he's going to
through.
If they've been good (even though he
Whenever children ask about tlle
already knows) .
Santa asked one Utile girl If she North Pole, Mrs. Santa, the elves or
was good to help her mother ru;ound the reindeer, they always receive a
the house. The llttle girl answered, detalled report.
"I don't knOw," so Santa questioned . "The North Pole is a wonderful
her further, "Don't you help with the place but It's sooooo cold. One time
dusting?" "Oh," cried the little girl. . when a train was passing through, it
"My mommy never dusts! " Santa blew It's whistle and the steam
could hardly stop -ho-ho-holng but formed big puffs of lee Instead of
the child's mother, who overheard puffs of smoke. If those puffs ever
~:~~~:a?:~~~~~~~ ~i!
.270 01 30/06
window.
r
little chance of
white Christmas
A-3--
Department store Santa has.
visited Meigs for 35 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Stu' .
dents at state collegfs, unlve1111tles ·
and technical schools are paying a
smaller share of the cost of their
Instnictlon this yea!' beCause of a 6
percent Increase ln .state lnstruc·
tiona! subsidies, ottldais say.
The Board ot Regents on Frtday
allocateq almost $!lX) m1lllon ln
subsidies, with abollt·$660 milllon of
that going to the state's largest
schools.
i
Locally, regents gave $1.6 million
to RIO Grande Comn\Urilty College
as part of Its subsidy to community
colleges. Shawnee State Community College in PortsmOuth received
$2.85 mUllan,
,
Amoilg the Iarger1 universities,
30/30
s-.15-995
Alana the River ............... 8-1-8
... , cas ..... ........... ......... .. ()..8
The report comes at a time when the defense
. budget .has come under scrutiny both within the
admlnlstra tlon and in Congress,
' President- .Reagan decided earlier this week to
mill relatively small reductions .In his defense
bulldup over the next three years, spurning advice
from top aides and many Republicans In Congress
that larger cuts are possible without banning the
nation's defense capablllty. _
.
PreSsure for additional cuts could be enhanced with
the word that the Defense Department, with a budget
estimated al $9.4 bl!llon for travel, consult;ults, public
relations and simllar lteins, found that no savings
!'OUld be made.
Regents grant
subsidies to
state coll~ges
MODEL 120
Home lighting contest
judging set tonight
'
' could be achieved, even though
b1lllon ln savings
Congress called tor the cuts In legislation approved
earlier this year as part of its effort to cut federal
.
deficits. . .
The spokesman conllrmed that when the 23
agencies were asked to come up with the savings,
they replied that only 8 percent .of the total, or $246
m!Won, could be lrln'lffied.
.. Admlnlstrallon records Indicate that the Pentagon,
asked to save $2.1 billlqn ·of the $3 blllon sought
throughout the government, replled •that no savings
were possible.
·
Pentagon ottlcla)s had no cormnent.
But Tupper declfued to predict that the entire $3 ·
CAMO
Ohio weather:
Sunday, December 23, 1984
.
Resistance "'!rpm the
.
WHITDAIL
HUNTER
a year •••
1etltlor
'
Aa!loelated ..._ Writer
•
t--------.,..-------..,..----.....,.------4
I
ByDAVIDDPO
MODEL 71 • SPOITSIIAII, BOLT
30·06 ·
Inside:
Goveimnent ;may fail to meet savings target
'
control.
Fined for speeding were Robert
Roush, Syracuse, $21 and costs;
Daniel Reynolds, Mt. Vernon, lll.,
$21 and costs; Franklin Brinker,
Point Pleasant, $24 and costs; David
Reed, Pomeroy, $'!) and costs;
James Depoy, Shade $29 and costs:
and James Rl!fle, Syracuse, $22 a.nd
costs.
Forfeiting bonds In county court
wereEdW.Frecker,Colwnbus,$50,
speeding; OUver Taylor, Dresden,
Vol. 19 No. <46
CIPL:elghled 19M
All Caino Clotting
\
D-1
•
tnttJ
.
I•
'Star Wars' - P
Take-One .'............. ., ..... lnllert
.SatUrday, Dec. 22nc1 and Su~, Dec. 23rd
EXTENDED STOlE HOURS SUN~AY
USED TVs IN STOCK
GOOD SELECTION! ...
ALL SIZES!
B&W and COLOR .sns
o
~hind
Dolls and
little girls
Bob Hoeflich di~usses canis, deooriations and .
of all ages _ giveaways - Pll@e A-4
PageB-1
-
wa• IN CINCINNA'D .,..
0111110...%' I'd C I rtz ,_
C111 a Ow I
' .... b II r':wl
hlt&pltor .. a,._c . I '..0011&
Bhalst I t · a lltt INIII.
Cll -IICIMI
r•
.......... (At~
Ohlolns back to work, strengthen
the state's schools and untvenltle&,
control utility costs and make state
government more responsive.
Celeste said he eKpects Republicans tocontlnuepushlngfora tall cut
and criticizing the90pez c:'etlt 1ncome
tax Increase he pushed through the
General Assembly after taking
ottlce.
But ·the governor says the
Republicans should recognize that
job securtty Is or more Interest to
inany Ohioans than ta~es.
"Areyone who doesn't recocntze
that as the number one illue and
understand that it cannot be a
partisan Issue Is going to make a
terrible mistake," celeste said.
'I'IIen tbe g\)venor laUDCbea Into
his 1118te Aiel pitch.
"Thl!n!'i aot another place oallie
taceol the planet Uke our kntltln,"
he Ald.
I I
·,
'
rt
fl
'
'1
•
�n. ceu tbw 23, 1984
r---Weather:·--
Comment
Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY rnROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Fair 111rough the period. Highs !roin the mid 20$ to the upper :.l5
MOitday, from ihe mid :.l5 to tile mid 40s Tuesday and from the mid
40s IX> the mid 50s Wednesday. Lows mostly lr) the :!Or.
•
Slim chance for White Christmas
A Division of
82$ Third Ave., GaDipolls, Ohio
(814) 448-23f2
.
By The AlloocJaled .,.._
The National Weather Service says a high pressure area w!U drtft
acl'O!IS the state Saturday night. Once the high passes, wlndsw!U shltt
back to the south and wanner air wiU move back In Sunday, when
highs wiD climb Into the 40s under mostly sunny skies.
' A fast moving low pressure center wiD move from the northweilt
toward Ohio and should pass north ot the state Sunday night and
' Monday, bringing another drop In temperatures.
. Right now, It seems that any snow that wiU aecompany the storm
· w1U stay north of the state. The prospect for a whitt!,Christmas does
· not seem promising .for most of the slate.
West winds ot 20 to ~ mnes per hour overnight w(th gusts as high .
as 50 mlles per hour heralded the passing of a cold front. The front
moved through the state during the evening hours, but the winds
continued through the night.
·
After the cold frQnt passed, rain ended and colder air began to
move Into the state. Temperatures which were In the mid to upper
· 50s around midnight dropped to the upper :lJs and low 40s bY early
m<>rn!ng.
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(814)
~2156
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
; HOBART WI !.SON J R.
: Executive Editor
.
PAT WHITEHEAD.
Assista nt Publisher-Controller
A MEMBI!R of The "--ialed ....... lnJand Daily ......... A.'IIIC>dallon and Ill<
: Amertc..
Puh~W~eni. A.'II!Ot"lullon .
.
•
rww,...-
,
LE'I'I'EIL'lOFOPINION_..welcorno.l. llley .... ufdlle .... lhan300_.....,_All
,. letler'lll atelllbjecl to l'dllln" a mUHt he siped wtlh ume, addreMudlelepllone num• bor, Na .......... """"" wtlllle pollllooh.d. .......,.,. ........ hPin ,....t """"· ,.,.._,.~IN-
;_
... ............,....
D~ar
Mr. Regan:
')'ou
are
a
Scrooge'
•
:It was a Christmas message for Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan ,
afld It said In effect: Dear Mr. Regan, you are a Scrooge.
· Contained In It was a plea that "the Ghost of Christmas ?,resent
unshackle the secretary from his adding machine and take him to a
Ouistmas EvE> supper with the Salvation Army."
: And then, it said: "Ask him If he rE>aUy REALLY wants20percent fewer
591t1s saved and served next year?" a percentage. the message said, that
would rE>present the loss,to charity If Regan's tax pi'O!lO§als were enacted.
:The message came from Brian O'Connell. president of thE> Independent
~ibr, which describes Itself as "a national forum \O encourage giving,
volunteering and not-for-profit lnltatlve." •
,
Regan's proposals, he said. would subtract $12 bllllon from total giving.
SpeclllcaUy, they might cut giving to religious chariti!'S bY 18 percE>nt, the
United Way and health by 24 percent. arts and culture bY 25 percent. and
higher education by 'n percent.
·
; "In the season In which they are announced," he said, "these cruel and
senseless slashings of charity call forth the worst Image of'Scrooge." .
: He added: "It Is grossly unfair and Inappropriate that such massive cuts
would come at the very time President Reagan Is calling on non-profit
otgantzatlons to carry a far larger share of services to people."
: O'CoMell, author of "America's Voluntary Spirit, " a tome praising the
fmlerlcaq spirit of charity as unique. cites several studies for his figures.
rRalnly one conducted bY Charles Clotfelter, vice provost of Duke
l]nlverstty.
· The losses would come from three major changes in the tax code:
: -contributions could only he deducted to the extent they represent more
than 2 percent of a taxapyer's adjl,lsted gross Income. At present, there Is
no minimum ' base.
·
-Deductions for gifts of appreciated property would be llinlted to the
aetual cost and Inflation, or to actual market value- whichever Is less. At
piesent, the market value can be deducted.
.
' -The charitable deduction for non-ltemlzers would be repealed. Since
J.982, taxpayers who do not otherwise Itemize have been allowed to deduct
tbeir contrlbutlons.
' ·
; In ' his own defense, the secretary urged people to look at the entire
!Jickage and not Isolate segments of It for criticism.
• But, said O'Connell:
.
: "In this season of caring and thoughtfulness, we hope that Mr. Regan will
ti? lifted out of his total preoccupation with the intricacies of tax policy and
~ caused to see the vision of the kind of nation we are."
Letter
to the editor
. ..
To the community
I
;r oday in history
t.run paae
Santa. ·~-------------(QJntlnued
the etves would rather make toys
than c1een the barn. Sometimes he
1W to pt after them.
Thefrtl!ndlle8t elf of aU lwi tile job
ot pollahlnc Rudolph'a 11011e. "He
shlnel Rudolph's 1101e untO It glows
like an electric light bulb," Santa
elaborates. ·
Santa IOveshlajoband he loves aU
"his boys and girls." He lOves his
· visits to Meigs CoUnty becauae 10
many Cif the children who used to sit
on hi! lap areparentsotthechlldren
whoslt onhlslap -now.
He lwi l(lllle advice for parents.
"U your Uttle 011-'8 cry when you
bring them to ~ me, dOn't force
Lottery winning
Al)
·::
••
..
.•••.
them to lit on my kllee. Thliyre
bound to be atrald a t first but next
year they'U ame r •IJIIIIni to old
Santa."
Santa Claus Is quite a fellow. His
annual visits are wetcomec1 by
chl.ldren and adults alikeIn em area.
But what Melp Countlana 1end to
forget Is that Santa Jan't always
dresled In h1l red suit and ·black
boo!J, When Christmas Is over, he
retuma to hlli1orne and puts on his
work clothes. Then at certain times
of~ year, he cornell back to Meigs
County to check up on everyoae.
Friends Pus him on the streets aild
don't even recotiJIIa' him. He could
even be someone Uke Orval (Curly)
WUes.
.•'
PHONE 446-2601
8 A.M.·10 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
. SUNDAY 10 A.M.-8 P.M.
THIS AD EFFECTIVE.THRU MONDAY, DEC. 24th
(AP)
PLEASE DON 7 FORGET····
.'
Benign nf18lect
WASIDNGTON - Like the 'Wise
Men of old, the Reagan administration Is turning Its attention to the
Middle East- not with joy and high
hopes this time,.but with foreboding
and trepidation.
After two years of disaster,
during which the president's dream
of a comprehensive Mideast peace
settlement under his sponsorship
disappeared In the rubble ot Beirut.
the White House has decided .on a
policy of "benign neglect" In the
region.
The bombings of the American
Embassy and the Marine Barracks
have left even the cockieSt of the
president's advisers understandably gun-shy. Talk of a "major pea~e
Initiative" no longer echt!es In the
corridors of power:
The new, unannounced pollcy for
Lebanon has already taken effect.
Beyond an occasional . word of
Jack
'
Anderson ~
~
'•'
enroutaiement.tor an Israeli troop them ~arms they nred to equalize
pullout, the administration Is taking the pressure exerted bY Soviet
pains to keep Its Involvement In the . scheming and Iranian-led Moslem
country's terminally complex pro)).
fundamentalism.
lerns to an absolute milllmum.
In fact, one administration In·
The new Reagan attitude toward skier told my aSSOCiate Lucette
the Middle East, born of equal parts
Lagnado that the White House's
frustration, experleftce and cau- only Middle East policy now Is
•
tion, should not be confused with a
arms salE'S.
"hands-off" policy. :rite United
Yet even tills scaled-down "Inter·
States can't afford to pick up Its few
ventlon" In the regton will gtve the
remaining marbles and go home In
administration its share of heada ' huff. But the administration achE's: Arms sales to virtually any
seems to have learned the hard way Arab nation east of Morocco
that It cannot meddle quite so historically arouse the maily con·
vigorously an!l simplistically In a gresslonal friend! of Israel to
sliuatlon that has never been determined o~ltlon.
susceptible to easy solutions.
The White House has no d!'Sire to
What wj)l the United·States do, replay the months-long battle that
. tll\!rt?
. ended thre«: years ago with hairIt wm hold Its trlends' coats and
breadth Senate approval of·the sal!'
encourage them to fight for a power ·at AWACS radar planes to Saud(
balance that wUI' he acceptable .to Arabia. Even though the 1984
th(s ·country's lnter!'Sts. It will sell election Is over. the White H011se
"
THE GALLIA COUNTY CHILDREN'S
HOME THIS CHRISTMAS SEASON.
All DONATIONS WILL BE VERY
MUCH APPRECIATION.
."
'
,,"
WHOLE
FRYERS
.,
,I
:;•
:
·•.
:l·
r
BONELESS HAM
SUNDAY ONLY
LB.
HYDE PARK
SLICED BACON
FREE
SMURF
12 OZ. PIG.
£
GUNNOE'S
SAUSAGE
/'~~~~~ .
/
WITH ANY PURCHASE OF
Sl 0.00 OR MORE
.
~~~~~
7/
~'\(.,... ,.,
While Supplies Last
1
~.
k}!t\.~!OP
'
$149
1 Lit
ROLL
'
°
FRESH LEAN
ROAST
BOSTON BUn
$1 9
Ll.
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS
29C
LB.
LET'S DEAL
Limited
Q""ntity
RED GRAPES
79< .
Ll.
CIISP
FLORIDA
CELERY
y,,
TABLES
CIIIH
S119
30 CT.
SIZE
49c·
U.S. NO. 1
IDAHO POT ATOES
10 Ll. lAG
$1 79
HYDE 1'111 GliDE "A"
LARGE
EGGS
SJ949
S950
YOUR. CHOICE
Oak or Mahogany
$9'99
Bedrooms
DOZ.
CURIO
CABINETS
there.''
r..ratlu
BARQAIN
HUNTfR'S
DfLIQHT
BY GARRY TRUDEAU
I
$199
7-UP, ORANGE CRUSH $149 .·.
Cll A&W ROOT BEEF
1-16 Ol. lnS.
""' ........ :
IIEG. 011 DIET
MAXWELL HOUSE·.
COFFEE
liED AND WHITE lAIS
PRICE
IEMCO &
SERTA
49C
IMJJ 1 WITH $I 0.00 &DOilJ(IHAl "*NASI
LOOK FOR THE
lf2
AND
lLB.
SAVE
CAN
All Grinds
CASH
&
CARRY
$199 .•.
11MJT 1 WITH S10.00 &DDmON&li'UI(IWl
. REITER
EGGNOG
QT. <TN.
111111
:,~,..,..from
FinanCing.
Available
OPEN TIL 8:00
9'--/ ·g_.~
.....
.
.......... .... .
.
$119 ..
WHOLE HOG
SOliD
WI!OD
Long after the warmth of this Cl)riStmas has
memory. precious gifts of fine jewelry
will continue to bring joy. For the special people
in your life we haVe chains and lockets; peorts
and rings ... gold and diamonds. VIsit us.
$178
WHOLE
1 til 5
BUCKEYE BUILDING & LOAN
C & S BANK
CENTRAL TRUST
GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
OHIO VALLEY BANK
favor." ,
. "'What's that?"
"11 you give me your mother's
number In Culpepper, I'll call -her
up on my cellular phone and ask her
to hold up dinner until you get
$249 ..,
I OZ.CAN
FISCHEl'S
/nlflfutionl will clo11 sf 1 p.m.
Mondsg, Oec. 24.
2°/o
MILK
PRICES GOOI) TIL
STOCK IS EXHAUSTED
~~~-
C()R~IN
& SNY[)fR
fURNITURf CO.
I
.
.,
'
'•
'•
.,
4-7C :
STANDARD OYSTERS
The ·following Gsl/lpolit Finsncisl
'
,I
!J,
FRESH
THE CHILDREN'S HOME IS LOCATED
ON RT. 160.
PHONE 446--9237 OR
(CALL 446·4612 8 A.M. TO 4 P.M.)
I
',I
,I
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
LB.
SAVINGS
:Ooonesbury
.,•.
;
I•'
GliDE "I" HOUY FilMS
-
The
'Yinltlng number cln\wn Friday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Nwnber," was 796.
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 0178.
The Number: selien-ntne-slx
Pick 4: zero-one--!lllVen-elght
/
' This includes Main Offices~ All Branches and
Drive-In Facilities.
get mine unbuckled."
"One more time~will you pullout
of the left lane so I can pass you?" ,
"I would, except that I could
never enjoy my holidays If something happened to that lovely
family up ahead. Bu~ I'll do you a
•''••I
UIIIT I PLIASIII
By 'lbil A88oclated Pre88
Warm air moved Into the Northeast Saturday In the wake of a
· winter storm that brought snow and freezing rain after chillllig the
Midwest and pushing temperatures below zero In northern states.
The snow that set off winter storm warnings and predictions of
foot-deep accumulations In the mountains of Maine and New
Hampshire was expected to change to sleet and rain across most of
New England as the warm air hit.
A winter storm warning was Issued for the northern h;llf ot upper
· Michigan, which already had as mut h as 10 Inches of snow, and a
heavy snow warning was posted for Wisconsin 's snow belt .
· • Gale warnings were posted for the northern New England coast
and lower Great LakE'S.
Northwest winds sent frigid air Into the north-central sectlonofthe
nation today as tempera lures dipped below zero In North Dakola and
.
Minnesota.
Rain was scattered from the upper Ohio VaUey across Tennessee
to southeastern Texas and showers wei-e scattered over the Paclftc
Norlhwest.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 10
degrees below zero at Warroad, Minn., to 74 at Key West, Fla.
/WI'
'•'•
. ------------------.·'
numben:
796,0178
.
'
CLEVELAND
·'·,•'
..•
CHECK MONDAY'S NEWSPAPER
FOI FULL PAGE OF. VALUESU
· The nation's weather
- Corps of Engineers. Gallipolis
Ferry Locks and Dam Operation,
under the cooperation of Roger
James, Lockrriaster and his Staff;
- Mason County Sheriff's Department under direct supervision
of Steve HE>nry:
- West Virginia Department of
Natural nesources;
- Pt. Pleasant Volunteer Fire
Department:
-Valley Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment and Rescue Squad;
- · Maso 'n Volunt e er Fire
Department;
- Pt. Pleasant Goodyear Chemical Plant with direct cooperation
I was driving down the highway
"You don't even know my·
from Jim Eustler, Safety Director;
.
the
other
day
at
a
respectable
55
brother-In-law
and sister."
- Dave Lovejoy. a courageous
miles per hour when I got a call on
"I'm just 'happy your' mother
scuba diver;
- Bob Evans and Bob Evans my CB radio from the man In the won't be along when they come for
car behind me.
·her, after you hit the wall at IJl miles
Farms. Inc.·
"Come
on.
Chicken
Little,
speed
per hour."
- New Haven Fire Department;
It
up.Jf
you
can't
drive,
get
the
hell.
"How do you know I'm going to
- Gallla County Sheriff's
off
the
road,"
he
said.
·
dO
IJl miles an hour?"
Department;
"II
might
Interest
you
to
know
the make at your car.
"From
- Gallipolis Fire Department;
that
I
am
within
the
established
People don't buy sports cars unless
- Ohio Department of Natural ·
speed limit as posted along' this U.S.
they can doiJl miles an hour. I never
RE'Sources;
.trust anyone who drives an automo-Kelly Hedger and Mike Brand, highway."
"No one pays any attention to the bile with only two seats. He tends to
divers from Cincinnati, Ohio; ..
- extra boats and sonar equip- 55 miles-per-hour speed limit any be spoiled by his mother."
"What does my mother have to
ment suwlled by: Earl Gibson of more," he sald.
"TlUlt's
where
you'~;e
wrong.
do
with your hOatng the left lane?"
Glenwood, W. Va.; Greg Hill of
There
are
many
God-feartn&
cltl·
"I'm
not just tblnldng of your
Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va.; Miles
zens
who
stUI-ob6erve
the
law
of
the
mother,
but of all the mothers who
Epling of Gallipolis, 'Ohio; Zlnn's
land.
It
Is
people
like
you
who
are
a
wiU
sufft!l'
. because of your disreLanding of Gallipolis, OhiQ; Russell
mel!llce
to
society."
_
gard
for
the
speeding laws. If . It
Wood.
of
the
left
lane
so
I
can
"Get
·out
were
only
·
your
life I wouldn't be
- Holzer Medical Center.
pass
you,
you
numbskull."
concerned bow fast you cjrlve. But
From the families of
"U I did that, sir, you woold only somewhere up ahead Is an Innocent
Paul Hawks Jr.
and Hubert W..Harder start speeding and I would ,become family, probably going home for
an accessory to a ¢me. Why are Christmas, and I want them to get'
y6u In such a hurry to get to your
there In one piece."
'
destination anyway?" llllked him.
"It's not the people who drlve
"What bu8Jneu Ia that ofyQIII'S?" fast, but Idiots like you who caule
"I'm curloulto lcnow what you're accidents ·on the highways," he
going to. do with all the ·tlqle you shouted.
: Today Ia Sunday, Dec. Zl, the 358th day of 1984. There are eight days lett save goiDa 20 miles an hour fast«
"Stallstlca show that the !111-mlle
bl tile year.
than!."
··
speed Bmlt IW lowered II• death
•
"I'm t:rytna to aet to Culpepper, rate by IJYI!I' l5 pera!IIL Good
: Today's hlgbllaht In hlatory:
.• On Dec. 23, 1783, George Washlngton resigned as commander-In-chief of VIrginia, to have dinner with my heaveu, man. It you don't care for
. } Vie Anny and retlrecl to his home at Mount Vernon, Va.
mQther.''
.
youneJt you cculd llave eome
~ On thla date:
/
"What kiJid of motber do you reprd for tbe inlunnce CCJmj:U·
In l'lll8, Maryland voted to cede a 1G-square-f!lUe area for the seat ot the have Who WOD't give you dinner If lei. They have motbm, tOo."
natlonal aovmunent. That area was to become the District of Columbia. you arrive l2 mln11tes late?"
"Pull IJYI!I' to the aide Cif the road
In liD!, Joleph &nlth Jr., founder of the Mormon Chureh. ,was born In
"It' a just not me. My brother-In· and we can diiCI8 thle like men."
1
law and IIIIer and their lddl are
Sllaron, Vt.
•
·
' 1 1cnow that ~IIi. I'm~ a
Jnl823. "A VIall From St. Nlchollll" by Clement C. Moore was published alao COJ1IIng."
safety lll!lt and !' can - · In tile
tiiXJIIYIIIOUSlln the Troy (N.Y.) Sentinel. The poem Is more popullltly
"I'm glad they're going to be mirror you're not. You'U probably
knOWn as '"Twas The. Night Before Christmas."
there," I told him.
start beating up on me before I can
,,
y.
'(
• Since the recertt plane tragedy on
Sunday, December 9, 1984, an
Einonnous community effort has
tjeen made by volunteer groups and
lndlvldua1 citizens for the search of
oor missing boys -Paul Hawks Jr.
and Hubert W. Harder. Our
tllmllles wish to makE> public our
appreciation for the efforts put forth
· by everyone Involved which has
l)een beyond our expectations.
· Volunteers have worked long
hours night and day since the
tragedy and many still continue the
S~?arch . Many of those who have
participated in the search are not
direct acquaintancE'S of either
a.muy - yet. many people have
l&'orked and are still working
diligently In behalf ot both families
because of their concern and
respec;t for the love of man.
• We feel that few communities
exist today where so.much loving
concern and so much effort has
alreadY bloen expressed. For this,
w£" say thank you and we wish to
recognize the following (while we
jlpciloglze· If anyone was not InCluded. herein):
: - the three teenage boys who
~rted their observation and.
Andlngs Immediately following the
O'agedy;
• - West VIrginia State Pollee,
Vnder direction. S!lpervislon of
Corporal Beckett;
• "- United States Coast Guard Offices at Hwttlngton, W. Va. and
Owensboro, Ky.;
,. - U.S. Anny, Corps of Engtaeers, Huntington, W. Va. Office;
The Sunday
Ohio Point JlleaMnt, W. Va.
Ave.
$169
lEITER
conAGE CHEESE
$119'",
24 oz. CtN.
. .... -··
'
..
'
'
'·
-
�_. Pall
A4
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
••
'
Ohio Point PleaiMt, W. Va.
DeoAinbn 23, 1914 •
Beal of the Bend
~- Dmdu23,1984
..--Local Briefs:-.......
r-;mm!'-".1 ChristMas Ewe; •·•:
Cards, decorations
.and giveaways
Christmas Closed
Wed. thru Sat. 9·10
Eastern board
sets meeting
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education has set Its annual
organizational session for 6 p.m. on
• Jan.10.
Meeting for Its final session of
1984, the board awarded contracts
· tor the year to Nationwide, fleet
Insurance; Standard 011 Co., gasollne and fuel oil; Firestone at
Parkersburg, W.Va., tires and
tubes.
The board authorized purchase or
. a new freezer for Riverview School
and renewed Its membership In' the
Ohio Schools Boards Association.
The boatd has approved attendance
of "King Lear" at Ohio Unlversliy
by juniors and seniorS of, the high
WJEH & WYPC
Proudly Presents F~r Your
Listening Pleasure ••• ·
This Christmas Eve and Christmas
Day a musical Christmas Card featuring
your favorite seasonal and traditional
Christmas songs beginning Monday afternoon and running thru Midnight Tuesday, Christmas Night with limited
breaks.
We invite you and your
family to enjoy the wonder. ful Sounds of Christmas on
990 WJEH and Stereo 101,
WYPC, in Gallipolis.
schooL
All board members were present
for the final meeting.
HOLZER CLINIC
CARDIAC REHABILITATION CENTER ·
For ..................... Patients who have had heart attockl (acute myocardial
infarctions), heart pain (angina), or car_diac by-pass surg·
ery.
. To ....................... H•lp restore patients to the highest level of activity possible and help redu~e the risk of future heart attacks.
Providing ........... Education and closely monitored 11ercise.
••
By.......................
Suzanne Mize, M. D. Cardiologist and Center Director.
· Roger Gilders, M. S., Exercise Physiologist and Supervisor.
and Nursing staff trained in cardiac care. ·
At •••••..•••••••••••••••• Holzer Clinic Sycamore Branch facility in Gallipolis.
Beginning ........... Fibruary
RUMP
ROAST
SIRLOIN
TIP
Insurance coverage by Medicare, Blue Shield, Aetna and most gro~p plans
•
Tolearn mort or register
for this n1w program, consult your doctor and/or coli
Holzer Clinic's Cardiology D•r-trnent at 446·5341.
PO!-fEROY - Marriage licenses have been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Harold Butcher, Swnmerland Key, F1a.,
and ~ Maxine Moore, Pomeroy, and to Edwward Michael
Martin, 34; and Colleen Christene Johnson, 25, both c..f.Pomeroy. ·
S2S9
..
Ll.
,SHOULDER ROAST . ROAST
HOllYWOOD
.Four-vehick accident reported
ll. $259
SPARE
Ll: $)49
RI.S
CHICKEN
BREASTS ll. '$)19
~ $].29
ECKRICH
ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA
PRE· SLICED
•• •
...
'
$)99
••
'
11.
PORK
.BACON
~~~A~LDER ll. Sl 39
BOILED
HAM
$1.29
LB.
<
.·
HAM
SALAD
BONELESS
CHUCK
ROAST
·CHICKEN
SALAD
.PORK CHOP
$1.79
;;
$11hg f. N11hg 01fg
~ISHER
WHOLE
11.
HAMS
1/o
$179
Sl
:' :
;-~
TOMATO
JUICE •• oz.
STOKElY
16
PEPSI
99(
'
aPACK
79<
CTN.
oz.
SAUER
KRAUT
left after falling to make a slight curve.
His vehicle went over a 26-foot embankment.
The Racine EMS unit and fire department were called to the scene.
Copplck was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital where hi> was
admitted for observation.
Copplck was cited to Meigs County Court for falllng to keep his
vehicle on tile right hall of the roadway.
Copplck's vehicle sustained heavy damage.
. The sherltl's department also reports the breaking and entering of
the Stephen Frost residence on New Hope Road. ·
The break-In occurred Thursday between 10 a.m. and noon. The
basement door was kicked open and drawers were dumped out, the
department said. A 20-gauge Mosseberg shotgun was reported
missing. The Incident Is under InveStigation by the department .
$1.4
.
•
•
-.- ..... (" .. £
·Treet
VALLEY BELL
2%
MILK
GAL
VALLEY -BELL
BUTTER'11 GAL
MILK
ORANGE
DRINK
u oz.
FAYGO DIET
,
~--:.:: ,,.AJ'
-~ ,f) , , I
·-.,.
·"··---....
-~q,
..
$)79
89 (
4I $1
.
SHUiFINE BROWN
POWDERED .
·
(
99
SUGAR
RUFFLES .
POTATO . . Sl. 19
CHIPS ,,,, oz.
Chili Hot Beans'
3
&
2 II. I'IIG.
.' CAKE
MIXES
VAllEY BEll
FRENCH • oz.
ONION D.IP
' '.'
..... ....
1601.
tANS
Sl
BANNER
Bathroom Tissue
19<
79 ~ I
" ~::::PK::G~.::::::::~-..;.'_ _ _.......,__,J;
GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
MICHIGAN
RED OR YEUOW
. DEUCIOUS
APPLES
POTATOES
10 ll.
lAG
89C
3 Ll.
lAG
89C
SOLID .HEAD·
CABBAGE
.ll.
!
' ·~
.
RED
GRAPES
•
Cited by police
15C ate:·
I
c.
MiddlepOrt.
CllaQp!d with failure to control
' " wu Gary L. Dray, :M, Rt. 2,
GaWpolls.
r
z.
.
(
I•
USP
5 ~;.1100
1\ M uiUmedla Ne wt;pa~r
Pu bl l!ih('d C'liC'I'l Sund ay , R2~ T hird
Avf' nU£'. by th(' O hi o Va!l('y Pu bl is hI n ~ Compan y . M u ltlmfldia. l nr . S«'·
ron d r lass
pos tn~t'l)aid
at r;a lll poli s.
Ohio 4f.G:t1. F.n trrf'd as ~mid cbss
m ulli n~
maliN at P omrro y, Ohio,
Posl Orfi<.'f' .
·
MC'mbf'r : Thr A!o.SOCiai C'd PrC>ss I n·
l and Dail y Prf'."!' As ..oc i~Jiio n and th<'
Amf' rlcmi N f>~· sptt Jlf'r P ubll shrr s As·
soc la lion. Nall ona l Advcrlls in ~ Rf'·
pr('sf'nt allvr, B ru n h<~m . 1717 Wf>s l
Nln£' M ilt• Ro11d . Sui II • 204 , o.·•trol! .
Mll'hlga n. 4flfl75 .
Airline will expand
into Cincinnati area
!
1
Before we can thank. y ou all in person, we wo reld
like to say that we love yo u and that we embrace
you a11d that we thank. you for having given us
such a special Christmas by showing us God's
love through your prayers and caring.
··
Bert's happiness in life came through his work~
science, through his music and his precious
friends . He was shy with strangers. He wqs
blesred to receive and give much love.
::
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alwa~s ~
ways of bettering the human condition , of sha;-. ~
ing his love of searching." She felt also that he
had left behind an empty hole which n o one will ~
I fill.
W
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POMEROY
GALLIPOLIS
11 A.M. to 6 P.M.
to
1 P.M.
5 P.M.
!HOP TODAY
AND !AVE
TODAY .
tor OWl.
'
••
COO
:-.;;,:pe~ra~tl~ve:;;·=======:-.
'IWo calls were answered on
Friday by the Meigs County
SURSC:' RIMION RAT I-:.t.;
R.vCarrie r nr Mohtr Rflutt•
Emergency Medical Service.
Om· Wf('k ................................ $1.10
At 2: 46 p.m., Pomeroy was called
OnP Mon t h ............... .. ..... ....... ~ . RO
SINCOI.I<; ( "Ot"\'
to the scene of an auto accident on ·
PIIII' F:
East Main Street. Linda Bentz was
taken to Dr. James Conde'spttlce
"We've tripled our business In
BURLINGI'ON, Ky. (AP) No ,;uiJscrl pli ons tn' nwll prrmltrcd
for treatment of a minor lnjuty. ·, Comalr, Inc. plans to expand Its
In I O\l' nr;; whf'n ' mo !IJI' f.'arri f' r ,,., r vh'P
three months," Curran said.
1:-; ava l lu hlro .
•
Al4!26 p.m., Racine was called to facilities .at the Greater Clnclnmitl
'!'he Delta connection. Curran
the scene or an auto accident on International Alrpori with the
T hC' S unda y T l m rs · ~ t • n flnrl will not
explained, means· a passenger In
Dewitt's Run Road. Theodore construction of a $1.8· million
bf' rC'sponsihlt' l()r ot d \' an(•£' pay m e nt s
smaller city, such as Lexington,
m :tdC' by C"il rriN~ .
Copplck was transported to Vete- building to house the commuter
Ky., who wants tony to Los Angeles.
rans Memorial Hospital.
MAll. S U B.~C - RIPTIONS
can take Comalr from Lexington to
airlines' corporate offices.
Sunduy Only
Cincinnati and connect with a Delta
The planned expansion should
O n,.. yr>ar ..... ..... ... ... ........ , ...... $2fi . ~J
Limited sen-ice
S ix mo n t h .~ ............................ Sl:l.fHJ
flight" to the West Coast. Ticket
generate about 150 new jobs for
prtces are based on tile Lexlngion to
Comalr employees during the next
Ually and ~unda y
GALLIPOLIS - Woodland Ce.n· 12-18 months, officials said Friday.
MAll. SI 'BSC 'RII'TIONS
Los Angeles "through fare," which
lmdd1· Ohio
ters Inc. will have limited services
Is cheaper than buying separate
The Boone County Fiscal Court
!12 Wffk S ........... , .................. $.~ . 2 <1
from Monday, 'Dec. 24, through Friday unanimously endorsed the
26 WC'C' kS ............... . ............... $29 .12
tickets.
11 W('(' k"' .... .... , ................. ..... Sl4 . ~
Tuesday, Jan. l,1985.
The airline ls currently carrying
commuter airlines' request for
Rate" Oubdde Oh io
Emergency services will be industrial revenue bonds to finance
!"'"! V.'re ks ...... .. , ...................... ~!'f.l . SO
15,1XXI passengers a montb, tralllng
: ... ,Vf'f" k .~ ................. ... ........... ~1 1 . 20
avaUable to those in need by call!rtg tile project.
only Delta at the Cincinnati airport
1.1 u .. (' k.~ .......................... .. 501:i M
Crislsline at 440-5554 In Gallla
In that category, CWTan said.
Comalr offices are now housed In
County; 286-5554 in Jackson County;
an airport hangar. Asecond hangar,
and 992-5554 hi Meigs County.
financed by an earlier $1.8 million . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - industrial revenue bond Issue, Is rt=:!BIIIWI\IIIIIIIWBII'IIli'V¥B:IB:lWIIIIW-I!:!IAIBIKBII!:llffllliii!Bili
Veterans Memorial
being buill to house the airlines ' If
' W
growingfleetof26aircraft.
I( Since our beloved son 's death we have heen sus - . i
Admissions - Catherine Mees,
Charles Curran, Coma.Jr vice·
tained b11 the pra:yers and love of our friends and J
Pomeroy; Theodore Copple k, president for marketing, said Co- I(
-'
Portland.
·
malr's business has Increased 1 by the prayers, sympathy and af1ection of Ottr i
Discharges- MateoDayo, Elsie significantly since the commuter 111 neiahbors , my patients and helpers and many t o· 1
Stanley, John Motley, Robert
airline became "the Delta Connec- II
"
Snowden, Nona Ritchie.
tlon" in September.
J tal strangers.
I
man wu dll!d by dty pollee Friday
AIJo cllarill!d with minor mlldeo
, 1111!81101" ·pol illton of marijuana
wu Denny
Morrow,
said, will save farmers of the are~
many thousands of dollars over the
nextlewyearsandheurgedanyone
uslngthlstypeproducttocontactthe
local office in Pomeroy for prices.
Holter also reports that Investment
stock Is still available In the growing·
1 One of our friends wrote to us that she
I1 thought of Bert aJ "a seeker - of wisdom , 'r;f I
GALLIPOLIS- A Melp County
"'
City.
POMEROY - George Holter,
approximately 1,00l tons of raw
president of MGM Farm City Inc., material, whlch will be shipped
announces that a contract for the · primarily by barge on the Ohlo
River and then trucked to the new
construction of a new. modern
plant. The plant will be using the
fertlllzer blend plant has been
awarded to Robert Thompson,
most modern blending equipment
Pomeroy, Associated Fabrics.
on the market today.
The new plant, to be located on the
Completion of the new facility is
east end of the present facilities
scheduled for Jan. ll, ~-and will
located on East Main Street,
be ready to start serving farmers In
Pomeroy, wUI be the newest and
Meigs, Gailla and .Mason counties
mostmodernblendplant inthlspart
just as soon as the barges start
of Ohio and West VIrginia. It will be
arriving.
Holter said that the new facility Is
geared to serve farmers of the total
area wlthalloftllelrfertU!zerneeds.
completely financed by locallnvesThls modern construction is
tors in the Meigs, Gallia and Mason
following the original plan of MGM
area.
Farm City Inc., as outlined to Its
He said that It Is "particularly
investors when It was purchased in
pleasing" to announce the construcAprll1984.
lion will take place prior to the
The plant capacity will be spring season . The plant, Holter
II
FREE ENSRA VINS
FREE WRAIPINS
,__~· ·
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transfers. There were 149 patients
transported with 99 going to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Z1 to
Holzer Medical Center; six to
PJeasant Valley Hospital and 17 to
• · other facilities. A total of 66.4
patients went to Veterans Memor·
lal; 18.1 perce!lt to Holzer Medical
Center and 15.5 to other hol;pltals.
All EMS vehicles were driven
8,100.3 mlleB clurlng November Cor
an average of 33.9 miles per calls.
· Calls made by the various units
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making up the services include
'I MiddlepOrt, 45; Porn~, 42; Ra·
' 'I cine,
37; Rutland, 26; Syracuse. 19;
''I 'I'IIppers Plains, 16, and transfer
I
squads, 54.
back, l'nJrn left, are Plrl Bunts, 0rv11 Holler, '-I'd
memben; Bob'l'hornpl!on, winnerollbe ~o
comaet; W, S. Michael, MGM board secretary; and
Jack Caney, treasurer and manager of MGM Fann
Ground broken for fertilizer plant
l
7.9c
4 ROll
Emergency runs
GROUND BREAKING - Officlal8 of MGM Fann
City Inc., Pomeroy, break gruundlorlheoonitnlctlon
Of a modem fertilizer blend plant In Pomeroy.
Handling tbe shovels are, from left, George Holler,
. president, and Zilla Mldldtl, vice president; at the
.. ,Monthiy emergency .--~------~----~----------------------~~I
runs revealed
••
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POMEROY- A total of239runs
i
were completed by units of the
~
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services during November, Admin·
1
lstrator Bob Byer reports.
.
Of the' total runs, 11!5 were
II
emetgelk."Y calls and 54 were
BUSH
SOFT Ast. Flavors
DRINK 16 oz.
DUNCAN HINES
GALLIPOLIS - Becky Rainey of Apple Grove, W.Va., was
winner of a Cabbage Patch doll in a recent selection byGallla County
Clllldren's Services.
·
Marte Glassburn, of 446lll Fourth Ave., was winner of a gun in a
competition sponsored by the Guyan Township Volunteer Fire
Department.
