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Pershing 2 lu-e probe

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Deaths .............................
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Edl&amp;:orlals •••....••••.•.••..•.• ,·,.. A~2
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Middle110rt

~986

Pomeroy--Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

.. "':-."~-~-By IU)iiEJii'i~·M'wR . ~-~~-~-~~u~i:d -a bm which -.;c;Uid'iilanctatea'"Co";toi fo

Sunday. January 13, 1985

oiiarnouliltriii

.

-~·-nons iri [}art
cash· llii'tanceexpecioo1ii ~" ·.
Associated Press Writer
• percent this year and additional slashes of 10 percent · reach about $400 million by the end of the current
_
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Republican leaders of
In each of the next two years.
fiscal year June 30.
~--,.... Ohlo-Senate·have-br-.a nded-as !!too.llttle~too late"
Senate President Paul E. Gillmor said: "People
Republicans maintain there will be asurplusof$571
0e1Jlocratlc Gov. ,Richard Celeste's reported call for
don't want symiXl~ey~ wanrrellef:"-iie-satd----mllllen,4lut~--Celeste's fiscal advisers
a 10 percent cut in the state Income tax over the next
Republicans have come forward with a proposal
disagree on the amount of funds that will be unspent
two years.
which prov,tdes "meaningful relief."
or othetwlse uncommitted at that time.
They referred late Friday to news reports saying
He said there Is no reason why a tax cut shoulil not
Meanwhile, an eight-member " blue ribbon"
Celeste will propose a cut of 5 percent as of July 1 and
be substa11t1al·and Immediate, and that Celeste "can't : committee of business leaders which made a study of
resist his Impulse to overcollect taxes and overspend
state finances said Friday In Its final report that the ·
a second reduction of the same amount a year later if
people's money."
expected $400 million surplus should be used for
economic conditions permit. .
Administration officials would not conflnn or deny
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, RCinclnnatl, said a 10
purposes other than a tax cut.
the report.
percent cut over two years Is "merely cosmetic."
The panel, headed by Dean W. . Jeffers, retired .
-· ~- ~-!!e-.¥--~10r-!t:/ - !...~ -t!!~ £.?!!ate ~~~rja.::a.~.,~" = :B0~~-~~~~~l~rtj~ ~r~ h£1.\!!.nftbylr -~m~nda- _
~ -· =-.,..
v -;c,..

Rio mayor
reviews first
year on the job

By JOHN CHALFANT
A8soclated Press Writer

.'
__...._ 1-

'Z.u.ts'• •
............
,::"' 1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
'Blue RibbOn Committee on .State
Finances' appointed by Gov. Rl·
chard Celeste said Friday a $400
million budget surplus expected by
June 30 should be used for expenses
other than an Income tax cut.
The bipartisan panel, headed by
-,,n W. - Jeffers;-sald- in Its final
report that $:axl million of the
projected fund balance at the end of
the current fiscal year should be
placed In a rainy day account.
' It said another $1B:lmllllon should
be set aside for payment "at an
appropriate time" of the deferred
and accrued interest on the $1.4
billion the state has borrowed from
the federal government io keep Its
unemployment compensation fund
mended the General Assembly
create a fermat bipartisan economic advisory panel to oHer fiscal
advice on revenue forecasts to the
governor and the Office of Budget
and Management.
Senate Republicans had planned
to use the $400 million surplus to
finance part . of their proposed 30
percent tax cut over the next three
years. The GOP plan calls for the
first 10 percent reduction to be
retroactive to Jan. 1.
U the committee's recommenda·
tlons were adopted, there would be
no money left over in the current
fiscal year to help pay for a tax cut.

negotla tlons with H &amp; H Cablevlslon
of Crown City. A- contract was
signed In July, and at last Tuesday's
council meeting, H &amp; H owner John
Hogan predicted that, weather
permitting, the village will be
on-line in mid-ApriL
Through discussions with Columbus delleloper Ted Harder, add!·
tiona! apartmffit space will be
coming into the wUlage, along with
plans for a senior ell tzens housing
complex.
"It was easter tlian I thought It
would be, because the timing was
right," Walker said. "Along tho.se
(Continued on page A3)

2~

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1 1 Sections. 78 Peges 60 Cents
Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

g:erieiaTciiali-rrian-ofNationwtde1nsiirance1:6:;·sa:ld ·--SWO million should be placed in a rainy-day account.
It said another Sl83 million should be set aside for
payment "at an appropriate time" of the deferred
!"'d accrued Interest on the $1.4
the
has
borrowed from the federal· ~~;;~iiii~fifi.iiri~f--unemplQYi'nent compensation fund oolvent.
The committee also recommended creation of a
permanent bipartiSan economic panel to offer flscaJ.
advice on revenue forecasts to the governor and the
Office of Budget arid Management.
· ·
·Among the committee members signing the report
was Howard L. Collier of Toledo , longtime budget

chief for former GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes .

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"T.&lt;l";""

Governor's committee nixes
idea of quick·income tax cut

•

By KEViN KELLY
11mes-Sentinel Staff .
RlO GRANDE ~- Donald L.
Walker believes he's accomplished ·
a Jot In his fl.rst year as mayor of
Gallla County's largest village, but
In the remainder of his term, "there
are still Issues to work on."
Walker said Rio Grande has
reached.. goals of getting cable
television service, low-income hoUS·
lng and additional police protection.
"Personally, I feel good about the
first year," he said. "I realize I have
made mistakes, but T feel I have
accomplished some things. A six·
member (vUlage) council has
proven to be a good government,
because we've looked at things
objectively."
·
Noting that the vUJage has tried to
get cable companies Interested In

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Vot 19 No. 49
f:op-roiglol8d

--~

State Tax Commissioner Joanne
Limbach said.she-hoped the report
&lt;lf the bipartisan committee would
enjoy bipartisan support.
"Ohioans Jiave been hearing a lot
of stories. Sometimes those stories
emanate . only from !he pol!lic&lt;ll
world. And I think It's extremely
Important that we note that here Is a
bipartisan, private sector commit- ·
tee-which co111e!&gt;out and says there
are some very important things you
haveU&gt;dlscuas,"Ms .. Umbachaald.
Celeste did not attend the news .
conference at which the final report
was released. He Issued a prepared
statement saying he was "extremely pleased with tile report and
Its recommendations," but offered
no comment · on specific
recommendations.

PANEL REPORT - A 1lhle

RlbboO

Committee oli Stale

Finances' appointed by Gov.
Richard Celeste recommends
thai a $400 mlllloo budget
surplus expected by June 30
should be used lor expenses
other than an income tax cut.

l

results of sunrey
on state-wide issues

support a requirement for high
GALLIPOLIS- The results of a
school students to pass a minimum
10-questlon survey covering a
wlde-r&lt;ingeofstate'lssueshavebeen · competency test before graduation.
released by 94th District State • Eighty-nine percent favored a bill to
exempt Social Security from state
Representative Jolynn Boster, D·
REVIEWING YEAR - Rio Gnuide Mayor Donald L. Walker Is
income taxes, and 87 percent ·
Gallipolis.
pleased with some ol the aecompllshments of his 11rst year In office, but
supported Ohio's low interest loan
Eighty-seven percent of those
program for first - time
said priorities lor the vDlage's future development are being developed.
responding to the survey Indicated
"I realize I have made mistakes, but lleell have areompllshed some
homeowners.
support for Ohio's current drunk
In addition, 84 'percent felt that
driving Jaws, which call for a
things," he said.
Jaws
which forbid hunting on
mandatory three-&lt;lay sentence as
Sunday
·should be maintained, and
well as driver's license suspension,
58 percent believed dog racing
Boster ("ports.
should be legalized if revenue from
In addition, 89 percent of the
the races would benefit the state.
respondents felt that financially
By JAMES HANNAH
Industries would be forced to reduce
"Put this proposal into force, and · second only to Kentucky.
Boster said the survey results
"U
these
regillations
are
allowed
able
prisoners
In
Ohio
should
"pay
emissions 'through ·other methods · yousaywearetohaveregulatlonfor
AMoclaledl'resiiWrlter
would
help her. "better understand
to stand, you won't have to go to for their stay," at least In part.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
such as installing expensive coal·
the sake of regulation although the
the
concerns
of the people in my
Orl a related question, 79 percent
Ethlopta ' to see starvation and
officials are pressuring the federal
scrubbers or purchasing more
air Is cleaner than It has been since
district."
poverty/' said Neal Tostenson, . believed thatstate.taxdollarsshould
government to cork up a proposal
expensive, out-of-state, low-sulfur
your measurements began," said
president
of the Ohio Mining and be used .to build sufficient prison
that would limit air quality credits
coaL
··
Carl Bagge, presklent of the
Reclamation Association. "All you facilities so that tougher sentencing
for tall smokestacks at coal-burning
Ratepayers would have to bear
National Coal Association.
power plants and other facilities.
the brunt of the increased electric· ·
The Peabody Holding Co. Inc., need to do Is visit southeastern Ohio Jaws could be enforced.
coal fields."
•
The survey . results represent
The Issue has coal and utlllty
generating costs, while Ohio's
which controls the Peabody Coal
Estimates
submitted
to
the
EPA
responses
to a questionnaire Boster
high-sulfur coal miners would see
Co .. submitted estimates on the
officials in an uproar, with one
by
Ohio
officials
are
even
more
distributed
in mid-Octoi)er to her
predicting that some Ohio coal
orders fall and jobs dwindle.
Impact of the stack height regula·
alarming - an annual cost to state constituents In Gallla, Meigs and
mines will become "coffins" of a
The U.S. Environmental Protec·
tlons based on one EPA scenario.
ratepayers of $588 mlillon and the Athens counties. The percentage
~•=•""""'~~Ill~~~ If the proposal Isn't ' lion A&amp;!"'_cy, which Is acting under .
Those figures show that the new c&lt; r - ~~·"t.~n ,AfW'...,.....,....•.-l
-,:!~!1'E'J='-!I=~~~l!J5~!!'!!!!1'~~"'?!~~
~'7; ~ ~ . --.-~ro\irf-oroef; lS to --rssuE!'---a~mci~ ru1!?s::wbUuf cOsf aTilF.,.,Jl n rrlinJ~r- 10i.'t_, Vl lllQJ"t1.-ci~'-'Vclt.-l'']"' .._......- "'"BaSICally,ft'SgOingtOCOStOhfOa people, out of a
of 466
Currently, coal-burning power
decision on the matter by April 4.
annually, more than any other state.
... lotofmoneyandalotofjobs,"sald respondents, who answered each
When EPA officials held hearings
In addition, the rules would reduce
plants and othQr industries receive
credit for tall smokestacks In
this week on the proposal, they got
Ohio's annual coal production by Christopher Coburn, ~tence and question.
In the area of energy, 92 percent
meeting air quality standards. U
an earful from coal and utUlty
nearly 10 million tons and result In technology adviser to Gov. Richard
'
responded that Ohio's 11atural gas
Celeste.
that credit Is restricted, those
officials.
the Joss of 2,232 coal:mlnlng jobs,
companies should be penalized If
~
they fall to buy Ohio produced gas

Officials pressure feds on smokestacks

r

,... AlbiiiMitt

Wllh PtOCIIIIng

·

=t,TWiNGiis'; ~n
~

11 amal enOuah to cony

a~.

'jet big

Twin llrlniiAt A . . . . ~ ·

OUIIMIWDAY lOW IIIICI

tZ L:ta a•~•

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

Water lines all around
By NANCY YOACHAM
'l'lme&amp;&amp;!ntinel Staff
PAGEVILLE- Even though the
small Meigs County community of
Pagevllie lies within two mlles of
two existing water lines and within
two and a·halt miles of another
existing water line, plans fm:a .plped_
water supply to the Pageville area
and the Scipio Industrial Park look
doubtfuL
·
· At the present time, Pagevllie
residents depend on wells to supply
water. Th~ water supplies are not
plentiful.
The Scipio Industrial Park also
&amp;!PeftdS on
water. WUUam
Kennedy, industrial park devel·
oper, antlcJpates greater develop-

well

mentof the park, If a more adequate
wl)ter supply were.available.
All explained by Raymond Cotterill, a Scipio Township trustee, 50
families :•at the minimum" need the
piped water.
Cotterill feels the logical water
SUI!Plier to serve the PagevUJe area .
would be Le-Ax Water, smce the
ottlce of thilt Albany concern Is oitJy
about ·eight mUes Iron! Pagevllle.
Leading Creek Conservancy Distlict and Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District ottlces
much
farther away, However, Tuppers
Platns.chester did Investigate the
posslbU!tyOf eifteni!ing its existing
line Into Pagevllie.
According to Lindsay Lyons, a

are

b

p
·
•JJ
Ut none tOr ageVI e

;~~utscheapertbanout-of-state

Tuppers Plains-Chester representa· Appalachian Regional Commlsttve, the water district spent slon. Those eHorts have proven ·
Additionally, 91 percent Indicated
"approxtma.tely $4.300 for prelim!· fu,tUe.
that consumers should not be
nary engineering." The outcome of •• A meeting was held in August at . charged tor construction work in
that preliminary engineering, last year In Marietta, at which time, progress at plants such as Cinclnna· ·
added Lyons, was that "a sizable those who ·had been working to get
tl's Zimmer Nuclear Power Plant.
"The 91 percent who felt they
amount of money would be needed money channeled Into PagevllJe
to fund the project" since several were adVIsed of the unleaslbU!ty of shoUld not be paying for projects,
clianges w the· Tuppers Plains-- the·propolll.'d-project::----:---:--_;o.suc~h~a~s~the Ztnuner plant, wlll be
Chester system would be necessary
However, Scipio Township trus- pie
to know- tfiaf"Senate Blll27
tocreatethebackupsupplyotwater tees - Cotternt, E,ugene Phillips was recently enacted," Boster
and Donald Weaver~ retuse to give commented.
ror Pageville.
Efforts have ~ made llY up on the Idea of piping water to
Senate BUJ 27, which Boster
Individuals and organizations to Pagevllle. With help · from Jim supported In the House, places
secure the necessary tunds'for the Jennings, whocontractswlthMelgs strlcterllmltsonwhattheconsumer
project from such Institutions as County as a planning consultant, can be charged for construction
~·annerS'"Home Admillistr-Mw, "' ardtt.e,t.1efp-€o'w.i~~:rJ:s.!o!l.. worlt tn ~Buckeye HUJs.Hocklng Valley Re- ers, the trustees are stullooklng tor
Questionnaire results Indicate
gtonalDevelopmentDistrictandthe
(Continued on page AJ)
that 85 percent of the respondents

SURVEY KFlntl.'l11 - 8tate
Rep.Jolym Bo8ter, DGII.......
has relea8ed the l'eii1Jb ol a
len-quE8Uon survey seat out to
her COIIIIItuents In mJd.Oclober,
She said the survey would help
~0 t!!!'. "~'!!" - tmd§
-i1
coro;; •• of the people" Ill &amp;he
tHlh
District
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Commentary aDd p.e rspective
A Division of
"11~

~m~ r"'rL--'---,-,~ c:=~,~

-~-=-=-~~ ~-

825 Tll!td A •e., Gallipo!lq, 'Ohio

(61t)

446-~42

-- 111 Coilrl St., Pome,roy, Ohio
(614) 1192-2156
'

,_

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

A ni0de8t

pro~sal_
- _-_-~_-.;&lt;=
_·=_-

soundprettyhawklsh. TheobservaWASHINGTON - So they
· •
marched to Geneva and they
lions first.
marched back a~in, Shultz and _ As a nmpl_e we_s~m _ to_·)earn_
- ~
- -- - Groinykii and- 400 tnio'ps ' trom ihe - nothing -~::.
- virtually nothing at all -'
American press, and what .dld It all
f ro m the history Of the Soviet Union
"" 60 .y ears. I am not
amount toi The whole overblown
oyer the past .,.,or
f
business was that city editors know
think!ng or the moment · of the
as a "no-story." It was a no-story to
history of purg~ and repression, of
begin with.
·
the den Ia I of .those c lVII and po!ttlca 1
The lords of our press knew better
rig hts that '1-'e rega rd as e1ernen·
~ulfluoto· the
notion
~

The Sunday Thne$·Sentinel
Page~A-2 ·

· January :13, 1'985

• !

