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·Shultz sets out .for Geneva - P~e ·D-1

If :walls

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Pentap •g&amp;doy' Les Aepin will' head the Houee ·
Anned Services Committee- Page 0.1
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could talk

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Deallw ............................. A-4

Art

Buchwal~ di~~ees

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the •beauty' of the Star

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11 Seetlono• .114 Pogoo 60 Conto
A Muttimedil Inc . Newttpaptlr

Sunday, January 6, 1986

·Meigs ·receiveS litter control .program grant

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Gallipolis-Paint Pleasant

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Edllqrlals ......................... A-2
Fann ......, ........................ C41

Ohio weather: .
flurries forecast
for Sunday

Sports ..... )...................... C-14 .

·Vol. 19 No. 48

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•meer........................... n..2·

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Inside:

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~-t -~. AS 'exJ)Iilned t&gt;'Y · Gn""·"'-""liJ\
-,.e""r"',-~tn~e~gr
an-t riaS"Dee~~du ~ut;i:luurt RF-Gii~; ~~ie-lilCi'rn~ ~uJ~~t!;·~:;-c! -!~ =

By NANCY YOACIIAM

~~-:;*~"!g· p~~l -«mld be presented tO the

11mes Sentinel Stall
·
awarded for the development of a litter control
grant.
state for approval at the end of the year. Gloeckner
~ ' ~=~P0MER0Y~ lmplew~.r:tat!or,c! a$25,oolLll!ar"u , .programA~~M9lgs£®nly.,ro.tJm:,sle'lcnun~!l!lg ,.._....,.. j;l.~rJtl:ll~.I!X~)n~l~g~. est~~JJ.!;_h[l:l~nt of a_~e:
pointed out that Implementation of the developmental
. Utter sites.
control hoard, which has already been achlevro; ~-g;.ar.YJs'·a" pri&gt;-requ!stfe'for aii ori-going granl.
Control Grant for Metgs County, recently a wardell by
the Ohlo.Department of Natural Resources officer of
The grant proposal ltseH was essenllally
containment, . which refer~ to the actual Utter ·
· ·Twenty-five percent of the grant money,
Litter Control, wUI soon he underway.
unchanged by the Office of Litter Control, however,
c6ntalners which will be . available for county
approximately $5,!XX!, Is to be released by the state
This was ~rted Friday rflornlng to Meigs
an addltlonal $700 was ad&lt;led to the grant, making a
functions and include delivery and pickup; and, the ·
upon return from the collnty of a signed contract
COunty Commissioners by David Gloeckner of.the
total of $25,700.
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Identification of. sites. through9ut the county to be
agreement for the grant. After !be initial $5,1XXJ is
Gallla-Melgs Community Acton Agency. That agency
This $700 Is to be used only for advertising
l!esfgnated for cleanup.
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spent,' additional costs ·for linpleme niaUon will be prepared the grant application · and wm, be a
purposes In a radio media campaign. The media
Cleanup sites will he Included In a multi-year
Incurred by CAA. The state wlll then reimburse the
.•ubgrantee with . the county In the' actual
campaigD, designed to eduqate tbe public, Is to take ·
grant appflcatlon for ongol~g operation.
county for the costs and the county will, in turn,
Implementation.
place qurlng June and September. Public aware.n ess
reimburse CAA.

Bids will ·
• open .
remam
on sewer
line project

~~~~~J·c·~Fa~e~of city's old
swinrming pool
·now u~der study

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POMEROY - Upon recommendation ol John Anderson, president
of Pomeroy VIllage Council, the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners wlll keep open the bids
presented last week for construction ol the sewer line extension for
the Pizza Hut, pending some
decision on the matter at Monday
evening's regular meeting of Pome·
'roy Council.
The administration ' of \he two
grant projects was supposed to be
handled lhro\lgh the Meigs County
Commissioners.
f. S62,1XXJ grant for the extension
from the existing line to the
restaurant was awarded to the
village from the Ohl9 Depaitment
of Development A '$32,!XX! Com- '
munlty Development Block grant
to cover costs of Including residents
living almig the extension line came ·
through the county Commissioners.
When all five bidders for the

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33o/o OFF Jr. beys.' select sport:s~s . • 00% OFF boys' selected velour shirts ·
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I· ·• 33% OPl' WOIIIBO'S select
25% OFF &amp; "14lJBE l!(ml8ll'B ~­
.. • 26% OFF men's aelect velOiJII s
. ' ,:., ~cro OFF&amp;! MO.RE Jti1sse$' select . sets
./ • 26% OFF select group ofjrs: ·c1re · ,:,,,,JiB_~ Ol.IP ~.MQB.J!l~ls' 4.6X ~lect tops
• ~o/o OFF glrls' .select~ ~terro~s ~i.: 26'lo eFF WOttl!l'Jl,s:
. select skirt sets
.
We've ltstedjust a. hint of what's on sa.lel 'l'here's~ots more quality fashions to ohoose from.
, Hurry 1n nowi.A.t savings this big, ~ey'll,,'l&gt;e ~mg. fast. Mero}ULndiseva.r.les by store.
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By KEVIN KElLY
nm.s-Sentlnel Staff
GAL!,.IPOLIS .- The fate of the
old municipal swimming . pool
behind Gail !a Academy High School
will be determined from an engi ·
neer's findings.
The Gallipolis .City Board of
Education earlier this week decided
to hire a consultant todelermineany
future use for the pool.
The lioard's concern, Superin·
tendent Joseph D. Carter said, was
that the pool could be a a safety and
hlialth hauird.
'
Asurveyo.r's report revealed' that
the pool is on ·the city schools'
property. 'The report was part of the
feaslbillty study the school district
conducted last year on its buildings
and facUlties.
"I Inspected It today (Friday).
and erosion' has detertorated thl'

llectston ~-was ~

special meeting last
even·
lng of Pomeroy Village Council, It
· was decided that the block rant
montes should be "returned to the
commissioners.
Whether or not that money will
have to be returned to the state has
not yet been ascertalnl'd although
proper authorities have been contacted In the matter.
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VIEWING THE SITE -

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1be old municipal

swimming poOl behind Gallla Academy Wgb School

Is examined by GaDipollsCity Schools Superintelldenl

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Joseph D. Carter. The city board of education has
lllliiMll'lzed emplo)'I'IIEIII of a c~ en!llneer to
detennlne a future 1111e for the pool, closed since 1977.

May1977. "ltwon'tbe
long until it's a hazard. Even to look
at-lt, It's an eye!&lt;lref! The pool, a Works Progress
Admlnlstratlon project opened on
June 6, ·1939, was ordered closed
when it failed a visual Inspection by
. the Ohio Department of Health.
had been done on
Although '

reJiairS

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the pool in 1972, cracks were evident
In the tank's cement floor.
The pool, {\long wit~ a small
wadlngpoolonthesouthslde, was at
the time the leading activity of the
Gallipolis Recreation Board 's
summer programs, accommodatIng up to 400 swimmers. Although
pool attendance had been declining
since 1973, it was still led all sumnier
programs in attendance.
When the order came through,
recreation officials were told that
repairs or replacement were
needed for concrete.caping, gutter~
and drains, dressing rooms and lhe
pump room, and that the floor
deeded sandblasting. Unless that
work was done, the pool was
"unsou!'d" and a "public hazard,"
officials said.
Davis attributed some of the
detertoration at the pool and ns
facilities to periodic fl~ll!!!. !':?.~ -I walked·around the area of the pool
and I saw a copperhead snake and
lts- famlj)L-(in the dresSing room
area)," he said. "That's why l put It
out of hounds for children.''
Davis said that the pool was used
for school pep rallies ·after it was
closed, but after he retired in 1979,
"they got away from·that."

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·Gallipolis 'muni-court' cases decline in '84, .report shows
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
GAUJPOLIS - FelVer cases wer~ heard In
Gallipolis Municipal Court in 1~ than !n 1!&amp;,
according to the court's 'annual report. However; 71
more OWl cases were heard In 1~ than In 1933.
'The court heard 6,159 traffic and 854 criminal case$
1n 1984, as opposed to 6,
traffic and 00! crtminal
cases In 1!&amp;.
'The coort heard 445 DWl cases In 1984. In 19l3, the
court heard 3&amp;1 caseS. The highest month was
January, with 50 cases. June was the lowest month,
with 19 cases.
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city were up. Thirty violations of city ordlnarices
heard in 1984, as opposed to 18 In 1983 and ~
violations ot the Ohio Revised Code were heard in
1!114, up !rom the 223 cases heard In 1983.
The overall reduction of crtmlnal cases, especlall
by those .brought by Individuals, could be the result of
night court, according to Mlnlclpal Court Clerk
·
Wilma Brown.
She said many people with complaints first take
their caSes to the night court, which Is conducted by
Gallipolis attorney Brent Saunders.• lf the problem
can be worked out, Brown said thecaseisnot heard In
ro~.
,
The reduction In cases also means a reduction In

and costs collected. In 1984, the court collected
$267,700.18, compared to 1003's Collection · ol
$3(1!, 792.03.
The State Highway Patrol, Gallipolis City Poll~ ·

and the Gallla Courity Sheriff's Department each
reported fewer lraffic cases to the court In al&lt;l. The
State Highway Patrol's qses dropped from 5,146 to
4,820, city pollee's from 1,415 to 1,201 and the sheriff's
department from 158 to 116.
In '1984, lhe Ohio Department of Natural Resources .·
and the sherlfi brought fewer criminal cases to the
court than In 1!&amp;. There were also fewer cases
brought to the court by the state.
However. criminal cases ,brought to court by the

N~w

Frank- takes over as.

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Colorful Print Shifts

21•7

SuperBuyl

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Euy-oare ootton blends: Mls8es'

aaes,K,L. Women'B1X,2X.

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SUP~LEMINT TO THE LANCASTER EAGU GAZETTE I LOGAN Oo\ILY NIWS, lAT., ,IAN. ~ -

·
WUKLY IIEVIeW, A!WEIITI8IJI.n!IIUIII I -&lt;;A-11Nil., MCOIID COURIER, TUI!S., .IAN. '
ATHI!NI IIU8EHOER I III!IIENCieR ADY!RTIIIA, ""'AAEN TAIIUNE .cHRONICLE, SUN.,
I. " · IUMAHT MCIIITIR I IU_., ~. IIOIIIIING JOURNAL I IAUII'
-Mit'. iJ; iiiriDii"•'liiN 7;w;;;, AL&amp;.JANCI·MY!!W¥ TH.! -~~"'!! .MII!AIIt~I!IJ,_~~N!H,.~ . ·~ _NEWS, BAT. 1_IUN., ~· I f \ ... HIL.LIOALI DALY NRWI, MON. I TUEB., JA,N. 7 I !;,!f"• , ·
1HENRY COUNTY MAAKIT!IA, liON., JAH. 7, fii'P CITY HI!RALD I NEW CAALia!IUN 'YinKLY'liDYiflt . ..,,
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1 TAl CITY AOYOCATE I VA-LIA DIIUMMI!A NI!WS, STUACIII Oo\LY JOURNAL I JOURNAL
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B;y CHARLENE HOEFUCH
ers, however, began before he
- - - - - - ~I Slaft- -.- . ---eiitei'Ed-the political arena:- - -·
POMEROY - When Howard
J;teturning from 'the Korean War
Franktakesoverasshelllfo!Melgs · In 1952, he took a courthouse
. County at midnight tonight, he will
janitor's job and then went.on to be
havetbeW.tlnctlonofbelngtheonly
a general building maintenance
person In the State of Ohio to have
man for tile county.
been elected for seven consecutive
Then In 1~. Frank ws appointed
1erms to three different public
a deputy sheriff&gt; and worked with
ol'flces In the same county. · .
Sberttf Bob Harten bach for the next
In his contacts aci'OOIS the state,
seven years.
Frank says he hasn't found anyone
In 1960, when Clyde Mllhooedled
to surpass that record; nor, for that
while serylng as treasurer, Frank
. matter, has lie !Ound anyone who
was appointed by the Republlcan ·
has been elected to a different
Centrlll Copunlttee to serve until he
. public olllce while actively serving
could run tor the unexpired term of
In anotbrr, ,
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two years. He won that election and
MOB! candldates,reslgn from one
went on to run again for three
consecutive !our-year tenns.
olllce before tuimlng for another.
But Fr1111k didn't wher. he was
It ws during the middle of his las1
county auditor and decided to throw
term that Frank ftled for the
·his. hat Into thl! rln8 for treasurer.
position ot coonty auditor. Alter
F'ranlc's career In public olllce wlnnlna that, he ra~lgned as .
spanuurtv a quarter ol a century.
treasurer lmd George Collins, ·
lils work tor Meigs COunty laxp.iy:" cufl"ei''i iteliSlll'lii', walr&amp;'iJ(l(&gt;lmtd iQ
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complete hi~ unl!xplred tenn.
Franlt opted not to file for another
tenn as auditor and left that office
In March, 1~. He Immediately
filed hiS petition of candldacy'·for
sherttr . and went on to win In
Novem~r. ·.
So, as Frank begins hl5 four-year
term as Meigs ~nty SherHf at
mldnliht 'tonlglif, he J,i, in essence,
returning to the place where his
political Inspiration and savvy aU
"begliO. '"'" ~.......... -·~ ·~~'--

disbursements by the court·to city, state and village
treasuries.
After accounting for checks reiurned Jo the court
for insufficient funds and refunds made by the court,
$267,090.18 was disbursed to city, state and village
agencies, as opposed to $:01,223.94 disbursed in 1983.
Disbursements were made by the court to city of
Gaillpolis, $138,467.73;· ·Gallia . County treasurer,
$16,931.30; treasurer of state, $1(1.2,354.46; Ohio
Department of Natural Resources, $4,672; Gallla ·
County sheriff, $218.69; law library, $4,!XXJ; Centerville Village, $72; Crown City Village, $212; and
Cheshire Village $162.

round of utility rate

By ROBERT E. MillER
consumer advocate in rate cases
A.-odated 1'1'1!111 Wrtler
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio · before the Public Utilities Commls·
slon of Ohio- to trtm the new round
utilities are seeking rate Increases
ci $670.6 rnllllon lhis year - more of rate bike requests.
He also mentioned continued
than double the amount granted In
19114, Conswners' Counsel Wllllam efforts to draw the line on pass·
throughs toconswnersofthecostsof
A. Spratley says.
unproductive
nuclear plants 'and.
Bu.t he expressed hope Friday that
protect
rate
payers from the
state regula1Drs will trim the
prospect
of
having
to pay for the cost
requests by the eight major utilities
transmission
Unes
which would
of
and move on other fronts to'fl'ght a
serve other stateS.
new upward rate spiral.
Last year's hikes totaled $248
rnllllon for an ~ ol only 2. 7
Spratley also said Ohio should
percent-tessthanthelnflaUonra~ seek federal legislation protecting
- from 1983. Cus!nmers had been natural gas consumers fro!n higher
socked with a 46 percent Increase In prices resulting from deregulation.
1!&amp;"1.
He attributed the slowing (!own of
But Spratley told a news confer- utility rate Increases ln".l!IH .IQ
ence: •1'he stakes are high for tougher regulaUon by the PUCO,
Colllllllllef!lln ~."
moderate Increases - and In some
Hellstedasertesolgoalsforstate cases decreases- In the cost of
~alON ·' tl"~~i."t~!~ng...."" tmt!JE~l 8~~ B!ld~tf~ti~~CQtlSU.:.__

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"Residential consumers certainly have llenefltted !rom a more
Vigilant and diligent PUCO. " he
said.
ln a review ofutilltycosts In Ohio's
major clUes !n 1984, Spratley said
COilSUJl'lers in Toledo were hit
hardest with monthly bllls which
averaged $159.64-8 percent, or$13
a month more than the previous
year.
'!be consumers' counsel survey
was based on monthly consumptlon
ol l3,!XXJ cubic feet of gas, 500
kilowatts of elet!trlclty and ftat-re.te
telepi\one service. ·
Spratley said the typical monthly
blll In Columbus was $1.4&amp;1&gt;.
followed by Dayton, $1.43. 76; 1\kr(ln
and YOUI!j!SIDwn, Sl36.Ql; Clave- .
land, $1..:1).87; Clnclmatl, $tl).ll;,

flld_eanton.~.1L ""~"""'"""--"''l"
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�Pon..roy-Middleport-Gallipol~.

· JanuaiY 6, 1986

and ·. perspective

COmment
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The ~y Times- Sanllnel

Page A-2

.Ja._IY 6.

198~

State forecasts ·

Cold air, snoiv forcast

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iuubq 'limet •.. ienti•~ _
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r.-~e: ~&lt;£ uu.'

Clu~tth ~-~l!te~~;!,.,..~~
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A Division of

NEW YORK - The, New York
Dally New~ has ljlken a PQD and
found that 65 percent of New Yorl!'s
Catholics t)!lnk their new archbishop, John J. O'Connor, Is doing a

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J!ll.o'D!{...i J\!'!!,..f.ADI- ~ ~ .JUf&lt;!.l!!rt S., P~. ~

1r

(614) 9112-UH:

(114) 44&amp;-ZSU

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poD results than the poll Itself.
A .society Is In trouble If It
' measure! splrftual leadership · by
popularity. For certain purposes
the standards of ihe market and rt
~rnocracy are perfectly legl.dmate; but . not for' spiritual pur-

. ROBER'f L . WING E 'IT
·
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

·guuU&lt;jut;=13ut tf.e·;cm -uew--s ':S··lisS!

PAT WHITEHEAD
As;lstant Publlsher-C()ntroller

poses.

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man a liar."

o\ IUMIIEB al Tile o\Mo&lt;lalecl l'r-, blud Dally PHu - - - lloo
Amnr'e11 News,aper PubUHen AIMclaaoe.

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The article accompanying the
poD mentions "disagreement"' between Ute archbishop .and the
majority of Catholics on abortion
(In cases of rape) . and on birth
control. But those Catholics a ren't
just disagreeing with the lncum·
bent archbishop:
They
are reject.
.

LEn'EIIS OF OPINION are welcome4, t•ey abouN. be leN tllaa - ..,.... ,
..... o\D 1o11en ue ""bled to eciW.. ud moot be llipH wall oame, - - ud
111 en ! ..uert. .No WISiped IHlen wtu be '*bUJbed. LeUen lltouJd bela
.... tale, &amp;ddreuiltl IMues, IIHK persoaallllee.
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scarlet letter

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lng the otrldal teaching of their support ot
Vatican.
whose mundane Unltananlsm Is
church. Itlsmiscblevoustoportray
'Since when does a news story · -lesstnterestlngthantbefact_thathe
this as a simple difference rt cover a controversy by quoting one
continues to wear a ROman &lt;:ollar
opiniOn between Individuals. I side exclusively, and that withOut and complain about · "repression;'
suspect that the News, Dire most rt any criUclsm? Here Is the paragon · when the Vatican says It do!!sn t
-=· ~~'S-,t~~~!!".:.!~ltr·!e·~ ~N r~--!!o!~.g · w:1r.t him..posl11..g ~ ateacM!1ot!..Jte. _.,,..,
In effect mounting an qttack on a hatchet jobs on the Catholic Church Catholi~ faith.
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ma1or Institution: the Catholic - 9r, more precisely, those eleNow there Is nothing represChurch. DMde
~uer.
ments ol the church It dislikes. Last slve'' about an lnslltutlo~
A· few days ago the Vatican SUinmer It gave New' York Gov. who Its ~mbers and representsordered 24 nuns to retract their Marlo CUomo unJIJnited space to dves are going to be. It Is totally
support for abortiOn as expressed In launeh his own attack on Archbl- dishonest for liberals to pretend
a tun-page ad In 'I'I!e New York shop O'Connor. Divide and that wpen the church decides that
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•might be going a bit far, but FUer's reaso':llng, reveaJe&lt;;! In a speech being
distributed by his former company, depicts a vague, perhaps amusing,

Instead of reporting on events, 11 Is
Involved In those events as a
competitor lor power and author·
tty . •The result Is that 11 no longer
reports Impartiality. The dlssl·
dends In the church are to be
supported; the viewpoint of the

·cofuparisOn.
• In the Hawthorne novel Hester Prynne, an adultress, illustrates the
author's view that sin ~ults In a downward, tightening spiral of
and suggests that absolution Is obtained by rejoining the
CQIIUJlunlty and accepting its mores.
As FUer views Reagan, the presklent and his advisers " will want to give
;the Republican party every chance of staying In power past 1988," and
•therefore wm do au they can to get the deficit down to acceptable size.
. "As the,negative aspects of deficits become even clearer, the current
·subustantlal political momentum for deficit reduction will become a
:Jugemaut," said Flier In his talk · to the Hong Kong Management
·Assocatlon.
·
. '"'be Republicans, and especially the president, wiD need to be seen In
the forefront In accomplishing the compeUing national goal of stemming
'the flow of red Ink;'' he told his audience.

;misfortunes,

the

Vatlcap Isn't presented; and
keypart ofthestory, the dereliction
of the American bishops and Ute
superiors ·of the religious orders,
Isn't even ~lnte&lt;;l at.

Other Ethiopias

Reagan, be believes, also wants to go out a hero, a man ln the good graces

at not just his awn party but In the hearts of aU voters. And neither he nor

Hester Prynne, he suggests, can be accepted while wearing a scarlet letter
on the cbest for all to see.
·
· If nothing Is done about the deficits, and U CIIITent projections have
credibility, Ftler says, the Reagan years wiU result In nearly a 150 percent
Increase In U.S, federal indebtedness.
.
To put It more precisely, "ln eight years, Ronald Reagan wiU have
presided over a substanttally bigger (l~~t Increase than occurred during
the previous ·l m years of our Republic, , says Ftler.
Filer believes that Congress finally will accept the necessity for spending
cuts, however painful.
"Persuasion In the matter of deficit. reduction has moved wen ~~e

a .-

questf9n .ot..:SooukUt

..

State.seeb to -make
up for federal cuts .
in ·indigent legal cases
.,nth
crlmes.
·
k
1o r
, The enabling legislation emerged from tbe recent, lame due sess n o
111e I.A!glslature despite the objections of lobbying heavyweights such as
thole representlng banks and lawyers.
Gall Richard Celeste who gavefavorabli signals durlngnegotlatlon!;on
the tJUi. 1s expected to ~lgn It Into law when It reaches bls desk later this

~~ Sen.

Michael Schwarzwalder and · Rep, Dean Conley, both
J).ColumbuS, were·chief sponsors of the measure which will extend !ega!
lllstancetopoorcitlzerui Involved In disputes aver such things as tenants
IlL
welfare benefits, divorce, and child custody.
· tor

thole leMCes totaling about $3 _
- that. ''l!CliWarzwaloersiilif.Tbe bill would provide funding of about $3mUllon over the next two years
trust fund It creates starts producing enough Interest to

cover ruu-ttme .operating costs.
MolleY wm be raised by the bnposltlon of an additional tiling fee of $5 for
civil CAII!IIln municipal courts and an·additional $10 tor those .~ned In courts

.:;::0~ tor~addltlonalfees

to be canceled atterthetwo-ye.&lt;ll'
period The funds will be aUocated to legal rights service
~~In
ai-ound the state and to the Ohio State Legal Se~
~godaUon. None of the rooney can be used topay~r seJV1ces In criminal
cut!l already funded 1n the state PubUc Defenders Office.
C4lllley l8ld the bill Is Intended to restore funding levels for legal services
10 :illllevels pr1or to the Reagan adrnlnlstratlon's budget cuts.
"Till• 11 a very lllgnUicant bill. It's about bealth, housing, .~ food.
tbat ue flmdami!Dtal and ten'lbly lmporlant to people, he said.
Ohio State Bar AsiOclallon, which says K favors the concept of
.__........,lepl belp to lndJ&amp;enta, •MJCll!!d the biD, however, on grounds that
funded with general tax revemJeS ratl!er than the bnp«JSltlon of

cttles

on:

jt-

.

Ire

8IIDiren fOulht tile proplllfl because of provlalo111 which wDI requ
them to SJI)IIDbll!llt on tbe special account. Until oow, they have been
.;;.............
IIIIi! to IIDid IUCh IICilO'IIIta wltl¥lut paying inte1'ett.
I*AiRW
lidetriiCked d!u'lnl the Uth-bour negotlattons on

~-i~:==~~=w~e:~~~=~=
t!'.it !!!fa'-!1--~ mt!Mll!,~,llf.I.llgu.l.ilr
II *ID JWCIVIde llpl ~.,
,.

:

1'1\

'

v

Mafxtst regime 1n Addis Ababa,
.bave.createda situallon of horror.
But according to officials of the
Agency for International Development, the scenes of deatl) and
misery In Ethiopia that h~ve been
so vividly portr~yed In the press are
.likely to be repe~ted on an even
more appalling scale In at least sill
other African countries unless aid Is
forthCOming soon.

across the
Ethiopia
have made matters even worse.
With 22 million people spread out
over an area about one-quarter the
size of the United States, Sudan has
a potential for tragedy that Is
almost Imaginable. AS tbe AID
report notes, there are "grain
shortages throughout the country...
drought and low Nile River waters ,
... (and) no foreign cash reserves. "
- Mozambique: The southern

and' central areas of this fQrmer
Portuguese colony in southeast

AfFica have been hit slm~ltaneously by "drought and uncontrolled
rebel attacks on farmers,' ' AID
reports. A IJIBSSive grain deficit Is
forecast through at least this Al'rtl.
A report from the U.S. Embassy
In Maputo, reviewed by my assoelate Lucette Lagnado, paints a
giim Picture of a country lacking
the most .basic consumer goods,
and even the transportation system

part, on marxist mismanagement,
Explains an embassy cable: . "No
consumer gOOds are available now,
not even soap and clothes. Shelves
here have been bare for several

mont~s ."

What has this to do with Ute
famine? Simply this: The farmers
have no Incentive to'Produce more
grain than they need for their own
fam!Uies. "Both government and
private sources say tbe lack of
consumer goods Is tbe
most

stricken areas:
"The tranSportation fleet IS a
fraction of I!J! pm.lndependenee
size, with many trucks lost to old
age ... compleie lack of spare parts
... Local authorities say there are
only :.ll toll trucks avaU~ble to
transport goods - -Including relief
commodities ... A fleet of several
hundred trucks Is, the normal
requirement."
The problem can be blamed, In

bassy reports.
Chad: "Drougpt, war, inadequate food for llvestock; rlnderpest
-outbreak" - the woeful litany of
disaster Is spelled out In the AID
report. An estimated 25,10) Chadian .'refugees have fled thl!lr.
Inhospitable ·homeland for neighbortng countries ..:. thus spreading
the potential famine to 't heir
hard-pressed hosts.

__ld_
Beauty' of.'Star.W'ars'_____________A_r_t_B_u_c_h_·wa

For the 11rst time, the state soon may be.helping fund legal services for
the poor 1n clvU cases, the same as It already does for Indigents charged

-~! CIJIIJ'I fees.

, ln a draft repo~D officials
warn that re
rmatlon Is
"difficult to o
·" and that
reporis on the amount of food
needed from one week to the next
are particularly hard to come by.
The seven countries. In the greatest
danger are Identified as the landlocked Saharan nations of Chad,
Niger and Mail, Plus Sudan, Kenya,
Mozambique and, of course, Ethlo-_
"pia. Here's the tragic rundown:
_ Sudan;_:rile sltuadon here Is

The beauty of the Star Wars
defense system Is that everyone ·
can discuss It with authority,
because no one, Including the
people In charge, has any Idea of
what It Is.
I realized this whe~~ I attended
one of those Washfltgton cocktail
parties · where .the power elite
gather to exchange gossip and
Information that only decision
makers are privy to.
"Is It true," I asked a source, who
has one of the largest offices In the
Pentagon, "that Star Wars wDI
become a bargaining chip In the
Soviet-American arms talks?"
.
"Nuts," he said defiantly. "If we
"Isn't It easier to give something
upln~talksthatwedon'thave,

than something that we do?"
"Not If they have It, and we
don't."
"Do the ~have·a.StarWars
defense? "
'"They must have or they
wouldn't want us to give up ours."
. ·"Maybe they don't have 11, but
hope we'U go a~ad with It
anyway," I suggested. "Did It ever
occur to you that the''reaaon the
·Soviets are making such a big thing
of It Is because they want us to
spendatlourmoneytodeveloplt,so
we won't bltve any left to lT18ke the
weapo1111 !hey don't want us to
build?"

"Of COline, It's occurred fo me,''
he said. "But'our answer to them Is
there'a no price you can put on
national security. Once we llgute It
out, all our ottter weapons will be
'u ; · ; a n

,,

have' no Idea what It Is? " I asked.
"We may not have any Idea what
It Is, butwedoknowwhatwewanllt
to do - and that Is blow up every
Soviet missile' before It hits Its
target."
...
"That's a tall order. WUI Star
Wars be able to do that?"
"We may never know, but neither
wtll they. Once we Install It In tbe
sky one one wtll have tbe slightest
Idea If It can do Ute job. But It wiU
keep the other side guesSing. And
that's the best deteiTent there Is."
A man who has one of the largest
offices In the White House Joined
our group._"The president wants
Star-wars because be believes once

·on It?"
"They better be If tbey want to
k ee p their jobs in this
administration."
"But how much will It real!¥
cost?"
_ The Pentagon man · tlttered,
nation.''
.
"When li comes to funding Star
"I take It then," I said, "that
Wars, the ~Icy 's the limit."
everyone In the government Is sold

you'!'!' talking about Star Wars,
you're talking about the hundreds
of thousands of jobs It will provide
for the next :.ll years.-It's not just a
dream, but a shot In the arm for
every defense contractor I~ the

'

Doonesbury

BY GARRY TR~DEAU

a

chan~ of .snow developing. High In themld-30s~-Th;eJc~han
~cefuof~~~~~6sou
;t~h~.~Lo~w~s~1~5~~~~~~l!Y~~~~~~~~~~~:D
~ ~ . ~~~
;.;
.

.

NoR1HEAST INlAND, cENTRAL mGHLANDS
Saturday
night, snow flurries Ukely. Low near 25. Sunday, cloudy •
with a chan~;e of snow developing. High In the mld-30s. The chance of
precipitation Is 70 percent Saturday night and 50 percent Sunday.
· · MII\MI VAlLEY, CENmAL. SOU'l11WEST ·
Saturday night, partial clearing. Low W to 25· Sunday, partly
cloudy. High around 40. The chance of precipltadon Is 10 percent
Saturday night and Sunday.
·
. •
EAST CENTRAL
Saturday night and Sunday, mosThtly clhoudy. ~w ~~r:~nn~~
near 25 and a high Sunday 35 to 40 · e c ance 0 prec pi
.

".Extep.ded Ohio forecast .

'

,
, By The As8oclated Press
.
The extended forecast for Monday through Wednesday cans lor a ·
chance nf snow on Monday, and fair weather Tuesday and
Wednesd~y' . Hlghswtll beln the30sonMonday, and35to45Tuesday

toward ·Northeast
By1be Associated Press
Snow or freezing rain stretched
froin West Virginia to southern New
England . Saturday, as a storm
trudged northeast on a path that left
thousands without power closed

,,...~-·

•..

•· ...

~

•

01/IN6E.~

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I

A week of stormy weather was
blamed for a !least 26 deaths.
About 10,1DJ customers were
without power In West VIrginia late
Frtday and early Saturday, Appalachian Power Co. spokesman Joe
Haynes Said. In southern NeW
Jersey, 9,!nl customers were wlthout power Friday morning as Ice
formed on eleclrfcallines and t~
limbs. .
•
Travelers' advisories were posted
Saturday for parts of KentucJcY ,

,.

Tennessee, VIrginia, West Virginia ,
Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey,
New York. Pennsylvania and New
England.
In Huntlngloil, W.Va., 61nches of
snow was on the ground early
Saturday, with up to 4 Inches more
expected In the · rilountalns, th~'
National Weather Service said.
A low-pressure system off the
New Jersey coast, which was
responsible for the stormy weather, .
· should continue moving to the
northeast Saturday, said Paul Flke
of the National Severe Storms
ForecastCenterlnKansasCity,Mo.

·-

, 1= ~'1-"'"'"~'-~~- _" _

c.

•.

~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~e:.;:'B.;.~~~

day. By early Sa\Urday, wet
'weather extended from West Virglilia toNi'W EfigllilHJ,andmost1lfth~ ·
area had snow early Saturday.
"Condltlonswilllmprovethroughout the day," Flkesald.
Thesystembroughttheflrstsnow
ofthewlnter to Atlanta, flurries that
stopped by midday.
.
New Jersey pollee lowered the
speed limit on the Icy New Jersey
&lt;lfurnplke. An accident Involving 24

pollee said. There were no serious

~=~ ~e Tax Break.
When you open an 'Ind
. ividual
t
Ohi
Retiremen!Accounta
o v a 11ey
Bank. and whether you itemize your
deductions or not. your allowable
IRA contribution is deductible in
lull. The amount o! tax reduction in

•

Ill., totake inmorethan~stranded

motortsts. As much as 10 btches of
snow feU In the area Friday, and
dozens of schools were closed in the
southern part of the state.
Seattle's Puget Sound area was '
plagued by an Inversion Friday that
kepttheareablanketedwlthfogand

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Frt,d ay
' night In the Ohio Lottery's dalty
game "The Number," was 471.
In the "Pick 4" game, t!Hiwinnlng
number was 0422.
The lottery reported earnings of ·
$1.141,774 fromwagerlngon ltsdalty
game., Earnings came on sales o~
$1,536,730, while holders of winning
ticketS were endUed to share
$394 9156.
'·
'
ipepru1mutilel"Pick4" game,
sales totaled $197,761. Holders of
winning tickets were entitled to 45
. percent of the take, OF $89,154. A
_ wlnnlng..$Lstralght tlcket e.arnell
$8,004. A winning $1 l!&lt;Jxed dcket
earned$667.

--

•

~~~~!~ ~ ~=~J~,~~r~

InJuries.
About 300 stranded motorists who
spentThursdaynlghtlntheNattonal
Guard armory In Lonoke, Ark.,
vl Fr1'd saki National
beganlea ng
ay,
Guard Sgt. Leroy Sternhagen.
An. armory alsi&gt; opened In Cairo,

'

0

I

your actual return depends on your
tcix bracket. your liling status and
how muc)1 you invest.

Reason #2
1,
Is The Tax-deferred Interest.

Reason #3
Is Obio Valley Bank.

RA be '
This is the point tor an I
mg
such a strong ·growth investment
You don't pay,a penny -in taxes ~n
the interest until you start taking t e
money out. And by then. you're
probably going to be rehre&lt;;f and
in'·a lower tax bracket. So your
taxes are substantially less.

Simply because we service .more
IRAs than any other tmanctal mstitutioninlhearea:Sowehavethe
experience. and o!!er more options.,
such as a variety ol !ixed and
variable rate investments. And. at
.
t
Ohio Valley Bank. you can mves
whatever amount best suits your
)Judge!. starting with as little as S10
per week. You may even pre!er to
fund your IRA !rom your CapitalLine account. All accounts are

•·

. . . ., .. .. -___.__

'

Lottery winning
numbers: 4-77,04-22

~=-

. By T1te Assoc.lated Press ·
•
A storm that dumped as much as 6 Inches of s now In the Ohio
Valley moved . into the mid-Atlantic states and New · England
Saturday, while Deep South temperatures dipped Into the teens.
Six inc)les of snow wa s reported at Huntington, W.Va .. a nd 5 inches
at Charleston, W.Va ., early Saturday.
Travelers' advisories wer e posted In Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, Connecticut. New York, New Jersey, PennSylvania,
Delaware, Maryland and Virginia.

'

~~~ .l~!!~~~~~~~l-----:~_J___Jpo~l ~ut~lo~n~-V~l:si~bl ~lty~d~ro:p;J)ed~t;o;les ~-tl-~l-----~--------:_---"!boiXOOihM,.~iOl.

HlfXJ

The nation's weather

oercent Satull_ia_x. night and Sunday

:f~! ~iar south as Atlanta.

than a quarter-mile as the air
pollution Index hit 171, with a
!'l'adtng of over 100 considered

war."
"But _the president says he
doesn't know what Star Wars ·Is
· either," ! 'pointed out. . .
' "He's not a sclentlst.and doesn't
..eJalm to be one. But hl! beUevesln·lt
more t!Wt anything be has .ever
advocated.
•
Besides, luou:
·-- he' s
- propoied It he has to go ahead with
It, or he would be sending another
wrong message to the Soviets."
An assistant II!Cn!taly, who has
one of the largest offices In the State
Departn\ent, said, "Even. If Star
Wan doesn't pan out the WilY we
envision, It wiU stiU be worth the
COlt just to show our NATO allies
that we have no Intention of leaving
them In the lurch. If nothlnl •• It
wiD ltJ'enilhen the West's commiiment to repelling the Soviet mU.ltary threat."
"Then our all1es ue for It?"
"They ue 81 Ioag 81 It doesn't

·

~·~ ;_~·~:n:d~W:·~ed~n:~:-·~~:Y~-'~·QW::~~wru~-:~~~=-~m~-~~ru;~~-~;!~~~~~--=··:~:~::=:::::::::~-~~-~·~~=-:::::··::::::::-:·:·:":::·:,:· :·::·:::::·:-~:-:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.
. ...
Storms moving

;;_~~ct~1U~'·is'~
r&lt;' --"'~l"~-,~..~"-o~or~~- ~ua~r:--~..~~-,~-e~~
~~~-~·~~-;-~~~5il~~~~E~~~~~~;i:~~~~'"'~~~:~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;$Z,;,;~,

during the protracted political season prior to tbe election."
He suggests the president and Congress are ready to practice greater
tl!cal resP!JllSlbillty - now, before the threatened downward-spiral of
economic events bmnds the administration In scarlet.

of

wASffiNGTON - Internal State
Department reports, based' on
cables from our embassies across
Africa, reveal a picture of:present
starvation and. potenttal devastadon that 1s even more horrible than
anything •reported 50 far.
Galvanized by media reports,- the
Reagan adml$tt;~tlon and the
American public have· respilnded
with an outpouring of ald to
Etillopla, wbere thousands have
died of famine and millions are In

.

'(·:

fi

Ulltl1 a special

waiting-'--_--L.-_Ja_ck_A_nd_ers_o~

.. ,

&lt;AP

. ·~' -~ ~.....

n~;:~~~~f!I:~ ~~~~"';."':;~

Occluded,....... Stat&gt;Onory a..,...

WEATHER FORECAST - The Naalollal Wealher Service
forecaat for Sunday predicts snow for portions of the wetlem Great ·
'Lakes. Fair sides are predicted for the rest rt !he~ wlth.rolder
temperatures.
Laserphoto).

In those days -the liberal was
making Important distinctions. Today his descendant Is eotlapslng
them, pretending t_bat the church
·can and should be subject. to the same standards as the state. He has
forgotten that liberalism once
meant freedom of speech to be a .
political principle, 11othlng more,
a nd that It also stood for the right of
private Institutions to maintain
their own Identities, Independence
and internal standards of conduct.

It Is Reagan's "Scarlet Letter."
·
, !I'hat Is how John H. Ftler recently described the federal budget deficit,
whiCh some supporters of President Reagan consider a sin against
: conaeJVatlsm that, unrepented,'could stain his other accomplishments.
· · . Filer, who recently retired as chairman of Aetna Life &amp; Casualty Co.,
believes the president wUI co,rrect the deficits and return to the community
. of pi'oper conservadves rather than see,Republicans shunned In ~Th

·~

·
NORTHWEST, WEST CENTRAL
.
Saturday night, mostly cloudy. Low In themld·~- Sunday, cloudy

Warm- Cold'"""
Shower s Rain Flumes Snow

Partly cloudy north, -mostly clear south a nd cold Saturday night
with low~ In the 20s. Mostly cloudy north and partly cloudy sout)l
Sunday. Highs In the mld-30s to:rn!d-40s.
•
WESTERN PENNYSLVANIA
Cloudy with a few flurries In the north Saturday night, partial

Ohio.zone -forecasts

FRONTS:

·one

•.

'

WEST VIRGINIA

and

ua1 leaders from the left can usuaUy
attacking their right to speak at aU.
Count on media support and, In _ And note here the strange
some cAses, Instant celebrity. The corruption of liberalism. · At
archetypal case was that of dme In history, the liberal sbnply
Theresa Kane, the nun who told off demanded the lnstltudonal separatbe pope during his 1979 visit to don of church and state. As long as
America. 1'hi,&gt; media have also
the church was prtyatlzed, he said,
heaped attention_on Hans Kung,
It coulddeclareanyvtewheretlcal;
·
all he asked was that the state
€)l!lt'l RJRf ¥CIRnl &lt;;Wo:-"TEte-62&gt;'&lt;'
C~
refrain from treating heresy as a
·
12-D HIII.M
-crtme, as the Spanish Inquisition·
. NEA

0100

l&amp;!:L •.

...

to the support of Its adVertisers,
assigning .Kenneth Briggs to do
front-pagestoriesontheeplsode,aU
written with tun support for the
dissident nuns. The most recent
lnstaUment quoted five of !be nuns
by name, cited dorrens of others on
thesameslde, andquotednobodyln

.

· By The A.88oc1Ated l'r..
Snow flurries northeast, becoming partly cloudy west and south Heavy snow of .6 to 8 Inches accumulated Frtday evening In the
S'atunlay night. LoWs 1J1 the_mld-20s, Cloudy north with a chance Of
southern part of Lawrence County In extreme southern Ohio. Near
snow developing Sunday. Partly cloudy Q&gt;uth. Highs 35 to 40.
nton, about8.~.of.sil!&gt;.w w»~l!¢.- ~~~~ ~t ft£r~f ~••• ,.,..,...,., .e~--- ·...7~~-:~ -- ..., -~'-''""'"'"i"""~-'="'-·"~~--- -- tiu! storm that moVed uifoilgh the TennesSee \Taney to e as
Saturday nigbt, iariable clouds north, fair south. Low 25 to 30.
Frtd!ly. . .
.
'
.
S~day , fair south, mostly cloudy with a chance of Ugh\ ra in or snow
More'cold air was po~ north of the Great Lakes and w1U sweep ,
mixed In the north . High In the mld-30s J\'orth to low 4&lt;B near the ohlo
into Oblo and continue flurries in northern Ohio Saturday night. A
river.
developing storm area In southern Canada wDI move southeast Into
KENTIJCKY
the Great Lakes region and bring another threat of snow to northern
Mostly
clear
Saturday
night.'
Lows from the ~~~~.!2.~!~L.,... .~­
-""""" -'"-· fll'"UtrSUJ'iday:- ...,
-r=- --~--~ __,__ ....L_"..,~'·"'~...IIJO&lt; • •"'"" =--=~ ..,_,.._,..,_ ....,.,~ -=··~'"'
Mostly suriny"Sunday:-Rigfu Iii tlie'4lls: ~ ~-. · .:.:

Joseph Sobr~ ·

"

The Sunday Tunas-Sentinel- Pegs A-3

Ohio- Point Pleaunt, W. Va.

'

•

•

,'•,

··.·
.'

-

:_~::~::~~i~n~su~r~e~d~b~y~th~e~F~e~d:e~r:a:l~D:e:p::o~si~t-------'--i-~i-__;
Insurance Corporation,

"

1

At least lor the ~reserit But when you·retire. it will be the first re~~n ~hat'tw~~
most people discover their pension or rehrement funds JUS! won o e JO ·
that's when an IRA really helps.