$1.09
12 oz.
CAN
99<
Local prizewinners noted
TREET
.
to a report Issued by Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Priltfltt, Copplck was traveling east when he went off the rQl!d on the
Deposit
~
2I 79(·r-----.......;...--P...:...Ius
-PRIDE
ll.
7
9
(
ARMOUR
CRACKERS
aox
· POMEROY- Theodore V. CoJ)plck, 26, Portland, washospltaUzed
~ccordlng
An escape
dismissed In GaWpoliJ Municipal
Court Friday.
The Charge against William
Richard Lewis, 29, Eureka Star
RoUte, was dismissed because the
pi'06eCIItlon was unable to proceed
with the case. Lewis was accused of
talllng to return to the Gallla COUnty
Jali Nov. 25 after being granted
temporary leave.
A Marlon man was fined $25,
given credit Cor 17 days served In the
county jail and was placed on 18
mon.ths probation on an aSsault
charge.
·
Cyrus R. Blazer,' 31, was accused
of assaulting Phyllis Blazer on Oct.
26. Charges of resisting arrest,.
trespassing and disorderly conduct
against Blazer were diSmissed in ·
exchange for Ills plea on the assault
charge.
In traffic cases, a Gailla County
man was sentenced to three days In
the county jali and fined $:m after
pleildtng guilty to OWl.
Mark A. Woodall, 21, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, was alsO placed on 18
months probation and had his
driver's license suspended for 60
days on the charge. A charge of
failure to control against Woodall
was dismissed In exchange for his
gullty plea.
·
Forfeiting $40 bond for traffic
violations were David W. HUI, !15,
Patriot Star Route, failure todlsplay
valid registration; MacArthur Mit·
chell, 40, Columbus, following too
closely; and Charles L. Unroe, 34,
. Main Street, Crown City, IJ!secure
load.
Forfeiting hand for speedlngwere
Conrad p. Chaskel, 32, Findlay, $38;
Brei Harrison, 18, Rt. 3, Bidwell,
$38; Kim J. Moore, Gastonia, N.C.,
$38; Timothy C. Gray, 25, Oak Hill,
$39; KE-vin M. Maldy, Ona, W.Va.,
$39; Dwight D. Woods, 39, Patriot
Star Route, Galllpolls, $40; E.M.
RotJerls Jr., :ri, Cincinnati, $44; and
Nathan Davis, 32, Dudley, N.C., $68:
·-~~a~araccldentonDewltt'sRun~dshortlyafter4p.m.
'
oz.
AMERICAN BEAUTY
24
RUTLAND- The Richard Dalley residence, on Townslllp Road
173 between Rutland and HarrlsonvUie, was destroyed by fire early
Saturday.
.
Although no one was home when the fire began, someone Issued a
call to the Rutland Fire Department at approxlnjately 12: :JJ a.m .
Two Rutland trucks and a Middleport tanker responded, but
firemen were unable to save tile two-stoty frame structure. Rutland
~ were recalled to the scene at 8:15a.m. wheq the fire ·
rekln'dled In the rubble.
.
·
No inJUries were reported.
Positive origin of the fire Is unknown, although firemen speculate
that It might have started at the fireplace.
GALLIPOLIS -
char~ against a GaWpollsman was
Accident hospitalizes driver
01 SlKED
. MORTON HOUSE
BEEF
STEW
RACINE -Trash collection in Racine will be on Wednesday and
Thursday during Christmas week and New Year's week, Instead of
Monday and Tuesday.
Fire destroys resUlence
'HOMEMADE
CENTER CUT
POMEROY - A lour-car accident occurred at approximately 2: !15
p.m. Friday In front of Pomeroy's Kroger Store on East Main Street, ,
pollee said.
'
A car driven by VIrgie M. Buckley, Coolville, was traveling east
and stopped to make a left turn into Kroger's. Can; driven by
NOITIWI L; Deem, Racine, anc_l Gilman Grimm, Point Pleasant,
stopped belllnd the Buckley vehicle.
,
A fourth car, driven by Linda L. Bentz, MlnewU!e, iailed to stop
and struck the Grimm vehicle in the rear, causing a chain reaction.
All lour vehicles sustained light dmf\age. Bentz, cited for assured
clear dl!;tance, was taken to Dr. James Conde's office by Pomeroy
EMS for treatment of a minor lnjuty. No other Injuries .wi're
reportEid.
.
Village trash collection set
I
ECKRICH
1985
Consisting of ••••• ThrH 1-hour. exerci11 periods a week for 12-1 a wHks, ·
plus education and EIG testing.
Marriage licenses issued
"'
r'
WIENERS 12 oz.
PORK
AWAKE
ANNOUN.CING:
BONELESS
AT
$2.99
lB.
,
near
BARR'S
RIB ROAST
_
'SUPEIIOit
._..,..
STANDING
of a bowie recently.
Andrew and Jolm A. Jones, 18, were flown to the Francis Scott Key
Hospital Bum Center In Baltimore following the explosion ol L.P.
gas Inside a home that ws under renovation
DominiOn, Md.
Both II'IEII suffered moderately severe seconddegtee burns over 10
to 12 peicent pi their bodies, mainly over their hands and faces,
Nelahboni who called the emergency unit, said they heard an
explosion and saw a 1lash !Ire erupt In the house. The explosion's
power was strong enotlih to crack the wallboard In the dining room
and tire s~ paint on the walls.
Andrew has two sisters in Pomeroy. 'They are Theresa Andrew of
Mulbeny Heights and his mother, Toni Andrew, resides in Point
Pleasant.
Andrew lias now been returned to his home at n; Utah Road,
Stevensvllle, Md., 2.1666.
.
FROM ALL
THE FOLKS
a
.,
ecp~oUJQ
•'
The Sunday Timt~-Sentinel Pa111 A-5
W. Va.
•
munJcomt.
POMEROY- Martin Andrew, 18, StevensvWe, Md., formerly of
Syracuae and Racine, was one rlf two teenagers injured In the gas
evening. A Une formed, of course,
and at one point It extended from
Dr. Conde's office in the middle of
The
aga!J) proves that
the block on North Second In
Jlme DOES
Middleport to the corner where tile
march on.
Middleport Lunch Room Is located.
MAKE THIS A
• I wasn't abll' to
And you guessed II. The supply of .
-HAPPY
HOLIDAY
keep up wltlllt aD
toys ran out so Dr. Conde dis·
FOR THE ONES
Dke you dld. I've
patched hls wife, Rllonda, and
YOULDVE
• lovl'd 1tl'arlng
Brian to the Rall Bfin Franklin
. Store and they picked up over $200
trom you - .mY car'ii.S <trestW
.boxes - Sl'ems Dkl' they might be worth more toys to be given away.
Brian said that people showing up
the same ones from last year. At
to get the toys lor their clllldren
this rate they'D last forever.
were mannerly, honest and well
The holiday decorations have behaved - and they undoubtedly
were glad to get tile help offered.
been nice. I admire people who
fight the wl'ather and come up with
We've had announcements from
so many creative Ideas In decoratIng the exterior ol their homes. about every public office on
IncldentaDy, Herman Grl!te of closings lor the holiday. However,
Mason Furniture lias been pretty the board of elections office was not
Impressed with the attractiveness Included. That office will be closed
or tile two homes on Center Street on both Monday and 'I't!esday, but
Wishi ng You A Season
and a mobile home around the will be open tor usual business on
Filled With Joy
E-2805
Wednesday.
corner in Mason.
· All tl'alltt ''"~'"" VNfljlwlde
He's been staying open In the
1980 Jonlll'6tll & O..ld, IM.,
L lc: t~MC buca lmportt Corp.
The end of tile year brings up the
,evl'nlngs and every night drives by
t)!e locations to see them one more necessity again to purchase dog
tlml'. Middleport had a home · licenses- and Idowanttopolnt out
Let these inspired subjects
llghtlng contest this year - pulled that the Meigs County Humane
contribute to the spirit of
together at the last minute - and Society has an especially 'good deal
Christmas for your family
and friends. Choose from
the other Ml'lgs communities as far for you.
figurines, musicals, mlnla·
Members of the society will be
as I know just sort of fizzled out as
lures, collectors' bells a'nd ,
far as ·any contests are concerned. selling dog tags at their Thrift Shop
phites. dolls and orna·
Used to be·nwnerous communi- in Middleport - the shop Is open
m~nts,
too.
ties did hold the contests and they from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday
did provide some lncl'ntive for through Saturday each week. You
Lovingly hand crafted,
more decorating with prettier pay only the usual fee of $2 per tag
prices start at less than ten
communities reSUlting. Then came and $10 for a kennel Ucense when
dollars.
·the energy crunch and the contests you buy at the Thrift Shop and the
We Invite you to come In
society wUI give you gift for your
never regained their stature.
· and see us soon for the
dog into the bargain.
best selection.
The Meigs Jaycees have been
very busy collecting food and toys
We will be wrapping up our
from area merchants who were Monday Dally Sentinel edition
quite generous in their glving.to the early so If you have any last minute
underprtvlleged.
news that you'd like to get to the
Jaycees and the Meigs County ·people before Christmas, do get In
. Jaycee Women distributed the food touch with us before 9:30 a.m.
and toys to the underprivileged at Monday. We'll do our best to make
tile Pomeroy VIllage Hall Thursday the edition with your items so that It
evening. There were 155 food won't be our fault if you can't keep
. Gallipolis, Oh.
baskets distributed and the great smiling...
collection of toys was completely .--------~----l-------~---~
deleted. There were some residents
who made applications for baskets
but dldn 't show Thursday night.
The Jaycees had some 175 food
baskets ready to go. Since some
. didn't report to pickup the food, the
JayCEeS sent the Items to the
Salvation Army to help with its
program for the holiday season.
Plea~ant,
Escape -case
dismissed in
Ex-Meigs resident injured
By BOB HOEfUCH
Tbnea S •~w Staff
Brian Conde. active Jaycee, also
was Involved with the distribution
of toys to the underprivileged lrj Dr.
James Conde and Ills staff Monday
PonMoy Middlepott Gallipolis, Ohio Point
113 COUIT ST.
POMUOY,OIIO
992-205.
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We have therefore established and are endo wing
in Hubert 's name a memorial schoiar.rhip fund
for Gallia Academy High School .ro that n eedy
and gifted students may be helped to fulfill in
Hubert 's behalf their dream of a better world.
Thank. you for your love and may God bless you
this £hristmas and forever.
·1
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Gallipolis, Christmas 1984
342 SECOND AYE. ·
GAWPOUS
446-2691
·I
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1
This we do not want to happen.
.
Sig and AJix Harder
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�Page A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Dnamber 23, 19M
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea1ant, W. Vo.
'
Dmmk•r·23, 1914
The S.n • t
Pelneroy--Middleport-QoUipolis, Ohio Point Pleotant, W. Yo.
Area deaths
Buster Ban-ett
RUTI..AND - Buster "Bill"
Barrett, 51, Galllpolls, was killed
early Friday morning In an auto
accident near Galllpolls.
Born Nov. 28, 19331n Rutland, he
was the son of the Ia!£> Dayton and
Iva Taylor Barrett..
Surviving are two brothers,
Robert and Charles, both of Rutland; twoslsters, JessleGrueserof
Rutlanc!. and Madge Flfe of Lake
City, Tenn.; a special frtend,
Geraldine Warren of Crown City;
and many llleces, nephews, cousins .
and'friends.
Funeral services will be held 10
a.m. Mon<tay In Rutland Bible
Methodist Church, with the Rev.
Amos TilliS officiating. Burial will
be In Riverview Cemetery,:Middleport. Friends may call at Hunter
Funeral Home, Rutland, from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. today.
lYE nLL 7 P.;M.
DAY
DOLE
PINEAPPLE
.7,. 9<
d
~-
•
.
Vema
,, Birchfield
GALLIPOLIS - Verna BlrchfleMJ, 87, 756 First Ave., GaUipolis,
dlejl at 5 p.m . Frtday In Pleasant
Vl\~ey HOSpital. having been In
falling l\eal1h for the past year. '
Born Oct. 22, 1897, in Mason·,
W.Va ., daughter of the late Frank
and Julia McDaniel, she had lived In
Galllpolls for more than 40years and
attended the First Church of the
Nazarene.
She marrted Kenneth Birchfield
on July 17, 1934, at Mason, and he
preceded her In death on Dec. 21,
1982.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Sue Bays of Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Joswhlne Miller of Mason;
two sons, James McDaniel of
Columbus, and Carl McDaniel of
Point Pleasant; 16grandctindren,24
great-grandchildren and a greatgreat-grandchild; and two brothers,
John of Clifton, W.Va., and Bob of
Point Pleasant.
She was preceded In death by two
daughters and a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in Waugh-Halley·
Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Bob Madison and the Rev. Jack
Finnicum o!ficlatlng-. Burial will be
in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
SIAIIDIIG
RIB ROAST .
' $289
on
Earth
jOyoos·Holiday
Season , a healthy and
CAROLL SNOWDEN
James E. Pierson
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Oh.
Phone 446-4290
Home 444-4511
LIMA - James E. Pierson, 58,
Findlay, died at 8:41p.m. Thursday
In Van Wert County Hospital. Van
Wert. ·
Born AprU 3, 1926, In Gallipolis,
son of the late Harry B. and Mabel
UNIDEN 1000
10 n. FIBERGLASS DISH
..•
.UIIIDEN 3000
.REMOTE CONTROL
10 FT. FIBERGLASS DISH
DRAKE .324
10 n. FIBERGLAS$ DISH
DRAKE 240 A
REMOTE CONTROL·
10 FT. FIBERGLASS DISH
1,795.
00
Olar
1995.
2,095.~
Hurricane, WV 25656
Next to Pizza Hut ·
P1ice1 Sls1hed
240-16"
240-18"
FIOM
31»9 Hilnicane Creek Road
CHAIN SAWS
SE Z·AO
Super 2-14"
GIVE A·GIFT CERTIFICATE
Call Collect 304-562-2121
atellite
150-16"
May yoo ond
your loved ones
have a safe and
Reg.
319.95
359.95
244.95
289.95
309.95
SALE
199.96
236.32
162.33
194.80
22o.n
'
JUST A FEW
HOTPOINTI G.E.,
TAPPAN MICROWAVE .
OVENS ON
CLOSEOUT PRICES
IF VOU HAVEN1 .
BOUSHT, NOW /$
THE TIME!
GENERAL ELECIIIC
TELEVISIONS
CONSOLES..::..._ TABLE
MODELs-' PORTABLES
COlOR - BUCK & WHITE
PRICES AS LOW
-~s S6995
.GENERAL ELECTRIC
STEREOS ..
NONE BETTER
'
Cloteodt '''~''
ALSO VCR'S
n,., S.nti.'lll
•
Paga A.-7
�Section~,:
r
•
DICICI . . .
23, 1914 ' •
~
•
CHDJ)JIOOD MEMORIDIB WM alrlp dowll me~•IOrJ . _
far .Juel 'lbelllulbedll!played
leYeral.cloZea ...., arouad the
llriiDnal ne. She remem-
·oNTH FINING
· UP· TO 60
liered blribdaya and Chrtltwhen the doll8 were pveos
to her .. gifts, and CClll1lllellled
... the IIWI)' ebopplng trlpi
wllldt Jbelook wMh ber mother .
to te1ect apeclal ones. Her dol
coiJecdon would excite - .
BANKS & GMAC--
IDd lelllor rather large sums ol
money, but they are not for sale,
lise said. .
3/
TO
CHOOSE
FIOM
,Air, tilt; AM·FM stereo, rallye wheels.
all low miles. .
1611 ,,,,
$
1984 BUICK REGAL
Dark gray fern exterior, air, stereo, Rallye
· wheels.
91 8 4
c
3 TO CHOOSE FROM'
Choice
Two-tone bluelsilvso\O ir,!M·FM.
$3284
SALE
1
WAS $1095
FORD MUSTANG
1981 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC
WAS 15995
.
WAS $2495
SALE
· SAlE
1982
,984 ."
-
DART 4 DR.
All the basics. Long
$ S984
S684
56984
S884
1981 O.LDS OMEGA
trans.
.ooo
SAlE
52884
$
SAlE
'
S8884
$AlE
WAS 15995
$4384
5484
1983 CHEV. CAMARO Z-28
Black, T-top,.loaded. 17;QOO miles.
$8284
WAS SJ0,9t5IAU
1983 OLDS FIRENZA 2 DR.
H~tchb~ck, red, fi ;\t ,I air, on!y 12,000·
·
miles.
WAS $69,5 .
$1 0,384
Sv.,,
IA/.f
$6484
·3~ 1914 CHIY. MONTI CAlLOS , . · · .
Air, tilt, AM-FM stereo, 10od color selection, aU .hlvt under 13,000
.
BRING THIS AD
WITH YOU
m~les.
IALE $9184
. '""
I
!AU
.WAS S2995
quintuplet furniture, a bed,
playpen, kiddie car , a nd a high
chair. When Janet was six years
old the family took a trip to
Ontarlo to see the quintuplets.
The dolls, while not for sale,
are now valued at nearly a
thousand dollars .
Another favorite is Joan Pa looka who came wit h a birth
certificate i and you thought
birth certlcates were uniql!e to
the Cabbage Patch Kids.) The
certificate Usts J oe Palooka and
Ann H. Palooka a s parents. It
shows 'his profession as worla
heavyweight champion, and
names Ham Fis her as Joan's
godfather.
Bisque miniatures with m oveable arms and legs, and numerous costume dolls complete ·
Janet's collection of cherished
keepsakes.
Dolls have been important
among childhood playthings
from the earliest times. Colonial
children played with homemade
rag dolls, today's children with
soft sculptures.
And for Christmas 1!& dolls
remain the most popular gift for
little girls.
.
'
S2284
White with dark red landau roof. V-8, ~uuJ.. I
P.S., P.B'.
WAS 14995 ,
1
Black on black with burgundy clotll inte·
· rior. Sharp through-out. $
WASS6995
. $AlE
WAS 19195 .
Picking up . one doll after
another, Janet recalled something special about each one.
Her first doll from the mid·
thirties, resting In an antique
buggy Is perhaps the most
tattered .
Shirley Temple and Deanna
Durbin who sang and danced
their way across sliver screens,
Man' Hartline, the circus prln·
cess, Sparkle Plenty and Bonnie
Braids of the Dick Tracy .series
of the early fifties, Jackie
Robinson, a baseball great, the
popular Campbell Soup Kids of
ihe mid-forties, are just a few of
Janet's dolls.
There are the walklng, the
windup, and the wetting dolls,
the ones with eyes that open and
close. and 'the crying babies,
some with composition heads
and soft bodies, others of bisque, ·
rubber and cloth, each one with
special memories of a happy
childhood.
.
But perhaps Janet's most
prized dolls are the Dionne
Quintuplets as Infants. The dolls
are stlllln their original clothing
with their names embroidered '
on their bibs. · She also has
several pieces of the original
,. ·~ ' 1910 FORD T-BIRD
l-981 CHEV. CAPRICE 2 DR.
Only 17,000 i artie
custom cloth in
doll8 from her childhood~-
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
hav~ IJeen In a wooden bed
'limes-Sentinel Staff
converted Into · a chest by a
relative, and stored at the E .J .
POMEROY - What' s the
most popular Christmas gift for
Hill family home on Flatwoods
lltt)e girls?
Road. Only recently did she
Dolls, of course!
move them to her home near
And w_hlle some children
Racine.
.
outgrow their love of dolls others
Handling each one of the dolls
cherish them right Into
as she <!!splayed them around
adulthood.
the tree this holiday season,
For Janet Theiss the dolls
from her childhood are trea·
~ revived such pleasant memories
sum· to be enjOyed. Each o ·_
for Janet - .the times she and
holds memories of happy times, 1 t her mother shopped for special
·some assOciated' with her · dolls, the hours she spent
dressing and undressing them,
modw•r · who deUghted In doll
shoppmg with her youngest
combing and Iearranglng their
daugllter.
hair, and the never-ceasing
'Th~ was a gleam In Janet's
admonition from her mother
eyes ' as she Iovlngl:f placed
that "If you don't quit combing
sev~al "dozen of her special
that doll's hair. she won't have
dolls ' mostly from the thirties
any left" .
/
and tbrtles, ai'OI!nd the Christ·
· Many of Janet's dolls would
mas tree the other day.
excite collectors and undoubt·
These are dolls not "col·
.edly brtng a big price but, of
lected" from auctions and dealcourse, they're not for sale.
ers, but her very own playthings
As Janet puts It, "selling these
preseryed from her childhood
dolls would be like selling a part
days.
of my past."
.
A few of the dolls are still in
It's her first Christmas In
many Yt>ars'te get out the dolls, a
their original boxes, but the
favorltes shOw the signs of
few In almost new condition, but
most shOwing slgils of the love
caring and cuddling given by a
and enjoyment they 'brought In
loving child .
·
years past.
For many years, Janet's dolls
1978 FORD PICKUP
Blue and white two-tone, V-8.
$5484
DOW, DOW OOUB - BIJth certUicales are not Wiique w ·
kids. They were lll&rcl*eed In the tonles wMh Joan
Palooka, dallghler of the world heii:Yp't'light dwnplon .Joe Palooka, as
. seee above with owner Janet 'lbellll.llelow, Janet ptBe~~wlthpariolthe
CahiJa&e Pateh
'
Red, XLT Package, V·8, stand. shift.
1978 FORD BRONCO
r best buys. Don't miss
2 'DR.
Red with white vinyl top, auto., P.S., new
Calais trade. . .
.
WAS 13995
· $1/•
'
S4784
cruise. AM-FM stereo, split seats, V-8 engine
miles. one has 16,000. miles.
.
$4784
SALE_
St. Wagon, light grey fern, wood grain, tilt,
ruise, stereo, low miles.
WAS $7995
SAlE ·.
1 WHITE-I BLACK
·,
1983 CHEV.
WAS 11995
$AlE
WAS s5995
WAS S6495
~uto.
Two-tone blue, air,
CUTlASS CRUISER
·Runs out A·l. Good work car.
'.
WAS 11295
SA.lE .
~o 1981 C·HEV. EL CAMINO
~
S3384
1978 atRYSI.ER LEBARON 4
so\.9 ~ood starter car.
1984 CHEV. S-1 0
Slant Six, auto., P. steering.
SALE
.
.
1978 PLYMOUTH VOI,ARE 2 DR.
WAS 12495
. ·QODG£ Dfi.OMAT 2 DR.
.Reream beige, V-8, air, P.S., P.. B.local car.
SALE
Long bed, stand.
shift, new radial tires.
·
'
.
WAS $5995
$5
'
SAlE
.
Air, auto., P. steering, only 2,685 miles. We ·
sold it new.
1981 GMC
.
.
$2 48 7.
SALE
WAS S995
Dark burgundy, black vinyl top. Nice..
1984 CHEV. CHEV.ETTE 2 DR.
WAS 164.95
S884
1977 OIDS CUTlASS UREME
1979 CHEV. IMPALA 4 Dlt.
SALE
$984
2 Dr. V-8, auto. trans. "Basic Transporta·
tion."
·.
-
184
. Arctic white with dark. blue vinyl top. Locally
owned.
·
WAS S2995
. k
Air, P.S., P.B., Rallye wheels. Compare anywhere
,
.
WAS 16195
SAlE' $§
$3984.
SALE
. .'
•
' 1981 CHEV. CAMARO
2 DR., white with burgunrlv ~loth interior and
landau options, ail
t, stereo. Diesel.
S0\.9
.
1977 OLDSMOBILE.(UTLASS
Dark blue, auto. trans., P. steering, Rallye ·
wheels. Sharp.
·
WAS 14995
SAJ.E ~4284
$5
SALE
SAil .
' $Alr:
' WAS S1695
19791PONnAC FIREIIRD
· 4 Sp,eed, 4 cylinder. dark biue interior. Only
6800 miles.
WAS S6995
S1584 '
Conversion. Put it Under. Your
Tree
I
·
"Servic~ Loaner C?solt'white.
1970 V.W. "DUNE BUGGY"
1979 CHEV. CAPRICE 4 DR.
WAS 13995
SAlE
Dolls delight girls ·of all ·ages at Christmas
.
1976 BUICK REG'AL
Maxima 'Series. Only 5,053 miles.
'
WAS 12495
S7384..·
,.,, !til O•lg .
YCLE
$7 484 .
SALE
161il•tt . ·S
FIOM '
.
1983 CHEV. CAMARO
5 speed, air, AM-FM cassette, only 20,000
miles. New Chev. trade.
WAS Sl995
TO ·
CHOOSE
All equipped with air, AMI-HI
Auto. trans., low miles.
$8.984
. SAlE
WAS S9995 .
1984
Air, tilt, All~~~ stereo,
some ha~e bucket seats
3
DEL
light gray fern; a· , auto., P.S., P.B. New
Cutlass trade. · .
·
$AlE S5484
1911 CHEV. '12 TON PI(KUP
'AS S6995
Short bed, 4 speed, bed cove·r, Rallye
wheels. Extra sbarp. ·
· ·
WAS 15995
SAlE
S4684
.60.,R''""'"
....
Financing .
14 & 15 modlls
'
Chevrolet- Oldsmobile Inc.
.'
.
.
'
'
1616 'EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS,
446-3672
DIONNE QU1N'nJPL1n'8- .. her Clal! ~b• ol
wlllithelr-IBemllrtiM!ndoalhelrbit.. Willie•
tor ale, U.dall•evlllaed lit~ ll,eeo.
dalltlfromherchlldhood,J,..'Dielll'..-prtlellue
..._Dionne Qulntuplela, . . . .llelrCII'IIIIul~l
'
.•.
'(
'"'
'
'
'
�' l'agl 1!1,.2-The
Times-Sentinel
. DIIIIiili:ll
W.Va.
j &ster ant,Uver.rary celebrated
.
Norman,
~Williams,
I
_
Winter term.set at Parkersburg _
,.....,..1 a 111,2
Rllpll ud
GALLIPOlJI -
•;
lids
1
t1111 • • Cdl r
; their Nth wtddlq llllllwnlry
; Die. l8 at their borne at a Locult
' St., Galllpolll. It wu a11D hll 8&111
: birthday.
Cosmetic & Brush
·Sets
W IIIH5ay, Jaa. 2.
.
~ceuor.
~-
Leather Accessories-
'
:
Mr. and Mrs. James Williams
I !
LOGAN MONUMENT
I'OMEIOY, OHIO
MEtGS COUNTY
DtSPIA Y YAID NEAR
POMER!)Y ·MASON
, IRIDGI
110 L YAUGIWI MGil
PHONI 992·2511
BARRE
Cachet
ouch-Up &
Powder Set
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Gallla Academy High School.
~ O~ey Coffee, GaUipplls, announce
Letcavlts graduated from Wa,
· the engagement of their daughter,
shlngton High School In MassUlon,
: Elizabeth (Beth) Ann. tci John F.
and attended Lafayette College in
: Letcavlts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Easton, Pa., where he received a
• James Letcavlts of Massillon, Ohio. Bachelor's Degree In Mechanical
: The wedding Is planned for April . Engineering. He Is employed by the
, 20 at St. Mary's Church in American Electric Power Service
1Massillon, Ohio.
Corp. in Columbus.
• The !>ride-elect Is a !V'aduate of
•
REG. Sll.SO
'
'
·
WELLSTON - Mrs. Shirley
graduate of Wellston High .
. • Colley announces the engagement · The . double-ring ceremony wUI
' and forthcoming marriage of her
take place Jan. 1 at the 1\omeofMr.
:; d~ughter, Kelly Colley, to Terley
and Mrs. Terley Clagg Sr.
.• Clagg Jr.
Clagg ls the son of Terley Sr. and
:: ·j\ollss Colley Is Ihe daughter of
Mary Clagg of Mitchell Road,
Shirley Colley and the late Robert .- Gallipolis. He Is currently em·
:: Colley of Rt. 1, Wellston. She Is a
ployed at Pinecrest Care Center.
She Is a
:•. graduate of Rt. 1 Wellston.
.
.------'-:----:---:-i
.
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. ~er
: Beegle, Route 3, Racine, are
@&'&ire
:', : appoachlng
announcing the
engagement
and
marriage
of their
daUghter, Sherry Lynn, to David
: · Ray Wilcox, son of Mr. and Mrs.
' Kenneth Wilcox, SoUth Third St.,
'
•. Mldd 1 ~rt.
"'""
, · ' The bride-elect Is a graduate of
: SOUthern High School and · Is
; employed· at Veterans Memorial
• Hospital. Wllcox Is graduate of
Meigs High School and Is employed
byNapperTrucklng.
/
The open-church wedding wUI
·take place Feb. 16, 4 p.m., at the
'
>
AFTER SHA
LOTION
Racine United Methodist Church,
Elm Street, Racine.
..
oz.
r-;::=========:j
TESSIE 1S
CRAFT SHOP
.
a
..
M onuments
Size
_l6-46
3rd St., RIKine, Oh.
PH. 949-3004
Open Mon.-Sat.
.
D.M.C. FLOSS•• ,............. 29c
Red Heart YARN...... S1.29
.
Happy .Holidays
Li~R
PHotOGRAPHY
WE WILL BE CLOSED
FIOM SUNDAY, ·DfC•
23 THIU TUESDAY,
JAN. 1, 1915
,. 14 v,,z4v.;
GIFTS$300 .
Chapel Hili Chu~ch of Christ : ·
J
FROM
Bola•lle Rood • P. O. lo> 301
GaiMpolts, Olllo 4!631
. "C.HRISTMAS liFTS"
.....
'l:tt,.•.
-
FREE
GIFT WRAP
·OPEN SUNDAY 1-5
2 nd & State
••
••" .
t;•
~
20°/o
OFF
Now Served with Garden Green Beans
11111 .....
11:55La .
Tartar sauce
'
OFF
Delicious fried otaa
Fresh cole slaw
..••
.....
.' .
••
:··
..
Revlon Nail
Grooming Sets
MONDAY -K1m3>AY ALL DAY SftllAL
·$3.99
Address ...... ............. ............... ..... .. ................. ... ··.... ·... •···.... ... ···.........··... ··.... ··... ···.. ···.. ···... ··.... ···... ··... ·...
.
'
'
..
······ · ······ ~ ······················:··················,······· •
!• A&e •• Sex ••
• Yr. Mo.! 11. F. ! Blk.
••
a • • • o o• o oo o
I" o •
o o o o • .. o o o o o ••
• .Breed :
•
If ••
••
, HIll. ••
· Yellow : _Lon1 Short: Known :
o•
P11~ :
........ _
. ....... ..
.._. ...... ,_......
..• ..• ......_........•.......
. .,.......,.....................
.• . .• ...........
..• ,.
.
•
•
•
COLOR
Tu Brown
White -• Gsay
.
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•
•
t
t
•
•
•
•
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•
•
•
t
t
.
•
•
t
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•
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· ~
.
•
•
•
·· ·······C······I··············•·······v·········,···,···············~····
•
•
•
• .
•
•
•
I •
•
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20°/o
OFF
A
.
t
.
'
tllza
•••• · - ............. 0 •••
c- ·· ···; ··· ·•·.:.• ··• ·•·;.• ·····:. ··· ··.· ·:········I·······~·······
•
•
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•
•······v·····-·····
.. ·•·····•······
...·····•·······v·······w······
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C· ···· ···•··,····:•
•
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• •
• •
..
........., .: - .
. .. .. : .. : : : : .'
•
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•
•
QUALITY APPARELAFFORDABY PRICED
•
•
•
•
.
•
rl'•••••t•••••A••••••••••••••y••••••••••••••••••••••,••••••••t•••••••
.a.
. •
•
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'
I ••• ···"'·····
•
..........
t
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43 COURT STREET, GAWPOUS (acron frotn the MunicipafParlrlng Lot)
.
129 MILL STIEn, .DDUPOIT (111 the r 1ft Mhlllllpert)
••••·•·····•·••··•····••••••••••·•••········•·····••··•·•·····••·····••·•·······•··•···
William II. •lckllnt, lltl&s County Auditor
ALSO IE 011 SAL£ AT THE NutiAIIE SOCIETY LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF IIOITH SEC.O!ID SlEET
1
AFTER CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE
STARTS TODAY
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1984
...
Township .......... ...... ................. ...... .... ....... ..................... .......... ................ ··•.... ··... ·.. ····.... ..... ········... ··.....·..
.
Gift ·sets for Men
'
All FALL MERCHANDISE IN THE STORE
Owner's Name ... ..... .. ........................................... ..... ...... .......... ....... ... .... .. ...... ..... .......... ...................... ...
20°/o
OFF
ALL .
MAiCHAIELLI
'
TO
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF i985 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH . TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) PENALTY IF Ll·
CENSE IS PURCHASED AFTERTHAT DATE. FOR lOUR CONVENIENCE USE THE HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS (2.00) FOR EACH DOG.
MALE OR FEMALE. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $5.00).
•.
1
MALE ~2.00
,SPIYtd- Female $2 .00
Ftftlale 12,00
Kennel License 10,00
All
20.
·0FF
.
THE 1985 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 20th
'
Gift -Sets
Southern-style
hush puppies
Cornmeal breaded, country-style
. nsh fillets
•''
·,
./
•
Alts1 Cblittmtt
'CIBIItnee
75°/o
OFF
•
l ......
BRITISH
STERLING
wedge
fries, fresH cole slaw and 2 hush puppies.
OPEN TODAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 5:00 P.M.
ALL
Lemon -
fi!tt.
2-Piece Fish Dinners
Each dinner includes: 2 IIOiden brown fish fillets, natural-cut french
2 SHOPPING DAYS 'T IL CHRISTMAS
'
25°/iJ_
•)
HOIIS: DAILY 9:30·6:00
Yin
-.
....,.•WIEH
""')WK·TV JJ • .....,, 'I:JI•
ENTIRE
BARBERSHOP
LINE. OF SHAVING ·
NEEDS
Sets
'
''MI...- Fr-.
I
Canoe Gift
-
W,._.y;
·4
ALL
' .
AMeia~Prorti'tl.elJtMe~~-
o...
'
' •
WilliaM B. K"ffl11
TlloFindMn
..
"To t.\c (IIMnllllllembl11 mod cl•rc:l of the fintb- vAic.l wN11111illleatJn, IIJid to God tlte ./wJge ofoil, Gild to lAc~ of/;"!! 1
,..,.,_,. petfect"(Heb. 12:23)•."Ffttborll"me&llll "firlt 1411Jeg.t. ~
that ·We may undentand the me•nlgg of the word, let lll oblerve t • "
way it il Uled iu regard 141 Christ:
L In reference to erealioa, He Ia ealled, ''t.U fintl>cml of !IWf\l
C7'tai1We (all miation)" (Col. 1:15). When we ecmoider Hil eterDal .
relationohip with God (being the image ofthe iuvilible God - Col. 1:15),
He il the Firstborn liefore all creation u all creation wu lint begvtten ' '
(made to exllt) by Him.
· .
.
·
·
·
2. Concerning Hill birth, He wu the lint to have been born of a
.
virgin without the concurrence of man.
3. In regard to His resurrection, He wu "tile foritb""' /rvm t.U , .
dead" (Col. 1:18), that is, to come forth from the dead to never die
again.
.
·
C. In relation to the church, He ia the ':fintlmlt CIIIIOtl(l -r '
bretll'fll" (Rm. 8:29). He, beiug the Firstborn before all ereUion and ·
the Firstborn from the dead, baa all preeminence, and baa become "t.U ;
loeod oftlte body, tle clwd"(Cot, 1:18).
Tile c..rdl Of Tile Ptrwtt •
'
Chriat, the Firstborn, baa ntabllabed Hil ebureh, the ehureh or the .
firotborn, 10 the phrue "tlte cbn:l o/ lAc /irlllmlt" refen to tbe '
memben of the chun:h or Christ 011 earth with Christ, the Flntborn, ·
being the head. The memben of the church (all Christiana) were '
begotten "wit/s tile word of tratl" accordiuJ' to the will of God, to that ,
they "alsovld be u lciruloj firrt/rvita of AU Cf'e4t11"'a" (James 1:18).
Ther. were among the ']irotbom, • entering the chUrtb by way or a .
spirstual birth: In baptiam, they obeyed the form of doctrine, the
death, burial, and resurrection of the Lord. They crucified the old man,
sin: they came forth out of the watery grave ill the liken- or the
resurrection a8 a new creature, having partaken of the divine nature
(Rm . 6:3-6); and they were added to the body (church) of Christ, being ·
united with the head of the ebureh, Cbrilt, the Firstborn; therefore,- .
the early Christiano were referred to u "tllo c/usrc.\ of tile Jirlt"- •
Christians. today, who have been betlotten by the wonl ·ot truth aDd .
been given the opirltual birth are calfed "tile c.\tud of tile /irll"- •
They, b!IVing been born again, have a holy; pure, and honorable "
relationship with God and Christ, and are among tbe firstborn.
.
The names of those who constitute "tile gnenll .cutcmblw Cllld
tAKn:ll oftlsefirrtbom. ..CI'I'e wftlt1111 (enrolled) i1l "-"(Reb. 12:23); .
therefore, to be enrolled in heaven il to be a '!'"l"ber of ·~Itt ckrc.\ of ,
tile foratb!>f'11. " To have your name enroUed m heaven, you Qllllt be
saved. To be saved, you must be in the church; therefore, membel'llhip ·
is a must !"hen it comes to salvation and heaven!
.
'
For F - Bible CorregJd•IIC!8 c-ne. Write .. ,
Full Figure Fashions
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs .
Rudolph Gordon celebrated their
29th wedding anniversary and her
53rd birthday on Nov. 26.
The celebration took place In
their home in Gallipolis,
Attending the celebration were
Dennis and Desl Hunt, June
Gordon, Nlkkle Sommerville, Danlelle and Brandy Gordon, Sabrina
and Dennis Hurt Jr.
Colley - Clagg
,
4%
ru.r-u. '
NAMES WBlTI'EN IN HEAVEN
Beegle - Wilcox
.
JAMES 0, lUSH
Monument ~.
'
<
OFF
MANAGER
PlfONE 381·1603
.
lotllng
New York accent offer
students at the Learning Annex here
an opportunity 10 acquire a slclll or
just to ·e nhance their lives.
Developed In l9al by two New
Yorkers, Bill Zanller, :11, and Jules
• Leventhal, 31, the new approach to
· adultedllcatlon provides InstructiOn
In such diverse areas asWiderstanding.the financial page, auto rnalnte,
nance, bartending and tlrewalklng.
Gordons note
•
anntversary
..
VINTON, OtttO
GAWA COUNTY
DISPIAY YARD
You g~ t our dependabl e
guid ance, understand ing,
;md h on est :1dl'ice in se· ·
k cting a filln il y memorial
pri ced to lil your budge t.
See our complet e di splay
featuring full y gu a ran ,
· teed Select
Barre Guild
GUILD
I
...
20°/o
Coffee - Letcavits
•
'
'.
_Terley Clag dr:
.•'
-20°/o
80th ANNIVERSARY - Anna IUid _William E. Brvwn wiD cDftove
theirl*ll weddlq 1111111\'enaryonChrillmaaDay:'lbeywerellllll'l'le!lat
ihe Gennan Lulhenn Clmch, JDgb St., Allroa1 on Dec. 211, Jt:M. 1bey
moved from Graham Stadon, W.Va. to Cher!Cer In .INS. Mr. aad Mill.
Brown bave three children, Dof111hy df!lb, Loulla; Ky., BID of M&Mm,
and Harry oJ Chester, nine grandchildren, 811d 14 IJI'I!al-!lrandchlldrea.
'lbey wiD celebrate their anniversary at the borne of their 8011, '811, In
Mason •
KeiJ' Celley
.
OFF
When You Buy a
Monument from
,lntereeted In
ciulesahouldcontacttbecolleau~
a
PRINCE & PRINCESS
GARDNER
BABY
SOFT SETS
Anyone
.
Information about winter quarter
· NEW YORK (AP) - Courses
ranging from hot air ~ to
. . , I'MIIL'.I .,
81FT IIIII lET
ALL
LOVE'S
tile upcorniJII quarter.
,
lEG. Sl 0.50
1111111 ..._ ·
•
ft:,S
I L: b
Natlaul Dl11elli 't , , ' 1 1
Ptll Gralltl, IIIPfliF.nal l:dtlca11oa ()ppartuahy Gnlltlt ~K :$ • .
work-ttudy ate atll1 avallablt tar
Adult courses
rover wide range
,
STOlE HOUIS:
SUN., DEC. 23 9:00A.M. TO 10:00 P.M.
SUN.,· DEC. 24, 9:00 A.M. TO 8:00. P.M.
groom's cake was decorated in - at Fooilland.
white with two doves.
The groom graduated from
Twila Lemaster of VInton, Ru, Isaiah School of Arizona and just
shle McCallister of Ewington and . finished basic training and A.I.T. at
Hazel Camden of Gautpolls served Fort LeonardWood,Missourlandls
1
'cake and other refreshments.
employed at Gas Plus In Vinton. ·
The bride ls a student at North
The couple will reside in Galllpo·
Gallla High School and is employed lis untU he Is stationed In the A!mY-
«· ~
(:Jlt) 4115-WJ~.