~-__,_
-~-_
- J_am~
'e___,;i·1....,...-_K"ll_ipa_~t_r-w_R~
relationship betwe~n th~
superpowers. . .
Toward that end, a modest
that an agreement could be reached
simply on existing numbers. As of
Jan. 1, for .example, suppose we
could agree that the Soviets have
6lXl land-based tn!sslle warheads;
• have .2,100. They have j ,400 ·
we
land-based missiles for

"ll·:x~~~~~=~~:=:\:=~:::~~~~!" .,=-~•·· j -·

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. The SundaY tmes-Sentinei-Page-A-3- -

By'lbe ~p..,.
central Jndiana, whereastormleft6
SnoWshowersdottedthenat!onon , Inches of snow overnight.
Friday, with unseasonable, bitter
. Travelers advisories for snow
t"Viti teni~tat-u--resrcuag'op;ji'i1-t:-'~·•.. ~\~~M ~ ...~S'1glan.d -to ll'
Northeast through the Mississippi
Delaware. the mountains of north·
Valley to the Great Plains.
ern West VIrginia and western
Temperatures were: In single
VIrginia, tl)e foothills of Colorado,
digits and teens at 'nlld-mornlng ·northeastNewMexlco ,andawlnter
aver much· of the Northeast and storm warning was Issued for the

ThecentrafDakotas,andthearea
from Montana thi'ough Colorado;
the Texas panhandle, and parts of
.Nt:t-t.b..~"xm..Jr.tatw_~J)ta,h~ lso
had snow showers.
·
The low temperature for the
nation Friday morning was 24
degrees below zero at Miles City,
. Mont. Temperatures around the

treezlng rain aver New Mexico.
Temperatures will remain In th~
teens aver nOrthern New England,
w!~_a,,band ..oL_hi ns In --!hP ~ =·
extend!rlg from the northern Atlantic Coast across the Great Lakes :
through the Ohio and Mississippi ·
river valleys, and the Plains from
.
north Dakota through northwest
Texas.

.

~I'Q..Alller_I'DU~
.:...o-·
r the
Texaslloon';S~mw·showers
Panhandle.
nation at 2p.m. ESTranged from 10
- ~ ·'no"'-'-rt''h"'ernPtaul&amp;
___ ··~.
-~ElY
reat:hetl- -c~e~roa:rGtasgOW;W'o!ltta&amp;l
-·H!ghs-..ill•aR.iJteimhe'~ ·
the mountains of Wyoming with
Ice jamming 1n the Platte and
from southern New Eriglanc\ liito degrees at Avon ParJ&lt;, Fla .
Loup rivers tn Nebraska res\rlcted · Delaware, across the Ohlo valley '
The National Weather 5ervlce high . temperatures . In the 20s
flowsandcausedlowlandfloodlngtn
and the Great Lakes, and from forecast for Saturday predicted through the northern pia tea u. Highs
some areas.
.·
Illinois through w~t&lt;&gt;rn Kentucky snow over much .of New Mexico, will reach the40s·lf!ong the northern
A snow warning remained over , and western eastern Minnesota southern Colorado. Texas. and • Paci!!c coast and across southern
part ·of of northeast Illinois, while
through eastern Missouri, southern southwest Oklahoma. Rain was Texas, reaching toto the ros through
and northeast Oklahoma.
for the Texas_coast and Southern California and southern

Assistant Publisher-Co ntroller

Executive Editor

--..~

Weather:__;,.....;._ ___, Snow; deep freeze, hits across nation

_ - · _.......

among them the Hel.s!nkl
agreements .''
Is there anything In that bleak
recoi'd to "'ve- ulf coiiffdencl!"'!Mt
s•
some elaborately detailed treaty on
arms control would be honored? I
see nothmg at aU. Any such treaty
could emerge only after months or
years' of tedious haggling over the
number, the size, the .p owerandthe
of both
and

-

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

January 13. 1985

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_____ ___

Counselor:. 'cabin fever' cure is activity

A MEMBER of The A88~1ated Prefils, Jnlarid Dally Press Association and th~ ,
Ainerlcan New11paper Publl8hers Auodatlon.

-

LETfERS OF OPINION ~e welcomed, the,Y "'hould be less thlln 300 words
long. Allletten _a re l!l~bject to ediUng and must be signed with name, add~ess and
telephone numher8. No un1l1ned_letten wUI be .Published. Letter.1 ahould be In
good tute, addresslnl( Issues, noc personalltle8.

WEATHER FORI!;CAST - The Natloaal Weather Service '
forecast for Sooday predicts rain for the Gulf coll8tal !II atOll changing
· to snow over central and weotem TeKas. Snow Is a1ao pted!cted lor
parts of ·the Dakotas and Great Lakes. The res( of the nation Is

.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Feeling
sorry for yourself is the worst way to
handle cold-weather blues; say
psychologists who recommend

-~+~~=~'~&lt;l__!to~·~haiO~v~e~!f~al~r:_:s~kl~ee~s~.~(AP~~~~~~...,-----~~-~,-~~~:f~tes;fh~al:r~a~n~d~a;ct~iv~lty;·~t;o~w;hi~sk~aw;ay~·
··

"I think Winter
are
somewhatofatlmeforustofeel spllt
"'"ffi:i and =·lsfJiat~ t"-ffi(;losed·"'"a~d
enctimbered. I think It's healthy for
us to do what we can· to fight that
!solation," says Jeffrey L. Alvanos,
a clinical social worker at Famlly
Serv!oes of Greater Toledo. "Get
out, get going and get around

.

or two events as a cuTe-au for a low
.mood.
"There:s nooneeventthatlsgotng
to cure people of the winter

.

· she plays'the plano. cooks or does ·
She recommends solitary walks,
- woodworK or needlework to over· long, warm baths, writing poetry or
come what she describeS as an listening to classical music In
unrestful feeling when "little things addU ion to physical exercise that

doldrums. They look forwarctto the
get you."
·
will increase energy.
9~~1\'.l!ll§:_)\!eekeJ.!.!!.Jb~)/-~t. .. , . _If all ._1~" ~~ils. she looks over ~
~-But,_half the ba.._!ti~.&lt;!S'~L.":i!~!~,-~--=
event that Is going to cheer them up.
catalogues and dreams of warmer blahs fs won by refUsing to tee! baa,
But that Is not going to solve the
weather.
Ms. Wilkinson said.
·"probleii"i -=-H£nm!Ho.OO-a.'1·0ngoing-.... --· Such ti..'1"1eil-kmC'-f!t&amp;--t~ presc.r.i .... -~~Ws.&amp;n.::v&gt;Lfn.I~J oonJi.qed;:.sp~.......,.
process."
tlon given by Judith Wilkinson, a said. "It becomes a seii-fuiillllngAlvanos' cure Is cross-country
psychologist al the University ot expecta tion . You have the feelings
skiing, but he said those who find
Toledo Counseling Center. •
that a·re associated with helpleSs ~
outdoor sports daunting when the
"Restlessness Is not the time to ness, hopelessness and being out of
thermometer dips · can lift their . · connect with other!. We wouldn't control."
spirits simply by staying busy
have this cabin fev er concept that
Although such feelings Juri&lt;
Indoors.
we do If people understood them - throughout the year; It Is part of the
culture to associate them with··
children In her Toledo home, sald

Ravenna woman awarded_top prize
The lU finalists efuninafeaeacil
other In a bingo-llkeroundbycalling
letters anq numbers.
Michael Hart of Mason won
$40,000, Steven Haynes of Cleveland
won $:!&gt;,000 and Thelma Cordell of
Ctnclnna ti won $10,000. The $5,000
winners were Rick Sutton of
Pembroke Pines, Fla.; Andy Lordi
of Youngstown; Gloria Williams of
Cincinnati; Sbelvajean Antle of
Hilliard; Margaret Smith of Parkersburg, W.Va., and J .D. McCallum of Aurora Shores.

While waiting for apress mriference after she was declared top
winner, Mrs. Liston remarked, "I
don't even like having iny picture
taken,let alone being on TV."
Shesald that she had been playing
the. lottery for a long time and had
once won $42 by picking four out of
six numbers In the Ohio Lotto game.
Winning the $1 million prize
Friday assures her ot receiving
$!'i0,000 annually for the next 20
years. After being· presented with

lhe ili'Si $5,LUJ of'tliafamounC Nirs.
Liston said, " I never, never thought
I'd win."
The grandmother of nine said she
·needs a new car to replace her 1977
auto which is breaking down , wants
to put some money in the bank. and
would like to help her four children.
Mrs. Liston stopped working in ·
1972, one year after her husband ..
died. She said she left her assembly
line job making hoat controls
bec11use she had arthritis.
Mrs. Liston plans to continue .
playing
the lottery: and advises
(Continued from page Al)
others to "just keep playing. You
might win some day."

FRAME

SALE -

ALL FRAMES IN STOCK

,UP TO

FREE

BxiO PLASTIC
FRAME

(One Per Customor)
(lMITED SUPPlY

SALE ENDS SOON

LEA~ ·
PHOTOGRAPHY

Berry's World

There was a 1imewheli the status _.,
symbol In our crowd was the
swimmi ng pool. Then ' everyone
Installed a swimming pool and It
~!most became chic not to have one'
After swi mming pools, the thing
to own was a tennis court. The
person with the private tennis court
had the drop on all of us . Then
tennis courts started popping up In
the nelghhorhood, and pretty soon
the tennis court owner had as much
trouble getting players to come
over as the swimming pool proprietor had recrultlng sunbathers.
What could possibly replace
swimming pools and tennis courts

·.
'..

.

...
:..
,·

..,.'.

.;

'•

•
,·
,

..·

;r

..
••

"-

..·-:
.

"Worst !iJBfl of 'Super Bowl Hype Syndrome'
I've EVER seen_"

•·
·h
r.J'oday in istory

We d!d'nt have long to walt. It
was the super large TV screen.
I discovered this the hard way. At
one time the gang used to come
over to · my bouse to watch the
football games on my new 25-lnch
- set. My wife provided popcorn.
potato chips, beer, assorted cheeses
and pate, and key llme ple. We had
a lock on the Redsliln games played
away from home as well as the
NFL playoffs, New Year's Day
college bowls, and, of course, the

~':;~!::u~~~~t;hi~~~oa;~

Washington.
: : Today Is Sunday, Jan.13, the 13th day of1985. There a_re352 days left In
We thought · It would 'gq on
tlle year.
·
forever. But three years ago at
: . Taday'sitlghllght-ln-hlstery.
--,-,-------~~pe_r BQ.wl ume 1 started to call up
~· On Jan. 13, 1898, Emil~ Zola's famous essay, ".)'accliSf.'' was published
the gang to get a head count on who
jn Parts. In defending Capt. Alfred DreyfUs, who had been falsely accused
was coming over. I called PhD and
betraying France, _Zola wrote: "The truth Is on the march and nothing
he said he was going over to
c Will stop It"
George's. _
' On this date:
"Why are you going io
-: ln 1733, Jame!i Oglethorpe and some 130 English colonists arrived at
George's•" I asked.
... Qtarlestotr,S.e:;·m serue ili~ Wliat isnow liie statellf Georgla:
~- ·
-" Haven'tyau hearrl?"'He jusi gil!
• • 1n lll64, composer Stephen Foster died In a New York hospital.
·
a 50-Inch TV screen. It will be like
•' 1n 1!106, the llrst advertisement for a radio- a Tellmco selling for $7.50seeing the game Uve."
pP_pe{lred In Scien!lflc American.
'l'
"Hol" ·could he . 1o that? The

or

.

.

•

Super Bowl belongs to us."
''I'm sorry," Phll said. "But you
can't expect to keep It with a 25-!nch
screen,''
Calls to Jack, Ben, Joe, Harry
and Charley all confirmed my
worst fears. They were going over
to George's to watch the game.
Charley said If It were just lilm, he'd ·
come over to my house, but he had
to think of his kids.
When I told my wife that we had
lost the Super Bowl to George, she
couldn't believe it. "But I've fed
those people for 10 years. Why
would they leave us now?"
"We're not talking about food.