Looking For Some Olher Reasons?

.

'

. . Open an Ohio Valley Bank IRA Them cash in right away_ on your tax break tor
1984. in addition to getting your tax-deterred interest stal1ed nght now. Come m and
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Locations

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,,.~·-··~~. ~~~~~~~~~~ __JI ~L-=============~=-~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~-·~-===-~-~--~-,~-~~~~~=.=-~=-=..=-=-~:-:~-:_:.=-=-~-=-=~~---~_.:.. -.~-~==··~-~-~.-=~~~~~
==~

�;;:; !

Ohio-Poiot

'

... -·

JanUary 6, 1988

W.Va.

Plea1811t,

. I

.
. .•

'

Pearl A. Darst

~

GAlLIPOLIS- Pearl A. Darst,
76, 226 MW Creek Road, GaWpoUs,
diedat10:30p.m.FrldaylnHolzer
n~Uii;tl' &amp;.ru I; 'liisVtng - iler6'r'in

January 6, 1988

Passenger in
cruiser killed

Hocking Glass at Lancaster:
Surviving are her husbancl. DencU lllgglnbotham; a stepdaugli_ter,
Mrs. Linda Tolley of Buffalo,
W.Va.; two sisters, Mrs. Gladys '
...~Tt.!rne: cll:.!'mas~. andJ-fu.t.!.
Minton of M~Arthur; two brothers,
Pearl Martlrt of Lancaster'. and
Harry Martin of Mount. Sterling;
. two grandchlldren, Usa and Jeff,
hoth of Buffalo; and several nieces

STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9 am ti110 pm
FRt-SAT.
9 am til 10
CLOSED SUNDAY

POINT 'PLEAsANT - One
per'SOII was killed . In an accident
a New
W.Va ..
Va.

..-~
. .Local

•&lt;

.•

GROUND .
·~~-·· 7
.•

BEEf··

99
.

..

•

GIOUIID

••sa

In Kirkland Memolial Gardens.

grandchlldren; two
Ernhorne after 3 p.m. today.
est Darst of Columbus, and WUbur
Darst of Indiana; two sisters, Mrs. ' John M. Preston

maneial id

:

FULL

both of Pomeroy; 'an!j a hall-sister,
GALLIPOLIS - Funeral setvi·
• ~- Frances Preston of Cheshire.
ces 'wtll be held at 1 p.m. today tn
FuneralservlceswWbeheldat2 Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
.p.m. Tuesday 1n Miller's Home for · Home for John M. Preston, 83,
Funerals In the former Warehime SaffordSchoolRoad,Galllpolls,wbo
Funeral Home, W1th the Rev. Bob died Thursd~.
Madlsonof!leiating. Burl~W1llbetn
The Rev. Bob Madison wt11
Centenary Cemetery, Fnends may
ffl ·
d burl 1 !II
M
··7c·a91fpa.mtth.Me'!!fllond
near~YaJ_·nomeTrom~-4 an·u" - PHillcC,aem!e,eatnery-.· · a II' J~·_!n .0~1!&lt;1 -

•

. ' Bessie Vance

POMERoy· ::. Meinolial-se!Vi-· .... -- --- · ·ces for~- Louise Hawkins were
GALLIPOLIS- Bessie Vance,
.....nJday nlght tn E wtng Funera1 •' T1, VInton, died Saturday 1n Pleaheld ..,
Home.
sant Valley HospitaL
Attendlng'theserviceswere~.
. BornAprUW,1907,atPhelps,Ky..
Ernest Bruley of Detroit, Mich.·,
daughter of the late Moses and
Maudie Tolet Wolford, sh"J was a
Mrs. Alma Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Leifheit of Spring·
member of the Church of God at
_lleld; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Steward.
VInton.
----·"'""""'"'"""-•'-"~:.:..:;..;~c:::· N u N T -- --She marrled·€laude-Wolford one eu
Se 1 9 1934
Willi
·
WV
zllrrg, Mrs. Hazel Hails, Mr. and
P· •
• at
amson, · a.,
Mrs: Rodney Howery, Paul NeutandheprecededbertndeathonDec.
zll
I Atbe
3 1976 '
ng o
ns; Mr. and Mrs.
•
·
Robert Lehe\lf"of. Colum_bus; Mrs.
Surviving are four daughters,
Erma Henderson and Jeff of
Evelyn Lee, Mary Lou Vance and
Hamliton; Mr. and Mrs. Norma
Brenda ~lbson, all of VInton, and
Hutcheson, Laura Hal'per and
BeatrlceSiffordofToledo; twosons,
Angela Wilson of Zanesville; Ted
Claude Vance Jr. of Lafayette,
Lehew of Chllllrothe; and Cheryl c.
Tenn., and BUIY, Ray vance of
~ ofGalllpolls.
Monroe, Mich.; 26 grandchildren
and nine great-grandchildren; a
sister, Dolly Moore of VInton: and
Edith Higginbotham
three brothers, Lacey Wolford of
VInton, Doc Wolford of Matewan,
POINT PLEASANT - Edith
W.Va.,
and Cooney Wolford of
Higginbotham, 67, OOlMcNeUIAve.,
FreebUrn,
Ky.
Point Ple;~SaDt, was dead on arrival
She was preceded by two brothers
Frld;ty at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
and a sister.
Born Aug. 21, 1917, at McArthur,
Funeral services will be held at 11
daughter of the late Charles and
a.m. Tuesday in Willis Funeral
Mae Martin, she was a Christian
Home. Burlal will be 1n Vinton
member of !,he Arbtit:kle InterdeMemolial Park. Frlendsmaycallat
nominational Church and attended
the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
Gospel Lighthouse Church.
p.m. Monday . .
She was employed at Anchor

ant manager.
Michael E.

Gallipolis, mechanic, and Nancy M.
Miller, 34, Colurnbuli,qualltycontrol
- -=a- -1ns&gt;""-.or.
Jack B. Sheline, 51, Point Plea·
san.t; retired, and Nancy C. Rickard,
· 41, point Pleasant, nutrition site
manager.
J9lm T. Haddon,1 22, Deckard,
Tenn., student, and Lynda G.
GibSon, 26, Rt. 2, VInton, medical
secretary.
w. Martin, 21. Rt. 3,
Bidwell, assistant head teUer, Ohio .
Valley Bank, and MltzlM. Dean, Zl,
449 Laliat Dlive, student.
David L. McCormick, 33, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, office · manager, and
Shlr,ley R Miller, 26, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, at home.
D!&gt;novan L Sanders, 22, Rt. 1.
Gallipolis, service station
attend·
'
ant, and Deborah L. Taylor ,18, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis, K-Mart employee . .
Donald E. Mltcheli, 41, Rt. 2, .
Vlriton, self-employed, and Joel!~
Thivener, 39, Rt 2, VInton,

PO¥_EROY-Awlitofpartltlon
has been Issued 1n Meigs County
Common Pleas Col!l'( to the Meigs
County sheriff.
The order perlatns to oil and gas
rlgh 1
ts n a sui.!filed
James W. and
GrelitS'tih1e·
'Loiig by
Bott6m'7agatnst
Manning D. Webster, Pomeroy, et.
al.
All parties named 1n the sutt have
an irlterest to miireral rights
underlying real estate iocaii&gt;&lt;ltn
Lebanon Township. Partltionofth.e
lights Is to be made by Gordon
Proffitt, John Pickens and Clarence
Pri dis! t
ed
ce,
n erest parties from the
Lebanon Township area.
1 h
r n 1 er court action, temporary
ae:~ orders were Issued
I! . _. _ William _K C_lllap_Imari,
Tuppers Plains, and Teresa Chapman Parkersburg wv
di
a di~orce ti betw•• a.,tbepentwng
ac on
eerr
o.
Both parties are restr !ned fro
sel
a
m
1n ling, transferring or encum be!::
. di~~rty owned jointly, pen\ling

26, Rt. 1, VInton,

cut

-~
.-·

.

. , .....~:..

···'-"""~··

.........

$269 •~~-

' (L •

S-159~ ~-

..

...

. ....,,

....

,., ....·

PRE· SLICED

I
LB.

RACINE ..,. Residents are reminded of the public.meeting to be

ROAST

held Saturday, Jan. 12, at 2 p.m. in
Racine VIllage Hall on the proposed
water system improvement
project
·
Village council Is conducting the
healing to get Input from residents.

LB.

LIVER

II. '

KAHN'S
AL-L MEAT . WIENERS

II.

~:::~

S1.69

s1 -acr~ ~

IMMEDIATELY
.

Ll.

$199

NEW WINTER HOURS

9:00-5:30

'.\

OHIO VALLEY BULK .FOODS

Brian

514 EAST MAIN

PORK&amp;

$199
.

HAM HALF
LB. $)69
LB. $)79

•'

GAL.

hO~e.

'flrnothy B. Queen, 22, Rt. 1,
Northup, construction, and Juaiuta
G. tall, 'ZI, Rt. 2, Crown City,

$189

DIAMOND
WALNUTS li.PKG.
EASY MONDAY
FABRIC
S'O FTNER

•
•

.......

POMEROY -Conunlssionsofal!.
deputies appointed under Section ·
311.04 of tbe Ohio Revised Code will
be terrntnated Monday. at 12:01
a.m., sheriff-elect Howard E. Frank ·
said Saturday. ·
Frank's term as sheriff begins at
midnight.
Admissions - Elizabeth Sto.ver,
Middleport; Eugene JohnSOn; Ra ·
ctne; Gloria Gardner, Middleport
Dlsc)la rges
Robert
Moodlspaugh.

$1.49

..... My tH11111

USPSU-AIO

A Multimedia Newspaper
Publlstwd each Sunday. 82S Third

n.
'.

lUIIIICR~ON RATES

...''
GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
. .

MICHIGAN
.
POTATOES
'

NElP/NI ' PEOPlE NEAR
t:::=:_:::_-=--==-=-======:=:=::='=::::::==:=:::==::=::==~

,~

0.

~-'l"

·.~ .

...

~

CRISP

t·

VINE RIPE

FLORIDA
TOMATOES

CARROTS

.

••
••

.

. · YELLOW

...•
.COOKING ....•'
ONIONS ''
"'
"

~~- 69(
.'
"
··
\
,.______________...._________...,.__. . .;.....____________.._________:.._____,

:::GLB·$1

WIWAM S. DILES
(6141 594-3571

~ ...... -~. . . ~·-·-

79

"

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...

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~:;.~~'' ~~-~-~$1.)0
.. Month:, .............................~.80
. SINGLE &lt;::IIPY
·
l'RICE .

'.

IICotila
No · su~rtption/J by

(nail pE"rmltted
In towns wtlf'rt' mqtor ratrltr service
Is available.
Thf SUndl.y TIDWI·Sl'ntlnel will not
be ..-ap611alblf- tor advance pay~nts

,l UlL MJPCRIPTIONS
_,o.~,

'

One year ... ............................ $26.80
S1x monlha .... ,....................... •1.1.00

~PRICE

CALL 448·2134
•
All Cl11111 Run 6 Woeko

Sat. 10-4, Sun. 1-5

SALE SALE ·
SHOES SHOES SH
•

! ..

'

COfiiUES . AUM110NS ' HUS. . .PIES

LARGE GROUP

.

WOMEN'S ·'SPORT-SHOES
Now
TOP SIDERS
.
· CHILDREN'S

CONNIES . DEXTER&amp;

'

TENNIS OXFORDS

Now. sl Q00.$)200.$1500

Save 200fo Off Fall Handbags
Save Men's Western ·loots
Now

S4ooo.ssooo.S60•.

LIMITED SIZES ALL STYLES

SHOES · SHOES SHOES
SALE
SALE
STOll IllS.:

......fit. ..3010.

TUES.-WID.· TMUIS.
SAT. 9:10 TO S

t··~-···

'

'

Garnets-

.·.
~

The regal red of .Garne,t oHers
true natural beauty at allorda- . • ,
ble prices Especiallly for those ·
born in January.
Discover the wonderful world of
colored stones. Many other col·
ored stones available.
'·.

. ~~
~

,•

'II&amp;'--

•

Jewelers

404 Second

•••
•••
•••
••
••
•••
•:••

.,.,.....i•• SEMI ANNUAl ClEARANCE
••
•••
••••
•
••
•••
••
:

'.

.

·:

Save 20°/o .Qff Women's ·
Fall &amp; Winter Dress Shoes

rn•de by canif'rs.

".

ONLY
All Winter Coats

CIISJIS Stortin1: Tolt &amp; Dec:orativt
l'lrty, J1n. 17, 6:30-1:30 p.m.
Knittloa: Jon. 21 , 6:30·1:30 p:m.
Jon. 23. 10·1~ noon.

preaentaiiVf, Branham, 1717 West
Nlrw Mtll' Road, Sullft 204, ~.troll.

I.

DILES
HEAR,NG' AID
CENTER
Alllerri, Olrlt 45701

SO;Ciatlon. National Adve,rflslng RP·
111tqhlMan.'4110'1~.

lENTAI. OFFER-Far a limited ti1111, rent the c-1 aid Iar .
any h..ring a'dl for 6 weeks for only $50.00.
TI-Y IEFOIE YOU IUYI
S.. us at Hol111' Clinic Eaeh W.-sday, 1:00 P.M.

326 W. llnlen StrMI

rond class pos1a~(' paid at Calllpolls.
Ohio 45631 . EnterE'd as second class
malllnjill matter at Pomeroy : Ohio,
Post Ortlcl'.
M('mbE'r: The• Assoclatt&gt;d PJ""ess
land Dally PrE'Ss Association and thfAmerlcian Newspapt'r PublisherS As-

f1ts c~m!ortably w1th1n the ear canal and is barely visible.
Help IS fmaily here to those "part time" hearing problems.

Maniagelieenae
PQMEROY - A marriage 11·
cense has been Issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Benton
eorn1ellus Phillips, Zl, and Robin
JoanJI Roee,16,
both of Rutland.
.....,, ......,or...,

100

OJ'S CRAFTS

A.\I('RU&lt;'. bv lhf' Ohio Vall£&gt;y Publish·
In~ Comp8ny · Multimedia. Inc. Sf'·

...•

JlC's

846 SECOND AVENUE

Saturday, .Jan. 5
and
Sunday, Jan; 6
SPRING VlliLLEV PLAlA

·-··

r

~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;;~~;;;:==~~~~~~~~~~~-l~"i7~~~~~~~~~~~

Berature to Veterans Memorl~l..

. Commissions up

SUGAR

10 CT.

y~u .
.whe_n you need it.
Argosy
hearing
a_rd IS so hny 1t ca~ b_e inserte.d in a matter of seconds. It

Barnett, Richland, Ind. Barnett was behind $700 1n payments,
, accordirig to a still fllect by' Sharon Sue Rinehart, Ractnec Barnett was ordered to Immediately resume payments with additional
money added to those payments until the $760 Is paid irl full.

.

"

SHOULD BE

Al$0 found dellrX!uent tn 'child support paymenij; was Vlrgil Wayne

SHLIR FINE

PLASTIC

''

'

IN TODAY'S 'INSERT
ASSORTED FLAVORS

$!4,073.2!lwas !ollllll agaln.ot

Ronda! ' M. Cornell, 28, Addison,
truck drlver, and Pamela K
Secord Ave., plumber, and Joyce
Askew, 32, 856'h Second Ave., social
worlier.
Kenneth Ulrich, 38, Denver, COlo.,
operation manager, and Loli Pennell, 28, Denv~. account manager.
GQI-don M. Sebrell, :Ji, Southside,
W.V~ .• construction w9r.~er, and
Fostlna Hendershot, 37, Point
Pleaaant, waitress.
Mark T. Lee, ~. Rt. 1, GaWpol!s,
auto body, and Kelly L. Nibert, aJ,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, cashier.
Mldlael S. Beckley, 25, 151
Jack$0n Pike, restaurant manager,
and ;Julia B. Mahan, ~. Rt. 4,
Ga~. Ohio Valley Bank assist·

wa:e
Serial number recording urged

Veteran8 MemOrial .

BAG.

' /

NOT 19c AS STATED

r-------------------~~

5LB.

' '

'69C

~

RAINBOW
BAGS

hOusewife:

GAL ,

99(
89(

·· .. ·

reported

appointment made

•..

95&lt;

GAL.

Jansen."

GLENDALE POP

BLEACH

GAL.

MILK

.

'

CLOROX

2%

aceident

r..::=====:::::::; ..

Emergency 'r uns

Dtposit

VALLEY BELL

CHOC.

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN
YOU NEED IT.

'

RC100

VALLEY BELL

992-6910

HitSkip

whetheragunfou'ndlntheresidence , , ..
had ~n Hred . Mcintosh was •.
arrested shortly after the shooting. . . , ·
In an affidavit flied td obtain a .· :
search warrant of MCintosh's ·
home, Officer Gregory Cooper said . •
the officers had been told the man - .;
was Intoxicated and had a gun and a .•
bag. Cooper said he "heard shots, . .•
looked around a tree, and saw Ricky. •. ,
Mcintosh shooting at Offioer. ,, •

ALL LOCATIONS
CORRECTION

~~&lt;I ~1 •.4_

BEANS

.MILK

POMEROY

-

DIET RITE

IS OZ.

juniors may also attend.
,
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP)-Frlends lodged in his spine, causing him to
Twehues said Kentucky law
The !tnanclal aid omcel-s wW discuss scholarshiPs. ·loans, grants,
of
Ricky
Mcintosh
demonstrated
bleed
to
death
!rom
Internal
·
provides
that a person can be
college work-study and applications. Federal and Ol;lio Instructional
oull!ide
the
CrunpbeU
County
courtnjurles.
.
prosecuted
for murder i{ they cause
Grant forms wW be available for distribution. If parents !laVe tbelf'
troom
where
the
25-year-old
New·
·
"I
heard
16
shots
fired,"
Barbara
the
death
of an individual by
· ·1!&amp;1 IRS forms completed, the !lnanclal aid officers wUi assist In
porl
man
was
III\algned
Frlday
for
Keeton,
a
nelghhor
and
frlend
of
"wanton
conduct."
.
figuring and completing the !lnanclal aid fOrms.
·
the
death
of
a
pollee·
of!lcer,
even
Mcintosh,
said
outside
the
cour·
Defense
attorney
Gregory PopoIt planning tb attend, parents are urged to call ttie GAHS guidance .,.
though
a
fellowo!f!cerfired
the
fatal
troom.
·"It
sounded
like
they
were
vich
told
Judge
Lambert
Hehl that
· omce at~ ld'glvetbe approxlmat~number otfarnlly members
·trigger-happy."
Mcintosh
should
be
released
with·
·
sbot.
.
attending the SCS$10n. ,.
·'
Bond was set ll!t $10,000 . for
Pollee Chle! David WiiUams said · out bond because he did not !Ire the
· Mcintosh, whopleadecjinnOcenttoa a baWstlcs reported revealed that fatal shot.
· murder charge In the death of the fatal bullet came tram a pollee
Although tbe assistant county
.~
~
'•II
•
' &lt;-+'
. .
'
,. ~
N~Jice
·
officer
AnthOny
service
revolver,
·
·not
the
gun
attorneydidnotopposethatrequest,
RIO GRANDE - A special session of Rio Grande Village Council
Jansen, ~. -A j:i'ellminary hea'Iing recovered fropl the residence.
Hehl refused.
wtll be held at 7 p.m. Monday 1n the Village lrullding.
'
was
scheduled
tor
Thursday.
Butauthorltiessakltheywouidn't
"That puts the col!rt In a
Councu· Is expected to act on temporary appropriations, an
Jansen
was
shot
to
death
when
he
the
murder
charge.
quandary,"
Hehi said. "The charge
drdp
ordinance on village employee raises and other personn~l. IIU\tters.
and twootberomeersresporu:IM to.a
"Even though Mcintosh's ·shot ts still a capital offense."
call early Swiday.that a man h&lt;fd a may ··not have been tbii fatal one,
Twehues said any decision- on
gun a! a home.
there Is suttlcienll!asls under state reductngthechargeshould be made
ShQts were fired as the officers law to p~ the charge of wimton . at the preliminary healing.
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James J. Rrolfltt reported
approachfll! McJ,ntosh's resldeince, murder," said Paul Twehues,
Pollee. said the state crime lab
that the sheriff's department was Informed a· hitsklp accident at
and 'Ja.nSen"u struck twice. One 'C~pbell CounW~tor.
.
hasn't completed teststodelermlne
Racine Friday night. ·
bullet tore through his lung and
According to the report, a 1~ Chevrolet owt)ed by'Terry llupp,
Rt. 1, Mason, W.Va., was damaged by a vehicle that apparently
backed Into it while parked at Southern High School dupng the
balketbaD game..
- ..
- ·.
-POMEROY .:. Eight nms were .
Deputies saki the le!t front fender, headlight, grille and windshield
answered Frlday l!y Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service units.
damaged.
I
· At 12: 56 a.m., MiddlepOrt Squad
11
went to 327 WUIIams ·St. for ·
.
Elizabeth Slover, who -was transPOMEROY - The recovery of guhS stolen from the Harold
. ported ,to Veterans Memolial Hospl·
Wlitesel residence Thursday pointed out the Importance of residents
tal. Racine Squad 28 went to 48301
having a record of Serial numbers, said Sheriff James J. Proffitt.
''
Blind Hollow Road at 6:17a.m. for
The numbers·are useful when items are stolen !rom residents,
Eirgene Johnson, who was taken to
Proffitt said.
Veterans Memorial.
Pro!!ltt saki the 'serlal, numbers were entered Into tbe sheriff's
At 9: 59 a.m., Rutland Squad 44
department LEADS computer system anti at 3 a.m. Frlday,
was called to Salem Street lor LilY
Whitehall, Ohio, police stopped a. vehicle and allegedly found th~
Robinson who was taken to Holzer
drlver with a concealed weapon.
Medical Center. At 12:16 p.m., ,.
The weapon's serial number was checj{ed by the computer and
Rutland Squad 44 went to Leading
determined stolen. Further Investigation recovered the other stolen
Creek !or Gloria Gardner, who was
weapons.
taken to Veterans Memolial.
' Promtt advised residents to take the time and record the make,
Syracuse Squad 33 was called at
selial number and other iJI!ormation on varlous Items 1n the house.
4:28p.m: to0hiol24, Minersville, for
Harold Davis, who was taken to
Holzer Hospital. At 5:10 p.m.,
Comm~ion
Mld4lleport Squad 11 went to 1.'n!
POMEROY - Ron E. Eastman, Coolville, a Vletnal'T\ War
PoweU St. !or Rn&lt;;coe rue, whO was
veteran, has been appointed to the Soldiers Rellef Commission to tbe
transpolied to Ho~r Meqical
!Ill the unexpired tenn of the late Frank A. Clark.
.
Center. Pomeroy Squad 1 went to
67.6 01. BTL.
Eastman's term will expire on Oct. 18, 1989, according to an entry ·
Meigs High School at 7:58p.m. for
1n Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
•
Kelly Dixon, who was also taken to
In oilier court action, two defendant~ere found dellnquent 1n
HMC. At 10; 34 a.m., Rutland Squad
'
'
child support pa~ts·
··
44 went to New Uma Road for an
WE AlE SOllY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE TO OUR
In a suit IDed by Shirley A. Lawson,
a
auto accident. Assisted by Mi&lt;!dle.

WHOLE

WHITE &amp; ASST.
SCOTTIES 200 CT.

'

-·

.

FISHER'S BONEl£SS .

~ RC

TIDE

•
•.

KAHN'S
BOLOGNA : Ll. .. '
LEAN JUICY

FAMILY SIZE

SHOWBOAT

••

BEEF

~s1~a9
CHUCK

''
'

FRESH

BACON

at GARS •

Council schedules special meeting

$1 89 -:' -

li.

SALAD

MARGARINE

EFFECTI~E

5 ..
••

CHICKEN

Public hearing set

meeting for Racine Village Council
wtl\ be held Monday at 7 p.m. In the
village hall.
The meeting, OPen to the public,
will also serve as coun~ll~~~ar

-~::u

yev:•

plannlrlg to attend, according to a school

HOMEMADE

BONELESS

An organizational

_;

9

HOMEMAoE·

°

Council to meet

~

BONELESS TOP
·
ROUND
Ll.
STEAK

$1 7n

.
.•L.B
... . "~
. . ,. .

2·

.

'

.

'$

RUMP
ROAST

R0 UN D
S1EAK

Partition granted

RACINE -

File for marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples recently ffied for marriage
1----- -li•cer)ses In Ga!!la

DAILY.

In

from Pleasant Valley Hospital.

~~~~--~

Louise Hawkins
.

Smith and·another

employees.

I

bothofGalll~lls~a~n~d~All~b~ligh~t
'
~of ~ic~ia~tin~g!.~B~url~a~l~W1~ll~be~~po~l~e.~fii~~~~~~~~:LB~.~~~~~~~n'~~~~~S~IY:ii~A:l~TIM;ES:m~~·SPA~R~E'm:'~E'~·i%!£1;I~!u~~·:,:sru2

flx~~~~:1~~~!~
Kay Jolmson,

the county, thereby mak'lni him
lnell&amp;lbk, to accept outlkle Jobs of

. . bythestatutllneypneralthata'
. ,..,..._ artemoon was the IOWid ot 75-rmwmeter hoWitzers .
mld·tenn
for membets of

u oz.

tiOLLYWOOD

Rhodes Comer on Couuty Road !l8
near Racine. He ll8ld there II 1111

told ,:

Acoordlng to Byer, cost for t1w .
questionthataproblemexlsts,but any ldnd. Rdlerts' PBY iralle Is lnsuranceiO(OU]dbelessthan$5,00J: ~
that . It ~W probably require requlrecf after statewide legislation However, lfln fact the cornmlsslor( , .
r ~~~~~~~~~~~~l!;llrl;;!.~~~~::!l!- ~~~~~5!9!1Jk~t;:;.
~IJI\IOn from IIJe ~for.J.a!ses fer certain county and e-s adopt tho! EMS budget W1th the.· '
·the meii't 'ot 'l'rallijlortit!On~tO~~
SiaieOI!iCWi1PBS~tl~iit ~ proposal, it would 1x&gt;the . "'A apcllll!srnan for the gOaro said Friday that three pre-World War
thelltuatlon.
COiwnbus.
first time for s11ch an actlon. The
· n11owben were shot ott around 3p.m. In preparation lor a salute to
Bob Bier, director of Meigs propoeed EMS budget was recently
GoV.-elect An:b Moore at his ina~ on Jan. 14:
Uie four·memlrer board ·be raised
On his salary, Robertllwasgivena
County's Emeigeflcy Medical Ser· presented and passed tn the form at
_ . . were fired from the howitzers by the guard's 3664th
· from thepresent$l,lll0to$3,1m. The choice o! accepllng an. ~ase o6o vice, was PfCSerJI at Fliday's a resolution by the EMS board ot ·
'"~ Com~y. lhe ·spOkl!sman.sald.
· ·
bldaet fer the .~ or E;lections · $12,!100 total, or an i!Jcrease of flv~ ~g to present the propcJSQd trustees.
·
·
•1¥ ~ saki'the~CAlliry Shel'ltf'si:lepmment had
w'.llllGW l".a-;&lt;'!Vt:ereww'nrcilbi!'ture- Jl8!' "'!!!-.~ ~ l!lo.!l;ol'!'JY'S . - lllldr-t !0!" !II! ~t fnr _JNI ~--.~!1' will resume a · •
beell DOtUied prior I? the blast.
·
~
lipp!opriallons can be Roberts cholle to take tbe 'live ' cmt1ng year. The .cmunlsstQners nonnalmeetlngs,:hedulewhenthey · · ·
I:'' ·
if.~I·
made. .
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perpent. . .
·
dldnotacceptthei:AJ&lt;Igetaswrltterr, meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. The .
_!'
U
. 0 J ~rS
Count)' EnjJtneer Phll Roberts
It he had opted for the $12,500 pending discussion on money re- county budget for 1985 is to be ·
l'l!p011edtothe board thathe'!'UI be figure, bewouldhavelradtodeclare quested to PaY for major mediCI\! ' adopted at that time. .
'
GALIJPOI.,lS - Ftnanclal aid orilcers !rom Rio 'Grande.College
~king drainage problems at himself a !ulltlmeenglneer, only for
tnsurance for !be six fulll.ime EMS
·
and CommunitY College wW be at Gallla Academy High School on
Jan. 15 at
to meet witb GABS ill!niors and their parents.
PO£?."~-The''bedln"beardexlen&amp;lvelytJu'Ou8h,the

.~

(

conu~issi~ners

Pay _raise .not legal,
· POMEROY - Melp County
Cmnmiulollenhavl!bemtnformed

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'c-'----~ ~===~~~~~~~~~~::J,-':­
SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

Briefs:---

'Boom muse cleterrnined '

Saturd•v. Jan. 1 2. H~ill

falltng health for the past three
years.
·
Sherltt's Department. ·
Born May 'ZI, l90l, in Meigs
The name o! the victim had not
County, sonofthelateGeorgei. and
been released as or Saturday
Elma Ellis Darst, he .was emPloyed
afternoon, pending notlflcatlon of
by C St 0 Railroad fa~:, ~.X~~ a!l!l-"~ ~ep~~- ...
,
.. . . farni~.. ..
"attended the First Church of the
'She was pteced"edln'il&lt;!ath'OY't'No ~- Th-~~..CSP.'.!!!L..se!!l- t.l)e...v!ctl."!l_.J,
NazarenetnGaWpoUs.
·
sister's, Vernloe and Blanche; and
was a passen~r in the cruiser,
He married Gladys CarT, who by a brother, EarL
dliven by VIncent H. Smith, 24, New
survives, on Aplil9, 1939.
Funeral services wili be held at 2 Haven.-whictr, was northbound on 62
Also surviving are three daugh·
p.m. Monday 1n Wilcoxen Funeral
when it reportedly slid off the
ters, Beatrice Grimms and Mrs. .Home, with . the Rev, Robert
roadway and strucl( a telep\lone

A-5 ,

. Pomerov-Middleport-Galllpolis, Ot)iQ-Point Plunnt, W. Va.

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IE HERE EARLY -

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SALE STARTS. 9 A.M SHARP
FRIDAY,' 'JANUARY 4TH

+

*•

MEN'S SUITS ·

SPORT COATS

RIG. •m.oo.:.NoW S100.00
IIG.I15S.OO ... NOW S124.00

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119. •ns.oo ... NOW '161.75

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IIG. '250.00- NOW S1 17 .SO •

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ALL WEATHER COATS

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:

HG. 'JU.OO .... -~ .. NOW 1101.00 :
· HG.
;.:.Now 1112.00 •

•:

•uo.oo ........

lEG. IIU.OO ..:.-••- .. NOW 1132.00 :

MEN'S WINTER
JACKETS
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HG. sss.OO ··-·~......... NOW IU.OO .
HG. IJS.OO .:....••.•;.._.NOW 160.00 :
HG. '10.00 ·-..·-·-...... NOW 164.00 4t

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LEATHER

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COATS&amp;· JACKETS
:
· : ua. "'·"·---........ NOw •12.oo :
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PARK ' FREE-ONE HOUR . ~~~NASI,. ":..·

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HG. IUS.OO ...... - ..... NOW 111)1.00
HG. 'IIO.OO ............ NOW,I161.00

~$-~~$r; ~r; C·:::.:-o=-:1::1: Ill

RIG. '90.00 ......... NOW S72 .00
HG. 19S.OO ......... NOW S76.00
•
RIG.'IOS .OO ....... NOW $ 14.00

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IIG. tU.OO ....... NOW S17.60

RIG.

su.oo....-.NOW '20.00

IIG. 13J.OO ........ NOW S2S.60

MEN'S SHOES
HG.149.95-.....NOW 140.00

su.oo

HG. •ss.oo.......I,IOW
IIG. t7S.OO......I_IOW S60.00

lEG. IU.OO .... :.•. NOW 111."40
HG. 130.00 ........ NOW S24.00
HG. '42.50 ......... NOW '34.00
. . .'S

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FASHION JEANS

VAWIS YO IIUO'

GP. SWEAT SUm
TOPS&amp;IOnDMS
SIPAUtiS

$16 99 .

1/3 OFF

I VMI IIUSIII

. . .-...

111. •u.oo ......... NOW •22.41

DRESS SHIRTS

GIIIUP -

: . ,;•

lEG. '24.00 ......... NOW S19.10
HI. su.oo ......... NOW •20.10

oPEN FIIDAY a MONDAY nL a P.M.
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A-6-The Sunday 'Tirnes--S.iliioll

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~-Micklaport-o.lllpolia, Ohio- Point Paa~ant, W.Va.

en .

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i100

II&gt;~

January

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a. 1881

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theri

Section

lli5

January 6, 1986

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•• •

{.ONG BARN - So food Is
Marpret Dunt of her hou!ie and
2110 acres extending lnm the
Oblo River up and over Snowbal
HW In
bas
~~~~feftml~ton·~- 1
• property. Among them are
: Sugar Camp, Big 0 and Lon«
Bam. Long Bani, seen here, Is
n8med lor the bani, Jl(tualed In
the middle of the field which
used to .be ion lnlergral part of a
busy, worldnJ!: lann .

•

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...

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.. _,,_0•
-~-

.. :;. ;ID2!
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. •II&gt;C
g
•a
1::
z"'

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. ~- ... ~== 0
a· ....._"'=-: S::
,
•.~· .· ,..,:.-oo
. 'tttl
•· ·-s; ..... c o•

... ·=--"'"" 2l
···-ir
··-~··· ·;;; ;~~-:
~! '!'~,~~~-"
• •.

t:: ~

'-' '

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Ill

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•

Keeping the- homeplace
By NANCY YOACHAM •
'l'lrnes-Senllnel Staff
SYRACUSE - If walls could
talk - tlle stories tlJIS old house
could tell . The headaches and
heartaches f!l\d happy times oi
. . several generations of one Meigs
County family, of the growth of
the State of Ohio, and of Metgs
County's contribution to that
groWth.

BuJII - by Adam RouSii. the
house tocik 10 years to complete
- aU -~oek - tlnlshed In

1837. Located Oli'State Route 124
In the ~pper 4jlld of Syracuse, the
house · and
accompilllytng
acres of proper:ty im! now owned
by Margaret burst, a widow,
and . heir by ber inarrlalie to
Francis A. (Pat) Durst, son of
Lillian ~ Durst.

:m

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the family,' woman a -preservationist

should he, " she mused. "All the
"However," she continued, "I
materialS used in ·building the
don't believe the house was ever
house came from the farm .;. the
p.'jrt of the 'tJnderground. The.
bricks, Ute lumber and the
Roushes were Soutller ners from
beams. All the floors are original
Virginia. If anything, tlley were
and in excellent shape, and the
more than likely pro-slavery. 1
panes of glass in tbe windows
tlllnk the trap doors were just a
were handblowit."
way to the cellar from Inside."
Representa tives from CaseAlthough not orlgtnally from
-Western Reserve Historical So- . Meigs County, Margaret's acclety have ~n to Syracuse to
quaintance with the area goes
advise Margaret on the steps to
back many years. "in tlle height
be taken In tlle restoration - of tlle depression, my Iailier, like
process.
many men, lost first Ills job and
·Among other things, tlley
tllen his home In Columbus.
·enco\lfaged her to leave the
"Iwas senttollvewtthanaunt
spots on thefioorwhere hot coals
and uncle in Pomeroy, Mr. and
from the fireplaces were
Mrs. A. W. Drummond. My
dropped - part of the heritage.
uncle was a pharmacist at
They also encouraged her to
Reed's Pharmacy on Court
leave the two trap doors that
Street. I llved on Lincoln Hill
were found In the floor of wt/at
with Aunt Rose.and Uncle Doc In
was the pantry - now tlle bath.
1930 and 1931.
related, " Here's
" omtngdowntlletllllone day

qualntance to Pomeroy."
. Willi deep fondness In her
voi~. Margaret' enjoyed relattng sloties of tlJe old hiiuse In Its
better days.
"As a little girl, I'd come up
here from Pomeroy with tlle
Dursts and just play and play.
I'd float around in my rnlnd In
my long crinoline dress and my
bonnet and Pat's uncle, Eber
Roush, tllen a younger man,
would help me fantasize."
Margaret returned ·to Columbus In 1933. ln 1938, Pat Durst
moved to Columbus to attend
Ohio State Law School and
· looked her up. They eventually
married. "We often returned to
Syracuse to viSit Uncle Eber and
the farm tllroughout our marrled life," she said.
Not everyone cares about

•

Those who have been Interested In helping ~re Leonard and
Ora Bass and Ralph and J an
Lavender, all oi Syracuse. Leonard Bass was caretaker of the
property for many years and
knows the history of the house as
well as any member of the
family. Health problems forced
Bass to slow dOW11 so Ralph
Lavender took over as caretaker. Both m en, and their
wtves, love tlle house as if It were
their own.
Said Margaret," In preservat1on, you save as much as you
can of eve~J~~hlng that's originaL
The Basses and the l.avertders
and I have spent hours and hours
down on oor hands and knees,
scrubbing and scouring and
scraping and wiixtng and paint, mg.
a JUS goes
t our