364 JACKSON PilE, GAWPOUS.
786 N. SECOND AVE., .DDLEPORT
~ de Coloarie Slnf, 0.85 oz.
and f'Oudrt Parfumee, 2 oz.
.
l'la .. aatllilwu lle1d 111 earlY 1
have a ·dauJbter, ~tie
; • They
wm -.m 1111
. IJiclmiJer, boWewr, Iota a tee!
lbldllltl eu IIIII apply at tile
oollelll!'• ~10111 0tt1ce which
llopenlrom8a,m.-3p.m. dally and
from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday.
20
:;_ :rwo
.
'
: Shlrlty (Dinnlr) Baeternllbialld
·wed Dec. 8
in Bidwell
mDWELL - The Church of
Chrtsi at Bidwell was toe setting t:A
the Dec. 8 wedding for RObyn
Nqrman, daughter of Jean Cannon
:bf Porter, to James Wllllarns, son of ,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Williams of
: Bfdwell.
;:. Terry \'lorman performed the
· can<ill'llght double-ring ceremony
following a program of music.
large · wicker bitskets _pf
'wltite gardenias and greenery
, deCorated the altar. Escorted to the
"alfar by her stepfather, Charles
·:C~nnon, she was given in marrtage
b~ her mother.
: The bride wore a gown of white
a~tate taffeta fashioned with a
high lace collar and lace accented
the bishop sleeves, with a full·tiered
la<;e chapel train and satin headband with full length veiL The bride
c-arried a bouquet of white garde·
rpas and violets with baby's breath
with lavender and white streamers.
· She .wore a pearl necklace and
· €'!J.rrlngs, a gift cif the bride's
. mother.
: ;· Maid of honor was Lisa Lemaster
, ~ VInton. She wore a lavender
· full-pleated gown · with a lace
. capelet and carried a !louquet of
white and lavender mums with
Iairender and white streamers.
• 'Marjorie Rudy of VIrginia, sister
. of· the bride, was matron of honor
: a,nd had a similar gown and
• bouquet as the maid of honor.
: ' Angie .Garretson of Porter and
' Diane White of Bidwell were
bridesmaids, and wore similar
- designed gowns of pink taffeta and
' C<Orrled a bouquet of pink and white
carnations with pink and white
'ilreamers.
:· Kay Cannon, sister of the bride,
was Dower girL She wore a light
blue long gown and carried a white
. Wtcker basket decOrated with light
: blue bows with streamers.
· · The groom wore his Army dress
. uniform. Best man was Scott
Wllliainson of VInton. Rlngbearer
was Greg Ward of Alice.
• Craig Lemaster of VInton Ill the
' oandles and played the recording of
· 'o\ieddlng music.
;· Roger Stout of Alice was usher.
Faye Stout of Allee handled the
· guest register.
~ All fJGwers except the bride's
bOuquet were arranged by the
' bride's mother.
: FolloWing the wedding, a reception was held at the VInton town hall
which was decorated with white
' and lavender Streamers j,lnd Wed·
; d)ng bells. The bride's table was set
wJth a white lace tablecloth with
crystal candle holders with a
-three-layer wedding cake with the
rplnlature bride and groom. A·
23, 19M .
Malter Chirp
lay••.,
Gift
w. ::'c ·
..
�- -- -- ·---.,..-
.. - ., ....
...
... ...... ,..
..... . .
"'
Sl n .Up
·Container caps
,, A
\
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - A
conta111er cap that doesn't "~k
off'' -or 1oooa1 by 1tlelf- bas been
dewlapad by Sl•,_m Corp., for
lelkproafprhelng r1llcJIIIda.
Osllg
We Reserve The Rieht To
limit Quantities
STORE HOURS
C8pa With
298 SECO.ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
LUCKY WINNER
· WILL IE
REIMIURSE.D
THEIR
PURCHASE COST
PRICES .IN EFFECT TH U SAT., DEC. 29, 19
9
9
51
Round .Steak •••
U.S.D.A•.CHOICE BONELESS
$
59
Chuck Roast .••L~. 1
·
• LIMA, Ohio - Martha A. and Jiving In Lima, Ohio. The children
;J !vanE.WheelerSr.celebratedthelr are Janice , Bayliff, Thomas
•; 25thweddlngannlver,;aryNov. 3,1iS · Wheeler,IyanWheelerJr. andEva ,
: • they renewed tl1elr wedding vows. Wheeler.
,;They are both formerly of the
A recepton followed the vow
:• calllpollsarea.
renewal at the church. Wheeler IS
:J The couple was wed Nov. 5,1959 at employed at Stoops Express Inc.
: •First Baptist ChurchlnJollet, Ill., by r - - - - - - - - - - i
; \the Rev. William B. HalL They are /h, A ~
~A~ ~
parents of four
all
I
s..~•• ()•lg
~
:r
•••••••••••• 59(
I
I
---------------'
COUPON.
'
· ,1.
1
1
1
Parts •..•~. 49<
SUPERIOR
. 129
Lunch Meat •......
Cood Modeg 01lg
~CHRISTMAS CANDY
1·
1
I
Ooly
Good
1984
Sausage •••••••• ~B.
FOR WOMEN•,
•AEROBIC SHOES
..
Rqilteftd Diamond llinp
!t1i
i
··
C~td
1
u~
·S. NO. 1 WHITE .
Potatoes •. ~o.L:·:! •••
6
YALLEYBEU
IEEILEI
CRUNCH TWISTS
II·
ao,:
I
I
I
l
.
wu..... Otlg
!
I
·
:
:
1
i
l't. Pl. 675-29811
3/$1 , J
'
limit 3 Per Custo1111r
Hill}. 11'"1/rwm
I
~
Good Orilr Powoll's
I
Good Wodntsday, Dtc. 26, 1914 I
69
2°/o Milk •• ~·!·..... -1
COUPON
1
c..
'I
RUFFlES-REG. 11.39
I .
~ ,.,,~,,
o.,,
'
~
by TfaHon and
Rocsports ·
·
FORMEN: .
'
Fn••• Uuwntnwn
Parkin~t
F "'r\•rln\
'
.
t
LLOYD HARRIS
79<
cr·ackers ..••.••• ~~.
FABRIC SOFTENER
CHERRY, PEACH, PUMPKIN or
;
The
:
MAXWELL HOUSE
•
COFFEE
:
• e• • • • • • • • • •
.·····cooP<M·······.
•• ••
:
HUNT'S .
·.
TOMATO JUICE
:
:
•
99 (
: . ' 69 (
~A~·$629..
..................... . ....... .-.... ............ . ......••••.•.... .. .
•
•
~
Limit 011t Per C•-•
Good Only At Powtll's
Offer bpiru Dtc. 29, 1914
0
Please
Limit 3 Ptr C•tomor
Geocl Onlf At Powell's
Offer frplrn D1<. 29, 1914
-
· 4 Roll
Pkg.
Limit 3
: 46 Oz.
-
•
.
• • • • ·em~······.
• •••••
••·····
••
• •••••'
.
.
•
•
.
limit 011t Ptr Cus'-r
Gootl Only At Powtll's
' Offtr bpiru Dec; Jt, 1914
~
~
•
,•
'
PUREX DETERGENT
~ ·
147
Oz.$3~89
lintit Ont ,., c••,.,..,
I
'
•
1
·~
r;,
OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, AND EMPLOYEES
OHIO VALLEY BANK
Dottie Failure
Reda K. Fowler
Jo Ellen France
Teresa Haffe1t
Judy Haggerty
Judy Hall
Randy Hammond
Cindy Harrington
Katrinka Hart
Morris E. Haskins
·a~ J . Holley
lily Holley
Kathy Huffman
Gail Jones
larry Lee
Judy Mahan
Bryan Martin
Kathryn Ma..ie
Connie Matthews ,
Carrol H. McKenzie
Kathv McKitrick
John McNeill
Billy Jo Meadowa
Tim Mndowa
Angle MINer
Frank H. Mills, Jr.
Pat Milia
Corte Mink ·
Concette Mitchell•
John Mulford •
~
Good Fri4ar, Dec. 21, 1914
1
~--------------~
,..-----------COUPON
.
39(
limit Ont ' " c..._ .
GoiiiOnlyAtPo..Wi
'-~
he. 19, Jt14
"
~
~~~
Good Onlr ' ' Powell'•
~!~'·
· Good Onlr At Pow til' i
Offer Expirn 0... 29, 1914
tnlly Joyou!il NP.BSOn In every way.
'~
I.,
GAY 90'S BREAD
)
'
wlshN to you and yolars ••• for a
;;.-;;~;.~
linoil One Per Cust-r
Good Only At Powtll's
Good Thursdoy, o... 27, 1914
amy lOSS
a·
•
lafar•tt• MaN
611d Sll•lilf O•lt
:
appreciation, along with fondNt
t Sh2a~oco~!e~J
{::::.:~;~;;.;;.;::::1
69( II
;
and liilneerely offer our
:~·----------------~---------------4
I
! .2/Sl
QU 4RT
--- ·-.
3
, ••a.JAgc.,,
:
I ' ·BALL JAR MUGS f
1
BORDEN
19
Downey ••••••• :!~.. 1· Sherbet
•• ••
• •••••
•·····cooPm"·······
•
$
as we reeall your valued buslneM,
•lASS WEEJUNS
..
TUllOS, DECK
)' SHOES
A
:A •MOCCASINS
·•
• •FIY.E BOOTS
~
•SHOE SHINE KITS tfi!J
9
3
Mince Pie .~·.o:~··· 1 1
$
. .
I
people everywhere delight In
Waterproof-Insulated ~
NOW 11000 OFF
e;J
Lg. Eggs ...~~•••••• b 3<,I 7iiz~z. s9 (
I
1
1
A NEW OIREC TION IN ~#AIR DESIGN"
abound. We cherish this tbne
i
'
•TIMBERLAND BOOTSt
II POTATO CHIPS
/
446-9510
2
WI Mairr .'>t .
~--------------·
,--~------~----~
I
0111 t'-I. L I Of'
1ifJ
~---~-~~------: ·:
. COUPON
·I :
I
I~
AN APP{)I N !M f NT
Kee~ ~t .~;::::-;~~~; l~
.
.
WAt l
2 ;;,.:a':Gs ~
•
I
Monday lllru FriUy
9AMiofPM .
Saturday 9 AM loS PM
the joys and glad tldJnp that
.A.,
Nikt·Roebok
•MOCCASINS
•SPORTO SNOW
BOOTS
.
~. •FASHION lOOTS
.
.CHRISTMAS
I
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Useofa
computerized materials catalog
system ill expected to save an
engj)leeling and construction com·
pany tbousands of dollars a month
through r e duced (jupll c ate
purchases. '
McDermott International Is the
first outside comp;lny to use the
system developed by Phillips Petroleum to Identify Items. Phillips says
It savesQXJ,!IXJamonth wlthltsoWn
system bymaklng!EwerJX!rchases.
M
fJtBif · '
Jt •1 I .,1
,
17/1f f1811 9A
~
2
A
:~gecolorful beaks.
MERRY
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED
Buying less
..
hornbUis, who eat fruits and
:'nl'sperse the seeds from which new
·l~ gioow, Kalina said. Some •
: :,t~qrnbills can be recognized by their ~
~--·--·-·--·----·-·--=·
LB • . /
~DS
of goodwill and friendship,
~
has
'0
:'1lie
Powoll's
Mondor. Dec. 24,
t'
~~~=~~g%S:.S:~KibaleForest ~
Assorted lags
I
~
· .birds In addltlon to having trees that
: :a~ themselves In danger of
:;extinction, reports Jan Kalina, an
·:eroioglcal researcher, In Animal
I BUY ONE, GET ONE OF
I' SAME
VALUE FREE
Good
At
\
~
::enctangerectspeclesotanrrnarsand
r
·
I
CLRSSIFIED
the heart, bringing forth .a·spirit
t The Shoe Cafe :
:: KIBALEFoREsT.uganda(AP)
: ;_ The Klbale taln forest harbors · '
r--------------~
I
I
..
that fills the air and wal'lll8
29'6 tf), 9~
~:enqangered species
I.
Good Sundar, Dt<. 23, 1914
~hUdren,
:l ~orest harbors
I
Limit Ont Ptr Customor
Good Only At Powtll's
LB.
~jt~
99C !
~:~~-
I
•
:iW'heelers
celebrate anniversary
.,
•
'
RC COLA
. .
.
J., • •
Martha A. and Ivan E. Wheeler Sr.
:·
- - - -·
Qood
• J.
-
r--------------,
COUPON
.I
L••
two caps. As the threaded part Is
turned, It forces the snap part open
or closed.
-•
•
·:·"
SIGN UP FOR A
(HANCE TO WIN
ONE Of 20-S2S;oo
GIFT CERTIFICATES
TO .BE GIVEN AWAY
DEC. 24TH.
U•.-S.D.A. CHOICE
alone
Sunbeam.
Snap caps have been U!ll!d moatly
with d!Y products such as aspirin
because most people would not have
the strength to qe a snap cap that
was tlpt OOough to be leakproof, he
said.
· The Sunbel!Jll cap combines the
Cireswsg
I
ICI'I!W thn!adS
tend to ''backdf'' and beca'IJe looee.
They are jiJIIUitable fOF llquJd.woof
seals, says Robert Lehman or
S1o~s,g
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM
Thighs
..
Dill ,••, 23, ....
Ohio P.lnt Ph1111r1t, W. Va.
CHICKEN
.
r
-•
~
.
.
Donna Neal
Steven Newberry
Jennifer Osborne
linda Plymale
Raymond Polcyn
Becky Rainey
Pam Ramsey
Georgie Rich.ie
linda Roe
Nancy Rose
Penny Sager
Polly Salisbury
Glenna Sanders
Connie Saunders
leon Saunders
Richerd Scott
Warren F. Sheats
Tommy Shepherd
Jeff Smith
Tammy Snyder
Mabel Stewart
Tammy Thacker
Wendell Thomas
Merva Turley
Wilma Webster
So~n R . White
Phyllis Wilcoxon ·
Pam Wiseman
�Du
Ohio fiDint "IIIEIII, W.Va.
Peggy Bush,
Kenneth Lee
wed
Aug. 25
.tn ceremony
n:ob~r
23, 1914.
Mel Pit
De camber 23, 1984
The Sunday Timft-Sentinel P11g1 a.7
! It, W. 'Ia.
.....
.
~liar I'ltcet May Vary at Some Stores
to lOCal c:ompetlllon
.
0
·1
. ·. ·. e.t w.
if '~.m
..;J
rme
b
·
Ca~
. 1. .' Jr.. Oct. 20
~
SUPPERs and ·
LONG OOITOM - Peggy Sue
Bush and Kfnneth Gregory Lee
were united In marriage at the MI.
Ollve Community Church In Long
Bottom, Au,g. 25.
The bride Is the dau,ghter or Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bush, Racine, and
the groom ls'thesoo o!Mr:and Mrs.
Mott Lee. Gallipolis.
.
The Rev. Lawrence Bush per·
formed the dpuble-ling ceremoey
following a program or music by
Norman Matson, nephew of the
bride. The songs dedicated to the
bride and groom were "Endless
Love" and "A Time 'for Us."
Given In marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a prtncess
style floor lengthgownoltaffetaand ·
· chantilly lace. Irwas fashioned with
a sweetheart neckllne, long sleeves
and anA·Ilnesklrt whlchfiOwecl'lnto
a.chapel train. The bride's fingertip
veil of illusion edged In lace fell from
a bandeau of lace.
Matron of honor was Donna
Matson, slstero!thebrlde, who wore
a floor· length gown of pale blue imd
tulle la.c e. John Lee, brother of the
groom, stationed at the U.S.Naval
BOOTS ·
· .Froin ·
SMALL·
X-LARGE
8
SAVE 2.67! Ambush
Mr. and Mrs: Kenneth Gregory Lee '
Base, Norfolk, Va ., was best man,
and the ushers were Harry Bush,
Fort Worth, Texas, and William
Bush, Houston, Tel\BS, brothers of
·
·
-·.
' ·..
poJVi:EnoY - The Laurel Cliff the groom, Point Pleasant, and
Free MethOdist Church was ·tile ' : ~dy Fisher, Gallipolis.
setting fdtthe weddingofRhonda L.' '!'7 'fhe bride's mother wore a grey
~~:des?e':t!:~~rs~~:~~~:
Snider, Middlep<;>rt, and James W. ·. dotted. swiss dress and a white
groom.
Casey Jv.l: l?oint Pleasant. '
. a
mation corsage. The groom's
For the wedding mothers of the
They a\'e the c hildren of Mr. and ~ljnotherwas Ina print dress and also · -~~~==~==:::.:::.:.:=_
Mrs. Janres Casey Sr .. Middleport, 1)ad a carnation corsage.
, .and Linda Saxon, Point Pleasant,
.· A reception was held In the church
and Ralph Snider, Williamstown, sl:icial room Immediately following
W.Va.
·.
wedding. The table featured a
The wepding took place Oct. '20 : three· tiered fountain cake topped
with the Rev. Robert Miller official·. ~th the traditional bride and
ingat theilouble-rlngceremony.
groom. Rhonda Zirkle registered
Music was provided by June Van ,.!he guests, and serving at the
Vranken whose selections ihcluded - tefreshment table were Wanda
"Endless Love" a nd "We've Only nando and ..tngela Sellers .
· ' The couple resides In Charleston,•
J ust Begun."
The bride, escorted by Chuck ''S.C. wherethegrobmisemployedas
Rando, wore a forma l gown of il welder with Swygart Shipyards.
organza with chantilly lace. It was !. The bride graduated from Meigs
-fashioned with a Queeri Anne lfigh School. .
·neckline and bishop sleeves, and the · · The groom graduated from Point
multi· tiered skiJ·t flowed into a ''fleasant High.
chapel train. The bride wore a
·
bandea~ ·1ace headpiece with a
fingertip veil. She carried aeascade
bouq~H1t'' 11f lavender roses with,. - .
steph;JI6tis, lilies, baby's' breath, d::l ~·
'
and ribbons tied in lovers' I<nots.
POMEROY - Bookmobile ser·
Teresa Hoffman served as ma- vice in Meigs County Is brought by
!ron of honor for' her sister. The . the Meigs County Public Library
bridesmaids were Vicky Thomp- ~ .under contr~ct with the Ohio Valley
son. sister of the groom, and Cheryl Area Libra~1es.
Harmon. Their gowns were orchid, . : Bookmobile schedule for Manand they. carried lace fans with .d~y, Dec. 24 - No service due to
lavender ahd white flowers.
. ~;hOliday.
Mike Hall of Poinl Pleasant •• Wednesday, Dec. 26 - Tuppers
W.Va. w6s the best man, and th~
· (Lodwick's), 7:25-7:55p.m.;
ushers were Tom McCoy, cousin
Addition, 8: 10·8: 40 p.m.
8
Salle 3.471 Jean Nate
bti~ and groom both wore beige
street length dresses,
A reception was held at the hOme
of the bride's parents following the
wedding. Cake and punch were
served. by Grace Gumpf, aunt of.the
FREE GIFT WRAP
OPEN SUND/'\ Y J. 5
bri<!e, and Belinda Bush, a sister-In·
law.
The couple resides in Cottagevllle,
W.Va.
2nd
&
Srare, Gall polis
__________________.:____,L~~~~~~~~~'!!!
After Bath Splash, Powder. Body Lo· Save 4.971 Amphibious
GXGXG. motori zed 6 wheel drive.
tion.
Our
9.97 ..................................... '5
Our 8.47 ................................. ~~
Spray Mist \? oz. and Eau de Cologne 2
oz.
.
§]
Our 7.67 ..................................... '6
•'
•
.,•
..
I
"'
•
.Jhe
Save 97<1 Pkg: of 12
lave•.97!5·sprlng
Chest Pull Exerciser
Men 's Polyeser/Collon
~.~fk~r~~'e.fs...................... •S
Ea. .
~~~~~;z-g~~8e •n•·ln~,.
Jtanctr .... Paokl
2.4-exp. ro111 no. 126,
Save 2.97! C,omfotfable
Joggl'lg/Exerclselult
Save 1.37! Zippo lighten
PooaP CIIIDr Pltnt Plllle
With elasllc at the neck,
waist, cults. Our 8.47 ..... $1
135
flm.IS0100.' .. ' ...... ' $1
Brush finish style. Many to choose Save 2.97! Amphibious
4X4 motorized 4 wheel drive.
trom ..
Our 6.37 ................... .................. '6 Our 7.97 ..................................... ' 5
Bookmobile schedule
Sav.e 2.971 ExecutiYI
Dumbrells by DP
I pair ~ 6.6 l~s. each.
Our 12.97 ................... ,............ '1 0
.....
\
8
.
'
............
11111
HMS
San 4.971 ,.,All
Save 6.971 Pro Style
1250 watt hair dryer
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Pierre COrdln~~~ne~ 2 oz.• ... : :: . .' .· _
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Fran:.., .........2..... ..
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'I
-
SPECIAL "AFTER HOUriS' SAlE A~ YOUR NEI(7H80Rk000 K M.C\JH
•
"
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(
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~11
. 920 ~13
�I
't 01
B 8 Tile Sunday Tii1WI-S.ntinel
·
Calendar
' SUNDAY
RACINE - The children's
Christmas program will be held
at 7: :ll p.m. Sunday at the
Racine First Baptist Church.
'Die publls is invited.
·
RACINE ~ · Chrlstma~ pro
gram at Mt . Moriah Church of
God, Racine, 7 p.m. Sunday with
public invited.
o•..,••, 23, 19t4
Pon-y Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point P11a.ant, W. Va.
CHESTER - The Uvtng
Word Church of God, Chest~r.
wUI present a Chrlstmu program Sunday evening at 7 p.m.
The play "Bethlehem Alley" wUJ
be featured · as well as spectat
singing by "Sunrise." The public
Is innvlted. .
.
p.m. Publk IIIVIted.
~
- o~.Ky~r
Freewm Baptist Churcll wUJ
!lave a Cbrtstrnas JIC'08I'IIII,
Sunday, 7 p.m. PubliC invited.
BIDWELL - Pnapect
Bap-
tist Cllurcll wiD have a Christ·
mas pctJII an&, Su!Kiay, 7: :ll
MORGAN CENTER - Morgan Center Christian Holiness
Cllurcll wUl '!lave a Christmas
program, Sunday, 7::fl p.m.
Public invited.
·
POMEROY - A Christmas
program will be held at 7 p.m.
Sunday evening at t1ie Bradford
Churcll of Chrl,st. The pubDc Is
invited to attend.
pcqpam, ~. 6 p.m. PubUc
litvtted.
p.m. Public invited.
EUREKA - PlvvldeiiCe MissiOnary Bapllat C)nitcll wUl bave
a Clu1ltmas piooeram, Suliday, 7,
p.m. Public Invited.
CROWN CITY - Klnis
Chapel Cllurch wiD !lave a
Christmas progam. Sunday, 7
PORTER - Clark Cbapel
Churcll wty !lave a ·Christmas
ADDISON - Add1lon Fl'f!eo
wtll Baptlit Church wUJ have a ·
Ou1ltrnaa PJ'0111'81Tl, Su!Kiay,
7:":fl p.m., and Rue&t speaker will
be JWv, MilEs Trout. Publlc
Invited.
-
BIDWELL -r ijlprlngfleld
Bap1
tist Churcll w1D 'have a Christ·
mas JliOQI am, slllld8y, 7 p.m.
Public Invited.
'
CLIPPER'S Mn.t - Christ
United Method~~! CHurcli wUl
liave youth Chrtstmas JlitJii'llll,
Sunday, 7 p.m. Public invt~. :
CENTERVTI..LE- Ther¢wW
be a Dve nativity scene, visible
from Route 35, Sunday, li to 7 :
p.m.
CROWN CITY .., Mt. Zion :
Church wm !lave a combined :
serviCe· Sunday, 10 a.m. There
wtU also be a Christmas pro .•
gram, 7 p.m. Public Invited.
~.
COPYRIGHT 1984 · THE KROGER CO .• ITEMS AND
. PRICES GOOD SUND ... Y, DEC . 23, THROUGH MON·
DAY DEC.' 24, 1884, IN G.IU.II'IIt.IS Alll POMEIIll' STORES.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.
.P or
1rime.- i'mtirut
Section
.
.
D111;
lu23', lt04
Citrus
Bowl tilt ends in 17-17 tie'
.
.
reverse
: ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Wltlllts 2-point conversiOn on a
to
lltgll-powered offense sllackled, pin the tie. ,
· lSth-ranked Florida State used a
, Georgia's .KeYIJi Butler was just
4S.yard blocked punt return by Joe short on a '16-yardtleldpl attempt
Wessel wltll3: 58 to play and a2-potnt on t1ie ftnal play of the pn~e.
conversion to gain a 17-17 tie with
Fresbman Lars Tate had given
, Georgia in the 39tli Florida Citrus · Georgia a 14.0 lead when he scored
13owl footbaDgameSaturday.
on runsot4 and 2yanlswltlllnaspan
· Georgia, )!lhtcll once led 14.0, was of 4: 18 in the second quarter.
attempting to run out the clock in the
Kevin Bu'iler, fourth on the
waning minutes wllen Lenny Chav· !"CAA's all·tlme scoring Ust, gave
.ers blocked Chip .Andrews' punt, the Bulldogs a 17-9 lead wltll12: 10
Smacking It toward tpe the goal
remaining wllen hedrllled a 36-yllfd
where Wessel scooped It upon the13. flelil goal.
Darrln HoUoman then scored the
Florida State, stymied by critical
penalties and tllree twmvers, cut
Into a 14.0 halftime deficit when
freshman Derek Scllmldt ldeked a
32-yard lleld goal earlY in the third
•
quarter.
The Seminoles tllen cut the lead to
14-9 on Tony Sl)1ith' s 1-yard run with
14:21 left tn the game, but Eric
Thomas' keeper .op a 2-polnt
attempt was foiled.
The deadlock lett Florida State
wltll a 7-3-2 record and Georgia
closed at7+1, ending a three-game
losing streak with the tie.
St. John's. outclasses UCLA.
NEW YORK (AP) - · Walter s~points; then outscored the Bruins
Berry had acan:er-hlg1123pointsas · 16-6 to take a 68471ead.
MlmTiiED ITBII POliCY
8111-ranked St. John's relloupded
· from Its only loss of tile season to
outclass UCLA 88-69 Saturday In
college basketbaU.
Fowi other Redmen hit double
flguresasSt.John'sranltstecordto
6-lln Its first game since betngu~
at Niagara a week ago. The Bruins
fell to 2-5.
·
· St. John's broke the game open
early, as Wlilie Glass' seven points
led'aa15-Jspreeearlylntheflrsthalf
tllat produced a 24-131ead that was
never in danger.
Berry, a 6-6 soplxlmore from New
York wllo played at San Jacinto
(Tex.) J~nlor College last season,
scored 14 of his points in the first half
as St. John's took a lead of ~35 at ·
Intermission. His previous high for a
single game was 18 tn the season·
opener agalnst.NCAA.
.
· UCLA came to within 52-41 early
in tile second half. But tile Redrnen,
with 7-root BIU We~nlngton scortng
·
Each of theM od.-tiMd ~om• is roquired to be roocMy
avaHabte for llle in each Kroger Store, except 11 apecificenv
noted In this ad. tf we do run out of en advertiled item we will
offer ~ou vo_
u r choice of 1 comparabte item, when 1 ~ 1 1lat*t,
reflecting the ume sevlngs or a rainc..eck which wiU entiUe
V~ .to .P.urchall the advtrtilttd item at the advenlted price
~tthtn 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be acCepted per
ttem purchased.
.
.
foTA• .SATIIFAcnotl GUAMmE
Duncan H.ines
Cake Mix\
E~tng vou buy 11 Kroger is gi.Jaf"8r,teed for your total
. llt!tfaction regardtna of manufacturer. If you art not
sat•sfled, Kroger will replace vour item with the aeme brand or
a comparable brand or refund your purchaee price.
AIRCHIEf 113 SIZE
CALIFORNIA
18.2~oz.
Navel .
Oranges
YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE
WILL CLOSE MONDAY DEC. 24th.
AT 6:00pm
CLOSED
CHRISTMAS DAY
Each
Chris Mullin, the 6-6 member of
the U.S. gold·medal winning Olym·
picteam,had16pc)lntsforSI.John's.
Wennlngton had 14, Glass 11 and
Mike Moses 10.
Nigel Miguel, Kelvin Butler and
Gary Maloncon eacll scored 10
points to lead UCLA.
IU!ggle MWer, the 6-7 fotward
whO had started the Bruins'
previous 'siX games, was benclled
for tile first half for what a
spokesman said were disciplinary
reasonS. He played sparingly In the
second half ana did not score.
DePaul61 NW 58
ROSEMONT,IU. (AP) -Tyrone
Corbin scored 14 points and Tony
Jackson adiled 13 Saturday as No. 5
DePaul, recovering from an upset
earUer · this week, posted a 61·56 ·
victory over Nortllwestern.
'f!le 7-2 Blue Demons, wllo lost to
Westl;!rn Michigan Wednesday,
uSed fierce defensive pressure in the
second half to overcome a gamehigh 20 points from Northwestern
fresllrnari Sllon Monis and keep ·
alive a 30-game winning streak at
lxlme.
Northwestern, which also got 14
points from John ,Peterson, sUpped
to 3-5.
Behind :J0.20 atllalfllme, DePaul
converted nine Wildcat turnovers
into eigllt points and strungtogetller
runs of stx and 10 points to take their
· first lead of the contest, 38-36, with
11:44 gone.
DePaul never relinquished that
lead, aitlxlugh Northwestern lied It
at 52·52 on a layup by Peterson.
But Kenny Patterson, who fin·
!shed with 12 points for DePaul,
followed with a 15-foot jumper and
after Morris missed the front half of
a one-and-bonus situation from tile
free tllrow ltne, Corbin came back
.with \1 soaring ttp-tn for a 56-52
DePaul edge.
BREAKING 'DOtOUGH - Florida stale University lllllback Rooolevelt Snipes ( 28) breaks llii'OOP lor
a sliort galn.durtng Saturd~'s CltftiS Bowl action bt
..
.;.
,
I
M'
Orlando
na.
'The
Seminoles
and
Georgia
battled
to a
'
. 17-1711e. (AP Laserphoto) .
.
176 SIZE
MarauderS roll over WaJTiors for fifth win
Tangerines
Tuesday, December 25th.
OR 125 SIZE
Re-Open Wednesday Dec. 26th. At
7:00am And Resume Normal Hours
.
rangelos
'
"GREAT GIFT IDEA" ·.
HERRUD'S ROYAL CROWN
14-17-LB. AVG. SMOKED
Fruit Bowls
And .Baskets
Semi-Boneless
Whole Hams
I
saw an early 14-6lead melt to a 19-19
tie midway into the second quarter.
~elstaff
· VINCENT - Evermore resem- It was aU Maroon and Gold In the
bling the championship . callber · next four minutes as Meigs ripped
team they were picked to be, the off theflnall4 points In the period to
take a comfortable 33-19 edge Into
Meigs Marauders rolled to their
·
tile lockerroom.
~
third SUCCf?!!Sive win wltll a 76-59
Subs
Flnlsll
Game
· verdict over Warren Local here
By tile third canto's end, the
.
Friday. .
Marauders
bad puUed away to a
Meigs remains in a deadlock for
commanding
54-33 advantage.
second place, one game behind
Meigs'
subs
coasted
out the win in
front-running Alexander, wttll a 5-2 1
t1ie fourth quarter.
slate inside TVC play. Meigs Is 5-3
Blessed with superior helgllt over
overall. Warren local fell to 2-6
the WarriOrs, Coach Drummer was
overall and to 2-5 'tn TVC action. ·
· Coach Greg Drummer's quintet pleased witll theptayofhisblgmen.
ByKErrH WISECUP
·s
Kroger 2%
Lowfat Milk
95 .
3
Gallon
:ro
SJ495
'
''I was very hapPy wltll thl! play of
our four big men (MUce Chancey,
Lee PoweD, Dave Fisher, and Jay
Carpenter). Carpenter played good
defense and bad several steals,'
Chancey was tougll OJI the boards, '·
Fisher played weU, and Powen~t
came off the bencll todoagoodjob."
Chancey lead the Marauders In
botll scoring and rebounds as the 6-4
junior put In 17 points and came
down with 15 rebounds, botll
game-highs.
Carpenter added 15 points plusstx
rebounds and Powell chipped his
seaaoi)·!Jigll of·12 points along with
Pound
Meigs canned 'l:l of 53 from the
six rebounds. Rick Wise was the
fourtll Marauder in double figures , field for 51 percent l)lld continued Its
consistency at the foul line wltll a
wltlll3 points.
spltd
!2 of :fl for 73 percent. Warren
Rauch Paces W~
Local
made23of58 from the field for
Brian Rauch led the Waniors In
•
39
percent
and put in 13 of 23 foul
scoring with 14 points and also tied
shots
for
56
percent.
Alktrewlthteamleadershipwltllslx
A 40-25 rebounding edge was held
rebounds.
"Weplayedwellmostofthenlght by Meigs. Warren committed only
seven turnovers while Meigs was
and I was glad to see everybody get
to play. The only thing that I was guilty of 13. Warren \VaS cllarged
disappointed tn was tllat we put with 23 fouls and Mejgs 19
MRS Faces AthenA Ne~
tllem onthefoullinetoomanytlmes
· The Marauders take a two-week
in the fourth quarter (16attempts) ,"
break from TVC play but wiU have a
l!£lded Coach Drummer.
return engagement with Atllens a t
AHSFriday . .
Meigs returns toTVCplay on Jan.
4, at home with Wellston . Warren
Local travels to Trimble Jan. 4.
Box score:
MEIGS ('ICJ- Hk'K W ~· ~ ·S. i-1: B r ad Alli>IAAOn
2·2-tl: Juytarprnlt-rt;.:H5; Mlltf' C' I\a.M~· 7~l-17: Da w•
F'1 ~b;>!- Z..2·~ : I~· Pmn 41.'l-1· 11: ~'l "'Tl B.akN (}...\..1;
Rodd HaJTisonO-U-11; <.: hti.~ K t'fl l"ll'dy l~"l :.!; Ctu;tsShank
IJ.O.Il". Pa rkt'r I..OOR 142. TOI'ALS ri·:Z.~.
W..UUtt::.' ' LOCr\L l58 ) - . ll't~ Pt~iml"'l" 2· 1 !'I; Jim
Jngrdm&G-12: BtlunfbLK'hM ·lt Dou~Hrs.-.on l -0- 2:
CI"(IJ! Huffmun f'l.l-.1; Dii VI' MltdH'fTl 4·l ·l1: Kf'n i\V
Alldn•·l·2·10: CW1)• R yan J.H:!. 'lUfA.I.S !l-IJ.~.
lly lfUIIIWri'\:
r-.1c>lji!!; .•.......... , ............•..•........•.. .17 16 t1 72- 7&
Wt~ 1 1'f'tlLocai .....•....... ,........ , ....... ,.H !i 14 Ji--~
Harinan Trace keeps SVAC
slate clean with · 72-55 victory
1
SLICED
FREE
By SOOI'l'WOLFE
'llmes-Sentlnel staff
KROGER
Brown &
o~~~~~rrd
erve Rolls .. 11-oz.FREE! ,
THORNE APPLE VALLEY 7-9-LB. AVG.
ROl,JND OR BUFFET STYLE .
Boneless··
Smoked Hams
..... . '
a
.........
· U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF
t
.
Standing
'Rib Roast
- ~
Pound
Pound
FOR A GR.EAT HOLIDAY MEAL
LET THE DELl DO IT!
Fresh Baked
AVAI LABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl·
BAKERIES .. HDT FOODS AVAILABLE
I tam TIL } pm DAILY
Dinner
Rolls
sPRINGDALE FARMs wHoLE
Sausage ..
DINNER INCLUDES 10·12-LB.
AVG. COOKED TURKEY,
2·LB. CORNBREAD
DRESSING, 24-0Z. tURKEY
GIBLET GRAVY, 1-LB.
CRANB~~RJE~~'-b~~S 1-DOZ.
Dinner
F•
$
lb.
BY THE PIEC~ LB ... $2.99
,
•
,.
WHOLE OR HALF
SANDY MAC
12·13-LB. AVG.
VIRGINIA
81
~
.
B!!1SEII, FIR~- E:.ien•s Royce._. (U)
lire! a Jump llhot over llannln Trace's~!IIM (S)
· duriJIII: Fliday'a SVAC luudw-..1 contelt. 'lbevlllllnl
PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES,
MTN. DEW, PEPSI .FREE,
.
Diet Pepsi· ,
or Pepsi Cola .
..
'
bolt
Eaclel. ·n-u to remain
lmbeata; Ia loop play.
Southem quintet still unbeaten in
8-Pak
,....
0
....
I
I
,.
sopllomo~
~lnLoop ·
'
RACINE-Coming
off a non·
teaguevlctory1on Tuesdaynlgllt, the
~ Creek ,Bobcats slammed
'')lead-on" Into a Southern Tornado
!)ere Friday 41Veiiln&. as the local
Whlrlwtncll stOnned to a 63-45SVAC
~ trlumpll at Charles W.
Hayman GYJ1lli;llll!l1'!1 tn Rflcine.
0.21
pian
Davis had 6, while Greg Leachman
pouned the Inside groove for 12
caroms.
Triple Overilme 'l1lt
In a deceiving 59-49 triple over ·
time reserve tUt, Hannan Trace
claimed the exciting prolonged
victory.
Eastern played its heart out, and
tile Wildcats put fort.h an equally
tough effort as Richard Stitt Iedwith
17 points, Steve JarreD and Brtan
Porter added 13 each.For Eastern
Bryan Durst ~d 17, Darin Drenner
13, and Mark Griffin 6.
Eastern plays in the Holiday
lournament at WahamanextThurs·
day a~d Saturday, playing Federal
Hocking in between on a Friday. HT
played Oak HUI Saturday night at
home.
EA.~~ j:mJ -
H~·,,... 1\1~•11 , J.\.;t.:J!o!: K•'"l'in
Ra~•r. J..(Hi: ( , l ~ 'f: I.I'<M
' hmun, !HI-It t .Jioff Catdlt•l>tt.
.1-ll-G; F'.ddk> Col li ns, ll ~ :l ; .Jim f'aJd,..'f111, 1+.1: Mm"k
Shrfvf'fli(l.{WI, TOTAI-X 111-3-SJ
" IIANN~ 'l'ltM't-; (1l) - fllii.Y S.•<~ln, 7-l t l : hi"IU•
Aillllf-s._4.0.St; Phil lli• lk';\". 4 ·1 ~ S!i"'l' S!:t t, ~ -4J.~; Mtkl·
J.Ja\ril(, W U ; Mark .'"ihn-t.~. i;·IH2 : nur\" ~ irk. 1·h 1
'rol'r\JJU4+Tl
·
St'CW hyquu.ftt'f'o;:
f:.'ls!•·m ........:········ ..................... lfi !:1 24 ti--5\
Hanmm 1'1a1• ...
. .. , .. ,....... 21 IN :Jl 1.'1-/'l
College scores
l"'r1dwy't. ~ 't llh'lf• ~u.tl
t:..\''T
11[11"\'an l
li ris~ m
~.
\ "rnmnt
~ • ..., .,.
~
77. N.f'.,_ 'tu!rlnJIC' 'ill
S()\,"T H
fuldll S!. Kl, Plltlibur~o:h 7fi
t ••orJtla T f'(' h ~ . AujlU,.IQ !).1
l..ou l~lun a f-;t .
?K. Nt•w O"rll'ans ti4
S. 1\lah.lnut h'7. S. Ml so;.k<ltppl ~~
1\danfl tifi, n 1r~ l;• M M !Wi
Va. Commof1WI•.al!h
Aut.Jm !'e
m,
\.
BySOO'I'I'WOLFE
'11m1!8 s ""el Staff
. '
.~ doWned the
~·
Baked
Ham
Turkey
$249 • .i2.~t C
i..A1i'Beef
EAST MEIGS - Placing four
men in double figures, the Hannan
Trace Wildcats of Coach Mike
Jenkins roiled to a convincing 72·55
SVAC basketball triumph over the
Eastern Eagles here Friday ~enlng at E!'Stern High School.
·
The win boosts Hannan Trace to
3-1 overall and 2.0 Inside the SVAC.
Eastern drops to 1-3 and 1·1 Inside
loop play.
WeD-Balanced Altack
Awell-balanced, tnsJcle.outattack
by the WUdcall! cut the Eagles no
slack as they were equally effective
from the perimeter and .the baseline. 6-1 Senior Bmy Swain and !HI
Junior Deke Barnes paced the
attack wltll 15 points eacll, Mark
Sheets and Mike Davis added 12.
PhU Balle)r 8, and Steve Stltt etght.
The WUdcats tOnid offensive
spreeovwsli~ an outstanding
individual perfolmance by Junior
fOiward Royce Bissell, wllo led the
Eagles with a game-high 28 points,
hitting 13 or 16 field goaiattempts for
a red·hot 83 percent shooting cUp.