It cosl David $40.000, but we told
you're booed.
hlm it was worth it.
George didn't hold the crowd for
What Davia doesn:t know Is that
long. He had two years before
Jack
Is planning to turn his garage
David Installed an entire "enterInto
a
mini-theater. With a seventainment complex" In his . basefoot
'screen
which will be completed
ment. Including a · 60-lnch screen
for
the
Redskin
Monday night game
that came down electronically from .
next
season.
ll's
too bad David only
the cell!ng and a custom-built TV
has
the
Super
Bowl
for one year, but
set superior to any on the market.
It
comes
to
fool.ball
watching
when
We all left George for David before
you're
only
as
good
as
the
slze of
the Washington-Dallas game this
your
last
TV
set.
year.

· Doonesbury

HOLZER CLINIC
CARDIAC ·REHABILITATION CENTER

BY GARRY 'fRUDEAU

for ..................... Patients who have had heart

T0.......... ~~ .........~..

of the United States and Canada
lllkes pleasure in announcing

the: rc:~ppglntmeni for 198.5 ~f

screens."

piii to

swaii~Wt

typicai uf iire .

fickle behavior of NFL football fans
all · aver America. One Sunday
you're cheered and the next Sunday

attack~ (acute myocardial

infarctions), heart pain (angina), or cardiac by-pass surg-

said bitterly. "I never thought
George would buy a new house with
an extra large Uvlrig room just to
get the crowd away from us. "
"What do we do now?"
"l'm going down to the TV store
tomorrow and prlce 50-tncb·
"Not In my living room," she
-said: "I'm not going to turn It Into a
Holiday Inn bar. If George wants
the Super Bowl that badly he can
have it. Are you going to go over and
watch It on his set?"
"What choice do I have? If I don't
everyone wiD call me a sore loser."
I went to George's for the game.
The screen was 50 Inches as
advertised, but the picture was
fuz,zy and out of shall'!' and ypu had
to sit directly In front of It to see
what was going on. Despite aU this
everyone kept congratulating
George on his set and making nasty
remarks about mlne. It was a bitter

ANNOUNCING:

1 •

ble and help reduce the risk of future heart attacks.
'
Providing ........... Education and closely monitored exertise.
Suzanne Mize, M. D. Cardiologist and Center Direitar.

.By·············'··········

~-----

~ ·

Roger Gilders, M. S., Exercise Physiologist and Supervisor.
.DAN DAVIES
Paul Davies Jewelers
GQ?. TH/5155o

IF YOIJ
5'lY50.

I

404 Second A venue
GalliPolis, Oh.

UIClJOI-' /IJHAT
AM I QO/N6r'

'

as REGISTERED JEWELER

AMERICAN GEM SOC1E1Y

and Nursing staff trained in cardiac care.

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

Beginning ........... February 1985
I

Consisting of...... Three 1-hour exercise periods a -week for 12 -18 weeks,
plus education and EKG testing.

The REGISTERED jEWELER has met the ethical and gemological
standards established by fellow jewelers in the American Gem
SoCieiY:'Ari'AGS'flilels an annuai appoinirtteui and must ~xt~""~- -~·-­
rewon by yearly examination.

~nsuranc~ wverage

by Medica;,, Blue~Shield, Aetna and most group plans-

'!'i! !~arn IDllrLOr Jtgi~ter for this ne'!_!._rogram,~consu!! yo~r doctor and/ o~ {~
Holzer Clinic's Cardiology Department at 446-5341.

�-~

....

__,...

......

- .------

-·· ~ .....

-- - _

---- .

Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

13, 1985

Area deaths
:rn·

Jlo'--..

,......~Pric=~g';;oo;;;d;tt;th~u

OUilOWN'I.fiNIST SUPII MAIK., .
GO TO CHURCU [V[RY SIJNDAY

January 13. 1985

STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9. am til 10 pm
FRI .•SAT.
9 am til10
"CLOSED-.S.UNDAY

Paul V. Basim

·

------ ---·--

. ..

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

daughters, Mrs. Ellen Deal, Mrs. ·Point Pleasant, Mrs. Islah (Sue)
.
. Delores Siders and Mrs. Sandra Crump of Henderson, W.Va., and
~· -~
~
--- - mJ.:~·~ __..,_. ~- - - ·• ~ ---..- - :;y:i'r ~ ..""'- Jlr..t:""••L.Lt .. __...Jt.A:nw.A.a..\ - UJ]ld=•
· -·- Gtf()[\T'[L[E-:...
PaUJ -V .Basirn
-- ••umui"Ci, -a u v• uamJJVul!"" rerr,r:=
- ··na·.:..
... ~o....-__.'"........... ~-:- ·-.--·-r-··" 15...oh.i.IJ
68, Long Bottom, died Saturda;
W.Va.; five sons, James R. . of Hahnvllle, La .; a sister, Mrs.
McCarty of Gallipolis Ferry, and Rufus Elliott of South. Charleston,
morning 1n v eterans Memortal
Ho ita!.
John L. McCarty, Lonnie McCarty,
W.Va.; two brothers, Clay Spence
in Torch son of the late Larry McCarty 311d Gary "Richie" and ·Albert Spence, both of St.
o- th'a 0 un1ee
, Ba s1m , McCarty
Sherry an d LX.'f
.
• all of Apple Grove·. ' a Albans; and two grandchildren and

-

__,__ __

...

r--

We ReMrve The Right

GALLIPOLIS- A hearing on Clay Township's disputed beer sale

Corrunon Pleas Court for Jan ..25 at 9 a.m.
The court set the date after receiving notU!catlon !rom the Ohio
Supreme Court that an affidavlt ot prejudice against Judge Rlcllard
C. Roderick was dismissed without coriunent.
~
, A bearing had been set for Dec. 12, but was delayed when Lewis
• apd_Jenny Bodlmer. w.lJQ.iss~ ~ll.eliUQll ®iwtlng tl!e. $347 vp~­
. that banned beer sales In the t ownship, ftled the prejudice affidavit
against RoderiCk. ·
.
The Bodimers and more than 70 other Clay residents allege,
among other claims, that the election was Improperly handled.

- - C-·~-"-~~;;;:~~;:y·;~~,,~::~~~~~. ~~,~~-~~~~~F~~~~~~~~-"'·-"i!d1f~~1~~~~iio,deiiithliy'a:sor~·--IH-:-- ~~]·Reedsville area. He was a· member . Dallas Woyan..and Cllfford Wayan.
of theDisabledAmericail Veterans. both of Southsi~e, W.Va., and Glen
Surviving are his wife, Opel; two Woyan ?f Semmole, F'la.; and 12
sons George J;laslm of Guysvllle
grandchlidren.
a nd' Paul Basim, at home; su;
. She was preceded In death by a
SISter, Dolly Dymple avayea ,,
Dd'•llll. both
Lascar of Tuppers Plains. Patty
Basim of Broadwell , a nd Linda Kay
Mumahan of Ironton; a brother,
Kenneth Basim of Hockingport; a
sister, Ruth of Marietta; a nd 30
grandchildren and two gre.atgrandchildren.
He was preceded in death by two
infant children.
·

Funeral·Home, with the Rev. Marlin
Campbell and the Rev. Lee Baird
officiating. Burial wlll be In Beale
Chapel Cemetery. Friends may cail
at the funeral home after 4 p.m.
today.

Emerson McDole

William Wesley George Spence;
and by a sister, Marie Walker.
Funeral servlces will be held at 1
p.m . Tuesday In Wilcoxen Funeral
Honne, with the Rev. James. H.
Lewis offlclatlng. Burial will be In

A
, Mrs. E ichinger
was born a t Nelsonville on Nov. 2il,
19IB, a daughter of the late William

BEEF

HOLLYWOOD ·

SPARE
RIBS _

funeral home from 7-9p.m. Monday.

Robert Lee Williams on
of breaking and entering.

ByJAMESF.PELTZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Alr VIa Is a

$139

lB.

$249 . ~·

STEAK
BONElESS

BONELESS

RUMP
.
ROAST

TAVERN HAM

-.;...WillianlS~

all€ged""'"-to·~ l'.a\IS"··H .,..,.,....... -~~-,~~
entered D.J.'s Savemore Mart and
Lewis' Stop-N-Shop, both In Mason,
during November.
WIUiams also faces arraignment
on-a breaking and entering charge In
Meigs County, after he and Kenny .·
Daniel Neal allegedly entered the
concession stand at the Meigs High
School football field In October. Neal

lB.

TOP

Y(I!9!-E.___ -·-- -· ~- "'--.. . ···-· . . ~. . -·- ---~ r·ol·l"lo~l:l.-·· ~-

LB.$1.69 LB.$1.79
~;-r

CUBE
STEAK ·
LONGHORN'
CHEESE LB.

BACON

·-- .----:r_.--,

•,. • · · - · - ·

BREAST
,...,;

-.--

----~-=-

SUPERIOR

$1.39

LB.

BOILED
HAM

La.

------, --.

$259

$

tor Bob Byer reports.
In answering the 132 calls, not counting 64 transfer trips made by
units, 102 patients were transported to hospitals with 69 gotitg to
'Veterans Memorial Hospital, 14 to Holzer Medical Center; four to
Pleasant Valley and 15 to otber Institutions.
Of the total196 calls answered which include transfers, Pomeroy
d 35
Mlddi rt 33 Tu
PI
.., S
runs,
epo • ;
ppers · a 1ns, ..,; yracuse, 15;
rna e
Racine, 15; Rutland, 15; and the transfer untt, 64.

~=~~dl~t~

,--·1·--·-i - -PO!N!' P.LEASANT- AG&amp;illpollsma::·has
by tl:eMason County grand jury for two COI!nts of malicious wounding.
· Richard C. Moore, 00, 26 MUI Creek Road, has been charged In
connection with the stabblr!gs of Robert Walker, 48, Henderson,
W.Va., and Wendell c Wayan, 43, SoUthside, W.Va.
The smbblngs are alleged to have occurred Nov. 251n frOnt ofthe
Ancbor Club on ¥am Street In Pobtt Pleasant.

Trustees, clerks meeting reset .

199

$259

LB.

$319

of the Meigs County Association of
from last week due to the
rescheduled
Center In Pomeroy.

POMEROY- A

$3 69

LB.

LB.

·-·

----

·;--.-

-~

-~--

·--

The Sunday Times-~entinei- Page-A- 5

flrstpassenger, bu!AirVIa's!uture
already Is being clouded by other
· alrllnes.
Air VIa, based In San Jose, .Call!.,
proposes to make th.ree flights dally
!Je!Ween Callfornm's Silicon Valley '

and New YOi'l&lt; 6eg!Mmg fii'Mai'Cif.
The company h.as secured government certlftcatlbn and an agree'
ment to lease three Boeing 7Z1 jets.
What It has not secured, however,
Is financing. Air Via Initially sought
to raise S2il mllUon in the public
·
~

I

I.

sent to

are many su&lt;;cess!UI small . primary .markets.
airllnes 1 of course. ~onal carri· .

GALLIPOLIS-AGalllpollsman County Jail.
'1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;:======;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;=;;;;;;;;~
waived a preliminary hearing In
In traffic cases, Robert L. Oliver, . I
Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday . of Point Pleasant, and · Ivan L.
.
.
.
and his case was bound over to . Cremeans, 42, of Rt. 1, Northup, . .
Gallla County Common .Pleas were sentenc&lt;id to th.ree days In th~
Court.
·
county Jail, fined
placed on 18
385 JACKSON PIKE, GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