._ · ~~~~e~~e~pt~t~h;e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~·~~~~~~;;~.~~~r~]~1-~]~-r~~~~~-~-ryo
~~~;.:
·~;;;l~·~~~~~~-~t~~=~~~~~~i

Ill~ legalities but Margaret
finally becarne tlle sole owner,
grandpa." • - - -- ---then rellllmlng the property,
Margaret describes herself as
"Mar-Pat Farm," a derivative
a 5e!ttlmentallst and a preserva·
of her first name and her
tionJst. Because of her love of
husband's nickname.
lierllligeandherconvlctlonthat
"Ijustwlshihadtllemoneyto
"people can learn from the
restore tlJe hoilse to wl!at It

try Is fairly young yet, so many
people · can~t even go past

...

said that the horne was once a
station on the Underground
-Railroad.) "''Gasa.W~stem told
us that 'If' this house ever played
a .part In the Underground, the
doors would have to be here to
authenticate an-y' future
findings."

The next year, my aunt and
uncle began renting an apartm entfrom Pat's parents, Lllllan
and Alber! Durst. They owned
the building at the corner of
Butternut and Second, now a
vacant lot. That was my ac-·
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own

,

two ~xtrernes . People not interinvolved and the rnoney s pent?
ested In ~rvatlon say_ '!luf!
§o!ne peo(ll~~ould say no . But
and puff and blow the house . Margaret Durst,- determined,
over ' whlle tlJose who are
patient, persevering and admitInterested offer to come and
tedly, ''set in her ~ays,'' says
emphatically 1 uy es! II
help."

'
HOMEPIACE - The Roush

;r!"g

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past," she held. onto her husband's family homestead dfi'S·
plte the fact that other heirs
wanted to sell.
•
Il'\1970, a succession of deaths
In her family left Margaret w!t)l
one-fourth undivided 11\terest In
whatwasalwayskoownas"The
Roush Farm."
'
' She gave little thought to tllat
Interest untjl she learned the
farm was to be soldAt !hat point; ·she began a
one-woman ftgttt -to keep the
f
"in Ill famll "M
arm
'ted
d
nec • e" That y.bollseargaret
re
an
property had been tn"the famlly,
direct tine from lll37.Someoneof
the bloodline had to stay on." Of
£011J'Se, Margaret's sons, Robert
and John, are of the bloodline. It
Is for them, as much . as for
herself that sh k
.Jl
1
.orn_
: :e. ;"'·~--- -·

c•

fl

family homeplace in Syracuse Is

now owned by Margaret Durst,
an heir bytnan1age. The outside
features a lwo-t!Wry veianda
and a painted motif on the lep.
The painting could be the rising
sun, the sldewheel cover ol a
riverboat or a fan, depending on
which family tnuJ1tio11 you
beUeve. palnled by a Mr. WlDis
of AntiquitY, and was a guide to
rlvemoats. Many of the Roushes
were rlvermen in the bullness of .

....

z
.ICII

....... _...
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"CCII'wt

oft,

~lng produce south. Two ·
holes In the motU were said to be
from shot8 by gunboats oent up
the river to Intercept Gen. John

H. Morgan.

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lABOR OF LOVE - Margaret Dun&amp; takes time to
explain why all the orta1M1
brlcb from the chlmtleY. of the
old Rooiab ~ were
plllnllakenly dllmantled and .
l&amp;acked aw~Q&lt; Ill llal'llp. At one
Ume, the IIOI8e • • u lnChell oil
plmnb, pvinl WIQ' to the llood of
die river fiOih the aau&amp;h .-1
!lhlfllllcr the hillside to t11e mnll.
ReprM.'IItailves 1nm cue
Weltem ~e llllllt.orical Society advlled her to remeve the .

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;:'!";:,:.:e.,!=~_the_ L:..::";:..,___..,
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e. 198!5

P~y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

flctge- B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.2•• WEEK ORAND

~ngagements

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January 6, 1986

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

the Sunday Times-Sentinel Paga B-3

=;========~===Annwe~~~==========~~ Boys Clubs try to solve problems ·

NO SALE

NEW

YORK (AP) .:.. What do
comedian BW Colby, actor Telly
Savalal,newcuterDanFialherand
Houle Speaker "Tip" O'Neill have

'

In CIX'IIIIlOII?

They were all members of the
. Boys ClubS of America, according to
W1llarn R. Sticker, the organ!za-

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Quantitits

t!on 's national dtrecto~ . .He IIIYI hll

ifOUP, with more then 1,100 clublln
the United States, II ewTentiy
centerlni Its etforte 011 two ctyouth'l
most pl'l!!i&amp;lng problemS - teenqe
suicide and chlld abUse. The clubl
have also developed pr-Ograms for
health · promotion and yol!th
&lt;employment .
·

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ACROSS
··r·1
r ..t

298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY; OH.

Monday thru Friday
9' AM to 9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to s PM

...• '

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Marie Marchlnko

••

Marchinko
Johnson
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. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Price .

· ·)UPPERS PLAINS - Mr. and
~s. Robet1 Marcinko;· Tuppers
eLains, are announcing the engagetj\ent of their daughter, Marie, to
NUchae! Johnson, son ot'Mr. and
M~s. Earl Johnson, Mason~
· ·Tiie bride-elec-t is-·a gradute of ··
Eastern High school and is emPloyed at E lby's Restaurant in
selpre. '
·
.
: ~ohnson is employed at the
SO!lthe rn Ohio Coal Co. Wedding
plans are incomplete.

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USDA CHOICE
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LB.

MIXED

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GALLIPOUS - Evelyn and
Donald E. Wright observed their
30th wedding' anniversary Dec.15.
They were marri~ at Gallipolis
Dec. !5, 1954 by the Rev . Robert
,

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HOMEMADE

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$189
Rump Roast •••••••••

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, has the followIng activities scheduled for the
week of Jan. 7-11 :
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11:45 a.m.; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:45 a.ll).; Chorus, 1-2 p.m.
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
11:45 a.m.; Bingo, 1-2 p.m. ;
Bowling, 1:30 p.m.
Thursday- Ceramics, 'to a.rn.-2
p.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:45 a.m.
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11:45
a.m.
The January Blood Pressure
Clinic will be held on Wednesday,

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$229
Cube Steak •••••••••
Round Steak ••••~•• $1.99
LB.

-Mr. and Mrs. Robert A.
of Plum announce the

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STALKS
Celery •••••••••••••••
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Margarine·•••••••• ~•• ~· 5.9.(
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BROUGHTON'S

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24·0Z.

Cottage Cheese _.••
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POMEROY .- The open-church
wedding of ·B arbara Jean Hendrix,
daughter of Franklin {Pete) and
Phyllis Hendrix, Syracuse, and
James Donald Riffle, son of James
A. and Vtrg(n!a Riffle, will be held
Jan. 19. '
The 5:30p.m . ceremony wiD take
place at the First Southern Baptist
C·h urch of Pomeroy, Rock Sprtngs
Road, wit h tht&gt; Rev. William
Newman officiating.
bride is a graduate of ·
High School.

_

_._.IENO~ . EROZEN~ ~-~~

oz. 89&lt;
TOmato Catsup •••• 89( Pizza ••••••••••••••••••••
10.1

DETE~RGENT

LIQUID

.•
d
.
oz. $179
T1 e•••••••••••••••••••••
"'

MAXWELL HOUSE

Umit Ono Por Customer
Geod Ollly AI Poo1111' 1

· ·· llfkr·~n·llio.tlf; ·1··?:~&lt; --·-"-··-~' If

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RHODES . 1-LB.
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COFFEE

~A~· .$ 5·99

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KRAFT PARKAY

Riffle

·. Now __

S42

Charles Edward !;'rice, Croton,
Ohio; William Byron Price, Colum-

Winebrenner of Letart,
attended the reception.

REG. 5S1.00

Tren t

HANDCRAFTED
ARTICLES NOT
INCLUDED)

menu for the week is:
Monday - Spaghetti, miXed
vegetables, tossed salad, vanilla
pudding on bananas.
Tuesl)ay - Cube steak, baked
potato, green beans, applesauce
cake.
.
Wednesday - Ham loaf, peas,
kraut salad, trult cup.
Thursday Liver, mashed
potatoes, spinach, strawberry gelatin with fruit. '
'
Friday - Vegetable soup, pimento cheese sandwich. pear
halves.
Menus are subject to change as
weather conditions change, Choice
of milk, coffee, or tea available with

. EVERY ITEM
20°/o TO 50°/o OFF

STORE HOURS
Mon. &amp; Fri. 'til 8 p.m.
.. Wed .. Thurs . &amp; Sal.
'Til 5 p.m.

340 SECOND AVE. GALLIPOLIS

.......

SUN. THRU TUES. SALE

'rhe Saving Place®

Q~ Pnces May VCJ('tf AI Some Sk:&gt;fes
Due to local Corr~Qelthon

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• _,. AD~'-""..._0
..:IIC....OIDIV ~ICY

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L

Sate Price

.

Hendrix "~

bus; Barbara Anne Des, Engleand Marllyn Kay Price,
Swanton. They have eight
grandchildren .
Mrs.Pricegraduatfl(lfromPom eroy High School in 1935 and Mr.
Price graduated from Pomeroy
High School in 1934. He Is retired
hum work with REA Express.
Mrs. 'Price's father, Karl Owens

•wood,·

·Peddlers ·Pantry·
· STOREWIDE
CLEARANCE

meals~

Miss Clements, a graduate of
Plum' High School and Slippery
Rock State Collegi':_js an Instructor
of Computer Science at Rio Grande
College.
Harrison, a . graduate of Point
Pleasant (W. Va. ) High School and
Rio Grande College, is stl'ffspeclalist engineering department for
•Vitro Corporation, Silver Springs,
Marylancj.
A June wedding is being planned.

Barbara Jean Hendrlx
Jan'les Donald Riffle

'l)ison King and daughter Sheena,
John Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Wright, and John Simpkins.

Senior schedule set
for week's activity

LB.

Clements
Harrison
-·.

ihe

REG. '60.00

Dana

·are'uii"'P,.i-eit1'5'0f"'ffVT=uonaia~grif;""Mr: anCI"MfS:"'=""W.:v·a''4'~'~-r&gt;-t•w•?"!•:;~···;!:;llt~~r,, ,.,=~lH'M•~!e:~!'li,..J!!!!tH&gt;~'~'~--G~JcJ&amp;J,J,!..,.

children, all living ln Gallipolis. The
children are Donald; Floyd, Terri,
Cherrl, and John . They have one
grandchild. ,, .

9
_Pork SauSage ••~-.. $13

BUCKET

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M: · Price, 13769 Morse..
Road, Pataskala, formerly of
Pomeroy, were honored with a
. A reception was held at the home ' family reception ·on Nov. 23 at
of -their son, Floyd and Joy Wright.
Olde Summitt Towne Restaurant,
·Attending were Mrs. Merrill Cox,
Pataskala, 'in honor of their 50th
Mr. and Mrs; Allen Cox and son
wedding anniversary.
- .
Todd, Mrs. Carl Bing Sr., Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Price were married
Mrs. Charles Cox, Mr. and Mrs.
28, 19:W at Point . Pleasant,
_.

Chuck Roast •••••••

USD.A CHOICE

Price anntversaryi noted~ recently

Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Wright

=rryl!r.~i'artT.:::.;Lf::.·.

Kimberly Clements
Timothy R. Hamson

MEN'S SUPER SAVING
SPECIALS

• • ••••

'

· THRIFT KING

,CHEER DETERGENT

MAC. &amp; CHEESE
• 1 oz.

$ f$ 1

UIWit fin Ptr Customer
•
6eocl Only At Powell's
•
e."~
ftff~ hp.:.:v.dGn. 12,~ l91§c.,.......~:.. •

.

······~······ ·······

l71
limit 0111 ,., (111Goetl Only At Pew..a
. -- -Offer bpkti&lt;Ja!!. 12,.1911..

oz: $429 .
LiMit

o.. ,., c..._

GNIICW, At,.....
Offer..,.,.. ..... 12, I..S

..,.....

.
&gt;

2F~3

A Message From The Bible...
BAPI'ISM
William B. K•glln
.
Bapti-DoeoNotNulllfyGro&lt;e
.
A person does not receive the salvation offered by grace the
lnoment he believes. Grace refers to the provisions God has made for
us to be saved. God has made the provisions, not the sinner. If the
sinner is convicted by the teaching of the grace of God that brings
salvation to all men (Titus 2:11,13), and thereby receives faith, he is
not going to merely acknowledge God's provisions but will accept them
in obed~nce. God provides food, but we hav.e to eat. God provides
water, but w.e have to drink. God provides air, but we have to breathe.
Suppose I refuse to eat, drink, or breathe, yet declare that I believe in
the provisions God has given me to sustain life in food, water, and air.
Regardless of how much I believe ln the provisions, if I do not put forth
the effort to ea.t , drink, or breathe (work or action) on my _part, I will
die. The same thing is true in the spiritual realm. To benefit from the
salvation God has provided me in His grace, I must obeu, showing
action on my part. I will, in believing, repent, corifeu, and be baptized.
Baplilm is as much a part of God's grace as repentance and confession.
To remove baptism is to alter God's grace, and in so doing, we provide
our own grace. True faith will not aUow this! ·
v
Baptlem Deee Not NaJII1y Clui1t'1 Blood
A person does not eome in contact with the saving blood of Jesus
the moment he believes. The saving blood of Christ was shed in Hili
death {Jno. 19:33). It is by baplilm we are buried with Christ Into His
death {Rm. 6:4). Why should we be baptized into His death? It was in
His death He shed the atoning blood by which we are jll8tified {Rm.
5:9), redeemed (Eph. 1:9: 1 Pet. 1:18,19), sanctified {H,eb. 13:12), and .
. clean~ed from all sin (I Jno; 1:7). In His death, we aontoct the saving
blood. The moment one believes with the heart, this is a step unto ·
-4 righteousness (Rm. 10:10), Likewioe, when one eonfesses Chriot with
tbemmrth;-tllis ill-a •teputosalvatlon-{Rm. 10&lt;10). Rig"-•• and talvation are in Christ. Therefore, it is by bdplilm we _get into Chriot
(Gal. 3:27) and, at the same time, contact the b!Qod of Christ. It is not
by faith or confession! Baptism magnU'wa the blood of Chmtl The ·
sinner can no more pi'Ovfl!e the saving blood than he can pi'Ovide for
definitely make CDIItaet with the blood of Chrilt that
grace, but he
God has provided in t~e death ofJMua, belngobedt&lt;lnt to baptilm. To
reject baptism ia to J'l'leet the blood of Chrllt. Before your dirty clothes
or body can be mlife clean, they mult eclme in contact with the
detergent or -p, the cleanalng element. To jult billeve that the
detergent or - p has the cle&amp;nllng power wi1l not suffice. Cont..Ct
muat be made by the clot.W1 or bodw with the d4181'11ent or 10ap in the
WGtor. For the aoul of a sinner to be saved by the power of Chrilit's
blood, his 1&amp;111 must make COIItact with the blood. Thia contact is made
in baptilm aecordlng to the 1\)l'ipture~l

"'"'!

For Free Billie Corre1p011deaee C.arie, Write•••

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bul..llo Road • P. O.lo• 3411
GIIUpollo, Oltlo 45631

•

hltU)'Im!IIIF

WM•flllt1:

IIIW. SttMir t131

Wonldp 6:10

~lcS.•dJ

7:0tp••.

·~

•

.,

...,••
,.

''JWI.-'M' .i.1

,.

lvol)'" S~ompoo or

Misses' SIM . MTn.
Choice oj styles.

/

/
/

'

l1m11 4

·'/ sssove
'

; . ~:'

.•

conditoner. 15 oz ~

~

Ou&lt; Reg. 8.97

Price

'

WI--

3.97

I( mart&lt; Foil

·u

~

· Price

S1~g

- I~~
r-::

Glad" Tralllllagl

..

15, 13-gal. size
or 10, 20-30 gal.

Room -dorke n·
ing. 37~x6: While

12"•25' lOll 01

aluminum loil.

~

Mlr"""'tO"'

.

~g.

sst";

$1~

VHSvtdeoT-

C-FIH.,.
~g. ol200 K mort'
conee fillers .

4-, 6-lv. record .

1

m.

Ouri .J7

Highdenslly. 2·,

•

r;tl

OUr Reg. 6.97

s0ve40%

2c·~:g~1
Vacuum lags

Disposable. Many
makes and mOdels . r
1-4 Pel P'lg

OJr Reg. 3.97 1307 1

Our 5.67-5.97 Eo

$4~197

Sole PMce

$3Sove
24%

6 :•-o&lt;~

10' Fry Pan

hclanguklflleama
Choose 465t or
4652 12-V lamps.

d

Teflon

II ~

Toolllpatle

Choose from Aim • 01
Close-up' toolhposle.

Polished aluminum ,

interior .

'""-'' -.!

; ou"onnhQ .

OJr 3.97 , 002•

Hi/lOw l!oc&gt;!l. $2

, c: .. ""'_._... or 6054 Hi·

'

SolePllce
Thru Jon. 13
With bchonge

Our5.97 Eo

ssg

$4 ' ~~

MotoiwaforC' 610

S.••II)'MOI'Iillll

Wonlttf I•.JD ...

Ny10n Panty HoM

Men's Crew Socks
Acrylic/nylon. fit
10-13. COIOJS.

2.~1

. Hair Care

Many U.S., Import
cor's ; II. trucks .
Sa.,.. on MatohOfOf"'
'MICI D't DlkO·........

~~ $49 ,
'

.nw~iji'

.. .,.....

~-·

...

Pocket KMife
lock bl,de pocket
knife. SAVE

.

..

Saye2.11

Our1 .37 Eo.

-

3~2··
120-pg.. Ncllt: k
3-subJecl book
In I O\h 8" alze.

.

�.'

..

,..:

.. ............ _,~·-----~-~--------·----'

. I

Page-B-4-The.Sun~y nmes-Sentir:~el ~

I

---~----­

..__

'

·----_.;,_ --""-· ..:. .. .. -·. ... ·-----·

·-- -·-···-·--

~

Janua!'V 6, 1985

POmeroy-Mid~leport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

,Pomeroy-M~Ieport-Gallipolia,' Ohio~Point Pleasant.

From

New director, /acility1 greet area Lung Association in 1985
.

'

ATHE,NS - The South East
Branch or the American Lung
Association (AlA) · or Ohio !s
starting the new year with some
new year's resolutions as well as a
new oHice and new director.
. . A pledge to be receptive to public
Input regarolng progr.1m heads the
list or reso.lutlons, according to Jane
Denbow, executive dltector who
-~~w~..:Pat GrliY of l\1iirtetU; woo

retired.
•
decided , to move the olflce to
answering service where the public
"We're excited about our reloca- Athens," Denbow added. "With the
may can to hear a free health Up, •.
lion to Athens," · Denbow said. . medical school right here, we have
offer suggestions, an!! leave a
"Since Athens_ Is central to the manyvaluableresourcepeopleand
message;
11l·county region we cover, de- the possibility or conducting joint •
- Reaching as many schools In
creased travel time will lead to public Information programs and
the area as possible wit!) smoking
Increased service to the area.
screening clinics."
prevention programs;
"The presence of the Ohlo
The local agency's list of resolu- Reaching area youth"' with
University College of Osteopathlc lions, Denbow says, Includes Items
what she calls "an· exciting new
Medlclnelsanotherreasonreglonal that she thinks will help serve
marijuana education program"i
•!x:a.rd ~T.embef'e;and stl!!e-.oU!clals ·~ Sol.!!~~ern Ob!D.~tli'.L....,..~ "·"'"~-""' Ji;ll!1an.Q.Im~: }.l,ILbllc awareness
They • are opennlng a ~-hour.
.
.
.

• Frefi(h· exC·hanges
. afle
Donna M
vo.ws with Granville Fletcher III
following the ceremony·

of clean air programs; and
-Offerlngmm:elnformatlonand
programs on subjects such as billck
lung which ~ o! speclallmpor·
lance to Southeastern Ohlo.
Area residents are Invited to call
the Ltq~g Une at 614-592-l&lt;l!O to
recelvelnformatlonoroHersuggeslions. The line will be open 24 hours
a day. Whe~ the office Is closed
callers can hear a free recorded
health "·up uas 'w.i!i~is- 1eave
message. Calls will be returned at ·
the lung assoclatlorf~s expense.
· 'i'he' &lt;lfflce ·Is located : at 527B
Richland Ave. In Athens. Because
the director will often be traveling
to the otehr cities In the region,

Dayton with a bachelor's degree In
elfmentary education. She. Is a
special education teacher for the
Meigs Local School District in
Rutland.
The .groom Is a graduate of
Hamsvllle High School and has
degrees in secondary education
from Marshall University, Ohlo
University, and Virginia Polytech·
njc institute and State University.
He Is an assistant principal for the
'A receptiOn wasHeld at ffie'hOiile-··;varren· i.M:--a:l- · Sehoo: Dist..-kt in
of Mr. and Mrs. G. s. Flesher, Vbtcent.
parents of the groom, Immediately
The couple will reside in Belpre,
Ohio.

Mr. and Mrs. John W. AbdeUa ·

Vicky L DeBord becomes bride
:of fohn ·W. Abdella Nov~ 10 ·

'
.
Nelsonville, and Angela Babbitt,
Tuppers Plains. They wore formal
burgundy gowns of taffeta with
matching jackets and carried
. hurricane lamps trimmed In white
and pink roses and miniature
rub rum lilies.
Dawn Renee 'Langdon, Marietta ,
was flower girl, and Michael
Brlckles, Germantown, Md., was

'

POMEROY- VIcky L. DeBord,
daughter of Dallas G. and Janice
· DeBord, Pomeroy, and John w.
• A1Kiella, The Plains, 5on of William
· P.' and Mary Lou Abdella, Chaun·
, ~. were~nltedlnmarrtageNov.10
at the Sacred Heart Ca thollc
; Q!urch, Pomeroy.
: ·1be Rev. Frank Patella perfOrmed the double ring ceremony
· iq{lowlng a program of nuptial
.ringbearer.~dStewart,Columbus,
music provided by Nick Ogg, •. was ~t man, and the ushers were
, ~Isonville.
John Keener, Jacksonville; Greg
: Given In marriage by her father,
Smit)J, South Carollna; Mark
U!e bride wore a gown of whlte . Brldgewater,Athens,aridGeraldJ.
lalfeta trimmed with reZukauckas, London, England,
fi!:Jbroldered alencon lace and
brother-1(1-lawofthe groom. Jimmy·
: p!!&amp;rls. with a high neckline, sheer
Abdella, Chauncey, was the altar
~-eke of English net, and long fitted
boy, and scripture readings were
· !ieeves. The A~l!ne skirt featured
gjven by Mrs. ' Sharon Abdella
fi\mt panel edged with lace and · Z!lkaucakas, London, England,
i:)lmlnated In a scalloped cathedral'
Mrs. Marylln Sue AbdeUa Allen,
· tr&amp;n.
.
Athens, and Tina Abdella, Houston,

a

!:n:k:!e:~-o!

,

and she carried a bouquet of
!'!lbrum lilies '!ftd white and Qink
rililes.
..
: ::J'ammy L. DeBord.'sister o! the
bOde from Columbus, was maid o!
bonor, and bridesmaids were Pam.~}il Conkle, Nelsonville, Terri GU~· ZenesVille, Megan Shingler,

..

~

.

\

.MU sets

~~egistration

Bryan, Logan,
guests.
---rile-bride IS a graduateof Meigs
High School Hocking Technical
College. She Is a nurse at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
The groom, a graduate of Athens
High School, has a master's degree
from Ohlo University. He is prtndpal at Zaleski Elementary Schi)ol.
Tl1e couple resides at 517 Adena
Drive, The Plains.

Menu set .
.for schools
POMEROY - Menus Cor the
uniform lupch program of the
Mwgs Loca\ School District, Monday through Friday of next week,
have been announced.
They are as follows:
Monday
Chicken
French
fries,- mixed
fruit,nuggets,
cookie
and milk.
Tuesday - Hot dog and sauce,
corn, peaches, brownie and milk.
___ Wedne¥!aY .. =: Sp;tgh~ttl, W~!l

Its

offers summer camp
and funds research .on lung
diseases."

'

at

~

The-Medical.
Shoppe
446.. ~206

IN, •'&gt;K ..... l)l t I,JUI o ift;(

Back Rehabilitation Program
. ~·-~"-~H-~f!~i!~l!!., .. I!!~V~!!gr!!~lltilbiDg

...... !!h-~-..,J,...

Sophisticated Equipment •

Adult. &amp; Corporate Fitness Programs
•Feafllring State of the Art Equipment
•Exercise Prescriptions tailored to each individual
by exercise physiologists
.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
Pomeroy. Ohio-Meigs County
Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo L. Vaughan. Mgr.
Phone 992·2588
Vinton, Ohio-Gallia County
Display Yard
James Bush, Mgr.
Phone 388·8603

PLUS

. Comprehensive Cardiac Rehabilitation _

.Vou1 ·Rehsbilitslion, Pbgtiesl Tbe~spg snd
Exe~eite Speeislltlt
TH~

MEDICAL SHOPPE, INC.
565 Jackson -Pike

ti;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WEEK · 0 N LY!

THIS

Each package contains three
paper bags that go directly Into a
microwave oven. Thesemlcrpwaye
popcorns were compared with
butter-flavor JiffY Pop - a stov&lt;&gt;·tOp popcorn th.O.t comes In its own
fall-covered pan .. The food technolo1 gists also made plain Orville
Rellenbacher's Gourmet Popping
Corn In a microwave oven, using a
special mlcro~a ye popco rn
container.

•Evaluation &amp; Rehabilitation of Joint lnjuri!IS
.•Post Surgical Reha.bilitation of
Knees, Shoulders, Etc.~·......

.CYBEX

Write for booklets showing memorials in full color with sizes
and prices stated.

Reports· food technolo,g!sts found
after testtng both the regular ancl
butter-flavored Orville Redenbacher's Gourmet Mlcrow;IVE' Poppfng
Corn and Pillsbury Microwave

Sports and_ Rehabilitative. Medicine

Meigs County
Bookmobile
plans route
POMEROY - ·The bookmobUe
schedule for Meigs
"'l','ey!_k)ll!$ .
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
On Monday the bookmobile wUI.
be at Burlingham, County MobUe
Home Park, 3:35to4:ffip.m.; at the
Harrisonville church from 4; 35 to.
5:ffi p.m.; at the New Lima Road
site, one mile south of Fort Meigs
from 5: 15 to 6 p.m.; and on Depot
Str.e et In Rutland, 6: 40 to 8:10p.m.
· The Wednesday schedule Is
TupperS Plains; Lodwick's from
7; 25 to · 8:10 p.m: and Riggscrest
Addit)on from 8:25 to 8: 55 p.m.

a

·

-~~ h!~~~'nt.l:!e..!!'~
·1&gt;!1&gt;-,....,.

come to the office.
Counties served by the South

LuEllen Saunders·becomes·bride
of Davi~ Allen &amp;outen Aug. 25
GALLIPQLIS - I.,uEllen Saunders became the bride of David Allen
ScoutenlnanAug:25ceremony.She
Is the qaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James W. saunders, Gallipolis. The
groom Is the son of Mrs. and Mrs.
=d-"-M-I'l~~'icy)u\'11l, 521 Hllda Dr.
The Rev. Alvis Pollard officiated
the wedding at First Baptist Church
ill Galllpolls. Music was presented
by Joe Gulley, p!anL•t; Brenda
Pollard and Lynn Saunders,
vocalists.
· · The bride wore a floor-length
gown of satbt with a ruffled bon om,
and featured mutton sleeves. The
chapel-lenglh veU was designed and
made by the brWe's mother.
Matron of honor was Lynn
Saunders, sister-In-law of the bride.
She wore a floor-length lavender
gown, featuring a bustle effect. She
also wore a halo o! silk flowers and
baby's breath In .her hair and
carried one long stern rose. ·
Bridesmaids were Debby Slm·
mons, sister of the bJ'.ide, Sharon
Scouten, sister of the'• groom and ·
Pa'ula Pullins, cousin of the bride.
They 1!-lso wore lavender gowns like
the matron of honor's, with halos of
sllk flowers.
Best man was David Burleson.
Groomsmen were Jim Saunders,
broth9r of · the brtde; Dennis
Sallsbury, cousin of the groom and
Charlie Corbin, cousin of the groom. .

underlay. Ring bearer was Joshua
Slnmuins, nephew of the bride, who
wore a white Sl.!it. .
'
Following t}le eeremony, a reception was held In the Fellowship
Room of the church. Tiu! reception
was given by_.Earlene S'IYP9er!j ••
aunt of the bride. Assisting at the
reception were Mrs. Marllene Settle
and Mrs. Phyllis Burleson. AttendIng the guest ri!glster was Letty
Willls. The brtde's table featured a
three-tiered wedding cake, baked
and decorated by Debby Simmons,
sister of the bride.
The couple resides at 2510
Kimberly Parkway . East, apart·
ment 101, Columbus. -

ia;;

lr=

SELECl FALL.
WINTER FABRICS

$12,000 'l'J.Glt

...

MORTGAGE RATES DOWN!

• 'fabric already reduced not included in this 30% off sale, including
fltn·Speclal Bargain fabriGs.
-

ONLY 2 WEEKS LEF TOwTl.aJAIC~E---=o-----i­
ADVANTAGE OF THIS
UNTASTIC OFFER.
\
Now's a very~ time to buy the beautif\!1,

Daily

alfordable AD Arnei. heme you've always dreamed ·
of. Hyou buy before January 20,·with your bonle to be
built and deivered bilon Ma..I 1. 1985, we'U sweeten
. the deal with a free $12.000 11GR .

uie

•

a:m:,

..

·L-Dj;:r~~~=:·

Salurday, Jan. 12th.

SILVE.R BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS

.

What's a11GR? It's • abbmiation for 1reuury ·
Investment Growth~ which wnaa• the
~y of U.S.~
with ex~ 'Ill eam11111· At maturtty, your 11GR yields $12, -yours
to- however you .... .
.
Now you can lllllke two of your dreama CXJIIle true
at Olla!!. &lt;&gt;wninl your own bome, 111111 bavi!.2l the fi.
!IIN'Piaecurity ma-IDOCI !!WIJ!I plan: 1b &amp;id out'how •

bot•

•

..l

new.,., .

you can aet a $12,000 11GR with JOUI'
vilit yOur authoriJed AI Americ:at dealer IOOIL

.
Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc. ~
Rt. 60 West
Athena, Ohio

-

JJn. 16-17, as outlined~ the course
.

Pllc.s cjood through

awn.&lt;~ oncl Ol*attd bv

Fabri.Centeft 01 a.mefiOO,Ine.

. ::students

v

&lt;

(See m~del! on d!!pl~y!

.'

. n · . . .·~

9:30·5:00 DAILY-FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

-.c"""~""""""'"~u

Attorney at Law
1030 Dublin Road (Route 33)
Columbus, Ohio 43215

THE LINEN SHOPPE

CALL COLLECT (614) 488:-6945.

'

AN OFF PRICE LINEN OUTLET
53 COURT STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
. "Across From The Municipal Parking Lot"

•200°

LIVING. ROOM
SUITES!

0

ON REMAINING STOCK!

6, 8, 10 &amp;12
GUN MODELS

COMPLETELY OVERSTOCKED AND
WHE~E TO PUT INCOMING SUITES.

NO

UPTO

50%

OFF

9$2-7034 or 692-1418

SAVE AS IIUCH AS
- •7oo·~-­
oN BASSEn BEDROOII.SUITE.
BASSETT SOLID PINE SUITE
REG. '1695
NOW '995
NO ..VENEERS
NO PLASTIC • NO PRESSWOOD!

ALL WOOD!!
OTHER SUITES FROM

'499

2 &amp; 3 PIECE SUITES

•3 PIECE SUITES AS LOW AS

'39900

andgeta .

10% TO 50% OFF ~~~UELAR

;:~

Towels
Bedspreads

new An American
home now,

'

..

-~·

Comforters
Blankets
·candles

· If you have been injured on the job and desire
professional legal. representation for your
Workers' Compensation claim. call for further
information without obligation.
· ·

Huntington, W. Va.

·

p.rn.

~e.

talner designed
in a microwave oven. An ordinary
glass bowl may shatter.
The microwave pizza was less
Impressive than the popcorn. Normally, heating a frozen pizza In a
microwave oven produces a pie
with a soggy crust. Frozen Totino's
Crisp Crust Heat and Eat Microwave ·Pizza Is .supposed to over- .
come that· problem. A Consl!mer
Reports' sensory consultant com-

H,arn"lbetg

=;

: :~

·

' NEW YORK CAP) -Columbia
University's ,new Rare Book and
Manuscript Library, built at a cost
of $3 mUllan, was opeited recently,
The library was begun more than
' :nl years ago with the founding of
the ' university. It was formally
organized as a separate unit of the
libraries In 1900. lts holdings now
number ·500.&lt;XXl rare books, 22
million manuscripts and thoussnds
of art workS.
Included are Items as old as a

One Hundred Dollars Off Any ln·Ground
Pool Kit or Spo Invoiced In JCI_!Iuary
Two Hundred Dollars Holds Your Swimming Poolllit
or Spa at low 1984 Discount Prices Till Summer
(304) 429·4788

_

: ·•

New rare book
library opens

SWIMMING POOL KITS &amp; SPAS'
Sl 00 Discount

NEW YORK (AP) - ·Artificial
Intelligence - the IndustrY that
develops computers that thlnk,
solve problems and the like - ts
expected to grow to$2bUllonlnsales
In five years from Its present $155.3
million this year.

Co m .p o u n de d

p·

!~

e;

·INJURED ON THE JOB?

. ·~·-·~WiJJiam It

Su. ER SAL.E.

SAVE UP TO

Artificial. intelligence
.

-----~-

•

aromas that you'd exPei:t I~ a pizza
and its crust was generally good.
However, 11 · didn 't taste partlcu- '·
I~)J',J~~ • •and the cheese was ·.
actually cheddar rather . than, ·
mozzarella.
!For a special reprint ot"eonsu·
mers Union's evaluation of canned
soy·ps, send $1 for each copy W
CONSUMERS. P.O. Box 461, Radio
· etlyStatlon, ·New York.,-,"&lt;¥- 1001,!).-

.'

'
Thursday - Turkey n,&gt;ast sandwich, potato rounds, jello and ""Uk.
· Frltlay - Cook's NiOice.
-

for term

-·:eourse schedules, which contain
sgeclfic registration- details, are
jl_r.aUable bt the Registrar's Office,
~ Main 106..All lees must be paid
a( the time o! registration.
: _.On Monday, Jan. 14, entry Into
registration area will be by an
fi!Pbabetlcal ~stem based on the
C)ldent's last name. ·
'-Theschedulelsas!ollows: Sa.m.,
~-X·Y·Z; 9 a ,m., A; 10 a .m., B; 11
C; Noon, D-E-F-G; 1 p.m.
:H:I.J-K-L; 2 p.m.. M; 3 p.m.,
N:o-P-Q-R; 4 p.m.. S; 5 p.m:,
't..U-V; and 6 to 8 p.m. open.
may register at their
e~Jeduled time or any time the real·
llir. Student ID cards will be
~ry lor registration.
·Schedules may not be adjusted
--regular registratiOn, but will

wave ovens . does···requlre . care.
Don't let popcorn tn a ·bagcook for
more than five minutes o.r you run
lhe risk of the bag catching. fire
Inside the oven. If you're popping

HOLIDAY POOLS,· INC.

· i-fUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Reguregistration for Marshall Unlvwslty's Spring Semester will be
C&lt;lnducttid from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on
MQnday, Jan. 4, In Memorial
siudent Center, according to Reglsirllr Robert H. Eddins.
· : "The Spring Semester also will
~ that same day ~lth classes
meeting at 4 p.m. or later, the
i11k!strar said.
.•·Walk-In registrations and sche&lt;)Wle adjustments will be processed
~kdays In the Registrar's Office,
tJljl Main lB. through Friday, Jan.
:)}, Beginning Monday, Jan. 7, the
. oltlce wllllleo peiiMonday tllrough
fniursday from 8 a.m . to 6: :ll p.m.
~on Friday from 8 ~.m. to 4:30

·-·

• By the Editors
of Conaurner Bepons

sis Association, the. ALA the oldest
.,_voluntary health organization In the.·.•
United States. With the Jessenlngof • .
T.B. as a major health problem ·
several decades ago, the society ·
broadened
focus -to lliclude the
preVention,a!itr'!fea"ttnelir ot' all"
lung d~ases. · ,
.
.
"Education programs on smok- ,
lng prevention and cessation have
become an btcreaslngly lmportimt
part of ALA work In recent years,"
DenbQw said. "In addition, the

a -

The Sunday TimeB-Sentinei-Page-8-5 . ·

The microwave-coo~ varieties pared Totino's Microwave Pl2:za
made a cre&lt;jltable showing against · (plain ,cheese variety) with Ell!o's
II you get sudden yen to snack
the stov&lt;&gt;-top popcorn. They took
Frozen Cheeze Pi2za - a conven-m~t,!'l'~!;~·oo.!.!!hl:"e"" ol\!y tllffilbl'l-do• · ~\!tell. . .~11"1!",~~~ \!).~QY.t~lb!'~,~h;&gt;Ldld~.
towaltuntllthepopcornpopsontop waiting; the Jiffy Pop required
well the last' time Consumer
ofthestove,ortheplzzacookSJnthe seven to nine minutes of cQOldng Reports tested frozen pizza.
oven. But you won't have to walt as
and constant shaking over a
The sensory consultant found
long If you,use some new products
burner.
neither product to be a prime
Intended for microwave cooking.
All of the popcorns tasted quite example of the pizza-maker's craft,
Making popcorn In a microwave
acceptable to the staffers wbo tried
but judged the Ell!o's goqd for a
oven (ityoucdo It proper}yfls a lor· ihem . eooldng lna·nlfcrow~veoven ftozen pll:zli': ·i!;'lliu'the navufS'·a•.U-·
fa~te~ and easier than cook.lng non didn't affect ttre taste or texture.
·
a stove. That's what Consumer
But cooking popcorn In micro-

East Brimch are Atbl!ns, Fairfield,

Gallla, Hocking, Meigs, . Morga,!l.
Musklngum, Perry, VInton and
Washington.

w. Va.

Microwaved snacks quick, tasty··

.Consumer Reports

.

~~~ex~~ ~~~~~~~~~b~rtd~e~l~s'a~~~;~o~f~Lo~ra~ln~~~~~~~~~
marriage of Donna Marie French
and Granville S. Flesher ill.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. French of
Lorain.
The groom Is the sorf of Mr. and
Mrs. G. S. FleSher o! Harrisville,
W.Va.
.
Maid of honor was Patrtpla
French Qf Lorain and best man
was Robert Ho~ard of Vienna
W.Va.
' '

1-'0"~--·~.o&lt;o·•

RECLINERS
SAVE AT LEAST

30%

ONALL
7 fiECE SETS IN STOCK!
CHOOSE SOLID OAK,
PINE &amp; MAPLE.
fiiESRHAst£ 1-flll!R-CIIAIRS-.

'179 00

AU.LA-Z·BOY,
BERKLINE
AND ORT RECLINERS
REDUCED UP TO

oooo

1985
25" ZENITH
CONSOLE COLOR TV'

,~ ·

ONLY

s54900

SP,ECIAL DISTRIBUTOR PURCHASE!
OIIE TillE DEAL!
NEVER PRICED

-·.. •
,..

·i
...."
'""

.,

�,,

:-•

.

' .

_,

Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Poitl'lt Pleasant,

, Lambert,
Donohue,
trade vows
Dec. 16
•

w. Va.

GALLIPOLIS ·- Mabel Stewatt
of Middleport, wife ot Richard
Stewart, pi.ltor of the Weird of Faith
Olurch In Middleport, will be the
speaker at the Tui!lday nliht
meetlq of Aglow Women's Fellowship, Pomeroy Cbapter. to be held
· at Duff's Smorgasbord, Gallipolis.
The dinner will be at 6 p.m.,
followed· by the meeting. ThP

baby blue satin dress with white
lace trlm. -She earned a single red
rose. ·
Gerald Donohue.- Pomeroy,
.brother of the groom, was best
man.

R.hemi

w~rk---ln

today's

an
expertence.
~
In five Ohio counties, persons 50

NEW YORK !Press Syndlca1e)
Seventy-five percent of the 2.5 .
CHESTER . - 'HUton SuUon,
million
marriages each year take
authority on propheUc scripture,
Place
as
large, formal weddings.
)VIIl be seen by satellite at
So,
an
.engagement
of a year or
Chester Church of God,' Sunday
more
to
plan
the
wedding
Is riot
• throUgh Wednesday. Sunday
unusual.
But,
as
the
"Modem
Bride
service 7 p.m., othm at 8 p.m.
.
HENDERSON, W.Va. _Runguide to your wedding and mar• GALLIPOLIS - the Glorynlng Club will nm~eet:e.~::~~~-~~~~ri:age~~·::~e~mphasizes, there Is
to~
~ iBM Bt.ii"""lTwilnlmg·arFaiffi ~.tJ p:m: at the 11
· · · . durt.-.g the- engagement,
Temple Church, Sullday, 7 p.m.
tloo Center. Walkers, joggei:S ·
pertod than just planning the
Rev. Joe Gwinn will speak. .
an4 cyclists are invited. . • '
wedding. The new book, published
by BaliJ!ntlne and complied by the .
Editors
of :'Modern Bride" magaKYGER -Chester,Township
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va,
zlne
with
Stephanie H. Dahl, Is the
trustees wW meet Tuesday, 6
-The Grubb Family Singer
first of its kind to ·combine
at the township buDding In
be at Plea$ant VIew CmJrcltJ
marriage ·

Mlnlltrlell televlalon. show with
teacheS a Bible class In Middleport

once a w~k.' She and her husb,tnd

LARGE . GROUP OF ..-

bave rnlnl8tere'd oiler much ol the
United States. They have two
d!lughters. ~ •

.

,..

20°/o Off

---------GROUP OF
KNITS

years of age e!'-OI&lt;Ie!T--S€€klngare

more

~W001S~-~

job

banks.

.

Belgian chocolate

:.. ,

L

------- wu:·anu Jvns."'tiein1TS'iviarrttcw·Booouue
1 ... ,

......,.

·'

-

The brtde's mother wore a dark
blue floral poly' ester dress. Th_e
groom's mother wore a light blue
ensemble. .
The bride is a graduate of -Meigs

•

High School ;md Gallipolis Business
College. She -is employed at Bank
One, Rutland.
Donohue gradauated from Meigs
High School.
·

Stamp collectFng veterans

NEW YORK (AP) -There are
more than 2,130 chocolate shops In
Belgium.
Chocolatier Magazine says annual per capita consumption of
chocolate In 8elgtulm is, gauged at
· 23-24· p6iifldS': lf5a'Y!rilllsciifli1jares
'to per capita consumption in the
115 W. 2nd
·
Pomeroy
United States of 9.6 pounds.
Phone 992-2284
. 8elgium has an aimual producSinger Approved Dealer
tion of total chocolate products of
more than 135,001 metric tons.
Nearly 50 percent of this amount is ,--------'-------L----~--_:__
exported to foreign countrtes, with
France. Germany, . the United

GALLIPOLIS LaLeche
League will meet Monday, 9: ill

Ideal employee,
taeat

~'-&amp;1010

4195, 446-6314 or 286-4990.

·

POMEROY - Pomeroy Ele·- mentary School PTO will meet
Moilday, 7::.&gt;p.m. at the school.

1o;.~50°/o
Off

The

-·

-

-

Marine Major and Mrs. Karl
Russell and children, Melissa and
Kenneth, lef1 Thursday for the! r
new home In Mt. Clemens, Mich.,
aft\lr spending the holidays In

Others of Ruth and Judy's
surprt!"'_ __!lolld~ -vis!tors _ )~'ere
Beverly Perrin Dixon· and Dave
Kosiba of Pontiac, Mich. Beverly,
of course, . Is a native· Meigs
Countlan, but long gone from the,

$HOE--S &amp; BOOTS

10°/o-30°/o

•

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of Jan. 7-11 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 220

Ja~':~a~ke ~~~:~~~~~:..
~-:.~~oon;

9:30

Blood Pressure Check,

Tuesday- S ..
T 0 ..
P Cl ass, 10: 30
a.m.;
PhyslcaiFitness,ll:l5a.m.;
Birthday
Party, noon.
,Wednesday - Vinton Bible
Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games. 1·3
p.m.; Garden Club, 1-3 p.m.
'' Thursday - Bible Study, 11
a.m.-noon; Legal Services, s: 30
a.m.-12:30 p.m. '·
Friday - Art Class. 1-3 p.m.;
Craft Mini-Court, 1-3 p.m.
. l'he Senior Nutrition Program
w1n serve the following menus :
' . Monday - Spaghetti and meat
sauce, tossed salad, pe~~c~es, Ita!tan bread, butter.

noodles, beets, Jello with fruit,
bread, butter.
Friday - Potato, franks, lima

:C~tZ~~:~~: ~~~e":.stlcks,
ea~~o~=a~f

'

fruit

beverage served with

•

.•

'

l

ANNOUNCES THE RELOCATION OF HIS OFFICE
.

1302 Fourth A. venue .;.... Huntington, W. Va. 25701

Ask me about State Farm's Home .·
Alert Protection Plan.

Tha carpet dtalli.. COII.IPally W8ll.llll reco•••ll.

II

FRANCH ISES AVAILABLE

&lt;&gt;c.py...,..ows..,..,-..,,_..,,.,.,,,._

'" ""

. Phone 446-4~0

I

..

For ••••••..••.•••••••••• Patients who have had h1art attacks (acute myocardial
infarctions), heart pa_in (ang'ina), or cardiac by-pass surg-

museum says the painting, a

masterpiece by the
Dutch master Hencirlck Goltzlus
(1&amp;1616) was acquired through
tile generos~!l-- of the Ahmanson

Providing ...........' Educalion and closely monitored exercise.
By ..........;...........; · Suzanne-Mize, M. ·D. Cardiologist· and Center pjredor.
Roger Gilders~ M. S., berc'ise Physiolo~ist on~ Supervisor.

J;;,:;;~!J

HOme Otta: Bloomu"1Qton , IllinOIS

'

By Med Whitcomb
,
DEAR MEG --o As a physician
with many aged patle_nts, I applaud
your column on mall carriers
checking on senior citizens wbo Uve
· alone. I've found elderly ~pie
lying on the Door Witt! hlp fractures
for as long as eight iiours. Alas, I've
also found them dead .
There Is another slmple,lne~pen­
slve solution to this problem that

area - or how to start one -send a
self•addressed, siamped envelope _. _
to Family Service Assn. of Amerlea, 44 E. 23rd St., New York, NY
10010; (212) 674-6100.
Here's more, readers,
DEAR MEG - Your advice to ••
the elderly widow who lives alone
was excellent, but tbe Carner Alert
Program cannot respond to emergencies. I'm a registered nurse with

results. Teenagers - Scouts qr
other reliable groups- volunteer to
telephone an older person every
day at certain hours.
If there Is _no answer, th"
youngster alerts the group leader
and goes to the home, &lt;Yntertng It
with the help.:Of the superintendent
or a neighbor If he o• she wasn't
given a key. The system costs only
, the phone charges which are fundect
by the community.
This plan has double advantages.
The older person knows .someone
cares, and there is a rapprochement between two generations that
do not have frequent contact. Sincerely, DR LEON MERKIN,
,
NEW YORK. N.Y.
DEAR DR. MERKIN - Tpank
you for a timely and thoughtful
suggesilon. Volunteer networks of
young people who telephone the
elderly dally are growing. For .
Information on such groups In your

not lose your excess pounds If you
quli. In which case you would be
both overw~lght and hooked· on
cigarettes.
11 I had to c~oose between being
overweight and smoking, ' I would
choose to be overweight. But you
. need not make thltt choice. You can
lose weight 1! you simply stick to a

good plan, which should include

..

•

.

"

'

...

-·

_,..,.

..

·~

.J.» "' •\.
_,

-;
-·

•

•
,

..,

. ..

·
'
•

-

A~....r--

-

,. ·

·; ,' ,.

·•

Extensive record collection favors past hits
Is a .prominent feature of
his Clermont County home.
· "Ever see what 40,00l records ·
look like? Well, here they are,"
Ridge said. "I have 1,0llduplicates.
A ton of records. Upstairs, I have
another room filled with them.
EverybodY Is waltl!lgfor my floor to
sag."
When Ridge's wile, Nickle, wants
to find him. she'll usually look In the
basement of their Union Township
home among stacks or old records. '
He'd like to put the records

now.

,

Ridge likes • tunes from the
blg"bandenl, when his loveofmusle
developed. He married Nickle In
1942, at the height of World War II
and the big-band' sound, and has

been collecting records since.

When he retired from his sales lab
at Diamond International Corp. a
lew years ago. he thought he could
spend time listening,to the records
he'd accumulated ·over' the years.
Someone asked' him to bring the
to a druice, and he soon

a g\(l's arm around a man's and his .

around t.ers,· ~=-se,!g~M~~r~~- ........_.,

AVL

•G.D.T.

missing a treat by missing
music, which became popular In the
not knocking the new sounds. I
1m and faded at- the end ofWoFid - remember when lu.o;ed_llltiJlli.Q!l_~ war rr.
radio as a kid. My lather toid me,
"Then It was face-to-face dancing,
·~t tbat rag-tag off the air.' "

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

HAPPY
30th
"SORRY IT'S A
LAtE"
DA~

JODI D.