Sopllomore Greg Leachman added
10, Kevin Barber 6, and Jeff
Caldwell G.
Initially liT took a 2.0 lead on a
successful tip play from BUly Swain
to Deke Barnes with only t11ree
seconds trtpped off the clock. Royce
Bissen quickly retaliated with an
inside jumper to knot the scoreat2·2.
Behind .an equaUy tortld Barnes,
Batley, Swain shooting attack liT
led 15-10, before Bissell struck
again. Bissen, ironlcaUy had ail 12
Eagle points, ending the frame with
14, tile frame ending wltll a 21-16
score.
Breaking open .a relatively close
game. the Wildcats clawed Into the
Eagles game
and took control
of the tempo with a tonid fast
breaking attack. Scoring eight
unanswered poin\5 in the second
canto, HTroiledtoa31-l91ead.golng
into the llalf with a 39-25 advantage.
,
Lead Cut To Ten
A tempo setting pace put Hannan
tn control early In the third frame,
but Eastern took away the 'Ca tsfast
break and climbed back into tile
game at 5949. A husWng effort
aDowed put the Eagles In position for
a comeback, but they ran out or
steam going dOwn the stretcll as on
several occasions liT led by 19,
before closing the door on a 72-55
finale.
liT hit a lxlt35of63atternptsfor55
percent, canning 4 of 8 at the line,
grabbing 28 rebounds, six turnovers, 2 assists, 5 steals, and 11
personal fouls.
Eastern hit a warm 26 of 62 from
tile field for42 percent, hlt3of5at the
line, and grabbed 25 rebounds.
Eastern bad 3 assists, five steals,
and 10 fOUls.
Swain led with 7 rebounds and
.
'
The win puahes Southern's record
to 4-2 overaD and 3-0 tnalde the
SVAC, while Kyger Creek clropl, to
1-3 and matntatns an 0.2
tec;Iger. .
The Tornadoes were led In IICOrlng
by junior point Jll8l'd.Todd Adami,
wlio ripped theaetator 11 palnta 111c1
claimed four key ltNII enmute to
teaaue
the wtn. Two othl!l' 'l'omadoeti allocracked thedouble-llprebarrier as
Mart ~ notclled 14
~o~ference play, 63-45
.
bard-pressed for a basket In the
and never let up. Following the
points, the biggest output of his , initial tip-off, wlllcll Southern con·
openingroond,KygerCreekmlssed
vanity CaNer, and senior Kevin trolled, Todd Adamsl'lla!d tn lor the
a goal and Southern was off 'to tile
Teaford zipped 10. Jay Bostick inllial score and a 2-0SHSlead. After
races for an 18-8 first period lead.
added el&bt and Kelley GniE!Ier 6.
KC lleCIIer In Secoad
a KC mllcue SoUthern capitalized
The Bobcats also bad three men tn with another Adams score, before .
KYKer rebounded somewllat In
double ligures, led by senior Steve Chuck VQII!l notclled a fade-away
the seconil frame as both teams
Wauall with 1.2, Chuch Voael added Jumper for a 4-21C0re.
bustled to a 32-2lllalfllme score.
10, and Br11n Wan&lley 10.
Southern controlled the tempo of
Southern eet up Ill oftei\ae and
Southern llliDI out of tile starting Adami aaaln c•sbed In t11e chips
tile game, ' - ' · Kyaer Creek
gate with an IIQI'elllve. fast- with a Jumper fl'om the wtng. Being
$!aged a cletenntned aeconc1 llalf
breaking, tuU court pressing game,
atlack, that fell sllori at tile buz2Jer
l'
63-45.
Southern. hit 'II of 61 for 44 percent
from the lleld, while Kyger slightly
bettered that mark at 45 percent,
cannlhg 21 of 47.
SHS hit 9 ofl3atthe foul line for 69
percent, had 31 rebounds,l3 sW&ls,
15 turmvers, 10 assists, and 131'11ws.
K~ hit 3 ot 9 at the line for 33 i
percent, bad 28 ~ rourJ
steals, 23 -tul'll!l\'f'is,3 8S!Iista, ancllS
Continued on C-2
�P'oo•-r Mlddl.flllf . Galpllle, Ohio Point Plea~a~~t, W.Va •
•
North ·Gallia notches first loop victory .:; .
'
ByJOBNJI1tiiDIAN
'J'ImM s " a' 811ft
PATRIOT -Too 11111Ch ·Mlke
Kemper. The 6-1 North GalJJa
,
11J DI!:NNM 8111JMATB
'Dnwd
·
:_
Southern quintet...
S...lhftltfm .....;,, ........... ........ l4 16
9
~..t
races
Athens at 9 p.m.SQuthern also
Ross·Soutl!eastern on Saturday.
GUI
D.1'111DN (G) - Jay Ebrldi.W.8~ Dartn ftwsb
().0..().~ TNiord -4-:Z·W,Mirtr: J11Tt'D 1-2-t, Todd
Adlnu 8-.'Ht.KdleyGNf'Sl'l" SD-6. Matt Harrll141..
Rk"hard Gllbrldl' 0.2-2,5rotl Wlcldlrll! BOO.SNII ,
Cnntr 0.00. Sft"Ve' Tf'&klrd 0-(H). 'lUI'AU rJ.NI.
_.,_,
IIVGI!'.II CIIEEII - Chuck V....
Mattt-s().0.6. 1'0'1'Aill ZI.J.II
'
Smltht'rn ..... ......................... .... ~ lf
u
lS-Q
KY1tf!I"Cnft ........................... 8 13 1q lf-.0
.
PPliS TRIPS WAIIAMA- 'Ole Point Plel18811t Bl11 ~won the
; flnlt bMIIe of Malon County defealln11 the Wahama While Falcons,
·' n•, Friday nlpt at Potm l"eu•nt High Sehool. 'Ole conlelt wu cjoee
. throuCftoat the flnlt hall wltll the ~ lied at tll at the inlennlllllon.
'1. : However, Polat PleiiNIH used clutch free tluvw ahooUnglate bt the
fotatt. quarter to IIGtch IIIII flnlt victory of the season. (Photo by Gary
Clark).
, ~-Alexander held Meigs
withOut a field goal for the first 10
inlnutes of the second half to score a
42·37 win and takeovertopspotln the
: TVC Girls' cage race In a battle of
• tihbeatens here Thursday.
•. Meigs had held a 27·221ead at the
"half, but Alexander limited •the
Marauderettes to four free throws to
narrow the gapto31-29headlnglnto
the final period and ouU;cOredMelgs
1U during the last quarter.
Coach Rnnl..ogan'screw suffered
their first loss and fallto6-1overall
and to 5·1 In the TVC. Alexander Is
7.()overall and6-0in theTVC.
. Jenny MU!er led Meigs with 17
,:paints. Including nine In the first
,Jiuarter when t,he Marauderettes
';lUmped to a 17·Siead. Jodi Harrtsor\
. a,nd JulleMU!er, who led Meigs with
rebounds. had eight points each.
HUDNALL'S
PLUMBING
& HEATING
317 W. !ND 51'.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
BUS. 992-6&60
RES. 992·7764
Opening Dec. 26, 1984
DISHES
Fiberglas
Mesh
Aluminum
Christl Bate)' led Alexander.with
14 points· while Missy Keefer
chipped II! with 10.
In the preliminary reserve game,
Alexander made It 8 clean sweep
with a 42·35 win. Shelly Stobart, Sue
Parsons, and Tammy Wright led
Meigs with eight points each WhUe
Williams led Alexander with 10.
'TheMarauderettesdonottakethe
floor again until Jan. 3when the host
Warren Local.
Meigs also has a home game Jan.
! 5 with NelsonvUJe.York In a
make-up game.
six
8 Ft. to 20 Ft. .
..
MEIGS l:n) - Ha1Ti~ J :UI, .lmnl Mlllrr 1>.$. 17.
Gordon 1-U-2. .Jullf' Mllk'r .1-2.a, Rhonda Haddox 1-0-2.
TOI'AVi
lf.t.37.
1\LE."'IriDt.:K
!UI -
Dall~·
4·0-R, Ball-.y G-2·14.
Bw-k•· l-1-7, Old!m Ht Kl't'b :2-6-Kl. TIYI'i\UI
··~~,.;. .....,
~
Mo•J., . ..................
.. .. ... 17.. .. . 108 14 •7
J\lc>)(Unde>T·
....... ·:. .... ....... .........
-:17
IJ.--t2
~Litt
. le
.
Lancers edue
e
• "B'. team,
· 74
69..
.:.~~;:MeJmi
.
.
.
•
e.....,
::. VINCENT _
ankle Injury during practiCe before
the season started.
• intheTVCwlthanexcltlng74-69wln
Warren's Joe Anderson led all
~.aver Meigs' reserves here Friday.
scorers with 24 polntsd while Chris
-;, With the win. Warren goes to 6-1, Cowelladded20.Andersonat6-4and
· onegamebehlndundefeatedBelpre . Cowell at 6-3 are taller than any
i. ~nd Meigs taUs to 4-31n the TVC and starters on the Warren varsity·
;':to 5-3 overaU.
·
MEIG."- t•) - F.:m;un 1H23; flfcl«'r &2-U :
,• Huey Eason led Coach Mlck uowa<d nn: M"""' "'''
.'Chll
. ds' crew with 23 points while """
IM : """'"''·~2. TOT.U.S11·7...
W,o\RIU!~ LOC 'AL ('U)o.o\nd!!.-- " " · ('ow~
' DoMie Becker added 14 and Jesse
...,, · - ~·, • ~• ...._
1
~:Howard 11. Highly·touted sopbiJ.. :=:,.~.~":.-;.,:;,-:ro.,ms.;;; .
d nore Ed Kitchen saw his first action
,,_.,.
· or \he year. playing two minutes In ..,,,,
......... ....................... ·" " 16 24-"'
Wamfl l.OC.al ........ ................. 11 lR XI ~74
· !he first half. Kitchen suffered an
"'"'2-2.o: Pow"'""''
·~
· ,
•·
lo
I
~'l'STEMS
OUR SHOWROOM
QRAND OPENINQ
..
i
Come in
' Regithr for
SONY Watchman TV
to be gi~en away. ($200
Retail Value)
DISHES ON DISPLAY
Systems from SI695
installed
1Y Till POST OFFICE
378-6158
ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO
HOUIS: Mon.-Fri. 2·6
Sat. 11-6
I
'
I
MEIGS TIRE CENTER, Inc.
John F. Fult•
arillfll JC. Fultz •
.•.
J. Marcus Fultz
William "Bill" Williams
II
larry Sigler• .
Keith King
'I
sealed the victory.
sco~w:e~~~~e;:~lna:
.Point PleaaaJU High
12
'IbeP~ntPleasantjunlor varslty
r,;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
MUZZLE LOADER
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FlEE Gin
:1•
CALL
:f
•
This ,o~p!ln worth $100 on any INGIOUND I'OOL liT or SPA in·
voicetl llttween new allll Christmas. Coupon plus $1 DO heWI • j
your Sl'Aar SWIIlW.ING POOL KIT at low 1914 discount pric.- 1111· : -1:
.til Summer.
,
· .
:1
HOLIDAy POOLS, INC.
I
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·...
(NOT OPEN ON SUNDAY)
OPEN 'TIL S P.M.
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CLOSEOUT SAL[ ON All
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Next To BetJ Honda
A lot Of VCR's
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Wahama junior
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....
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MOVIE RENTAL
~
' '''""'
BAUM
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MAIN ST.
CettlnR A V.C.R.
Fot Ch,ilfiiiH?
~~)h
F. I. F CTRO NICS.
915-3309
OPEN
MONDAY
'TIL 5 P.M.
Large Stltctian •f Movies
2 FOI$500
No Chargt for Christmat hy
lAIGE SELECnON OF
VIDEO TAPES
Ducks Unlimited
Eaetem Ohio Velley Cheptar
233 Second Avenue • Gelllpolla, Ohio 45131
.
(814)448-9680
SONY dealer
.
THE EASTERN OHIO VALLEY DUCKS UNLIMITED COM·
MITTEE WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE FOLLOWING DONORS
FOR ALL ·THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS AND SUPPORT. WITH
THEIR HELP THE LOCAL DUCKS UNLIMITED COMMITTEE
RAISED OVER $8500 AT TH"EIR ANNUAL DU BANQUET.
-
>car's .Bank a.
I ,.
• .
46-38.
. Thenextj~amef~r~BigBiacks
wm be Dec. 27, In opening round
Thank You .......
II
I
I
II
'I
action a( the Ripley Hlgll School
Chrlatmas Tournament. Waharna
wm hit the oourt again alao.on Dec.
'r/ tn opening round
tlon f the
Wahama High School~ew ;ear's
Classic
.....
12
••
I
.
·
Nibert led Point Pleasant with 25
points followed by MltcheU with
while 'Riftle and Odie Noble added
10 apiece.
COMPLETE LINE
OF MUZZLE
LOADING ACCESSORIES
SII.VI!IUIIIlD
SI\TEU.I'f.ll
•ANNOUNCINS•
I o
I o
basketball te
'
first quarter ~~t
Nlben connected on eight field Barnltz with
and
points,
goans and 7-7 from the foul Une.
respectively. Matt Dawaon and
Including five of Point Pleasant's Matt Thompson added 10 apiece for
first seven points as the Big Blacks WahB.ma.
Point Pleasant won the rebound·
surged to an early 7-2 lead.
However, Wahama regrouped to . lng battle 31·28 with Morrow and
score 10 of the ftnall2 points of the Mitchell leading the way with eight
quarter to take a
lead after apiece. Northrop ted the White
.
Falcona with seven rebounds.
eight mtnutli$ of play.
From the chartty stripe. Point
Afier a foul shot by Wahama to
start the second quarter, the Big Pleasant connected on 19-21 attempts while the White Falcons hit
Blackll tied tbe contest at 13 on
.consecutive baskets by Odie Noble
on 13-21.
and Kelly Rltfle.
.
The win raised the Blg Blacks'
These two Mason county rivals
record to
while the White
played evenly throughOut the rest of
the second hlllf with neither team
taking more than a four point iead.
With time explrlngWahama's Jeff
Barnltz connected on a 25-footer at
...........
the buzzer to knot the.contest at 23
as the teams entered the halftime
lockerroom.
Point and Wahama"traded a trio
of baskets to start the third quarter
which kept the teams deadlocked
by a 29-29 count. At the 2: 13 mark,
with the score tied at 35, Nibert
EI.ECTilONICS
connected on a driving layup and
Darrell Mitchell hit a foul line
jumper to give the Big Blacks a
39-35 lead. One minute later
Wahllms's Boyd Northrop drew the
White Falcons to wlih!n two points
with a rebOund basket.
Nibert ended the third quarter
scoring with a rebound basket at
the 25 second mark to build the
Point Pleasant lead back to four.
41·37.
The Big Blacks scored six of the
l'lrst eight points of the fourth
quarter td build their lead to 47·39.
. Baskets by MltcheU and Guy
Morrow with just over three
minutes to go In the game built
Point's advantage to 57-49.
Wahama ·cut the deficit to 61-5.1
following a basket and a foul sbot by
Warren Local's
· ~;~es remained In second place
The greatest of gifts
are family and friends,
as the magic of the
season never ends!
To wish you ... '
Falcons dropped to 1·1
12.0
\'Alexander girls hand .
:Meigs first -setback
f>lllll. St...
waup ~2-l2, AntMI\V Kllchen 2-0-4, Brtan MorJ-1
J.l-3, L.any Eqfe 2.fH. Gary PolnlnRfon 1-o-2, Bany
Riehle Clark with 1:M left In the
game, but the Wblte Falcons were
15
17~
. (il~
., )
·
.. - · .._ --.
25-polnt perfor'n:l8lltl ot Shawn
Nibert and clutch free throw
lhootlng down the stretch to hand
the Wahama White Falcons their
first 1- a( the sea1011, 71·57, Friday
12
I ·
rl8tall
a
DlftP?_~P~~-=~het ~~ty~aelldpe=~~::
rtlllllllnto21·14&,ttheendottheftrst ~. ~1! uver the wxt
111s1111ct yet aDd ·t he layld wltll'
stanza. Scuthwall!i 11 OOIItrlbuted to e1111t rpblule. for a rornmandll!g
Chrlstmanext wee1r: acara
thePiratelfaltstartbyturnlnatbe rt•leld.~scored:llpolata
'"Jbey juJt clealled us," M)ei:l
ball over tlve tlma Ill the llrlt two IIIII ....-eel 7 rftlqlmdt durtol the
said. "Wedldn'tdotheti*JIIIIItJeJf
mlllutelotthepme811delgllttlmes lln!lcll'u the Plrata CDI"k'll!d on · second ball we n.t to do. we ltll[
In the lint quarter. ·
·
llot111atll!mpt. frorntbetloor.
want toplayandwt!'Uben!ldyto~
Soufhweatet n controlled the 11eFor the pme, Kemper was :18-25 Monday IIIOI'IIlng and try to get
cond Qllll1er, pulling within 111ree from the field. 'lbe Pirates con·
ready for North GaUia 1n fhli
polnts,'Z-22, on a '-bit by Bailey nected on31-li.1attempts, while the tournament."
•
with 4:02 remaining In the halt. But HJablaDden scored ·on 2'7·'18 at·
Iii the reserve game, Andv.
the Pirates outllcored the Hlgbland- ' terr11JtS. !leal! Colley lec'l tJJe High·
Halslop and Jason Hm scored :u;.
ers 9-J, riYt!r the next two minutes, · ~ with l8 polllts. and 14 points each as the HlahlallderB WQI£
tor . a :M-25 lead. A buc~ by . rebounds. QalleyaddedUpolllts,
thelrllrstganll!ottheyear,U,;
Southwl!stern's Joe Baker with ~02 .WI\IIe Joe Baker and Steve.Pelfrey over the Pirates. Todd &~stein·
left cut the hal1tlme l'l1lll'gln to!).lJ. chipped Ill with .10 apiece tOr the · scored U points for the Plr8tes 81141'
Kemper SCQred :1! points and had Hlghlanders. · ·
·
Riel\ Welch chipped In with 7.
10 rebolmds In the flnt ball i>r the
North Ga!Ua Coach Bnlce WUson
Box score: ·
•
Pirates, connecting on 9 of from , said befQre the game he tiJid his
-..o.v.w 1• 1-MJ.. -JU.G.'I'c>dl
tl!e floor. As a team, the Pirates guards to force the ball IJis1de · ~..~~~=~-04.<.;:u'o.~~.:,::
corjnected on i6 of :6 first half ag!llmf the Highlanders. "We're "'' ,..., 01..,,. .... Earl Mayo IH><l. 'IVIAI.I'
attempts.
young," thePiratecoachsald, "and . "~ 1 •, - wuoHolllap~HM~
After . the Highlanders cut the we wanted to pltM! ~ can . -~u............~,~- collfYT+ll,,....
l'l1lll'gln to#39with1; 48togolnthe dominate. This was a crucial game
=~~~.,a.,......,..,.,, ,,m...,.,.l-32.
third quarter, thePiratesoutllcored for ua, with the county tournament
lloftbyqu-:
next week. We don't have the ldller North a.w. ............................. 2,. u .s 29-19
me:•;:
sophomore had Southwestern
Coach Lloyd Myers scratching his
head after he scored 42 PQIDts and
hauled down 16 reboundl, 10 on the
offensive boards, ·81 the Pltates
pulled away from the Hl&bJanders
In the fOurth quarter tor a ~
vlctmy here Friday nlght.
Thevlctorywasthesecondofthe
year for the Pirates, against four
losses. The loss was SotbWestem's
sixth of the year, without a win.
• Kemper scored nine points In the
ftrst three minutes of the game as
. thePtratesracedtoanll-2lead.But,
behln!l four points each by Steve
Pelfrey and Mike Bailey, the
Highlanders .raiDed. A basket by
Bailey with :45 left cut the Pirate
lead to J.9.14. But a basket by Todd
Dee! at the buzzer extended the
7.1-5~~
.Pt. Pleasant cagers .t op Wahama,
P'ootNIOf Mhldl.pnrt . GaiN.... Ohl.• Paint PI n•nt, W.Va.
'
The Commercial • SaYings Bank ' " "
Mlliibtr FDIC
: 'ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"
25 Court Street
ciret A. ftlhort
Joyce L hrlllll•
c.thtriM· A. hlllc
.hlllt A. (elnrt •
W11111tt P. Chtollhtllll
111ry L Cllar.
._.. F. Cth 1
...... L cD. hill Inlet
Dow••
Cltlly II .If..
Mlryi. Er-
.
Spring
W.,... L Nw.y
Anlll T. 0'......
~~1 '% ~·••
..... L ' •
-
Cllarlll L Holt~t, Jr.
S. ..._
·htiY L ,..,_
Joyce L .....
· i1rry L ...,..
JIM W. a-· .
Mit A. L--" . . .
· .......
.
Plaza
(llarletto I• ..,,...,
'
kltt "-'1111'••
1t11wt T. 111nn1ty
iMetll • • '""'
C1trttt1M I. ~
P.
lllttt
Silver Bridge
.
.
.
A. . . L....., .
, .... I. llWp
llldttrt L bwiiM
· Ul ....,
SINil A. s.,rt
De.W L SWhr
AIM I. llu••
. •
G._ D. Stlytltr
.
. (
Valley
Sheila K. Stidham
Allc,t K. SIIYW
Sl......lii L Sto"'r
. . . . Y. Swhhtt
Cllrol J. TaJier
'
>
,,
:
:~
••
Wlllotloe Taylor
IIIIo J. Teylw
Selly A........
· .,_ M. .W.....
faye L Wllilnlt
lhrril L Wile._
, l8ri A. y_,
;
•
~
•
~-.-.~··-
, ,_,·
Ewinl Funeral Home
farmer's lint
Fenderbosch's Deli
Paul Davies Jewelers
Central Trust
Bernard Fultz
Dr. R. R. Pickens
G&J Auto Parts
G&J of Pomeroy
G.C. Murphy
Gallll County Consv. Ch1b
Gt11 8rabiec
Jay Hall
J.D. Drilliltl
J&R Sports Shop
Jenkin• Concrete
Rubr T. Jenkin a
llropr's
Last Chance Carry Out
Dou1 Little, Attorney
Marchi's Distributinr
Mei&s County
Prosecutina Office
Motor Parts Company
like Mullens, Attorney
O'Dell Lumber
Ohio Valley Bank
Oscar's
Pawn Shop of Gallipolis
Point Dlstrlbutinc
Tawney Jewtllrs
Fred Crow, Attorney
Pim Dan's
Pt. Pluunt Kantucky
Fried Chicken
Red1111n Inn
Bob Saunders
Shake Shoppe
Jennifer Sheets
Shoe Cafe
Jim Spltte
Sport About
The Tuidermy Shop
Willi111 Tho1111s, Optometrist
Tom's Auto Clini~
Toler & Toler Insurance
Tope's Ftl'niture
•
Tri·County Sports Shop ••
Nancy T1wney
Willis Tint
Wo1111dorf & Tho1111s
Keith Wood
Tilt Hlldquarters
liclllel & Friuds
•
L--··••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
- .....
........ -----·-----.
Ace Hardware
Athens 7·UP & Pepsi Bottling
A. J. Stoctmeister
Barr's Super Market
The Blatllle
Baldwin's Fine Guns ·
Birr'a Grocery Store ·
Blum Lumber
Bernadine's
llltZ HOIICII
BtOWtl'l Tuidermy
Karr C011strutlon
Clrter Tntctor Sills
Cltttrll Supply Co.
David Dllll
TIM DOWII Under
Elliott'• Union 71
&!pint Ftnlture
• 1,1
,,
.......
�,
Da •• tar 23, 1914
,.,._,. Middleport Gollipolil, om-Pvint PlaaMint, W. Va.
'
:Spart~ns nip Trim-ble in double overtime, 88-84; BUS winsj
•
.
Alexander raUII!d
ALBANY -
• from a nine-point dettctt with three
; minutes 'left In regulation to pull out
: an liS-84 double overtime win over
: Trimble In a battle of the 1VC
• leaders.
• Trimble had led throughout the
• game with leads of :18-17, 41-37, and
57-53 at thequarterstops. The game ,
played,belore a standlnli roorn Only
crowd, was tied 70-10 at the end ol
rei:utatlon and ~ 78 at the first
overtime's conclusion.
Ryan Carsey led Alexander with
23polntsandl4reboundswhlleScott
Ferris added20 and Brad Jeffers 18.
Donovan Lent took game-high
honors with ?:l points for the
Tomcats and Tee' Morrlson added
22.
Belpre MaUs Comelilck
In another barn-burner at McAr·
thur, Belpre made a remarkable
eoo~eback In the ttnalll second! t o
pull out a 51-50 win over Vinton
County.
The Vikings seertled destined for
the upset wllha51H7le!ld and only~
seconds· remaining. Belpre's Chris
Newberry, whole only fQur polnll ot
thegameweretheEagJesflnaltour.
scored to make It ~- VInton
CQunty stalled thee lock down to nine
SE(:Onds, then they missed a lay· up
with Belpre taking the rebo\llld.
Newberry laid In the game-winner
with only I,Bl"OIIdl
rernalnlna
but
Belprest1DIIad1Dboldltl~tbua
Vlntm County 5l foal ·cBperalioll
lhot at the buzzrr boonced orr the
rtm.
Belpre's Robert M1l1er led the
way with 18 poiJits and 11 rellOUllds
while R111111 Log\le added 13. LaDce
Bollender llld the VIkings with 16.
·.I
Federal·Hecklnatoa51.J7wlna¥ei. •MJIIer. The Lancen' Ketth Barn·
luu"t; added 1. wblle Keith Robelfs
paced MiUel" with 18.
• ........- 1
N~Yon handed wtNess.
Welllton their III!'Yilllth atnlabt loJa
In a 97·!11 runaway. Jay Kllnellelln!d
34 for NYHS while T. L. Bentley
added 20. · Shawn Jenkins Jed
'
e
By .JOE KAY
•
' APSports Writer
ONCINNATI(AP)-TheCincln·
nat! Redshavea colorful newowrier
·Jn businesswoman Marge Schott,
who has bought controUing Interest
In the NatlonalLeaguectubtokeep it
In Cincinnati.
Mrs. Schott has kept a high profile
as a car dealer and previously a
limited partner In the Reds, starring
In her own television commercials
and renting alrpl~ to fly banners
over Riverfront Stadium.
She dldn 't shy away from the
unusual Friday, bringing her St.
Bernard dog, Schottzle, to a news
conference to announce her acqulsl·
tlon of controlling Interest. The
BYU edges ·
Michigan, 24-17
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The legs
may go, but as long as Brigham
Young's quarterback has an arm,
the Cougars are always In business.
Robbie Bosco's left knee and
ankle went In the firsi period but his
trusty right arm came through In
the clutch with 343 yards and a pair
,of fourth-period touchdown passes
Friday nJght, rallying No. 1-ranked
· BYU to a 24-17 victory over
Michigan In the Holiday Bowl- and
perhaps the national championship,
as well.
animal appropr~tely wore a Reds ·
baseball cap.
''ll'l!ally like pizazz,'' Mrs. Schott
said. " Who else would walk In with
their dog with a hat on?"
Mrs. Schott hOpes her enthusiasm
rubs off on the National League
West ballclub and Its fans, who have
stayed away from the gate the last
two years while the struggling team
lost millions of dollars.
"I think the fans have been turned
off," Mrs. Schott said. "Jthlnkwe've
got to turn them back on again." We
must draw people .here to break
even. U they really wantto keep this
team, theycan'tjustsay, 'Let's keep
the Reds In Clnclnna tl.' "
Mrs. Schott, one of severalllmlted
partners under the team's fonner
ownership structure, said she decided to buy the shares of general
partners William and James Willi·
ams to make sure the team·stays In
Cincinnati.
The Reds took the unusual step of
announcing after this season that
they lost $4.5 million In 1984. The
ballclub, considered the oldest
1\LLG/\MES
!:
4~
455
>'ll
!i)l
500
599
493
570
JJelpre ...... .... .. .. .. ................5 2 462 4:11
W~Jiston .. .... ................... .....O 7
-
429
Sale
•
•
•
•
4.49
TVC RESERV1!8
W• L P ()p
Belpre ................. :............ ..7 0 4()6 273
F~ .-Hocklng .. ......... . ...........2
5 244
,~u
j;;;
!~~· things about their team or a certain . enjoyed being with my son and he
: • ·j:llayerthatcanonlybehelpfullater with me, Mac and l .have hunted
:: · · on. A team that goes six and four together for 15 years and have
·· ~· - ~uld be consldered "successful for always enjoyed ~ach other's com·
" sure. More wins than losses. But, a pany. We learned sme things on this
team thai goes three and seven tr1p that can be helpful on tater
• would also be cOnsidered successful tr1ps. We found some new places to
:
U they ·Were say, zero and 10 the hunt and some new areas to go to.
:
year before.
We learn by exper1ence and we just
:
Now, back to successful hunting. adt!ed another day to OW' fist of .
•
Saturday, a week ago, West experiences. Aflf!' all there wm be
'' Vlrglrila had Its one day muzzle· another day, another season, other
,
loader season. Having tags thai deer, and even other hunters, and
•
were not filled my good fr1end Mac the deer will be taken:
•
Morgan, my son (T. J.), and I took · · According to Webster's diction·
:
off to Tucker County where buCk or ary success tt a favorable comple·
• doe were legal. I was optimistic to lion of an undertaking. Using that
;
say the least. As a matter of act, I definition a s a measuring tool I'd
1 was sure we would take at least one have to say we had a successful
;· deer, possibly two. Well, things tr1p.
• didn't work out. We came home
Merry Christmas.
: ; ~empty. Durtng the trtp home I
A71-13
(78-14 .
E71-14
F71-14
G71·14
•MOUNTED FREE .
oBUIIII:E IIAINICED FREE.
G78·15
H78-15
•WHITEWALL
•SAME WARRANTY.
ON NEWnRES
NO RAINCHI!CKS
SALE ENDS DEC. 28
L71·15
: ~~~
· We had a ·good hunt. It was a
.; ·~ beautiful day to be outdoors. We
: saw severall!eer1of the distant fast .
', •:• moving var1ety but nothing that
' • •ottered /a decent shot. We jumped
. several grouse, saw squlrtels,
chipmunks, and !airy diddles.
These 'little creatures are weli"d
looklng rodents about two or three
times as large as chipmunk with.a
·head the size of a squirrel. They are
usually reddish gray.
Our hunting area was a 2,!m acre
tract ol national forest which we
4.49 Sale ea.
.- 1.00 Mig' s Rebate
3 • 49 ea •
Yo"' cost
:M;2
•'
ss~·
alter rebate
Reg. 99"
69~
;::;;~.'~ .-=..":'!'! _·
s. Amh'"" r~~. ' """ ' '
S, Cm tral i4. A~ C'rtstYicw ~~
"w
"'""'""·"""'-ct., "
,..,,,....;; LOCal "· ,.,,.,,,. '-"""t.,
><porta Hl"'land ~'·
.!::~"M Sl<a•·""·
"""""ct"""" "
" · Sprln • • Non h
"""""· South 96. ""'"' ~
~.:;:=~"'".:t:.".! .,
T.. ,. vat. " · s~oom-cam•u ~'
TO HELP US REALIZE THESE GOALS. WE CONTINUE TO UTPL?ZE THE MO·
OERN FACILITIES OF HOLZER CLIN?C IN GAUl POLIS. YOU WILL FIND US
AT HOLZER CLINIC EACH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. FROM 1:00 P . M .
TO 3 :00P.M, OR BY APPOINTMENT. FOR MORE INFORMATION . PLEASE
CALL (IN GALLIPOLIS. CALL 448 · 6136) OR WRITE
326
UNION STREET
p .0. BOX 61 1
ATHENS , OHIO 46701
TELEPHONE 1-614·694-3671
(Out ofT own Call Collect)
DILES
HEAliNG AID
CENTER
Autohte .
Spark Plugs
4 Ton .. ....
,Reg . 14.95
. .. 9.88
•
~- ~
••'
~t~~
.•
'
,
-~
12.88
(V-Iy)
12
AU STOlES OPEN AT LEAST
10 AJA.·7 PA, SIJI)AY, DEt 23
NOW THRU JAN. 5, 1984
Save
'20
EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
POIIIIOY, OH.
!J995
170/o
Off
Ex~. '$239 24
Exp.
2 4 1 ! 2 9.95
A timely gilt! Built·in alarm is an ideal
backup lor wake-up calls. Analog quartz
clock, slide-rule dial, AFC on FM.
36 Exp.
.
S5 99
100 ExcHing and
15 Exp. $2 19
Educational Projec1s
Kids can learn about programming and
binary math by working with computer
circuits. Safe, solder1ess coil-spring assembly. 112S.218 Baner;esext..
·DISC
Offer l•ns Dtc.22 thru Jan. 5
•
OPEN SUNDAY 1·5
Rag. 26.95
Save '10-Handy PC-4
Pocket Computer
2495
Reg. 24.95
Reg. 34.95
Measures AC and DC volts , DC amps,
ohms and decibels. 4" color-<Xlded and
mirrored scale for easy readings. With
prObeS, manual. 1#22·203 Baner;os exl•a
Programmable Memory
Cordless Telephone
ET-400 by Radio Shack
EaslPrn at Federai-Hocklng
at Mlller
. _ SEO standings
34.88.
Magnum Fog
3.88
Lights
Sheepskin
Steering Wheel
Cover
Ferber
4·3002WS clear
4-30012WS amber
.'
AIL GI\MES .
, .
TEAM
W L ' P OP
Grrenllcld .. .................. .,_.It 0 m 395
Galllpolb .. .. ........ .. ........ .. .... .6 0 391 293
; Loflan .... ........... ,-.::":' .... .. ... ... ... .. 7- 1 5ZJ t58
44.95
Reg ; 95
.
49.88
Sparkomatic Car
12.95
Sparkomatic
119.88
Portable
Stereo System
FM Converter
AMIFM Stereo Cassone and
Dual Cone Speakers. Re_g. 69.95
Converts any AM radio into an
Reddy Heater -HM2e
The portable forced ~lr heater
lha'l puis lhe heat vm 0re il
AM and FM receiver: . Reg. 16.95
-FM11
belongs ... with you!
.
•'
Cut
140/o
•
•
129.88
j
~~;~~~~~~ 6 e 8
WaY<rly .... .... .. ............... .... .J 2 291 283
• South Polnl.. .. .. : ...... ........ .. .. .3 3 :IJ2 341
~
Pt. Plt'u~nl ..... .. ........ .... .....1 1 m 138
~
Athens .. .....•...... ...•.•. ... .......• 3 4 409 412
Jronton ....... ... .. .... .. ............. 3 5 493 4B7
!'l>rtsmoulh ...... .. .. ............ .. 1 4 "HI :M
419
446
• Frtda.J''• re.u~ta·
Pt. Pleasant 71 Wahama 57
Rock Hlll83 Symmes VaUey 00
• Grrenfleld :19 Athens Ill
.
:
Pt. P-.ont at Ripley Toumarnont
Southern vs. Peebles at OU
Chetapeeke at VInson Tournament
........,.._
Alhenl
,
VI. - a t
OU
GoUipolls at Greenliold
• Pt. PleeoaDt al Ripley Tournament
• 'Chesttl>ftlile al Vtnoon Toumarnont
Rock Hill al Soulh l'lllnl TOIII'1WIIelll
<# Nortttwftt II Sbliwnee 1'oumarnent
'P' Tr1mbla at Lopn
Lawrence', Ky. al lrootoo
ilfeii>:O al AtltEttl
Miami Trace ot Jocicl<ll
6.88
Fuel Pumps
9.88
Fuel Pumps
Reg8.95
Starters or
Alternators
High lorque Starter ' _
Narr~nty
Large Lobiter Tail
Stll/fed Pow o
Broccoli Polmtaire
Salt<d Bar
Rollr and Buller
Sh erbet and Cookie
3 3 8 elChang~.
4 0. 8 s~hh
8 Wilh
430Jo
Off
79'5 ~
Rag. 139.95
Give the safety and security of 2·way
radio . Aip one switch for access to
Emergency Channel 9 where help is
alw;ilvilavailable. 1121·1537
Sixtec'l
:.change Limited
110
month wa..anty
Ninctj~ Fii-C
10~ 7
J6~
Reg. 17.95
day free repiJCefT'ent period delivers up to 540 cold crank ing ampS Ex ceeds
new vehicle manufacture specification. Mlin tenanc e free•
"Never neeas wa1er uflder normal condl11o na
Integral Allernators
Boos lor Cables 12 gauge
•BC812 . . . . •~ . . Reg. 8.88 .... . . 5.98
................ " .. ...... 32.18
loolter Cables 16' Copper
1208t2 . .. . , . .. .R~ . 16 .9~
and dancing pleasure.
209 UPPER RIVER lOAD
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEI
· Rmn.litlnl: Ul OOIJ!I1_Ell na!On 301
Olltlllr: ' , .I. tO lllllilllt '
llr Slnlca: To 1:30 A.l.
'
• • I
.....•
:
~
'
J
.
)
batteries are
fresh lor Christ·
masl Looks just
Reg. 12.95
It's wild! The light ohny party or dtlnce.
Thi'OWI a dazzling dllplay of colors on
floonJ. ceiling, walls and you. Afthis
price ·get a COUille-one to give lind one
to keep I f.42.3018
'
aack Your Phone Book for the ..... lllllk
PARTY FAVORS
446-3807
Be sure all your
like our ENER·
CELL" batter··
les. Buy two or
three lor stock·
ing stuflers.
1122.()98
AL HARPER
. • . . 12.88
230fo
Off'
400/o
Off
day lree replacement period delivers up, 10 380 c old CJanKin{l amps Flecom."
mended for vehi cles wilh moderate ar11oun1 of power op1 ions
Prices In effect Daa1111btt' H , tllru Dse.mber 21, 1....
I
By Radio Shack
Limi ted 50 mont h wa rranty 180
Roc1< Hill at Soulb Polnl Toomey
Ncrt-1 al !lila,_ 'l'ourtley
""""""'th al Cdumbu1Nct1illand
'
CeiHtte Interface. 1126-3651 . Reg.
. 39.95, S.:. $29.95 Bone•ios eld•a.
•
for your entertainment
i'llr'lftiOUih
.
10,000 combination programmable
security code.
' Auto-dials 16 numbers. Tone/pulse.
Up to 700.1oot
range. #43-550 ·
........ ............ .. .... ' 24.88
Does not Include import o r
eloctrorlic luel pumps .
J..-. at W.owrly
\
1.88.
Remanufactured
Reg . 11 .95
R<u-Soulhtaltfm II Southern
~
TRC-473 by Realistic"'
Neu · Yorl- Strip Steal
or
8 Wolh u cnange. Lomlt eO 40 • mcml h
90
days tree replacemen1 period delivers up 10 31 5 cold cranki ng am ps Recom mended tor Ve hic les wi th llm•ted power oplions. Maintenance tree ' at an
economy price.
e
--·Mll!lln al
Mobile CB With Ch. 9
Priority Switch
Menu
~li: Hill ........ ............ .. .... ..4 2 4.i8 313
Southern ........ ............... ....... 2 344 '1!11
.........,.......
5P.!69.95
Looks like a calculator, but il's a programmable C:omputer. #26-3650
Joclc$olt': :....... .... .. .. .. ..... .. .. .. 4 1 354 296
ClM!Upealce 59 Coa_l Grove 57
\VheelerBI>W"R 52 Northwest 50
Southern 63 Kyl!<'f Crrek c;
band. 1112·198
Battery eKtra
Rag.
139.95
Alexander vs. Athf'J\5 at OU
Frlday'l pme:
M£1igs at Alhen.'i
TrlmbiP at ~an
10 Soulh Polnl 56
Logan 61 Mar1l"tta :J (on
Ironton 56 East Caner: 55 (Ot)
Waverly !16 Valley 16
r-;;;;;-..::;
1
••
'lllundl1"• pnie:
Fa~land
Padded earcushions seal out
noise. seal in rich
dual-speaker
sound. Sidemounted controls,
adjustable head-
·Save '20
' NPLsonvllle-York 42 Wellston 29
wt...ler5but'IZ .. ............... .. .. .1 5 322
Non hweot ..... ......... .. .... .. .... .1 6 385
Lowest price ever! Use instant-loading .
Program Paks for games, aid in educa·
tion, word processing, more. Built-in
BASIC. 1126-3134 TV and Program Paks .,,,.
1895
290fo
$4l9
(ll<oenles)
Cho<apeake ....... .............. .. ..2 2 2ll
USE
'IIIUR
240fo Off .
Cut
•
•
Al<'xander &I Trimble 5(;
Warr('fl Local 74 Meigs 69
. ik'lpn" 65 VInton County 49
Miller :ll Frcleral Hocking 23
•
'
Reg. 119.95
By Tandy'"
..'