HOLZER CLINIC

s.m.

~~~::~--~-j-~J-lGT~o~mUI~mll~eOagte:~wfals76~,~~-f6,1o)trMiiavfefm~gieio:f.:~:·5~pe::r~c:a~-~-~~~~L~u.
~
~th~e~rM~?oo~re~,~5~9~,l~su~f~~ee~o~n~$~~~000~~m~o~nt~h~s~~~~an~d~h~a~d~~t:h~~e~lr~-~~---~~~~~~

LEAN JUICY

PRE-SLICED

for breaking and entering.

$249

'

$15 mllllon, but even that amount
- Air One, a St. Louis-based ers-ComalrlntheOhloValleyand
has not yet found support on Wall airHne that catered to business Corrurtand Airways In New York
Street.
travelers, flied for bankruptcy court are but two examples - profitably
..~.'hj'? . A ,~t_c.....sf . !.a.U··~ ·relt!: -p~m:crr~~~t. 25. - ·~:-,
~ ...5ei'-If. '.ln1.!'0r:' r.ar "" l es_.&lt;Hravp~ _
serious losses among other new
- Two months earlier,
routes,lncludlngmanyabandoned
carriers has left Investors wary o! . Phllactelphia-based Amertan In- by . the major airllnes after
flnMcing another young alrllne.
ternatlonal AJrways also filed tor deregumtlon.
Their concern was fueled this past reorganiZation after two years of
But as Alr One, Air Florida,
week .l"hen Nortbeast.em Intema· serviCe.
Northeastern, Air Atlanta and
!tonal Airways, a closely held
-Pacific Express having served others found out, trying to garner a
"'Flor!Oiliii.Sea-alflfrie,~~,!lleQ ."foi'"" - Wesiem states-for ~yeafs;'faDed -$nil'i'e-of1lfe:w~fi'trayt"J110'rnarkets
reorganization under federal bank· In February 1981. ·
served by the larger, established
ruptcy laws. Nortbeastern, whlcll
-TWo more-established airlines, carriers Is Increasingly difficult,
· had expanded rapidly, was forcEd tO Air F;Jorida and c;:apttol Air, ceasEd even If the small airline's strategy
slash Its service to .Just two cities operating 1n July and November, involvesofferl.ngrock·bottom fares.
from 12.
.
respecilvely. Air Fl&lt;&gt;ridalsattempt·
The larger carriers, after suffer·
Northeastern's action Is becom- ~
to be acquired by Midway !ng enormous tosses In the first feW
·
are
~

·•

POINT · PLEASANT The
jury has

December EMS statistics listed

·lB.

DAllY.

Grand jury indicts
Meigs resident

,

. Wh' FU
McDole, 74, Long Bottom, died
2: 30 p.m. Mond ay m
. lie . nera1 Friday In Arcadia Nursing Home,
---Home,..Cool!!ll!e. Rw;t'!l. "'lll. bP, tn ·-cooiVITie:TOiioWiilg a bnef'iilne~:-··
Meigs. Memory Gardens. Friends
Born at Bashan, son of the late
may call at th&lt;; fu neral home after2 Sherman and Ella Batey McDole,
p.m. today·
he was a retired machinist at
Parkersburg Rlg &amp; Reel Co., and a
Margaret Eichinger
meniber of Long Bottom Christian
Church .
•
·
POMEROY - Margaret Mae
Sun1vlng are a son, Patrtck
Eic hi ng~r. 66, ·College Street, SyraMcDole of Belpre; a sister, Laura
cuse. di&lt;id Friday In Veterans
Baker o( Bashan; and a grandson,

Sausage

_________, ____ -·

Locar Briefs.· .----. Pas~ failures ._affecting young airlines-_---

Vj)tiOil iw\liii N.W. SCerectlud"has lleeli scheriuit'O ii1 uifdia 'Cuiltary• • · - -tt;.rt~?~irllne-~t hae:yet~. 8y !t~-

limit Ouantitie•

-·-~-

Pomeroy-MiddleportGallipolis.
.
. Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

· Beer sale hearing scheduled

Saturday, Jan. 19, 1986

-·---

Senior

...,..,._"'

:.':"'

, ...

-~·~

;~~~~:~~;~Ro;:r~~:O:r~\. ~~-~-t~=do~~~~~:;;t::~~~
.. ..

Hotel on Christmas Eve and then
holding Elnora Price, 60. of 148
Portsmouth Road, at knlfepolnt' In
Thomas Clothiers. One of the
conditions ofMoore:sbond Is that he
reside outside of Gallla CouQty and
enterthecountyonlyforeourtdates.

Robert L. Long, 28, of .'l4~
Smithers St. , GaUipolis, was given a
six month
jail sentence
misdemeanor c harge of recei"lng.

against Oliver was dropped In
exchange foP his plea. Cremeans
had his fine and costs su.Spencled .
afterpleadlngnocontesttoacharge
of driving left of center.
Jeffrey s. King, 21, of Wellston,
was fined costs following his no
contest plea tQ passing agalnst a
double yellow llne. King's fine and
costs on a chargeoffallure to display
a valid registration sticker were
$17 after pleading guilty to

--!c'?".g h/l_d - OO!'!L -~~a.rgff! w!!h--. a!lqwh1g an unllcensed operator.to

. .....,._,...,

ooe

POMEROY- A
deer was killed at 7:35a.m. Saturday on Ohio
124 when It ran Into !be path of a vehicle dilven by Melissa Smith,
Racine. Sheriff Howard Frank reports.
. .
Mrs. Smith was not InJured and there were moderate damages to
· _
'
the vehicle.

receiving stolen property. He was ·ctrtve his vehicle was Charles R.
accused of having th.ree video tapes . Stewart, 21, of Langsvill~.
that had beenstolenfromJ.B. VIdeo
Jackie L. Shepherd, 32, of Rt. 4,
In his possession. Long was given
Gallipolis, forfeited $43 bond for
credit for10daysserved In !he Gall Ia
speeding.

AND

·cMARifA: ·wllkE'I , . M~D.--·
BOARD CERTIFIED ONCOLOGISTS
AVAILABlE FOR DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF
CANCEROUS TUMORS .
, . SERVICES PROVIDED .
•Examinations &amp; Evaluations
•Treatments and Transfusions
•Complete
Therapy ,
i

ral'V'"·" ·

. ~ !1\\aior 9r_Mlnor_ Surge!'{ -~

'

•Patient Teaching &amp; Counseling
•Dietary Consulting
FOR INFORMATION .... CALL 446-5131

Senior ·center closed Jan. 21
GALLIPOLIS - The GaUia County SenlQ!' Cltize!l§ Center, 220
Jackson Pike, will be open M'onday and will be closed on Jan. 2lfor
l\1ar,tln Luther King Day.

$-399

Board approves temporary budget
EAST MEIGS - A temporary budget of $2,624,596.82 w'as
. approved Thursday when the Eastern Local Board of Education met
for Its annual organizational meeting.
.
)'&lt;amed to serve as president ofthe board wasDorsel Larkins. Dale
·
Machir was named to serve as vice president.
·Other school board members include Susan Hines, Roger Gaul
and James Caldwell.
Regular meetings of the Eastern Boa~ have been set!or 7 p.m. on
the third Monday of every month.

Special deputies'
names withheld
-~·~··~~~-····=--·
schel Manuel, 72, Columbus, for·
r(lerly of Pomeroy, died Friday In
Rivers ide Met hodi st Hospital ,
· Columbus.
Mrs. Manuel was a daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Burton of Pomeroy. She resided in
P.omeroy until about 15 years ago,
when she moved to Columbus. Surviving are two brothe~ . Bob
Byrton of Pomeroy, and Charles
Burton of Cape Cora l, F la.; a sister,
Oja Mae Rinehart of Loogootee,
Ind .; a daughter, Brtdget Ann
Ruk hel, and a son, Leroy Ruschel,
ij)tp of Columbus; and two
grandchildren.
Funeral serv ices, to be held in
Columbus, are not be set.
•

· Geneva M. McCarty

YOU NEED IT.
,-·

·'

If you are like most people with hearir.g loss you h~ar well
in some situations and have difficulty in others. A new
hearing aid has been dev~loped that can give you the h~lp
you need. when you need tt. The Argosy CCA Canal heanng
aid is so tiny it can be inserted in a matter of seconds. It
fits comfortably within the ear canal and is barely visible.
Help is finally here for those "part time" hearing problems .
RENTAL OFFER-Foro limited time, rent the canal aid (or
any hear~ aid) for 6 weeks far anly $50.00.
TRY BEFORE YOU BUYI
See us at Holzer Clinic Each Wednesday, 1:00 P.M•

LG. ROLL

16 Oz.
Bottles

.69&lt;

l!lus
Deposit

FISHERS

SANDWICH
MATE 12 oz.

$109

COTTONElLE

ARMOUR

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

BATHROOM TISSUE ·

. BUZZ BUTTERED

~~VtiES

a PK.

STOKELY

CATSUP

requirementsof special clePutles, an
order has been Issued by Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Judge
Charles Knight preventing pubtlc
release of the names and addresses
of MeigS County's special deputies.
Acccrdlng to the entry filed in
MeigS County Common Pleas
Court, lnfonnatlon on special deputieS, filed subsequent to Jan . 7, Is
sealed and ordered not to be
revealed to the public until further
order ofthe court.
·

32

oz.

$109

4 ROLL

$l99

PACK

Divorce granted

Meeting date changed

SEMI ANNUAL CLEARANCE·

DOWNY

2/7.9&lt;
FRITO

CORN
CHIPS "''' oz. $159
JOY
UQUID

DETERGENT -

12 oz.

FABRIC SOFTNER
64

oz.

BTL.

$199

MPmlwr: Tht&gt; Assocla!ed Press Inland Dally PrE.&gt;Ss Association and th e

America n Newspaper Publish ers As·
socla11on, Natlbnal Advertising Re·

prcsenlalive. Branha,m. 1717 West
Nine Mile Roa d, Suite 204, Detroll.

Michigan , 48075.
SUIIS(;RIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Ro•te

Onr W&lt;'&lt;'k ................................$1.10
One Month ., ... ,., .. -~:-, ................. $4.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

No subscriptions by mall pE&gt;rmtncd
In towns where motor carrier sPrv\ce
Is available.
The Sunday Tlmrs-St&gt;n11nel w\11 no!

b&lt;" respon slbl&lt;' tor advance payments
made by carriers.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
. Sunday Only
One year ............... , ......... ..... $26,80

Six months ... ~... ., ......... , ........ $13,00
Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
52 Weeks , .. ,.... ,.., ... ..... ,, ........ $58.24
26 Weeks ............................... $29.12

CHESTER -Next week's meetIngot the Chester Township trustees
has been changed frOm Tuesday to
at 7:30p.m .

'

Posl Office-.

SO Cents

POMEROY - Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Cha·
rles Knight has granted a divorce to
Jennie Lynn Singleton, Racine,
from Len Marshall Singleton,
Chesapeake, W.Va.
The divorce was granted on
grounds of groSs neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.

$1 09

E."''"''d as second clas!!i

mailing matter at Pome-roy, Ohio,

13 Weeks ............................... Sl·t56
Rates Outside Ohio

52 weeks ,,,,.,,,, ... ,,,,,.,.,, ........ $59.80

26 w..ks ............................... $31.20
13 Weeks ......... ,. ........ .. , ........ . $15:00

,.,'
•

WE NOW HAVE A

$A-TELLIJE SYSTEM

You know its an imitation. But what ' won't:Because no one else has1the banker's
abOut the many people today who have · hundreds of years of banking experience be-decided they are just like a banker? From hind them. Nor do they enjoy the kind of ·
stockbrokers to retailers, frot:n credit
trust that bankers do from the
unions to insurance men, to savmajority of Americans.
ings and loans, they all seem to be
Sq why settle for an imitation
saying, "You don't need a banker,
when you can have a real banker at
we'll do just as well:' Oh, no they
our Full Service Bank~

WITH A 5 YEAR GUARANTEE
THAT HAS THE lEST PICTUIE AVAILABLE IN A 10 FT. SYSTEM

FOR ONLY

$1 99 s
WE ALSO HAVE

8 FT. SYSTEMS

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

MICHIGAN
.
POTATOES

WINESAP OR
ROME IEAUTY

APPLES
3LI.
.UG

. aq.c_

CALifORNIA

ORANGES

. CRISP

CElERY

FOR$995

THE ONLY PLACE YOU'LL FIND A BANKER IS THE BANK.

We ofhr fv~ wwlc.• IIIII • c......h
II• of ~k,. units N yeu
t.
wltheat. 1 plctor•.

••'t

'
•

ODDS &amp;
.., . ·-END SHOll . . . . . -;'-,. -.~-,H. 992-6173

'•

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�.

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipo.lis, Ohio-Point Pluaant, W. Va.

~~

tlllUti~ """''".. -Sectio"n Ig) ·

er

January 13, 1985

: :~

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....
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Di!A~~-­

Mary Ann McGuire and Gllberl
Craig plan the number of meals
takm to each llrea serviced by
the hOme delivered meal program of lbeGalllaCountySenlor
Citizen Centet-. Mrs. McGuire Is

:
• •

~~(e=.'J'IIR

~' in-biline- sel'\'k'&gt;f• nlireeli)f''"aiiil"

~CL _ .,.

··~~ ·:;

Craig prepares the _fO!MI for the

,' 1

• lunch progtam oaered by the
center. He Said he only fixes one
meal per day - that 000 P""Pie ·
s1t down to, from the center on
Jack8on Pike all
way out 'to
Of the

100 are for homebound senior

clttz.em; In Gallla County.

'
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~-o

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servtces--aren t lirnitaL to the=ce_nter_,

.
....
.,"'. !II - ::z:
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-

'

Br LEE ANN WELCH
'llme.s-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- There's probably only one thing worse than
being alone, and that's being old
and alone. In your nome all day
and night, byyourselfwlth justa
television or radio to keep you .
company.
The Gallla County Senior
Cltzen Center Is taking strides to
combat the lonllness older people suffer, especially the shut-in.
"Lonllness is one of the biggest
problems with -~em ()he older
American).:· according to Mary
Ann McGuire, In-home service
director for the Gallla County
Sj!nlor Cltlze_n Center.
A number of programs are
currently ,a vailable or will be In
the near future, she said, to
' combat the lonliness of the
shut-in. Already In service are
,.,. horne,dellvered
.... ..... - . .
....... -meals:
'
. tele.

phone reassurance and assist·
ance In doing cleaning aitd
chores. Soon to be ayailable are
Friendly VIsitors and a new
concept In elderly care - adult
day care.
·Home-delivered meals
There ate approximately 100
home delivered meals in the
county, going in the city of
qaUipolis, to Vinton and Crown_
City. There are also other meals
sent to the Vinton and Crown
City "satellites," or centers,
Mrs. McGuire said.
The program Is a vital one taking nutritionally balanced
meals to the elderly person who
maybe cannot cook for themselves any longer, or. simply
could not afford the food needed
in a proper diet.
The . biggest problem within

;; ·
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HOME DELIVERY - Mary Ann McGuire delivered many of the
home-service meals during the past few d~s due to Inclement weather.
Hl\re, she gives a meal to Ada Henry of Gallipolis.

..