JANUARY
WHITE

DOC, KATHY &amp; LOIS

SALE
Snt on flowers! Flowers ...
crisp, clean, fresh and ••·
citin1 ... in Ill whita and
colors. tool Bri1httn 1
corner or set M tltpnt II·
bit witll these bta1tiful
fresh trrlllp,..nts of lanatulinl. •nowwllitt earn•·
fiiHIS, p0111po11 nld dtli·
Cltl dlilitl.

lvaiiMtle in thrH
_sizes anti all at
1/S offl
King Size

.,_,,.

QuHn Size

..._,17

.••

•

'

Co111prahansive
Cardiac

~r$2000

=$1500

Full Size ·

::r$1250

.

Rehabilitation
" leginning Jan. 21-No., Accepting Referrals
• (all Tht Ml!licql SbM• at 446-~206
¥ Gtn1 Abels, M.D., Cardiologisl, Medkal Dirtetor
'
• Timothy lttz, Progr1111 Coordinator ·

Public Open Houa

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP.

' •TraneoutiMOUI Ellctrlcall
NlfVI ltlmulltlon
•

.

&gt;

heat. A long exercise period,
as watl11Dg7"ts probably more
helpful than a short Intense period
In terms of eliminating lat. Why?
Because It takes quite a while tor
the mechanisms. tbat mobUize fat
for energy to take effect Short·
duration exercise is more apt to use
muscle glycogen (glucose . nolecules) than fat tor energy,
'

PAll, HEADACIE COIIJIOL' SDVI~ES IIICWDE:
•Hypnolll

'"

1-: ~ ·

~ ,,

bothabalancedlow-&lt;:alortedletand
a regular exercise program. .
I have Included a dietllst from the
four basic food groups, which you
canuseasabaslsforadietthatwlll
help you lose weight, In a new Issue
of The Health Letter, Si&gt;eclal
Report 17, Flexible Weight Control
Plan, which I am sending you.
Others who want this issue can send
75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelOP&lt;:' for it to me
In care of this newspaper, P.O. Ba&gt;;
1551, Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
. RegUipr. frequent act_lvity durtng
the day probably helps keep the
body's thermostat turned up and

IA~fiiSOII

•PhYIIOII Th1r1py
•Acupunctul'l

•

program Is especially helpful In
,'"
__ _ _,;' : ;_,... •
,.lti!J!J.... ·- large metropolitan areas. Thank ·
- _
.,...
~
~
· you for calling It to my attention.
• ,... . ......
~
Wrtte 'to· Meg care of this • • ...'•'"i
'r
newspaper. She wlll personally
.... ,.,;;. •
answer only letters that contain
PET ROCKHOPPER? - A Rocldlopper, lhe smallest ol cftl!ted
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
·penptns, enJoys his rocky .nw-nent at the Berlin Zoo recendy.....
. Questions of general Interest will be
p-own at aboul20 Inches, they spend most of their time In water. where
discussed in future columns.
theyusethelrfeetasmdders~¥~dw!DgllapropeOers.(APhs rpbot.o) . .

P'OINT PLIASAIT MIDICAL CENTII.
liTH

~ -~

•

Some communities have emergency assistance programs available. For Instance, special transmit- \
ters can be worn around .the neck
and if an emergency occurs, the
person simply squeezes the tran~
mltter which sends a message to
designated places. The cost Is little
- $8 or $10. for the transmitter. ·
People Interested In programs
'
·· ;~
such as this should contact their
~,..
,.
physician, council on aging qr the -""~ ,_ •
local hospital.- Sincerely, J.L.M..
~ ~•.;
MOUNT CLEMENS, MICH.
it; •
DEAR J.L.M. ~The transmitter

PAIN CONT OL CLINIC

TeJearruMrt or rtgi!tll' for this new prog!'!!!!l,.tonsult yo.11r doctor !:!!!d/ Dr •nl!~.
Holler CHnlc's C•dlelaiJ Dtpart1111nt at 446-5348.

...

R~~~....!!.Ce Lfl~ff.z.!.~~~11 " 1 !~~--=''- •

lot-'ll

lnsuranc:e caviragt by Medicare, Blue Shield, Aetna ~nd mast gro.up plans
F1r8aoo Casulity (.;Ompany

••

•

'

self-knowledge and a reasonable
gauge of beavlor In other situations.
At best, It can help predict the
chances tor a happy' successful
relationship; ·at the very . least, It
can help to deal more o_bjectlvely
with unresolved problems.

.•

and Nursing staff .trained in cardiac care.

plus education .and EKG testing• .

\~----~--1--oo·,.,,n,..-

day and continue Indefinitely at
the Morgan Center Chrtstlan
Hollni!Ss Clfli~lli""MOl'gan center. Rev. Ralph Spll'!"' will
conduct the. service which wm
begin • at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Various singers will be featured
throughout the ~vlval.

Walking helps

Jn women Is' that so

· Consisting of ..... ThrH 1-haur exercise periods a week for 12-18 .;eeks;

, lilce a good neighbdr, 1S/are

~

.

~~~------ll~~ir==~~th~e~l~e~ad~l~ng~c~a~u~se~,;o~fic~a~nce~~r--~he~l~psyouusecalortesbypr~
:::::::::~~~~~rt;;;;;~~;t;!~~~~~;;~~~~.......................
Help restore patients to the highest level of activity possi·
ble and help reduce the risk of future heart attacks.

Beginning ........... February 1915

Homt446--4S11

may seem. similar on the surtace, long-term decisions_?
Were you raises permissively or
(undamental attitudes toward mo·
ney, sex; careers, parenthood, . strictly? What areas . of Y.Our
pertormance were considered most
rellglort, and tradition can be very
Important: schoolwork? 'sports?
dltferent. It 'is Important tbat a
couple recognize the attitudes and e mployment • behavior? social
life?
,
habits they have !nherlied from
. How are rights and responslblll -

~

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
- DEAR DR. LAMB - I have '
· smoked for 17 years. I have always
~n heavy, but when I quit
smoking a year ago I gained :.&gt;
J)ounds. It was so easy to quit
smoking. I just stopped.
I have trted many diets, but. this is
hard for me. I'm five feet arid slx
and al)out 100 pounds overweight.
I'm about readY to go back to
smoking. Which Is worse, smoking .
or carrying around all this excess
weight? I used to smoke about a
pack of cigarettes a day. I'm 32. :
DEAR READER - I'd be very
disappointed In you If you went
J?ack to smoking. The reason lung
cancer Is replacing breast cancer

HOLZER CLINIC
CARDIAC REHABILITATION CENTER
o

~~~~~\';Pt~~~~~~~~
r~
n t

somewhere else, but the basement · found himself booked for the next
~·u'iE---u."i!)-"L'iilace--•vallabl~fQr=~.!..
severai months ·

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Co!llltY Dlstrtct Library will

Health

•

At •••••••••••• ~ •••••••••• Holzer Clinic Sycamore 'Branch facility in Gallipolis.

CAROLL SNOWDEN
•4t7 second Ave.
Gatlipotll. Oh.

Receive Jupiter" has been acquired
by tlie Los Angeles County Museum

Pcundatlon.
'I1Ie mUEUm says Goltzlus Is
cJaidered one ol the l1lOit
' 'arum ot the Haarltm school
JlddliiiiiiJiel'llm tit his draWings, etcJdnp and palntlngl.

I $1l9 5 ~~~~~HTRg~EANING
11
446
8059
I
z
SCOTCH~ARD
f
II ~
mSTAILEY! STEEMER. I1
---------------

• ---,;;-- -

· LOS ANGELES (AP) - ''The

"The

•

ANNOUNCING:

Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases
, of Heart, Arteries-and Veins.
Cardiac Catheterization - Pacemakers

sleeptng Danae Being Prepared to
of Art.

Mon. ihru Fri. 9 A.M.- 9 P.M.
9 A.M. --S P•M.

.

. . and save on your
homeowners Insurance, too. ·
•

7 ~~NJ~~T:J.E:.E

fRANK RIV AS1 M.D., f .A.(.(.
HEART SPECIALIST
·
U.S.A. BOARD CERTIFIED

GALLIPOLIS ·Gallla
County Extneslon Homemakers
will p1eet Wednesday, 10: :.&gt;a.m.
at Grace United Methodist
Church. Program will be ~
Saundra Koby on Calllgrapby.
Potluck lunch will lie at noon. All
county homemakers are Invited
. to attend.

GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke
.. Club will meet Tuesday, 8 p.m.
; • at the home of Mrs. Michael
• · Corbin, 644 Foyrth Av~.

lr::::~=::~~=::::::::::::;;~:;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;j-}::::::::::::::J..:~-=-=-:-:-~
·::-::-:_:-~-:-:-:-:-:-::-:-::-::-::-::-::-::-:-~

Protect your·home
against fire and burglary, ·

Major painting
.is acquired

PARKERSBURG

~

... .

o::JJ

Per Room
Min. Rooms

.!.U~
as
E l

Dear Meg

Gallipolis

SPECIAl.

·

(~n~~cond &amp; Court

WEDNESDAY

GALLIPOLIS -lt!kht to Life
will meet Tuesday, 7: :.&gt;p.m. at
Buckeye R\ll'al Electrtc. Public
Invited.

FREE

704 GRAND CENTRAL

Buster

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area ·Chamber of Commerce
will hold Its monthly meetmg
Tuesday at noou_ at tile Meigs
IM. Scheduled guest speaker
will be Dr. Clodus R. Smith ol
Rio Grande College and Community College. All members
are urged to. attend.

.

'1,000 ROllS TO SELECT FROM
All NEW PAmRNS
HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION

-..--

•

SECOND
DOUBLE
ROll

OFF

Gallia senior activities

DOUBlE
ROLL FOR
AND GU

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet' Tuesay, 7: :.&gt;
p.m. at the lodge. Work will be in
the master mason degree:

TIJESDAY

IJLEARANCLSALE -

effect until Feb. 17, he advises.

POMEROY-,-- Xi Gamma Mu
··SororitY wm--mt•ei "TuesdtLy, ·;·: :ii
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
Knight. A white elephant sale
will be part of the program.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Rotary wtiJ meet Tuesday, 6
p.m. at Oscar's.

SEMI-ANNUAL
SELECT

'X'c
planning.
"Everyone wants a beautiful
wedding," says Cele Goldsmith
Lalli, Editor-In-Chief of the bridal
magazine, "but a lavish ceremony .
without .a mature understanding
and a sertous commitment between
the couple is meaningless, The
most ·perfect weddings are tho!;e

am

ties t!lvlded? Did -your motherworit
their families and that ar'eas rjf
differences and similarities · be , outside the home? Did your father
·· share household chores and chlldIdentified.
ca-ie? Were the"' rigid sex role
Consider these questions about
stereotypes?
your own family and ask your
Are there frequent arguments at
!lance to-J.. do the same·. then
home? How do family members
compare notes. Once you start
show anger, disappointment, or
thinking along ttoese lines, other
hurt?
Issues may emerge.
Does J-9.11£ !~ID!IY. ~pend ~lelsur~ ~ __""
. How do :;our parents...lrea!-Jbe!r
time
together? Are frtends valued
parents? Is there a respect for
as
an
Important part o1 famUy life?
cultural and/ or religious. 1radltlons
Are
there .any tabOOs In your
and generational ties?
household?
Any prejudices? Are
What Is the atmosphere ot the
ashamed
of ~ny family
you
home? Are family members open
member?
and demonstrative, or private and
The analysis of
backreticent?

LV -

pressure

POMEROY- Meigs mothers
are lnvlti'd to attend the Monday
· night· meeting of the Point
Pl!'asant LaLeche League, 3003
13rook Drive, Point Pleasant,
7:30p.m. For more Information,
contact Elaine Matheny, 6754439.

RELY ON STANLEY STEEMER
FOR QUALIT~ SERVICE &amp; VALUE

........,IIUUUJUlJ'

Sonville Senior Citizens will have
blood
day, Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon. Ferndora Story,
R.N. will be In charge and the
public Is Invited to come to the
town hall to have their blood
.pressure taken.

ROYAL OAK-- Belles and
Beaus · Western Square Dance
Club will .sponsor lessons ~n­
- nlng Monday, 7 to 10 p.m., at
• • Royal Oak Park Recrea ilona!
· Building. Instructor . John
Waugh: For Information, call
992-2500, 992-7261 or 992-7477.

-

tfollU:

. HARRISONVILLE ~ Harri-

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Junior Women's Club will meet
Monday, 7:15p.m., at Woodland
Centers.

---

It doesn't take

that truly reflect the depth of the
couple's love and ~t lor each
other: 'l11e only way to achieve that
depth Is throi.gh open, honest
communication."
A relationship, especlo!Uy a J11art·
tal one, demands aquantum leapol
_faith In one's self and one's partner.
Some good sei)Se must temperlalth
and..lm•e,
a ille!lrne".roromlt- ~~~ent to one special person must be
carefully evaluated. According to
· the Modem Bride Guide, . the
engagement period is the Ideal time
to set prtorltles . and determine
sbared values for the future.
One effecltve
tu
this._Js

lege. Members are urged to
attend.

~-

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'

The Sunday Tmes-Sentinei-Page B-7

. . ~~~;,:u._~~!;!~P~~~ - ~~~!~~~-~!RIO~r"!!~1e

____

By ?HARLENE HOEFLICH
Meig~ County with relatives.
local scene. .
.
'
.
.,...-....- ·'""""' ...--- 'iiiey l:ame--- i~enr jUst= Ueture= ·Jc!!!!~~-·R.~t!! ~- -a?!f!-=J.::~ ,_.,_ !~r-- ::: ·A· . . ,!, -~ • - • ...
.,....,.,.._~.:o- , ..&lt;~
Again this year the Return
Chris!mas from Kallus Marine pre-holiday observance were Mr.
OOSS
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Base in Hawaii where Russell has and Mrs. JamesArnold 'and Mary,
-"OVERLAND PARK,, Kan : (AP)
been stationed. However since last Cincinnati. Jim and Gloria then·
Daughters of the American RevoluThe Ideal employee is conscientlon are collecting cancelled com,July, he.has been in Kenya , Afr1ca went on to 'Tomoca, Wash. tospen(j
tious,
competent, loyal and commitmemo r a t i v e
on a tour of duty aboard the New Christmas with another daughter,
ted,
while
the Ideal boss Is a good
stamps for hosplOrleans.
Laura and her husband, John Budd,
listener,
supports
the staff, and Is
tal'zed veterans. ·
Karl is the son of Pearl L. Russell at Port Lewis.
fair
and
honest.
·
.
and the late Kenneth. Russell,
As explained
These
were
the
traits
named
most
For those of you interested In wok
by June Ashley,
Racine, and Mrs. Russell Is the
·
frequently
by
managers
and
emdaughter of Mr. and_Mrs. Roy 0. cookery, don't forget !bat' come
ployees
who
took
part
'tit
a
recent
,
,Sml1h, P9lJleory, For Christmas, Wednesday a class will be held on
stamps are "not
survey
ronducted
by
PadgettMrs. Russell and the Karl Russell the · techniques of stir frying,
common everyThompson, a business seminar finn
family joined Mr. and -Mrs, Floyd stttaming and deep frying at the
day stamps but ones which pay
here.
County
Extension
Office.
Meigs
Chapman (Kenda Russell) and
tribute to famous people, state
T!"n percent of the 529 managers
The class will be offered from 1 to
daughters, Shelley and Kim at
flowers, birds, special hQ!ipays,
who
took part In thesurveysaldthey
3 p.m. and then repeated from 7to9
_Pickerington.
etc."
would
not change anything about
p.m. Registration fee is $1 and that
- She suggests that a small border
their
employees,
but only 2 percent
Judy Arnold added yet another covers materials and the "taste
be left around the stamp when It is
said they
of
566employees
surveyed
doll to her fantastic foreign collec- testing" which will follow. Cindy
cut off and asks that Meigs
already
)lad
the
Ideal
boss.
Oliveri is asking for reservations by
tion over the holidays.
_
Countlans check their Christmas
Mr. and Mrs. Harley DeVol"of Tuesday at 992-6696. Isn't it time to
card envelopes ior stamps before
Tipp City. came to Middleport over try something different?
tossing them in the wastebasket.
the holidays to visit Ruth and Judy,
I
Mrs. AshleY. "((ll be placing a
Have
a
,nice week!
especially
to
brtng
Judy
a
and
"Stamps for the Wounded" box in
Bavartan doll which he got In
The Dally Sentinel office. The
stamps, she tells us, will be used In
Germany while there visiting his 1 --------------l ~'t.-·
sqn. DeVol, formerly of Middleport,
collecllons maintained by veterans.
Is one· of several responsible for
starting Judy on her -fabulous
And speaking of stamps - ·
collection many years ago. When
Joe Struble, Middleport postmaster, -·-sa~~q~::-r!o:;- are ~ming--in-·-- she w-as 12

- ·

POMEROY -Pomeroy Area
Cllamber of Commerce will hold
.Its monthly meeting Tu~ay,
noon at the Meigs Inn. Guest
speaker will be Dr. Clodus R.

MONDAY

::t:~~e.:~~tsstatesas

'""-'". ,. -·= ''iitil~"Sentie1' Siaii

POMEROY - Melgli County.
Board ol Education will meet
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at -the offices. A
regular meeting will follow the
orgaJilzational \neetlilg:

LECfA - The Rev. l!.arl
Hinkle will spe'!k at Walnut'
Ridge Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.
He will aJSo be In the morning
service. Public Invited.

'

Functionrof _ -engagement .is topic of·book

~ 'l'ueltlay. S p.m. for the
annual organization l\)Jd regular
· monthly nleetlng. 'I1ie meeting
will be In the Rare Book room at
the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library, 614 Second
Ave.

SUNDAY

PaVY Joe Hlalom and ClllfttiUy

'

Looking - (or-

Bible

~

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

Calendar·

School ,raduallnl from there 1n
11111. She hu been on the New Lite

Job Jxiiili ·;ii1/T.semors
in ful~ part time, ·work

with Mabel Pauley, niece of the
groom, and Missy Neutzllng, providing ihe music. Poinsettias were
used to decorate the church.
Jim lambert escorted his sister to
the altar. Sheworealacegown wlthVIctortan collar and long sleeves,
and earned a bouquet of white a,nd
pink cartJAt!9ns and Ia vender roses.
She wore a · cameo pendant from
Italy, a gift of 1he grOOm.
Linda Rae Donohue, Pomeory,

'···------·--l&gt;leter '-"' ·•J-,1;'&gt;. _..,. ...........,....._·'"'"'" n:o-:o.l.-:1 o'
,
honor. -~~d- ;~;;.. ; ;;;;,;;:~;~h

speaki!r attended

.

-

.

•

Speaker set for Aglow·

POMEROY - Janet F~ye Lam·
bert and Dennis Matthew Donohue
exchanged ·wedding vows at the
Pagevllle Free. Will Baptist Church
at· I: 30 in lhe"affej'hoon on Dec. 16:--The !lrtde Is the daughter of John
and Kathryn Lambert, Rutland.
The groom, · stationed with the U.S.
Navy at Charleston, S.C.. is the son
of Raymond and Dolores Donobue,
Pomeroy. ·
- - - The Rev.'-&gt; Dear!.

Community
corner

j"

'

•Trlgglr Point Injection •Thennogrlphy
•llofltdblok
•N•rve llook
__ C!IIRIISA110N. IIUUNCI. - AC'!'f!l

106 Iuthi iNI ltt.
I'lL ftf.f039
POMROY, 011.
· Or HI· 5721
We Accept All .M8jortrildit C1rd1, and wn.
flo_,. EvlfYWhll'l .

•·

I

,

SullNiay, Jan. 27
3:00 to 5:00. P·•·
'-

THE MEDICAL ..
SHOPPE INC. '-.~.Ac,
· - IUIG JACK~i\i PiKE - ~
OALUPOUI, OHIO

1
'• ·

•

�'

·~

,.

..
Pea•

j

•
w. Va.

Pomeroy:_Middleport-Gallipolill. Ohio-POint Pleeunt,

B-8-Tt1e Sunday Time•·Sentinel

'

·-

.·

•

ports

January e. 198(

New Guinea, ·Af~;ican · art is displayed

•

,.

~.

'.•

..

~imt•· -~Section

198&amp;

"

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - With lnterest ·to a Wide audience lnclud·
McNeer Collection" Wlll also be :
the assistance o1 a grant to the lng schoiars, students ot ·au ages
shown.
Mrs. Jullenne Shinn McNeer wUl :
Institute loa: the Arts trpm the anc! townspeople. Michael Com·
Marshall University Foundation,
leld, Blrke Gallery director, and
present a slide lecture on Pre- ;
the Blrke Art Gallery wt11 present Or. John Dolin, assoclateprolessor Columbian MesoaJperlcan art and
"The Gebhardt Collection pi Al1
of art history, have prepared the
architecture related to the photo-,::
from New Guinea and Atrlca," a works lor exhibition.
· ·
graphs, whlchweretaken•bySeldon;.:
group of Wart and cultural objects
An extensive catalog of lnlorma· S. · Mc;Neer Jr. The McNE!ers havt!~
donated t(;Manhall by the late Ms.
t!onon theobJectslncludtngseveral collected much Information ~
W. Homer Gebharclt, formell Hun· · photographs prepared by Oolln wlll through their travels and share.:;·
tington "resident wllo rollected thi( 'be avallable CIW1ng- the exhlblllon.~- ·tt In this public iecllun~-'1'ttlore"ls·r.IF.'-'''
Iterns be.tween 1!172·76 through an
Among the lter,ns are masks,
charge lor the lecture or the,;:
. ' Artzona gallery.
human and animal forms and
exhibition.
..
The exhibition oftlclally OJle!IS 1\mctlonal ObjeCts 'or wood, clay and
· Blrke Gallery hours are dally:
woven materials.
·
from 10 a.m .. to 4 p.m., SaturdayI····Jian.151rom7togp.m.wlthapubDc
reception.
in conjunCtion with the Gebharclt · from 1 to 4 p.m., Monday eyentngs:
Ori display through Feb. 21, the Collection a rompanlon exhibition
from 7 to9 p.m .. and othereventngs:·

iDgaD haltds GallipoliS
CJrSt CAae loss; ·57·4 9 ·=~· ~!-

(

I ·-·""''"

00~~~~~~~~~Pre-Co~~l~um~·~~~an~~ln~~~~~m~th~ev~e~n~~~ln~&amp;ru
~t~h·Pc~kt~~
~
'
.:; ·bi
"'

:~ ~ l i. ~;~;;

"""""'.....

-

•"" , ••

~

GAU.IPOLiS - Two storms
struck here Friday nigh\'- !he first
by Old Man Winter -' followed
shortly by the Logan High Scllool
basketball team.
And when the wind, snow and Icy
rain finally
outside, Coach

.

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_,__

,__-

~'&gt;-~"- ~...lrt'l:·~-

-,ell-·-- .....

....

••
•
•

-

. ......

. - ....... ...,.

mth :rT seconds left.
'Kept Us WOI)derlag'
''You have to give lull credit 'In
Logan," continued Osbori\e. "They
lu&gt;pt tiS wondering What was going
on and they kept usfr&lt;mplaylngour
It's the first Ume that's
~ ':') ~1,~tzi::::l.'l:

percentage came up a bit tonight
(UIShitllof141or7!ipercent). That
conoemed us because we have not
been real good at the Une this year.
·Against a disciplined deteni;lve
teamllkeGalllpolls,you'vegot to be
able to make those shots."

.

thelrway
we
5749 Soot))eastem Ohio League
lt. We put the clutch free shoot 53 percent fnm the
hardwood victory over Coach Jim • throws In when we needed them. . (GAHS was Zl of 41). The veteran
Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils.
The kids held their composure very GAHS mentor added, ''They· man·
,..
Logan showed Gallipolis why It Is well. We feel we beat a very good aged to take Dant)y (Dressel) out of
PORTSMOUTII -The Southern programs as well as 'the dlsman· Biblical history by the noted French ··
ON EXHIBD'- Works by Yasue Sakoaka and
Ms. Sakoaka Is one of many on dhplay at lhl; gallery
the class of the SEOAL, completing basketliall team here tonight."
our offense. (the Devils' top scorer
Ohio Museum and Cultural Center tllng and Installation of exhlbl~ artist. The paintings... are tO be :
. .,,.
• Sllllllil Twilte are currently on display at the French
through Jan. 31. Hours are Tuesday, 10 a.m. to3p.m
'Took U To Us' ...,. Oz
was limited to Just six points). Give
first half action with a perfect 4.0
Is closed lor a winter recess through throughout most of SOMACC's accrhpanled by Biblical references "
·Ait ColoJQ" bt Gallipolis. This multi media work hy
and 'Satunlay wu1 Swtday 1. to 5 p.m.
Meanwhile, a dejected Osbo(pj! Coach Hardman andhlsstaHcredlt.
record. It was the ftn;t loss of the
Feb. 28. The Museum's shift to a recess. Anyone mshing to contact ao,d .te1d explanations. A series .of ;;
seai;on for Gallla ACademy. The had nothing _but praise for the They Sco.it.!d us well. They .demnter closing rellec~ the
or meet with museum ,staff may Sunday afternoon mini-concerts ::
Chiefs upped their overall record to visiting Chiefs. "They came to our served tOnight's w!n."
' _
-MACC Board of~Et'!e~"~· 1 re-c~~,o!~"(':'?'..ot~9~:l'~~.,. ~ ,..•:·.~!!~=:;:!&lt;:'~'='~~!!e"'~/.!:J'~~="'~!'"''"'~
~1. ~ --,-~~-- place and took It to us. We came
Osborne concludj!d, "Although
better to serve the needs or the
The Southern Ohio .Museum will workS of art In March and AprU. •
GAHSdropped to8-11nallgames . back, tied the
but they were Loganhastheupperhandrlgblnow,
~ GALLIPOLIS - Works by two
ing Education program and Is a
Columbus Art Leaglle ShOw, Co· community and ItS Increased em· reopen March 1 with an exhlbltloln
Area church circles, Bll)le study :
~-·-·~-· ?ns!.?d l'l ~&lt;&gt;~gye~!ln~ ·.
~llleJrulQ!!~back." _ _ _ ,_
· .,_ enYt~Ji!:.li ~£!!&amp;&gt;~ !" ~league.
~ ·-coiumtiiisartlsls will li'e"displayed
member oithe Resource Faculty of , iumbus; and was iiie Eulll\ Fergus ' j;lhasts on promotln~rsummer to~r- · · in 'me~MeZ:za'iiHi!fGlillet· groups, · women·f' assoct11l1mts;':"
Hardman Pleased
Continued Osborne, "Rebounding We have to regroup tvloililay and
.At the French Art Colony, 530 First
Capital University Without Walls.
Gilmore Materials Funct Award Ism, according to -1982-&amp; SOMA\X les entitled "Artlture: Funilture ~ rellglously-hased organizations and ·
"Wedldwhatwehadtodotowln," wasn't a big !actor.untll late In the prepareloratoughgameatJackson
~ve., Gallipolis. through Jan. 31.
·Her works have been Seen recently
recipient, Ohio State University .In Board President C. Clayton the BIE," organized by the Pitts· schols are especially encouraged to :
said a Jubilant Hardman In theLHS game." He felt the final turning this weekend."
~ The work of Yasue Sakoaka Is
at the Ohio Design Craftsmen
1984.
burgh Center lor the Arts and schedule meetings, study sessions ·~
JohnsOn.
After GAHS built up a &amp;-21ead In
lockerroom as the"Chlels ,packed . point came with 2; Zl remaining.
•. multi-media. Ms. Sakoaka explores
Show, Franklin County Library
She Is an Instructor of Studio
Past records Indicate a drop In toured by the Opportunities for the or programs at the museum during •
their gear lor the long trip home.
GAHS traDed 48-45. After a.Gaufpo- the fu;'st 5:04 of pl.ay, LogaJ]_bla!iked
':lhe tWO ·and three dimensional
Gallery , ana ~Winter Fair,
Hl!rtlanltles at Ohio State Univer· attendance by viSitors and school Arts. · ·~
- the exhibition's tenure which runs : ·
"Our kids rose to the occasion In Us steal, a Blue Devil was fouled.
the home learn 14.0 over the next
Columbus.
·
slty and a free-lance graphics artist tour groups during the bad weather
&gt;worl? of Origami which Inspired
On March 16 SOMACC Is to open through AprU 20. Glenna Forde, '
the final period (afterGaUlpollstled Gallla missed two free throws, fourandahalfmlnutestotakea16-6
;:m.d suggested shapes and form (or
Susan Taaffe Is a sculptress for The Media Group, Dublin, Ol)lo,
months. SOMACC'scurrentbudget I~ major spring exhibit lrl the SOMACC theatre artlst·lri· •
. It at 36-all). We could have easUy Logan's Keith Myers picked off a
lead.
··
~r panels.
working In oil paint and wood. Her
Sattlemeyer Films, Columbus, and levelandstaffstzedonotallowalull Edmund J. Krlcker Gallery, "The residence, will offer a special .:
folded, butwegottheflrstfourpoln~ rebound from the second miss, and
The Chiefs led 18-8 alter one
,; Ms. Sakaoka has art degrees
constructions are contemporary In
Vldeotronlcs Inc., VIenna, VIrginia.
12-month Pf.grammlng schedule, Biblical Paintings of J. James program, "Art: Our Spiritual Jour- :
of the quarter and controlled the Troy Wright was fouled seconds quarter, . 28-22 at lntelsslon. The
"from Reed College-Portland Muuses ·of form and color. Ms. Taaffe
Gallery hours are Tuesday, 10 Johnson sali:l.
Tlssot."
ney," In conjunction mth the :
.
game's tempo thereafter," Hard· later. WrlghtmlsSed!ll'efrontendof seore ·was tied :J6.all alter three
.
.
::lll!un\ Art Scbool, and the Univer·
has a M.F.A. In painting from Ohlo . a.m. to 3 · p.tn_, Saturday and
Although · closed to the general
Scheduled lhrougb the Lenten exhibit which may.be scheduled by' : .
4-0loopmark.OnleftlsLogan'sTroyWrlgl&amp;(2l).On
mancontlnued.
his one-and-one, but Kerry York
periods.
J¥)WL§ . 'EM OVER - Gallla Academy IDgh
-~tty of Oregon. She Is a lecturer for
State University. She has exhibited
Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. Al~exhlbltlons at . public, staff members will continue and Easter seasons are 100 render· request.
right
are
Keith
Myers
o1
Lopn
and
Kev
Carty
(30)
of
Hardman
siltd·
,
"It's
very
pleas·
picked
off
the
rebound
and
was
Chiefs Up By lf
School'• 5-8 IIOphOmore point guard Gary Harrison
:'the Clhio_Jitl!~ University 'contlnu·
at lhe Kuban Gallertes, Cleveland,
the French Art -Colony are free and
•
working on future projects and lngs of Old and New Testament
~
.....
~:;:..::~-!i:
_.~;:_~·
!~
G!!lllpolk
on
diP.
hnilrd$._,
~
,
1.1\.
=.- ~-~gJ~~d,_-st-Ga.llla, .E.~-g~l] ~t.!_m_e nut ..,., fn-..!100, Bt ..,t~-~~ rrny;k=Z-r.E..~~I,t-:&lt;-:-=-. ~~) b!gg~t
~~~~ ""':'-'as 14
•
.....,.-..;-.-·,.-N&gt;.:=.::-::;;-,::-·- - ·
·= : • .. ~ . ~ ~· " '· ~ "' -·~ 44irGail~iy-;lin!l- the fith- Annuiii · open to the public: ~c-·· - ·~ · ·~ ~
gua~ up anU over·a-toUih Logan deiem~e in ..FnWQ's~
rebounds.
He
also
paced
the
Galllalls
In
srorlng
mth
our
kids
seem
to
be
getting
better.
both
of
his
charity
tosses.
That
gave
poln~.
26-12,
mth
4:24
remalnlog In
SEOAL hardwood conlellt In the GAllS gym'. Logan
14.
·
Theyarelearnlngwheritoshootand
the
visitors
a
5045
margin.
LHS
the
second
period.
GAHS
cut that
won. 11'7-48, to cornple&amp;e tint half action with a perfect
when
not
to
shoot.
Our
foul
shooting
Increased
Its
lead
to
nine,
54-45
Continued
on
C-2
•

Portsmouth .'museum closes. for winter

:~PAC

so-

exhibits Columbus artists' work

score,

~....-,..,.......,,..-=-:"' "'~~"'-""''·

-.:ljj~_..;,t;f---

:OU Opera Theater to present The Crucible

- ATHENS- The Ghlo University
:apeta Tlulater mil moul)t Robert
Ward's contemporary 'operatic
·:.masterpiece ','The Crucible" on
..Feb. 1, 2, 3 at g p.m. In the School of
:-Music Recital Hall.
, The Crucible Is a chilling opera
baSed on the original play encom&gt;passing the horrifying wltch trials
:of Salem, Mass., In the spring of
1692. Although the.Purltanlcsubject
· matter of the libretto (story) is
hlstortc In Its onctent, the powerful
dramatical music composed by the
cllrrently active Robert Ward
entertains the musical styles of
. composers such as Strauss,
Wagner, Berg, Stravinsky and
other contemporary composers of
the 20th century.
The Crucible was commls.sloned
by the New York City Opera
Company In 1960. The world
·
0

prermere of the opera took place on
Groves; Proctor's mfe Elizabeth
Oct. 26, 196l.at th~ew York City
ProcterwlllbesungbyJuiitorvolce
Center of Music and Drama; and It
Susan Scherban. The roll! of Abigail
was ·sald that Robert Ward wanted
Williams mil be sung by Xlna
his compoSition to be of such great
Larson who may be remembered
perfection tl!at on the night of the
for her (lne portrayal of Susanna ln
final dress rehearsal of the prelast year's production of The
miere In New York, he handed out
Marriage of Figaro. Other princl·
the final manuscript of the fourth
pal cast .members Include Jonathon
act to the orchestra during the
Oehler as Rev. Hale, Wlllam Cruse
Intermission following tbe third act. a$ Rev. Samuel Parris Sabrina
The following year The Crucible Coleman as Tttuba ,Beth Robison
~as awarded the Pulitzer Prize and as Mary Warren, Jennler Scolnlck
the New York Critics Circle as _Rebecca Nurse, and Ben
Citation. .
.
McClellan · a first year graduate
student from Louisiana, as the
The Ohio Umverslty Opera
Theater cast will Include approxl· ' Imported Judge Danforth.
mately :1Q student singing artists
There are several students from
under the direction of Edward
the Athens area who are also
Thomas Payne, 20 of whom will
participating In this production;
sing principal roles. The title role of
Rob Pettigrew as Francis Nurse,
John Proctor will be sung by first
Steve Steward as Giles Corey who Is
year graduate student Jeffrey sentenced to death by being

and choreographer, Parenti's cred·
Its Include the film :'Popeye," plus
numerous~llroadway musleals and
television appearances. He has also
performed his own choreography
for Morton Gould's Concerto for
Tap Dancer and Orchestra mth
Arthur Fiedler and the Boston
Pops. ·
·P arent( has ·been working on

Farm ;boasting some unusual boarders
. SPRINGF1ELD, Ohio lAP) Jim Waugh Is uSed to having exotic
friends on his 100.acre iarm In Clark
County, where domestic animals
share the grounds with a buffalo, a
Brahma cow and an ostrich.
. That's not all. There'salsoasUver
rooster pheasant , a peacock, wild
sheejl, two hofSe?, a timber wolf,
two golden rooster pheasants, white
r.ntaU pigeons, four deer and a
rtiesus monkey.
Wa111:h sOld his bear and his lion

all I know."
Waugh picks up animals at many
places, blit most come from
auctions at Royal City, Ind. That's
where he found Heathcliff, the&amp;-foot
female .ostrlch, about a year ago.
He said ostriches do wen In this
climate and that Heathcliff usually
The other animals are his pets and
prefers living outdoors, huddling
his frtends. He can't recall what got
against a fence [n the coldest
him started collecting exotic ·· weather. HealhciiH eats mainly
wildlife.
corn, though Waugh said she can
"I've always loved horses," he
swallow a half-dozen whole apples In
said. " I grew up In the country- thtsts
a row.

Southent comes
behind, njps Wahama

and~ DinnerS

41 THE LaSALLE RESTAURANT
ONLY

$3 3s· ,

Bysp&gt;'ITWOLFE
Hoot play and a steady hand by
In an explosive itrst period,
'lbnet&amp;nUnelstalf
Harris allowed the To!l'adoes to typical .of many recent Soutliei'n·
RACINE ~ In one of the most
sway the momentum to their side of Wahama battles, the West Vtrglnl·
. dramatic .comeback performances
the floor and keep the ball rolling for ans blitzed to a 24-18 lead. A
In recent years, 1 the Southern
the victory.
somewhat slow'er, but rio less
.•Tornadoes eroded a seemingly
Strong supporting elf9rts from exciting second frame saw Wa·
InVIncible 18 point Wahama White
seniors Kevin Teaford and Darin harna remain In control, despite
Falcon lead In the third frame as a
Roush, illong with juniors Kelley . Southern's continued aggiesslve
Todd Adams' jumper Mth five
GrueserandJayBostlckplckedup play.Waham&lt;lledatthehalf40-32.
seconds remaining tripped the any slack In the SHS offense.
At one point 111 the third lrame,lt
cords lor a 73-72 non-league victory · Teaford and Bostick tallied eight looked as though the Tornadoes
Friday mght at Charles w. Hayman
each, while Roush and Grueser might abandon their ship, but just
Gymnasium In Racine.
canned six apiece.
short of any mutiny, the gutsy
· Adams, Harris Shine
Three White Falcons hit double Southerners made an Immediate

Luncheon Special•
Soup of the Day

POTATO
BROCCOLI

MONDAY: Creamed Beef on To..t.
Groan Beans. Coli Slaw.
TUESDAY: Manotti Toned Salad.
Pon Fried Chicken.
WEDNESDAY' Maohed Potaioeo. Ho·
momade Noodles. Hoked Steak.
THURSDAY: Mashed Potatoes&amp; Gra·
voy. Broccoli &amp; Cauliflower Cauerole.

VEGETABLE
.

CHICKEN

NOODLE
CHEESE

~::~~:~, ~:!:'.::~~~~~~·· Scalipptld

.

an}cos:::~ffo~=tAd= ~ra:~:~~~:;~~~'::~ =~tc=.I~th~:~~~::~'::

~~~ki~~~~~
~·~~~-~·-~r~~~f~~~~~~.~~-~~~nf~~;=~~;G~~·;~~·~·~~;:::~~::~pi~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w~ho~~~~th~e~n~e~ts~ro~r~28
~a~n~d~~~·~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~::.~ ,c.
~
M'if. '

'8ii
unique and exhilarating evening
designed to delight all ages. As the
jester, man of many h~ : Parenti
becomes Iamong mal!Y others) a
bronco buster who tames an
uncooperative Ironing board, and
Fllppa, a formal frogman who iap
dances In tuxedo and smm fins.
Thl.s original blend of artistry and
entPrtalnment Is Parenti's fifth

-- -

Business Lunches

crushed between two large stones,
Charles Merkle, a College or
ME!&lt;llclne employee as Thomas
Putnam, Yolanda Moncayo as
Martha Sheldon, Ronda . Walls as
Bridget Booth, and Sharon Beebe
as Betty Parris. The set designer
for this production Is E . A. Vlcol, a ·
graduate production design major
at Ohio University's Sc11ool of
Theater. The production will he
accompanied by Robert Wilder at
the plano, the Opera. Theater's
Graduate Associate.
Tickets may be purchased start·
lng Jan. 7 in Room 446 at the School
olll!fuslc, Monday through Friday, 9
a.m. until 5 p:m.; or reservatlens'
may be made by calling (614)
594·5235. The price of each ticket Is
:SS. For more Information regarding
The Crucible call (614 )· 594-5888, Of
(614) 594-5235 or (614) 594-6512.

·'
. u • • h
Oh
. . 10
ntvetstty osts ]·ester .ae Lar~·,. ·· debut

"Jester at Large," starring and
created by Noel Parenti. · This
modem-vaudevillian revue will be
presented Jan. 10,. 11 ~nd 12 at 8
p.m. In the Patio 'Fh.eater, Kantner
Hall, Athens. There will also be a
special preview performance Jan. 9
~t8 p.m. for a student reduced rate.
This tap-happy extravaganza

~

""·"'"'

Yorkcttytnthe-sprlngof-t~,anct

WA1CH~ FOR THE ADDITION

:~~~~r?::~:~~~:~~:r~:

Of THE SIDE DOOR
AT THE LaSALlE RESTAURANT

mil be. followed by a national tour.
This recollection of vaudeville,

r·

Jan. 9, 10, 11 and 12 at B p.m. In the
. Patio Theater, Kanther Hall,
Athens. ·For reservations, or to get
further Information contact the ·
Ohio University's Theater Ticket
Office at 594-5010.

last fall because their dally diet of
about 30 pounds of meat apiece cost
too much.
Waugh has lived at the farm 26
years, and earns his living raising
feeder cattle and hogs for commercial purposes.

~

LANDOVER, Md. (A.P) - BUI

Martin seoi:ed' 19 poln~. lnclururig
two clutch free throws with 1: 38
remaining In overtime, as topranked Georgetown escaped mth
an 82-!ll victory over previously
imbeaten Boston College In a Big
East ConferenCe bllsketball game
·Saturday.
.
Marttn:s free throws gave the
Hoyas an 82· 78 lead. Michael
Al)arns' . 23-foot jump shot with 47
seconds remaining pulled the Ea·
gles mlhln two points, 82-81.
Boston College had two chances to
. tie the score, but Skip Barry tllfned·
the ball over on one. possession and
Adams, the game's high scoret mth
~ points. missed a 12-loot jumper
w1.th nine seconds left. . ·
Mldllpn 87,
82
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP)
Guard Antolfte Joubert scored a
career·hlgb 27 points and No. 16

LaSALLE RESTAURANT
992 -613'6

Mlr.)DDL£PORT

BELIE~E

CAN YOU
~ --.

.