Alexandct 88 Trimble S4 !2 ot 1
Mel!!> 7& Warren Local 59
Belpre 51 Vinton County 50
Federal Hocldng ~I MU1..,,37
NE"IsonVlllt"- York 97 Wellston 5ti
#43-508 FCC rt!l)islered
1112·1549 Bonerleleld•a
$23 9 24 Exp. $4 19
12 Exp.
Compact one-piece phone
"hangs up" on any Hat sur·
face. Two-button dialing of
up to ten t e.digit numbers .
Touch-redial. Pulse dialing.
White, #43-507. Brown,
446-1883
~---------------------------~
..,,•
RS
SALE!
LATE·
CH
By Radio Shack
•
•
.
nu CHRISTMAS AT MOST STORES
12 bp. $2 39 24 Exp. $4 19
~ ·~
•
6Ton ............
'Reg. t8.95
...... . . . 89'
EXTENDED HOUIS
EVERYTHING
''YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTIOI CENTER"
••
Bottle Jacks
Designed tor small high ·
revving engines. Reg . 87'
61
Excluding Guns & Ammunitien ·
SICDnd Aw.
Limit 12
Wellston ,. .. .... ...... ......... ...... .0 7 251 :119
Tolah
35 35 :rns :1211
Friday's resulla;
C rook.svlll~
w.
.Tot. Ot-\ 'll" ,. 111· Tot. ''"'
r--~--~-------------------~-~
0 llttCGPorPflnt,.?mDenlaplng
7.88
·.Two Ton
non rqsistpr.
)Yllller .. ...............................2 5 288 342
- . ... PN~"
61
10°/o-50°/o OFF
-·~!.~t\!
a
Kendaii10W40
Mot 0 r 0 il
:m
~; ~: ~~:
Jo-
OUI GOALS HAVE ALWAYS.IEEN TO PIOVIDI.UAIU -01·
MAnON,·MEDICAL IEFEIIAL AND DrPENDAILE HEAliNG AID
SEIVICE. WE AlE IN OUI 36th YEAI.
WHITE ELEPHANT SALE
~on little
Kendaii10W30
Motor Oil
~
·.:::: ..... ,...
. . .. ······ ·-
Fram tillers fll all
engines and keep them
running longer.
Reg. 3.95 Umil2
s....-. E "'· N a.nlcncln>.,
lOll ...
PIE-INYENTOIY
::!
CJ!,i!!li""W!B
Reg. 4.88 Limit 2
l.c!hmoll •
..---,;.,---------1
: :~ reminisced.
Pies•.
Filters
I 391 :115
2 :!til 311
3 383 383
3 JJ) 3'J3
4 2!11 :rl6
NelsonvUie-York ...... ... :....... .2 5 2ti7
35
disagree.
In comparison, I have heard
rnaJiy coaches, after losing a game,
, · =• say they thought It was a successful
R99 . Q4·
2.19
Fram O.il
570
• Tnm
: Warm> Local .. .. ..................6
Alexander ......... .. ................ 5
Mel!!$ ............ .... ................. 4
Vinton County .. ........ ........ ... .4
Trimble .............................. 3
5
78~
Fights c'orrosion all year long .
Protects all metals including aluminum. '
Fights freeze-ups alf winter.
Fights boilovers all summer. ·
35 351121-
•
Wellstonwtth18.
It
Prestone II
Anti-Freeze
and Coolant
488
TrlmbiP .......................... .... 5 2 472 4fll
~elsonv\11@. York ............ ... ... 5 2 515 46.1
.VInlon Counly ................ .... .. 3 4 441 411
Fed.·Hocklng ...................... .3 4 441 431
warren Loca l .•.. . .. ., .......... ...2 5 488 529
Miller ............ .. ........ .... .. ....1 6 350 451
us aaw another hunter all day. The
clear cool creek which !lows down
the hollow supplied us with 84fe
drtnklng water. The huge moun·
tatns protruding
s kywai"tl are awe.c ht
·
some .. g s on such a clear day.
And. of course, the forest Itself with
a 11 Its sights and sounds is beautiful.
One might think In those sur·
roundlngs It's just nice to be alive. .
And, the animals live 'on also since
, we managed not to take any.
GALLIPOLIS - Is a successful
hunt only one where game Is
· ' brought In? That COUld be a much
debated question. I am stire many
' I people WOUld feel t"-• are
·
·
.
·~3
success.
~he~, ;;~ ga~~:. takewoukln.
Mud & Snow letreads
aller mfg's rebate with purchase of 2
TVC VARSrrY
Team
WLPOP
Alexander .... .......... .. ........ ...6 1 5.':il 452
Mel!!$ ................................. 5 2 4Q! ~
87 TOM BELVILlE .
,. - .,
BY
.n ==~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~A~S~K~A~B~O~U~T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•:~-.~~~~ ft~-a~~~~~r~~~~· ~~
b-;;·T~~;·~ ·~-~~;*
3.49
. Team
W L P OP
i'Jcxander ...... .............. .. .....6 1 558 452
BPipn• .. ..................... :..... 6 2 526
Tttrnble ..... ....... ..•. ......... ..... 5 2 472
Meigs ............... .. ................ 5 3 516
Nelwnvllle-Yor k ..... ........ . ... 5 3 ~
Fecl.-Hocklng .... .. ... .. .. .......... 4 4 515
VInton Counry ......................3 6 5IB
Warren Local ...................... 2 6 500
Miller .. .. .. ...................... .. ...1 7 -385
,Wellston ....... ...... ........... ...•..0 7 429
game."
professional baseball team. has
Mrs. Schott said she wasn't sure
flnJshed last or near last In theN .L.
exactly how much of the team she
Wes! the last three seasons.
now owns, The purchase price for
The Williams brother$, both
majority
ownership wasn't
prominent Cincinnati businessmen,
disclosed.
·
said \hey decided to sell all of their
Under
the
sale
agreement,
whiCh '
shares after 18 years of owning part
must
be
approved
by
the
National
of the team. They've been general
League, Mrs. Schott w111 take (JIIer
partners since February 00.
TheWilllamsbrothersrecetvedat the general partnership shares plus·
two llmlted partnerships held by
least two offers, most recently from
a group headed by former baseball others. There will be at least eight
commissioner and former Ken· other limited partners under the
new arrangement.
tuckyGov. A.B. "Happy" Chandler.
. Mrs. Schott said she'll leave
Wllll;~m Williams said Friday the
brothers wanted to sell to a local · player matters .to Reds President
grouptokeeptheteamtnCinctnnatl. Sob Howsam, with the front office
unchanged by the team sale. She
Mrs. Schott said she became
also
said there won't necessarily be
concerned . when oobody came
a
change
In the team's philosophY of
forward locally to buy.
passing
up
the free agent market
"You never know In this thing,"
and·
Instead
develop talent through
Mrs. Schott said. ''If they (Williams
the
farm
system.
brothers) wanted to get out and
However, she made It clear she
nobody wanted It here, you can't
wants
to be an active owner.
blame t\lf'm (for selling to an
" I'm not very passive," she said.
out-of.clty group).
" It seemed like nobody was "There's no use being part of
something unless you take a part In
stepping up to the plate. You've got
it.
to step up to the plate or forget the
RendyMatlack'sl6PLlntspaced
1· Friday'stcores
~.!f~~~""'· Lalc-"
had relatively to ourselves, None of
..,S:":"''>' """'*" r~~. ........,, so.
a
; TVC standings
·'
e
Lancen Romp
·~
l
·
Wndl
11.e
00
es...
.
.
l!petlW Canl!lpiiilllent
c
New own~r wiII. keep Reds m · incinnati ,_-·-~·--:---~~
•
~,~.~~~··~·~~~23~·~·91~14~:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~-~~~~
\
Store or Dealer Nearest You
GALLIPOLIS
.,
•
II
�Paga C 6
PonN~Vy Middlepon-Gallipolls, Ohio-Point Pleaaant, W. Va.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Mary Pullins retiring
Qu~P1er
report_notes
retum to profitability
from Central Trust
GALLIPOLIS - In more than
four decades In the banking busl·.
ness, Mary C. Pullins has seen an
kinds of changes.'
But one thing, she said, has
remained constant with her. And
!hat's In providing the personal
touch to her customers.
Mrs. Pullins, vice president of
· Central Trust Co., 358 Second Ave.,
since 1975, will be retlr!ngDec. 31.
"The thing that Impressed me the
mos.t Is the people telling me how
they'll mtss the personal interest In
taking care of their business," she
said. But that Interest has been In
keeping · with the bank's . pQlicy
toward its customers, she added.
' Since her start In 1939 In the
bookkeeping department at First
National Bank - which became
Central Trust In October 1979- "all
as(l!'CtS have changed, really," she
said.
" I think customers thlnkit'smore
· complicated, but it's easier for us to
do, to pull out . a sheet or a
microfiche," Mrs. Pullins said. .
Mrs. Pullins, wbo resides at 9ffi
22nd St.. Point Pleasant, with her
husband Rodney, a retired General
Services Administration employee,
was born In Charleston, W.Va .• but
her family moved shortly afterward
to Gallipolis and she graduated from
Gallla Academy High School.
Her association with the bank has
iaken her from bookkeeping to
being a teller, au~itor, comptroller,
. assistant cashier and assistant vice
president until assuming her pres·
ent position.
"She has contributed significantly
td all of us over that period of time
with her dedicated efforts to her
bank," said Central Trust President
1914
DAYTON - Robbins .1: Myers
Inc. reported Its fltth couecutlve
quarter Of profits since the com·
pany returned to profltablHty last
year. For the company's flmt fiscal
quarter ended May 30, Robbins &
Myers had net Income of $132,tnl,
or six cents per share on sales of
$38.4 million, compared with net
Income of $U4,4Xll, or live cents per
share on salesof$37.6 mOUon for the
comparable perlod a ye!U' ago.
Wall said the company's lndustrlal·products dlvlilons -the Motor
and Control Systems Division and
the Fluids Handling Dlvlilon were continuing to respond well to
the strong capital goods economy.
"Sales, order rates and operating
Income for Industrial products are
up compared to· a year ago," he
said. "Backings also are healthy -
Harold E. Thompson, noting her '
"ability to deal over the years with
people In a competent, professional
and friendly manner."
Mrs. Pullins has been Involved In
numerous banking and managementsemlnarsandconferencesand
·has been active In the Bank
Administration Institute and the
American Institute of Banking. She
was a charter member oftheHUisof ·
Ohio chapter of AlB.
She credits AlB with helping
many banking professionals In their
careers.
"The sad part is that we dldn't
baVe things Uke this when I started
out. You learned by experience,"
Mrs. Pullins said. "Now I thlr)k It's
great that young people can get all
this free education."
In retirement, Mrs. Pullins plans
to travel, which she listed as one of
her hobbles along with golf, bridge,
music and art.
·
Ohie Pvint Plea~a~tl, W.Va.
Katies Korner
HOLIDAY
SPECIALS!
Improvising her own Christmas.·~ee
especially 1n the Motor and Control
Systems DIVIsion.
.
"We expect Sllles , and profit
Increases for the ltsCai year In both
lndustrtal product divisions barring
any unforeseen slowdowns in ~·
lndllstrtal sect<m~ of the economy, .
Wall noted.
. •
"The Comfort Conditioning Dlv·
islon ts currently In the off-season,
when the celllng fan business Is :
mrmally slow. However, sales,'
order rates and operating income
for the division· are down from a.
year ago due to heavy carryover
from last seasOn of competitive
ImportEd products !it the. retall,
level. It Is taking a feW montl).s for ·
the trade to lower these Inventories
and begin restocking in quantity for
the next season.'' Wall said.
a, KATIB CROW
nm.s
t
idea CI'OIII!I her mind. Why,not cut
some of the limbs and ma11e a tree.
There was a slight problem,
reaching the limb&. "Well I'll solve
!hat she thought,, I'll call my
daughter Nancy." That she did.
What was the neKt step - you
guessedlt,climboutontheroofand
reach as far as humanly pQSSible
and ·cut off as many limbs as
possible.
,
I
When aU this was done the lim)ls
were carefully placed together with
strong wire and presto! A Christ·
mas tree that stood tall and
straight.
r
It'' called
~veChrlstnw
trees are expensive and this fact
hit D.orothy
Roller. Middleport the wrong
way.
Determined not to pay such and
exorblllll)t price but ·detennirfed .
also to have a Christmas tref> she
improvised.
Growing next to her home is a
large Hemlock tree. At this point an
Ughts · an,d decorations .were Rouah will be pl'elellted at the
placed on the brancbea and 0111! . RldJie Junior Hl8h following the
holidays. We undentand there was
would never suspect thllt the tree
was once lowly branches blowing standing room only.
theWind.
.
It just goes to show you that If you
want something bad enough and
have enough! ~termination you
can do anything. .
Speaking Of Christmas decorations the art clalses .at Syracuse
Elementary made many beautiful
decoratiOns . The ·students placed
them on Evergreen tree alongside
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
U you get a chance st«;~P by and
take a peek - It looks great.
Nice, .very nice.
'
FROM .
K&l MOBILE HOMES, INC.
"New" 52114 - 2 Brm. - T.E•..~l4,5000'
60112 - 2 Brm. - T.E................ ~5~895 00
60112 - 2 Brm. - Fuel Oil ......... ~5.295 00
50112 - 2 Brm. - Fuel Oil ..........•4,59500
70114 - 3 Brm. - Gas ............. :'11.~0000
70114 .... 3 Brm. - Gas..............'12,9CJOOO
21 R. - Prowler - Gas ............... •3,20000
...
K&K MOBILE HOMES, INC.
675-3000
OPiN 7 DAYS
MON. ._.,u FRI. I to I ·
SATURDAY I to 6
SUNDAY 9 to 5
t~ THEY CALL this the Uger cndse,
fiDd there'D be an all-male weloom·
"'' crowd or 1,000 fathers, 101111,
inthers, grllllllsolw, and lliends.
~anlulll · Canaday flew IAJ Hawaii
'Dec. 10 1o meet his son a& the
Honolulu airport.
'~·Jle're out to earn
your
·!: MARK
Mary
SCHEDliLED a flight
·liome Dec. 21 and wUJ he with his
:Jlarents for Christmas and a couple
,f>t days before. Mark will ha'Ve been
, ,In the service four years this
IX!ming April. He's been out on tile
cruise since June of this' year.
c. Pullins
",:
A 1978 GRADUATE of
IAnBIIS
40MONTH
GaiDa
AMPS*
so
36!.~ M~~TH
UP TO ~~0 CCA'
l.l
NEWI700 CCA*
70 MONTH HI-TECH
ALL SEASON
•MOR£ CRANKING POWll
FOR MAXI- SBtVta.
RADIAL
Sill
'11(1
P15S/1Cil13 ....... $42
P175/70113 ......... 49
P175110113 ......... 47
PliS/10113 ......... 41•
P195/75114 ......... S4
P205/75114 ......... 51 '
P20S/75115 ......... 60
P215/7Sil S......... 63
P22S/7Sit 5......... 66
at
SALE ENDS DECEMBER 211
Long-weartng, fuel efficient
89
UPT0370
COLD CRANKING
CHESHIRE - Three employees
0 { Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s
Kyger Creek plant recently re·
ceived 30-year service awards from
Louis R. Ford Jr., plant manager.
They are Roger G. Theiss,
maintenance supervisor: Harold E .
.:Bud" Bowman, shift operating
engineer: and BUI N. Fugate,
115Sistant shift operating engineer.
..Theiss joined OVEC on Dec. 10,
19171. as a maintenance mechanic C.
He advanced through various
lbliintenance mechanic positions .
and was promoted to his current
POsition at the plant on Feb. 1,1968.
;Theiss and his wife. Janet, reside
Racine.
: Bowman transferred to Kyger
·creek on Dec. 16, 1954, as an
•uxillary equipment operator. He
Computers
used in state
audit program
,,,
•
WE Will U CLOSED CHitSTIUS DAT
IIAYE A HAPPY HOUDAYI
School, Mlirk alllo
COLUMBUS- City, county and
township audits in Ohio wUi soon
take on a new "computer look"
~esignro to save audit time for the
I?Xaminer and money for the
~axpayer, according to State Audl·
tor Thomas E. Ferguson.
· ''Anything that we do that cuts
down on the time it takes our
examiners to conduct audits means
that we charge back less to the
govermentai unit under audit,"
Ferguson said . .
"That is a major reason we are
row introducing personal compu·
lers into our audit programs for
local governments," Ferguson
Sllid. "We envision that eventually a
,Pc (personal computer! .will be·
. ~me as much as tool in the auditing
business as are now a pencil and
Y,.now legal note pad."
~. "Computer auditing ls the wave
of• the future In our business ," he
added .
Ferguson said he has begun
micro-computer training sessions
' for his field audit supervisors and
staff. as well as for supervisory
staff i"n his office 's Management
' AdvisorY &>rvices division.
Initial seminars are a joint effort
of the Auditor of State's Electron~
: Data Processing audit section and
Touche Ross a·nd Co., a nationally
'recognized accounting firm. Future
• training programs will be the sole
responsibility of the State Auditor's
,office. Employees are trained on
• J1eW IBM portable computers.
. • According to Ferguson, the basic
advantage of using microComputers in conducting audits is
' t he speed and accuracy of the
')ll'ocessor.
• "We believe that by offPrlng
training programs, such as these on
•mlcrCK:Omputer fundament als, we
can contribute significantly to the
professional growth of our audit
employees," Fei'IIIIson said, "and
In turn, we hope this professional
growth will be reflected in a
superior audit product. produced in
a timely and cost efficient
The
radial whltewalla!
OIL FILTERS
43!!
UP TO b~O
89
•EASIER COlD .WEATHIII
STARTING.
CAl LOCI
DE·ICU
AUTOMATIC PUSH·'"
tll.lfCIIOH UNt.OCKS .
FIOZIN lOCXS
=•99C
Road IQng R<;ldlall
Steel Baited Radial
12.00°/o *
P155/80R13
P165/80R13
P176/80R13
P186/80R13
ANY
SIZE
BY THE MAl!RS
Of GABRIEL
MI·J~
FREE
.•
MOUNnNG
·•,
.,
.
COMPt.m WITH KIT
5988
. ...
: ·. ,.d . . . . .,,
..
P185/75R14
P19&/715R14
P206/7&R14
P216/76R14
ANY
. . . . ..
I
.
SIZE
t
'
'
~
INTEREST & PRINCIPAL
PAID MONTH.LY
A unique investment. thai offers: highest safety,
marketability and guaranteed apprecu1hon from d1s •
count to maturity. Tax deferred for PenstOni Pmflt
Sharing and IRA plans.
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•
CltJI.
•
Outtl
<78-14
INTERURBAN M/S
0
Onlt
CELEBRATE NEW YEAR'S·"E · ··
:AT THE LaSALLE .RESTAURANT
P206/75R15
P216/75R15
P226/715R15
P236/76R16
ANY
SIZE
o 1am int1111sted in Government National Mongage
,
AaiOCi..lon certtflcat••·
Name----------------~--------------
.. . . 3999
.STEAl IOUUPS or CHICIEN CORDON ILEU
With TWJa IAIIED POTAhJIS. RICE PILAF
Various Slltctlln of SAUD, HOT ~ous
GREEN lEANS CASSEIOLE, DESSERTS
.
·.
COffll 'or lEA
MOUNnNG
(614) 446·2125
l /~']l[ '
BUFFO DINNEI 7 to 9
FREE
417 Second Avenue
P.O. Box 328
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
PASS-l'IIU
IIAI WillOW
I
$25°
AT
11fT 11
stoa
IWII
Horns, Party Favors
anti Clianlpagnt Toast, (Our Treat)
•Whitewall
078-15 ... .. ........ 33
•fltt - • ' ol-tlc can
H78-15 ............. 35
I
Other
.
E78·14 .... ......... 30
1t slmll1r prlcu,
'
MIDNIGHT~Hat,
A78·13 ............. 25
878-13 ............. 26
Iiiii
·~:"C:..n
·M~tll ·6g A,.,•i 9;P.M. .t•.t A.M..
ROAD KING
PlafOaMANCI POLY 78
•4 Ply , ••, ••, ••
ofosr fo
in1!CIII
IIEAIFAST 1 A.a to ???
.
~~----~--------~----------
Continental Style Buffet .
'
IESERVADONS-Call
992·6136
.
.
su.oo SJS.•OO
SINILI . COUPLE
' ~-------Siate _ _ _ _ _ ZiP----
Silver iridge Plaza-Phone 446~9335
1
'.
manner."
I
Bill ltlly ..
Mlinaaar'
INCluDES MimiNG EICEn COCITAIS
·-
~
-
_. __ _.
··-- _..._
~----'----
_... ---
�Pq1
C8
The
Porter
Methodist
Church firSt
site for _
Yule tree
By JAMFS SA.NDS
Special Co.-respclent
GALLIPOUS- That the Christ·
mas tree has
place within the
church has not always been a point
of agreement for Christians in
Gallla County.
We have before
tiS some notes
which we copied
from an 1886 Gal·
llpolls Journal
newspaper of a
meeting of the
Sunday School Board at Porter Methodist Episcopal Church.
One would guess from the way
the story Is writte_n that this mighthave been the first time In Porter's
history that a tree had been
suggested for the church. The most
vocal opponent of the tree was
Charley Summers, who felt the tree
had more connection with St.
Nicholas than the Infant Jesus and
for that reason was not proper.
C_IIARLEY WAS outvoted. The
chairman then appointed a com·
mlttee of one to obtain the tree for
the church, and Charley was that
one. And he agreed to get lt.
Apparently the rule of .Porter
Church was th<!t people could agree
to disagree and still be friendS .
The tree that Summers obtained
was placed in the old brick church
which preceded the present build·
lng. Today's Porter United Metho·
dlst Church building was erected in
1888 and dedicated In the fall of that
same year .
THE ocToBER 3, 1988 Gallipolis
Journal has an Interesting article
on the Porter dedication. The day
started with a Methodist Love
Feast which Included lots of what
were called "testimonies."
After some singing, presiding
elder J . C. Arbuckle spoke on
Matthew 16: 18-1~. Wrote the Gall!·
polts .Journal: "The sermon . im·
pressed all hearts, until it became
actual l'xperil'nce, with all theSI'
glorious truths of the gospel, that
there Is ower Iii the religion of Jesus
Christ al)d thai this gospel Is the
power, of God until salvation to all
.t hem that bellf'Ve."
AT THE END of his sermon the
Reverent Mr. Arbuckle noted that
the church still owed some $100 on
the new bullding and he Issued . a
call for more · subscriptions. He
started first with $10 and asked who
would give $10. Four made the offer
Including both Dr. and Mrs. Elias
Sisson, who headed the building
committee.
When the $5 call was made a hand
from out yonder came through the
wln(low of the church with a $5 bill .
The congregation laughed knowing
that the hand· belonged to D. K
Morehouse, who because of the
great crowd that day, had to stand
outside the church. In all $155 was
collected and the debt retired.
There followed the order of
dedication, lunch, another sermon,
and community with the day ending
·
about 5 p.m.
Au&hor of lids artlcile Is James
Sands, Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio
Smith~s
YEAR END TAN REDIJCTlON SALE!
Canaday...
Continued from C-7
~yearS, an 8.3 percent November Increase which
!hi! ~an admlnlltrallon haUI!d on Friday as a
1984 :~:~~ ~DOR:r' Umiteds .
25
AFTER HIS graduation, Mark
worked at Birch Distributors at
South Point and lalf'r he was
employed by Bob Evans Farms.
Mark enlisted In thf' Navy Aprll 2,
1981. After basic training he Wf'nt to
school at Millington, Tenn ., and Le
Moore, Calif., to become a Navy
elf'Ctronlcs technician.
)'dARK'S PROMOTION . to second class petty officer came only recently, after he had been Sf'rving
for six months on t~ aircraft
carrier U.S.S. Enterprise.
MARK'S FA TilER, Marshall F.
Canaday, flew to HawaU ~- 10 to
participate In the "Tiger Cruise."
The Tiger Cruise Is an opportunity
foe any male mf'mber of the family
oc a friend of thf' enlisted man to
travel on the U.S.S. Enteq~rile
from Hawaii ,to Alameda, Calif.
THE TIGER CRUISE left Ha·
wall Dec. 13 and was scheduled to
arrive at Alameda Dec. 20 and
mark was to fly home Dec. :U. Mark
will report back to the San Diego
base Jan. 4. Marshall F. Canaday,
hll father, Is also a Navy veteran,
having aerved on the U.S.S. Idaho.
Marshall retired froril Ohio Bell
TelephOne Co. In 1918 after 31 years'
service.
"llrl&bt horizon for next year's 'economy,"
}\lid In ·a · move that Is likely to spells~ ·
~tdc growth in cmllng months, the Federal
f!Berve Board anJlOUIICed It was cUtting Its lending
nlte to banks and other financial Institutions by
~half pel ceutage point to 8 percent.
•'l'he move, the second l'!'ductloli In a month, left the
dlicount rate at _Its loWeSt level Iii six years.
,~lysts said the ~;e~ttral bank was moving
~lvely to ensure that the reeent slowdown In
~ does not turn Into a recession.
predicted
Interest ra~, which have faUm aboljt three
'·
BOICK CENTURY LIMITEDS, PONTIAC
BONN~VILLES, OLD$ CUTLASS AND CIERA BROUGHAM
(;lt.~1 ·st\t.t1'o
PRICED FROM
.
'•
~
iWASHINGToN (APJ- On their either my security as a cltlzf'n or the '
·
editorial pages and In an Infor-mal security of our country."
survey, a number of newspaper
After the Post ran Its story
~tors . support the - Washlngt'on_ Wednf'Sday, W!!lnherger criticized
p,dst:s decision to repqrt about an the paper's decision as the "height of
up:.-oinlng spy ilaielllte launch In journaUstlc Irresponsibility" and
defiance of a Pentagon request to suggested the story burt thenatl6n's
~the story 1secret.
·
security.
; Many of them dispute the Defense
The story reponed that the space
~partment's contention that the
shut:tle ~ ~h wUI put Into
article may have endangered. stationary orbit over. the Soviet
oil tiona I security.
Union a satellite capable of Inter: "If that's big news to the Sovlf'ts, cepting radio, telephone an~ sate!·
tltey must have been hibernating In ute communications. ·
Siberia," said the Tribune of
. It was Rrinted two days after the
Qaidand, Calif. In an editorial.
. Air Force announced strict secrecy
; Leonard Pardue, the acting would sWTOUnd the shuttle mission,
el(eCUtlve editor of the Louisville and Air Force Brtg. Gen. Richard
Courier-Journal and Loulsvlllf' Abel told reporters at a brleflhgthat
'I;Imes in KentuckY, said, "Someone any story about the mission -even a
shOuld give (DefenSI' ·Secretary speculative. story - " may be
Caspar) Weinberger a tranQuilizer. .Investigated as a breach of natlorial
He badly overreacted to the Post security."
's tory.''
Other news organizations, includ·
"TOe Kansas City Times saw a lng The Associated Press and NBC
broader tssuf' In thf' controversy, News, had the same Information the
~Y the rlghtsofthenewsmedla
Post printed but vOluntarily with·
'versus the right of the gove~nt held It at the request o! the
to maintain secrecy.
Pentagon. After the Post ran ·tts
The Times said In an editorial that story, the other organizations car~g motives 1\fe often Inferred
ried their own.
from government secrecy, with
In gf'Deral, most editors and
some claiming "censorship, intlml· editorials agreed with a view In the
dation," and asktng"'whatarethey Los Angeles'Times.
tr,Y~ to lilde? And · anYWaY,
"DefeRS~' Secretary Ca~par w.
f'Verybody already knows that stuff, Weinberger called the Post's dticl·
i!Jeludlng tllf' Russians." '
slon 'irresponsible.' Bi!l If news
The paper asked why can the agencies can figure out the natureof
military "seldom be glVI'n the the payload, so can the Soviets,"
~It of the doubt?"
said the Jlljper.
.
'HO)Wf'Ver, John Selgenthaler, pubEdliors
there were legltl·
lisher of The Tmnessean In Nash· mate reasons for withholding lnfor·
vUie, Tenn., .said he had read
matlon, but said each story should
wprd of the Post story and rollld not be evaluated on a case-by-case
see
how it could have "endangered basis.
• <
PER MONTH
Ba•ed on $SS60.~0 sale price.with $560 cash or trade
down. 11.9% A. P.R., $6308.16 total note. 48 months.
$1308.16 Int.
f8clo1g Offic/8/t' C~tt
I
·BRANO NEW
\
'60'·
MONTH
FINANCING '
ON NEW '84., 8UICKS & PONTIACS .
1 -Riviera
_5 - ) Pontiac 1000's ..
S - SkyhawJ<i
'1 - Pontiac Sunbird 4 Dr.
1 - (entury St~ Wagon · 1 - Park Avenu'
Financing ·
Available
J
· TO
- QUAURED BUYERS
DEMO
SAVE:818 BUCKS!
1981 Pontiac Grand Prix
1981 Chev. Caprice, 4 Dr.
Blue, 46,000 miles.
41,000 low miles. low one owner.
$5488
WAS S649S
Olds . Delt~:~88,· 4
Navy blue, runs and drives good.
1980
Family speGial, vinyl interior; btown with tan ·
top. Runs and drives super.
·
'$2990
·1979 Chev. 4~4 Pickup
. 1975
4 Speed, A·l condition, brown, diesel
economy.
$2 500
$4 320
$1880 .
WASS2495
1979 V.W. Dasher
% T., 4 wheel drive, automatic.
WAS S4995
1977 Olds Delt.a 88, 4 Dr.
c~
NewDOrt,. 4 Dr.
I
1979 Firebird Formula
seats.
WAS S499S
WA$_$3495
'
1979 Chev. Sport Van
Auto., AC, tit, cruise, etc. Red and white.
$4970
WAS S5995
1976
LTD
4- Dr.
. -··.
~
·
$2330~
1979 Mercury Cougar
Good body, new tires.
.$
Book Value, S3450.
53,000 lo!.~KsAg9" clean interior.
Minor ru.s~1f'a steS!
·
Lt. gr~n. b~cket seats, runs good, new
t1res, low m1les.
·
WAS S1295
WAS S4995
:
95_0
'
·I 40
3
.'
t490
\
1'913 ·chevrolet Impala.
'
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix .
$
WAS S995
O>
. .
12 80
\'f."
Marshal
Sokolov
Dr.
-~
4 Or., rough & ready.
..
$180
Septfmber. -;;
Iraq reports ·attack
on 'naval targets'
·PROTEST AT POST- Membel'!l of a JI'OIIpcalledAIM, Accuracy
In Media, protelit Friday In front of the Washlnstoft Poet newspaper
agalaat the pubHcallon lhls week details of the secret payload 1o be
can1ed by thf' space obuUie to be launched Januaey 23. Pliorto the story
the Pentagon asked membel'!l of thf' media to not publish details of the
payload and Its~- (AP Laserphoto).
member MlklhaU S. Gorbachev, who warned ·this
week on a visit to London of the dangers of an anns
race In space.
Gorbachf'V "doesn't understand exactly what It Is
·we are researching," . Reagan said Friday on
departing for thf' presidential mountain retreat in
Maryland.
"We are going to be very pleased to let them know
exactly what It Is that we are talking about and I think
they'll Sf'e thai maybe lt!s better lfwe have .a world hi
which you've got some kind of a defenSI' that maybe
MANAMA,Bal!rain (AP) -Iraq
said Its jetfightersralded two "large
naval targets" In the PerslanGulfon
Friday, and shipping sources con·
firmed a Norwegian superptanker
and a smaller Liberian tanker Were
hit.
.
Two crewmen were reported
killed on the Liberian vessf'L
Gulf shipping sources, speaking
on condition of anonymity, first
reported that the 114,099-ton NOIWC·
gtan supertanker Thorshavet, laden
With 232,000 tons of Iranian crude oil
destined for Japan, was set ablaze
by a missile about 00 mlles south of
the main Iranian oil terminal at
Kharg Island .
_ They said two dozen SpaniSh and
No~an crew members safely
abandoned ship and were picked up
by Iranian helicopters but that the
captain and chief officer stayed with
the Thorshavet.
Hours later, the London-based
Uoyds Shipping InteUlgence unit
· reported that the52,66HonLiberlan
tanker Magnolia was attacked
about 30 miles south of Kharg and
that two of the crew perished in the
raid. The rf'St reportedly got off the
ship safely.
The attacks were, the !a test in a
recent spate of almost dally forays
by Iraqi warplanes against tankers
and freighters plying Iranian wa ·
ters. Baghdad 's aim Is to tighten Its
yearlong blockade and economl·
caUy choke Iran out of a war that
bligan In September 1!81. In
retaliatpry raids, Iran has bef'n
targeting vessels in the southern
gulf.
The IraQI military spokesman In
Baghdad, capital of Iraq, said
"direct hits" Wf're scored In
Friday 's attacks at 12:30 p.m.
SAUDI
ARABIA
TANKERS ATI'ACKED
Iraq said Its jet flghtel'!l raided .
two' 111arge. naval target..q" near ,
Iran's Kltarg Island In the
PenlaA Gulf Friday. Uoyd's of ,_
London reported two seamen
were ldlledtn a misolle attack on ·
a Uhf'rian·reglslered tanker · . ·
and that an oil-laden Norwegian " :
supertanker was ablaze. · (AP . .
Laserpholo ).
By the count ·or the Lloyds . ·
intelligence unit, 62 tankers and ,
freighters have been damaged since '
January.
-
Suspects held tpithout bond
~ppOinted
'SUCceed
. JJstinov
«o
··'
:~ (APl - · Marshal
. \.
' ' ~ L. Sokolov has been ap. .,
p!Jnled Sovif't deff'nse mlnlsfer ·to
~ceed the tiue Dmitri F. UstlnoV,
ttl!
NEW , 110\'JET DEFENSE
official news . agency TllS$
8IUIOII~ Saturday.
.MINIITER - Manlllll Serp!l
: ]he bJ¥ announcement saldon!y
L. •ll•lo'V,- Ill II* Ullaied
IDe ...... liM been ............
tllat the appointment was made by
llo9lel . . . _ m'*ter to lllcthi! Presldluin of the Supreme
9Qviet. Sokolov' 73, has been first . cee!ltaellte Dmitri F. UIIIIDov, '
de;puty defeme ~ since 1967
•llle n C Jal apllcy Tlllldllflillmembl!roftbfCcmmunlat
Saturday: (AP
PWty Cmtral Committee siiiCt' .I
1811111.
.. .
·•-•eell
.
Uatlnov, 76, died Th\ll'lday and Ia
al the kremlin wan In a
funeral on Monday.
had takm on a hlgh
the past tllreemoilthaas
dlaappeared from public
llid was DOl seen at hll official
aadefe~~~r minister.
:J_Jat:tnov had not been seen In
since sejlt. tl, and the
bulletin Issued by Tal$ on
Indicated he had been too W
In IUidln& tilt llatkla'l
..,._.,, at· 1e111t 111nee
dlpltarlls and Jed the Nov. 7 Red
SQua~plnldecmtmemcntlngthe
67th anniversary of the Bqlsltevlk
revolution. The celebration IS the
Sovlf't Union's bJi1est national
ldlday, apd IIIIa year WU I~ first
time ill the nadaa's hiltm'y tha~ a
clefeMe ~failed to atlalii.
lJuJ'inl hll llddrea to tldllallds
gathered at Red SQ\11111! for the
Revolution · Day parade, Sokolov
lncludedallalldardattackonNATO
fonlal pilllcy, ~ 1111 Wl!ltern ·
nallillll' "W ~ ldlons . .. .
prec,lude a leaenlng of the threat of
war."
j)
can destroy weapons without kllUng mlUlons of
people," Reagan said.
He has already lobbied West German ChanceUor
Helmut Kohl and wiU meet next monthwithJapanesl'
and Bf'lglan leaders. The U.S. research. program and
a planned test of antl·satelllte weapons in March are
likely topics when Secretary .of State George P. Shultz
lneets Jan. 7-8 wJth Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko.
The Soviets are determined to halt both programs.
The Reagan administration has rejected a Soviet
proposal for a moratorium In anti-satellite tests, but. ·
has offered to discuss the Issue at the negotiating
· table.
.
Mrs. Thatcher, after meeting
last weekend In
London with Gorbachev, said "obviously you can't
stop research. But! think one does not want to go into '
'
a higher and higher level of armaments. ...
Flying to Washington Friday night from the Far
East, shf' said reports of diScord were an Invention~
"I've
one of the people who has bef'n most ·
· staunchly behind the president In going ahf'ad With ,,;
thf' research," she said.
'
been
.....,_....;;.........
" Ohio briefs:------;......,_-.. . .
I
Blue, locally owned. . Best bargain in
town!
· ·
E.S.S., local owner, auto., AC, bucket
Black, auto., AC, aluminum wheels.
SHARP.
$.
.
4280
1976 Buick Electra, 4
1979 Ford Granada 2 Dr.
.
• }VASHINGTON (AP) - President Rf'agan,
meeting Saturday with British Prime Minlstf'r
Margaret Thatcher, ts signaling his determination to
l'!l)ly Western leaders behind his space-based "Star
WJirs" missile defense system. .
.
.
: ~ Reagan takes charge of the drive for allied unity
~.advance of U.S. -Soviet talks In Geneva next month, .
Mrs. Thatcher wUI be hll guf'St at Camp David. She
~s to havf' breakfast Satilrday In Washington with
President Grorge ~h, before Dying to Camp
. ~vld to meet with Reagan . ·
, · . ~ :Reagan says he hope's to also win over Politburo
Extra clean interior. Runs and' drives good, mi·
nor rust.
.,
WAS S995.
-
estimated at 2.8 percent - an Improvement (11/e" the .·
sluggish 1.6 percent~ July through
"This suggests thllt the worst of the slowdawl! Is
ending and that the growth recession Is .old newa,"
said Allen Sinal, chief economist for Shearson
Lehman·Amertcan Express.
Orders for defeme doubled In Novf'ffiber, c!Jmblng
from $4.9 bUllon In October to S9.8 bWion. Defense
d!lrBble goods lnclu& everything from rUles to
airplanes, ships, tanks and mlssUes.
.
Analysts said the Novf'ffiber defense gain, which .
was concentrated In new orders f9r planes and ships,
was In part a bounceback from an unusually low level ·
of recent orders. DefeRS~' orders had dropped 13.2
percent tn Septf'ffiher and another 25.4 percent In · ·
October.
Jleagan signals determination·to rally behind. 'Star Wars' ·
.•
• I
N.A.D.A. BOOK VALUE
S497S
$3980 '
WASS4995
S21 so
WAS $2995
1980 Chevrolet Camaro
Dr.
every
Runs· good, tilt, cruise, AC, worth more.
$4900'
WAS SS995
aireed
19.77 Chev. Caprice St. Wagon.
I
· signals they provide about production and employ·
ment In manufacturing ~tries In corning months.
The November gain, whlchwaatbelargeslslncean
8,5 pe1:cmt Increase tn September 1111J), followed
declines of 2.6 pe1:cent In October and 3.3 percent in
September: Itputtotal!Xdersat$101bi!Uon,upfrom
· $96.1 billion In October.
When orders s~el'l!d back·t<>back decUnes,
analysts worrll!d that the sharp slowdown in
economic Kl'Ciwth since July could be threaienlng
another recession. ·
However, tliOIIe fears have eased with a variety of .
statistiCs s~ a rebound In November. Unem·
ployment feU to 7.2 percent, Its biggest decllne since
June, retaU sales were UP, sharply and overall
economic growth for the fourth quartf'r ts being
.
1984 BUICK leSABRE LIMITED
. 4 DOOR
SAVE UP TO S25oooo
eooos
support
Post's decision
to .
report Shuttle .story
/
1-Silver. with Burgundy Interior
1-Whlte with Burgundy Interior
Both loaded with power equipment.
percentage points since AIJIUII, would drop further.
·m the report oil durable
orders, the
CornmereeDepartment attributedrnorethanhalfthe
, gain to a 99.4 percent~ In defi!!!St orders, the
blgjp!St Jump In deniand for nillltary hardware ·in a
decade, !hi' Commerce Department said.
With the defenSe 911l'ge taken out, durabie goods
orderutWroseahealthy3.3percent-farbetterthan
recent months.
At the White Houae.- deputy press secretary Marlln
Fitzwater said, '"!~ econoll))lls growing. People ar!'
confident. New orders for products are being pta~
to meet demand. And It gives us a bright horizon for
next year's I!COIIOmy."
·
New orders for ch!rable gOOds - Items expected to
last tllreeorrDQreyl!ar!l-arecloselywatchedforthe
New~pape.-s
$899500 :,
-
pOst huge Nove~her inc;;~~
'
1OOOfo Warranty
LOW MILES AND EXTRA CLEAN.
TheY
¥.'1
1m. While at Buckeye Hll!s Career
Center, he took a two-year course In
heating and alr-condlt}onlng.
~ASHINGTON (AP) - Orden to fadOiles tor
dilrable goods posted their biggest gain In more than
.'
16
.
-f'actory orders
.
a
43115.