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..,. "·I
...
'illll:

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..... 0
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.

Friendly Vl&lt;;itors

Someone to talk to
Last year, a very small group
of volunteers delivered 23,509
meals in Gallia County. The
more volunteers that donate
time, the smaller area each has

. . . ._., . ., .

The older person who partlcl·
pates can be brought to the
center and be looked after for
during the day - fed, make
certain they take their medl·
cines, nap 11 they like, visit and
take part in center activities.
But again, the problem.wlll be
with getting volunteers. Some of
the ~nlor citizens who come to
the center . will be taking part, ·
she said, but more will be
needed .
This program is scheduled to
begin as soon as remodeling 1s
completed in the designated
room at the Senior Citizen
Center.
The In-home services o! the
center continue with a handful of
volunteers. Anyone with a sympathetic ear and a . couple of
hours a week vti)l be more than
welcomed, and a place wtll be
found to suit the volunteer.

elderly person, breaking up the
solitude of their days .
"That's all they want, someone to talk to," Mrs. McGuire
said of theeldeily alongthemeal
route. Some of them have stories.
to tell about happier times, some
just want to talk to SOlll,eone, to
hear another live human voice.
There are few r~uirements
for the elderly to take part in the
home-delivered meals program,
Mrs. McGuire said. The recipIent must be homebound, over
60-years-old and have no other
means to get the meal; such as
not being able to cook for
themself or not able to afford the
food.
There is no financial requirement to recieve the m«:als, she
said, but noted donations are
accepted in any amount. She
stressed the recipient does not
- ·have to pay for the meal. The
program Is paid for through

!I

·ca. I

. ..
&lt;IR•
......
Ill

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'

A ME.U. roB •
- Every .ta,, qllbert Crall cooks fer
appna:lmlltlll,y 1110 ~ In ba&amp;h the home-4e11Vered aad llelllor citizen
centa' meals.
meeta dietary pddellneleet up by
lbe ..._
lllllle 4Bder ftlr ·the pall&amp; II yean, CraiJiafd 11111211

'l11e---..

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Friendly Visitors should be off
the ground shortly, Mrs.
McGuire said. This Is a program
in which a person or group takes
one or two elderly people and
visits with them as often and as
long as they want
In It, the volunteer can talk or
listen, see If the elderly person
needs anything such as grocerIes or medicines picked up.
She sees the Friendly VIsitors
as a "big boost to older people."
Adult day care Is 'the same
principle as child care, only for
JUST A FEW -There are 100 reclpl,enls of home-dellvereil meals In
the older person.
Gallllvla County. Abo\le, Senior Otlzen Center van driver Arnold Merritt
It will revolve around the work
de ers one to_Evan Plymale bt _Gallipolis. Below are Fern and Ora
da and Mrs. _. McGuire said
Y
,
IDveley, 89 and 102 respectively. They are just .a few of those receiving
~~,e,&lt;?&lt;JI!-'!:"'S- ~,,~m2e!s L'!-t~ P'~.!!!o ··~... - ..,,._ ...._......""". ~ ~---=

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state and federal funds and
donations, along with the volunteer time in delivering the
meals .

the home-delivered meals Is
volunteers.
Cl)rrently' five individuals and
women from Grace United
MethOdist Church deliver the
meals .,-- each c)1ooslng one day
to vohmteer _ In cases of inClement weather, such as llle past
week, Mrs. McGuire braves the
elements to take the meals when
the volunteer cannot make it In
to the center.
One volunteer, Alice Lassiter,
spends her lunch hour one day
each week to deliver meals in
Gallipolis along one-half the citY
. route.

•

CD- • •

-·----1-c-=-------

cooks, cleans

~

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..__,

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

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elderly home prqgram

...A~~~

......

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years working oo the river pret)ared him lol:' the dally talk of IIUIIIIve
cooldDJ. He a11o doe8 the cooldaJ a&amp; Paint lieek BeptW Clludl,
lDcludlnJ the 8IIIMI8I Thanllalh1nl dinner, wlddl u. )'0{ .en'ed 0\'el'
301maiL

'

1·

GET11NG THE MEAlS READY -Kathy Bell of Gallipolis, places'
meals ln a carrier to be taken out on tbe home-delivery program. The-·
meals are for either regular .and diabetic diets, and kept hot bt Insulated.'
canters.

�P~ge

· B-2

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel

.:. ~===~---Engagements------

... I ....

S':\1~.:t~!S~e2'-~e;;4f~~C!r.@ · :;;;

the upc&amp;ning wedding of their
-daughter, Sherry Lynn Holtz, to
Michael Hollen, Pomeroy. son of
Mrs. Sara Allenbaugh, Cincinnati.
Tl:le open church wedding will be
held on Feb. 16 at I p.m. at the

~·~~~!~~~~·,"'li'gfiruuatl;•~'Hocidu~~·H~:opet:~r:s~~:'=a-~u:~a.n=- i~~~~::~~~~n~~rM!!!!on..~
Technical College, Is

theRev. Don
The bJi de-elect Is a graduate of
MPigs Higl) School and attendlng
Hocking 'technical Collegp. She Is
· employed at Burger Chef.
Hollon graduated from FayetteSchool and.

Reiber

Price
The brldE'-t'lect is attending Hun·
tington College, Huntington, Ind.,
majoring In elementary education
and Is employed by the college
library.

POMEROY Mrs. Sylvia
Reiber, Tolroo, is announcing the
engagement of her daughter, Me.linda Sue, toRodney LynnPrlce, son '
of Mr . and Mrs. Richard

School, Derfield, Ill. and Is
played by the United Parcel Service.

the late Charles F'. (Fred ) Reiber.
The weddlng wUI be l)eld July Zlln
-

"'"'' -·-· ....... ~.~·-··=""~"'"'""''''-'"_..__,.

-

Interfere In personal ·
but
said they "refuse to walk many
kilometers In the snow because the
baker is In prtson for a family
problem."
-Frlcaud went toi aii"Thursday for
falling to pay 700 francs, about
monthly to his former wife to
supportthelrtwochlldren.Vendeou ·
vre'ssecondbakerhasnotbeenable·
with the extra work.

Wilkinson - Longenette
The brldE'-t'l.ect )s att!!n&lt;llng lndl·
ana University.
-r.ongenett~ t.sa gradlillte of
Eastern High $(:hool and Hocking
Technical College. He is employed
at Indiana and Mlchlgan Electrtc
Co.. Rockport, Ind.
Wedding plans are incomplete.·

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Wllliam Willtinson, Hatfield, Ind.
.~--are announcing th(' engagemenrand approaching marriage of their
daug hter, Robin Renee, to Larry
Alle n Longenet te of Chrisney, Ind.,
son of Duane and Betty Longenette
. of Long Bottom.

Open

"Sunday

-SenzorCitlzens si!Jedule

m.

&amp;bin \Widnson
Larry Longenette

cancer patient which brings hope

for a world

In three villages was
· j&amp;Ued for
pay alimony, 500
of his customers . ro5e to the
occasion.
In a petition sut;&gt;mltted 'TUesday,
residents of Vendoeuvre,, SalnteGemme, Mlgne and Mezleres-enBremme in central France asked
thai Marc FJicaud,.44, be freed "to
the
io

Melinda Reibel

i'iiiSsrle11i;""M1Ch~··-··

nurse at

Residents riie
to aid baker

at the Meigs Inn.

•.

Ost0my group-plans -mreting,-pro-gr~
GALUPOLJS - The Gallipolis Holzer Medical Center and Is
All ostomates and their families
attending Otuo University's School from throughout Gallla, Meigs,
Area Ostomy Group will have their
ot Nursing. Ms. Allen was selected. Jacks'on. VInton and Mason Coun·
regular monthly meeting Thursday
7 p.m. In the French 500 Room at
N!Jhe of Hope last year. The ties are Invited to attend and
participate In the monthly meetings
Holzer Medical Center.
American Cancer Society's (ACS)
,;..'TJ&gt;.!&gt;.dfop&lt;&gt;!l~ -Sidfo~ af -ldn.Cll "·"' ·· N"!:SI!D! Hope .Prngr!'Olill!l'gn&gt;wn of the ~Galllpoljs Area Ostomy
will be the topic that Bonnie Allen,
slnee Its Inception In 1975. It Group. Memllershlp In the group
R.N., will present. She will discuss spotlights the nursing profession as . comes from the five-county area.
· hopeful aspects for cancer patients
a partner with the ACS In a
Meetings are also open to the
In order to lead an active and
thrl&gt;e-rold program of research,
frtends of ostom,ates, as weD as
productive life free of disabling education and service. The Nurse of other Interested Individuals, lnclud-

Holtz .Hollen
POMEROY -Mr. andMrs. Mike

contact Phyllis Brown, R.N., E.T.,

rree or

at

.

inter Clearance
NO

N PROGRESS
L---· --~~ ~·---~ SAVE~ ··-· _·- ... ~- L_
.

.

Gallipolis-···

Lafayette Mall

, Friday - Art Class , l -3 p.m.;
Craft M\ni·tourse, 1-3 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
will serve the following me nus :
. Monday - Baked · fish, stewed
KWIK
tot a toes, mixed vegetable s, rice ·
pudding, bread, butter .
. Tuesday - Beef stew with
potat oes and carrots, mixed veget·
abies, r ice pudding, bread. butter.
· \Yedp.e:;d;n ;...;;;;;,..l~ini.Q r.JeiJ\!J.8....an&lt;l.- l•l ~~~·-"-,-;:~g.,

CLEARANCE

MODELS GE 3-5016, GE 3-5160,

GE 3·5158, RQ 2103

20.88 TO 39.88

SEW

PATTERNS

so(

]ob Bank
helpY seniors
find jobs,

Reg. 24.88
to 49.97

G.E or Panasonic Cassette Recorder
AC/DC Slimline. Computer Program Data, 4 Styles to

29.97=.
•10.00 ='?'Y

K~JI® DisC 3100 Camera

19=97=l~~S~- Ultra .

bu~o~~~~~~=-··---·,1-

2S /o off
LARGE GROUP OF

WOOLS

~

2S0/o Off

-

99 ~ale

I TAILE OF

FABRICS
1/2 Price

THE .FABRIC
SHOP
2nd
Po1111roy

Save31%
Our 28.97

19S

Price

7-pc. Cookware Set
SilverSione®interloi, 1-,2qt. covered saucepans,
10" fry pan, mcire. Seve.

AII·Purpose Cleaner

•OIJ Pont ~eo. N

Convenient 32 oz. liquid househo.ld cleaner.
fPlaY on! Wipe Off!

11 5 W.

Phone 992-2214

Singer Approved Doaler

·.

.-INNCMTIVE

COUPON SPECIALS

------------,

'

TIME
CORPORATKJN

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

COUPON

I I

BROUGHTON'S

I I

I I

COUPON

.

I
.

I I

E.pires 1· 19-86

Unlil 1

""' Dtp,

Expirea1-19-8&amp;
C .K. SUPERMARKET

C.K. SUPERMARKET.

Our Reg. 21.97

1.78

Isosl
Sole Price

58¢

Capri®lath 011
In 56-oz.* Size

Each

1f-oz. • larbaso~·
Shave Cream

· Choose from voriely

cause of the Involvement of the
~ommunlty members,"· Miss Der-

lllnaer admitted. "All of the work ot
and preparing a chicken
CQUP for :100 he!ll was done by a

bus from 'l'f illellalpa, tile capital.

There she lived with a Hont!uran

movlna

II

...,

bed, pip under

the kltchen.,table,

I'UIIIIIni water three hours. a -day

teacher and her family, and Ia~ · and candleUiht at 6 p.m." Life In
• htl'*fwith anoiher P.,eac~- Danlt, , liv&gt; ,._..I~ "'.!'" m!!re
Corpe Volunteer.
comfortable with better housing,
their husbands.
"Life Is different and at times
fuU-tlrne • electrlclty and running
"The" women's group will be
water six hours a day.
responsible for the maintenance of difficult In the rural area," she
recalled. " At first, I had problems
. "Some things are the same, no
the project ," she added, pointing
matter where you are In Hondurelating to the people because a! my
out that. the "project's goal Is to
ras," she reported, pointed out
provide the community with a . low level of Spanish and also
chellper- and constant source o! --t&gt;ecause·oH he-basic way ot-ltte. - --"'•f~ng-rotd-s hOwers as-hot water
, " It was difficult to-relate coming tanks are almost unheard of,
eggs.
_
from
a country of such wealth and
washing clothes by hand On a plla (a
Durtng her two years tn the
standard
of
living
like
the
cement
wash board 'with a sma ll
high
Central Amerlcao ·country, Miss
United
States
to
a
country
where
holding
tank
of water, non-carpeted
Detfllnger experienced a variety of .
many
of
the
people
have
womes.
·Doors,
constant
dust seven months
living conditions. Initially, she lived
such
as
where
the
money
wlll
come
ol
the
year
due
to
unpaved streets,
In a s mall town with a fa mily of
from
to
beans
to
eat
wood-burping
adob e s toves. ·
In a
wi th four ,

£1'1!1!'

nf. lJl W.O!lle.'! -ll.'ld ll

•ba~

~ Q! .

crlbed r ural living conditions a s
possibly Including "chickens on the

" The maj or par t of her s tay,
however, was in the medium-sized
town of Danli, located two hOurs by

Political plunge really ·

·B y Karen Anderson
From the moment we first hold
our baby, we gently . move ou"r
back

the activity.
· During- thi.s activity, m aintain
eye contact with your ba by; you

ents do this Instinctively; we know

forth ; then toward one parent ; then

By CHARLENE HOEnJCH
nn--sentiDel Stall
After writing last SUnday about
Howard Fi-ank' s ·
_ plunge
polltlcal scene
nearly a quarter
of a century ago
andh!Sdistlnctloli
of -being elected to
seven , consecu-·
ttve tenns In three different public
offices, genial Ernest A. Wingett
6~.-I..J ~-.., _ .._..., ._ __

..,. -!!"""""1-:on-

~

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.

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lUll SJ:tt:\IUUl,

,.....,.,... _. ....,_~ , .,,, ,.......

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d :) nil

_B!a[rl- -~-nil
.:&gt;u&amp;antuo 1jv fun.-.
- - · .... .... . ~
- · ;11 · - - - ... •

·· - · ·- - · - · ·-··

back far enough."
·
--Wingett said It was really he- a
Training cia~ In thecareofthe
Charles Ryan
devout Democrat -who started his fraU elderly In the home, as well as
Rotary speaker
friend Frank, Meigs County's new techniques for coping with the
Republican sheriff, on his way, and emotional stress of the constant
It was all through the draw of a confinement, are belrig offered
· broom straw.
through the Flimlly Support Net·
It was back In the early fifties. work program and will llegin In