• '
'GeorDielOWD
• . U .p. set.·.
S~n'IVeS
e
- 8 . k be
bid by·.&amp;slOB; . UC 8 · ate_0

COMINAV SOON!

actorsatOhlo
inAthens.
The show Is slated to open In New

•

4 12 FT•
1

~~~

•

SATELLITE ·
SYSTEM ..
'

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

'·

COMEJN~AifD ·..

TAKE A LOOK

game Saturday. .
Palomblzlo put ahead Ball State
to stay at J3.12 mth 10:47left In 1he
first half and flnl.shed thehalfmth 17
poln~ ·and 11 rebounds as the
Cardinals jumped to a 33-29lead.

Red~ei1 r~sume play Tu~sday
RIOGRANDE-TheRioGrande
. College Redmen wUl resume action
Tuesday evening as they take a 14-2
mark Into the Mld.Qhlo Cdnference
opener against Malone Colle!:i; at
Lyne Center • .
The Redmen are ·eomlng of{ a

Dre!Sel got off only nine shots aD nlgl&amp; (he hit lllree)
and never had the opporlwdty to 10 to the loullne.
Dressel carried a 14.7 average Into the coMes!. UIS
defenderS on 1e1t are KeiiJ! Myers (33) and D. J.
Conrad ! 12) :

CHIEFS DO A JOB ON DRESSEL - Logan's
. vlsltlnt!: Chieftains llmlted Gallla's top pollllmaker,
Dan Dn!Mel (12) to a season-low slx' polnls Friday
nlgl&amp; wrlhe Hocking County quintet handed the Blue
Devils a 57-e Satdlleastem Ohio League setback.

holiday defeat against ·concord
College, 82·71, In the finals of the
Bluefield State Tournament.
. Malone has complied a 94 record
thus far, featuring 10 retu1111ng
lettermen from last year's second
place squad.

Meigs in tie for firSt
tun .our offense well In the third
By KEITH \'mECUP .
quarter.
I thought. we played good
Times &amp;utlnel sun
defense
most
of the night," said
ROCK; SPRINGS- Meigs gained
a share of first place . In the
Trl·Valley Conference cage race as
the Marauders rolled up a big lead .
early and won handUy over winless
Wellston, 7049, here Friday.
The victory, fifth straight for
MHS, coupled with Belpre's upeet of
Alexander,&amp;)48, threwtheTVCinto
a lour-way tie.
Meigs now shares the lead with

osu

•

I

Ball Slate 81, BG 67
MUNCIE, Ind. (AP)- Forwa:rd
Dan Palomblzlo sco~agame-hlgh
30 points and grabbed 16rebounds to
lead Ball State to an 81Al7 victory
over Bowling Green In a Mid·
American Conference baSketball

Drummer.
Since the Marauders' blg guns
Continued on C-2

Be!pn!, Alennder-and Nel!onvllle-

York. AU own &amp;-2 records. The
Marauders are7-3overall. Wellston
Is winless In nine outbtgs, elgbt In the

'·

TVC.

ONLY

.,

- -

Q.D
.

$99500
I~SYALLID

REMARI&lt;ABLE

.\
'Jtt::'
.......
,:.rc;: .

.

White with carmine cloth interior, loaded with equipment OI"'IY 1 .279 actual miles: Must be se~n to' appreciate:
' .

'

• I

- -

"

.

•

"

. ____ i

ChevroletOldsmobile, Inc.
· 446-3679

...

' I

'

-·-

. After jumping to a 1&amp;-1 first
quarter lead, Meigs outscored the'.
Rockets 11-8 the ftrst six minutes d. •
the secondquarter for a 33-1.5lead.It
was 39-21 at the half.
Balanced ~ was the Ma·
rauders' rortf as 5even players
IICored between six and 13 points.
Senior .D-2 fmwarcl Jay Carpenter
led the Meigs' attack Mth 13 and 5-7
junior guard Brad RoiJinson added
10.
.
Brian Deck led Wellston mth 16
whUe Steve Newman chipped In
mth · 14. The Rock!lls' leading
scorer, Shawn Jenkins, was held to
only el&amp;b.tllQI.nts. Alti\OUib wlnnlna:
UP AND AWAY- Melp' Clrila" ilr . . a.-ri)uuoeroll
by the pre;slded score, Coach Greg
t INn W..._.. llltM Deek (.) tllnll the
Drummer ttwght his Marauden . IDler heM')' PII
lol.ch ....... ollbe M
~
vldlley wI I I
lacked a Uttle !lhootlng tt'\leh. "We
Frldaf
Dial&amp;Tile
...
1110\'fS
Melp
....
lint
place
Ue
Ill
llle
T\IC,
~~~·••wg- !f I•MilalCM!m (II) . . . ta.ldelar two . missed seven shotS from three feet
('J'rriia~S
Cine!
p!dO
li)'
ftMd1
Ha
•
&gt;i'J
~
·
"·
.....-weiiMIIF'Itdaf-Diai&amp;·KGcllet.,..,..lillrlMD*k (it). ~ OfciOei!r bt tbetlnfhBlf. We did not ~

.......

GAWPO...S

~.~'""

--

UPPEI IOUTE 7 "
NEIT TO 1111 HOND
GALUPOUS, OHIO ~ .

1

_

'
.•

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•

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.....

••

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l

�January 6. 1985

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolii.
Ohio Point Pleaiant. W. Va. ·
.-.

The ~unday Times-Sentinei- Paqa C-3

~

Southern

Highlanders scare Wildcats~ lose
50-48
.

--~O~·~··~--~,....~ll~can~~C~l--

p-Jl:DI.?
•~-•••

AmhPI"'I 0 ,
I§
S.. C'tllriEitm SE'&amp;, W•)'t'INVIU~ ~
S. Riner' II. MtDon&amp;kl ~
SpaN Hl,!lh!And !12 , Northm:.- 17
Spmlf:a'o Ill. Klnp M W. 1.1

.

.

-;

scores-- ---.
a.

.-----Friday's
· S.
Lutheran £ .

MERCERVILLE - Two foul
trey attempted a steal on Bailey and nine IW'noVers and the Highlanders Ironton St.. Joe niesday ancl on
was fouled, allowing Bailey to step
n!corded six.
Friday to North Gallla . Tile Hlglt·
shots by Hannan Trace'sPh!JBaUey
snapped th~ Wlld~ats . tie with
forward to the charity line tor the
Earlier, South~tern's reserves lanclerS ~In tdle until Friday,
Southwestern In the closing seconds : game's winning two shots.
posted a 34-19 lead over the junior when they travel to Kyger Creek. · ·
of Fri_day's SVAC game ancJ gave
"I have mixed emotions," Coach Wildcats, but the hosts fought back
•
the hOme C.!!!\!,a~~~~' , !,._kly!l_Tt!lvp~j,~!t,AAter:._.. an'!-ll!l.lff1&gt;~~~af.744:0V!n· --=c; ~AI~.}~AC~J~l...:::~i!.."'!l~-5-Ht;
over the Hlgi!Jitn!lers,
ward. ''We liada clianee to win the . Steve Jarrell led with iB poilliS for
bli ...~ ""'··
~~,..::;;-The foul shooting climaxed , a
ballgame,butwema&lt;letwomental IIT,wh!JeRlchardStlttadclecllOand ~~(II) - Bailey H 9;
-hectic session between both teams.
mistakes at the encl that cost us the Brian Porter iiaa nine.
·
Baker 1-2~; ~hey H-IS; Pc~rey_ :&gt;0-10:
Although liT le&lt;1 nearly all tile way,
game,"
Andy Halslop was high point man
au:,::·:-~ zu.t8.
the Highlanders gained the lead at
The Wildcats, nowH overall ancl torSWw!thlJ.DannyPatr!ckadded · Hannan Tr.::_.. ............. ,.':....H to .16 10-IAI
-least twice and never fell far behind
IIDIIflfeat~ In three starts 1n the 10·ancl Jason Hlll had eight
Sou&lt;hwcs&lt;ern ..................... 12 9 l4 U-48
• ..
.. _
,
•
' " ' - of ,.
pi
•
118ervet - Hannan Trace C7, Soulhwest1
-...,. -tha.IY'
-;- ""'ol"!onr"V\t:t~•
'r'J"-··-··---=""·
-----"~=.. =~----=.._ ....... ,.•'C'Gg".ie;pu:t·~ttl.l-~
.... ~. ::yc-re -~-"·
.::...n--Js~-~"Eek,.....,MT. - p!.::::,~ -haets - t~ ..- ..;ar.o 4e""'_. ...... - _ .
~~
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· 'It was pretty close all the way, "
dOuble-figure scoring. Blll Swain Jed - - . , . - -·- - - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - said HT Coaclt Mike Jenkins. "We
with 14 points, while Deke Barnes
Lyne Center Gym/Pool SChedt&gt;le
led by as much .a s three In the first
-and SteveStltt aclcledl3each.Balley
Week of J anuary 6, 1985
had four points for the winners,
halt, and we got up to five In the
Date-- Cymnasium
Pool
whlleMikeDavlsaddedslxfromthe Jan . 6 ~-J; :JJ p.m . ()pen Rec
second halt, but then they'd come
1-3: JJ p.m . Open Swim
S-8 p. m, COII&lt;go """.
6·8 p.m. College Swtm
fOUl Une. Swain was also top
back, I really have to take my hat off
!P."·
7 6-8 p.m. College Re&lt;.
12: .J).I:.:r. p.m. Fllness Swtm
rebounder, responsible tor eight of
to them ."
!E.:~
. t.: ~
='~ (: ~ - ~
(. '
rugged
Colley had
Fu .....
play by the
kept the score
the season, scortng 15 Jl!)ints ancl
Closed
12: :11-l: Xl p.m. Fitness Swim
. close. liT had a three-point advancredited with eight of his 'team's Zl
6--8 p.m. Colleg e Swtm
tage at the close of the first half.
rebounds. Pelfrey and Justy Burle- Jan. 11 6-8 p.m. Open Re&lt;.
12: .J).l;lJ p.m. Fitness Swim
6--8 p.m : Open Swim
HTbrokeawayfor16polntsin·the
son supplled 10 points each, whlle
,Jan, 12.1:30-.l::xl p.m. Open Rec.
,
l
:.J)..3:30
p.m. OPE'n SWim
third pertocl, but led by only two
Mike Balley chipped In with nine
5 p.m./Redwomen vs. Mt. Vernon
Nazarene
.
going 11\to the fourth quarter . With . points
Baker had four. SW's
Jali.
L1 1-3:JO p.m. Open Ree.
l -3: :II p.m . Open Swim
overall record Is 1·7 and 1-31n loop
·Jess than two minutes rem~lnlng,
S-8 p.m . COllege Re&lt;.
6-8 P:lfl· College Swim
SW grabbed the lead at 4644. The
acUon. '
W!lclcats then·tl"!!lt, butthevlsltors
From the field, the Highlanders
regained theleadona20-footshotby
·shot'44 percent (22 of 49) compared
Sean Colley.
to the Wlldcats' 16 of :r1 for 43
·--· A IMlrd•~ tlJLbY- -~·s. Jr.!!&gt;. B•"~~.~ ~rit. .-t:!~j: ....lll!l~.!lelleL,Jll,dQ
falled, the hosts set up an In-bounds
sltootlng. sinking 18 of 24 tor
OPEN 7. DAYS
play th~t put them even with SWat
percent, while SW connected on four
MON.
thru FRI. 8 to 8
4848. The H(ghlanders' Steve Pelof six shots for 66 percent. liT had

~

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C.fT1)tl

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~ Narthwtlltnl,!ll, Orban~&lt; M
Sllnl&amp;- !On~ a, Dly. SWbblnl !18
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Meigs in first ... __.:__~o~OO!Im~,....!!!trom~c:!..-1_ _
saw less action thaD normal,
fnim tile foul line for ll!l perca1t,
substllutes grabbed most of tile
ampared lo Meigs' 14 of 22 for 6t
Umeltgbi. "Lee Powell ~ again . Paa:ul
came of! tile bmcb to do a real good
Meigs bad 13 f:w'1IIM!rs and
Job. I was glad 1o-Brad Roblnsm · Wellstoo 16. BotiJ teams bad a lllre
drive to tile basket and Parter Long
arnwut of fouls, Meigs 13 and
came of! tile be!lch and did a good Wellston 16.

• • 0: AN USY'I'WO- -,;,· ~~~~~=Q=,::

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tlp, but Logan stole the ball. 1be
score, but so did
Gallla. Then came Logan's fln;t
fourth period goal at 7:34 by Keny
York, and a """"ftft layup by Jim
~·••,.;
Wakl. (7: 01, to give the visitors a
spurt ,,_,needed
.
tQ win~ first
u~3
game on the GAHS hardwood In
seven years.
y ..,...,
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Mel&amp;l11l WellsUJn 49
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Vlnloo Coomy liS Miller 46

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; Soulh

......,.., .....,.,
: 1'1. """"""' !11 Duvai!JJ
• Soulhem 73 Wahama 12

1... , _ ,

F-al·ilocldng atlill!tp

·VIJIUIII ewnty., AleJia.MIJlel'atNebonvtJio.Yorto
warren LocoJ at Belo&lt;e
WelloiM at 'n1miJie

' etwapeallt&gt;&amp;l Swth
•• l\lavmy
61-""'''
Washington
rn at Grf!enfk.&gt;fd,&lt;ma®p l

P&lt;iO! !;2
'· • Fairland 82 R.ock HHJ ~;~
«1

ppnd,

A."S(1

SVAC slandmgs'

,: ,J;,n, 8
NF..OA.L V.\&amp;l'n'

• TPAJI
W L P OP
I.Afpn ................................. t 0 'J:B :1:!6

W. G.uo!ll

Team

W L POP

Swtbem .............................
. -••
t:,'-;:;:, ~"""'''""'"........
~ ; ;: ;: ?':C;;;;k·
.. .
~ : : :.............. , ' "I
~!..hGallla ......................... , 6 ,_,.., .....,,
South-tern .. ,.................. .! 7 443 498
. •u•~
'
~·
Ul(jan rn Ga lllpoll• 49 '
FriUJ'o ~AC - :
101

York paced the Ohlefs with Zl
-A~ 6 and J
k
po lnts · Myers ~ 1
ac
M11Jer 10. York collected nine
rebounds Myetsetght
r ,.....!:llft .. ~hot 54 ~t from the .

Hilnnan Trace ·······--········-~--1 I 481 «lJ
6 j 5JJ ~

CaJJipoU..s .......................... .. 2 1 l?.J 166
Ja&lt;lwln ............. ....... . ..I 2 Jifl :1:1!
I

"w I

' ""'

Afhmi 84 JaClOion ~

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

-

HYAC-~

•

~..-·

.------

fteld (2342,. The Chlers had 24

•

Cree~ !i6 (malwupl
Trac(• 50 Southwestern -t8

/makeup!

' : J1oc1&lt; Hill at (,.,.pealw

8VAC Rflli!JlVI'll

Wa.hinitoo CH at Gn.'('nfleld ttnakt&gt;up l

F'rtllay'" pmt'JI:

'" Team

W L

P OP

Southern ... ...... ... ' .......... ' .... .3

a 165

Kyger Creek ........................ l
Southwestern .................... 1• .1
Norrh Gallla .. ..... ,........... .. _.. .1
Eastern .... .................... ...... 0
TGiall
0

2 13)
2 m
2 133

Hannan Trace .......... ........... 3 0 ~

..O.Ulpolla at .Jackson
.. : ~AthenJ ar Jronron
-r,: 1..npn Za001v1ll4'&gt;
: Pt, PieaBanl itt Millon
.... SouthPrn tH £as tr•m
. _.' F''l!f'land at Chos'Pl"' lw

*'

~' , Porurnouth WeNt at Waverly

Friday't

.... Whel'lersburKat Minford
~ CreentiEid ar Clrcl('V1Jie~: ~·._.cMvtlle Valley ar Nonhwt'f!t
_, South Point at Oak I-lUI

~:

.~

Ju. 1%

·

..

Questloas: How would you like to
take your pick from more than
· 650 Jr,... mov ies each and every
month? Have you ever settled
dOwn.In Iron! of your TV for anaf·
ternoon of basketball- and then
discovered the b..., games 'l'er·

Friday and host Northwest In a
non-league tilt Saturday. Logan
plays at Zanesville Friday,

en't even broadcast to your re-

Box·~-:
-.....-.. .-.;

gion?

w.,.

LOG-'.IIri (J'J) - Mlllft-.f-2-10; Cc:w-ad IJ.O-O; WfWIU

--

~~~ r ..• ' "'' Fann...,
rorAL'! 11-11-ll.
GAWI'OUI &lt;• I - - 2·2&lt;• - " ""'

2*

WINTER INSULA

cany i--2-14; nre..tJ.M; lbrrtson 6-1-ll; Feltur-P
"'::;~ ........,,.,.._ rorAl.S ......

.,,_,,

Answer: Tunin~t in lo Snr('llil f!
TJ- answers all your questions
about satellite TV . See the

dealer helow for a free copy,
But hurry - the . supply Is
limited .

H u-&lt;1

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50 MONTH

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FJ.IEP \0.~29; Harold Hu,qiR 2-3-7; Devt&gt; M cKIJt~·
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POINI' PLEAS~ (II)- Sbnwn NUrr19-0--18;
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_,.,_

PYRODEX • CCI • RE_MINGTON

E lm scored 11. Estep leo I e
Yellow jackets with 29 points,
followed by Chuck Clay with 16 and
Pleasant Big Blacks used a 32-potnt
third quarter to overcome a shaky
Pauley with 13. Point Pleasant
first half and defeat Duval,91·lll,
outrebounded Duval 44-32 with
Friday night:
Morrow and Nibert leading the way
TheTellow Jackets jumped to an · with 10 ·and nine reboWlds,
respectively.
early 11;..10 lead after the first eight.
minutes of play. Duval extended Its
Esteppulleddownllreboundsfor
lead to 18-10 when Bruce Pauley
the Yellow Jackets. The Big'Blacks
connected on a 20-foot jump shot..
connected on 41-7lshots taken from
Durlngthenexta. 36, theBtgBlacks,
the Door (55 percent) and 9·251roin
led by Kelly Rime, outscored Duval
the foul line (36 percent) while the
16-2 to take a 26-20Jead.
Yellow Jackets made31-54 from the
Riffle scored l2 of Point Plea- · court (57 pea cent) and18-:llfromthe
sant's 16 points during that , Big
charity stripe (72percent).
Blacks' offensive surge. Point · The w1n uppecl Point Pleasant's
Pleasant 'retained the lead the
recordto2-3whUeDuvaldrojJpedlo
tJ..6.
remaincler of the halt. It was 37-34
during the halltlme break.
Jwdor Varsity Wins
· The Big Blacks put all thoughts of
The Point Pleasant junior varsity
a· Duval upset aside by outscoring
squad upped Its record to 2-1 with a
the Yellow Jackets 32-19 In the
54-43 victory over the Duval's
decisive third stanza.
• reserves.
Afte r Pauley pulled the Yellow
Tony White led Point Pleasant's
Jackets within one, :r/·36, to start
attack with 11 points, followed by
John Pelfrey with eighL Mike
third quarter action, PPHS reeled
olf the next six points for a 43-36lead
Rhocles and Alan Kauffer each had
at the 6: 35 mark.
seven.
•
With 5: 14 left to play In the
· Point Pleasant travels to Milton
quarter, lhe Yellow Jaclq!ts
Friday for a Pioneer Athletic
um:"""'"'u~t ~-

POINT PLEASANT- The Point

SALE

·INSULATED PROTECTION
AGAINST
HEAT, COLD
AND'RAINI

NAME

!

"'

'fpblle Home Roofovers .

A GOOD

...

,.S,~~~~~J!-= ~ Brir;~~~~lli;,&lt;J_l2_ ancl__!;~;,hl~

outscoring Duval 16-4 over the next
2: 52 to build up a cOmfortable 63-46
·- ·-lead. - - ·~
DUval cut the deficit to nine points
late In the fourth quarter.
· Five players reached . double
figures In the scoring column for
Point Pleasant. Darrell Mitchell led
the Big Blacl$5 with 19 points. Rtme
!md Shawn Nibert added 18 apiece,

:-,•" HOMEUIE

••
••
••
'.•'
••

'

.Jri-Next
Gallipolis wiD play at Jackson

"'"'-....................................... 814

!:

·:

•

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

Fibtr&amp;Jas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

Southern

•

;"•
'•
'•
••

oil a jumper over Wellloo's Brian Deck early Ia Friday~~
Mauraudel' vldoey. Ml'ip defealed Wellston to move Into a lint_.,
lie Ia the TVC. ('l'lrnes-Sedine photo by Rand&amp;' Hoodashelt,

GalllpoliswasfiveoflJattlleUne
(38pen!ellt,andbad17reboun!ls,10
by Carty. · 1be Devils ahd n
IW'noVers.
, •

l&lt;&gt;&lt;; M,..,.

ro- •.•

::!\,-

DISHES

-~~~~~~~~~::::;;~~~~~bem~~·~·~~st~ern;;;;~;;;:;;~~~

--'

·

'

....,..

I 831

,JUl. II pmM:
Ky(I:N C~k a t Southwt!fitern
North GaiJJa at HaMan Trace

Rock HIU at Racf'1.ar'id
South Webst('r, Whcfolersburw

p

GAHS

"'""·

1~

Sl. JOf.' at Hannan Trace

RavenswoOO at s--JU thcrn

• ;

~

.

Gallipolis' top scorer was Kev
Carty with 14. Gary Hanisonadded
U. DresSel, Brett Bostic ml.'To&lt;!d
Bergdoll . each had six apiece for

.' J...

Ky2er Creek 40 Ealitfm J4
Hannan Trace 47 SouHtwl!5lem 14
Jan. R pme~~:
'
Kyger Cret&gt;k at Wahama

.. .raa. 1% plllf.M:

..

•

r;iiiiiiiiiiiiPIIt;...~...~..~;;--;;;;·····l

"' PortJI'l'IOUih Wrsl at South Point

- - ...

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

Y."f'Uston ............................ ··--------1 l-1 ~ 13--t1
~--·--·-·-- ··-· ........ ...................X ZJ H 17-1111

'-" ················ ................... u

rebounilsandJ2tumovers,

Eutern !18 " yger
Hannan

;... .

Big Blacks in romp,
slap Duval five, 91-80-

~• Im~ FWwr-JO.f: Jay C.-pellwor6-l-J.l: Milar

l'ba!Kr! 3-N; 1M ~3-U; Oris~ 1-2-t:
~li 8abr- 2-2-.f; Pu1ln- U.C Z-H: Cbrb ~
6-2-t Roddt~arrt~catOO. TOI'AUau.a.

.

rt'f!UIIIi:

••

TOrAU•u.&amp;
. . . 00 - Rd ..... l-1-1; Br-ad ~

Soulbem ............................ . 0 201

•

•

...... .........,. ' " Dn• f"rk* ·1-t Ed
Sbra11Jellldai l-Oa ElriM ~ltd. U-K

~ J.f-2;

WLPOP
3·
Hannan Trace ... .................. 3 0 177

I

•

IW'UftON ,• • - Br;ibJaop ui; Sit* ~

.w..~

KfNl'UCK\' RIFFlE"r-••·"';..........., $1-69.9S
TRADITIONS FRONTIER SCOUT ........ S129.95
~BLACK POWD-ER'.... ~ ...........................~. ss_
.95 ·

''lle're ,out to.earn ~­
yOur business!"

SATURDAY 8, to 6
SUNDAY 9 to S

TeMl

.. :................... ...... 3
.2 1

..
·:.
•
...•.
.•..
·.
:..••.

lias-=

SouUtnern 73 Wahama 71.

KFJOA.L R"'I!I!Vt:fl
WLP

~

,

Galllpolls got the fourth quat1er

Miller ............................................... 2 6

lloct HUI .................. .. ....... ~ 5 672

• •,..., •., ............................&lt;

Trimble.

........

Mel&amp;l ............................................... 5 3

• • Clftonrleld ... ... .

Hocldng. Wellstoo must go ' lo

,~ ,mr;a.~,! ·~- ~'=-=""~-"'-~·~"'·=l.":;.C'L..~~,..,....--=i;,.,,-~::-r----r:··"1C·ll=ni···~~~~-"'P""~
--~-~"T" " :" ~-~M• ,..,.-',~=,.,.,~. --~
':rvco~1.v,
"' L Logan hands...
ContinuedtromC-1
ONEBANDER-Metp'MlkeChaneeydriveslheleftbu Mr&gt;etoaet

TCUII

561

flJ;

.,.

'l'rlmble ..............................; 3 538

,~;SEO-Al:rg:;;·ndi.~ -:: ~.....
IW.GAM»&lt;w L r or
9 1

•

~r

- Y &lt; r t ..................6 2 ~76 ~19

CHI '

&lt;}""'!}'..... ....... ... ·'

·7 1.A!Pn ......... .................

~

:;
2L
2
2 ~22 ~

~!!". ·............
.............
· ...... ---~
., ............. ,. .. n

,.,

' . Tedenol· ........ ,..... ,..... ..... s 4 5!12 613
• edenol·llr.dlng , ........ :.. .5 5 6.11 fin
~.....,
6 l8l 636
• amn ""al ...........~ .....1 ~ 629 6li5
MJIIfr ., .... ., .......
,,,, ..,, ... 1 9 . 478 641
.) ''ftJAon ...
.. .... ..o 9 s:r; 7;2

;

(1"\'C GAll!!! o•iLV)_

,

a 41-:;x) advantage. Mike CbaDcey
once again led the Marauders with
lD snags whlle Powell bad eight,
Cafpenter and Dave Fisher six
each, aDd Long IJve, Deck led .
Wellston with seven.
n.-.~•-Jostng by a wide rnargtn
WellSton oulsbol Meigs from bJih
the field and foul line."""-"'~~-

TC HAWKEN ..................................~•• S.209'.95...

ana

Job~~~r!t~'t~hmnl..Wffb~· ,.=t,~'-::r~::"'J'

TVC lie.

•.•••.•• ~ •••••••.:••.•••••.••... ~ s17 9. 95

675·1160

Point Pleesant

Store Hours: Monday- Frid~y 8 a.m.-5:00 p.m ..
Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon

Plaza~Phone

•

v

'..

•

IT RIGHT"
•
,,

\446-9335 ,

Manager ~ ·

-·•

-· -·

,,

goo
Bill Kelly '~

"WE MAKE

CHfSTrR, 0".

7 MM-HI TEMP

•

-.

,,

,,

�.

t '

'

'

BySCOITWOLFE

'l'lmea-&amp;ll&amp;lne Slaff
~AST MEIGS ·Led by a
sparkling 23 polrlt effort by Junior
forward Kevin Barber and clutch
fioorptayfromhlssuppo~cast,

percent and hit14of25tromthellne
fov 58 percent. Kyger hit a .very
warm 24 of 46 trom the ftoor for 52
percent, while hl)tlng a near-perfect
seven of eight at the line.
BobcaiiiWlnOalloarda

boYs.

~ad,at t__~~ the frame-_.A~~~

c tlle Yfti ~Ea__!t~Y~~~--5S{X;com.i-troni-behlnd SVAC vic ·
tory Friday evening at Eastern
lllgh School.
Leading57-53withjust46seconds
remaining, !{yger Creek's Anthony
Kitchen sank bothendsofatwo.shot
the S..'O...,;c""5'!''55oEa,stern
lost the ball on an
In-bounds pass play. .
· One LasfChan oo
J&lt;C called a tlme out with 38
seconds left, setting up a play In an
effort to knot the 5core. Eastern's
up
defense tightened, ·

.; ·

· pressure to add fourqlilckpolnts In
the opening seconds of play. Steady
Door play by Jeff Caldwell, Eddie
Collins, and the Bissell
aided
by four consecutive baskets by
Barlll!r sparked ,E astern to a 49-43

""1

~les

slap 6p-48
less on Alexander .

·••

prejlmlnarytUt40-34asTimGorden
and Rich Gilmore combined tor 33
points, Gorden with 16and Gilmore ,
17. ~an Durst had .l2 (or the little
"
E&amp;f!. es, whUe Darrl!l Drenner .;: ·.
pace. theattaCkwith14.

!'£. ···*-="~~t.~ -!Jle .~~ ~ P!Ir.··~1!P.-~·~J~~~~y,- ~ -:::~

THOMPSON

CENTER

...

CVA Hawken Rifle

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

IIIOMI"'IN/C fNIBI kAO IIOWO(I OUI'e!o
..,.~ ,

J

'209'~

-~ ,_,

5

=

50 Cal.

3

50

Perc.

Ca~

Perc.

.:. i t~~~-~:;;:~~;::i~~:·;"~"~"-~~=..::..:. :. ,~.~4::-;~~::;::;;;::~~F":--"""~,;,.,""'~~"'~~"

RENEGADE

'179'

w""''""'

~~;:·r~~;y·:::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::: :~ ~ ~ it: KC's last mtnittecomeback

(VA All (alibtr

Thompson/Center

Percussion

ACCESSORY
PACK

SHOOTERS KITS

C1l.
5· . •50Perc.

$).995

Barber Leads Eagles
reserves
Junior forward Kevin BsrbPr
1:'~~~~;~~J~iH~x~b~~~~ potJJt!L:W,fC&gt;n~~ -: m~~ ~"~~~,~~~~~~~:.~~~~,.

WARREN LOCAL (1!) - HulfmaJ1 .4-.'J.I l; ln,ram
4.&amp;.14: Mlrchrtn 6-~ 17: H.-s..'iOil S.0.16; P!i lmcr 1-24:
Al klrt&gt; ft. :\- 1 ~;

Rauch 1M. TfYI'AlS:..I&amp;-'1!.

'1R1MBLE (MI - Calchf'lt o..i-24: Step:man 1-M :
MotTI!liOn 4-3.11 : 0 av1s l-0-6: Sa.\'11' 1·2·4: Campbe-ll
J. l-!'1: JmniCf'fi.l ,l: Lmr 4-5-1.1. 'ftn'AL.'\ 2+18-GII.
B,v qullrtf'rs:

Warn'l'lLocal .... .... ................ ... .. 22 19 "16 22-'/'J
Trtmbl.r&gt; .... ....... .
. ..... .9 Ll 9
~n·l'!l - Warrrn in:·al :IJ. Trimble JI.

2i--6ll

Buckeyes Win Again
Nelsonville-York
BUC!ITEL puUed awa y la te In the fourth
quarter to post a 61-56 win over
federal-Hocking and the Buckeyes
claimed a share ot' a four-way
logjam a top theTVCstandlngs.

ROCK SPRINGS - Placing five
men In double figures, the Meigs
reserves cllmbed Into a. three-way
tie for third In the TVC with a 75-31
e ake walk- over Wellsto n he re
Frtday.
'
Mdllty Hart led the Uttle Marauders' charge with 14 points while
Sq&gt;tt Powell had his season-high of
· 13, Huey Eason added 12, and Steve
. Musser and ~esse Howard chipped
In 10 apiece, Allen Asbley led
Wellston with six.
- After taking ~ 15-5 first 'period
-lead, Meigs rolled over the Little
Rockets 40-12 In the next two
periods for a huge' $-17 lead going
Into the final quarter.
Coach Mlck Childs' reserves are
6-4 on the year in aU games and go to
5-3 In the TVC. Belpre Is 8-0 ·and
Warren Local 1-1. Wellston goes to
0-9 overall and 0-Sin the TBC.

T~tr
t-1-!1: Bamh.ar1 G) ·l1: Tak ach 0-2-2:

FEDERALHOCIUNG !511 - M111Iack fl-.1-19:

1M :

f: thr~r&gt;

Hw·rolll - ~7: Klnr~ 1·1-4. 'I'O'I'tU..'tZI · I~.

NEL'WNVDLE-\'ORK (at)- Bullock 10.,'1.21: Day
6:{1-0; Bmtll')' !'J.J -11: _Kllnr 10.:~2.'1 : Waltrrs 1.0.2:
Bol!.v('('r 142. TOTAlS 2'7·111.
B,v qlUi nr r.t
Fffit'rai - Hoddn~ .. ..... .. .. ... .. ....... ... 12 !t 16 19- ~
r\f'I!1011VIIIr-York ......... 1,..... .......... 12 17 l2 :JJ.--bl

"

,.,

Mei~

the Tomcats' home boards.
Warren Local , winning for only
the third time this year, roUed to a
22-9 first quarter lead and went on
--- top-41--22-at-the hal!.-'l'rlmble·neyer -- ·
seriously threatened after that.

Box score:'

-'

IIEUSTON 1a11 _ Allen Ashley :HH;: J""
Johnston 1-3-5: Greg H.ay 1·2-4: Keith Doyi"'

'

points. Freshman Brent Bissell
canned 11, brother Royce Bissell
eight, Eddie Collins and Jeff
CaldweU six each. The Bobcats
pUfced threepeoplelndoubleflgures ·
as Chuck Vogel spearheaded the
attack with 18, Anthony Kitchen
notched 12, and Steve Waugh 11.
Eastern's opening Up went out of
bounds to Kyger Creek setting up an
Inside field goal to Larry Edge with
6:55 showing In the Initial frame .
Just seconds iater Eastern Ignited a
shal"p-looklng fast breaking attack,
hittlngJeffCaldweUinthelanefora .
2-2 tie with 6: 50 - left. Going_
nip-and-tuck In the early going KC
went up 1&amp;8, but Eastern battled
backtoa20-16deflcltattheendofthe
frame.
A competitive second period was
playedqulteevenlywithKCtaklnga
slight advantage of 34-29 at the half .
Storming, out of the gate In the
third frame, Eastern unveiled a
run-and-gun attack and full~court

LCR1ooo

1 '"

"

..

Wllh

·$19995

$)995

,,

at
Waterloo, John's
and Buf·falo, among other places, averaged
more than 200 conversions per year
on this charge. Prayer meetings at
Flag Springs_' were beld every
Frjday evening In 1913 at the home .
of Charles Rice Jr.
In reading the Flag SPrtngs news
·In 1913 one finds a lot of news
concerning 'tbe passab!Uty or Jm.
passab!Uty ol the roads,
something ,
'
Ice.
mu~ was a severe
problem then.
The condition of the roadS made
traveL difficult but apparently not
Impossible as some peop~ rode by
hOrseback and some, like peddler
, Arthur Ham, who sold Watkins
remedies In Flag Springs In 1913.
traveled by "Shank's pony."
iDGHWAY ACCIDENTS were
common even In this horse and
buggy age as we note In Mai-ch,
·- 1913, that Thomas E!aD. working for
John Null, upset his wagon and
deposited on the roadway 60 dozen
broken eggs. ,
In 1913 {.qotbaU was a spring_ sport
In Flag Springs as this village
fielded Its own gridiron squad to
play the likes of Waterloo and
Patriot. Modern-day deVotees of
the pigskin manta . would hardly
recognize the type offootllaU plaYed
., at Flag ,Springs In that period,

however: ·

'

Wildlife
notes-••• .
By TOM BELVIU.E

304-675-2988
Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.; Open Sun., 12 Noon to 5:00 p.m.
Located Be,ween Poinl Pleuant &amp; Maeon on St. Rt. 62 Next to Ma1on County f•irwounds
I

Brya n R!ppeth 1..0.2; Gary VanBidder 1-0-2;
Kelly Perkiru; ~1-1. rorALS 12-7-.11.
MEIGS (75) -: Marty Hart 5-+14: Scot1
Powell &amp;1·13: Huey Eason 6-0-12: 'Steve
Musser
Jesse Howard

•

-

...
•

..
- ·
·• •.._·~

•

1'"

I

.,.:Siinbed'b;'uiiJ

folAG SPRINGS United Met..;..D. Cllurcb'wu
with tile lint llalliiiDs millie ol rouild .... .-tructed m·J8SII on a1t111
80Uihwellt oUhe~l church. The pr! rentehllrchoyuerectedllllJ21
on land donatee! by EmJiy Webller Pattenqo. Some c!f the early
families In the FJq Sprlap oommwdty lociUed oo stale Boule 141 were
Maddy, Belcher, Bal, Sawlden, Webllter, and Malllle. In the World
War·l pel'lod, FJq Sprlnp even haltlM own_foolball team.

'

Special Correspondent
GALLIPOUS - Have you IDled
. your Ohio deer tag yet?
U you have had my kind of luck,
yo1!._haven't. Not to worry though,
we stUI have the three day
mtizzleloader season tn take home
some venison. This year's season
runs Jan. 8, 9, 10 wbich Is Tuesday

~~~~~~~~
3.4•8
~

8Wot h e&gt;e nange. L
;;,,,.a

' 180 day free repfaceiJ'ient perior.J
Aeco mm ehd e~

G Nationwide
'

~~~~~~~~i
41
•
8
8
.
~

1-0W30 Motor ·
. Oil

/ltn. e•cnanQe llm&lt;tcd, 60 mon&lt;n ,.aoranly
36 5 dayl ree re placement period delivers up to 540 co ld cranking amps E• ·
c eeds new vehicle manu fac ture ~pec rflc at• on . Ma r n t enan c ~ free • Reg. 44.&amp;8

Limil 12 Reg . 79'

•Neve~ needs Wilter under norm a'l condi tions.

Your Cholc•

14.88
Battery Booster Cables
120312 U20816

88_t_

Your Choice

Your Choice

sa-~ -

r·

Athens beats Jackson
for first loop victory

Snap
Washer
Fluid
Winter/Summer
FormUla. Safe for all

Snap "
De-Icer or
•.Starting
Fluid

llnishes. WWS106.

Your Choice

2.88

Prest one
Anti-Freeze
Tester or
Anti-Freeze
FlushiFIII Kit
R~g. ~-,•...&amp;

3.49

1.99
Stant
Thennostats

,... W!'WI .,......

scoring.
Cassady led GaiDa's scorers with

GoUtpotts. .................................... s 11

~~ p.~ • • ~-

..

"--

-~--··

c."""'"'·&gt;&lt;:""""
3-9-lfi: Wott• 4- ~ 0 """''' Stllw~t~ M...cort
0.1 ·1• WsUII42: IUcham
'lm'.ld.B IJ.IN'7.
Go\LUI'OIJ!I ...,,......,. '"l - F""" &gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;:
CaMad)' S.J-13: Sptncrr142;
Wlclillnt&gt;
01

1 · 1~1

Jarboo~-8:

OOOMW..-&gt;J~: C.HowMdOOOHol&lt;11&gt;2: -

u:.·~-~ '~

Auto Snlt:l
Far Mn GDOII lllars
. 111 'ltlur cat

...

'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

242 WEST MAIN ST.

'

992·2101

Reg. 2.98
Prestone Wat er Pump
Lube #AS11 t
Reg. 1.39 . . . . • 98'
Prestone Funnel
MF/1430N
Reg. 79' • • • ••• •• 48'

From

19.95

300 &amp; 700 series ..
Reg. 2.89

WPI m1y ,uun tn
r~ lll

chllatl

Many other
lhermoetels at
Ever-,dlly Low

Prlcoo In eHIICI"Januery 8, thru Jonuary 12, 1M~

209 UPPD RIYII lOAD .
446-3107
· OPEN
7 DAYS A WEEK
We ,...,.. the rltiM to limit quentltloo.

POMEROY

JOHN FULTZ - J. MAICUS FULTZ

-~

~

•

• lnc:lua.t Ull lO ,,.,.
Q\111'11011
• !lpec o ~CHI I"" h ltiH

or
Super Sealer

.

13 ,l , llhTI
B..,_..

,b.-

LU.E, OIL CHANGE I FILTEA

1.98
Super Flush

Prlceell

. . - · . .. .

"*""·~

Reg. 16.95 119.95

.,

'

,..

. -4 -tor$1'......_ ~~ - 3.-44 ·
Zerex

Snap
Gas-line
Anti·
Freeze

t-7---:::::-r Ant-i·
Freeze

Don 't lei wlnrer stop
you cold! ltS575
Limit 8 Reg . 39' ea.

.

~eg . 99'

LOGAN...,.......,. tnl -

for ,'/ehi cles w•th moderate amount of power op l!ons

Reg: 37.88

..... .. ............. .. ....... 5 7 5 .14-31

Box1100re:

50montn waoranty
~IIYE!fS up to 380 cold
crank ing amps

-·--,J,,-thr(U.!,!!hThnr_~ay

...... ... ........... ... ........ .15 a&gt; a&gt; ID--15

1~ points. Todd MUier added nine
and Jackson had eight. GAHS Is 7-2
overall and 2-11n loop play.
Mike Derr led Logan's attack with
15. Kelly Wolfe added 10.
Logan led 10-2early, and 13:8after
one period. GaUia led 23-20 during
the halftlrne Intermission, and 31-27
going Into the final period.

mon~n ~ar anty

7•8

8wttn e&gt;ehange Ll mlled 40
90 days free re placeme nt period delive rS: up to '31 5 cold crank1 ng arnps
Recommended for vehicles with limit ed poWe r opt• ons Mamtenance free•
at an e~onomy price. Reg. 30.88

.

Each team had 20 players, all of
whom were aUowed on the Oeld at
the same Ume. In addition, there
was no runnlnll of the baD. The'

2-0-4 ; Mlli:e Hill 2.fl.4: Rusty Rankin 1-1·3:

GALLIPOLIS- Five free throws
In theflnal49setondsofplay, two by
Tom Cassady and three by Kirk
jackson, carried theGaWpollsBiue
Imps reserve basketbaU team to a
44-37 victory over visiting Logan
Friday night.
Logan's Papooses, now 9-2overaU
and 3-11nslde the Southeastern Ohio
League, had reduced the GaDians'
lead to twO, 39-37, on a tip-In by
James Burcham.
·
Cassady's chartty tosses made It
41-37 and Jackson hit two more with
.. t th .
;14left, J acksons' free •~~
uuuwa e
0; 00 mark completed th£ game's

The Sundlly

Ohio-Point PleeNnt. W. Ve •

polntEasternledbyelght,butcould 28-23; led by Waugh's eight and ,Jnale&amp;j,-uebattle.
' never pull away as thedetennlned Pennington's four. BrentBisseUhad
Box IIC-&gt;re:
· Bobcats never gave up hope. six for EHS and Eddie Collins had
EABTI!IL~ (II) - Kevin &amp;,bel' 1~23:
Eastern controlled the frame
five
Grell Leaohman 2-0-t: Jeff Caldwell 1-U;
"
•
Eddie ColllltO 2-2-&lt;;: Jimcaldwell ()&lt;H): Brent ...
outscoring Its guest, ID-9.
Eastern' s Jeff CaldweU threaded
s-n4-J-n: Roy&lt;:&lt;&gt; a~sen ~~-8: Jtm Weber
Much of the fourth quarter . the needle for five assists of a total
Wll. ror.wJ t=-14-18;,. .
.~ , · .,.,;'·"·-·-~
EaStern fea by $IX; tip ·wa $--49 -- 12; EffS Had Ll steals, 15'tllrli0Ye1'8'"· ~~_gft"~;i:il~Ki~~",
score will) 2: 12 J;"emalnlng to set the
and 12 fouls. K&lt;;; had fOur steals, 19
4-4-12: Rodney Morgan 2-0-t; Larry· Edie ,,
stage for the exciting finale.
turnovers, 12 aslsts, and 21 jlerson2-0-t: Gary !&gt;ennln_!1' 011 2-2-~. Zl-7-11.
Th e wJ nners of Coach . DennIs als. Kitchenhad flve .......
· ·· ·•·ts.or
• KC .
""''"'
hy
quonm.
.
·
.......:...... ,............. 11 13 It .__.
Elch!ngerhit22of60ahemp~Sfor36
The young Bobcats wqn the
K.fprCroel&lt;.. .... ... .. ... ;....... ,. •• 1 .11-111

~

Trimble'79,WJUtS66
TRIMBLE - Warren Local ,

...,.., '•

.1&lt;

' ' ' li

who had bEen cazyylng a hot
hand, thus forcing Larry Edge to
take the earner jumper. Eastern
controlled the rebound with ~
secondsshoWing,forcingKCtofoul,
sending Eddie Collins to the line for a
one-and-one.
·
.
Collins shot just nilssed and· KC
BELPRE ~ RobPrt Miller's 19
and coasted to a · 65-46 wi.n over was off and nmnlng.
pillnts led Belpre to a 6048 win over · MOler.
Momentarily, a KC offender was
previous league-leader Alexander
Chip Alman led all scorers as the open -In the corner, but a key steal
to throw the
TVC race Into a
Vikings hit for 20 and Steve Hamon fron1BrentBisseU tooktheflnalpuff
&lt;~&gt;-'~"'"fow-,wao;;rtJ;;·llh\1;reiiY"Beip1-ecPQerA•F·' " '· addeC .l2 . .Just .~!!~.!p,from.lhe.- · of~ '.Vi.""ld.. from· !1!9-E&lt;Dooat- a-ttack:•
andl)r, Nelsonville-York , and
reserve team, Craig WilsOn re- With nine seconds · remaining,
Meigs. ·
spondedwith11toleadMUler. Kelth Waugh fouled Collins, sending him
Roberts added 10.
to the line where he Iced the game
AJ.h..vmEII (..SJ - Frrps 4-2- IU: J('('lt"'"S 4.0.8;
o
.
with a clutch foul shot. Eastern
Carsoy 3-1-11}: Camptrll ~: Hllrkl&lt;' J.&lt;Hl:_ Fa rk'~·
MJILEll (46) - Tqt h [1..().(1: Ca~l:rll 3-2;1': RIW'
2-{H: ,Qnwon 14 2:' \\'ifiSOO 1.0.~. Tor.u.s ti-M.
t-0-2: Ro01.&gt;r1~ ~lO; era!g ()..()..(J; c ra wfor'd .i-t -7:
c1eared the 11nes, pu ttlng conseiVa~
Bfti'&amp;E Je ) -· Rubk' J.Q-2: MUI&lt;&gt;r H -19; Crt'£'11
Thnm,...ua w"'"" " ·ll.TOT.us......_
live pressure on the Bobcats as they
(}-2-2: i..Qcut' H l4; Mfi\J('('(}-2-2:.Hokk&gt;r 2-5-9', Thrnl'l"
YIJ'III'ONOOlNI'l'(ID)-Hamon&amp;O-J2: Bollmdrr
hedd
Ch kV
1
1-J-.1; Nrwbeny 3-l-9. TOTALS 19-~
2.{).4: Cllllland 4-MI: Saundt-rs 2.(;.41 Alhwl 9-2-n
marc
own cow1. uc oge
By QIIaJ1ers:'
M•oc H&gt;:
~ani&lt;'YH&gt;! TOTAL'!&gt;»...
got off a flnalshotfrom the middle of
AleKIJ,ndPr ..................................... H 10 10 14-48
8
YO"""''"
,
the key, buthiseffortfeUshortasdld
BciPIJ':.........
....... .............13 16 13 18-tll

•. ,.

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

-~--

6, 1986

Eastern rallies to defeat Kyger Creek

I I

1.19.

Bars
Leaks
Radiator
Sealant

lasting s ea~ l n
radiat ors . hearers or

From

9.95
'

&gt;

Washer
Pumps .
All original equipment
NOP964 Aeg. fr?m

Prefects a ll year
freeze-up's, b oi lo\lers
"&amp; corrosion.
Reg . 3.88 Lim it 6

19.88
Battery
Chargers
4 amp #A 76 12

Reg. 26.95
6 amp MB76t 2

Reg. 29.95 _. ..

22.88

10 amp #C7612
~.g . 37.95 •. ' ' 30.88

10·. 88
Big G &amp; Tribute
Mufflers

�I

· ~

. , . C-6-The Sunday Tlm11 ' Sentinel

PomeroV-MictclliPort-Grllpolil.

Meigs County agents comer·

Agricultufe and our,.rom~nity

Extension notes•••
By .JOHN C. mCE
. Exlielaolon Alea&amp;
Acrlwllure Melp Coua&amp;y

·•

E•tA•Apet

TWIT'"

Jan. 7

ational

•

the loan p .......am.
on ciunpus program ~ experience the t~ It took to get' them to tllat,
•...,
t1
Season price averages lor the · llrstllandtheclassroornllllltruc on, stageoiUfe.
·
·
four . major markets that Gallla
tacultylnterestandstudentlnvolve-.
Rabbltaandmlcewlllfeedonthe
County farmen sell their tobaCCO,
ment ln your coUege program. . bark ol YOUIIII trees when IIIIOW baa •
are as follows on a per lnllldred ·Contac:;l me or Fred Deel at burled their natural food. To

ApiculiweACNRD
Galli&amp; ~

r:n•

· ·. Burley sales resume

. und
. er

By BB\'SON B: CAB'JER

engine depositS, 'l'llst, and CQITO-.
ston. SF ous can be substituted for
SC SO and SE

r---~~----------------------------~

JAnuerv I. 1181 · ~

Ohio-Pan Pleallnt.W. Ve.

·

·

U~~;~'"'~~=~:~~~~
;.;t -~ CC,
~Jt~~~~~:i!~~';f=:r:;:s:;r~~
:O~~e::S~lS~~n~~~ ::~t::nr:::=~~
~ . ='=~J:,~~"c':u:'~
,
a.m. at the Meigs Inn.
and CD. CA - diesel engines markets clooed lor
$181.88; I_Upley'$1$.46.
forward t,o visiting with you soon.
II around the.
and paalt

the ChrlstmaS
Corn Inventories Up - Com
under mild to moderate conditionS. break: Auction les are schedliled
. tnventortes are up considerably
They should ~ot be used 1n modern
to ~pen Mo~y, Jan. 7.
from last year. This does not
engines. CB oils - have more '
The season figure for pounds of .
~~~~r!Jun,gan !l!ere Is !l Sl!.111!\l.s ....,..~~.l!o.&amp;_~.CP. ~,£C:.Q!~.,., --Burl~ t&lt;;tQe&lt;~IH&lt;?&amp;c.Jiro juzt.c.JI!+.!c
bu! ~rn prices should be 15-20
used 11' turbo-charged or super· over 419 Ifnmpn pouilds aYf!l'lllllng
percent below last year. .
charged dl~ engines and heavy $18'1.57 per hui.dred. Pre-Chrlstmas .
Jl;nglne Oils?- At:e You Buying
duty gasoline eng~nes, co oils - to sales last year totaled 387;9 mUUon
be used . w~en highly. effective pounds averaging $17$.ii4 Pllr
The Right Oil. ,- Engine olls have
four baste tuncions -1) cut friction
controt_of wear deposits is needed hlindred.
and wear; 2) cool Internal moving
or when fuels wtth a wide quallty
!iran' receipts amounted to 211 •4