F·amo.us
.,
LOGAN (APJ- TwoMansfleldmen accusetlln the shooting death
of a Hocking County woman and wounding of her husband were
ordered held without bOnd by Hocking County Common Pleas Judge
James StUwell.
StanleyR. Cooper, 29, and Wayne R Meadows, tl, each entered
Innocent pleas Friday Ia each of three charges stemming from the
Dec. 3 kiUlng of Evelyn ROSI' Damron, 30, and the wounding of her
husband, Evan, 33.
·
Each man Is .charged with aggravated murder, attempted
agrava~ furder and thett. Stilwell set a pretrial hearingfor) an.
25 to hear any motions to reduce the bondS. ,
.
Logan County Prosecuter Chris Veldt filed a motion Friday
~king ~pies of head hair, blood and blood type for each man .
· The Damrons were shot In what Sheriff Jim Jones described as an
"execution typEl shooting" while they were In bed In their rural
Hocking County home. No motive has been glvm for the shootings.
'
New,superintendent named
ATHENS (AP-l .-:. Dr. June Slobodian has been named
superintendent of the Athens City School District by school offtdals
who salci she would itart the new job Aprtl 1, !!MIS.
Ms. SWxxllan,!\2, wW start at asalaryo!$42,500andwlll begtverla
three-yell' contract lhrough July :n, 1988. She Is CUJTently assistant
superintendent of Alexander Local Schools.
Board members said Froday that Ms. Slobodian was selected
from a field of three finalists that Included Dr. Raymond Yeagley,
superintendent of ltte Alexander district, and Darrell Cook, principal
of the Athens Middle School.
The district has been without a superintendent since last summer,
when Clayton Dusek resigned to become superintendent at Avon
Lakl!. Acting superintendent Roger Thompson dliln't apply for the
Job.
Woman released on shock probation
ATHENS (AP)- An Atllem woman convicted In the stabbing
death of her husband earUer thiS year has been released on shock
probation.
Athens County Common Pleas Judge William Rowland on Friday
ordered Charlotte Dodson, 33, placed on probation for five years. He
also ordf'red Ms. Dodson to pay $4,000 In funeral costs to her
husband's famUy, attend mental health counseling sessions,
maintain steady employment If posslblf' and pay court costs.
Ms. Dodson was convicted this summer in the murder of her
husband, Thomas, last November. Her attorneys said she was thf' '
victim of domestic violence. She had served six months of a 6-to
25-year sentence:
Company fulfills contract
NEWARK 1AP) -A Columbus company Is moving here to fulfill a
government contract and says it will hire as many as 120 local
·
workers.
Michael Cherup, president of Mlcael Industries of Columbus, said
Friday that his company wUI leaSI' thf' former Ward Hydraulics Co.
plant, which has bef'n empty for eight years, to produce 5.JJ,852 rolls
of barbed tape for Sf'CUritY. at military Installations.
Work on the $9.6 million Defense Department contract Is expected
to begin next spring and will take 2Y.! years, Cherup said.
The company choSI' Newark largely becauSI' it Is a
"labor-surplus" area, and the governrTlf'nt favors aw~rdlng such
contracts to those areas, Cherup said. Unemployment in the area
was 8.6 percent In October.
"This Is the first major employer we have had caine here In 3%
years," said Mayor WUUam S. Moore.
The barbed tape ts
. made of high-carbon wire and sheet steel.
.
Rockwell emploYees laid off
NEWARK (AP) - About 100 Rockwell International employees
here have been laid off, although they wm be paid through Jan . l,
according to plant manager George Mqer.
Me17&er said employees have kmwn about the Friday's layoffs
since September. He said It Is typical for the plant to experience
seasonal layoffs at the plant which malces l\eTOSPIICll parts, aJtbouah
they u!lllally mmesrlier In the )'ear. It Is not ~crown If the em~
wll1 be recalled.
.,,"
'"
..
'
.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.....___;__________-J:'•
�~2
The Sunday Times Sentinel
o-mber 23, ,,..
Pon...-oy Middleport Gallipolia, Ohio Point Pleatant, W. Va.
'
'hun' u 23, 1914
(
l
AIDS .~ttacks ·both body -and
system.
By JOHN GVIITAVIIEN
A_., I J.,._Wtlta
"It's pOssible to transplllllt bone
.HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -1be marrow after Jll!ltlng r1d of the
lethal disease AIDS may be much virus, but repairing damage to
l'll!lre dlttleult to ireat than was brains Is something In which we
previously thought because new have no expertile at aD," said Dr.
research s~ ihe virus that JohnDwyer,chlefoflmmunologyat
. CONFERENCE SPEAKER Rep. Rocco
;c.oiOnpa, D-Cievelancl, riJiht, cbalnnan or the House
.(<Jrnmlttee on Economic Development and Srnau
"' HI ~ss. spoke at the recent ecoDOmlc development
conlen!llce at Rio Grande Collep and Conununlty
College. He Is gree!ed, above, by Dr. Cloduus Smltb,
JWC.CC presldeitt.
·E conomic goals discussed at
· d evelopment conference
.
"
caU!leS It can attack brain ()ells as
well as . the Immune system,
researchers $ald.
The AIDS virus had been thought
Yale University's medical schOOl.
"So It might be much more dl1flcult
to treat the dlseue than we ever
ioattackthebody'slmm~system
No vaccine . · has ever been
di?veloped to combat an AIDStype
virus, and the development Of a
vaccine Is compll~ated further
when multiple strains are Involved,
Dwyer said.
AltS aftllcts more than ·7.100
people In the United States. The
number or neWly reported cases Is
expected to double every . five
months, Dwyer said.
"Ifwe.havelOOnewcasesamonth
In Manhattan now, we <:aD expect
by Invading one type of white blood
cell - the T-4 lymphocyte. But
premature senility In some patients
afl!lcted with acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome Jed researchers to cooclude the virus also
attacks the brain, Bald Dr. Robert
Gallo, head of the tumor ceU
laboratory at the National Cancer
Instlfute and one of tile discoverers
of the virUs.
·
Gallo, lecfurtng Friday at Hart.
ford Hospital, said his researCh task
force hasfoundavatletyol!tralnsof
the AIDS virus, raising "wqrry
Whether that wllllmpalrvaccineor
therapy."
"It's really unpredictable, but It's
a five-year. problem at best," he
said. "If we don't come up with a
vaccine, we're In some trOuble." .
He said his work wiU be published
next ll)Ontl) in Science magazine. ,
Scientists-seeking a cure for AIDS ·
have been concentrating on the
Immune system In the hope of
repairing damage once a way Is
found to ldll the vtrus. White blood
cells produced by bone marrow are
a key component of the Immune
nald Ash, Pomeroy, and David L. fac!Utles, community awareness of
Souders, Wellston .
economic development, attraction
Each chamber was asked to of small businesses to the area, and
cover the following points during better utilization of the services that
the panel discussion; local com- are available to this area.
The conference continued with a
m~nlty economic development situation in the recent past and the presentation on business retention,
current situation; current projects expansion, and creation 'by Sam
to promote economic development; Crawford, district specialist, Com·
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP)
future goals for the communities; munlty and Natural Resource
State Attorney General Brian
a nd areas In which regional Development: Cooperative Exten- 1 McKay says he has dismissed a
cooperation could . speed up eco- sion Service, Jackson District
claim of improper business practl·
nomic development.
. Office.
ces flled against Santa Claus by .a
Crawford introduced .a ·slide
It was the consensus of all the
\.
"Mr. I.M. Grtnch."
chambers that there Is a need to present a lion stressing the need for
McKay, who Issued a similar
work together to improve transpor- increased communication among
tongue-in-cheek Christmas mestation and to promote tourism.
government, management, labor
sage last ye;~r. said Fr)day he has
Many of the chambers discussed and . tht' general .population. The
countersued on Santa's behalf,
the · brochures that they have basic purpose of a retention and
alleging Grlnch's claim constituted
available. Other . concerns ex- expenslon program is to assist the
"mallclous rottenness during the
pressed by the Chambers were community's existing businesses
holiday season."
health care facilities. recreational . and Industries, he said.
The first-term attorney general
The conference continued with a
said Gtlnch accused Santa of giving
presentation on the Innovation
away presents In violation offederal
Center and Research Park at Ohlo
minimum-price rules and of taking
University by Dinah Adkins, assist·
kickbacks from hls reindeer.
ant to the: director. ICRP was
created in 1.982 to foster en(repreneurtal activities and to provide
'
technical and business assistance to
,
OAKLAND, C<!llf. - Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. has
new technology - oriented
. ·. signed an agreement ~lllng most of its refractories assets in
companies.
,
_ ' Australia to Morganite Australia Pty. Limited, a subsidiary of
Beyond the Immediate purpose of
. . , : Morgan Crucible Company PLC of London, for an undisclosed
encouraging · the growth of
, : amount.
technology-oriented business,
The sale includes equipment located in New South Wales. South
ICRP's goals are to strengthen the
' :-" Australia and West Australia . The facilities make refractories, heat
bridge ·between university and
' resistant linings for industrial furnaces .
Industry, to expand student and
Earlier this year, Kaiser announced intentions to withdraw from
faculty experience with Industry
the refractories business.
•
and the problems of small business
and to promote economic growth In
Ohio.
•
Adkins also Introduced the idea of
small business incubators, which
' T .,
represent an opportunity for comGREENVILLE, s.c.'...,. Multimedia Inc. has charged off 22 cents
munities to support entrepreneur·
· .. per share of Its s,tock because of losses caused by Sports Time, Its ·
sh
ip and local economic
·
· · pay-channel cable television venture.
development
.
·
' Wilson C. Weam, Multimedia's chairman of the board and chief
An
incubator
center
,Is a locally• · executive offiCer, told securitY analysts in New York recently the
owned
and
financed
facility
(for
company may write off :Jl cents per share for the full year because of
profit
or
non·prpflt)
that
provides
losses suffered in the fourth quarter.
·
• office space. and sometimes reIt Is now estimated that Multimedia 's total losses will be a
search and manufacturing space,
maximum of 35 cents to 40 cents per share.
to beginning businesses.
Multimedia may choose to charge off this addltional 5- to-10-cents
In addition to providing space,
per share in the fourth quarter. If it does, Weam said Sports Time
facility offers support services
the
should have zero Impact Ol) the company's earnings in 1005.
.
to the businesses such as adminisSports Time, which Multimedia produces with Anheuser-Busch
trative,
technical, educational, and
C9f11pani..S, wiU continue to operate and can contribute to future
financial.
earnings, Wearn said.
The conference ended with the
keynote prt>sentatlon by Rep.
Rocco J. Colonna, D-Qeveland,
chairman of the Hou.k Committee
on Economic Development and
Small
Business. .
PORTSMOt..rrH -Auto travel increased 3.2 percent during the
Colonna
stressed the fact that
third quarter of 1!& when compared to the same period in 1983,
·local
government
officials, local
according to the American Automobile Association's quarterly
businesses .and industries and the
survey of travel routing· requests.
.
·
general population nt!ed to comDurh:tg the first nine months of the year, auto travel was 3.7
municate needs to their elected
percent higher than In 1983, said Gene Redecker, auto travel services.
officials. He also urged better
director for the Auto Club of Southeastern Ohio.
utlllzatlon of the programs already
MA's survey, a barometer of motor travel lit the United States, Is
In place.
based on a tabulation of Trlptl~ 'prepared for members by
AAA·afflllated clubs.
' RIO GRANDE
Rio Grande
c;QUege and Community Coliege
recently held a "Conference on
Economic Development - Past,
Present. and Future."
The conference was sponsored by
RJo Grande College and CommunIIX College, area chambers of
commerce (Gallipolis, Jackson,
Middleport, Oak Hill. Pomeroy,
and Wellston 1and Ohio Technology
.,-,.ansfer Organization (OTTO I.
• -The conference began with a
welcome to the college by Dr.
Clodus R. Smith, president , and
•. ~Into the chambers of
' commerce panel discussion.
v The panel consisted of the
' '(:hamber presidents; Paul Knotts,
•·GaUipolls, Pete Michael, Jackson,
• Dr. Yvonne Scally, MiddlepOrt,
Lawrence Brtsker, Oak HIU. Ro-
~-Business
Claim dismissed .
Briefs:--..
··· .·.:Kaiser to sell refractories
thought."
:.m ~month In tlvemonths,'; oWyer
bllclY's
·'
"
Association . He Is a licensed
physical therapist In Ohio and West
VIrginia.
·
Bonar and his wife, Judith, an
elementary teacher, have thnie
children. They will be moving from
Shadyside to GaUipolls in the near
future.
Josepl! E. Bonar
....
..•.
.
.•.
....
P.M.
..
2-5°/o OFF OUR LOW, LOW .PRICE
ALL 14K GOLD CHAINS, CHARMS
. ...
'
..
... ..
.
..
.
AND EARRINGS ... DAZZLING!
. ..
Auto travel shoWs increase
RIO GRANDE -Seminars to program Lotus software for use by
business and government wW be conducted In January at the
• Emerson E. Evans School of Business Management at Rio Grande .
• College an<;t Conununlty College.
1be seven-hour, one-day seminars will provide instruction for use
· ~ PC disk operating 5ystems. Introduction to the Lotus 123 and
advanced Lotus usage.
A $125 fee per sm1lnar covers use of all equipment, a Lotus basic
ccmmand manual, parking and refreshments. Certificates wiU be
awarded to those who complete the seminar.
• '!be seminars are slated ror Jan. 9 and Jan. 19.
TWINSBURG, Ohlo (AP) D.S. Inc. atttlbutes an
expected ~ percent second quarter
drop In earnings to several factors,
including the unexpected poor
performance by a recent
acquisition.
·
Revco's llscal second quarter
endedNov.17.
Revco, a specialty retailer that
operates the country's !ar&est
drugstore chain, ctted the ccsts or
opening new tilm!l ror the earnln&ts
drop and the po<r performance by
Odd Lot Trading Co., a deale~' In
' close-oUt merchandlae that Revco
acquired In May.
The conpany also blamed slower
growth In sales and Increased
Interest COSI.!I.
'
PORTSMOUI'H - Portsmouth Receiving HIJSpital was recently
~ accnodlted ror three years by the JOint Con:unisslon on Accnodltation
allllllpltals.
'
'l1le mental health racWty serves seven southeastern Ohio
mmtle'l, Including GaJJJa, Jackson and Lawrence.
'
;'
'
CINCINNATI lAP) -A former
foreman's allegations that the
General Electric;-Even\lale jet en·
glne plant fraudulently bUied the
government forworkdoneforother
customers are under Investigation
by the Air Force Office of Special
Investiga lions, says Capt. Jim
O'Brien.
.
O'Brien said Friday that the
criminal investigation was being
pursued jointly with the FBI.
I ,, t • :
The Investigation began in Oc·
. ...
Iober, almost a year after GE VIce
• f N • ~ II
President W.G. Krall told the Air
Force 'about "improper labor vou>~
chetlng" at Evendale.
.. ... ~.
O'Brien, an Air Force spokesman
.. "' . ~ ..
at the Pentagon, said the Office of·
'
'
Specl!ll Investigations would not
:. : : . • TIRED MINER- 8lewllrt FGiter, 41, or Price, V&eh, takes a break
:· ~ ::. rrom eaorta to locate 11111N8Ciie re11ow mtne... trapped 1n the WUherg comment further whlle the investigation is underway.
.. :_: • :. Mine. Foater II one o f - or Emery MIDinc Co. worken laboring bt
U.S. Attorney Christopher K.
' :;, : the l'eiCUe effolt. ( AP I mrplao).
·
BameshadsaldWednesdaythatthe
FBI ·was looking Into allegations
'~
.
r
.
that GE bUied the government for
work done on other contrac\3.
E
The charges began In 1983 when
:: . · CLEVELAND (AP) - Four
Edward ' High School teacher. John Michael Gravitt, a rormer
machinist and roreman at GE's
• : CleVeland tren-agers who had
Thompson was bl;lund, beaten and
: 'p1l'lldell gulltytokiiUngahighschool
shot twice In the head afterleavlnga Development Managerhent Opera,
tion, blew the whlstle on the voucher
;: teacher and other crimes have l)een
bingo game at the school.
.
~ sentenced to )lfe In prlson.
Elilred and Scebbl had also problem.
1
HetoldGEaboutlt.GEresponded
;::
Cuyahoga County Conunon Pleas
pleaded guUty in the attenipted
! Judge John L. ~Iotta headed a killing of Robert HaJduk, 511, of with an Internal audit that reviewed
! ~ tbree-Juclgepanelthatsentencedtbe Cleveland, who was tied and thrown a sample of the labOr vouchers
... tow-, alll8, on Friday.
rrom the tlark Avenue bridge In · lsslled during Gra\~tt's three years
•~
.
"We are of unanimous opinion
Cleveland on Dec. 12, 1983, but at Evendale.
GE round problems with
; that thele criJnes not only are
survived.
heinous. they a~;e slaughters, ..
Jamet1 Rader and Ge{ard Valdes vouchers, but the company conCluded there had been no fraud and
;, Angelotta said at the sentellclng. ·
~ 111Uty In November to
the ~t had not been
charJel In both thole crimes and the
overbilled. In fact, GE said, the
slaying or Raymond Forestal, I>, ~
,
James Eldred and Michael
vouchers sampled Indicated the
Youngstown, wbo was found
" i ' &ebbl had both pleaded gulltyearly
•• th1l month to the sJaytngot
stabbed and shot on Cleveland's · govenlment had been underbiUed
by.$47,(0).
F E. Thompeon. 43, a Lakewood St. west skle Dec.16,1983.
~
'
...
4
' I
W
• t
.. .: .
. -.
. .
. ...
.
~
Revro
,:. Hospital receives accreditation
Billing fraud'
·investigated
.. .
· Revco earns
show .drop
· Programming seminars at RGC
..
A\lurn ~uur~:lf in ..:.l imn·K:rin~t Jtnl\ll.lt Sitvinl(li rh.u will
ll1;tkc.• you !!hin•.:. A 11 c,: ll'J,:JMI ~•rr,•y uf lttrrin,~.:honr.:s,
M:qw..·minc.·~t . mJ'•!i .1nd otht:r dJSII it• r :uu:rm. In t_:\'l.'r)'lhinJ,:
fn11n du.kt·r kn~~~~~ tn lun~o~ . fluwin)t srr.lll)lC.\ C~tt np lt:nwm
yuur luuk:~ wirh our ~•:k1.·rinn u( novc.·hy .ll"kl \k·filfltfivt.·
diJfnl~. ~n. l c.·otrrinJ:,' in hnor~t. :lll ttl!o, h,dl:; ;u~l tnnrt<. All
2'1 '1 uf( nuw!
'
.
INGELS F NITURE & JEWELRY.
OPIIIIYIIINGS UNtiL I P.M., 12·6 SUNDAY, DEC. 231D
116NOmSICO.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Union
ieadml at the NLO Inc. uranium
~plant at nearby F!!I'Mld
want the
Department ~
Ener-gy to step aside and let other
aaencle!llnvestlgate worker health
problems.
Geoffrey Sea of Piketon, a
member of the on, Chemical and
Atomic Workers of Amerlca, told a
Friday night news conlerence that
six Fernald workers were urodet goIng treatment ror ailments he
claimed were job related.
'l1le union statements came a day
after Ohlo Attorney Frank Ceie. bre= announced plans to sue the
OOE for violations of alleged toxic
waste regulations at Fernald and at
the Mounds Facility In Miamisburg,
Ohlo. He said NLO and Monsanto
Research Corp., which operates the
Miamisburg facUlty, would be
included.
The DOE has closed parts of the
~year-old NLO plant 18 miles
northeast of Cincinnati to Invest!·
gate the leak of some 270 pounds of
radioactive uranium oxide dust In
late November and earlier this
montlt. NLO operates the plant for
DOE and makes uranium Ingots for
rederal reactors In other states. ·
Sea said five of six workers
treated at the Greater Cincinnati
Occupational Health unit at Provi·
· dence Hospital have severe lung
disorders which may be Job-related .
"I believe out of six workers who
are being treated, five showslgns of
severe respiratory dlslsease, " Sea
said. "None of them have been
diagnosed by NLO d~ors, who,
even though they checked their
chest X-rays once every year,
should have been able to diagnose
those problems."
u.s.
Two ex~Ohioans
perished in mine
SUNDAY ONLY, DECEMBER 23rd-
..
:
the
INGELS SPECTACULAR ,
SU -DAY SALE12-6
~ · Sports ·Time losses revealed
u.s.
cles, said JohJI McGrath or the
Mine · ·Safety and Health
ORANGEVILLE, Utah '(AP)Administration.
,Relcuen who found 13 bodies in a
Bore ~les were being drllled
· burning coal mine were foi'CI!d by from the topolthemountaln and the
. flames to retl'l!llt nearly to the
adjacent mine, but the work was
surface from deep Inside the mine ' going slowly. Henrie saki the
Saturday as they attempted to reach
hor12Dntal hole from Little Dove had
:pie remaining 14 miners trapped · gone only 34frreet by today,leavlng
since Wednesday.
iibout 600 more feet to go. Little
, Freezing temperatures post·
progress was made dvernlght on a
polled efforts to set orr explosive
vertical sllalt being drUled on top of
' charges aboVe the mine to signal
East Mountain becatJse or the cold,
. any survivors who 11\ay have
McGrath said.
reached a safe aretl In the mine. . Nine bodies were found Friday
· Other work, delayed plans to set up
morning 100 to :nJ feet inside the
,geophones, microphones that can
mine section In which they had been
pick.up SOUnd through rock.
working, Henrie said. The next two
The 26 men and one woman were. ~ were found Frfd!!Y ~ening 600to 700
trapped Wednesday night when a
feet Inside the section and the last
fire broke out as miners and
two a half·hour later an additional 50
company executives worked toto 100 feet Into the funnel.
ward a production record. Officials
"They appearedtobemovinglna
· bellfVe an overheated bearing In a
direetlon toextttitemlneratherthan
conveyor belt started the fire.
to retreat," he said. "The fact we
~Bescuers~ had inched 1,500 feet
have found ..~jlle who apparently
down the tl\llllel or the mine's fifth
attempted · to evacuate the. mine
tight section early today when· a
certainly does not preclude the
"sudden fiareup" of fire drove them
posslbWty that thereweresornewho
back 3,4 of a mile almost to the
attempted to retreat."
.
entrance of the mine, said Robert
Henrie said that among the 'XI
Henrie, a spokesman lor Emery
trapped miners were management
ETHIOPIA ..., ·Two-yeaNlld Jennifer Shrlrnplln deposlls ber
Mining Co., which operates the
offtclals "there to provide encour·
conlrlbuUGD
towards helping with the famine In Ethiopia taking to heart
mines for Utah Power & Light.
agement and support" as the
the
words
of
Jesus In the Gospel or St. Matthew, "I was hungry and you
• Officials hope some of the miners , workers pursued a one-day tonnage
gave
me
to
eat,"
thereby reaching out to the lnmgry In that country. 'lbe
may have taken refuge deep within
record for longwaU mining - a
parl<lhloners
at
Sacred
Heart Church bt Pomeroy made Ethiopia their
, theflfthrlghtsectlon,ontheopposlte
process in whlch machines strip
special
concern
durlug
the
holy season or Advent by prayer, fa!!llng and
side of the fire from
entrance .In
coal from a lengthy area of a·seam.
giving ahns. Also, this year - as In previous ye~m:~- they donated over
a chamber stocked with oxygen.
"They were mining a great deal of
300 Christmas toys lor underprivileged chUdren of Meigs Coonty.
Henrie acknowledged the latest
coal off the face of that,longwaU and
setback was not encouraging to the . they might tulve been dealing with'
rescue etrort. ·
some of the transportation needs or
"Clearly, time Is t!w critical
other concerns with moving those
element," he said. "We're hoping
materials," he said.
we can workout therlre problems to
Six officials, Including an Emery
avoid the 'yo-yo etfect' of having to
vice president, were among the nine
retreat then start again, reventllate
whose bodies were round first. The
the shaft- this Is the challenge."
names of the last four had not been
By 'The Associated Press
to work as a rank -and·file miner, his
Henrie, who had described the fire
released early today.
VIctor
Clngolanl Jr, left eastern
father said.
as "contained but unprecllctable,"
Officials believe the nine were
Ohio in 1975 In search of a brighter
"I had hopeuntU the last minute,"
·declined to estimate when rescuers
trying to follow the route taken by
future in coal. Randy Curry ieft in
said VIctor's mother, Lena. She had
would resume their advance Into the · Kenneth Blake, 32, who escaped
1981 when the coal mines started
heard that her son was tight behind
mine.
minutes after the blaze was
closing
down
.
another
man who got out ofthemine
Federal mine safety officials
discovered.
Their dreams ended Wednesday
safely.
ordered workers not to remove the
The fire, beDeved to have been
when fire swept the Wilberg Mine at
Clngolani had two children by a
13 bodtes discovered Friday becaused by an overheated beartng In
Orangeville,
Utah.
Twenty-seven
first
.marriage and three adopted
Cll\15e "of the limltedamountoftlme
a · conveyor belt, erupted as the
tci recover"any of the survivors," workers were mining a 12-foot-thlck l,li!OPie were trapped . Friday, 13 children by his second marriage.
Curry was the father of three.
'
1Jenrle said.
seam of coal In the mine, located · people were found dead, apparently
by
carbon
monoxide
overcome
Federal mine safety officials
About 20,tro feet of cable for the
eight miles north of Orangeville and
fumes
as
they
tried
to
escape
the
ordered rescuers not to remove the
geophones had been laid in the
150 miles southeast of Salt Lake City.
OOdles of the 13 people found dead
.adjacent Little Dove mlite, bul the
The mine Is made up of horizontal fire . Cingolanl and Curry were
among them .
Friday because of the limited time
~!fort was delayed as the cable was
tunnels drilled Into the side of a
The search, hampered by a
to rescue t he remaining victims .
repeatedly broken by mining vehl· . mountain. There are no vertical
•
fiareup
of the fire, conllnued
United Mine Workers union
shafts.
Saturday for 14 more people.
president Richard Trumka called
'
Cingolani was a 33-year-old father
the deaths at the Utah mine "an
' '
of five who left hls hometown of
unacceptable race toward death,"
•
Hopedale, where his fat her is
saying efforts to set a one-day
•
•
mayor.
nine
years
ago
to
work
for
prOduction record'conttlbu ted to the
.
Consollda lion Coal opera lions tit the
•
fire. "How much, I don't know,"•he
•
west. His father; VictorSr., said his
said In Washington .
son
left
Consol
to
accept
a
job
with
Rescuers had Inched 1,500 feet
.' "
Emery Mining Co., the owner oft he
down the ~unnel of the mine's fHth
burning mine.
right section early Saturday when a
31,
of
Jewett
,
was
trained
Curry
,
"sudden flareup" of fire drove them
'
as a mortician, ·but decided at the
baCk :X of a mile almost t.o the
age of 19 to work In the mines
entrance of the mine, said Robert
inst ead, according to his father,
Henrie, a spokesman for Emery
Earl. He worked for Y&OCoaiCo. in ·Mining Co, which operates the
Harrison County , leaving for Utah
mines for Utah Power & Light.
when a mine closed.
Officials hope some of the miners
He worked as a foreman for
. ..;. .
may have taken refuge deep within
Emery before hew as laid off.That's
the fifth right sectlon,on the opposite
,.
when he rejoined the United Mine
side
of the fire from the entrance, in
'
'
Workers of America and went back
a chamber stocked with oxygen.
Henrie acknowledged the latest
'
setback was not encouraging to the
rescue effort .
VIctims of AIDS die of compllca·
tlons artslng rram the
lnablllty to ward oltlnfectloll of tpe
lungs and other organs. .
,I
"We have seen a number, of
pa~ts who died because they lOst
control over their bodies 1111ca'l"'
their brains were cracking \W."
Dwyer said.
'·
"It's gplng to be a conslder~ble
number" of people who die fil!m
AIDS lnlectlon of the brain, Dwyer
said. lie said he knows of no A¢5
patients who have the virus onJy,ln .
their brain, and added he ~ts
the virus may also be able to attack
"some cells ofthe intestine."· 1 1.
The disease affects mainly liqnosexualorblsexualmen,lntravenoos '·
drug abusers, blood transfus(on
recipients, !]emophlllacs ~nd
Haitians.
.HMC names physical
the~apy director ·
GALLIPOLIS Joseph E.
Bonar, RPr, has joined the staff of
Holzer Medlical Center as physical
/'
therapy director.
A Bellaire native, Bonar graduated from Bellaire High School, and
received his certificate in physical
therapy from the . University of
Pittsburgh .and his bachelor's degree In physical education and
blolpgy from Purdue University.
llonar came to HMC following 10
years as director of physical
therapy at Wetzel County Hospital,
New MartinsvUie, W.Va. He was
also a physical therapy consultant to
Shadyside Care Center in Shadyside. Ohio, and to the Wetzel County
Home Health Agency.
.For nine years before af!Uia tlng
with with Wetzel County Hospital, ·
he was In Ohio serving as asslstam ·
director and director of physical
therapy at Bethesda . Hospital,
ZaneSvUie.
. Bonar holds membership in the
American ·Physical Therap5' Asso·
ciat!on, the Ohlo Physical Therapy
Association, the West Virginia
Physical Therapy Association and
the Orthopaedic Sports Medicine
By PEG McJ!:NTEE I
_._.., .... fl.- Writer
said.
,,
:Teens sentenced for murder
•t·n
wnuam
·-
Plfl
!:!
-
Outside agencies
so~ght for probe
Mine blaze forces
rescuers to retreat
brain, new research reveals .
Tin•• Sr illlllll
The Svd f
A
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tetldel!!i
~uinerous shoppe~
. BELLAIRE, Ohlo (AP) -In spite
of the rain leaking through the roof
and a lack of heat, shoppers from
across the eastern United States
fiocked to the three-day Imperial
Glass Corp. closeout sale.
Imperial Glass, one of the last
hand-crafted glass manufacturers
in the Ohio Valley, declared
bankruptcy and was bought by two
Columbus companies - Lancaster
Colony Corp. and Consolidated
International - In November for
$00l,lXM>.
With most Items on the first day of
the sale Friday carrying a cut-rate
price tag of under $5, hundreds of
bargain
hunters filled~ carts
.
with pieces of the :.nl,®ltem
Inventory the new owners are trying
to liquidate.
''Our famUy has worked f~
Imperial Glass for a number of
years. I'm well aware of thevalueof
Imperial Glass. This Is an outstand•
lng value," said John Weyrick, Who
drove over 'tram nearby Mounds·
ville, W.Va., to shop. "It's sad to see
Imperial finally close up. But I think
the people who are here shopping
today are getting incredible bargains. There's noquestlonabout lt."
Shoppers shivered inside_ the
81-year-old buDding on the first day
. ,.llldiiii •IP"-•I!O •rt.•~ ·~ \
.
.. -I Pul*llllo\o>t i!U
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of winter because the local utiUty
wouldn 't tum on the gas. It said
there were too many leaks in the
pipes.
The fire marshal prohibited the
use of kerosene heatersforthesame
reason.
A local group, the Save Imperial
Committee, stW hopes to buy thi!;
company and its valuable molds to·
opeo a small manufacttirlngopera·
tlon, and to eventually turn the su.;
Into a tourtst attraction.
•
The uncertain fate of the company,
angers some. Mike Nocera, former:
general manager at Impertal, saJct
the glass company would still be;·
alive toda}(. If not for what he,
·characterized as shortsightedness
of local bankers, from whom hesakihe sought money in 1!1l3.
:
"We went to the financial instltu~
tlons to borrow a million dollars tQ;
save Imperial, and we could not lkt
It," Nocera saki. "The companies;
that purchased Imperial , patct
$001,(0) for It, and It wiD liquidate for~
a million dollars."
1
This, he said , demonstrates a lack.
of good faith by the Ohio Valley's.
financial and business community.'
The problem Is going to grow, he
warned .
........ ....
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Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO .
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORT AnON
NOTICE OF THE
· AVAtl.ABIUTY OF
AN ENVIRONMENTAL
ASSESSMENT
CONTRACT SALES
LEGAL COPY NO.
8&·1 10
In accordance wtth th e Provt ·
s1ons .of the Nat,On<'tl Envtron-
mental Pohcy Acr, the D•rector
oJ the 01"110 Deo~rtment ot
Tr ansport at1on announces the
avatlab1hty of an Envrronmental
Assessment on the orooosed
upgradmg ol sut: (6) onmtt•ve
h1ghwav res t area tacd1ttes wtth
modem bwld1ngs; flu sh tOtl ets.
s•dewalks and access lor handl·
capped persons The se Rest
Areas are located 1n the
coun hes on h•ghwttys as lotIOVVS' Athens Coun rv. State
Route No US 33. Sectoon
8 4 2 wes t of Athens; Galha
Tribune - ~2342
Sentinel - 992·2156
lll&ister - 675-1333
:.I·~ .: - ~:
II
II M11111 .... ,.. ODO•I
l l t l. tWIIIINIIIoh.-...-101
............,....."... ....... ,....,.
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"futfllllllle .. _ ,
Public Notice
CO\Jnty, Stl';ll e Rout P. No 7 .
Sf:!r.ton 3 30 north ol Gath pol ts.
Monroe County. Stale Route
No 78. Sect1on 11 93 . eas t of
Lew,svtlle . M organ County.
State Route No 37 . • Sect, on
2 5 1. east of Port ersvtll e and
State Route No 60. Sechorl
11
11 '"'-'-'••
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v1ewed and wher e add1t•onal
1nformatton concern1ng ' the
oroposed undertaktng may be
Anyone w1Sh1ng to subm1t a
wnuen slatement concernmg
l ... t-.114
.._t•.ww
·~ ,_
••
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,_
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Uftt\1-· . "" ... . . _ _
Public Notice
thi S EnvHonmonH'll Assessment
may do so by ma11in!l 11 10 the
Ohto Depanrnent of Transpor 13\tnn. 0 1stnct Depu ty D1re<:tor .
Georg~ D Doug rm . P 0 Box
658. Moroena. OhiO 45 7501
The ftnal date lor subm,sston of
statements wtll be January 23.
0 65. north of the Wash1ngton
1985
'
County line. and Wash,n{:lton
Coul)ty, State Route No 550. ·
Warren J. Sm1 th
Sect1 0n 9 90 . east of Barlow
Q,reclor
A coov of lhtS Enwonmemat
Dec 23
Assessm~nt rs ava,labte to the
public for vtew1ng at the Oh10
Qeparlment of Transportation
01Sir1Cl ou.ce. Moskt ngum
Dnve and Oav1s Avenue. Martetla. OhiO. Al so the 01 stnct
Off 1ce wrll adv1se you of
3 Announcementl
)ocat10ns where cop1E!S may be
ob1a1red
·:
J!ol&l'il
'
.. .,.,,,.l.,.,.
~
::
Closeout sale draws
I II UII~UI 0 11UftUnlll
ll
••
••
~
clinic, which opeMCI In Mit!
COIIftnned the five wmilen' bealdi
problems but saJd the 1111!11 bed~
undergoing ln!atment ~
l!r eorne time.
:•
1be energy department baa laid
p!'t!IOOusly that no wallets haW:
been affected by working In tal!
plant and that nearby
were In no danger fnrn escapiJC
dust.
Sea said the union wants OOElO
turn over health problems 10 till!
National Instlfute for OccupatJonAt
Health and Safety and the Occu!il·
tiona! Safety and Health ~
tratlon. DOE facUlties are nat
subject to tho8e agencies.
••
Workers also want lrnmunUY
from reprtsal ror talking to out81di
investigators and repol'ten, !IIi!
said. 1be unions, which ronn die
Atomic Trades and LaborCounclla!
Fernald, also want to be part r1 aiiy
future decisions OD WOrk
~
regulations.
Meanwhile, DOE officials sald
theywanttorneetwlthCelebrezzeto
discuss his allegations.
• "They (DOE officials) called 8J!d
asked to set up a meeting as soon 1$
possible," said Bob Tenenbaum,:a
spokesman for Celebre=.
"We wiU be dJscoilsslng the
programs that we alreadY haVe
under way ror general site fr!lproVement which• would coriect and
Improve conditions cited in thla ·
notice. These will .address mOst,' if ·
not all, of the points raised,'' sajd
Jim Alexander, a DOE spokesmaJi
in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
·
Celebrezze's threatened com·
plaint would not address the fE!Clellt
leaks of uranium oxide dust, hi$
omcesald.
·
Junbq 'arimo· Jentin:d
__
ipokesman llr the
.~·;
Blloono for G.t Wall, Anftl,
...urya, llrlhda... p8111n.
81nglng Gorrih. C•l 811·
toono a Co. 441·4111,
~
3 Announcement•
SWEEPER ond MWing .;...
chine rep1ir. pen•. ent
oupplloo.
delivery,
Pic• up ..,j
Devil v,cuutt
C!Hner, one holt mite , .
G-o
lid. Colt
c,_.
114·441-02114.
.
•
•
•
'
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. A'll
ME HOW. The fun II~
_ , ,.... 4 otope "' ......
weltht, no aounli"' Cllllil
rift. no ate~vation ...... al
-olng.c.ll••••==
lfilll•lllellln .......
• '"""' hMIIhy. <filii
2011 or 441-IJW.
;
Gun-•t . . . . . . . .
Club . - y 111-f, 'lOt
p.m . .Factory dartll...,
oofr..
'
�The
Ti!Tle$oS.ntinel
Ohio
Do It Every Time
GiVNWIY
11
"'"" .............. b-.1
,.............. • Terrier. can
,14-:171-2103.
JOIN• . THI LEA DEll. The
New AVON. O..mlllo ""'
•rntnao ploon, proJ.....,MI
- Uleo tnolnlng. melle up.
color •n•lyolo, unlimited
growth potontt.l. c.tl
*>4-1711-1 421 or 304·
3"·0724.
2 8donble IJUIIIMeo, .-d to
to a - - t a . mlxad
IHwd. 114;441-0059 .
I a - hound pupplaa.
~,1711- 2571 .
j
. &t. Barnard to . a good
country ho11111. Shirley, Rt.
1. Boxll9. Apple Gro.,., W.
Vo.
.1
C1rd of Thanks
The family of Delia Devault would like to thank
Virginia. Send resume to:
Colonial American Develop·
ment Corporation. 380
everyone for the nice
letters and cards she received on her 93rd
South Filth Street, Colum. buo, O&hio 43215 .
birthday.
4
CHRISTOPHEl! 1974-1978
: There's a miniature train
- beneath the tree,
: A little en&i- said,
'Gn!ndma keip it for me."
: How was I to know he
would .never see.
: The little train beneath the
trH.
: S1dly missed by Grandma
. and Grandpa.
8
Giveaway
12
Public Sale
& Auction
Small female puppy 4 mos.
old. lovaa children . Perfect
lor Chrlotmas. Call 446·
3005.
'One
mala kitten,
orange
tabby. 8 weeko old. Call
614-992 ·7194.
Black and white Dutch rabbit. Two female dogs both
long -haired . One black, one
blond. 8oth 25 lbs.. 1 Y,
yearo old. Coli 614-992 ..
3283.
In Memoriam
IN MEMORY OF
6
Lost and Found
ADA E. BAYS
Auction avery Fridly night at
t~e
Hartford Community
Center. Tr,uckloada of new
merchandise every weak.
Conaigmahta of new 81 uaed
mtfrchandise always wei·
corned. Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer. Call 304-2763069.
.
Need extra money? We buy
about .a nything of Value: no
junk, please. Leon Flea
Single person-male or fe-
mole. 21 to 39 to Uvelnwlth
single mele, ehare expenMJ.
and houaehold dutiea. Call
448 - 3819 7AM - 1PM,
10PM-12PM.
F 1n~nwl
FOUND bicycle. 2300 Jef·
ferso~
Ava, identify end pay
for ad .
LOST
clean Used can.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
446-3672
female,
last seen vicinity Ordnance
School, notify 304 -6'7641B7 or 614-446-9533 .
Wanted to buy used coal &
6
Raw Fur. Top prices paid .
Lost and Found
wood heaters. Swain i=urni-
tu•e. 446-3;59, -3rd . '&
Olive St., Gallipolit. Oh.
Hill. Oh . 614-682-7448 .
Two German Shepherd Pups
missing. Last seen at home
on Nebo Road. 3 mos. old,
black &' tm. Reward upon
return of dO&S. Call Joan
Harris at 379-2702.
2
Sadly Missed By
Jim and Karen
Werry and
Filmily.
In Memoriam
Mkldleport home. priced to
aolll And we Moon Pricad To
Sellll Cott614-992-8941 .
Nice 2 bdr. home on l"gelot
et 608 Ridge Rd, Rio
Grande . Near
campua .
Shown by appointment. Call
614-1182-7424. Priced to
..li.
Standing timber. Call 614388 -9617 o• 614 · 388 9906.
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITUI'!E. Beds, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs.
chests . baskets, dishes.
stone jars. antiqUes, gold
and silver . Write-M . D.
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 or call 614-992 7760.
A-frame
pn
5
Asking $-35,000 .00 or mioke
offer. Call 614-B43-6384.