Racine, for some reason whlcl! I early February.
can't remember, was without a
Several famllles have been se·
'mayor. Wlngettwastreasurerandlt tected to participate In the training
seemed that none or the council prograrno!l2sesslons, butthereare
members would agree to move Into stW some openings. This is a pllot
the mayor's spot. They did agree, . projectfundedthroughttheDepart·
GALLIPOLIS - Charles Ryan
however, to the straw draw which mentofHealthanctHumanservlces
will be the speaker at the weekly
Wingett proposed. Frank was the gpared toprovldequalltycareofthe
Rotary Club meeting Tuesday. The
winner and served tor a time as at-risk and frail elderly In their
meeting will be held at 6 p.m . at
mayor of Racine.
homeS, as an alternative to nursing
Oscar's. Charles Ryan ts a former
"And that's the truth of how homecare.
broadcast journalist and television
Howard broke Into politics - all It
It's a wonderful opp6rtunlty for
news director with over 17 years of
took was broom straw," Wingett- family members to gain the
communications experience.
quipped.
expertise they need, and It's all free,
--although there is some obligation
He was a gener al assignment
reporter in St. Louis, news director
Meigs High School junior, Lonnie about attending the sessions and
LeMaster, b home after his tenth keeping certain records. The of WCHS·TV In Charleston. W.Va ..
surgery at Children's "Hospital In classes will Include a variety ot news editor from WSAZ-TV In
Columbus. He's making progress "how to" skills 1n the pl)yslcal care Huntington, W.Va., a broadcast
. but expeCts to be out of schoolfor a of the elderly, as well as tips on news editor for .the Associ a ted
few more weeks.
dealing withrontuslon and dlsorien- Press and now .heads CharleS-Icy an
He was In the hospital nine days tatlon, problems of communication,
Associates .
,............,thi~,W~HJ}a_skM_l!:,~1n~elJyou.hmv giv~.r.g rned!eat!on, .,.nutritlon, and . .,.

program s

for children untll" you can't lift them
any more. But that ti me, you .may
need to buy a ha mmock.
DEAR KAREN-

tlonwelllnthe world. Wespendour
whole lives using our balance
system to keep ourselves upright
against the pull of gravity. Balance
fs developed by the many movement a ctivities children love:
sliding, rocking, tumbling, rolling,
spinning and swinging.
One of the easiest ways to
stimu late your baby's balance
system and to have fun, too, Is to
make a blanket swing, preferabl y
using your baby's· own blanket.
. Lay the blanket on the Door an&lt;;!
place your baby in the middle of it,
parallel )o the sides. With a parent
at the head and one at the foot.
firmly grasp the two corners in
front of each parent. Gently lift the
blanket off the floor . When · your
baby feels movement oft the
ground , he may be startled, so lift
carefully at first. Begin tb swing .
your baby back and forth, slowly,
while he gets used to tl!e motion .
You can Increase the swing as your
baby becomes comfortable with

This will give stimulation to the
three planes of balance, centered in
the inner ear, that need to be
developed for proper maturation.
This-is a wonderful acti\llty_!ha t
you can do anywhere, On long
trips, it can calm a tired child who
has been traveling all day. Stop for
a picnic along the way a nd try it. ·
Or, If you're staying In a st rang~
motel room or with rela tives. thJ s
familiar exercise with your chil d's
own blanket will make him feel

heard so many negative com·
ments. Is this OK for her? - R.S..
SARASOTA, F LA.
·. DE AR R.S. -Opinions differ on
whethe r children sleeping with
their parents- rr healtbyo-·H- yoUL _
child seems ha ppy a·nd well ·
adjusted, I wouldn' t worry und uly.
But such a situation, over a long
period of ti me. is not ideal.
Now might be a good time for you
to begin placi ng your daughter in
her own bed. so that s h&lt;&gt; can

a•. h••om.e.
. -.-..---· ..,..,.. ""'·-- , ;_.,.-~ad,_J.?
l.ly.JP.»r;n
'~t:;l:-·C::l%n..P,. - ~~~
-,- . --- -·.
~
•
~·
.'
If you're Invited out for a n
I'm sure your fam ily ca n find

.m••0 r.&lt;&gt;
-

evening and take your ba by with
you, this can be ·a good way to calm
him down- and perhaps even put
him to sleep between the mat n
course and dessert.
Blanket swings wUJ rem a in fu n

other ways to "connect."
Write to Karen Anderson in care
of. this newspaper, Volume of mall
prohl blls personal responses . Questions of genera l interest will be
answered In this column .

- - - - - T reat brown spot.r - -,.----The -jlermanen! brown spots be done abouLthem except to blend a
whiC,h often appear on the backs of little tinted founda tion ·tnto hand
the hands used to be called '"liver · cream to tone them down.
Using a sun·block lotion on hands
Spot."
and
arms or wearing gloves when
liowever, they're simply the
outdoors
in ronstant bright sunshine·
result ofyears of exposure tothesun.
helps
prevent
the m.
Once theyhavedeveioped.li ttlecan

a~-=

Quiltmakers and quUt lOVers alike
agree that a precisely pieced qulltls
a joy to own.
·
But there .• Is certainly added ·

,

this week. If you're Interested in

enrolling, just contact Norene
Ondrusko, coordinator, at the Senior
Citizens Center. This is a final call,
and since It Is a pllot project, there's
certainly some question about it
being offered again.
Have a nice week!.

and Industry and the role they play
with the media has been the
foundation for the success of the
firm.

On All Winter
Merchandise

In addition, .he is the governme nt
affairs expert of the firm and Is a
registered lo!Jbylst · for several
clients.

~ Pied Pi_I}er of China zaps rats
PEKING (AP l - China has its
own Pled Piper: Chen Shlxln,
,dubbed the "Rat Extermination
King" of Hubel Province after he
•concocted an herbal polson that
' killed 3.~ rodents In a night, the
' Communist Party People's Dally
·said today .
' Many peasants. have hired Chen
:since his "aromatic gas rat-killing
extract" proved , so effective last
July, and he now has exterminated
more than llO,!XXl rats In less than
six months, the newspaper said.
"He was nicknamed 'Rat Extermination King' by the local people
and was commended by the local
distJict party committee and go-

tliem out. The government has
estimated China's rat population at
4 btnlon and accounts In the

sta te-run press have told of rats
eating chickens, a ttacking babies
and ruining ~:~;atn harvests.

Gz!ipois, 011iD

..... ....

-

"Super Meat S-pecial."
FROM MILSTEAD'S BAKERY ·DELl
•••••••••••••••••••• J.I••• 79&lt;
•Sup·erior Bo
•
a
-ognO):::-~'lT:29
•Virginia Boiled Ham ...............Ll· ~ 1.49

"it

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

1/16

'IIGAL

Umll 1

$1

I
Expire• 1-19-811
I
C.K. SUPERMARKET
._ _____________
.JI

WALK-INS WELCOME

64~

·Our .77-.79 Quart

s:n.oo to '46.f0

1C mart® 10W30.Or lOW.., Molor 011
ChOice of oil for all Masons .
Our U7, PIMtic F-.1, 1.37

now through 1119/85 witH a copy ot this ad .

Haircut not tncluclcd.

W• lol yuur icxJd /CXJIII
go 10 your !Had.

ON THE "T"
IN
' MIDDLEPORT
,.,
.
...

(addr... )

~ --==

'
.(

1/2 PRICE
Perm Spectacular
Top of the une--dNE liErrER
QUANIVM., UN/PERM and
G/MME CURL en HAJJI PRICE

C.K. SUPERMARKET

iPtionel ·

I

' I

'

I

~·

1

1

I

"f

·'

In

.c.~.-J h.ow,mn_c~!o@S.!l:Ne.toJ:~.~kOO~.. .. . thenthe.r..,...a'!.rl f1!\!;!lly.,1lP.ruu:tdown_,.,.. .. ,..!#JJ~Qf_JJS_.B ! Lto r-.o~_ R!l.t J ' ·~ ~ -"· --~

. When you think about It, your
baby has been rocking for nine
months , suspended In warm amni·
otic Duld, rhythmically moving
~back-and- forth- as- the mothermoves. Many pregnant women
love to rock In rocking chairs a~d.
of cOurse, they are rocking their
, babies, too .
Movement, In this case rocking,
. stimulates the body's balance
system . Babies need to develop
balance so they can sit, crawl,

significance to a qullt If It is a family
work ot art. Like those owned by
Janet Hill Theiss.
Janet has several quilts made by
mother;-the late Mrs. E .J . Hlll:-but the one which she expresses the
·most delight In owning is one which
tells the story ot years ot qulltlng.
Mrs. Hllimadeonequlltofl21nch
blocks which are replicas of quilts
wlilch she made for various
relatives. Eacl! block Is marked
with the name ot tlli! recipient of the

development
Honduras.

Baby is a real swinger

Child's play

••

Mlu Dertllnaer said. "I learned to
be more Independent and self·
confident ·• • a single woman and I
"ho!'f' that thl\ flnnt!l!•an Wlln\l'l!
with whom I aSBOCiated realize that
this is a lso possible for them." She
hoped that she l"mpressed that
education Is the key to advancemerit a nd that parents should make
certain that · their chlldren take
. advantagp 'Of'"'all- avatlabll' l'!duta·
tiona! opportunities. The da ughter
or Robert a nd Barbar a Derflinlfer ·
of AshvUl~. she gradua ted from
Teays Valley High School In
Ashville . She was one of about 225
Peace Corps Volunteers serving in
health education, natu ·

Volunteer was a perind of personal
growth and development for me,"

Community rorner

.,___ ~
..,_e!.~9..C JP~r~Qu·~-• c.}c..c=:=="=d"";
lemon/lime or con•
Ingredients or explain whether It Is
ditioning formulas.
' Nelwl
harmful to humans, but said Chen
used herbal medicine to.ctevelop it.
China has a persistent rat
problem despite campaigns to wipe

I

I
_____________
,
~-------------J. "--~--~-------COUPON .
I
I COUPON .
I
BROUGHTON'S
I
DR.
PEPPER
REG. OR SUGAR FR£E
ICE MILK J
oz.
09 ' !
I II

Sole Price

Water-sport Watches
For Men And Women

*,

I I

Save $6

15.97Eo

1

2o;0 MJlK . I 1 RC COLA
I
~ ' 1~.1- 0. _ , ~-J,
==:!~'""'-==:..=:;;c-~-;: -I" 'J1 1! ~ ,-,'uniE'"'~
GAL

MJu Derfllnpr rec.tvecl a mu·
1m''a~ In ediiC&amp;tioll from Ohio
Unlwralty of Albenl. She was 1
-~ U:e~ 1!::-~::u.._ wm- sncnc
!l'.!!!!be!'..d !!!! D!&gt;.!o E~J!!!l!.O!W!"
National Ec!ucatlon Al!octattona
the proji!CII undertalmt by a young
Peace Corp1 Volunteer who II a Rio before she joined the Peace Corps.
In late 1982.
Grande College graduate.
Other projects tackled by Miss
"Volllnteers working In a rural
Derflinger Included soliciting suppschool may have a variety and a
·
In the two
lies for the school's medicine chest,
-~ buYing · teachers.' m:amlliis With •
Derflinger, 26, who compleWd. her
money donat~ from a church In
Pea~ Corp5. service In early
the Unit~ States, providing seeds
December.
_
for the school and community
"The goal of a rural school is t9 members, and getting money .to
buy a pig for the school.
·
work jOintly with the communlty,
thus allowing' the Pea~
'"Wo~klng with .. the chicken
In a
me more

you're confined to a room. For those
of you who didn't get around to
sending a card while Lonnie was
hospitalized, his home address Is
40165 Devenny Road, Pomeroy.

0

GALLIPOLIS - The .Senior
&lt;;:ijizens Jdb Bank, 220 Jackson
P.il&lt;e, is open five days a week from
Monday to Friday. to serve em ployees 50 years of age or older
seeking employment .
'fhe Job Ba nk needs applicants
fo' babysitting, people to stay with
th!o elderly on a llv('in bas i~ with
pay .
:rhe Job Counselors welcome all
employer's and employees to use
this free service. Telephone 446-7!XXl
for e ither of these services.

RIO

GJlANDE-Provldlni add!·
t!olnal claurooml for a rurtliCbool
and :100 hena fix' a women's club In

Rotary
speaker
announced

ham, cottage cheese, pears, com·
bread, butter.
Thursday - Baked chicken with .
dressing, carrots and peas, apple·
sauce raisin ·cake, rolls, butter. ·
Friday - Baked macaroni and
cheese, turnip greens, corn, jeUo
with topping, bread, butter.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
Meals subjecr to change without
notice.

. The Sl.py Tlma-Sentinei- Pege-8:3

'

\.:dUI:U 'V \..lUU IUo;;" .... .....,.,.., _..,.~

Reoui&lt;11 Prices May Vary At Some
Stores Due To Local Competition

.

~. m. -n oo n .

Pomeroy-Mlddlepon-Qallipolla, Ohio- Point Pleeunt, W.Va.

188~

Peace Corps gives · RGC grad new outlook on. world development

--LI-..1

-·· .- ..

setfor Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of J an. 14-18 at the Senior
Citizens _Center located ·at W
·J ackson Pike are as follows:
Monday - Quilting. 9 a.m.·3
p.m.; Visiting, 9 a .m .-3 p.m .;
Nutr ition Meal, noon .
Tuesday - S.T.O.P. Class, lO::io
a. m. ; P hysica l Fitness. 11: 15 a.m.
Wednesday - Vinton Bible
Study, 1 p.m.; Card Ga m es, 1·3
p.m .
Thur sday - Bible Study, 11

--

.

2 5_0/o_to_5_0°/o
300 Secon\1 Ave.

- ..January 13,

-~

T

A- 19M elementary education
graduate of Rio Grande College,

10-9

n :6

.

-~----

January 13, 1985

,,

'

MEDIUM
PIZZA
WITH 2 TOPPINGS, REG. S4.90

LARGE
PIZZA
WITH 2 TOPPINGS, REG. S7.90

. NOW$3 90

N;W $5 90

:
'

�- ·-

.·

--~-

_

__,_____

·- - - --- ..

-~-"!~ · ·-=;:...

':'-··--- ·.- ~ ,-._._.._

_ _ , -----.:..,.__ _ _ _ _ _ ._ _ _,_

JanOMV 13, 1986

Smart money

SALE

Calendar

-

--:-~ \.:UtTvtncU~\;\Ii'iUUii"Ui'llUiil:,":""

CENTENARY- Centenary
Unites! Christian Church will

STORE HOURS
· AM"lu PM~--C-~
Sunday 10 ·AM-10 PM

and
Sisson singing and the
Rev. Don Johnson speaking.
Public Invited.

1.....

~- ~ce ~~""-'=····---...:_.

'

. • Does this sound )Ike a
Investment? -

MisS. · , ·

good

E.P., Jackson,

. ·

DEAR E.P. - Since your area
has government rent control, the

298 SECOND ST.

GALLIPOLIS ""' The Unroe .
·• FamOy will be at Elizabeth
Chapel ChUrch, Sunday, 7 p.m.

...

Apartments In this area are
expensive and hard to find, but It's a
shOj:k to go from Ull a month rent
to what would amount to $700 In
monthly mortgage and . main tee

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities
·

.