seal the cylinders; 4)
Including high sulfur, is
There are two major oU classiD·
Oil ·visCosity · is a
cations, Sand C. Bast.ially, S means · measure of the aU's body or
service station or automotive ser- thlckhess. Smaller numbers means
vice, while C means commercial or · the ollls thinner or will flow faster.
3)

--.'..,
In the ,spring of 1984 following' a
wlntfr of deep snows, a lot ol

Are you liiterested In preparing
for careers In science and techno!·

CJ!!Y, 1)1.91~. ~. lnfor~ , . ])ac~~~~
- tt~~!,~~~! ~"feeding..~~~~~~~~~.:_:
ma!fon pl'OCEIISing, foods, livestock
young u w
rees
"""'"" UJ. iJei!P, c,.,.,,
.
nnw
and . plalit produCtion? I! sa, the
rabbits. Some small trees . were the weight of 1be rabbit - tl!eSe
College of .Agriculture at Tbe Ohio
completely girdled, while ,others . anbnals have~ known to eat the
·State University can assist you In
hl\d Ill!! bark ch,eWed off oilly half to barl&lt; off several branches.
d~veloplng your career. plans
t~~ree-iourtbs around. the trunk. ·
Have a very happy, ~e.~ ·
through exciting a,nd up-to-datu.
These trees !Ire lost, not to mention ' weekend and 1-lappy New Year!

Fl.ag '

Continued from C·5
• • • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,...._ _ _.....;._ _

are

~-r
'

'

*ANNOfJNC/fm*' Come in and legisttr for
wDOO"
OIJR SHOrrI\ . " '

PEEPS, a Gallinoli.s.Diary:

·T. 0 ·bring· you .u·p to· d ate
'

no

on llrst or

DISHES ON DISPLAY
. ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
ll TilE POST OFFICE

to be ginn qway.l$200

HELEN R. WOLFE'S brothers,
Carl, Don, and Jerry, and their
(lunllles are still out In Texaa, bul
Jerry, Mary, and their family wllll&amp;
1o come back 10 Ohio this year
(19811). Aug. t Charles and Helen
Wolfe and their famDy went to
DaDas lor her' Mom and brought
ber Jiome with them Aug. 11.

· SONY dealer

down ·

~ ··
'

•

THEY STOPPED at the Cowboy
.
Hall
of Fame ln Oklahoma on the
HARRY, WHO WA'i'. Helell's
way.
back
and the Mermac Caverns
oldest brother,. · died of cancer
Jerri and Sean had
in
Missouri.
nearly ~year ago (Jan.l6) and had
a military bunal March 31. March . · another baby Oct. 10, according to
31 was his 58th birthday annlver· the letter from Helen and Charles
Sary. Jan.~. the day of the funeral; WoHe. The baby's name is Adam
Lee Poling, who weighed seven
roadS between Columbus and Med·
tna were all ice - a ·bad day for · pounds two ounces at birth In Fort
Stewart, Ga.
driving. However. driving was O.K.
March 31 despite windy conditions.
SEAN WENT TO ~rmany Dec.
WHILE HELEN R. and Charles ··t, and·when he finds a .borne, Jerry
and the two Dille ones wiiJ Dy overlo
JL Wolfe were In Meigs County May
Uve In Gennany for three years ...
26 for lbe purpose of visiting the
Our
ch\lfCb bought a used bus,
cemeteries, llelen had a numbness
according
lo the letter writtllll by
In her left ann ·and left slile of her
Helen
Wolfe,
and besides the youth
face; therefore, she decided that
using
II
ihe
adults
have taken two
ome bad better go lo the dociAlr and
In
II:
first
lA&gt;
Creek for
-~Jl!lve.J!l_~hej;i!¥d·. _ c ••.

'

' (

OVER 25

'

LIVING ROOM
, SUITES
..

.
'

50°/o OR MORE OFF
ALL LANE

. CEDAR CHESTS

"'

)

50°/o 0

(electrocardiogram) and dl~coCHARU::S MAY retire from the
vered a heart problem, according
state Feb. 8; he wiD be 59.
to-.telen 's - letter. The · !loc!or - Handwritten--at- the bottom of this
ordered her to lose. weight and to
typewritten letter was this:
\Yalk two miles a day. She lost 10
Mike Is our son; Linda our
pounds the first six weeks, and five
Jerri and Jim are our
daughter;
more pounds off after that. "There I
two
oldest
grandchildren. We also
am stuck for three months," she
12, and Larra, 4,
have
Jason,
wrote. "Now that winter rs here I
besides Mike Jr. and Paul. Jennifer
don't walk, either. I like to eat, anq
s0 It Is hard for me to lose ... I am and Adam · are our great·
grandchildren. I \Yas a greatstill trying to lose ;lO pounds more.
grandmo!her at age 52.

50°/o OFF
SAVE MORE

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M:'

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc.
Wishes · Everyone a Happy
&amp; Prosperous New Year

_....

WASHINGTON (AP) - Many
House Democrats predict President
Reagan's defenSe lnllltiyes will be
· subjected to tougher, more critical
scrutiny as the result of the
generational battle that brought
Pentagon gadfly Les Aspln to the
. chairmanShip of the House Armed
Services Committee.
In a series of votes that lgoored the
pleas of House elders and battered
the traditions of the congressional

·-

'

746

·

RUST PRINT

MAKE YOU A CUSTOMER

REG. $699.95

REG. $,6 99.95

IN 1985

$28888

.$28888

Ssle p,;ce

Ssfe Me• ·

•~• sa~= 1411.07 s••ln

Sm 58'/t =1411.01

REG.

REG.SJ$9·. 95

88
.$788
Sne $1.,., • •81.07

29.95

Sm

,,

~_ - ·

___

·'--""':""""'"~~~~~~--.....- -..·~-.......-.~-....o..l · DemocrallcSteeringCommlttee.
•

HOSTAGE STANDOFF _ Cleveland PoHoe S.W.A.T. team .~ ""Tiiere s no queStfonln my rrilna
members. take up positions at tbe rear stain! of a Pan AmeriCan '72'7 jet · that Congress finds Itself row with a
liner Friday where a woman held several hostages at gunpoint Friday.
chairman who's going to question
'
from
timetotbnewhatgoesoniDthe
The woman, Identified as Ometta Mays of Cleveland, was shot twice by
·
Pentagon (and) , I · think that's
polioe and FBI agents who stoni.ed the plane. AU hostages were
unbanned aller lhe slx·hour ordeal. (AP LHsei'pholo).
healthy,'' he said,

'

'

Talks between Shultz and Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
open Monday, with at least three
meetings planned over two days.
The discussions, abned at establish·
ingaframeworkforresumlngarms
negotiations that broke off more
than a year ago, are to begin In the
Soviet mission to the United Nations
on Geneva's Avenue de Ia Paix
(Peace Avenue).
Upwards of 650 reporters and
tecbnlclruis were descending on
Geneva to covertlie meetings.
Shultz and McFarlane held a final

conference with Reagan on Friday
and · also briefed congressional
leaders on thelrmlsslon.1\venty·six
members of the House and Senate,
Republicans and Democrats allke,
were Invited to the White House
meeting In the Cabinet Room.
White House deputY press secretary Larry Speakes said House
Democratic Leai!er James Wright
spoke up In praise of the "Star
Wars" plan - offlclally known as
the Strategic Defense' Initiativeahd other congressional leaders
Indicated similar feelings .

"I would say there was a nnddlng
approval around the table,"
Speakes said,. "I think If the
leadership Is a reflection of what
Congress' thinking Is on the subject
of SOl, It has a very receptive
audience in Congress. They seemed
to think the defensive concept was
quite an Innovative approach that
could bear 'truit In the future."
· Speakes also sa ld the lawmakers
were Interested In the prospect of
changing the U.S. ·doctrine on
nuclear deterrence to a theory
based on Star Wars weapons, based
ln space, that would shield the
United States from .nuclear attack.
Current strategy Is based on the
threat of massive retallatton.
In Moscow, meanwhile, the Soviet
news media said
for success

WOOD'W/VELVET
REG. S309.95

Ssle Price

•

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St•e $7'11 =~7 6.6t $twiAII,

60 Months 'to Qualified Applicants

.

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, BEIGE PLAID

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""!! M.~F·~tmd. ~ W.u!!lnstl&gt;n 1!11ol@yJ,!!r ~a,
Swlberllllld, where lhey wUI meet wkb Sovlel
dllllecntllry of 8&amp;ale a-p llllula, center, and
NMioaal !lecuri&amp;J Allain AtMior Hoben McFarlane .., Forelp l'tflnllter Andrei Gromykl). (AP Luerpholo ).
1n the Oval Office of the While Houe Frtday. Slndtz

.~~-----

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Garcia, D-N.Y, a member of the

·= 1118.84

,$1 ~3.33

'

'Rep. Nicholas · Mavroules, ·
DMass., an Armed Services com·
mlttee member, said he ultimately
voted for·· Aspln In the caucus
becauseofAspln'ssupportofaplan
to put the panel on record on overall
national defense policy Instead of
dealing with Pentagon teCO':fllllen·
datlons piece-by-piece.
.'It's vital that we not.be a rubber
stamp to the Pentagon or to the
White House, any White House for

NEW CHAIRMAN - Rep. ,
Les Aspln, D-Wis., leaves the
Capitol Friday alter he was '
selected by his fellow Democrats to replace Rep. Mel Price
as chalnnan of the HOWle
Armed Services Comniittee•
( AP Laserphoto ),

e

~;;;;~;;;;~:;~~~·~·o;ru~y~t~lm¥e~w;l~te~
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_....,..._~

'·

· · Sale Price
$111 11

Ssfe p;1ce

when the Incident ~an.
"
The san-\n-law, W\ll\am Graham, 35. Worcester,
Great Britain, said be was leaving the lavatory when
a fllght attendant told them to exit at the rear.
He said he was confused but obeyed. His wife,
Patricia, later was seen at 'the airport holding the
daughter, Jennifer, in a blanket.

unseated alllng, ~year-old Chair·
crat," Mavroules said.
Mavroules said he hopes the
man Melvin Price of Illinois and
bypassed other committee committee now can take the lead in
veterans.
'
mandating the cuts in defense
• The Wisconsin congressman, a
spending ·hi' said are needed to
former Pentagon o!flcial who - reduce the looinlng -fedl!ral budget
'
ranked oilly seventh in seniority· deficit. .
Garcia noted that "there al'!'
amongthecomrnittee'sDemocrats,
said his election on·a 125-103 secret
people ·on the Armed Services
Committee who are .100 degrees
tally .by the Ho1,1se Democratic
Caucus .Is "a ·slgn we .ought to be opposed to each other," and that
~plnwlllhavehlsworkcutoutashe
taking a serious •look at defense·
· ... trying to balance the federal
attempts to reach some sort of
budget deficit and national securtty accomodatlon between them.
·Interests."
One of thosewhoopposed Asptn's
But one Democrat, echoing the successful takeover bid, Rep. Sam
party's .conservatives, said that In
Stratton, D·N.Y., said II took place
choosing the 46-year-old Aspln, the
oilly "because there were more
anti-defense liberals In the DemoArmed Setvlces Committee now
has as Its cbalrman "a person wbo crallc caucus than people who
doesn't support an adequate
support an adequate defense.''
defei)Se."
And he said Of Aspln: "I lhlr.k It's
Under Price's leadership, the unfortunate that we have a person
"COmmittee leadership haq been
wbo doesn't support an adequate
criticized by younger and more defen&amp;e in the face of the Soviet
liberal Oemotrats for showing little threat."
ornovtgorinexamlnlngtheReagan
administration's military policies
and programs.
•

•'
BLUE &amp; TAN PLAID

'•

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Bank &amp; GMAC Financing Available

i

tary of State Sherrod Brown says a
one-vote discrepancy in vote tallies
for President Reagan ln the Nov. 6
general election wasduetoachange
·In state. law and a figure that a
county elections officer reported by
telephone.
As required by law, Brown had
certified to the president of the U.S.
Senate and to the General Services
Administration that Reagan received 2,678,560 votes in Ohio.
a later tabulation of
ICsliMIS re{xirts .from all'1J8""
Ohio counties put the total at
2,678,559.
'
The problems arose after the
Federal Election Commission,
_ which got Its numbers independ·
enlly of lbe U.S. Senate or Electoral'
College, listed the smaller flgu,.re In
Its vote totals. Th" lower vote total
also was picked up IndependentlY by
the Washington-based Center for
the Study of tbe American Electorate, a private organization .
Brown noted Friday that fedl'ral ,
law required him to get the certified&gt;
vote total to Washington by Dec. 7.
He had to mall a total on Dec. 6, the
day he took some county totals by
phone.
"Because of that, WI' coqldo't get
aD of the canvas in by mail from the
boards so we called some of them,"
Brown said. "SOmeone, someivhere
gave us something wrong on the
phone. Normally we won't certify
until we get It in writing, but we did
take some.by phone this year."
David Shu~t. communications
·director in Brown's office, said the
Ohio Legislature last year changed
state election laws
the start

WA'i'.HINGTON (AP) - Secretpry of State George Shultz sets oyt
tonight for anns control talks in
Geneva claiming strong backing ln
Congress for the "Star . Wars"
' anti-missile program which the
Kremlin Insists must be abandoned
If U.S.·Soviet negotiations are to
progress.
Shultz and a delegation Including
White House national security
adviSer Robert McFarlane and
anns negotiator Paul Nitze were to
leave Washington this ey,ening and
·
arrive Sunday in Geneva.

Jim Mink

NO PAYMENT
MARCH 20,
-1915 ON AU NEW
. C~EVIOLElS I OLJ»SMOIILES.
ASK OUI SAI.ESPEISONS
IIttS 1Pf PLAN.

come off tl)l' Jllane."
.
The woman "obvlous)y 0\tm \ seeJn very '!lel"l!oos,' •
he said. "It .was sort of nonchalant.''
"Someone said, 'My God, she's got a gun,' " said ·
Cecllie Todd of Great Britain. "She seemed to have
her wits abnu.t her. "SIIe didn't seem to be fanatic at
all. She didn't seem to me to be berserk.
"She stood there and ~ldo 't say anything. Then I

gadfly Aspin new

'

The Staff of

NEW CHEVROLETS - CHEV.Y
TRUCKS - OLDSMOBILE$ &amp;
QUALITY USED CARS AT THE
PRICES'YOU WANT TO PAY

en route to New
Boeing 7TI when it
• Yorll by way of Cleveland, Pan Am omclals 'said.
Sane passengers and the cockpit crew had ajready
, left the pl~when tile woman. rushed past security
guards, shot and woun,ded a gate attendant and
boarded the plane, officials said.

\l?.jlQ on to New York. I was working a crosswom
pu1Zle." ·
'
Savant said he heard shots, but, "I just didn't
believe It was happening. I don't knowwhonpened the
back."
Authorities were unsure If the back exit had been
opened because of the gunshots or lor some other
reason. Passengers, though, saldlheyheardsomeone

urging them. to get out the back.
. saw a pollee officer and he said to her, 'I'm going io
~ _ ~ Mo~ 6~1rf~x. v_a,,, sal_&lt;! hew&amp;l;seated ln= ~apPI!J8Ch y~:: Then .ff~ sl,!?! a\\~)Je jum~ back. .....
the plane wben be heard the commollon anir saw the .' · .. " I "(as netvoois'.'l have~m experience with·this 'Sort
armed woman.
· of thing. And.! heard someone say, 'You. cart get up
"The pollee omcer told her to drop the, gun, but sbe
IIOW and exli out the back door.' I think 1 was the fli'sl
didn't say anything," he said. "She sort of held It in a·
one pp. I left everything I had on the plane and jUS1
downward position~ fired one shot in his direction. ·
walked slowly out."·
It seem'§ to me she could have hit him If she wanted to.
Mrs. Todd said her son· in·law, 'daughter and
And a few secondS later, someone was saying for us to
5-month-old grandaughter were at a rear ·lavatory

Shultz sets out for arms control talks

work ... accomplish

,

passengers about 9: ~ p.m.
"I was sitting In the rear of the plane, seat 22-D,"
said Savant, 46, of Great Britain, who had been
visiting relatives In Cincinnati. "People getting oil In
Cleveland were gettlilg off the plane. We were waiting

out of the country, particularly from
military personnel on foreign duty.
Previously, state law allowed the
official canvas to begin the day atier
an election.

.Y'-'J

DRERIMINED TO

one passenger said.
· · "It was just a'matter of two minutes or so, but a lOt
happened In that lime," said Jim Savant, one of the
luckY passengeys who escaped out a back exit Friday
shortly after the woman came aboard about 3 p.m.

. the.returnJlll'iffisentee baUnt'ifmm ·

Progress
•••
'ss·
dream ... plan...

~IE

0! the remaining aJ or so passengers and crew, aD

• general election.
He said the ijl_tent was to allow for

AT LEAST
..,,

..

....

•
Systems fro.ii $1695
'installed ·

=~:t !.-S'.~"!'-~L·!"Il;lr.J!@.,=,=~~ :r:!lPnJ,J~'!QlilJ!la_I,J.wf!lf~ better::

GALLIPOLIS - Charles H. and
Helen R. Wolfe, 34!Ml'Kautrnan Rd.,
N. W., Carroll, Ohio 43112, have
authored a long letter, snatches of
which we'D try to pass along to you.
. Helen's brother Clark, she wrote, is
still feeling fine, although be had
leukemia - he. doesn't drive but
likes to go whenever he gets a
chance, and he and Betty are
regular chlirch-gQers.

'

Brown explains
vote difference

SONY Watchman TV

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 2·6
Sat. 11 ;6

CLEVELAND (AP) -Most of the people aboard

~.,...~~:~~~~~~~~~t:~c~ockplt
crew
.
Wl!l'e a'ooard \'nl&gt;

SIU'ERBIRD

=i·i ·lrii

on Charles Wolfe family

!

'

'

shooting:·'escape seemed a long time'

~~.u~
.""_:nan
.F11a~~womanllla!!~c-a. m~oe··gea~~~~oan~L ·~- ~t .seven ~9t&lt;J1!1t~.bil~of~Jll!M'e~ ho§.ta.l!~
nunu= """''
'"""'
~lAJOUu u
were released about 1W01iours later, and a SWAT
began shooting. Those moments seemed a lot longer,
team WO!Inded the. woman and freed the other

Vlsl't our college during our agOay

heavy duty service. For the service VIscosities avaUable include 5W, several rule dlffe~ between thinking tllat they would ra,ther the
classification, there are six catego: lOW, 'JIJW, 20, ~. 40, arid 50. In now and then made lor different other team have the ball. In hopes
·rles: SA, SB, SG:, SD, SE, and sF: ai!Jiltion, multl·vl$00slty oils sucb ·strategy.
that the opposition would make a
SAandSBwered.evelopedforolder as 5W·'JIJ, lOW·;lO,lOW-40, ejc:,
For Instance an Incomplete pass mistake.
engines running under mild condl· aval]able. Numbers with '''W" drew a five yard penalty for the
This philosophy was so wldes·
lions. These should not be used· att~cbed tridlcate that the viscosity offensive team. Any pasa throwit pread that many teams after
from '1964 through 1m. Tliese may was measured at zero degrees out of bounds or beyond the goal line ·having the opposition score chose to
.
also he substituted for SA and SB ("winter") while those without the
was ruled as a turnover with the kick-of! rather than receive. For
""""'-"~-~o~~: SE oils_"!,!' '.:"""mmended.J9f~ .."W" ~'::.~ vlscoslty!f!~t _ de~~~g ~ ball wb;ere It . }!!:Sta.!.'!!,.. in one ~~ In 1919
19'72·1979 cars ana trUCI('5."~ oilS :no degrees. A'mWiii&gt;Te Viscosity on. went out or If It went over t goal · Getween Gallipolis ana tl:live·ns 0
meet requirements for 19lJI and ·such as lOW-~. meets the require.
line at the 20.
wood, the Ravenswood taam chose
laterautomoblleengtnes. Theseolls m~ts of SAE lOW oU and 1be high
RUNNING I'IAYS tbat went out to kick of! after several Gallipolis
· .-J,mprove antiwear performance. temperature requirements of SAE of bounds meant tllat the offense got scores, hoping the Blue Devils
They pr,ovtde ~protec_tlon against _ ~.
.o..
to place the baD down on ihe out of would fumble one and Ravenswood
·
.
bounds llne. There were m hash
would not haVe so tai'io drive for a
marks then. What all till's dldwas to
touchdown. Their strategy did not
r
· 'discourage passing and running work too weD as the final score was
plays to the sldelllle.
·
Gallipolis IKl and Ravenswood, zero.
It was not unuSual to have 40
MalllnJ addreM of Jama Sands
punts ln one game as many teams
IS Box 92, Clal'lalburg, Ohio 43Uii.

,

~4-port

Place
tree
Into -the around about an lndi. Be
sure II 1s taU enough, aboUt 18 ·
Inches, to discourage rodents from

percentforthesea$011thUStlir.~La:st~~~c;,urrt;cul;a~~ln~m;a~jo~·rs~.~le~a~dln~g~ito~a-f;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~t~-

·percent olthe tobacco was placed

'

l!e:•!R•apn~

=

Ohio.
_Coinpany figures show that during the w&lt;'E'k ending Dec. 29,
"Thlumbla sold aoout one-llilro as mucH natural gas ·aS'llurlng the .same week the previoits year.
.
Between Dec. 1 and Dec. 29, Columbia customers used 33.2 mllllmi ·
cubic feet of natural gas, comparedwtth57.6millionduringthesame
time In 1!&amp;.

Dakar appointed liaison

. '

WA'i'.HINGTON (AP) ~Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D.Qhio, bas been
named the liaison from the House of Representatives to the
Democratic National Committee.
Ms, Oakar was named to the post Frtday by House Speaker
Thomas "Tip" O'NeUI.
The appointment makes Ms. Dakar, who Is the secretary of the
House Democratic Caucus; a member of the Democratic National
Committee for the 99th Congress which ends Jan. 3, 1987.
"Over the next two yeats, rebu~lng the Democratic Party will be ,
the major task, and a close working relationship between Democrats
In the House and the Democratic National Committee will be crucial.
I'lntend to play an active role in this rebuilding process," Ms. Oakar ,
said In a news release.
·
·•
A member of her staff, wbodld not want to be Identified, said it was •
clear that House Democrats, who retained control of that chamber
despite the Republican landslide in November, would take a much
fllOre visible role in directing the party's future.
As Ualson, Oakar would communicate the views of House
members to.the national committee, he said.
Ms. Oakar was elected secretary of the caucus in early December
to succeed Rep. Geraldine Ferraro. ().New York. who ran for vice
.president.

Appeals court rules on Shrader .

concessions.
In a commentary for the gnvern·
ment news agency Novosti, VIa·
dlmlr Alexeev said "Washington's
currentlackofdestretonegotlatea
ban on thl' milltarlzallon of O)lter
space eould becom~: a major
stumbling block ln resolving t~
Issues of medium-range and strategic nuclear weapons."
In another development, three
Republican senators wrote Reagan
urging tllat shultz tell Gromyko a
cessation of anns control treaty
violations Is "a precondltlon to
ser1ous negotiations."
Sens. Steven Symms of Idaho and
JohnEastandJesseHebnsofNorth
Caronna Included with their letter a
list of 43 Soviet · practices they
clafrr\ed violated treaties and agreements with the United States.
Reagan Is due to sulxnlt a report

that John J. Shrader Is entllled to money from his late wife's
Insurance.
·
The ruling means It will be harder for Shrader's former
• father-In-law, Dale Wolford of Ashland; to have the high coun review
the case, said John C. Elam, Wolford's attorney. He said the
Supreme Court will be asked to consider the case anyway ..
"We think the Issue Is an Important one,'' Elam said.
In a split decision, appeals judges John McCormac and Alba
Whiteside rejected Wolford's request that they refer the matter to
the bigher court on grounds their ruling conflicts with another
opinion on the s8me Issue.
Tbe appeals court last month ordered Franklin c;ounty Common
Pleas Judge Wllllam T. Glllietoaward Insurance money and Interest
toShraderunlessbeischargedwlthldlllnghiswlfe. Noone has been
cbarged 1n the case.
.
Shrader, '!/, stands to collect more than $11S:OOltn life tnsw·ance
benefits and interest due to the Oct. 22, 1981, strangulation of his wife,
Jean. lier body was found . that evening In a downtown parking
garage.
WoHord claimed lA a 1983 ctvU trial that Shrader was not entitled to
the money because he killed his wife. The trial ended abruptly when
Shrader refused to testify about an alleged perjury scam,.and tbe
money was awarded to Wolford.

East and

appealed.
TbecOnvicted
appeals of
court
niled tbat
l_aw, _a person
must .~
a ml!!ller
or
charge before being denied Insurance Pl'Ol'eEds of a

,
'' ;

·l
••

•
.:
:
'

•

'
'
.!
·
•

--~on~iSovl~et~~~~;to:~Congress;;~~l=;~Shr~~a~der~su~bsequently
twice in tbe past, he accused the
Soviets of sbnllar misbehavior.

,,

relative.

-•

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�I
The Sunday·Times-Sentinel

~eveloper

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

likes

.

COUD~!!~-~~!·~1!~~=&gt;=-=rJ£
By SUE CROSS
Assoclatro Pres!! Wrller
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio (AP )
- .FOR LE ASE:· Clean air, easy
living and a good place to make
u :..-'1:1..!)~,_~ ...,

"""' =~

•'-&lt;.. "-,,,·.....,. ....,..,...

~

'-"'

"""'

That's llle sales pitch developers
in Ohio's rural areas should use Qlli often don' t- to draw industry to
areas outside the traditional urban
b~s iness clusters, says a developer
who specializes In projects for rural
counties.

Mrs. Dietsch said rural counties
should take advantage of llle
current interest in development to ·
create an · economic base for a
possible future without many fed·
cra:

lnc~nthre. ,pr-ogt&amp;..T&amp;S ~t.iGt"''-"llW

are available.·
"I feelllke there's ~e pressure
on," she said. noting that some
de\'elopers • believe changes In
federal law will lessen the avatlabll·
lty of those options within the next
few years. "We have to set up more

I.

~==·-·' ~

6, 1985

January 6, 1986

Pomeroy-

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Poll indiCates ·no
major turnaround

'-'"'!' .......~~~=ntcn&lt;.U&gt;l-r:~ -C'::f..~-:u~-

COLUMBUS - There Is little
evidence that Ohio's economy wUI
Improve dramatically In. the first
llalf of 1985, according to the first
Ohio CPA Poll of economic trends
released by The Ohio Society of
·' ~ Ci&gt;tiiiied ·PUblic Act:ounilillts. ' ..-.
· A rando'!l sample of 600 of ihe
state's CPAs Indicates that only l5
percent currently rate the state's
economy as goocr; and 70 percent
·forecasted that conditions wtll he
unchangedslxmQnthsfromnow. I!
a
does occur,
more

The

Tribune - 446-2342

Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

Yard Sale

7

'

ever, felt that
.be "best served lf Congress pursued
no changes next year.
- · Just over half of the respond·
ents felt that some major tax
reform was likely In 1965, but more

=

--····-r•omero;;·········
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.,

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

" i.liiui 86· p;;,~nt'&amp;lt-trllll-riO"Tr;iiJor·-··

·1 12

31

Situations ,

=--. .c \llf.A.n$!'~ -~
Ride needed to Rio Grande
ColleQe, day cl auea, will
help w ith gu . Call 4462629 .

3 Announcements

'

clean uaed cars .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
446-~672

Raw Fur. -Top prices paid .
Lake Jackson Fin&amp;. Fur Oak

all I
i
and take

614 · 367 · 7 55 7 o r 446 ·
4271 ... . .

7 room home with one and I "'
Lots, garden _apace • . .
H a r t f o rd , W . v • . .

Elllploylllent
Serv1ces
Male tan &amp; white dog, 8

months old. pen Collie part
1 Good watch dog, 304·
875· 6933.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Business
Opportunity

1 975 Governor 12K65,
good shape. $600 down
take over payments . Call

LOST: 2 Siberian Husky in
Ewington vicinity both have
1 brown eye.
1 blue eye

a.

Business Briefs:

Reword . Colt
9939.

.
. .
~· Tax preparers attend session
..
. ·. POMEROY - Karl and Mary Kebler, H &amp; R Block owners from

Kroger tries ,
CINCINNATI (AP)
The
Kroger Co. Is experimenting with ·
candy-less checkout lines at Its
Cincinnati stores after an unldentl·
fled mother bllstereq store otflclals
saying the candy was a tefl(ble
temptation to children.
Last October the · firm set up a
checkout line or twQ In half of 50
Cincinnati supermarkets, said Sam
Gingerich, advertising manager for
Kroger's Cincinnati-Dayton region.
He· said customer response "has
been only positive." He said there
are plans now for all th~ Cincinnati

;· . : GREENVJLLE, S.C. - David ,L. Freeman has been elected a
director of Multimedia Inc., replacing Robert E. Bunnelle, who has

.,

li

j

FOUND: Beagle dog 11rayed
into my home
10th
derk brown-ten 4 white feet,
white tip of teil, collar only
and no tag. Cell Clinton

·oec:.

candy-l~ss lin~

· Multimedia director elected

GREENVILLE, S.C.- An agreement haS been signed for the sale
of radle stations KAAY·AM and KLPQ-FM, LltUe Rock, Ark., to
Sudbrlnk Broacastlng Co. of Arkansas, according to Walter E.
j'lartlett, president and chief executive otflcer o! Multimedia Inc.
_,, • No purchase price was disclosed, and the transaction Is subject to
the approval of the F'ederal Con1rnuntcatlons Commission.
In a rC'IatPd act ion, na,•t!ett •aid Sudbnnk has made an agreement
'· " · S&lt;'il !\1 ·I~'' &gt;· :m. ·~1r·rlta Corp., Duilas, Texas .. following the
completion ol !to transaCtiOn" ith Multimedia. Sign al currently owns
.and operates KLRA·AM In llle Little Rock market.
·111~ saie ottne rWultliihrUt siatlons is-mi.i:-onttngentufl"Nr--spirruff.of KLPQ to Signal, Bartlett said.

Call collect 614-867-5904
or 887-8335 .

Boy Scouts of America-·
adult applicants for summer
camp director, program diractol', busine11 manager,
cook1. lifeguard. June 16July 27. Apply 733 7th
Ava., Huntington, Wv

which It had
monopoly.
court over whether the FCC's ·
One of the most common com- depreciation rates should override
plaints during the Hrst year came the state's mqre lengtlly depreclafrom business executives used to ton schedules.
..
deallngwllll one company for phon '" TheutUtles argue tliatthey need to
service.
.
, wrjt~Q!fexpenslveequlpmentmore
"There's been a iot of problem quickly so they can compete In
finqtng out who's responsible when lucrative hlgh-tecnology fjelds. But
' lllere !sa problem," said Bob Talley, 9strander says . the companies
AGENT- EdnaJaoe Slaaley
manager of corporate comrnunlca· should llnprove local servtce'Hrst,
Stewarl, lonnerly ul Rudand,
Uons at Dana Corp. In Toledo. "It's ''before they go to the moon."
·
• SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - · A
trucking exe&lt;;utlve was ordered to
has been lUIII1ed lop 1'1!111 ealate
klndo!beenabounclngbaUorflnger
Some AT&amp;T workers are sufferprison Feb. 6 to begin a six-month
agml of 188C Ill lhe Daytona
pointing. We've been calling the !IX) lng !rom that technology, said Bud
term!or!alselytelllngtheFBIIllat
Beach area Ill V...... CGuoty,
numbers and we hear, 'DANA? McNI!!hols, president ot.the 1.700Labor Secretary Raymond J. DoooFla. She !Old :Ill boJmo:l!, wllb total
How do you speD !hat name?"'
member Communications Workers
van laundered union contributions
sales amoun11n1 to Sl,tn8, 7110. A
Talley said things have steadily of America Loca14320 In Columbus.
lB!I8 graduate ol Rudand High
improved, however. And fewer Thelocalrepresentstechnlclansfor
toPresldentReagan'scampalgn.
Michael E. Klepfer, 45, who ·School, lhe received her 111'111
people are calling the ·phone bothOhloBeDandAT&amp;Tsubstdlar·
pleaded guUty to one count of
real 88&amp;ate u - through
companies to complain or just ask tes. Some200o!hlslocal'smembers
making a false statement, was
COIU'IIe8 at Hocking Tedudcal
questions.
have left, many through attrition,
sentenced Friday by U.S. District
College In Nel8onviiJe. She l•
Diane AIPxander, a regional b\Jt about 50 wen&gt; laid ott at AT&amp;T
Judge Howard G. Munson. Klepfer
wilh Century 21-Exdn&gt; ·
'T 1 wforma· · InformRtlon Systems.
had been charged willl telling FBI
Realty Corp. at Daytona Be.teh.
!JOn Systems , said ealls to tlle·
"We !~It sure that In d'lvestlt\11'!'
agents that Donovan helpedlaunder
Friends may contact ber at The
company's complaint and question we were protected," he said. But. he
_$20 ~mlllio1ilri " TeamS'teii" uiuon ....•~JM~ .,~.....,~"'m- &amp;:w===lines ~n -..t'w Cola.iibi:ffi..-area :r.a..~ - -added. uw.e ce~..a!.nJy -OO~t,~U!~~rb&gt;o
coqtrlbutlons to Reagan's J.!m
" " - Bllld., Suite l%l S,
dropped by half since January 1984
secul1ty today that we felt 10 years
to about 2,500 dally.
ago ... even a year ago."
campaign.
Daytona Beach, F1a. 32018.

.Executive jailed

L ..

non-candy
.
It a)l began when an unidentified
mother at the Madeira Kroger's
noticed her young son chewing on a
candy bar he had removed from llle
&amp;'Oodles rack whileshewaschecldng
her groceries out:
"She had been charged for the
candy bar, but the point ts sbe had
been trying to reduce the temptation
tor her child tCieat candy and there It
was sitting right In front of him,"
Gli\gerlch said.
When the mother complained to
store manager'Jecry Lux, she was
overheard by Robert Saffron,
company vice president for tlle
area, who d~lded to test candyless
checkout aisles.
He said he believed no other
supermarketchalnhasremovedthe
candy temptation from any check·
out aisles . .
')If yoti don't listen to your
cus~rs and you're 'In the retail
·--~--- Uus~ras, t.i......-. yoa.L4:9. !n. hi! trw:
ble,': he said.

. ..

Smith. 446·2529 .
LOST female Pitt Bull, black
with white cheat, red collar.
Main Street. call after 8.

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.

FOUND blk and white puppy
approx 3 months l)ld, GMiip_olls Ferry. phone 304-871S-

8t28 opr 675·1686.

LOST male Silver gray Poodle vicinity · of Pentasote

NEW JUSTICE - Justice Andrew Douglas, left, accepts
congra1u1a1kms from Ohio Supreme .eow; Cldef Jlllllice Frank
Celebreoit.e tnlnutes altert:eleb...,..,·swore Douglas Into lhe court. The
ceretTlOIQ' wus held In Toledo city Qluncll chambefs In fronl of a large
ol
Douglas won the election In l\lovemher !or the

AND A MONTHLY PAY·
CHECK. 675-3950 or 1·
800·842·3619.

12

Situations
Wanted

Professional
Services

2

In Memoriam

. Sr .. who
passed away
year ago
today, Jan. 5, 1984.
Wherever I go, what,.er I
do.
locked in' my heart are me·
moriis of you .
Memories are treasures no
oril can steal.
Death is a heartache noth·
in&amp; un hill.
It's only a lllvt that still
needs care.
But the one I love is sleep·
ine there.
It's 1 lonesome house
without you
And sad has been the way.
For life and home are not
the same
·
Since you were called
away.
Some may forpl that you
Ire tont,
But I will remtmbtr you
No •tter how lonr.
Sadly missed ·br wile, chi I·
!!!!L!!!J!dt.h!td~ .

.....~). =-

,,

Will take care of patients in
1heir homes, 5 dayaa week,
have refarencea. Call 614 ·
Have vaGancy · In my home
who need personal care . Call

614-992·8022 ,
Lady to live in maintain
home partially care for
tldery lady. Pay negOtiable
upon inquiry , Prefer fady
with no personal r&amp;lponsibility. C.ll304· 773-6784or
773·5534 ,

2

In Memoriam
IN MEMORIAM

In lov1111 -

al 01K motiMr.
Adolino l.o!Jise CaojJor: Of\ ""

Jon. 6. 1915.
nNmber all

dono
footsteps rilhl.

....,...,.,•...• lovint ways ln

cond . Coll614-446·0176.

12x60, two bedroom with
"Cintral- air heating. · 810clli-and underpinnmg, front
porch all in gr~at condition.:

$4, 500 .
2468 .

Colt 6t4- 742·

- - --

Real Eslate

- - ftc4

1975 Windsor, 14x70. 2~
be droom, all electric Wood ;
walnut paneling throughout. ~.

Homes for Sale ·

Three bedrooms. celltral air,
vinyl wall paper, carpet
throUghout, well insulated,
new paint, eHached garage.
gas outdoor grill. awnings,
many extras. Call446-2583
t1l 5:00PM, aher 6 :00PM

Call614· 992· 6830 .
Tra iler for sale 1982 Fleetwood. 2 bdr., 2 baths,

t4x70 . Coll614-992-6747.
12x65 Mobile Home. com·
pletely furnished and aet up
for Immediate occupetion.