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recomm,ndo
that you do business with
people you ~now, and NOT
to aend money through the
mail until you have lnveati·
gated the OfftlJring.
ment. 124,000. Call 614742-2643.
J -20 ditch witch trencher
12,760. Call 4411-8608 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
22
Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low fiKBd rate. U1e equity
for any pUrpose. Leader
Mortgage Co.. 614-5923061 .
23
For aale by ownei. owner
will finance the down pay-
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36. PHONE 614,4467274.
1904. Paned away July 4, 19U.
A1 I walk in tur gordon of memo·
rita,
l'Mrt mid1t the blonorM of blut,
I find Nl that Dtautiful gardtn,
Forgtt· mt ·nots ~ooming for
yoo.
You ~ft o beautiful memorr. dar·
In memory of
"Bud" Eddy who
departed this life
Jui.Y15, 1984.
ling.
And a sorrtw too grtol to bt ttld.
lut to we who lowed ytu and miu
you,
lhat-IMeutlful memory will Mwtr
grow. oht
Sally missed by 'o"r wift, children and ranckhtldren.
Five months have come
and aone
~ Since you went to your
J.r:IVe.
I wtllllways miss. and jove
. you dear.
· But your life I could not
save.
I often think about you
-as your presence is so
J
Buying daily gold, silver
coins , rings. jewelry,_sterling
ware, old coins, large cur ~
rency. Top prices . Ed. Bur~
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ava.
Middleport, Oh . 614 -9923476.
--------lcBUVING RAW FURS . Beef
and Deer Hides. Ginseng and
yellow [QOt . SellingtraP,ping supplies. Wheat .
lights, night lights. George
Buckley . phone 614-6844761 ,hours 12-9PM dailey.
Employment
In loving memory of Judy
Lee Johnson, who passed
away 10 years ago today
Dec. 23. 197 4.
.
Gone But Not Forgotten
God knows how much we
miss 'her.
He counts the tears we
shed.
And whispers that she is
only sleeping,
Our loved one is not dead.
We did not know the pain
she had,
We only know she has
passed away.
Without a last good -bye.
God gave us strength to
face it.
But what it meant to lose
her,
No one wi II ever know.
Especially durin& these
Holidays; Bud.
Oh! how I wish you were
,
here.
.
I can't give you &ills- as I
often cave you in the
. past.
: - My heart holds only memo.
ries of the aood times.
· Thanks. to you Bud - they
. . will always last.
: I will buy for you some
flowers,
; · And place them nicely on
.
your grave
; : And try hard to do my very
• · best.
·
; : To ma.te it through these
. · Holidays!
or 3 bedroom hOuaee in or
near Pomeroy. Furnished. or
unlumlohod. Ront and utili ties negotiable, Day 814·
992-23B1, evoninga 614 ·
9112-6723.
11
Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardl Music Co .. 4460887. Twentieth year of
quality aervice. Lane Daniels. 814-742-2951 .
port. 8260 .00 month. Call
614-992-7356 .
Public Sale
& Auction
PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
From GaiHpolls, lake II. 141, turn left onto Rf. 77 S, turn
right onto Potrioi-Codmus Rood. Walch for signs.
SAL£ EVERT SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
DOOR PIIZES GIVEN EVERY SAL£
S.mothing lor owory- Ntw, Usool ond Antiquos- Weololy
HaYI so1111thing yov wonllo soli? Iring il to lht Patriot
Auction lorn ontl we'll 10ll .il lor you. Consignments a<·
ceptool from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on S.turdoy.
Marlin Wedemeyer-Auctioneer
388-8249 - 245~5 152 .
L-.::A rentict Finis Ike lsaat-388-93 70
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Furnilllad 2 bedroom apt. In
Middleport. Adulto, no pet~
, oocurlty depoolt. Call 11 4·
' 992·3174.
I
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apartment.
., tuitllble for one or two
; people. Coll304· 713-6882,
, Batty Mercer.
t Nice efflclltl"'cy
..
UTILITIES INCLUDED
Eld~rly and disabled with an income tesli than
yearly can renllor perconllif !hoi• income.
'0
sn.25o
PHONE 675-6679
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ple. Call 614-992 ·2441 after 6PM.
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3 br house. bath,full beaement, garage. available Dec.
26. 8250. Raferancea and
deposit required. 304-675 1090.
._..
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pot1t. Route 33. Nonh of
Pomeroy. largo Iota. Call
614-992-7478.
•: "'2 bedroom apartment in
New Heven. Newly remo--dolad. In town. 1250.00
pluo depoe~. can 814-992·
7481.
.
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• APARTMENTS.
-.-:
·49
For Lease
mobile
both. 1110 mo. pluo ' utllitloo. Call PJ' 448-1118.
and relrlgorotoro . Compe,.
our prices. save todey .
Phone 304-773-11430.
: In Middlepon, 2 bedroom
• lumlohad opt, 1 child, 1: 304-882-21811.
Flatbedo, Trip Leua or
Leaao . 2&9-2306 . Ohio
Wato 800-282-28el. Interstole Woto 800-1135· 7413 .
Green aota and chair. good
cond. 176.00. 614-9926192.·
.
" "·'
today 614-992-6720. Top
of thl' Stairs, full aervice
salon.
Help Wanted
2 positions at LaSalle Restaurant . Cook -Chef and
Salad Maker-Dishwasher .
in person only. 9 :0011 :00 om . Mon., Wed ., T~urs . ,and Fri . Middle'p ort.Ohoo. No phone call please.
~pply
BEST KEPT SECRET IN
AMERICA--Army Nationar
Guard . Join and you have a
good part-time career--good
31
Homes for Sale
2 br house, newly deco·rated . 304-675-1090 .
·
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SALARY:
Mobile · home, Wlnnobag~
1971-22 ft. Exc . cond. Must
oeo to app•eciate . $6,600.
304-882-2336.
36 Lots & Acreage
Lot for sate in Mercerville. 3
trailer hookups. electric. rural 1Weter, septic tank,
IB.OOO. Call 614-258681B .
Spaces for rent, trailer lots.
sewer and water furniahed .
Small children accepted.
304-676-1076.
Rental s
brick ranCh, 4 car garage,
*43.000.00 . Phone 304675-6851.
4 bedroom house for sale or
41
Houses for Rent
rent in Mason . 614-992·
6972 .
Help Wanted
$1'1,000 • $22,000.
STARTING DATE: Immediately after star<h.
RESPO~SIIIUTIES: Develop and impltment patient
educalton programs and stnices with specific
emphasis on arthritis for a fin county area of
South-tern Ohio.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS: R.N. or I.S.N. with additional health education or rtstarch backgro.u nd and
training strongly preferred. Other alied h1altli
degren acceptable if experience is appropriate.
APPliCATION DEADUNE: Cred•ntials rHtind no later thon JonuarX 11, I '185 to Anita M. DuntH, Hu1ft0n Resources dministrator, Ohio University Col·
lege of Osteopathic Medicine, Parks Hall Athens
Ohio 45701.
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TEAFOR!) ·rl]
Real Estate ~
216 E . 2nd St.
Gallipolis Ferry 6 year old
benefits- - monthly
paychack -- NO LAYOFFS.
304-675-3960 or 1 -800 642-3619 .
Beautiful Holly Park Mobile
home for sale on land
contract. Small down payment . Call 614-992-2053
or 614-992-2698'.
removal by European Elec·tronic Dapilator. Mary is
certified· in thi·s new compu·
terizad digital . ly1t8m. Call
House· for rent. Call 304-,
875 -7263 675 -5104 or
676-5386 .
House tor rent in Mercerville
area. Call Kenneth Swain
446 - 3169 or 614-256 1662 ovenlngo.
Furnished houoe, 3 bdr .. 29
Noil Ave .. Golllpolio. U26
plua utiltiea. references . Cell
446-4418 oltor 7PM.
HouH downtown, ·3 bdr.,
nice 1160 mo. Cell 614 675-6104 or 676-6386 c
Small 2 bdr. houoe in
country . Call 446-0924.
2 bedroom liouoe 42 Chilllcqthe Rd. $210 par mo.,
t76 dep. Call 446 -3870 or
448-1340.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3326 .
NE.W LISTING - 5 room
business building, Has gas,
elec. and city waler. Will take
$6,500 for quick sa~.
eason's Greet1.ngs
From
JOHNSON'S AUCTION SERVICE
Durinl this holiday season. we wish to express
our sincere thanks to all of our clients, buyers
and contend in& bidders in Gallia and surround. inl counties. We have enjoyed working with you
•r and for you on auctions this year and we hope
to sea you next auction senon.
.
Holidays from Lee, ~aJld)
and Dusty Johnson
JOHNSON'S AUCnON SERVICE
... .
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LONG BOTTOM - 2 level lots,
3 BRs,, bath, flue lor a
woodburner . Now only
$22.000.
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Real Estate
P. 0. lox 903
Ohio 4'5631
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......
.
NEAR POMEROY - Good one
floor 5 rm. home. Full'
basement, FA furnlce, ·storm
doors and windOws. Plus
garage.
,.I•
..,.
Apartment
for Rent
,.,_
·-
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Hous;ny
;::
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.·-,
HP.,u/quartets
'..._.
Real Estate General
$6(),()()()
.•.
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~IVER
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m.
(i:r.
,.,.,_
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Housin1 For The ElderiJ; Disabled And Handicapped. Rent
Is 30S Of Adjusted Income To QuallfJr Low Income ''
'lrSOO or Less Per Year.
.,.
All Utllltles Included In lent
Except Coble And Telephone.
Umited Number 01 Apartments Available For Persons
40 Years·01 Aae 1.Up.
·
,..
LAND COIITUCI' - V£R'i NICE 3
BR. 2 BATHS, I~ 8UilOY 14x70
t.IJBilE HOME FURNISH£0 00
.EV£L LOT. fEtal) PLAY ARtA,
:OOCRf:TE WALKS. $2,500 DOWN
PAYMENT: llltNIC( 15 YR. AI
,2lltNUR£ST. MONTHLY PAY-
MENT $234.1!i. SUP£11 PROP-
ERTY. SUPER I'Rit1.
BEND PLACE
New Haven, W. Va.
OWNER IS IOSIIIG llfOUSAIIDS ON THIS BEAUTIFUL ~:
BEDROOM, 2 BATH RN«li HOME. FAMILY ROOM WITH
FIREPlACE. 2 CAR GARAGE, 16x321'00L EXCElLENT LOCAT10tt
NEAR CITY.
,
'
·y· WISIIIAfiiUL ISJAB AGifiCY
44
.
"MERRY CHRISTIIAS"
TOWN &
AT ONCE - Convenient location only a
from shopping yet secluded surroundings
with peace and quiet. This home sells itself with qua lily brick
conslruction , large wife approved kitchen. lull basement
wilh .family room !sliding doors leading to back yard, plenty
of baths for everyone. two car gara~e. gas heat (low bills! and
central air. Owner an•ious to move to Florida.
$59.900-would entertain offer.
. .....
Tired Of Paying High Utility Bills?
Let Us Pay The Blllsl
'
.
BARGAIN - 7 yr. ~d 2 story
business bldg. and exira lot
with 3 stories. WHI take less
than 1977 conslrll:lion cost
Otlto YPIVIISlrY IS liN lQUAL orrotfuNmt.VFMAfiYI AWOl rWi.OYrl
!WEN AND WOMEN -:- To ~ rotltloatiol, c-rcial, anti.
onwtllmtnl proportoes wolh one of Gallipolit' reputololo
r~tors. We hawt recently jeinool o lap flight inlornatoonol soles orgenlaatlon lo back you eftry lltp of tho
way. You ~illlaorn IIIMIIroin wilh lhtlorotror's porsonol
oSirstance on ol phasts of IIGI Estate.
. Wo have 2 oponing1. To olnaitt lhtt1 positions yoo must
".'"' tho following '\ualificatl•s: Nl!ll appttrr-.o, dt·
'"' I~ help potpie, !"'llint to work, plaoeqnt ,.rstnolily, ·
be wolllng to lake rnstrodi- ontl be stif motlwottd.
Sells 11perienceln leal (stale or rolatool floW holpfol but
~I nKoiiiGry. Our ollke has., nttlltrot raputotion ond
0111 salt~~p~aplt 1arn top <OIIIItliSiiOII,
Wrilt us to4ay for a confldtntiallnlorwilw. It would be
I~ firs I lttp to word o lorilliartt new ' Mwell WriW.
..
. -• BLACKBURN REALTY
·
' • "' . iri
NEAR TUPPERS PlAINS - 2
bedroom trailer wilh 2 added
rooms. About one level acre.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
I+OLIDAY
TO YOU!
'
. ... .'
TUPPERS PLAINS- Like new
one floor, 3 BR, washer-dryer,
nice doning wrth glass doors
and carpeting,
$14.000.
.
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POMEROY 2 bedroom
home near the hospital. Hot
waler hea~ full basement and
doulje garage.
IHALINE
t
(J I )
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tDYNKIL
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RIVER BEND PLACE ;
New Haven, W; Va.
,
For aolt hond,...de dolls
hOUH from 180 to *711. Coli
441-4e30.
cupboordo. pt. Hfa, toriaphonee. delk. also Mttiquef
Firewood for iale -• 25
pickup load, S35 delivered.
Call 814-266-620B .
Now orronga I l l - _
_10
form the aurprtllt II'IIWef', u auggeolod
by"'"--,
I I I I I ]
882·3121
Office Hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. r.tonday-Friday
.
-tc-
Oak furniture. tables,chaira,
and glaatware. Open Sun-
daya . Conktl'o Tupperaplolns. Rt•.7 .
'
Mobile home neW parts end
doore . lnlidt. outlide.ttorm
doors. trailer windows .
About 500 lprlced to lOIII
McArthur,Ohio,
Route 1.
Call 814-69&·42B2 .
Christmas tree cut your own
til ohapeo 1!. alzeo, 15.00.
Call 814-379-26B6.
1--...:..:..:..:::.=:.:.:___
14 MIIC.
Merchlndlll '
(Cotl Dellvoo..tl ttMd turnf,
houae coal 1 to 1 tort . cell
Jim La- 171-7317 Oj
304-1171-1 24 7 .
.Uoad pinball machine ltandord oriza. 1110. Call 446·
4117 or 441-.271.
llaler gee hut atove : Call
448-21011 .
rI
1-----------------
; ond Golllpollo . 114-441, 8221 .
MerchlndiM
Dri-•y otonoo heultd and
oprNd. CoH L. Pout Martin
114-261-17711 or David
Martin 114-211-1228 .
2
Apt. for ...... overlooking
city perk. LA, kitchen, 11ove, . RICK 'S NEW AND USED
refrig., dining eree, 2 bdr., FURNITURE. Uoed ot~v11
homes, houHs. Pt. PIHMnt
446-3636~
· .. .
023~.
.
•, peted, toll I electric. depooh
;- required . Call 614- 992 · . 2014.
Canaday Realty~
..
For rent: troller lot in Plantz
Sub., dept. & ref. required.
Coii614-246-5B66 or 448·
: : ~ rOM bedroom apta, Clr-
Real Estate General
""-
Mobile home lot. $71!1 weter
peld, \fth a Neil. Golllpolla.
Coli 441-3844 attar 7PM .
l
In Syracuse. ideel for cou -
I
PhoH
' TWIN 'RIVERS
TOWER ·
House .in Middleport. 3
bedrooms, new kitchen, carpeting downstairs. Cell 1304-8B2-2B1 1 .
Nice, redecorated· 2 ·
bedroom home in Pomeroy;
i.,sulated. stove and refrigerator proVided, storm windows. $185 .00 plus security deposit . Sorry -- no
children or pets. Phone
814-992-6292 evenings or
Saturdays .
Apertment
for R1nt
APARTMENTS AVAILABLE
3 bedroom Houoeln Middle -
19
54 Mite.
.
:'i11dl~o ~~~m
d" to
· table
pc. with ala
onchalrt
up.
Wood
Prlntan.werhere:
_ _ _ - Stokermetic stovea end
12811 to 17'1. Dtok 1110
(--.Monday) stoker furnances . Jack hag·
up to 12211. Hutcheo. 11110.
Boonlc bad complete with
Yesterday's I· Ju.,bleo: TO NIC MOURN' PULP!T BEACON
~~x- Rodcllff. Oh. 814-669mattreiNo, 12711. and up to
Answet : He became man of the hour because he
1381. loby bado. 1110.
knew how to make thisEVERY Mll'jUTE COUNT
7•17 white owning for solo,
or bo• eprinlte.
full or twin, I l l .. firm . 1118. ' - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - - - - 4 1 1 k s new . Call 614-3677468 .
and 178. OUHn aoto, 1111. 1
4 dr. ohaato, . 148. II dr.
Two Browning auto-6. 12
challtl, 1111. lad !romeo,
go. 1400 & 8476. Call
120.ond 128 .. 10 gun· Gun
61 HouMhold Goods 64 Misc. Merchandise 446-7019 .
coblnata. f3110 . Goo or
olec1rlc r•ngoo U711. Baby
5 Cohtco Cabbage Patch
mottr••••· 1211& 1311, bad County Appliance , Inc.
frame• *20, 125, • 130, Good uaod 0pplionceo and Knauff Firewood Split- 95% P...-mie dolls 1nd 1 regular.
king frame UO. Good aolt~- TV nto: Open .BAM to 8PM. herdWoOds r Senoned or N- *56 aoch . Call 446 tlon of bedroom oultn.
Mon thru Sot. 446-1699. green . You 'pick up or we 2087 or 446-4349 .
rockers, metal . cabinetl. · 127 lrd1 Ave. Gallipolis, deliver. HEAP vendor. 814Buck stove. 2 yrs. old. $425 .
haadboo•d• 138 & up to OH .
258-6245 .
Call 446-B221 .
116.
Trade Center Kanauga . Limeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Uoed Furniture •. electric Ohio. Furniture outlot. Why Pick up at Richards 8t Son. Firewood for sate, 90%
hf\l'dwood . Cal448· t 287.
flroplaco, 6 pc. dinette, hood Pay Morel
Cell 446· 7786.
boordo. and 2 bedroom
aultu. 3 mllea out But.vttlo Uaed bedroom suite, Love- Firewood cut up sl1bs. t 1 5 3x4 ft ., gold framed minor .
Rd . Open8omtollpm.Mon. Mit hide-1 -bed . Corbin 8t PU load. Larger loads deli - Call 614-266- I 768.
thru Sot.
Snyder Furniture. 966 Se- vered . Call for prices, 614814.441-0322
cond, Gallipolis. 448-1171 . 246-6804.
.
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1- - - - - - - - Homelite ·Chilin saw, new.
I--::0--::0-0-D-U~S-E-D-A-P~P-L-IA'"'N-C-E-S Valley Furniture,
new & Big 3 or 6 bdr. home built on 12 inch. Hof'lelite chain
Welllo<l. dryaro. relrlgaro- uaed.' Large section of quaJ. your lot 816.900 & up. See 11w. used, 10 inch. Small
10<1, rongoo. Skoggo Ap- tty furniture. 1216 Eoltern our model . Call1-614-886· gas furnace used. Coaletove
7311 .
.
pllon!l'll. Upper River lid . Ave .• GaUipolis .
usad . Call 614-992-5409 .
bolide Stone Crett Motel.
814-441·7398 .
Real Estate General
Plckeno und furniture. 3048711-5413 or 175-1410.
1101
Unwant!td facial or_ body
hair? Permanent, painless
POSITION: Coordinator of Patient S•rvius.
Crown
44
Sofa, Choir, rocker, ·ouo- n 3 tobl• (extra •---1
--~ ' lofoo' and ·-·•
1111.
chaiN' ·
prlc:ad trom 12811. to 11911.
Tltblto. 1110 and up to 1126.
Hldo-o-bado,*390. and up
to 1&60 .• oota bode 11411.
Aecllnoo<~, 1221. to 13711.. .
Lampo from 128.to' *121.
M1rch1ndiM
,.w.
BWAIN
AUCnON • PUIINITUIIE
12 OHvt lt. O.IUIIOIIo. Now
• UMd wood-coal ttOVII. e
pc wood Lll aultt Utt.
bunk btdo 1111. antron
recllnaro 198, uoad ~
aulttl, rongao, wrlntor ·
_..,_,., • . -. C.MII1 4·
441-3118.
1---------LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1ha Sunday TI"'"'"Sentinel Paga D-J
Singer -lng machine for
ule, golden touch 1nd MW.
Call 81,· 388-81191; Ike
1- - - - - - - - - M•tir••••
Mobile homo In Gallipolio.
nice for senior citizen• or 1
married couple with one 2 br mobile home lumlaliad •.
child .. no pota. depooit and 1 child.. no peto. etten
talare~ceo required. K & K condition . New Hevtlri.
Mobilli Homea1 Inc.. 304- 1160. per month. 304-8122468 .
'
676-3000.
2
J AC Kl 0 N ! IT AT I! 8
APARTMI!NTI (Equ•l
Houolng Qnonunltyl hu
' PUrnilllad 3 bedroom mobile one and twO badroomo, ,.,.t
Home with -•hlf and onontng ~ I 113 lor one
dr'Yer. No ptta. PhOn• .814- bedroom end 11111 par
941-~253.
.month .lor two bedroom.
with 1200 dopoolt located
;1 4 • 10 lhrH bedroom with nooor F-ond and Spring
ltrge yaord. I 1611.00 month Veley Pl•u. pool and TV
P.lu• daiiOIIt and utllltlta. ant. Call 4411-2745 or ltevo
'One chid . Call ·IU-918- mtoaoge.
'4317.
1 bdr •pt.. Z bdr 1~t..
*1110-12110. Call 304-1 II44 AJIInment
72113 1171'-111 04 or 1711. for Rent
11381.
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f.urniohad olllclency 1145. Fumlahod opt.: next door to
utlltleo pd. iho,. bath . 607 Ubrary. o~o profnoK>nal
2nd. Ave. Golllpolla. Call adult only. Coii4411-033B.
441-4411 after 7PM.
·3 room• with priovta bath.
1ot. floor . Con 441 -2216 .
Now olllcltncy ept. w~h
prage. applhincil• fur~>llhod, wuhor-dryer hoo-~p. Pilvltoy.,d,l210 mo. l":c::--:::----:--:---:-=-lncludao water, dap'. ra· 46 Furnished Rooma
qlflrod. C•ll 448-7209 or
441-3287.
For rent &l-Ing Room•
and light houM k-ing
'Furnl•h•d ept., 1 bdr .. 8226 roomo. Portt Central Hotel.
uJIIItiea paid. 820 4th Ave . CoH 814-446·0758.
Golllpollo. Adulto. Celt 4411Furnished room. t126. Utili·
4418 after 7PM .
tioo. rang•. ,.f. Shere both.
Rtvartlda Apll. Mtddlapon. Mon only. 919 Sac., GallipoSpotlol rotaa for Senior lis. 446-4411 otterS p.m.
CICilOnl. 1130. Equal HOUI•
Jng Opportunltie1. 614: n2-n21.
46 Space for Rent
pletely furnlllltd and
lor lmonodloto qt~«:upoi!o
_30_4-_1_7_11_-1_3_1_11_ _ __.:._,
Small houaelocottd at 1701
Chaltnut St. 11 f6 mo .. 875
dap .. Call 448 -3870.
54 Mite.
Professional
Services
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR. Reduced ratesl(mited
time only. Ward ' s Keyl!loard,
304-675-5500 or 6753824.
S~r VIC I!S
Loved and missed by
mother, father . relatives
and friends .
: . Sadly Missed and loved
• : by wife • .Jewell.
•'
·~ ' bldroom mobile home .
. 'Notur•l ... halt. lloclno
eno•. Ctlll14-1112-1111.
12Kit5 Mobile 'HOme.
Houses for Rent
Ohio Point Pleomnt, W. Va.
••
/l ·l.L
41
Middleport-Gallipolis,
A111rtment
for Rent
IN MEMORIAM
In mtmarr of William " Pete"
Thorwp1oe's birthday Dt«. 24,
:r-:-------.,
B
located on Rt. 1188 In GrNn
Townohlp. 3 bdr., LR , kitchon, family roon'l. 1Yt both.
t42,000. Callonytlmo4411.
9396 .
.
44 ·
for Rent
14x70 total a1tctr1c 3 bdr.,
lumlahad. pluo 'we- • .
dryer on privata lot. 10 mlr>r
from town. 1200 mo. Plui
dopoalt and utiUtlea. llel.
req. Call 114· 2~1- 1383,
6 minute drive from tOwn,
9
Business
Opponunitv
42 Moblll Home1
2 bedrooms, oatandtd 11Yin·
groom. all modern 1171ino, .
1100 dopollt ptuo utllltltli
SH at 314 3rd. 8t .. KA~
noug•. 4•1-74.73.
" •·
0
way and baHment ar.. ,
Modlllad
21
0
Located In very nice nelghbo•hood .with buutlful
view. Now roof and now
aophelt 'drive. For lnfromation call 448-2734 or 4462206.
acres. Fully carpe~ed with
wood burner. FHA. VA. or
conventional loan will buy it.
Owner moving out of sta,e.
Wanted To Buy
•
~· ··
Fumlohod 2 bdr.. ot.n.
qulat. ooble, beautiful r!wttf
vlow In Kanougo. Foot.....
Mobile Home 1'11'1<. 1 441111102.
'
double
In Southern School District.
Bill Gene Johnson
Dalmatian
kitchen cablnete.
Market. 304-458-1572.
Lake Jack1on Fin 81 Fur. Oak
n1ar.
Chrlttlon Singlet, pon palo,
friondo, dot... 18 to 108.
Box 189. Allegany NY
14708.
We pay caah for ·tate model
who passed
away one year
ago
:
Situations
Wanted
Mobile Honwe
for Rent
2 bdr. troller for - . ·
MaroarvHie. Coli 441-31 It
or 114- 21111 - IIU .l.ftar
'
1:30PM.
1
·c..
oven. otova top. Aelrtgorotor Included. Carpeted
throughtour. Afr condldon lnl •nd goo hoot. &Ingle c"
Wlclooad garage with odfaotnt office. lto10gt """ In
little with de"1""dlng otolr-
Help Wa-.1 - ,.,!dent
nun,ger end or rMintenance. coupte or _petiOn for
omoll 24 unit elderly apartment complex. River lend
Pllice. New Haven. Weat
42
Wright
vinyl .... ,......, aotpel
throuthout. lnlut.lad.
new point. •nached ..,....
goo outdoor ,,., 8Wftitlll.
m•nv
448·2U3
tN 1 :00PM • .ttar 1 :00PM
colt I 14-241-1111.
·
-
,_,_y
\
U.C.' ba1 23, 1984
TlwM lrellrooml. OMirlleit,
Pointa. 2 Pleeaant. W. Va.
-nod·
W. Va.
KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®br
31
UaH with option to buy: By
ownoor. lorgt! well kept brlclo
home with 3 • - bad1'\)omo, 2Yt c.,.rnlc bathe.
!Jorge llvlngroom with flropt.ca .. dining rpom, now
..-•1
.
Plecnont,
T"tO - l n p, 1111 yaon of
... or older, Ught typing.
oHioe _.,-"ion
by· -arty InOil- guide llnoo. Apply In
Point PleaoontJob
Service, 2211 &lith &t,
-at
12•17 gold twMd c.-rpet.
~ condition. 304-676-
en.
Hltlp W1 nted
Point
14x70.
3 bedr9om
with
Iorge yard. 1186.00 month
plus deposit and utilides.
One child . Call 114-9864367 .
Pora~eto t10 to *13: Cocke1ials t30. love birda aao.
pair, finches
upright
piano· 1165. Call 614-9864212 .
.
•s.
Parakets 110.00 to t13 .00.
Cockatiela $30 .00. Love
birda $60.001 pair. Finchea
f5 .00 . Upright piano
1185.00 . Coli 614-9864212 .8a.b2,1clor73
197B CJ7 Jeitp , 6 cyl . 3
opaed, hard top, 13,800 .00 .
304-676-5966 .
c-..
Judy Cutlao : Soft<
aculpturad
Kldt:
Mr. T.'a, Bolltrlnoo. ate .. all
liz... laoutlful WOftt. 304'176-111311.
lntelevlaloft with 4 car•
trld .... 304-773-6214.
~tereo all wood c.binei.
I'M -FM radio. turntable.
very good cond, hova to ..,
to appreciate. make nice
Chrittmu gilt, 304-1763000 after 6:00. 304-6711'·
6277 .
FREEZER BEEF
Grain Fed. 99' lb.
LOREN NOLAN
388-9676
HOMELITE.
CHAIN SAW
Fltforg $pttillt
ON SAU AlE
SUPER 2-14"
240-16"
240-18"
For Sale: One third acre in
Middleport . Colt 614·9926530. Zenith stereo (console) like new..
REG. PIICE 5319.95
For sale . A Cabbage Patch
Kid . Colec:o, with red hair.
w. rm S219'5
Call 614-992·3483. alter 4
PM .
MGM FARM
CITY,
INC.
POMIOY, 11tH
1---------Firewood. 820.00 pick up
load, t30 .00 delivered .
304 -675 -2991 or 6'75 -
6762 .
Real Estate General
#150
614-992-2111
�W.Va.
Ohio l'lllnt
M
Mitt. Merchandise
Original Coloco Cabbage
Patch ~mle doll 166.00.
One Co '8•_!:otch Kooaaa
•~1-1
O.uu. 304·882·
2904.
SURPLUS DENIM jockoto
U1 .oq, 8iba ' 16.00. cava•
,.lla regulor 822.00, kidl
Cllmouflllde. new army field
Jackett. illl army field pock
.ecceaiOrl••· combat boots.
C•rh~"l
cloth ing . Sam ~
SomervMe'a. Ee1t Ravena~
wood • Pti. Sat. Sun. 1:00·
58
Peta for Sale
Autoa for Sale
AKC rAioterod. 81ock to -
Mfftl-tUre poodle, good
mal•
with
children ,
AKC rtoiltered mole block
Tiny TtJt Poodle. ·fi weeks
old. .... .ohota ond baon
worrr!4f,. _
- e176.00. Coli
1114-94t,t977. '
.
fllrmall H tractor,
•soo or
beot offer. Call 114·388-
9303.
W9 would like to thllnk our
customers for a very goOd
year with big year-end dl•
counts on all new end uledi
farm equipment •nd chain
aaws in ttock. Siders Equip·
tnent, Henderson . W. Va .•
304-675-7421 . .
63
Livestock
Reg. Quarter horse weanling
filly, dark chestnut. blaze
face. high hind white 1ockl.
show or racing· quality proapect $600 or · trade. Call
614-379-2683.
~or
sale, seven year o'd colt.
&150.00. Call 614-9863891 .
Car sbat
Horsem.an' Carrel. 2413
.•
Jackson Ave, Point Plea sant . Horse and barn equipment. Veterinarian supplies
and grooming aids.
t;s BuiHJing Supplies
.
' ~~ -
.
.Building 'Miile rials
tilock. bl'ick, sewer pipes,
windo~ •. lintels , etc .
64
sorted lengths. Call Hogg
Bnd Zt.l s pan Materials
bs1~ rt
Drums 'j to ..set Tame. axe:
cond.
446-3758.
'
Good hay for ule. Call after
5:00PM at 614-992-6633.
'
, TOP CASH paid for '80
33. Nellt Haven. Complete
12 " 'lJiock. De,live ry service. 1.- -
...... !':;;::;:-:::-:;::::-::;~
Phorle day 304-882-2222.
as2-3239.
1 ----''i-='~----
evenin~
model arid newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis ..Call
614-446-2282.
83 Dodge
Om~i
4 dr.. 4
spd., AM -FM C811ette. de-
' l>ets for Sale
+K 10 7 4
• A 10 7 2
.AtAS42
By Jam01 Jacoby
WEST
+Qg
An Innocuous spot-card can m~ke
luxe inte"rior. Call 614-245-
·'
HILLCJI't sT KENNELS
Boardirlg·li11 breeds. Heoted
•s
nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Siahtltse kittens. AKC
SETTLE FOR TELLING THE WHOLE .
C08.TYr WHEN YOU CAN TILL THE
. :~
wtiOLE WORLD?
Ask Tounelf. Thli QuestiOft.
PREFERRED LOCATION - Residential or Commercial.- 7 acres of prime land. ac~ to city water and
sewer. 3 bedroom rnnc,to. 24'x24' family room wrth
firep~ce. Additional room used presently as beauty
shop. Owner willing to sell all or part. Grve a Call for
more details.
#72B
•Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph . Home 446·9539
•Ed Evans. Realtor , Ph. Home 446·0B25
PH. OFFICE 446-7699
ca n Pit Bull Te rrier for sale .
Call 614-379-2469 .
pies. reduced for Christmas
$125 . Call446-1609.
Farm Deluxe puppies watchdogs, hog & cattle herders,
hunt coons & hogs, Cata-
houle X £ngiish. Call 614379 -2563.
NEW ll liNG - Middleport
- A roort\y 3 bedrOOm' home
with sev~ral nice fealurel.
Equipped . kijchen. insulaled,
garage, patio, lorced air gas
heat $22:500.
·
JUST WAITING FOR YOU
lrltt$JM£NT INCOME
lovely 3 bedroom br~k home
Need a'home, plus an income'
in a very desirable local~n Who dMSn'tl We have 1ust
close lo Holzer Hospital. This
what ioL need' lovely modem
home has a formal entrance. a
ho:;l.;JIO rental motel
large living room, a nice large
unitl, excellent condition.
krrchen with formal dining area
Co
· furnished. All you
and garage. The home · ~
hava -to do~ movein. Approx. 8
silualed on a large well
acr~ •: ~d stocked ixmd.
landscaped lot wilh chain link
l~ on a state highway.
fenced in yard. Also nat. gas
You , ;li)n, own your own
and central air.
bu~R.@t ~ Just call for more
details, .
#599
LUXURIOUS
Cou\llfi&trte wijh :l Indiana stone fireplaces, including onein a
4 BRtotal, 21h balhs, 112 acres moreor less,JUStshort
Gallipolis. Thiscustombuill bg home features nearly
of beautifully decorated and well planned livin~
and dining· areas with beautiful hardwood lloors.
is fully equipped and designed for convenience.
and air. Attached garage. Includes 5 room
#610
VACANT LOT - CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
1165 localed, on Madison Ave. in Gallipolis. All city
$5,900.
#620
niPPERS PlAINS - Keller
Aw. - Nit"!! 3 bedroom home
with apptm!imately I acre level
lot, garagll; woodburner, all in
good condiUon. Financing avail·
able. $27 ,900.
7 ROOM COUNTRY HOME
I home wnh 4bedrooms. 2 car garage and
burldings. All th~ oo 6 acres. more or less. 4 miles
on St Rt. 141. Pnced at $32,900.
H623
HOME IN THE COUNTRY
wdh 3 01 possibly 4 bedrooms. krtchen with built-in
windows and doors. located on stale highway.
$39,000. Will consider trade. Call lor- your appointment
-
living
bathS,
apjlllll(J
,$69.~:.•
Fantastic
family room
fireplace, large
bedrooms. 2!h
basemen!.. on
a'c . ground. Wanls_
#364
PRO~TABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE
area. Computer. typewrners. dells. ch~rs. file
calcui;ltor, all included wrrh sale. This is an ideal
~r the n&lnperson or coupk!. A~ingpu~ness with lots of
expansion, For full informatron phone now for an
.,.:r
~ Neat 3
bedrooin lanch with spac~us
·lOIIG Blll'tOM
fmaily r,gom. ' kkchen with
buil-in .lf!lge and oven umls,
separate dining area. Gas
forced • t ir heal. plus wood·
sar garage, approx. I
mile wllf garden space and
outbufld/rflii Many other lea·
lures. f35;SOO.
bumer.:z
door. a"to, run1 /coact .
•4&0.00. Coll814-7 03: .
1980 Com oro Z-28. garage
~ept,
itever in anow. air,
T-top, RWD, am·f'1'
CIIIIIIO. tilt, MADA book
86.900 aocrifico $6,900.
Call 446-0362.
1971 V.W. Super Beot!W. 4
.....~f:-d~irA:~~
s~:~:e~·
Verv good ' condition'.
11395.00. 1977 Grenade.
door. 302 an,g_lne, auto .•
P.S" P.B.. air. f79&.0o.
1976 L.T.D.. 4 door. 351
engine, auto. P.S .,P.B., 'ir.
1796.00. Coli 614·367·
7750.
:.:.·
•
'.
' '·,c·'
11618
3 LOTS PlUS 8 ROOM HOME
,
~·:Addition ri'Sidwell. 4 bedrooms, built-in cabinets, dbl. sf
si1lftlngie roof. Wl\l)d or coal heater.Apple tries, side porch. rural
watef.-system. A steal at $14.900. You better be the first. .
11622.
7 110011 FRAME
plan. 3 bedrooms, no upkeep while alum. sidin£ Built-in
fA furnace. Jllce carpeting. well kept property inside and
garage. Concrete drive. Chain link fenced-in level
walls and ceiin, Phone todfy.
#615
SI'IIIIG VAUIY SUBDMSION
·- · - sill buildine lots with all utilities trere. Lot size
Belter D!l this one now.
LOW INTEREST LOAN ASSUMPnON -Call and ask
about lhe E-Z financing terms on !his attractive 3
bedroom home. Includes eQuipped kilchen, firepla,e,
family room, 2 balhs. heat pump, ·2 car garage,
workshop and much more. Over I acre tree lined
-1'·
72
Truck• for Sale
; eo Monte Certo Lo~dou.
\18, euto. P8, PI , AC. AM.
- r def<ooter. tilt. 304-875·
5281.
1171 Ford F·150, ponw
troction - r - · '-vy duty
IJiringo, 400 -1M. re11ular gu, lriouiUed
top-. 23.,0 00octuolmiM,
n LtD ford. 304 -175- one
te.IIOO.OO firm,
73ll1 .
304-1. .·3178.
1871 Mercury Cou11r XR7,
'"II'
' Pl. AC. AM-FM, 1144''f!·2111.
1178 Ford truct. cob. 31 1·
Clevlland EddlobrOck - .
4 ford whlto . opoloo rlmo.
1975 Chevy "" ,.., end, 4
7.2
IPrlnga window. 304·
578-21711.
84
ap . . whtdahield , doera.
Trucks for ·sale
i tll2 ford, S-210 4 WhNI
drlvo for ulo. Colll1 4-379·
24119.
1'9 19 Cllovv Luv, IUIO,
rod i o, toppor. *19$9 .
John'• Auto Selea, Bua.vllle
R<!, Oollipolio. Ul-4782.
'1981 OMC pickup 122&.
Collll1 it-3117·Q132.
1.SJ!8 Chevrolet Scattodolo.
4JCj&. PS, PB, auto. new tire1,
lock out hubs. exc. cond.,
66,000 mi. Coli 1114-315771140.
73
11MftlriHtNM1
..c•....,.
........
Vana 1o 4 W.O.
LOVELY HOME IN THE COUNTRY- 3bedroom ranch
can be bought with 3. or 25 acres. Home has new
kitt:Hen wnh all appliances, formal dining room with
beautilul chandelier. living room with stone fireplace,
breakfast room. family room, ·partial bisement utility
room. garden tub in bath. Barn and outbuildinr.
I
#707
"
EASY LIVING - $35,000 - Very cheerful 3
bedrOOm, 2 bath, · refrigerator, range, .dishwasher.
woodburner. cement front and bac~ porch. '• acre wnh
mobile home hookup. Home is in excel~nt condition.
.
#747
PRICE REDUCED! FANTASTII: PRICE! - Can you
believe lhe price the owners have red'uced lhrs brick
ranch to' Over 2,000 sq. ft. large living room, foyer, 2
balhs, 3 bedrooms, ·dining area, attractive krtchen,
family room, fuM divided basement 2 car garage. large
landscaped lawn. Price reduced to $52,900.
#670
SOUP OLDER HOME - 4 nice lots. 2 car,garage,
outbuilding. cellar house. Home has 4 be~ rooms,
krtchen. bath, family room. formal dining hash~d some
remodeling. Home needs· a lamily. Take a look.
#692
2 ACRES - located 2 miles below Eureka. Good srre
for building a home or to place a mobile home. River
view. A steal at $3,500.
#743
FRAME RANCH and 2 nice lots local~ at lower River
Road. Home has 3 bedrooms, eat-in kitchen. dining
room. bath, utility room, front porch. storage building,
Call to see. .
·
11671
$5,500 LOT - Ott Clark Chapel Road. Owner wrll
survey. Level land.
#706
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE - .New bi·levet home
located north of Rio Grande. Beautiful decor,
throughout 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. dressing room and
bath off large master bedroom, French doors 10 back
deck off the dining room. nice Mchen, large fami~
room. bea'!liful catpet. 2 car garage.
lt717
WANT ELBOW ROOM? - Raise your meat and
on 4 acrflS of I~ . land. Home with 3
bedrooms, modern kdchen. bath. Some new Anderson
wi~ows and other improvements. Ott Rodney-Bidwell
Road. low price.