.............. .......... ;.I.

...

POMEROY, OH.

strong likelihood Is that your rent is are deductible from federal and
artificially low. There Is really no state lnoome taxes, bringing the
way to compare your current rent
true figure to substantially les~ than
tr; iiu&amp; mcJ -uW..I ftc-t Ui..iditiu.a.;. fw:
' JI'"O::."=;=..."""'.tfl.
·""
. ;-.
It your apartment Is In a good
FUrthermore, If you choose not to
neighborhood, and If the buldlng is
buy you'll have to leave. Then you'll
In reasonable repair, the condom!be out in the-real world where the
rilum might be the best Investment real market . price eomes much
that you will ever make.
. . closer to the$700flgure justforrent,
, J'o s~ up_the. ccmverslon and . without deductions or equity.
.
•cotiform- taiocltflaws;-you're fietng - ·1- suggesit fiat- yau carelwly~'c
offered an "Insider" price, well
consider home ownership, and If
under the going market rate. A you do, welcome to. the worio of the·
major portion of the expenses, such
mortgage Pc:x&gt;r.
..
as reai estate taxes an(! Interest,
DEAR BRUCE WJLLIAMS
•.

I'm a 15-year-old boy and I like to
DEAR P .T. - 1 wi;h there was
should be sufficient for all covered
work. Unfortunately, I'm having a something l could do because I feel
employment.
hard time ge)tlng a job.
thai adults are a bunch of
Your parenls had It a lot easler·
Most clot!¥.! e!~
!~0'\n,.h_r te!!.ree
..,,_t'""'--'"'""'-'"'
... ~.......
_ . - __
_becauSP. thPSP law~~urPrQ lth:er--'J!&gt;t...
•
,.. ...
I'm too young. or that they'd like to
On the one hand, public service
enforced or not In effect. As I see It,
hire me but the law says I have to be announcements and newspaper
we are prolecttng kids from
either 16 or 18, depending on the edlt9rjals beg employers to get
phantoms and keeping them from
hours and the working conditions.
teenagers off the street by giving
becoming useful members of
l don'f get it. My parents keep them a job. Then wly!nanempioyer society.
telling me how hard they worked wants to hire someone like yourself,
I think It's time the laws were
w hen they were Kll!S.Tm wlllfng lo ~ we ~ lnrow -.;p~al£ -:;o11s· 'oflegal - changro.- Peop!FtlkE!.)Il&gt;U 'lri!U YOur
work hard, bull just can 't get a job. roa&lt;lbiocks.
parents should contact yourieglsla·
Is there anything you can do to
Working papers are my pet
tors and expr,e:;s this poinl. of vi~ .
help me? - P .T., ALBANY. N.Y.
peeve. I understand · Ihere were
Write' lo Bruce Wlll~ms in care of
'
abuses many year~ ago, but there is this newspaper. Volume of mall
no reason tor an employer and a prohibits personal responses. Ques· ·
teenager to fill out separate forms !Ions of general Interest will he ·
for each
U It's .necessary to __answs red in thilu::ol\lllln.
~.,.

'.

MONDAY
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

MIDDLEPORT Job's
Daughters, Bethel 62. will meet
Monday night at the Middleport
Mas9nlcTemple, 7p.m . At6: .lOa
council meeting will be held and
members are asked to attend.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a
female, 60, and have had high blood
pressure for the last 10 years. I take
Aldomet and hydrochlorothiazide.
My blood pressure now is 150 over
90 and my doctor tells me It will not
.go down any more than that. I think

sure too much in an older person. ·
The latter is often unjustltled. .
But you have a powerful treatment toof In your own himds: You
can lose that 25 ·pounds of exq!ss
body fat. If you do, you may be able
to prove to your d'!Ctor that your
blood pressure can be lowered

pediatrician was often quoted as
your blood-pressure level. I have
provided some guidelines about
saying, "Show me a child who has
that In The Health Letter15-8, Your
never had pinworms and I'll show
Vital Blood Pressure, which I am
you ~ child who has no friends."
sending you. Others who want this
The ~ggs are deposited on the
issue can send 75 cents With a long,
anal area, and that Is what causes
stamPed, .self-addressed envelope . the most common symptoms and
for It to · me In care of this
Itching, particularly at night.

· I am also
pounds overweight
way to do It is by developing a
City
New Yofk, NY 10019.
_ --~!l_d jlav~- ~a that is fair at _good walking program while you
DEAR DR. ]_,AMB - My three---1
present.
'
am-·cuttlng ·dOwn~oii yllOifl cli!orie- recenfly::nad·':::prn--DEAR READER - That.Js an Intake.
worms. I noticed them one night
acceptable blood-pressure level,
A lot of the lnnproved pressure after he complained of itching. I
but the truth is that the lower levels reported for sodium restrlc·
immediately called his doctor and
pressures are associated with less tlon are really from loss of weight
he prescribed medication over the
risk of having a heart attack or associated with a decreased calorie
phone.
My question Is, how · do people
strike ..Theoptlonalleveliscloserto tnt,.ke. I prefer that people with
115 over 75 for most adlllts.
elevated blood pressure lose weight
usually get them? ·Could they
Often there Is a trade-off between until they are on the lean side before
return? I have been very careful in .
getting the benefits from lowering starting any medicine If, the
cleaning ·his bedroom and ba·
the blood pressure and the symp- situation will permit that Often,
throom and also laundering his ·
toms that may be caused by taking weight loss is ail that Is required. It clothes and sheets.
enough medicine to do that. So Is a most more healthy than staying ·
DEAR READER - A child
" --~-~- ~~~~-Y&gt;li!~"9"'!1""m....,_tn_____oyerwel~~:ht.aJJ.d_ta~IIuqne.dlc.l!)esto ·- u~ua11Jb,g_£ts pln~orms from. ,
. · avoid side e!fects of medicines and lower your pressure.
another chlld. They are quite
to avoid Jowertng the blood presYour lifestyle has a lot to do with
common, so com·mon ·thai one

--yeai:Olir--son·

· MIDDLEPORT -The Heath
United Methodist Women will
meet at the church Monday at
7:30p.!p.

.USDA· CHOICE BONELESS

$199
.
Rump Roast ......

KANAUGA - Revival will
begin at Silver Memorial
Olurch on Second Avenue ·in
Kanauga. ·The Rev. John Jef·
fTeys will speak.

LB.

,

"~Groond ·fe'!f·:~!~$-1-·-lJl.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
.County Deputy S!leriffs Associ·
ation wlll meet Monday, 7 p.m.
a.t the courthouse.

'

.,

.. VINTONTIJESDAY
- Vinton Friendship

MIDDLEPORT- Group II of
the Middleport Presbyterlan
Church will meet Thesday even·
.lilg, 7: 30 p.m., at the church.

.- GALLIPOLIS

- Gallipolis
Rotary will meet Thesday, 6
p.m. at Oscar's.
: GALLIPOLIS . ,.... American
(eglon Auxiliary of Post 'fl will
meet Thesday, 7:.ll p.m. at the
J;.egton Hall.

getttng
•
attentton .
nationwide

Batter-Dip-Fish

,.
;.MIDDLEPORT -;-·Group II of
the Middleport Presbyterlan
Church wiil meet Thesday evenIng, 7: 30 p.m., at the church.

•

MIXED

Fryer

(
Parts ..••..l:·. 49

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

LB.

Sausag~·············

ByJOJ!:EDWARDS
Associated PreM Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Exile, the former rock 'n' roU band,
had some trouble gaining acceptance from country music radio
stations when the group's first
country record was mailed a year
ago.
"A lot of radio stations threw It In
the trash can because they thought It
was a mistake," recalled ExOe,
drummer Steve Goetzman.
The five-member band was best
known for ltscontrov~rslal1978rock
hit, "Kiss You AU Over," which has

$ 99
1

·
·SUPERIOR . .
. .
$. 2.9
Lunch Meats...... 1 .
LB.

cvptesSo when the band changed style in
1983 and released "High Cost of
Leaving," described by Goetzman
as a "beer-drinking country song,"
many country radio stations exDed
the record to the nearest wastebasket without listening to it.
But not anymore.
The next three singles by the
five-piece band made No. 1 on the
c6untrycharts: "WokeUptnLove,"
"I Don't Want to Be a Memory" and,
most recently. the roustng"Give Me
One More Chance."
The group, from the lush horseb~lng area around Lexington,
Ky.; decided to try country muSic
after follow-up rock records to" Kiss
You AD Over" !lzzled.
So they holed up for 1 ~ years in a
125-seat .bowling alley bar-lou~ In
Lexington and perfected their
country sound while playing tor the
bOwlers.

: GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette
White Shrine will meet Thesday, '
i&lt; 30 p.m. at the Masonic Tern·
pte. Men members will be hosts
f9r the eveinlng.
.,GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolis
Area Christian Women's Club
~I meet Tuesday, noon at the
Down Under. Luncheon Is $6,
and ~rvatlons are necessary.
, .CHESTER- A meeting of the
qlester Township trustees will
tr Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at town

KRAFT. AMERICAN SINGLES

PKG~
Chee.se •••••••••••••••

' '
WEDNESDAY .

12 OZ.

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
The board of trustees of Colum·
111'8· Township will hold a special
meeting this coming Wednesday
eiliening, 7: 30 p.m., at the
!irestatlon.

VALLEY BELL .
FLAVORifE ·

'
Racine Ladles
Firemen's Auxiliary will span·
RACINE -

School
,.
. menu
announced
MIDDLEPORT- In accordance

WQh the uniform lunch program of

JOAN OF ARC LIGHT RED

.

Kidney Beans"::z3 I $1

c~

sandwiCh, beanie wienies, pears,

milk.

.,

o=~T--.~ ~~ -­

.

![

1

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -When
M.C. Morris and state Del. Thomas
M. Moncure Jr. were rna rr1ed ,
Moncure's "I do" translated Into a
legislative "I can't."
The new Mrs. Moncure is a

"'"'''f-'" _do~swor.:.,.t~ . .VIIl!inli' Trtal

•

I I

I II

• •••••

COLES BREAD
I

20 oz.
LOAF

3/Sl

Limit One ror (vstomor
Goed O~ly ~I PowoU: ' ··
Offer bpirH Jan. 19, 1"5

I I' II I

C\11, • • • • • l

:

·CHARMIN

:

TOILET·TISSUE

•

SLB.
BAG

couwv.J

6 ROll
PIIG.

•

PEANUT BUnER

$1~9

22 OL
JAI

Umit One Por (uotomor
G~ ~ !! !i'~!!'!H's

OHer bpim .1m!. It, ltiS

.•

•••••••••••••••

'

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•

$139

DISHES
Fibercl11

•••h

Alumin1m
8 Ft•.to ZO Ft.

The accu~ation
is false, and comes from a mistaken
view of the whole matter.
doing the limitingl _He is limitlng~sl.
Wemustoe limited in-order that we may know -exaCf(yWIIatl&lt;fdol
are limited by and to the tryth, the gospel! It God had not been speeifle
in baptism as being an act 6f salvatiOn, how could we be sure of bemg
right or pleasing unto God? I.t is to our adva~tal!e that God h~ !muted
us to the simple act of baptism: therefore, It 1s not a hardship but a
. blessing!
·
God's Definite And Specific Commands
God has been definite and specific in telling men what to do in times
·
past:.
1. God specified to Noah what to build, how to build it, the size, the
number of doors and windows, and of what ma.teriai to use (Gen.
6:14 ·17). God was limiting Noab, so that he could know beyond •. doubt
what he must do in order to please God and to the saving of his own
house . Noah bei ng limited. d1d not argue with God about ~he t;r~ of
material its size, or what to build. Why? Because, his bemg hrruted
remov.J ali ideas and doubts from his mind that he might have had .

'fe

Nor.-~::~:~\;:C~~~-~~;~;i'N~~~finst;~ctio~s ~;-~~· wh:O;

Noah did not accuse God of limiting Himself!
2.God was specific in giving Naaman instructions as to what he
must ,do in order to be cleansed of his leprosy (1 Kings 5:1-14). God
specified what Naaman must do, where he must do II, and how many
t imes he must do it. When'Naaman accepted God's limitations given
him, he discontinued arguing and questiomng God. He obeyed, and was
made whole! Naaman did not accuse God of limiting Himself. just
bec;:ause he was limited!
· God is just as specific today concerning baptism being essential to
salvation: "He that believeth a!'!d is baptized •hllll be •aved: but he that
believeth not shall be dqmned" (Mk. 16:16): "Repent,_and be..baptized
every 011e of you in the name of JelfUIJ Chriot /01' the remiBBion of lim" ·
(Acts 2:38); and "The like figure whereunto even baptism doth Cillo
now save ur" (1 Pet. 3:21). Gbd through Christ and His word has
limited us to baptism so that we 'might know when we do that which
God has commanded for the remission of sins. We are not to accuse God
of limiting Himself, when He has limited us!
Man accepts being limited by rules in the realm of sports. If it were
not for our limitations in athletics, the world of sports would be
destroyed with chaos, confusion, and division. He wants everyone to
play the game of life by his own will o~feelin. Yet, he. thinks God
should accept him on
and all terms, re
ess of God's rules. He
does not want to be limited to the one
(Eph. 4:5), the 011e badJ,
the church (Eph. 1:22,23: Eph. 4:4), and the oae bapt11111 (Eph. 4:5).
Because of this, the religious world is divided, filled with chaos and
confusion.. You must be limited if you are to be saved·!
For Free Bible Corre-~eoce Ce"!'!IO• Write ...

·
GEITING '111EIR SJIARE OF ATTENTION Fonner rock band Exile had liOI1le trouble gaining'
acceptance from country mwdc radio 8&amp;allons when

playing before a crowd often more
Interested In discussing their strikes
and spares1hailllstening to muSic.
But they eventually got the
attention of Epc Records executives tn Nashville and were Sigl!ed
with hopes of achieving the success
of the trend-setting Alabama.
The band Is still probably best
. known lor. "Kiss Yoil AD Over,"
which gave them three European
and two South African tours,
However, . some radio stations
refused to play the song because of
what some programmers regarded
as graphic sexual content.
Band members were making $S5