304-675 -1385 ~her 6 PM. ,

call 614 · 245-5859
Remodeled 2 BA vinvled
home, carp ete d, 2 aetas,
1224 pound tobacc.o a llot·
ment, cit y sc h ools,

$22.500
5296

Call 614 -245 ·

3 bedroom house for sale or
rent. Coli 6t4 -992 -7356 .
- - - -- - -- ftc4
Quick sale by owner. leaving
state. Three apartments, ell
rental (all rented) . Oisireable
location. Pomeroy. $31 . 000
and $3,000 down . Refi-

nance,

"A Quality Day·
Care Center"

''

Enlist, and you have a
part- time career, educational and retirement benetits. $35.000 life insurance,'

Plant. 304·675-2288.

Cuyahoga Coonty common pleas judge.

~

tween 6:00PM-8:00PM.

1969 Schutz mobile home•
with lot . Call 814 -367·
7 165 .
baths , total electric. gOOd

PJANQJUNING• AND RE·
PAIR : Reducaa rates limitea
time only. Ward's Keyboard,
304· 675· 5600 0' 675 ·
3824.

31

Babysinar to watch 3 small
children In our home. Mon .
thru Fri , 8 : 00AM to
5:00PM. Refarunc81 ruquired. Call 446-1418 be-

446-4095 ,

1 4x70 Park Ave. 3 bdr., 1 'h

23

Reliable babysitter wanted
In my home on Raccoon Rd
for 11JJ year old. prefer
references . Call 446-3431 .

304-676·3419 ,

to low fixed rate. Use equi1y
for any purpose Leader
Mortgage Co., 614-692-

Help Wanted

25701.
Lost: female beagle In vicinhy ·of Mud1ock. Reward.

• P.omeroy, were In Chillicothe recently attending the tw&lt;Hiay farm "
-~works hop sponsored by tlle Department of Agricultural Economics
and .Rural Sociology, Ohio 'cooperative Extension Service, and Ohio
State University, in cooperation with the Internal Revenue Service.
During the workshop, participants discussed such topics as tlle
· ·.'Pax Reform Act of,l984, net operating losses, alternative minimum
tax, retirement plans. capital gains and losses, government farm
and other topics.
Kcblers have been tax practitioners In Meigs County for the
' past 16 years They also operate Kebler Business Services in
a'ssociotion with their son, Karl A. Kebler III.

Radio purchase agreement signed

614·388·

HOME OWNERS-Retmance

3051 .

11

over paymente.

304-675 -7753.

$19.500 .00 . phona 304·
882·3374.

Financial

22. Money to Loan

.

Colll - 61~ · 888 · 7311 .

Home Improve ments· con crete wor k, ca rp en1ry .
plumbing . N o JOb 10 small .
References ilvailable. Call

21

.

up.

Wanted To Buy

Hill. Oh . 614-682· 7448.

equipment operator and In January
1956 to unit supervisor. In No·
vember 1~. he was promoted to
assistant shift operating engineer.
Raynes and his wife, Lucille, reside
In Mason, W.Va.
Hall joined OVEC on Jan. 1, 1955
as an auxtltary equipment operator

home, 3 bdr., ·
on your lot. •1&amp;,900 &amp;

reform wUl take place.
-Only 7.5 percent felt that a tlat
rate Wllllld gain passage. and only
13.2 ·percent said that such a tax
would be In the ta&gt;&lt; reform policy
most belle!lclal to the economy.
Only 23.6
said that a

9

Freeman is a senior partner in the law firm of Wyche. Burgess,
Ereeman &amp; Parham. Freeman Is a graduate of llle University of
South Carolina and Harvard Law School. He Is active In numerous
community and professional associa!lons.
Bunncllc has been a director with llle c9mpany since it was
foundr'&lt;l ln 1~. Bunnelle was associated with the company and one
'-Of its nPwspapers, the Asheville (N .C.) Citizen,Ttmes, as publisher,
president and chairman of the board for the past 30 years.
. Upon his retirement. the Multimedia board of directors elected
Bunnellc a director emeritus.

Homes for Sale

appraised

for

$38.600 . 7 room home.
1hree bedroom, 1wo s1ory
brick . newly remodeled .
$27
and

35 tots &amp; Acreage

•

4 mi . ou1 on Rt.141, 1 ac,. ,.
with furnished mobile home.
extra mobile home ~d,
good rental •nvettment. Call

446-3918.
- -- - - - ·lc-fto4
Lot in Florida qn Like June
near Sebring on paved road
with eleGtricity Call 614·

667-3025.

CHRI AN'S
CONSTRUCTION
Sidtng,

i

Near Chruches. school and
business -fin e location . Call

614 -992-7022

11

H.elp Wanted .

HELP WANTED
PAR-K
CUSTODIAN
For Buffington Island
Pari! on S.R. .124 at
Portland. Year Round

Caretaker, yearly con·
tract. Application dead·

54 Misc . ·Merchandise·

HOMEliTE
CHAIN SAW

F1~#D~g $tuitlt
ON SALE All
SUPER 2-1~"
240-16'
240-18'.'

line is 1/18/ 85.

, #150 .

Contact The Ohio

REG. PIICE IJlt.tS

Historical Society,
1985 Velma Ave.,
Columbus, OH.

Sale

43221

Attn. S. E. Wolfe

DU
U&lt;! Utili
rn. - '"~
~-,.~ ... uv·;~...,vv

Prict''21"'

MGM FARM
CITY INC.

�•

•

•

Times-Sentinel
ht•fll tl

41

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

LAFF·A·OAY

Houae1

44

3 bdr. hou• unfumiiMcl. no

41

pe11, mutt ho.. rof. Coli
441·0321.

Houn1 for Rent

· H"'- IM rent. Coli 304'1.71-7213 175-1104 or
&amp;7&amp;-&amp;3811.
.

Fumlohed houM. 3 bd;., 29
Noll Ave.. Golllpollo. f22&amp;
pluo utltla, roforencoo. Coli
.441-4418 oftlt' 7PM.

Small furnithed hou11 in

city, od_
ulto only. Coli 4460338.
.

HouH on G..n·lummlt Ad.
Coli 114·388-8908.

'

·

• I

- Knouff F,l-ood lplit· ' " '
hlrd.....,.. leoeonod or
1

,..n.

You DICk up or we

dol'-· HIA.. 218·1246.

· 814·

.1 bclr. opt. downtown. • 160
per mo. Aleo hou• for rent.

Furnlahed houu t21 0. wa-

Coli 4411·3919.

.

-

Aivertide Apts. Middleport.

Special r1te1 for Senior
Clti1ene. *130 . Equal Hous•

lng Opportunitlu .- 614 -

.--'-.::..· :~-~ I ~&lt;J"&amp;!n•ncP.

tloo nogo,..blo. Doy 814992-2381. olioningo 81,4·
992-8723.

--~

· ·~·----

bedroom

~~~·~-~tC~

..

2 bedrOom furnished apart-

houM. New kitchen . Call

.

· By James Joeeby
.......'
Here Ia a very COIJl!Poil card combinaUODio pllly. You, u declarer, and
dummy have Dine canis in the he.art

TV 1111. Opon BAM to IPM .
Mon thru Sot. 4411·1'1188, •
627 3rd. Ave: Golllpallo, ,
OH.

H---"~

manto. Coll814·992-6434,
614·992-5914, or 304·
882-2686.

Logic finds
&lt;~~ (~p•~-~·~·orn~: ~~~~·&lt;o&lt;•~: ~~ .,~~"'

County Appliance, Inc: .
Good uMd appllenoee and

2 bdr. Reter•DC•• required ...

'tor paid, 2 bclr., 1131 2nd.
Avo. Golllpollo. Coil 448441So-7PM.

~

-

•

prlv•t• bath and entrance.

Completely rtdlcorated.

In Middleport.

..

111 Houuhold Oooda . ,

8ultabla for one poroon. Coli
441-1232.

2 or 3 bedroom houna in or
near POmeroy. Furnillhed or
~ · .k. oeutt....- ~. · o:{C-..yw; ::!!'"'-y"'""Hniriilii&lt;l: '"eftt"a11cf utiir- · ·

448-1340.

CAIILYLI! ®br Lerry'Wrlght

A pjlrtment
.to( Rent

~

Fumlohld offlcloncy opt ..

2 btcfroom houH 42 ChUII -

•n dep. Coli 448·3870 or

6, 1986

Woodbwning fumence. au-:
tometlc controle, blower,

roldytohooltup.-UIId
8400. c.u 114-2511-121&amp;.

304-882-281 1.

WEST

EAST

+JB

+A 102

.K

.10!3

•9u

• 8 763

+AQn

+109642

""'""'~~~=sotrrit

have to bring the suit home wltbout
any looera. Tile right percentage play
ls to lineae, but the percentages
change If your pill Eaat leans over
and says to you, "By tbe way, I do nol
have the heart kine."
The jack of Clubl wu p1a;yec1

. ....~- .....

+Q3
•AH765
tAKQI05

....

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

~~~

Stlndi"ll nw timber, phone

304-876·4681 otter 6 p.m.

p...

,.
5+
Paoo

Pi!U

3 bdr. home ex.tra nice, tJttra
ciMn, 10 min. from Golllpollt toward Jackaon on Rt .
3&amp;. CoH col ...t 1114-288·

Pus

&amp;447 for more Information .

Dtpo8it 6 flrtt month rent

•

anytime in Janurey, PlY• to

Eaat also showed up with the spade
· ace, be would have tiad to overlook
his band in second
not to
the

Morch 11t 1988.

3 bdr. houM in country near
Rio Grande. $226 mo. no

peto, oec .. dop ... Coli , 614·
245-5439.

8

2 bdr. furnished trailer,
$160 mo. plue dapoah: on
Rt. 564, "12 mi. off Rt. 180.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Call 614-388-9661.

can
''fi· J·~•~ce~p~t~~~~~~::

"
f•oll! Gillipolis, take Rt. 141, turn left onto At. 775.
Turn richt onto the Palriot-Cadmus Road. Watch for
sians.

SALE EVERY SATUR.DAY AT 7:00 P.M.

tton.

Hm somothina you want to sefl1 Brin&amp; it to the Palriot
Auction Bam ad we'll sell it for vou. Consien menls accepted from 1:00.5:(JO·p,ll, on Saturday.

Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctioneer
245-5152 - 388-8249
Finis
Isaac - 3'88-9370

••

wagon very good condition
11,260 or trede for truck of

oquol voluo. Coll448·1097.

Furnished efficiency $160,
utiltiea pd,

cabinets,

Total electric mobile home

bath. 807 2nd. Ava. Gallipo-

ties. range, ref. Share bath.

for rent, no pata.
614-387-7438 ;

lis. Cell
7PM.

Men only. 919 Sec ., Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 8 p.m.

electric ranges. 8376. Baby
mattresses, $26 &amp;. $36. bed

446-4416

after

niahed. beeutiful "r iverview.

2 people $100. Call 446-

Kanaugo. Fostor'o Mobile
Home Park. 446·1602.

1414·or 446-1023.

2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gas heat. Racine
area. Call 614-992-6868.
3 bdr trailer for rent; $126
mo. plus deposit. Call 992 -

2777 or 992-9986.

Mobile home in Gallipolle,
nice for senior citizens or
married couple with . one
child. no peta. deposit and
references reqUlt'ed.- K'"'&amp; "'K
Mobile Homes. Inc .. 304-

675·3000.

2 bedroom all electric mo-

bile homo. ., 38.00 plus
utilities. located Gallipolis

Ferry. 304-675 -4088.

for

&amp;13 Third Ave .• 1 bdr..
washer-dryer hookup. water
paid, depost required. $186
mo. Call446·4222 between
9 and, 6 .
-----....:...

3 bdr. unfumlohed garage
opt. e250 mo. 1 mo. dop.
Call 446-3786.
Brookoide Apts.

1 bdr..

,
Mobile home lot, $75 water

paid, 4th s. Neil, Gallipolis.
Call 448-3844 .. fter 7PM.
Mobile ~orne space 1 mile

·out Neighborhood Rd . Call

446-1340.

CO~NTRY MOBILE Homo

Pomeroy. large lots.

~all

no pets, t217 mo. plue

Furnished efficiency apt.,
LR-BR comb .• kitchen and
bath. Privata, eecurity dep.
&amp; references. Call 448 -

4607 or 446·2602.

or

rockers, metal ·cabinets ,
headboards $38 &amp; 'up t~

---------

44

.................
Used Furniture ·· electric'
fireplace. 6 pc. dinette, head
boards. and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 miles out "Bulaville
Rd. Open 9em toSpm, Mon .

49

For Lease

Apt. for Ieete, overlooking
cltypark,LR,kitchen.etova. wr•nger_, washer $75 .
refrlg .• dining ·area, 2 bdr., Skegge Appliancaa, Upper

will deliver,

phone 304-675-2897.

pupo. 304-882-3672 .

Tniner rabbit Beagle,

61

Rent

57

SOUTHERN
.

Musical
.Instruments

Real Estate General

UTILITIES INClUDED

,.;

yearly can rent for 30 percent of their income.

both, $190 mo. plus utili· River Rd. 446-7398.
ties. Call PJ' 446·1819.

r---------

PHONE .675-6679

55 Building Supplies

.

.

':

~

.-- l!t.Ii ...
..

'

446-

r.:

..•

.

.

'

Bloclt. !&gt;rick. - r plpoo,
windows. lintel•. etc.

Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

0. Collll14-245-li121 .

•.

-.

#670

SPLIT LEVEL HOllE - Approx. 3 yea" old and needs
afami~ . 31Edrooms. 2 balhs, ~ving room, dining room,
kitchen on main level. Basemen! drv~ed but nol
finished, with area for famr~ room. utility, bath. Garage.
l acre of Hal lawn.

GREAT LOCATION - More lhan house - th" 1s a
home' Brick ranch within amtle of Holzer Medrcal
Center. St Rt 160. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs. equrpped
klchen. spac!lus living room, full _basement 2 car
garage, 2 acre Hat lawn, rn-grou'hd swrmmrng p:xj . A
home wrth a klt ol charm.
#668

Building Material•

·.

PRICE REDUCED! FANTASTIC PRICE! - Can yoo
believe the pnce the owners have reduced this bnck
ranch to' Over 2.000 SQ. It large living room. fay!!, 2
balhs. 3 bedrooms, drnrng area. attracllve krtchen,
family room. full divided basemenl 2car garage. large
~ndscape:l ~wn. Pnce reduced to $52.900. -

'

Elderly and disabled with'an intomelesslhln 513.250

'

... ..••'

Put Nu•nber 1 to work fo~you: -

Atori 21100 ond 15 cartrldgoo UOO. 2 Cobbogo
Plltch PrMrnie'e 846 ..ch.

'

R.E., INC.

·446-6610

Cell

Coli 87&amp;·1 078.

~IUS

..

J. Merrill (arter-Realtor-379--1184
Becky '--Realtor-441&gt;-0458
.lin tochnli--Realtor-446-7881
Yirgna ~-RealtGr~lsi-8126
Elirabeth long-Realtor-675-3968

tlti.OO Hch. Call 11752798-. ----

1175-207&amp; or 875-2099.

APARTMEN1S AVAILABL~
TWIN RIVERS
TOWER

~- 1idY ~Dew.tt-Realtor..:::3n-s1 sr~=~==w

Farm Equipment

For ule girl Cabbage Patch

doll. H&amp;. Call 304-578·
2926.

partment
for

•20.00 pic:kup

_ Firewood delivered.

..

Auto waaher $66- five other
,washers to chooa~ from .
Ges stove 8 75- 2 others to
choose from, electric range
895- 2 . others to choose
from. Refrig. $96, aide · by
side, refrlg.
8175, ·woodbur~ing stove $95. Maytag

Firewood,

Firewood

load, UO.OO dollvorad. Coil
304·11715·67112 or 6762991 .

-:~;----;A-:-'-:---.---

$65.

thru Sot.
614-446-0322

load, 830.00 delivered. Call
304-458·1728.

~=~--=· =

I rr·r1 :;di'Pircs
/, Lrv,"IIIGk

Silver miniature poodle

Firewood. $20.00 pl(lkup

Pork, Route 33, North of

614-992-7479,
laundry, water-trash paid, 1- - - - - - - - - -

dopooit. Coli 446·3474 after 4PM . .

Gas

Valley Furniture, new 1r
frames 820, ~25 ; a.· 830, used. Large se~t_ior:t of qua_
lking frame $60. Goodselec· . itY furniture. 1218 Eastern
.tion.......:.of.___be_dr..dom suites.
Ave .• Gallipolis.

U-1-=;:=;:::::=:;::;::;:=-.i
46 Space

fur.nishect-nicelv, .1!

utilities paid, 1 person $76,

$360.

-

gun-

Furnished room. 8126. Utili-

Cell

adults.

$20.and $25.,

ahara

water and . sewage fur·

-Door Prites Given Every Sale ·

19n Ford Pinto 1181ion·

1 bdr apt.. 2 bdr optc,
8150-1280. Coil 304·876- For
7283 875·5104 or 675-. ond

ll _l~;i;i;;d~;;-cll;=~;;~~~~
no

Somethin&amp; ·for everyone NEW USED &amp; ANTIQUES W"kly.

·

1

59 For Sale or Trade

11659

40 ACRES TIMBER- 3 mik!s off Rt 7, Hannan Trace
' Road. These are approximate acres. Rural water.
electric availa~e.
and
stream crossmg

•
FOR THE SIIALL FARIIER - 10 klvely acres with a
br~k ranc~ ho!T'j!. Ho!T'j! has 3 b!!drooms. full balh and
2 half baths, hvrng room. krlct'&lt;!n, drnrng ~rn, .full
basemem. attached garage. land and hQ!T'j! rn
excellent condrtion. Located Rt 35 West area.

••

•

.

'

#686

I

Hundreds of books from the very old to excellent modern
hard covers! Just a few of lhe titles and calegories include: 2
Vol. oH964 "Cavalry !acts &amp; Regulations";--1896-"Under
Bolh Flags"; 1861 "Infantry Tactics for Volunteers &amp; Mililia"
U.S.A.; Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin"; 1850 "Report of the
Commissioner of Pafents"; 1855 "Footprints of An Itinerant";
1893 Saxe's Ill. "New Guide or Hinls to Soda Water Dispen·
sers"; 1848 Bible &amp; olhers; Crane "Collection of English
Poems"; Brographies; Hislory &amp; Georgraphy Books; several
McGuffey &amp; Rays school books; lot of illuslrated books; also
lot of children's illustraled books. Exceplional collection of
books aboul Hollywood, sludios &amp; stars. Many of the books
relail in lhe $30-$40 price range, and lot of recipe books,
both old &amp; modern. Hundreds of Books!
JEWELRY: Nice slick pin w/diamond in Filigree mounling;
gold tie tack w/diamond; Goodyear lapel pin w/diamond; 3
gold ladies' dinner rings w/genuine stones; 2 heavy gold
weddin~ands; gold Odd Fellows lo4ge ring; gold cameo
stick pin; plus more jewelry'
COINS &amp; CURRENCY: 15 silver dollars; silver half dollars;
1951 Cinco Mexican f"'Sos; other coins; U.S. military 5 cent
cerlificate; 1899 $1 Stiver cert.; 1914 $5 Fed. Reserve Note;
$2 Bills; other certificales'
STAMPS: In Blocks: 8-1949 Annapolis Tercentenary 3
cent; 8-Final Encampment of GAR. 3 cent; 6- Wash . &amp;
Lee University 3 cent; 4-Edgar Allan Poe Slamp. GUNS:
1855 S&amp;W Springfield .22 pislol; good Nickel Forehand Arms
Co .. 38 pistol. NAZI GERMAN ITEMS: WW II German Currancey; WW It pin w/Swastika; artillery badge; 1936 Ge1man
Melal.
LARGE SELECTION OF RECORDS AND TAPES: Old lo modern' Many albums of every type and good ~ssortment of 8track tapes. Many never used. ..
•
OLD FURNITURE: painted oak serpentine high chesl
w/bevel mirror; painted oak washstand w/ dove tailed ·
drawer; bridge I
I
I
I
round oak lamp
table
cabinet TV; good heavy duty . commercial
portable washer: sweepers; 2_modern chests;
machine; maple dresser w/mrrror; kong &amp; srngle
G.E. port. stereo: G.E. 8·track player; !oro power . mower;
elec. lawn mower; slain less cookware; pots/pans: drshes. lot
of small household ilems &amp; accessories!
SCI,FT GOODS. TEXTILES &amp; HANDMADE ITEIS: large selec-.
tion: AbouiiO qurltsrnvanous condrlrons: 6 quolltops; handmade comforls; lot .of hand crocheted Items; ·mce bedsp, reads sheets, rugs, blankets, towelS, lable scarts, doilies,
curtains, ofghans, cushions and the like; lol of yarn and sew·
ina items.
COLLECTOR ITEMS: 8\lx6\\ tin type of Civil War soldier;
brown stoneware gooseneck tea pot; blue/white stone sail
crock; large .blue "Star" pottery mixi,ng bowl; ilene mil~
crocks in assorted patterns; very good' Chref Logan lard lon
good C.W. Miller Newark lard lin; flow·blue plate; 2 Dresden
llles "Drifting" &amp; "Signs of a Thaw"; Copeland Spade
P.
.Rose" plate; A.W. Wadswprth slipper knife; 6" lead crystal
all bowl; fine Bavaria decoratd pitcher; assortment of china
&amp;·glass figures &amp; ~ms; 2 old postca!d albums and others.I.O.
O.F. Cuckoo clock; Flemish art box; old pncil box w/early
pencils; Murray City milk glass ax~; plus many, many unHited nemsl
Hllndrtds of ltt!M lo sella! this auction! 7-room house
IIIIa ,.,.... Enrythinl full. Somotllln1 for everyone.
T~r~~~s· Calli Day of Salt or Chock with Positive ID
·
Lunc~ Availoble
OWNER: MRS. MAIY TURNER ·

·· ·

...__.,_(!f!~9!A!·,~!~~I!Y

TU!!£! , .............._ .....

AUCflO.EEI: OTTIE OPPERMAN
315·7195 or 394-2296

HILLCREST KENNELS
lloording oil broldo. Hoolld ·

BRICK- RT. 35- 51Edroo~ living room. 21ft ol
cabinets in kilchen, 2 full bat~· full basemetil 4 car
garage. sitlJated on 1 acre. This horne has had olot ol
TLC. Lots.of possibiltlie. Call for more uelatls.
11636

indoor-outdoor f•cilitles.

AKC Dobormon pupp...:
Stud Sorvlca. Call814·4417791.

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OWNERS HAVE
IIOVED TO FLORIDA - And would like to .
have their home sold this month. like new
splillevel is located on Debby Drive and ofters
approx. 3000 sq. ft. of living ar.ea plus 2 car
garage and one ofthe area's nicesl pools.

zm

PRICE DRASTICAllY REDUCED! OWNER
SAYS SHL THIS IIONTH! - Rio-Centerpoint
Rd. {Cherry Ridge). Approx .•75 acres woodland, fronts on 2 roads, county water available. $250 per acre.

.

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GALLIA'S BEST LAND BUY- Price reduced
to $87,5001 - Former dairy farm - 7 rm . 2
story house, several buildings. 180 acres,
more or less, localed on Northup-Patriot Rd .
near Northup.

llionol All·b-d grooming.

ADDISON TOWNSHIP r 8.8 acres 'more or
less, vacant land on Bulaville Porter Rd. Electric septic tank, spring, rural water available.
Asking $10,900.

en
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THIS COUlD BE YOUR PERFECT HOME! --'
10% FINANCING- FIXED RATE -20YR~ I
This hom~ oH~rs 4 BRs, 2 balhs, ktlche'~
w/range and eye-level oven, 15x48 LR, frre'
place, woodburnrng stove, 6x40 front porch, 1 ~
car garage, storm wmdows. nrce flat garden__ 0 area, Ctly school district.

rNtttNNtU LIJ(;AI,IUN

Reel Estate General

::;! '

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - GreaiiNVESTMENT
acres woods. Comfortable lwo story home off- for lhe buyer! located on Graham School Rd.
ers 4 BRs, bath, kilchen, living r~um; family • E.ach ~nit offers 3 Brs. bath, living room,
room •. two fireplaces, barn , 2 large screened kitchen w,rth stove, refrrg., OW and disp., laundry, large c,arport, central air and storage area.
porches. lovely Quiel setting.
•

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CADMUS AREA - 26.5 acres - 1\1 story
Z home offers 3 BRs, kitchen, living rnom, dining
·m room, bath, carpeting and aluminum siding.
~ Call for an appointment.
.

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lleSidenlial or Com11101'·

WANT tLBDW ROOM? - Raise your meat and
potaloes on 4 acres of level ~nd. Home wrth 3
bedroo'TIS. modem kitchen, bath. Some new Allderson
.;ndows and ott'&lt;!r imprOI'emenls. Off Rodney-Bidw~l
Road. Low price.
#6
97
IN TOWN :._ (}.vner .;11 help finance this older 2 story
rome at 3rd Avenue. lndudes 2 IEdrooms. famrly
room, nal. gas heat Garage. $20,000.

ROOII TO ROAM .on this 2 acres {approx.) lot 4
bedroom home wrth large lrvrng room.1ilchen. balh.
basement frurt trees and storage butldin&amp; $33,900.
lf/27

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#737

CHESHIIIt:'AREA - ROUSH LANE -Very al·
~ tractive 3 BR ranch offers equipped kitchen, l ·
;;;: shaped living room and dining room wilh fireZ place, I \l baths, full basement with woodburn·
Ci) ing stOI'e, 14x21 garage, carpeting. Call for an
en appointment.
~

LOT FOR SAlE- 100x600 lot on Raccoon in·
eludes water lap, electric and septic lank. Call
for more information.

ADDISON TfWP. - Approx. 7 mi. from Galli·
polis, 39~ acres, m/Uronts on township road.
All woods and brush. $8,9(10.
I

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,500!- 3 BR ranch
on 11 acres mar~ or less. Pond, full basement,
family room with woodburner, living room,
eQuipped ki(chen, dining room, 1 ~ batbs, attached_2 car garage.
OWNER MOVING 'TO FLORIDA AND HAS
DRASTICALLY REDUCED THE PRICE OF THIS
HOllE -Will finance wilh 25'11 down and 10'11
interesl on the balapce. Victorian style 3 bedroom also offers. l'h baths, krtchen with range,
refrig., OW, and displ., laundry room, living
room, family room, carport, unattached garage,
16x32 · fenced pool, • alu111. ·siding. Attac~ed
beauty shop .would help make the payments.

#684

INisreduced to $22,900onthis
IEd.~ll?" motile home with Ol'er 4 acres of r~lt ng
land. . dr. garage, storage btd&amp;. private location. KC
schools.
#l34

Z 200 ACRES, 11/L. FRONTS ON RACCOON
1:;1 CREEK - Approx . 65 acres tillable. and 135

.

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sewer. 3 bedroom ranch, 24'x24' fami~ room with
fireplace. Addillonal. room used presently as beauty
shop. Owner .;!ling to sell all or part '"ve a call for
rrore details.'
ma

COUNTRY . ATMOSPHERE - New bi·level home
located north of Rio Grande. Beautiful decor
throughout. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs. dressrng room and
bath off large master bedroom. French doors to back
deck ofl the dining room. n~e kitchen. large famrly
room, beautiful carpel 2 car garage.
#717

school district.
I
can
purchased. Call for an appoinlmenf

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cial - 7acres o1 prime ian~. access to city wat!l and

Ci)

CONVENIENTLY lOCATED - Approx. one
mile from lown, this older home has had some
remodeling, 2 BRs, kitchen, LR, 14~xl5~.
dining room, bath, part basement, one car garage. Level lawn.
·

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#731

cllh ..o. Englllh Cocker Spo·
nlol puppin Col 614-~88·
9790.

z-·

FARMER'S FARM - One of the area's better
farms. 101 acres m/1, lots of Symmes Creek
bottom ·land, pond, new fences, large barn,
several other buildings, large tobacco base,
mod. 3 BR home, 2 baths, localed on Cadmus
Crossroads. Call for more Information.

Protes-

Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·

-t ·

M~KE US AN OFFER -

Briar~tch Ken~•

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#655

LOW INTEREST LOAN ASSUMPTION -,Call and ask
about the £.Z financrng terms on th• attrac!Ne 3
IEdroom home. Includes equipped kitchen. fireplace.
'fami~ room. 2 baths, heat pump, 2 car garage.
wocksrop and much moce. Over I actelree hoed yard.

811-3117-7220.

,

WHY WAIT -'GO GIVE YOUR FAMILY A_Gtp
they'll never forget Buyth" rome in the country on l \\
acres more or less. 3 BR, 2 bal~ livrng rtxim, famtb'
room wrth fiteplace or woodburner hookup. 2 car
garage,' heat pump, central arr. Pnced rn tt'&lt;! 50s.

'

Judy Teylor Grooming. Cell

' OWNER NEEDS QUICX SALE -4 bedroom home
localed on 1.8' acres, more or less. Large family room
·with fireplace and beamed ceilin~ Den or office, dining
room, 2 large barns. tobacco base.
#688

MOvE lti
OWIIER IS LOSING TIIIIUSAIIDS ON THIS BEAUTIFUL 4
BEDROOM, 2 BATH RN«:H HOME. FAMILY ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE. 2 CAR GARAGE., 16x32 POOL EX&lt;ILLENT LOCATION.
NEAR CITY..
.
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ID.
GUYAN TOWNSHIP- 108 acres more or less
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20 A. til,lable. Balance woods.' lobacco base. Owner
will help finonce.
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LOVELY HOMEIN THE COUNTRY - 31Edroom ranch
can be bought with 3 or 25 acres. _
Home has new
klchen with all appliance~ formal_dtnmg room with
beautiful chandelier, Irving room Wlth-~one fireplace.
breakfast room. family room, partlal basem.em. utlltty
room, garden tub in balh. Barn and outburldrn&amp;#70l

(!).
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TilOAY! - This modern, destra~e._ 3
bedroom home is ready for occupancy. Rent to clo!lng
for qualified buyer. Features inc!ude modem klct'&lt;!n
witf1 all appliances. livmg room. dimng room and
fweplace. Over' 3 acres ~nd. Bonus-like new. large 2
car garage. Close to city. Believe ttl Only $37.~

STOP!! LOOK NO FURTHER- Th~ 31Edroom ho!T'j!
is just what you need aun affordable pnce. 1300 sq. it ,
of liVing area inCludes 'lfJ tamrty troll\ ,new kitthen,
dining area. 1~ baths, natural gas heal new carpel
oak tm~ neW root. localed on a safe street for
children off Rt 141. ~1.000.
.N i
79

722

$5.500 tOT - Off Clark Chapel Road. Owner will
survey. Level land.
• #7U6
SECLUDED FAilll - 146 ACRES - A filrm that
shows its care and prominence of past h~ory.
Complete set of farm buildings. DrlNed well. rural waler
avai~bte. Springs for livestock. Good pasture farm,
crop land, timber. TobiH:co crop and a full line of ,
machinery. $65.000. 12 miles 1rom Gaii~POIIS.
11663

..... -~

. Housmq

Hei1d1fu.lrtl!rs

-

• VINTAGE 'OF 28 COlONIAL STYLING--: 2 slory brick
OYeffooking lhe river. Stories of the past rn th• speCial
horna Large living room. furmat drnrn&amp; kitchen..
sunroom, 31Edrooms, I ~ balhs, basemenl Extra are:
5 room house, abOI'e grourd pool. storage butldrngand
1.87 acres. Give a call today.
.

•no

2 ACRES - localed 2 mites below E,..,... Good site
for building a home "' to place arnoble horne. River
view. Asteal at $3,500.
tl4l

VINTON COURT- 3 BR ranchm wrth carport
front yard wrth covered patio. Compacl clea n. cent arr.
and oh. 50 nice. Vrnyl sKiin&amp; ~. heabng bil~ . All r~ht
here rt is. Only $33.900.
11681

"" Oiit8teetitOtf"2-I"Rtialf.st'itt~t1Qf! ·astr1is"~oet fV~-i~ NAF.·O~~""'nv.~;;t;,;zyll-! P~!

'

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.·

SOLID OLDER HOllE - 4 nrce ~IS. 2 car garage,
ootbuildin&amp; cellar house. Ho!T'j! has 4 bedroo~m
kitchen. bath, fami ~ room. format drnrn&amp; has had SOIT'j!
remode~ng Home needs a farmly. Take a loa~

#692

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LAND - Oesrrable tract 96.62 acres O'()re or less on
St. Rt. 124. AoPio•-30 acres lll~ble. Pond, some older
barns.

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#723
EASY LIVING - $35.000 - Very cheertut 3
bedroom. 2 bath. refngerafor, range, d~hwasher,
wOOdbyrner, cement front and back porch.l oacre With
motile horne hookup. Home ~ rn excellent condition.

.

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r.;;.k f-."~~tmr.~~~~ !~J · .~ :'.-£!;u!.! !!-&lt;:~l~~unit~G:!
kA(:B OFPICE IS INDBPINDBNTLYOWNID AND OPDAT!D.
·

,747

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�Page-D-6'- The Sunday Times-S.entinel
64 Hay &amp;:Grain

71

Autos for Sale

Ear corn for ute. •3.00
bllthll. Colll14-742-3010, -1878 2dr. Ford llronodo PS.
PB, new tlre1, good shape.
H1y *2.00 bale, in bern ne.a r 1964 4 dr. Chewolot. trade
Rutlond . Call 614· 8117· for 1ny type of camper. Call
3831. '
1114·886-3838. . .
~ ~

0

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va . .
\li}l}~ )e}l] ~ ,THAT SCRA":~BLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each sQuare, to form
f&lt;1ur otdlnary words.

Januerv 6, 1986

6,. 1986·

Pomeroy-Middleport--~

Ohio-Point Pleeant, W. Va.

7

•

71

72

Autos

1--:-:-::----:::-'-

1984 Dodgo Doytono Turbo
loodod 6,500 mlloo. Coli
448·8149 before 2:30PM.

Trucka f9r Sale ,

Broker-Auctioneer
Call. 446-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245.9507
Steve McGhee
446· 1255

•

1978 Chevrolet 'cottodolo,
4x4, PS, PB, auto, nrit th·ea,
locll out hubo; ..c. cond ..
18,000 mi. Coli 114·317·
7140.

1972 Chevortot Mollbu. Coli
811·245·5492 .

72

u · · !leoblaet

Trucka far Sala

81S
•

Jamoo li&gt;ya

'10 FOrd I.Nn P1 00, air.

-a.

c.ll ., 4·
2111-1141 or · lt4-441·
1 171orl14-44a-7811,

with Olmtll&lt; top.

11,100 .00. 304·171·
2130.

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301'

air, PS/PB, good conditit;m.
.One owner. $1250 . Call
oltor 5PM, 448·0137.

~;r.;;,~~:t,-4~
7741 nltht or cloy.

1975 Vollont 4 door, 221, 6
cylinder, 1lr, etero evl'lem.
now rodlol tlrto. •1 560.00.
Coli. dovo. 614-892-2386;
ovonlngo. 614-992-3310,

'80 Monte

arlo Landau,

VB. outo. P

PS, AC •. AM,
rear defrost r, tilt Wheel,

' TIIIITATI

UI'HOliTI!IIV IHOP
1111hc. .............
114-441-71J3orl14-4411133.
•

~·, Wo• ..... Ice. Wello, ~:;;::;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;==

lfdii~IJIIfLIIIOII
Autos for Sale

w- ..,_,

....... poole -

cruloo. bulll·ln Cl. AM-FM

:C C-Ol -"'- •&amp;i!fbC ·j +ici \Bi

71

G...-el Hauling

• Refrigeration

Business
Senrices

Wf-i A'T 'TH 5
EMBAR'R'A55Ec::&gt; .
'SCOTSMAN ' HAc:&gt;.

~CRYGLE I

304-675-6286 .

PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

74 M'otorcyclea
~

1880 Honde CR-21D-R vary
good cond. Coll4411-8710.
1973 . Votkawagen. needs

minor work, beat oflar,
304-675-7177.

71

Woterprooflng.
Roofing. guuerlng. okllng.
plumbing, oo,...try worll
ond ooncrMa work. Free

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

76

totltMtoo. Coli 441·3171 . ,

Auto Parts ·
• Acceaaoria~

4 whlto opok• rims
111x9Yax50. 8 lugo, UIO.
Coli 114-885-3839.

Iron Horoo lulldoro. Farm •
Commorclol Polo lldgo.
114,.332·9741 Collect.
Winter opl. : 30X40XI w~h
11' track door • mon door:
f6238 oroctod.

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...,, - · poln•.
IRI flnclu4_1ng hot tor
oppllcadon) :J04·871-2011
or 111·7311.

1--------:--:-::::-11-ry or C181tle tool drilling.
- o compltted oomo
My.

Pu...,

•leo -

- · 304-111·~102 ,

aot'VI·

YOUll BE DELIGHTED ... with this 3 BR bi-level
located lust minutes from town. Also features
2Yt baths, LR. kitchen, carpetin&amp;. heat pump,

.18' - pick up
20' ft. - delivered
Also pige ·connec-

tions and water pipe.

S&amp;H PLASTICS

Central (YieRnO), W. V1.
PH. 304-295·8615

ILACKBURN REALTY- 446-0008.

•

1981 Pontiac Bonneville
Brougha,m 42,000 miles.

1970 Ford Fairlane needa
work· 446·3092. 1981

Ford Fairmont good condition. Clll 446-3622.-

1974 Po11 1iac 400 engi11e.
sell part, running cond . Buy

all togetHer save. 982 ·
3
1965 Olds 88 V-8, auto, 1_::-9:-:9:-1-:· ::-:-::-::-----::-:runs good, body good, good I
family car or collectors. Olda Delta 88 convertible,
$600. Coli 446-4462.
1973 perfect shape $950.
1967 «;lTO 4 spd .. perfect
9 60

diesel engine $4,5000.
1980£itation 52,000 miles

Real Estate General

' 1967 Chovello 2 dr. $6SO.
1962 Impala 2 dr. hardtop
$1.800. 1965 Impala herd·
t op •~ 1. 400 . 1974 Pont 1ac
'
.LeMons Sport $850. 1966
Chevelle porto. Call 4'46·

e

Reaf Estate General

•
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Real Estate Genaral

~-.,;]

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FARM OR INVESTMENT
&amp; BUILDING LOTS

•

WHY SEnLE FOR TELLING THE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?
Ask Yourself This Question.

•

HILt TOP VIEW FARM - CHEAP! ...:. IMs~nding country

side view from this 3 BR farm house whiCh has·had good care.
lnc~ded are

several spnngs for cattle. 60x45 barn in e~tcellenl condition

MONTGOMERY·
REALTY

(614) 385-7419
Collect Calls Accepted

ENJOY liFE JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE w~en vou buy Ill•
ranch OOme with 3 acres in Northup. Wale~ fall burst into
magn~icent colors acrosS the rnuntryside. Property inclUdes

large lenced pasture perfect 10' several cattle or hor~
24x40 barn. large garden s~t and creek frontage. Home

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

features 3 BR, family room w1th fireplace, large 2 car garage,
and new 1n·ground pool AJI th1s affordably priced at $55,00l
anc(.indudes Buyers Protectjo,n Plan. ·

JUST
LOOKIIIG FOR! -In V~lo&lt;l. well
buin and well kepi 2 Br home with attached garage, partial
base~ fuel ol furnace, bu~ in cabinets in krtchen. also
range, oven and relri~ Woodburner in tR. well insulated on
~rge loll'ith two additional lois. Comer ol Van Buren and Bull
Run. $50s,
11427
6 ACRES &amp; 7 ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
7 room remodeled older
home with 4 bedro oms '2
car garage and 2 olhe'r stor·
age buildi . All lhis on 6
acres,
less . 4 r

7 ROOM FRAME
One fl oor plan, 3 bedrooms.
no upkeep while alum. sid·
ing. Built,i n cabioels, FA lurnace, nice carpetmg, well
inside an~

I%~

llow"' and a

MOBILE HOME lOT - I.Dcaled approx. 2 miles below E,.eka. •
$4,000.00.
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NICE 2 or 3 BEDRM. COLONIAL DUTCH HOM£ -Located •
across from new courthouse. Excellent location for attorney's •

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offrce!

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HOUSE FOR RENT References required.

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COMMERCIAL BLDG. - 700 block of 2nd Ave. Purchase or •
lease. lot 22,620 sq. It; buildin~ $7,560 sq. it. Excellent •
condition.
•

very convenient and QUiet neighborhood on the edge of towO,

When you walk 1n•de, jou'll lall in lo\oe With lhe hardwood
floors, interior (lecorating and coziness this home has. Pt!flty

\

of room wrth 3 e,lOd size BRs; family room with brick fireplace

·•

and 2 !Jalh&lt; Garage. Easy lo heat. Buy&lt;lr's Protection Plan.
Owner wants to sell today! 50s. Good ffnailcing.

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#24!

.;""""''"" ·····=~~.u..~~,,~,,~,:&gt;n::'"'""""~\...,...
NEW USTING- RUSTIC LOG CABIN -II vou're lookinjfor a log

'cabin you'lllove this country style decorated 3 bedroom. Fe1tur~ a
cozy living room w/field stone fireplace w/woodb,urn~r. Convenient
country style Iam i~ room, dining &amp; krtchen comtinat~n. Only 2y~s.
~d. Setting on a partiallv wooded lot. C1ly schools. Priced 1n the 50 s.

Good·1 Exco..tlng, booo""'""· ~. drlwwaya.

..,.lc ......

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GOGO AS NEW - 3 bedroom ranch. Everylhmg is in liplop shlpe. New
carpetin&amp; llindlws and doors, pall1l, paper, elc. Owner is ri!O'ing
and
needs to selllhis home. IIOWI!livina room ~'II" kilchen and dining"'"·
Garage. City school&lt; Good noghborhood. Priced ~ the 40s.
STATUY HOME- .651! acre ol woodland and 1.6 acres m~ can also be
purchsed. fO'mal enlly, IIViig room and lllrrral dm~g. room. rrodern
kilthen !am i~ room w/wb fireplace . 3 B~ 2 balhs, 2 car g;~r!l', ~
interes£ r,~le a,.umable Shown by apJX&gt;intment Priced 1n Ws.

•

~tuated w~hin Sec. 13,

.

SUNDAy·PUZZLER

'"'I

Rodney ';j!age II. $275 monlh. •
•

•• 3 BEDROOM HOllE with 17.9 acres.
Huntington Twp. Price $45,000.00.

land-ping.

Colt onytlmo I 1 4·4411·
4537. Jo- L. O,ovtoon. Jr.
owner.

.

ACIIOII
1 Seal
BWalkhMvlly
11 Induct
18 Fllamentl

18wnt.l181
.20 Announcen.tta
21 .POIIIIII\18

BEAunFUL BRICK 3 BlDROOM HOM£ with 2~ acres. 7 yrs. •
• okl. JuSI off Bidw~I-Rodney Rd. Elec heat pump, fireplace, •
cenl vacuum _system. $70,000.