. ~J~Mtoes
11697
'
WITHIN MINUTES OF TOWN - The price has been
reduced on lh~ immaculate 4 bedroom brick and
frame 1Ti-level, 2 baths. formal entry. fireplace with
Insert. nice carpet tllrpu~ lar!ll deck. 2car prage.
Oulbuildine Over I acre lawn. City schools,
lt733
BRICK- RT. 35 - 5 bedrooms. living room. 21 tt: of
cabinels in kitchen. 2 lull baths, full basement 4 cal
garage, srruated on l acre. This home has had a lot ol
TLC. l ots of possirnlmes Call for more details.
#636
MOVE IN TODAY' - This modern, de~rable, 3
bedroom homers ready for occupancy. Renl to closing
lor qual~red buyer. Features include modern kCchen
with ·all appliances, civing room, dining room and
fireplace. Over 3 acres land. Bonus-like new.-large 2
car garnge. Close to city. Believe it! Only $37.500.
#722
Homel-qwemont
--~,.,
. _ . _ , new Joomn. od . . _ • PlY ..... Calli dltlone. roofing. olollng..con114--·121L
- · *Y woll . 30•·458·
1511.
1971 ford Von Cuotom,
82
f17110. Rodiff Auto Soleo,
Vinton . Coli 388' 9961 .
wheel ' drive,
GREAT LOCATION - MDI! than house - this is a
home' Brick,ranch within a mile ol Holzer Medical
Cenler, St. Rt. 160. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. equipped
krtchen. spacious l~rng room, fojl basement 2 car
garage, 2 acre flat lawn, in·ground swimming pool. A
home with a lol of charm.
·
"umbint
• Heetino
Services
Eleetrical ·
Refrigeration
RUSS AND MAX
ELUOTT CO.
lEWlNG M«hlne ropoira.
& Aio Conrll-
MrYice. Authori1ed Singer
lolo• & lervico Shorpen
lcitaora . .flbric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 814-992-2214.
lnsulallon.
tl-:=~~w
380 en ..
ci8terns, pools filled . Phone
114-367-0123 or 514-31577741 night or doy.
,1S82 Ford '.4 ton pick·up. '78 CherokM Chief, 4whwl
3QO cubic l~ch-5 cyli~dor . 4 drive. 31,000 miloo, b~Cket
IJI!Ioci,PI, PB, AM rodio.
tilt lloorlng, good
· 40,000 mileo. UOOO.OO. rodlo, .CIIIIY whliolo; oil
Call 1114·698·113114 and tin._,d glooo. •4.000.00.
6.14-949·2293.
304-1178·7771 .
Will
hJ~ul
S&H PLASTICS
coel, und and
Central (Vienna), W. Va .
PH. 3~ · 295 - 8615
trovel. 304-4118-1516.
-11.
..'
.lSi ft. - pick up
201 ft. - delivered
Also pipe connections and water pipe.
Kon'o Woter lervlce. Wello.
1,979 CJ-5 Golden Eoglo: 1978 CJ.7 Jotip. 6 cyl.. 3
,PSJ P8, loaded. Coli 446- 19'1.. hardtop•• 3.800. col
01141 lifter 5PM.
304-175·59&6.
......
PLASTIC ·
GAS PIPE
i" 160 PSI
General Hauling
Jemea Boy1 Wet• Service.
Alto poolo flllocl. Coli 814 2111· 1141 or 114·•48·
1175 or 114·441·71111 .
gine,UIOO. Coli 4411-7141
otter lpm.
f
lASE ME NT
WATER PIIOOFING
u.....ndltlo~ollw.tlme tuo·
r1n1M. Local reference1
furnlohocl. F - -motM.
Col collect 1-114,2370481. 9 • ·"'· to 5 p.m.
•
e
•
•
•
•
'
URBAN LIVING FOR THE EXECUTM - ·10 acre .
estate, lake, shrubbery. tree~ 3 bedroQm brick home,
buitt in 1975, Efficient heating. low maintenance. Six
miles from Gallipol~. 5 miles lrom hospital. One of Ganra
County's best
H674
. ""f'.
' OQPSI OWNER DROPPED HIS PRICE! - Very nice brick
., and frame ranch in one of the area's nicest nerghborhoods-close to ·town (within walking distance) but quiet. Over
• 2,000 SQ. ft. offering charm and comlortable living. 2 warm
fireplaces, large family room, Early American dining rooin
plus eat-in kitchen, 4 BR, 2 baths, lar11e screened in patio.
and much more. Gas heat with central air. Don't miss this opportunity at $59,500.
• THE WISE.AN lEAL ESTATE AGENCY ,
lAND - Desirable tract 96,62 acres more or less on
Sl Rt. 124. Approx. 30 acres tillable, Pond, some older
barns.
lt723
ROOM TO IIOAII on 1his 2 acres laP~rox .) lol, 4
bedroom home wrth large living room, kitchen, bath,
basement, frun trees and storage buildin~ $33,900.,
m1
•
•
MOBILE HOME LOT - located approx 2 miles below Eureka. •
$4,000.00.
•
•
•
NICE 2 or 3 BEDRM. COLONIAL DUTCH HOME -l,ocated •
. across from new courthouse. Elcellenllocation ior attorney's •
office'
•
•
•
HOUSE FOR RENT References required.
#720
12% FIXED RATE
-6% DOWN PAYMENT
CALL FOR MORE _DETAILS
$85.000- TARA ESTATES- ~c ns alareemaster bedroom.
. breakfast nook. 2 fil!fnl0\)"!itl!ollel1~ OR. FR. k~chen w~h
disposal and rel.-freez~ n.;o has pool and dubhouse prMieges.
'·
~-
OWNiR NEEDS QUICK SALE bedroom home '
located on 1:8 acres, more or less. large family room
with fireplace and beamed ceilin~ Oen or oftice, dining
room, 2 large barns, tobacco base.
#688
WHY WAIT FOR CHRISTMAS go give your family agift
they'll never lorget. Buy this hOme in lhe country on 2 ~
acres more or less. 3 BR, 2 balhs. living room. !ami~ :
room with fireplace or woodburner hookup. 2 car garage, heat pqmp, cenlral air. Priced in the 50s.
·
#655
HOME PlACE - 2 slory frame home Rlus 60 acres of
land. Appro•. 20 acres tillable, the rest P.sture. Tractor
can be dnven over all. Home has large ~tchen, dining
room; living room wilh fireplace, balh, 4 bedrooms. ·
Good land to raise bee!.
.
h "
11656'
40 ACRES TIMBER - 3 miles off Rt 7, Hannan Trace'
Road. These are approximate acn!s. Rural water
electria available. Fendng and small stream crossing
property. Priced for quick sal~ $15,500.
'
11691
OWNER MAY TRADE FOR HOME- $30.000 wili bu~ .
a comfortable 3 BR mobile home and 25 beautiful,
acres 1Jf land. Sprtng. · outbuilding, very well
landscaped. KC schools. 5 miles from St Rt. 160 on St.
Rt. 554. •
#714
.
.
OWNER HAS DRASTICALLY REDUCED the price of
lhiS 3 belfroom lrame ranch. 2 balhs. living room
,kitchen, dining area plus a 640 ~uare foot addition tO
fiAish as you WISh. level I acre bt in Green Township
and only 5 minutes 1rom Rt. 35.
'
·11701
, @1984 Cenwry 21 Real Estate Corporation &lltruotoefor tho NAF. ••ndN - tradomorl<' of Century 21 Real Estate Corporation. Prlnte~ in l' .~ ..~ - fA;u al lluu,i ni i)Pf!urlunlry~
EACII OPPICIII INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND O~TED.
SJ~TELY HOlE - .658 acre ol woodllll<l and 1.6acres m/1t:~n also be
purchased. form~ enlry, ~~~~ ooom and formal drn~ng room. modern
IUtchen, family room wlwb fiteplace, 3.BRs. 2 IJ1hs. 2 car garage. 8%
inlerest role "'umable. srown bv '"""ntmenl Priced m 60s.
'
GliEER ACRES - Newly carpeted 3 bedroom. modern kitchen and dining
roqm oom~ w/sl~ing lilors. Lrvlflg room. balh, laund~ room. sn~e car
, galago. erty ·scooo• Gas heal~~ <:t11dliior11ng.
COrrlemlll"•~ lllmelealuring a
>dotilm wl hot lub wral)lll!(l b'/ an oper~ lormaiiMng and ~mng room
wlattiJm doors. massive slooe fireplace. Amodern oo.miJie\• _kitcherl and a
brtllotasl noo~ 2\? bolhs. 3 bedrooms w/master "'!e, slidmg ooas 10 a
polio 'i ra tatondry and mud room. Unfinished """"'"!'1. 2 car gatage.
v~ garden and dwarl ~uij bees. Shown b'/ appoontmeot
sriniJG IN 20 ACRES Of WOO OlAND -
LAND CJIIIIRCT- 10% OoMo poywoont, 10% lntnst Rote. 39.50 Acr/!5
of ~ao:ant land. Black walnut Lois olwoodland. Awll!rl~ls. Secluded &Pfl·
vale. Blacklop Road. Pr<ed $20,01Xl
SECLUOfD PRIVATE NEIGHIIORIIOOD w1lhin walling dislance !" down-'
town and city schoolS. Briel< br-lev~ home has a form~ enlry. lilring room
with fir"'ace and a breatlllaking v~w of the ~o Valley. Step·"'"'
k!ch!rl wl)\ bui!-in IIIOdern applra1ces. den witfl fitoplae,l"'i'lui·IIObatxxrlhk·
case and h~f bath. Middle levo offers maslet bedroom ..... . , 2
large bedroom> ceramic lied lu! bllh. tower OV!I witfllorge foni'i room,
4th be«oom. storage areo. and launrh/ hobtl)' rrato. Thrs home has r..
cenltY been recarpeled 1h10ughoul. Screened-rn back porch w!h bilr!·tn
bllrbecue Jil dauble carport with slorage area. Jnlscaped lollo accent
·the beauty ' o1 ttis Qu~ity lllme. Give ,. a call lodoy.
..
15 ACID IIORE Olll£SS in St>rini!fOid Townsllil).Wooded. Minet~ ril!,l11s
wit!r the jll'operty. Only $7,500.
1•1 FAIRMONT IIOIILE HOllE - 14152 in excellool oond~.
11111111 bl in My achod dislricl. Ollly $9.100.
()o
a
lfMSTIIfNT PllOPfm- 641 Third Ave. 2 !loryhomeorcan,be used
.S 2 ren1• Large modern lrichen. 3 or 4 bedrooms. form~ d1mng ill1d
livinl room. N<e back palil. Also o 14•70 lllOta home rn, fllOd shape A
.......t urport. Pricod in the 40s. srown b'/ allfllllnlmerr. rrl\'. $450.00
nontll.
LOCAIID fN COUNTIY :_ LR. 3 BR1. l<ildoerr, boltr, utility room, cedar
lllllOinl. f"Y carpelld, lir oonditirned, ,...,,,
woshet, dryer,
)qe llll1lll oirlllWdirlL prtlen, 3.6acr/!5. Wii!OI iir $32.000.
aoomces.
IMO OOiffUCI - A-fnme tcrne .., .65 acre bl more or 1tss. 2or 3
lalralrll. Ill bolll Mll roorn.lilchen. rdty ...... Third bedroom oould
tie 1111 b- flm)ly.IOOIII. \1 blsemenl utOOishtd. 2 - . retrillllfllor,
..., n drier ino:lude<f. Priced 20's. .. '
fDI! Ill LOCAllOI - Wlllrill ....,. lo <ill schods. - n 4
--home.
ee
BEAUTIFUL BRICK 3 BEDROOM HOME wnh 2Y, acre$, 7
oft Bidweii-Rod$ney Rd. Elec. heat pump, fireplace.
vacuum system. 70•000·
Ml'l!lU
fl TeuiOniC deity
ill Felonlel
$8.500.00.
7 Nat holloW •
12 Trcpny of vlt:tary
17 Whlnfl)8!
21lrrtlale
22GQdt
of~
23 ~oil of gift
::I:'
pailll
2 1 - .·• r• 11" 1
21Aarta.! ,..-. "
I
I
•
45 ....._
: : : . : . ~-~
G0r•oteo: Olllllq.
:
71 T1wough
72 Bull like bini
7
4
~:~..of.~.
1,. AMII ..... ,.,1
117 Cudgaf
:::::-~-
:~E:"aboc*
~ lllalecl
•
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A CONVENIENT LOCATION along Garfreld Ave. Horne can be
used for 3 or 4 bedrooms and wnhin wal~ng distJnce from •
most all services. Only $30.000.
•
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NEW LISTING - Comfortable 3-4 bedrm. oottage. 500 bfoclo •
4th Ave. Otf·street parking. ea~ly maintained kll $26,900. •
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·•
' INVESTMENt PROPERTY - 5 rooms and bath down and 4
rooms and bath upstairs. located along 2nd Ave. Buy now for
$17,000. Price reduced'!
I
WE HAVE A HOME AND PERFECT LOCATION for a family.
located almost across from Washington School. 3 bedrm.
home, 2 baths, 2 krrchens, nice lot which is wide and deep
enough for garden and swimming pool. Needs SOllie work.
~-
•• 2'BEDIIOOM MOBILE HOME klcaled alonK Hazel Ridae 25
acres. more or tess. with nice garden area and wooded area
• Priced $27.500•
~ bedrm. 'cottage with eldra lot. Buy alf for
•
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NEW USTING $29,900.00.
•
IIEW USTING - 3 bedrm. home along Smm~ers Sl15'x20'
family rm. Sf! me appl~nces with home. Buy al for $28.000.00.
•
IIEW LISTING -
109 acres loWed in La- Co. ~
Lecta. Costs less than
per acre. Boy now fill $32.000.
1
SEWNG ·yOIJI lEAl UfAU IS IIG IIISINISSAU. All iU II Jl(ED WOCIIIIAm SMUfiUOII
s:m
.
.
the border
::~
114 Heroic-
161 Dapandl on
161 Ccut on11r
1811 t:llunW
170 ~ 1a1t1va1
171 Strlkeo
DOWN
1
=.,ci,IICul
2 Existed
!~~ion
5 Suonllll•ouextra
8 Anlltoxtn
~=~"
:~S'tem
~~ ~: =.,;..
14 Poker-·
15 Lookocl ~
134 Newly mm~~•mnloclor;
16=ngty
17 o.nce step
18 Abcwe
...,.,.,
· 20 ~
27 Dry
29 L!beraled
31 MenuKrlpt: abbr.
34 Fragile
38 Pltcltlng alals.
38 Looks flxedly
40....,•
tree
42 Ctnlnee '
::
=:.
48 SJ*lleh pot
49 Figure of speech
~==
53 Lamb's pen name
102 Eat
104 Depo
ion
106 Choooe
107 Magn-t
108 Fall into d;.,..
110
Limbo
111 Pvetontiouohome
112 Leak through
::
~ ~
t 17 Prohibits
119 Fruit Clllce
:~==-
58 -
123 Per coni: abbr.
t2511ighway
127 Symbol for erbium
1281s r -
62 Fordeo
129 ~bber on panc:ll
:::•---•
ng
muga
· eo Slclllai1 volcano
85 Tree branc1t
68 ~
orvar-~on
69 Shooting atw
70 Eur0])11811
~~~want
75 ""·• -.....
76
i;.:"'
77 FW!alnlng 1o blt1h
79 Slone out in relief
:=.
130 ~ ·
coonpooltlon
131Traps
133 F,.ln dropa
138 1>1nrw COl.l'88
138
Shoolatfrom
COVIll'
140 Approachet
143 Reglat•ed~
abbr.
144 One
"PP•-
::=
.
i:Er~ons :E~:
: ~!;~:"" ~
1
90 CuJa up
91lrrll~..
·
:::;:...,_
w.t
97 ~
of
!54 Pigeon POl
156
Hlgll card
ISS Yde
161 Chi.- dlstllftal
,_...
183 RIIIIWily: abbr.
185 Senior: abbr.
•of_'_____1ti•Aei-rla
_ _ _ _ _ _98_Spanllh
___,U•Ie---1•67-Pr•onoun----
•
e
•
~ :-- : ,_
153 A-.y from
1211.ong1 for
121 Floolla
=--.v.:. ::::=eteng
78 Nlrrow a1r1p
of wood
•
•
.'
!~:::-.i.._
===::: ::
11 . _ , 11 q
...._.... ____..•
..
1111.oob ~ly
I ~·77_,._PI"!'I•n•frt---•135-•00d•.
..,.....,..
·
11$......,
.,.....
:!:,
3 BEDROOM HOME - Ranch style, lg. carport.
adapted for woodburner, fenced yard and in-ground
swimming pool. Price reduced lo $38,000.00.
..
,tal J)ally
11111
¢edvalllr
511 0 fMift
,...
•
•
•
.....
Profounll,
117 8ymbol for
:· •, gMinlum ·
1il ,._.per~
47 . . . . , ...._
•
1
:
eolloq.
48 ~ .
,
48 01* w11a '
•
•
•
OONT OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN in Eureka. 2
bedroom home wnh 2 baths and lots of room bexpansion, located just off Rt. 7 near dam. Reduced to
$20,!XXlOO.
·
-I)NCIOUe
41IIHII ~. ~·
43 ·
~ <
APPROX. TWOANDATHIRDACRESwrrhin citylimits
Zoned commercial. Along Rt. 7. Price reduced to
$20,000.00.
•
••no•
1a
liC Allof of IIIOUih
101 l!utler llllitrtt1ute:
••
e
:
1411:
39 TlWIIII! I I I
VINTON: Commercial building wilh 2 apls. upstairs.
Formerly used as ha rdware store. Reduced to:
$28.000.00!
•
=•...•.
17Punctult1lonmark
111 Datelted
37 CCrceor' II
:
• •
••
83 ~
14 Aate
86 8horde ,,.
tOo 8emt-
36 OiiiJifn
: =~~~~~~t4~:~&li ldin&for~rlyusedforbank
•
· fl2 Olfwprtng: jll.
138 Therefore
137 ...,_
139 Mountain lake
141 Symbol for
tellurium
142 Evil
143 Genus of frogs
145Biobylonlanhlro
147 Explree
1118
t~
..
to~welght
·
:
~==
1111 n.ial
151 Note of .:lle
33..... " ··
I
1 :5?:"-:..s
•
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81 Ventilate
I 40.....,• ,'
I
1
2 BEDRM, COTTAGE, localed along WMe Ave. Buy now for . I
•· End", YlftS,m.t,
iatrM- 2 ~horne lots witfl-. $45.00per montlr. KraerCnrolr
OIILY $11.000 - St!O.OO Dan PIJ•IIIII- 3 b!Jdroom, famiy
1111111. LR. diJtin& room. Modem ililchen. lQI IGt
SUNDAY PUZZLER
I e::::wpar
.
•
VINTON: EXTRA CLEAN- Clean, cool and convenienl2
bedrm. home located along Main Slreet Refrig and many
other nems of furMure will go wilh house. Ideal lor newlyweds
and pr~ed at only $22.~00.
·
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2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD: with Raccoon Creek fronlage.
$7.500 each.
'
•
•
.
wit~'517000.9"&res,
~tuated wnhin Sec. 13,•
· ·
• . VICTORIAN BRICK HOME - lower River Road near Clay
SchOOl. Outbuildings and 7 acres. Buy for $37,500.
•
•
3 BEDROOM HOMEa~ngChestnui St. lot with service alley in
•
rear. 2 car garage and nice garden area. Price $38,500.
and,.,.
..,. dill!id-
~
3H B.E,_
DROOgt HOMPE
u~ 1n on wp. nee ... ,
•
•
,,
I
y~
I
oklcenl
. Ju~
e•
2 flmly IlD/I 2 boths, built-in litllln•livilcrrall, Ullfllv
- . - nrorw,oorlrshop, loiiicellr, !CIItref-11 pordo,oomllir, ,9
lrullln!!lS
orllor. Horne~ been ... ~
c.-::=
.
Rodney Village II. $275 monlh. •
•
COMMERCIAL BLDG. - 700 block of 2nd Ave. Purchase or •
~ase. lot 22.620 sq. ft; building. $7,560 sq. fl Ei<cetlent.
-condition
••
•
•
bonnie L. Stutes
(Sonny) Garnes Clttly Cllfk Burdette
Assoc.
Broker
• Assoc.
446-4206
446·2707 Evenines 388-8118 Eveninas
Wintor opl. : 30X40X9 with
15' troclo door • mon door:
15231 erected.
RON'S Tolevloion Service.
8poclolhlino 1~ Zonllh ond
Moterolo. Quour. ond
hou• colla. Coli 304-5712391 or 114-441-2464.
1 U.. a'brocim
•
•
.•
SonsHr~IY
FARM- 140 ACRES TOTAl. with I slory older home.
large barn. garage and shed. tobacco base. 2gas~WIIS '
, appro~. 60 acres tif~ble. Agood working farm.locaied
at Cora MHI Road.
#686
e
•
446-4206
•
•
•
•
•
•
ESTATE
VINTAGE OF 2B COLONIAL SIYLING - 2
i
ovenooking the river. Stories of the past in this special
home. Large living room. formal drnrng krtchen,
sunroom 3bedrooms. I Y, baths, basement Extra are:
5 room house. above ground pool,storage building and
1.87 acres Give a call today.
•
~;:::::::::::::~:.._...:::::=:::~==~~~~~~~=~~~~~::.....,
•
BTUT
Iron Hor11 Buldera. Form •
~r:.<;;'i!:~::leo!111::~ :
LOCATED
niElol.VIllAGE
bedrm.
cottage wilhWITHIN
86'x202'
Nal gas OF
FARODNEY-.
furnace. King2coal
and •• .
woodburner. septic tank. Gallipo)is city school district Priced to
~I! $20,000.
•
•
'
OWNER FINANCING on this immaculate 3 bedroom
home in Kyger Creek Scliool District Included:
~replace, I ~ bath~ full basement with 15'x40' family
room, natural gas, central air, garage pius 16'x32'
in-ground pool on ~ndscaped ~ acre yard.
FOR THE SMAll FARMER - 10 louely acres with a
brick ranch home. Home has 3 bedroom~ lull bath and
2 half baths, iving room, kitchen, dining room, full
basement attached g.arage. lantl and home in
eKceltnt condition.
. located Rt. 35 West area.
NEW USTING - 3 Bedrm. home outside
picturesque Willow Dr.. formal
room,' 2 baths. WB FP. fent!ed-in ba~~~!~Pr!Odrerro litchen
with many amenities. Priced to sell.
•
UPPER RIVER RD. -3·4bedroom home. wbfp, 2baths,:kar
prage, mo~le home hookup on lg. ~l Owner interested in
trading for small business or will ~I oulriglol Price $41,500.00.
PURCHASE FROM I TO 5 ACRES wnh ttis 3 bedrm. farm
home located along Rt. 218. Harrison Twp. Priced from
$50,000 to $75,000.
•
Real Estate Genarlil
Beaem .ent
Roofing, guttlring, oidi~g• .
plumbing. corpentry work
ond conc,.te work. FrM
eati-too. Coli 441·3171 .
•
#668
'
Ro·gera
Wollf1lroofi~g.
•
•
STOP!! LOOK NO FURTHER - Tr~ 3 bedroom home .
is just what you need at an aftordable price. 1300 sq ff.•
of living area includes 20' family room. new kitchen.
dining area. I !h bath~ natural gas heat. neY' carpet, :
oak floors, new roof located on a safe slreet IQr,
children off Rt. 141. $41,000.
·
·
a.
86
1979 Chevrolet Bloaer 4
•• .. 1{.
11684 ·
.
Mme
llfVI-
-
good cond ., one·own•r.
.·.,
#681
•
LOOK TO THE FUTURE - This 3.6 acres appro~ . is
located close to the.new Southwestern school srte and
would be a beautiful spoil for your new home. But while
you are waiting to build:move into this 14'x60' mobo1e
home plus have another completely separate mobile'
home hookup.
#701
_
Will tredo 1181 Uft.
1977 Oodgo Trodelmon von
100 I cyl., 83,000 miiM.
11,000. Col1441-8508.
446-6610
VINTON COURT- 3BR rancher with carpOrt. fenced
front yard wnh covered patio. Compact clean, cent. air,
' and oh. so·nice. Vinyl siding low heatingbills. All right
here rr is. OnlY $33,900.
' #659
tt- ··
y roven..,at•
o-.
#734
.
11
•
1978 Ford Courier Pick-up
MOVE RIGHT IN - Pr~e is reduced to $22,900 on Ihis
3 bedroom mobile home wnh over .4 acres of rolling
land. Obi. dr. garage, ~orage ~d g., private location. KC
schools.
'
r..e
w.v..
rr 23, 1984
truck. Four opetd. Low 74 Motorcycle•
mileogo . Ru.no good . - - - - - - - - $1000.00. Coli 114-992(.403.
1978 Hor.do troil7o. 1100.
'
Coli 441·,1127 oftor 5. ·
~)78 Ford .F-1&0•. pootive
1884 Hondo 3 whoelar. with
·tNction r"r end, huvy duty 1984
' Howk engl~e :
apringa, 400 engine, usa •900. Nltht
Col11114·182
-7184:
· Ffgul•r gea. inauleted
·Iepper, 23,000 octuol mileo. 1983 Hondo XR200A, exc
Qhe a""'"· $6,1100.00 firm. cond, ..00.00. 304-178®4-8911-3879.
6112.
IN TOWN - Owner will help finance this older 2 story
home at 3rd Avenue. Includes· z bedrooms, family
room, nat. gas heat Garage. $20,000.
#737
AKC Reg_. Toy Poodle pup-
259
8396. Coli 446-4226.
SECLUDED FARM - 146 ACRES - A farm thai
shOws its care and prominence of past history.
. ·Complete set of farm buildings. Drilled well. rural waler
availab~. Springs for livestock. Good . pasture farm.
crop land, fimber. Jobacco crop and a lui! line of
machinery. $65,000. 12 miles from Gallipol~.
#663
Dragonl\lynd Cottory Ken-
OY,O .
1971 Oldo Coqlooo. Two
l .toworkforyou:
Put
niol puppies. Coli 614 -388• 9790.
female . Call 614 -9922386.
Dune Buggy has VW eng I~•
good frame. roll bars. real
fun machine. Must aell.
SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.
• Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
' cilities. English Cocker Spa -
J\KC Miniature Schnauzers
born 1 0 ~ 02 - 84 . Nearly
housebrdren . Good with
children, 1 male and 1
'
1976 Dodge Aopon. Ruluo
good. Body ruff. Good Wl>l'll
1965 Chevy Belolr 129&. cor. 14&0.00, C•ll el-4·
engine • body in good cond. 992·73&4evenlnga. ' • •
Call 446·76eo.fedtemp
· •
1965 Chevy Belair 1296. 1978 Vego O.T. with Sun
0 ngine & body In go'od cond. Roof. Call Peggy Glrolol)tlllt
·&_7_8_6_
. --~
· ,
Call446:7&13 alter 4PM " _6_1_4_·9_9_2_
1
1982
Chivy
Chovette.
LUI
1970 Ford Fairlane sold 11
lo, best offer. 1978 Ford than 1·1.000 mllos .
Fairmont good cond , 13600.00. Coli 614·986',
3891 .
• '
,U .OOO. Coli 446.3622. •
Judy DeWitt-Realtor-388·81 55
J. MerriR (crrter-Rialtor-379-2184
Becky Lane-Realtor-446-_0458
Jim <octnn-Realtor~446-718 1
Yfr!iiiia Snith..;_Realtor~318-8826
E1itabeth Long-Realtor-675-3968
Margaret Bryant-Realtor-245-9277
- Brlarpatdl Kennels Profes- ,
, sional All -breed grooming . .
ABDA & UKC Reg . Ameri -
·11111 Plymouth. II cylindor,
otondord, 111,000 ml..l .
good body. ru~• good, very
reotoroblo . •4711.00 O!
trade . Phone 614-247·
4292.
01 1 11'
.
Judy TayiDr Grooming. Call
614 -388-9755.
'19111 Chivy 215 2 dr.
Seden , need• reatoring .
1496. 1978 Comoro. 6cyl..
IUIO tro~o. I 1 ,000. Coli
4411-8113 or 441-8201 .
•3
,614-367-722P,
buff in color . $126. Excel lent Christmas gift . Call
EAST
+s
,.••
614. 246 -9665 or 245 9480.
Stull Sal'llice. CaliS 14-446·
7795.
.
CHRISTMAS Puppies. AKC
mi.,· new betlery, br1k11,
point upholotery, *1 .950.
Call 448:4969 after 4PM.
....
1976 Monte Carlo. PS. air.
cruise. 71,000 miles. Call
. i ndoor -~(ndoor facilities.
AKC doberman puppies:
regiS'tetGd Cocker Spaniels,
1973 VW Beetle 48,000
or break 10me contracts, but you
.QJU
have to know bow to put It to use
+QI098
t73
properly. Forcet about ciamoroUB
+KH7U
+QI08642
aces and ltlnp; the aturdy little·card
SOOTH
that did the dirty work In today·~ deal
+AJB 632
was the eight.of diamonds,
.KII4
Declarer played low 011 the openln1
+KJB
heart lead, and tbe nine from East
forced the king. The ltlnc and ace of
Vulnerable: East-West
spades pulled the opponents' ~ in
trumps, and South now· led a low
Dealer: North
heart toward dummy. West showed
Nortll Eut Soutk
out, but South wa~ undaunted, After
I+
Pal!l
all, the diamond finesse might B\111
Pus !+
Puo
work. If not, the diamonds might split
Pau Puo Paa
3·3. So there were lots of chances left.
He went up with the ace of hearts,
Openins lead:
threw a heart on (he club ace, and
played a low diamond. He was just
about to put in the jack when the · It's interesting to note. that the rec·
eight of diamonds suddenly loomed omrriended play works even if East
out at him. Declarer played that card, puts up the nine or 10 of diamonds (If
and West was on lead. A diamond be bas it). South would then play the
return would be into the K-J, We all jack to West's qu.en, but the K-8 of
.can see what a club return would do. diamonds would t~en. be promoted to
West actually played a ·diamond, hop- a major tenace. •
ing his partner bad the jack, but to no
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRri!E ASSN.)
avail.
I
9665 or 246-9480.
Chow puppies. Call 614446 -3844 after 7 .
1978 Ford "" ton piCkiiP
4•4. t1 .200 or bell offor.
Coli 814-388-11303.
NMTH
1977 Novo. four door. Tilt
whNI with PS. PB. B9dy
ond motor in A· 1 ohOH·
*1195.00. Coli '614-378·
1349."
TransJJOrlalion
for bllsiness,
masonrY supplies , 4"' 8 " r
Spot-card
power
Auto1 for 81!1
71
Autos for Sale
Mo unta in State Block . Rt.
56
Grain
large round bales of hay &20
Co . ; lh c . 773 - 5564 .
daytime.
Now
S.
aach. Call446· 1062ofter5.
Rough Cut lumber, oak,
p oplar, srtd pine. 2•4's,
US's . h8's. As·
Hay
"
g~a~~~ 6~~t_e;~.5~~~~;~nde. 57
2xB 's,
Pontloc Oro~d Prl• 301'
good condition. Coli otter
5PM, 441·0137.
house
trained, 7 yeoro old,good
heolth. t16 .00. Coli 614 992-5207
7:00 PM (other dayo to
Chriotmn 3:00 -7:00) 304675-3334.
4087.
1.984'
J
�Ohio Point
Plea~ant,
o.c.mlm 23, 1914
W.Va.
for ·cause
·Guard jet crash
·
.of fatal
.
.
.
. VERSAILIES,Ind.(J\1")-Four
weeks may pua befcre lnvelllptors release areport on what ca1181!d
Thursday's fatal crab of an Ohio
Air Nallonal Guard jet at the
Jefferson Prov1J1C Ground, one of
the victim's mmrnanders said
Salufday.
Col. Gordon Campbell, vk:e
commander of tile l21st Tactical
f'llhter Wing bued at Riekenbacke!' Air Force Base near
Colwnbis. ohio, said findings might
be releued l!fll'ller If tbe Investigators dlleover a factor that they
believe flgured 'slpttlcant)y In the
crash ot the AID Cors.air ll jet.
An autopsy was pertol'llll!d Frl·
day on the body of the pilot that died
In the crash, Lt. Col. Andrew Gross,
39, of LancaSter, Ohio, Campbell
'DIE SEASON FOR .GIVING - Throughout
Decemher,memhersofPomeroyBoyScoutTroopWI
have been doing good deed'! lor lhe!r convnunlty.
PJ'I)jects have tocluded, replacing Bght hulhs In lhe
town's street decorations, covering the parking
meters lor free parking, and collecting food lor the
GaDia·Melgs Community ActlonAgency'sfoodpaatry
In cooperation with the students ol Pomeroy
Elementary School. Donated Items were boxed up
Friday afternoon at the school lor delivery to the food
pantry in Cheshire. Helping with the packing are some
of Pomeroy Elementary' • youngest students, seated,
Oak Hill board
seeking bond issue
· OAK HILL - A bond Issue has
been slated for the IVlay primary by
the Oak Hill Union L~al Board of
Education.
The board earlier this week
approved action lo place t!le Issue
before voters.
Superintendent Howard Smith
said that if the issue is passed, it will
finance additional classrooms lor
the agricultural. band. vocal music
and science departments at Oak HU!
!i!gh SchooL
A new cafeteria and classrooms at
Oak View Elementary will also be
funded by the Issue, Smith said .
No amount has been set for the
Issue yet, Smith said, but the board
has employed Peck, Shaffer &
WI!! lams of Cincinnati as Its bonding
members and Includes a pilot, a
doctor and other technical personnel, he said.
. .,
..
•
Gl'OIIB was a lllll-tlme technlclan'
with the mst TacU('JI) FllllterWing, said JamesT.IIdlng, apul!llc
affairs ott1cer at Rlckenbacker. ··:.
Boling said the Jei that cruhed
was one of thnie Corsairs that ll!ft
Rlckenbacker on a nlgllt · Jl'OIPid
attack practice mlsslon about 7: ~ · ·p.m. Thursday. It crashed !IIi ·
minutes later.
·~
The fighters trom the Oblo baMf
routinely practice over the Jeffer-.
son Proving Ground. Bollna ~.
During the night mlssloDS the pllotl.
practice low-level· bombing bd•
strafing of ground targets and ·~
. their Instruments nither than vls!lal
Information," he added.
,
''The only thing we know Is that It
was over, and he was preparing to
return," Boling saki.
left to rlghf,.BDiy Crane, Whllney HaptonMall, Adam
Smith, Jodi Smlih, Ashley Roach, J08h Harris, 'a nd
Taryn ·Dolqe. Holding the box on tbe left are IICOUts
StaceyShankandMichaeiVIUIMeter.PutUngllemsln
the box are ·J88011 Wright, soout, stacy Price and
Matthew Ault, students. Putting·food In the box oo the
right, held hy scouts Robbie Hawk and Mike Mayer,
are Challe Cleland and Shane Pbllllps, also scouts.
Scouts Eric Goode, In the rear, and Eric Hack,
exlreme right, also help with the pacldng.
Scoutmaster for troop WI Is Tom Reed.
:A guide to local
Television .p rogram.m ing .
Dec. 23 thru Dec. 29
Transplant recipient "satisfactory'
CLEVELAND (AP) -A42-year·
old Canton man who received a
heart transplant last month Is In
sa t!sfactory condition and should be
able to go home shortly after
Christmas, a Cleveland Clinic
spokeswoman says.
Elmer Allen has been moved out
of the special isolation room, used t.o
prevent transp!:mt patients from
said. He said the autopsy was
perfOrmed at a Columbus, Ind.,
facility, and that he was unaware of
the results.
Campbell sa1d Investigators sUII
do not know what callled the crash.
"'lbe acddentlnvesttgatlng team
Is tonnfneover thrn! (at Jefferson)
today," Campbell said Saturday In a
telePhone IntervieW from hi$ otflce
at RJckenbacirer.
'
"They'll spend.several days over
there trylnJ to determine the cause
Ill the accldeat. They'll be loOking at
the 1lte and trying to put all the
pieces bacJI toeether.''. Campbell
added.
.
'lbe team numbers about eight
•
being exposed to infectious agents,
said spokeswoman Marlon Moseley. Allen received h!s new heart
Nov. 'l:r from a Cleveland-area
donor.
"They're certainly pleased With
h!s progress," Ms. Moseley said.
"He mighl be leaving (the cllnlcl
very shortly after Christmas."
The clinic was among the first
U.S. Institutions to transplant a
human heart. It handled two such
operations in 1968, but then did not
perform the surgery for 16 years. '
ln the two years following the
world's first heart transplant -
~.
1~.
Two ways to deck their halls~'
.
11
Includes complete
Merlin Olsen
and 90 percent of the recipients are
pursuing a lifestyle of their choice.
She said 50 percent of all heart
transp!llnt recipients are alive after
five years.
The clinic has several criteria for
candidates for ' heart transplant
surgery, Ms. Moseley said. A
candidate must be younger than 50
with a cardiac disease that Is
progressive, incapacitating and
certain to he fatal without the
surgery. Ms. Moseley noted that
without a heart transplant, 90
percent of such patients die within
six months.
Send the Candle Lamp'" Bouquet.
Or the Twin Candle'" Bouquet.
Both are available from your fTD®Florist.
legistor to Win a Cabllage Patch Doll to be Ginn Away on Doc. 24th
POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
"The Way AmericaSends Love"
106 lutternut
Pomeroy, Oh.
.
. listings
Phone 992-2039 or U2-5721
Send your thoughts with special
R
..
Mary Peckham
Pages 3, 5-
Rt•gbtcn•d lrJdt•n~tt rk of l"lorl i;f~' TrJn~wmld Dt•livcry A:o.:-.( K iation .
---------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
performed Barnard
3, In Capeby
Dr. .Chrlstiaan
Town,
South Africa - many such opera·
tions were performed. But the life·
expectancy of patients was only
about ayear,somedlcalcentersand
hospitals stopped performing the
opera lions.
A major problem previously with
heart transplants had been the
body's rejection of tbe donor heart,
Ms. Moseley said.
Since then, Norman Shumway, a
pioneer In heart transplant research
at Stanford University in Palo Alto,
Cant., developed cyclosporine to
control the rejection.
Currently, Ms. Moseley said, !ll
percent of all heart transplant
recipients are alive after one year
"Channel 23 listings included
in t~ week's guide."
-
-
Station listings
'Wsi.Z
HBO
. MAX
CBN
ESPN
WTBS
WTVN .
WTAP ·
WCH6
WPIIV
'"
H~.wv
Home Box Oftlce
CI..Chrl8tl8n ~
SpooU N~
A118m8. GA
Columbus. OH
P..tceNIIuri.WV
. C.....,IUI,, WV
Huntlngtan. WV
WBNS • Columbua. OH
woua Athens. OH
WOWK Huodlr,.tun. WV
. WVAH Hum-. WV
LADIES'
MEN'S AND BOYS'
BLOUSE
,
SALE
Dressy, casual and lacy .:. they've all got special holiday
SHIRT SALE
Special Christma·s Sale prices on men's and boys' knit ·
shirts, flannel shirts, sport shirts and dress shirts.
~,,,
CHRISTMAS ·
SALE
ON ALL
TV'S and
·APPLIANCES .
USED TVs IN STOCK
GOOD SELECfiON!
.
ALL SIIEJI
B&W and COLOR
SETS
I
p,;uj
Sizes
PANTY
SALE Fragrances
hvntrs,
WaM log sty!tt
and lli.inis. Nylen. CDI·
1011 CHHI acetlle in sicn
4 Ia 10. lonaint and
.Tmhten ••a~ly.
lfl!l. suo to '4.SO
S1le
.-$119,0
'$359
L .
on CI1' istmus
ribbon, bows,
*Musk · ·
tags. etc.
*l'Aimant
*Charlie
'
20%
..
Off
20°/o Off
. . . BE liDS.
TO Sll
SUNDAY HOURS
11 :00 TO 1:00
SUNDAY lfibNOON I TO 2:00
'
fflwn~p,
*Stetson
SAltA CLAUS
{
Scrtt 20%
and 'gift .sets.
*Emeraude ·
*Jontue
'
*Nuance
l
I
I
·of the
year award.
(AP
Ydmeter
Page7
r m photo).
879-
WRAP
SALE
San 20% on our entire
stock of cologne, perfume
*S11phio --
Sl
GIFT
REVLON & COTY
' •ills, flart si.,·hl.li'
Reba McEattre, a ..,,_ l"8dea - · 11M riMeD ller CCIIIIIh')'
Se"'ing Gallia, Mergs and ·Mason Counties
!UNDAY ONLY
LADIES'
'l'lliJ CIUB'IS -
a·ppeal ... eipecially for gift giving
Misses and extra sizes.
lEG. IIUO IJI36.00
Boys Sizes 8 to 20
Men's Sizes Sto XL and
RIDING
nRille- to the top olthe record cbarta aad to the Coua&ry MUIIIe A_.t.......atenlllevocalllt
'
.
.
'
'
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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12. December
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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December 23, 1984
barrett
birchfield
pierson
taylor