:

'· ·.

24x30 brick and frame separate building to store all her
~beasured items~ . .aJI this was dooe and then the busy couple

lois ol trees.

.

e

•
•

#245
YOU MUST SEE INSIDE - Th~ anract1ve lllme is located ina

ago, owne~

said to an excellent local contractor: "Build us a2,000 plus sq.
It house on'2 acres off .RI. 35 - make il92' long ri quality
material, brick, put in 3 bedrooms, a sunken front room,
2balhs. large living room, oak trim. Now add an oiJef'Sized 2
car garage and as the wife alllects all k1nds of thif1gs bui\4 a
~anted

~

~ssoc.

Assoc.

lOCATED WITHIN THE VILlAGE Of RODNEY bedrm. •
eotlage with 86'120Z lot Nat ~s FA lurnace•. King coal and •
• . woodburner, septic tank. Galhpohs city school district. Priced 10
•
S&lt;Jfl $20,000.
.
.
•

and 2car garage ooild~g 1200 lb. lobacoo base. toealed off - . ·
St Rt 715. Priced Ia sell al $37,500.
#239

ARST TIME OFFERED FOR SALE - II

UPPER RIVIR RD. - 3-4 bedroom home, wbfp_, 2 balhs, 3-car ••.
garage, mobile home hookup on· It lot Owner interested in
trading lor small business~ will ~I outright Price $41,500.00. •
PURCHASE FROM I TO 5 ACRES with tl'is 3 bednn. farm · •
home 'located alons _Rl 218, Harnson Twp. Priced fiom •
$50,000 to $75;1101l:- --

"
Cetlly Cllrt Burdlttt

JIM'S PLUMIING. HEAT·
INO. Rt. 1, lo• 3111, Golll·
1101f1. CoN 114·387-0171.'

~::!2'~-!,!
446-2707 Evenings 38Hll8 Evenrnas

•

•

*Willis T. Leadinll!am. Realtor, Ph. Home 446·9539
•Ed Evans, Realtor, Ph. Home 446·0825

6 ACRES - $6.000 on Spring
St

Sonieernaf'
(Sonny) Gornes

"'/.~;~;.::!!-~~:£.~~~~A~n::..

e

72 a&lt;res ~ rolling pasture land aod woods.

POMEROY - 2 nice building
lois on Wright St Water &amp;
sewer. $4,000 00 each.

446-4206

NEW USTING - 3 Bedrm. home outside city situited alOng
plclulesque l'lliow Dr., formal dining room, 21'x15' lamity
room, 2 bat~ WB FP, fenced·in bacl&lt;yard. Modern kitchen
with many amenities. Priced 10 sel. $58,500.

F"""'"-:l~F"'' "'"t· =· e·~~.:

. ,.,·,r=·

130 ARES I mile i rom Ohio
River. Fealures house, huge
dutch style bam. excellent lake
sile, crop land, pasture, and
\\'oodS. Owner says "MAKE OF·
FER ON All OR PART". Pnced
to S&lt;JI as a larm. Possible excellent terms available.
ATIENTION BUILDERS
This property has been subdivided into I acre - I 0 acre
sites, can be wid indi~dually.
-leax waler obtainable, priced
low, possible excellent lerms.
This is an excellenl buy for
either larm or development

CARTEII'I PLUMIING
. AND.HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
GoiiiJNHt,Ohlo
l'hono 114-441-3111 ·or
114·4411-4477

ESTATE

:':::·:C:a:ll:9;92:·:6;64;6:~
·:8:0;9:4.==;:====

Rabbit
1880 Volkswogon
diesel.
AC. ei:c. cond
., .-::con:d:.
1
U.600. Coil alter 4PM,
446·8264.

· • H81tlng

·83.200. Call446-4109.
.

pronoun
23 Faray
24PirCIIIdllnd

26AI,.boX
27 Senior: llbbr.
28 ~..... urilteadlly

•

. lime has

I

30Ched&lt;

84 Symbol for
dyoproofum
65~-

86 Stary
67 SUrfeited

68Ciadl-·
7151.-..ael
73Gonw
74Kfndofa76 Climbing pllrlta
79 o-.yduck
81 Llllr
82184 Hindu pe8sants
851ncllnes
87
Pflntlng '

er-:

126 Wine cup
121
128 Dlnet'S
131 Station
132 Lalit stand
133 A state: abbr.'

c,_,.

134 RevoiUttons per •
minute: abbr.

136 Jot
137 Blemish
136 Rock
139 Symbol lor cerium
140 Hindu garment
141 Snare
142 Sao In Russia

' 21 Bench
22 er-.y
23 PeruM
25 Doll• bill
27 Soaked
28 Blu8llaa
30 T31 Nutaanc:e
33,Dart
35 Gasp for breath
36 Entrance
37 Frog$
39 Succcr
41 Llratne animal
42 Burden

94 Serious:
comb. torm
98 Note otiiCIIIe
88 Spar
99

-llent

100 Mechanical

cantrtvanoe
102 Bart•
104 Interjection
i os Satiate
106 lngnodleut
107 Exponds
109 Group of three

P..-tnad

143 C..001md per!OIIS

4,4 Cornered

111

144 L-.lng of

47 NOIM'Ishrr8lt

112 Afternoon pertfeo

~~48'~~mea· -~""&gt;'":"-~~

608

E. Ma i n&amp;.J.l"~Ui.;.l!
POMEROY, 0 .
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Vacanl
ground in lhe counlry. Greal
building or mobile home sile.
10.51 acres, some cleared lor
your home plus a small share
ol aproduc1ng gas well. plus a
spring lor lree waler ~ me in
and let's look al lhis.
$8,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- On agood stree~ this 3 bedroom two slory remodeled
home is priced to sell. It looks
mce and has a woodburner for
cheap heat this winler. Owner
really wants lo S&lt;JI al
$29,500.00.
PRIVACY - W~h 3 beautilul
acres and a really nice 6 room
home with 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, equipped k~chen, ceiling fans, front &amp; rear porches.
and a woodburner.
JuSI
139,100.00.
BEAUTIFUL VIEW DF

OHJ -.AJtQ~.:':"':::•Ii-'::'';-1

trees. storage building,

room home. Has 4 bedrooms,
big li~ng room, 2 baths, and a
huge lamiy room. Asking

$4a.IOOOO.
CONVENIENCE - Close lo
downtown, this 2 story home
has 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, lull
basement equipped kitchen,
and is in good conditio~. Now
$30,100.00.
RUSTIC HILLS - A home to
be proud or with a huge lam~y
room thai has a beauMul fire·
place, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths,
lormal dining room, garage,
and a big lot. Very n~e. Wants
$48,000.00 .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
. 992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jt~ Trussell 949·2660
Jo Hill 985-4466

AW

WHAT A DEAL- ~24,900
Come see lor yourself. Cozy 6 rooms and balh, 3 bedrooms,
range, diShwasher. storage building and 2 car carport. Kyger
Creek Schol. l arge level lot
#552
c.
'

.
INVESTMENT INCOME
Need ahome plus an income' Who doesn 'l? We have just
what you need! lovely modern home plu s 10 rental motel
units in excellenl condilion. Completely furnished. All you
have to do is move in. Approx . B acres and stocked pond.
localed on a state highway. You can own your own bus ;ness.
Just call for more delails.
#599
J,UST WAITING FQR YOU
loveiV'J bedroom brick home in a very desirable location '
close to Holze r Hospilal. This home has a formal enlrance. a
large living room, anice large kilchen wilh formal dining area
and garage: The home is sistualed on a large well land scaped
lot wilh chain link renced in yard. Alkso nat gas and cenlral

air.
#488
LUXURIOUS
Counlry Estate w1lh 3 lnd ian a stone lirepla ces, mclud1ng one
in a masler su1le. 4 BR total, 2' baths. 112 acres more or less,
IUSI short distance lrom Gallipolis. ThiS custom built tog
home leatures nearly 3700 sq . ft. ol beautilully decorated
and well pla nned living. Stunning living and dining areas
with beautiful hardwood floors. The lovely kilchen is fully
equ ipped and des1gned for conven ience. Central heating
and air. Attached garage. Includes 5 room caretaker home.
.
#610
VACANT LOT - CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
lol-#65 located on Madison Ave ~ in Gallipolis. All
·
Only $5,900 .

-41roc~o&lt;u'

11620

· · 3 LOTS PlUS 8 ROOM HOM£
Heatley Addition of Bid\\'ell. 4 bedrooms. buill·in cabinets,
dbl. sis si~. shingle roof, wood or coal heater. Apple trees,
side porch, rural water system. Asteal at $14,900. You better
be the first

#622
HOME IN THE COUNTRY
7 room house wilh '3 or poss1ble 4 bedrooms. kitchen with
built-in cabinets, slorm windows and doors. localed on stale
highway. Priced at $39,000. Will consider trade. Call for your
appointment now.
·
' #364
PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE
Owner leaving area . Compuler, typewriters, desks, chairs,
tile cabinets, and calculalor all included with sale. This is an
ideal business for lhe right person or couple. A going busi·
ness wilh lots ol room for expansion. For f.ull information
phone now lor an appointment.

#61.1
SPRING VALLEY SUBDlVISION
Vacanllots. Nice size building lots with all utilities there. Lol
size 101.8 by 171.2. Better gel thi~one. now.

··~

FAIRFIElD ctiiTENAI!Y ROAD.... Where yoo can lind qu~t
peaceful StJrroundilgs along with a beautilul rounlry view
Wltoout sacrfficing conviJlience lo •oopping ond hospi~l·
...Where vou11 also ~nd this altnlclive b&lt;ick and lrame ranch.
This oomwffern lhree bedrooms and one ahall b~hs, eat-m
eq~pped'flit£'""', living room, garage, lart~~ flaj lo\ buyern
proleclion pan. $55,000.
#220

#615

I
I
BRICK RANCH ON DEBBIE DRIVE- We can
I FOUR BEDROOMS ON CHAROIAIS IAJ(E - ,Prole!Oionallj lorAFFORDABLE
l'elp you buy lhis attractive oome whidl offers plenty ol room
any size
4
baths, large kitchen and dining
I decorated,
m
1.67 acre;, deck,
area. Full basement with rec. and finished family room,
2300 plus sq. and workshop are someOflhe edfas ttis ' ·
·fenced 5acl yald ljve us a call, 1'00'11 be surprised I&lt;Jw •
I dining,
affordable it is.
propertj offe". Home has 2h baths, eat;jn kitchlfl, lormal
sunken livin11 room and family room. Scenic views ri
#204
I lake
and hills in a restricted area. er1oy wildlife. fishing, ice .
and other benelits of suburban livin&amp; Call and male
1
I skalmg
an appointmenlto see this
home today!
NEW LOOK- Takea second look atlhis home4 mile; below
#406
town
an excellent nver view, oilers and attractive living
I tOW CALORIE SALARY! - Yoo can stre!cil vo&lt;Jr hosuing room with
wrth hardwood floors, altraclive fireplace and bg picllJe
Window. N"" lilchm also •ilh big picture "ridow taking
I fireplace,"thkno"tty
lhis 3 BR ranch.Offers
room
advantaRe
at nver VIeW. Three bedrooms.
bmnent
pine k1tchen ar1d dining room, large attractive
Gas heal Block bui~~g lor auto workshop. EKcellml buy at
I living
'foom and sparW1ng ceram1c bath. New carpet
$39,900
"'""'·
lown and
#216
I .throughoul-.d
Plan cove" oomponenls afull
year. Asking $47.900.
,
I
N233
I
I
lhe lllme
neighbo" Mthin i
I Beautilul
-view
countrysides. This
Sl15
you've teen looking for and m&lt;Je. We can get vou
I Reduced
lo $79,900.
N203
I
I GORGEOUS
RIVER VIEW - Very nlie Ill ~DIY Cape Cod
located a minute
town on lower River Road offers your
spacious INing_wOORilh4 BRs lalllari!O), attractive
I . room wHARDWOOD
FL 5 AND Buck stove insert!J) inlq
•
·I brick
ace, lar110
w/ bay Mndow,eal·in kitchen
and
dining room. Partal unfinished basement also.
16x32 in-groond PWI with wood ileck. lar110 3-4 car garage
I pertect
lor woll&lt;sl\op. Tho lllme has akll of charm inside and
I o•- Prolecluln Plan. Reduced to $69,900..
I
n~
MAKE AN OFFER - Own.he ... ronsider any
..
I carreasona~e
offer on three tl!droom, si~~: room in all home. Two
garage attached IO'x26' deck,. screened in JX&gt;rch, 18' ,
ENJOI' lHIS IEAUIIFUL COUNTII' VIEW from ti'is new 3
I abo'le
II'OUnd
10' satellile dish-push butt111 rontrd,
bedrnom tome wilh 2 boths, U bosem&lt;nt unfinished, on a2
trailer
with septic tanh and water tap. AI thison an acre of
aero
one mie...,. ol \Inion on .Jockson Road. Has a
'"'ge
ond double P'll' 32K32, "'"WJier with wunty
I land. located on EIIOrl!l'een·Prospect Road.
water--Over 1100 sq. fL ollivingipacereadylo"""'
I
-~~ in.
Usted at $54,900.
11426
I
~N GALLIA .COU ..1TY
lami~.

ft. la!~ fion_l.l&amp;!).~~

2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD. wilh Raccoon Creek fiontage. •
$7,500 each
•
2 B£01111. COTTME. located
$8,500.00.

#215

MOVE UP ANOTCH- Tolhis~ru~~lenancelree-brK:krranc~
Beautilul home inside and oot 3 BRS. large deluxe eat·in
k~cfJoo with oak cabinets and oouble oven. 1~ batb ~us
si&gt;Jwer in basemen\ finished famiy room in basement w/ fp.
living room w/woodburner, 2 car garage, all on 2.3 acre lot
overloo~ng. Rt 141 fust m~ules from town. Owne~ anx~us to
sell .. trade. Assumable ~w ~lerest loan.
#108 •.

OLDER HOME WITH MODERN FEATURES- Oveltlokinglhe
Ohio Riller and We'iJ. ~rginia hills. Ju~ off Rl 7. Ky~ Creek
Schools. Nice lYing room w~h ~replace, balh, forced air
furnace. 6 rooms in all plus partial basi!menl Good garden
area With 2.6 acres in all. Possible loan assu!JlptiOn. Good tJJy
at $18,000,
N301

CHARMING BRICK RANCH - Owner has cui hll price lo•
lasl sale. AI $59,500, rompare whal voo get 4 BRs, 2 baths,
large living room, eat.in kitchen. dining room With hardwood
floors and fireplace, spacious family room with another brick

fireplace and ·indoor BBQ. 'Screened in patio. Excolent
'neighixlrhood-walk to town. Don't hesitate-won't last at
that price.
TOWN &amp;COUNTRY - B~h

lllsp~l BUie~ ~rolfdion

Cooven~ntli klcalediD

~low

lami~

fire~
~rmal

~ith'b&lt;ick

parti~

..

.

BRICK RANCH ON NICE SIZE LOT wrth 24x30 separate
garage and WO'kshop. Full basement divided with heat pump.
~so y&lt;llld slave wrth lorced air lo two rooms. Localed on
Bulavllle-Addison Rd.. ju~ north of Bulaville. let usshow vou
this quality bum home

w~h

a nice lawn. .

SOlS

pool,

~ m~.

polio

Jij

1

~

1

I

~~
!.
,.

VINTON: Commercial building w1th 2 apls. upstair&gt;
Formerly ~ as Hardware store. Reduced to:
$28,000.001
.
.
APPROX.
AND A THIRD ACRES wilh1n oty II mils.
Zoned commercial. ,IJong Rt 7. Price reduCEd to
$20,000.00.
3 BEDROOM HOME -__ Ranch style, II. carport
adapted fur woodbtirner, fenced ya111 and in·grou~d
swimming pool. Price reduCEd to $38,000.00.

•

•
· •

lAKE US AN 'orr Ell Owner needs to sell. 1.590 acres, more or less.
3 bedroom ranch 2 baths, lormalliving room. lormal dmm~ room,
lam•~ room. 1.920 sq. it. ~!living space. 21argecovered patios.Clly
schools. Priced in low 50 s.
SilTING IN 20 ACRES Of WOODLAND - Conlernorary home _featuring a
srurium w/hot lub wrapped by an open lormaiiMng and dlmne room
w/allium ~ massive stooe fireplace. amodern "'"""""·kilthen and a
brea~asl noo~ 2~ baths, 3 bedrooms w/master SIJile, slidlf'll doors IDa
patil area: laundry and mud room. UnlinOhed basemtfll 2 car gara110.
Vegetable ga11len and dwart lruil trees Slllwn by appoo1lmenL
IIOiiTHUP AREA- 3 BR lllme, large modem'eat-In kitchen. Fami~ room.
i'IOlg room, office .. den. Nice lol and star&gt; II" bu1~mg City schools, Shown
by' appt Priced IJw 50s,
LAND CONTRACT - 10'11 Down Pavmen\ 10% lnlere'iJ. Rale .- 39.50
acres o1 vacoilland. Black walnut Lois ol woodland. Awaterfall. Secluded
and P"ivale. Blacktop road. Priced $21),000.

11~ ACRE FAIM \lith stllely ~od seven room house in good
repair, two good barns-on~ tobacco and livestock. one for
. ivtstodt Coocrett floor down and hay storageabove.20'x64'
machine shed, grain storage and garage. 3) acres o1
productive crop land, 65.acres hill pa~ure, SMle woods. Coal
under part ol farm. good tobacco base ._ . all for
$4.800.
.
. .
.
#!72

'"rn

within walking d~lance from

e

.&lt;, •

2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME located illortg Hazel Ridge Rd. 25 ••
acres, more or.less. with n~e garden area and wooded area.
Priced $27,500.
••

:

NE.W USTINO - 2 bedrm. cottage

Ike Wiseman, Broker 446-3796'

$29,900.00.

I

acres localed in

58-·

121 Evede an

81 Straka

. 123 ~
~
124 Juncture

12 Chairs

125 Tumbled

i!o Dllllcutt'

organiZation

.11 .PI8Mad
12J--drima
13 Plon;e
14 Wheel covers
15~

16 Msat:Jow
17 PI-of the
18111: abbr.

125 St,..,..,on

63 Klll

126 Makeo

86 -.ttlng in
· 67 Saint: abbr.
88 Made moist
701!raathadloudly .·
In sleep
71 Footllke part
72 Be ill
73 Aecrfbo
75 t.Jnrnarrlad gl~
77 Coin of Slam
78 Conljl . . point
80 Heroic tMirtt
-83 Traced
88 All led
lis Wery: slang
. 89 Dines
80 Equally
91 Prlnt«'S -.re

128 Frolic

•

Carpem.-·.

_..,

LAIID COIITUCT ·- A-tome lwJme on .65.ac:re kit "!"• or less. 2 or 3.
bedrooms, 1~ boltl, living room,lildw&gt;, IAi_lty room. tlild bed!oorn could
: bo &lt;ned for lani~ rD0&lt;11 II bnenlent 'IJI1finished. 2 ~ refri.....
WJsher and drver ~duded. l'rlcod 2IIL

DCEUEIII LOCATIOII - Walkini dilla~ 10. cilv

-~ 4

bedroom lllme, 2111111y 101]0\ 2 b4hl. bUll... kildlen, livintroom. ~
room liobby room. ~. fruit color,~ IUdl. COat air, .9
aero iot with
lruilln!es ond fiPO orbor. Home hos been Mil cored

e

•••••••••••••••••

o:f1Ws.

!Jr. Energv

C:
;

•

RENTAl.- 2mobile home klls wifllwller. $45.00 per month. Kyger ina~~
school dislri&lt;:l

OIILT $19.0011- St!O.OO Dorrrl ,..,_, - 31Jeitniorno. lomly mom,
,

=
'=
LR. dini1g
·-

-

==·~-'

· t.qe lit

......

~

'

....

-~

"

'

'

.

•••Ids

130 Pedal digit
131
tOOl
132 Chore
135 Alter-dinner candy
137 Wire nail
136Goby-er
140 Weight of India
142 n,. gone by
143 Oioo ca a
144 Dec;jgr 111'11: abbr.
145 Symbol tor ·
tellurium
147Eltlw
145 Symbol for • ·

tOCATED IN coUNTRY - LR, 3 llRs. llil£hen, belh. IAilly, room. cedar
panelin~ flj~ ~ oir roudiuod, --'IIIPionces. washer. dryer,
Iorge metal wtbuildin&amp;. prden, l6 ""'· 1'111 sOl for $32.000.
'

:

,,

55 Climbing dtrvloell
57 Tumor of the akfn

118 Pay anentlon
t 19 Tip
120 Sl*lilh article

61 Parent: colloq.

rentrl.

lawrence Co. near
per acre. Buy now fur $32.000. •
IIAI EiTAT£ IS IIG IUSINISS-·
•

m

53 Grtlin
54 Cicatrix

9 Roman 1001
10 Protecllve

defaw
124 Colonize

1fiV£STIIIEIIT PIIOI'EIITY- 641 llild Ave. 2 ~ory homeO' can be &lt;ned
as 2. renlll&lt; large modem 1&lt;itchen. 3 .. 4 ""!rooms. formal dining ond
iving nlOII\ Nl:e back patio. ~so 1 14x70 moti~ home mpd stupe. A1
rovored carport Priced in the 40s, Shown IJj IIJ)fXIintment orly. $450.00

SIWIIG ~~~~
AU All UPI..NCiiD WOOD IIDLTY SAIISPII$0HI . .

;• .

..-.

•

.NEW USTING - 3 bedrm. holne along Sm~hers St. 15'120' •
family rm Some applian~ wilh homo. Buy all for $28,000 00. •

•

- -- ·~'fi,

w~h extra lot Buy all for

•

109

52 F - ortlcle

,_.,.
. 115 UlnCI , _ . . .
117 Dolly record

7Showor

aSum up

60Worttman

118 Wile of Zoua
119 Trial
122 Form &lt;11 sell•

1911 FAIRIIONT IIKliiL£ IIOIIE- L4K52 in "celerlt oonditiln. On a
rented lot '" c1tv .:hoof disbict Only 19.800.

e

NE.W USTING -

slang

110 Frigllls
112 AI thl1 Urfle
113 T""" lnactlpllon
114 Chi,_ dlatonce , .

DOWN
1 Brlglrt
2 catls
3 VentUates
4 Federal agency:
abbr.
5 Rupees: abbr.
6 Characteristic

Ssc'tnsd
55 Tartly
56 Atght of steps
59 Haphazard

15 ACRES 11111£01 LESS in SpringfiEld Township. Wooded. Mineral rilt&gt;~
Mth the property: 0111y $7,500.
'1-.
•

iJMSi'MENT PROPERTY - 5 rooms and balh down and 4
rooms and bath up:;tairs located along 2nd Ave. Buy oow for •
• $17,000. Price reduced!!

l.ecla. Costs~ than

49 Vllal argon
5 t lnolde Information:

curency

151 Uq.-

SO Spoor
~

"""'oll!rs""""'

•
•

•

47 Ward ott

48 ~ corbon

""*

146 RNwln France
149 'Nolcomad
150-ttway

SECLUDED PRIVATE NEIGHIIOIHOOD wilhm wallong' distance to
oowniDWn and oty schools. Brick lnlevel home has akl&lt;mal enlry, livmg
room with firerAace and a brealtlloking,.,. of the Oho Valley. SloP-saver
kll:hon wrth 11!~- in modem apP:.,ces. den with lirat&gt;late. bu~..,
boollcase and han batll. Mddo
bedrnom with hill batll,2 •
large bedrooms, ceramoc bled luD bllh tower level witllllfil! f1rmlyroom,
4th bedroom, ~..age are~ and laundl'j/illblly room. THis tome .has
recenlly
lhrouihotil Screened.., bock pordl wilh bu•-m
with .storage areo.
lot to accmt

e

,

..

105 LOll color
101 Unit of Latvian

lhorlulil

•• WE HAVE A HOME AND PERFECT lOCATION for a family. •
Located almost across from Washington School. 3 bedrm. •
:"&gt; • hOme, 2 balhs, 2 k~chen~ nl:e lot which ~ wide and deep
enough lor garden and swimming pool ~s some worl . •

#403

43 Speck
45 w.ry
46 Symbol tor

along uartield .Ave. Home can be

NE.W USTING ...: Comfortable J.4 bedrm. cottage. 500 block
4th Ave. Off·street parking ea~ly maintained lot $26,900.

·

Immediate possession. 165.000.

----------------------------"i-·

VINTON: Brick ! -floor bulllin~ lormerly used fur bank.
Reduced to $42,000.00.

A CONVENIENT

HUGE FAMILY ROOM - l.oCale!l on lhe lower levo ol this
brick and aluminum ranctl on Jay Drive. 20 lO SQ. ft. includes
3 or 4 bedrooms for d01), 2~ balhs, formal LR. 2car gara110,
central air and fenced backvard. Convement lor fami~ living,
lriend~ neighborhood. Dcy schoos. 167.000.
.f140

••
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••
•••
••
•

BtgJnnlng ot f41 Vur $pultll'

41 Mullic:ll
orgontzatlon
42 Be de!IMod

93 Fabulous king
95 T...-..ctlons
97Pa88 Coroner: abbr.
• 99 Print«' I_,.,
101 Catlike animal
103 G.- lett«
104

.co Pigpen

OON1 OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN in Eureka. 2
bedroom home with 2 baths and lois or room for
ellj)lnskm.located just off Rt 7 near dam. Reduced 10
$20,00000.

LR, formal dining area,·2 baths. ~ersizetl garage, concrete
dnveway. Oub house and ' SWimming pool privileges.

WISEMt~ A
. CALL EVEON~NG ~~ :::n.A:~2:U~:~
-~. --~~,."_.!fQY.S.~-so,L . ~f:?~0.~.1 446-364_UALL: , ;.E.·=~:~!t;~m~9466~ ~~
·

~­

.TARA•ESTATES .- ·4'BEDROOMS - Solid bnck 1,633 sq. ft.
r.mch lhat has everylhing needed ~~ comfortable, gra•us
living. Family room With extra n1ce fireplace, oorr.plete k~chen.

'"~groom

Buym

~d

.

-..·

room, and equipil81 k~chen and 2 lull balhs. 2 car garage . • ;.
$62,000.
.
•

b'

lami~

••
lr •••
•••
I'·
:•
•
••
I'
••
·:

MOVE TO THE COUNTRY, BUT DONT SACRIFICE AfHING,
- Very attra~live clean home on 775 1ust &lt;If 141. Offers• • •-

country features like 2 acres of w-ound:·beautifl.ll v1ew and
peace a~d. quiet, but :w!thout givin~ up con11enien~s. of
modern liVIng. 3 BRs. hv111g room witt1 woodburner. d101ng

•
•

·3 8£DROOM HOME along Chestnut St. Lol wilh service alley irJ . •
rear. 2 car garage and nice garden area. Price $38,500.

[

~-

e~tceptiooal

Wl'f ~mi~

I~

•
ronstruction.large wrre approved klchen, full basemen! wilh •·
lamily room {~iding doo~ leading Ia back yardlr Pienly of ••
balhs lot everyOne, lwo car 1arage, gas heat llow bllsl and
central air. Owner amtious to move to Aorida. ~
$59,900-woula lllllertain &lt;Iter.
.•
~.
#208 ••

BR~ 2~

1

ooHa~

on~

a~ng White Ave. Buy now for

VICTORIM 'BIIICK HOME - lower River Road near Clay •
School. Outbulldin6 and 7 acres. Buy for $37,500.
•

If
•
#128 ·f··
at once. Convenient klcatiln

a mmute from stl!ppmg yet secluded ~rroundings. with
peace and QUiet This home sells ils~f Wllh qualit) brick

~

ft.

34 Orgeno of -lng
35 Fuel
31ChMte
31 Trapped

'

�.... ,. -· . - ..... .. -..

.

.,

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Pomeroy....:.Middleport-~allipolis,

Page D-8 The Sunday.nmes-Sentiner

,........ .

6' " .

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·~· - - -

.

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. January 6, 198&amp;' ·

Ohio-Point Pleeunt, W. VII.

•

·Beard removal-order draws mixed· feelin~ :
_By MARY Mac~
A..OO•ted Pres&amp; Writer

Lt. WoodY Hansteln, a lawYer at
"My wife's only seen me without:
Bruiiswtck Naval Alr Station ln. ·my beard once In the 10years We've;
~:~c~.- ~l'J!:l~'l:lll!!lfe9 J "
~~·-&lt;'~Jlf.!;'~.l;¥,J•I'l""~g.-x-!~!Cl!l, 2o !1~!'!'!'1c"l!.&lt;\~l!L~-=--::;.-:.':I'""ll"~.a.~iv.,!~tfJ:II:l!\.~~been married," said Petty O!llcer.
that laclal fuzz makes for a
years, but since the beard ban that
postal clerk In Long Beach, Calif.
And beards, he said, could pose a
No so fQr others. .
. 1st Class WUIIam D. Byrd, stationed(
less-than-natty Navy m~m has
tobkeffectNewYear'sOay,onlya5
Uhlsaldhlswifeof12yearsdldn't safety hazl!rd. such .as when
"I uw\i&lt; It ha'S cut some of the. aboardtheUSSRJchardL.Pa&amp;eln.'
trimmed morale as well as btlards.
o'clock shadow will grace his chin.
know she was married to a man with wearing an oxygl!ll mask.
morale down for a lot of the guys,'' . Bath, · Maine. "She cried the lastt
some sailors say, but other$ dugout
· Ji!ut when Vernon Ubi, a 25-xea,r a double chin."! cln't think of any
Neat moustaches escaped the saki Petty Officer 2nd ~ass Kevin
time I shaved it."
i
thelrrustyrazorswltha"halrtoday,
veteran,preparedTuesdaytosbllve . other thing the Navy could have blade.
_
Boulter,:M,statlonedlnNorfolk. Va.
And, there are hazards to belni:
gonetommoiTOW"shrug.
for the first time In more than a
donetomethatwouldhavelefther·
The Navy was the only armed
"Ihaven'ttalkedtoanybodywhO beardless.
·
) ·
-~- •rfin a Navy" man;-·tih;t ana = deel!&lt;le, ne ~arne pretcy lathered 'spt;echless;'o'he&gt;;aid. ·- "· "' - ' '"'SerVieesl:lr'lutclfio'Iiilowitcii~ was to&amp;pjly aoo~t lliiV!r,gtusliliveutt
·Geva·a: 1j'l€1'i £a!kro by a ~.:l'.V!y,
foremost. If the order Is to shave It · up himself and submitted his
Adnl. James D. Watkins, chief of personnel to wear beiu'ds.lt limited their beard," said Petty Officer 2nd . beardless Byrd:w1ufout recognlzlna· ·
bald or Uke a Mohawk. I'll do It,"
retirement papers the next day.
navill operations, Issued the ban, them to certaJn rimks and made Class Bobb Hanks, a lO-year
him, and he :says H takes several·
said Petty Officer lsi Class Jerry
"My Intent had been to walt out which allows · only those beards them conditional on approval of the veteran stationed In Norfolk, Va. · lhaves a day to keep his face::
Forstater, who works at the Navy
the E -9 (highest · enlisted rank)
deemed medically necessary. Mas- local commander. The Air Force
Include ·many glrlfrlends and
smooth. .
,
,
·
•
··
and Army a.Uow beards only for wives In that assessment.
Standing watch otitslde tor four·
Donna Marie Metro cried when . hours aboard the USS Richarll L.C
medical reasons, Including that
g_
caused
skin
her
hUsband, Gunner'sMateSecond
when Second ClaU
1
and ManneCorpsReserveCenterln
Jacksonville, Fla.

pi'OJ!X)tlon llst thls year to

see If I

rriade Master Chief, but that did It,"

ter chiefs he saki, found that so few
officers 'wore beards that they-

K~ ;

to aid Ni~araguJU~J.tarvest
•

By CANDICE HUGHES
fluent In Spanish and familiar with
_ the Central Amerlcart country, said
A..octate4 Press Writer
DALLAS(AP)-GeneLantzls44
coordinatorSaraMiles.
·

~

~

"..-: . ~

, ·-:. ": '&gt;X

"'=

~

going to work at the Long Beach
Naval Slation In California.

"I took It pretty philosophically.
Hair today, gone tomorrow," said

~

?"

reard lhfi most,

the brigades can make does
matter."
The U.S. contingents have In·

""''"'~·~· ~~
~"-~ ~~~~e·s
• c6uee lJean.

never set"n ~ =v0l.ilniceei1faie'recroi11€00i~rnc=tif
· Ann Bright is one up on him. The o( moti th and through ads In . cbncemed about the pnsslblllty of a

".,..58-year~_.gr..ane.~c-t..l:er. !-'..." t'!Ot~ .... ..dll.agaz4tes_, ·-new~pare.~ ;m9. . ·reM :=-~~ w~-rlm~h.e!e;.:..~e.ru:!d91, ~""'""'
what coffee beans look like. She's
giol!S newsletters, Ms. Miles said.
Ms, Bright, whO lives In Corpus .
About 650 Americans and 800 Christl and has been to centtal
seen them In gourmet shops.

Lantz and Ms. Bright soon will be

.

weD acquainted with cof1ee In the
IWgh. - .
TheyareamonghundredsofU.S.
citizens headed torwar-tom Nlcaragua In volunteer worker bridgades
that will help local peasants harvest
their preclpus coffee and cotton
crops. .
·
"I've been learning a lot about
solldarity since I've been laldoffand

Europeans participated last year, America twice, said she Is going for
she said.
.
political reasons.
The Texas contingent -Includes
"I'm . -doing - II-· because I'm
other trade unionists, a refugee, Interested In seeing our country's
counselor, a · black activist, a
policies In Central America
bindery worker and a univer.;lty chartge," She said. "My 14-year-old
professor. Volunteers pay their own Is not real happy about lt. I think he
expenses, usually $500 to $!DJ, Ms. probably thlnks I should stay home
Mlles saip.
.
and cook supper."
· "They are mostly not what you'd
Most of the brigades will be
call· political people," she said. . working on peasant cooperatives In

U
.• ~. ,. -1..,__, ... '"""''"' h._...lpl:nn
1"1"10 II 1:!-:llir't
UIC" WJ.UUU ' ~ u... ... u .......1
"f;o ••'•'- o '"' ~"'"' '

'''f'hPV
~~nl ~ l~.::.fA&lt;:J~f' b~ . a.!'lf.:h
·-"'t- --..--.#·~~--..t,- ~ ·L-..~-:o~aJ.,.~ p ...... .
--"""-',r----r- · ·r " - -· ""- ·--------"""" u; ,.;;- .._o;r._.;..;..,_- 6 ..• V'n"O::.I5 "i~-'O.U·t!;:.:.a•'Y.....'t " '1;"-"-

Lantz, an auto worker from Dallas
who lnst his job last summer.
"I never saw a coffee bean," he
said. "But my wile did It last year
and she said the only thlngyou have
to remember-Is to pick just the red
ones."
This. Is the second year the New
York-based Nlc;u-agua Exchange
. has orgartlzed the brigades of about
25 volunteers each, with leaders

farmers, mostly people In their 30s
and 40s."
By the time the coffee and cotton
harvest ends in March, about 400
volunteers from the United States
and hundreds of Europeans will
have been to Nicaragua, Ms . Miles
said.
"It's not a symbolic action," she
said. " It is a literal help. It's a very
small county and the difference that

~-llli

·=

A guide to local
-~elevision programmirlg
Jan. 6 thm Jan. 12

vlnce of central Nicaragua or In the
cotton Helds of the Chlnandega
Province In western NicaragUa.
"They will be eating lice, beans
and tortillas three times a day and
sleeping on a wooden bunk," u~:__Miles said. "It's hard physical work.
Yougetuparound4a.m.Foralotof
these people Its their first expelienee In a country that Is very
undeveloped."

,. -Crash injures 4 Pomeroy residents

Includes complete

' SWORN IN - Gallla Coumy
OFF1CL\L.'!
officeholders reelected In the Nov. 6 election were ·
swom In Friday by Conunori Pleas Judge Richard C.
ltoderick, left, In the conunon pleas courtroom.

Taking the oath are, from left, Cieri! of Courts L01ll8e ;
Burger, Recorder Evalee Myers, Engineer James :
Baird, Coroner Donald Wareldme, l'ro8ecutor Joseph Ca.Jn and Sheriff James Montgomery.
.

~

..

GALLIPOLIS - Four Pomeroy
residents were treated and released
at Veterans Memorial Hnspltal for
Injuries suffered In a two'car
accident on Meigs County Road 3
(New Lima Road) Friday night.
The driver of one vehicle, FrederIck A. Colburn. 18, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
was treated for scrapes and bruises,
according to bQspllal officials.
Sean Liberatore, 14, Pomeroy,
was treated for a fractured right
collarbone and Gerald A. Moore, 15.
Pomeroy, was treated for cuts.
and Moore were pas-

Rick Dalley, 24, 343 Clark Drive,
Gallipolis, was eastbound on 35,
when troopers said Amy D. VInson,
36, R t. 1, Gallipolis, apparently
attempted to pull onto 35 and struck
Dailey's car In the left side. Both
cars sustained llght damage In the
3:10p.m . Incident, according to the
patrol. No Injuries were reported
and Vinson was cited by troopers for
· failing to obey a stop sign.
A three-car accident on Ohio 141
caused heavy damage to two cars,
the patrol said.
Gordon D.

apparently went left of center In a
Highway Patrol.
The driver of the second car, curve, slid around, went offtherlght
Jonathan A : McCoy, "27, Rt. 4,
side of the road backwards and
Pomeroy, was tr~ated for a frac - struck two cars that were parked In
tured rlb and multiple bruises, a driveway. One of the cars, owned ·
according to the hospital.
by Ernest C. Saxon, Rt. 2. Gallipolis,
Colburn was northbound, when susiained heavy damage In the9: 45
the patrol said he reportedly slid left p.m . Incident.
of center In a right-hand curve and
The other parked car, owned by
struck McCoy head-on. Both cars Glen Pratt, Rt. 2, Gaillpolls, was
sUstained heavy damage In the 10: 35 moderately damaged. Splete's car
p.m. accident, troopers said. Col- was heavily damaged In the
bum was cited by the patrol for . accident, troopers said. No lnj~rles
or citations were reported, troopers
driving left of center.
A Rt. 1, Gallipolis, woman was said.
cited hy troopers following a Friday
A Rt. 2, Gallipolis, man escaped
atternoon two-car accident on U.S. Injury when the car he was driving
went off the. rlght 'side of Ohio 7 In
35.

.

Pomeroy resident sentenced
GALLIPOLIS- A Pomeroy man Patrick, 20, 270 Jackson Pike,
was.llned $50 plus costs and placed Gallipolis, failure to obey a stop
on 18 months probation In Gallipolis sign; Paul A. Stacey, 27, Wellston(
Municipal Court Friday.
no valid reglstratlon; and David A.
Jeffrey Scott Smith, 21. was Wellman, 19, Point . Pleasant, assentenced on three bad check . ,sured clear distance.
charges. He was also ordered to
Forieltlng bond for speeding were
make restitution.
D.avid E. Boggs, 21, Northup, $38;
A West VIrginia man was Garland E. Williams, 20, Colo., ~;
·sentenced to three days In the Galli a Jack E . Curry, Sl, Rt. 1, Ewlngton,
County Jall and fined $lXl after $42; and Theron E. Harley, 38,
pleading no contest to DWI.
Detroit, Mich., $86.

Clay Township and Into a ditch.
Timothy Cheney, 23, was southbound, when he told troopers a
northbound vehicle splashed his
windshield with slush as It passed ..
Cheney apparently lost control of his
car, went off the light side of the
road, Into a ditch and struck a rQCk,
the patrol said. Light damage was
reporled to Cheney's car, troopers
,said.
Ught damage was reported to a
car driven hy an Oak Hill woman
follOWing a one-car accident on Ohio

Dispute leaves village without lights:
BRADFORD, Ohio (AP) Dayton Power and Ught ~o. crews
havethird
removed
thevillage's
bulbs from
one
of the
1[i0about
Ught
poles because the village has not,
approved a rate contract. ·
However, Miami County com:
mon Pleas Judge James J. Hooper
ord~ the utility to replace as
many . of the lights as were
neceSsary the same evening to
of

village of Bradford."
On Thursday, DP&amp;L officiaL~ had

J

·-

"Chan~l' 23 listings included

in this. week's guide." .

me

when she apparently lost control of
her'car, sUd off t~ght side ofthe
road a nd Into a dlt . No Injuries or
citation!; were
ried, troopers
Silld.
,

Station list~

tralnlng order.after the village flied
a complaint alleging that the lack of
lighting would "cause lrrunedlate
and Irreparable Injury, loss and
damage to the Inhabitants of the

WSAZ

CBN
ESPN

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l

TV~$

•

WVAH · ~.WV
HIO
Home Box Office

MAX

Clne!MX

STARTING AT
SYLVANIA
COLOR

$3590°

•

. WIDE SELECTION OF .USED
TV'S IN STOCK

.

Showbeat
Page6

.

.Serving Gallia,_Meigs {Jnd Mason Counties
•

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.

9
$179 5
'
.

IOOMIROY OHIO

.

•

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Colum-.

WCHS
Ill' '
WPBY Huntington. WV
WBNS
OH
WOUB A-... OH
WOW!( Huntlo~. WV

YEAR END CLEARANCE
1.9" PO.RTABLE

e

Huntington. WV • CBN Cable Netwrk
SpofU N . A - . GA

WTBS
WTVN · Columbus, OH
WTAP .....ersburg.WV

REG. S219.95

'

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f~;;;;;;;;;olfl;;cl;al;s;t;ha;t;if;lhey;;;;;;;;;would;;~turn~~th;e~lr~U~g~ht~s;off~.;.~~

,.. Triple Filter Syst!lm
.-: Brilliant Headlight
,.. Low Profile. for Cleaning
Under Furniture
. ,.. Automatic Carpet Height Adjustment
· AdJusts to all Carpet Levels
,.. Adapts to Above-the·F!oor
Cleaning Tool•
,.. Brushed Edge and Corner Kleening_

charge.
Flned'$17 lor disorderly conduct
wa$•Jody Lanham, 18, 547 Burnett
Road, GaUlpolls. Grover W. Waugh,
~. !lt: 2, Crown City, forfeited $53
bond on a charge of resisting a game
protector. ·
·
.'
In traffic cases, eeraldCampbell,
41. 39~ Court St., Gaillpolls, was
given a six-month suspended jail
1erm; was fined $12 and placed on 18
months probation after pleading
auilty to a reduced charge of no
~to~'s license. He had been
~ with driving under license
tuspenslon.
' Fined costs ~r pleading guUty
'ID no motorcycle endorsement was
,Johit Sheets, 24, Rt. 2, GaUipolls.
Fined $178 for an overloaded truck
was James M. Daniels, 24, Lower
River Road. Gallipolis.
-·-"·"-.....,.~-"" o~ F-O!'!e!t!.n.g!M)!D(Irafflc_l(jolati.OII$.
were Laura E. Kratz, &amp;!, 548 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, faUun! to yield
when making a left ttirn; Randall J.

Filmeter
Page4

did not approve a rate contract with.:
the company by ·Friday, DP&amp;L :

'probation and had his driver's
~censesuspendedfor60daysonthe

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