a week in 1978 when the song thrUSt
them to short-Uved rock 'n' roll
stardom.
"Wewentfromoneend to another
In s1x weeks," Goetzman saki. "We
thought we were home free. Then it
all started co1Jap61ng."

make it. easier for lawyers to sue
doctors.
·
"I've been accused of mar rylng
Tom just to stop hlnn from voting
. against us," said Mrs. Moncure. .
"lt doesn't present any great

Chapel Hill Church of Christ.

they first crossed over Into the country !leld' In 19&amp;'1.

8ulavllle Road ., P. 0. Box 301
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

'The group gets plenty of l!lr play now, however, with
three singles In a row going tonumber1intheoountry
charts. (AP Laserphoto)

N

of their concerts to country music.
They also do a stlrrtng medley of
Motown songs: "Stop in the Name of
Love," "My Girl," "I Can't Help
Myself," "Reach Out" and' 'Signed,
Sealed and Delivered."
ExDe has been compared io
Alabama, the award-winning, fourpiece group- the first band to mark
such success In country music .
"Alabama opened doors for ils,"
Goetzman said. "They created
group acceptance lrl country
music."
Eod Adv for Weekend Editions
Fr1 Jan 11 and 'Thereafter

Omission
Due to an omission by the source,
the anniversary announcement of
Mr. and "Mrs. IvanE. WheelerSr.in .
last week's Sunday Tinnes-Senttnel
did not include the name of the
church or Mrs. Weeler' s maiden
name.
Therepeatingofweddlngvowsfor
their 25th anniversary was at the
Kibby Street Church of Christ in
Lima. Mrs. Wheeler is the former.
Martha Anne Barcus, daughter of
the late Wyman and Eva Champer

-~tn!'llbl~." sat&lt;t,~ne!J.n.!LS.. ..Barcu~
;s~.::::;;:::::::;:;;:;:..::::==..=:......:..:::!j~~~

Lawyers Association, 9:l,;{oncure, a - member of the HOUBii! COUrtS or
Republican, will abstain· on bills
Justice Committee, which coMid·
pushed by the group. .
ers most bills in which her her lobby
He had vigorously opposed some
has an Interest. "The commlltee
ofthemeasureshlswlfe'semployer
would consider only a few of their
wants most, Including ones to ma~e · bills each session and I'll just
It easler for plaintiffs to recover In
abstain from voting."
negligence cases and suggestions to .

6.5

. A MeBBage From The Bible:": .
BAPTISM DOES NOT LIMIT GOD
WiU14m B. Kughn
To disregard baptism as being essential to salvation! many c,r;y ·
loudly "God can save a sinner any way He
Do not limit God!. 1
" but I am also
agree that "God can
of the fao~ that
from their sins

anr

do' is a legislative 1 don't'

. d••••••••oz. 4/$1 Bread•• ~ ••.••• ::!~ ..•.. 6.9&lt;
( ·a t 'F00

,
'!

&gt;

=-

RHODE'S POUND WHITE

Frlday- cooks' c)lolce.

'

.

KAL KAN

the Meigs Local School District the

TTb:,!.~_,.-=...,.... - tOA~tP(I

5
49
Grapefruit .... :~:: 1

o==WHITE=-or'lliNr~

menu for school lunches for Jan.

1QS are announced:
).londay- !lsh·and tartar sauce,
trench fries, peas, cookie, mUk.
~ay - hamllurger on bund,,
on1on ch1p6, mixed fruit, mUk.
Wednellday - chicken and noocni., mashed potatoes, green beans,
jellb, hot rolls and butter, mDk.
.

$

.

1.59..

Ice Cream •••.• :~:a;. 119

Spaghetti dinner

'

$

2°/o Milk •••• ::~~\ •••.

flappenings
.
Sunday, Jan. 20, at the fire
~partment annex. Serving will
!!!gin at 11 a .m. Prices for
(!loners wlll be $3 for adults and
$1.50 for children 12 and under.

recur.
of the life
of
the pinworm. it is a good Idea to
fiave"IWO:.:courses oniealriieiit I
hopeyourentirefamliywastreated
With the medicine at the same time,
as usually the family is infected, not
just one member. Failure to treat
everyone al the same time is one
reason for treatment failures.
Medicines are now considered
the mainstay of treatment. but 1
think laundering at hot tempera·
lures ali the bed linen for everyone,
underwea·r. sleepwear and towelsls
an Important pan of e radicating
th~._lnf.e&lt;;tlo.n. The e11gs. ~X~ easily
spread.
(Newapaper Enterprise Assn.)

..Exile•

SEA STAR

Garden Club will meet Thesday,
f p.m. at the home of Elva
Adkins. There will ~ silent
auction.

ban.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-S: '

Condominium .·. investment should weigh .pro and con

DEAR BRUCE vn~
My apartment building Is being

LECTA - The Rev. Ernest
..13eloor ·Ylli pc2..'t a• \\tal."1ut •1~1- ·D·'Ii· ..
Ridge Church, Sunday, 7 . p.m.
The Rev. Earl Hinkle wiU have
mornl!)g services.

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

Pomeroy-' Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Ple8sant, W. Va.

By BIUce Wllllama

SUNDAY

•

s ..

S11nd1y t.tomlna:
Blblt Sl:ljd¥ 9:J(I
Worship lt:J(I

- ..

IKI.,. t:'lllns:

\\o'tcl..-., :

WoDIHp &amp;;00

, ,, ..,.,...._...............,.,,....._~

Blbk Sllld)'
1:001UII .

'

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_ "'__ ..___

'

t

·January 13, 1986 ·

Page-8-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

---

pie rep!!ca built for the 1932 chicago
World's Fair but now in pieces in
Ohio som~ay wUl be reassembled,
says an official of . the Indlaila
University Foundation.
. ~And :an..JU:Cillt.ect from Sweden,
hopes the foundation will let him
undertake the project in Stockholm.
Thl" non-profit fUnd-raising arinof
Indiana Univ&lt;'rslty filed suit Dec.18
in Lorain County Common Pleas
Court against Paul Haering, a
scrap metal dealer, and his

'
wu clllplayed at the l:hiCaao fair rebuilt and taken to $weden for·
aroundthecountyandofterinathern andlhe1939NewYorkWorki'.1Falr. dlspla)' in Stockholm, In part to
The project wu COITII1llu1oned by honor Bendix' interest in Chinese
for sale.
- Jutlge 'F ijjya l1iins 1m Dec. l i - 'SWeaiiii lriiNitriiiiiafVm&lt;:olnHitm· -cwiw'f. - Issued a temporii!Y restralnin&amp; dlx for the Chicago exposition. ·
Woeler, whO has spent several
order, enjOining the defendant.!
It was iiisa-rnbled .and turned weeks in Oberlin since August to
from doing anything with !hetemple over to Oberlin College, near inventory the parts, said Wednes·
excwt taking action to preserve It.
Clevelarid, in 19l'l. The college was day the ruling represents"hope that
the university foundation will let his
The judge set a hel\rlng on the unable to raise enough money for
lllwsl!!UQLY\'ednesday butJal!l)(erS, ~tructlon_l!!!d sto[!!d theJIIlrts. -~O.l!Jl~lak~-~c~arge o! ! he
Instead met behind closed doors to
In l!m, ownerShip was trans· reconstruction.
"I'm simply fa:;clnated ·by the
reach a settlement that gave the ferred to Harvard Ontverslty's
. university foundation "complete Yenehlng Instltut&lt;', but Harvard · building and the project. It has .
and exclusive rontrol, possession also was unable to finance restora· . seemed as 11 the Americans don't
and custody" ofthe!empleand Its tlon. The temple, still in pieces !ri wanttouselt.Sowhynottakeitback
parts.
Oberlin, was donated to Indiana to Sweden," Woeler said.
"OUr interest in this Is to see thatlt University's foundatiOn in 1969.
McGlasson said

Studies, Inc., ostensibly to rebuild
the temple,.
The suit alleged that Haering and
his group failed to Uve up to a 1982
promise to try to restore the temple,
which once stood 68 feet high.
The suit alleged the group was
to.
causing "injury, loss or damage"
' ' '") ,

counsel. "We think now we've laid
admfnlstrator to save
the groundwork for it. We thought what remained of the temple.
we had an arrangement whereby It
Meanwhile, a group of Swedes
would get re-erected, but It became who formed the Foundation of the
apparent that we did not."
Golden Pa\OIIlon in Stockholm
The copper-roofed temple, built became inl&lt;'rested. Architect Max
primarily by Chinese artisans as a . Woeler came to Oberlin to Invest!·
copy of the GOlden Pavilion of Jehol, gat&lt;' Whether the structure collld be.

the templ'e by

~Prell Witter ·
ELYRlA,Ohlo (AP) -Atull·s!ze

~-l:Bth:centw)o

C'runese Budalustfem·

in ihe news,

Ricky aiding search for child
·.~·ccj~'·~·~-o)S'Ki'iwoLi::5 · v~F) -·-

Teiev'isiUIC'slar;· riiO\y_...~iut.lt'Uer ·j·~~
offered to go on a national tour to help find Laura Bradbury, a
3-year-old who apparently was abducted while on a family camping
trip in October.
"He said that he w'ou ld qo everything he can to make sure people
are aware of Laura," said Patty Bradbury, th&lt;' missing child's
mother. "It's really great that they're offering to help. "
Jeff Ballard, Schroeder's publicist, confirmed Friday that the
14·year-old star of the NBC series "Silver Spoons" will help with the
search and will meet with the girl's mother Monday to discuss the
• tour.
Laura was last seen Oct. 18 while her family was camping at
'Joshua Tree National Monument in the desert 125 miles east of Los
Angeles.

Lena honored for furthering cause
NEW YORK (AP) - Singer Lena Horne wept upon receiving the .
Paul Robeson award for'furthering civil rights through the afts,
saying that before she met him, "I was just existing."
·The award, presented Friday by the Actors' Equity union,
recognized Ms. Horne's career from her debut as a 15-year-old
dancer in the chorus lines of Harlem's Cotton Club.
Ms. Horne, 67, said she felt her color rendered her "invisible" until
1940, when meeting Robeson taught her that black artists could blaze
trails for their race. "Until! knew Paul, and he was in my life, I had
no schooling, I had no understanding about being an artist, I had no
understanding about human beings- I was just existing," she said,
bursting Into tears.
· Equity established the Paul Robeson Award in 1974 for artists who
have shown "concern for and service to fl"llow humans,
for
. t!l.f'~ digniiJ(" &lt;t; ..JI&lt;!t;;,

By JOHN CHALFANT

stare is headed by a woman.
-The number of single women
heading famUies with children
under 18 in Ohio rose from 142,000 in
19711 to 227,272 in 198l.
-As of September 1984, more
than $700 million of accumulated
unpaid chlld support obligations
were owed In Ohio, with more than
$400rDIU!onowed torecip!entsofA!d
to Dependent Children.
-sixty· perceht of Ohioans llv!rig
in poverty are not eligible for. the

~latedPressWrlter

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
American Dream has become a
nightmare for women heading
fam!lles and legislation Is needed to
remedy the problem, saysstateSen.
Neal Zimmers Jr.
The Ohio Senate Task Force on
Women Single H!"adsofHouseholds,
headed by Zimmers, D-Dayton,
issued a report Friday detaUing160
findings !rom a IQ.month study.
111€ nnamgs

-,-

mcmoe: -

--.---·----:--

.

.

,_.

-

.

par1a

By NANCY YOACHAM

_ . _ ,.,tnt.... ~1\lftvflno.IAn......,~t'U'\O"'

.. .om:........... ....... -....:. ......... ,f" .. -o·-···

-About. one-third of ihe Ohio
families headed by women live In
·
•
poverty.
-One out of seven famU!es In the

1

---·,.:..,.-·-

"There does not appear to be a
safety net stopping. women single
heads of households' fall into
poverty," Zimmers said. "Duling
the task force hearings, It became

· -~.:Ctfuy~i"igli_.Ui't1 9 ~aSt:-

wllection

.J;oke .advp.nJage a! .!a.gl.Ht!!!s :&gt;t

skating, Ice fishing. building snow·
men, cross country skiing and
hiking hiUs cleared of undergrowth
by colder temperatures? Open year
round, Forked Run Slat&lt;' Park can
meet their desires too.
.As a natural retreat for wildlife
and birds, theparkcanaffordwinter
nature lovers a variety of oold

support obligations.
-An increase.In federal and slate
support for day care.
-Changes in federal and state
Job Training Partnership Act
procedures to promote greater
involvement of women In training
programs that won't lead to
underemployment.
-Extension of the Ohio Instruc·
tiona! Grant tO' part·tlme single
heads of households to defray tuition
costs.

In recent weeks, the lake was
dropped eight feet and permanent
concrere footers were poured to ·
anchor the buoys which mark a
sw!nunlng area. A bulldozer was
brought In to grade the beacli and
lake bottom under the ·swimming
area Into a slope.
Of Forked Run's 800 or so acres, ·

ftJ! ~mbe!:S f}f.- Lhe-Democr~!­

Catalog No. 7433, $130 plus shipping,
relatively inexpensive gauge avail·
and Sears Catalog No. 7437, $160 · able at many hardware stores.
.
j
When the temperature drops and · plus shipping - were top rated.
The reservoir itself can be a
you turn up the heat, the air in your Their high outputs of water at 13
breeding ground for bacteria as
house becomes l~ss humid. You and 15 gallons a day, respectively,
well as for molds: Though usually
nose, throat and skin can dry out, should be more. than adequate for
harmless, those microbes can
your , housep lams may wither, fairly large houses.
cause allergic reactions or resplra· ·
floors may start to squeak, and
The reservoirs of both models
tory infections. But studies show
furniture joints may loosen. •
had large openings. Each Sears
that the kind of evaporative
Hurnidifiers help to reduce such modelcomes'witha 7'h·lnchhoseto
humidifiers tested don't seem to
problems because they add mols· fill the reservoir - a convenience if
expel organisms into the air where
ture to the air. But they can also the unit Is rolled to a faucet. In
they can be inhaled.
have adverse effects on some addition, bbth urilts were among the
To minimize health risks, the
allergy-sufferers.
easiest to move when lull. But their
medical consultants recommend
Consumer Reports' e ngineers
fixed reservoirs were inconvenient .cleaning the' reservoir weekly,
tested 21 portable · humidifiers,
to clean, and their fans could be 'using o~ .tablespoon of bleach for
ranging In price from about $80 to
reached by the fingers of a curtous
each pint of water. Scrub or scrape
$225. A typical unit consists of a . child.
·
any debris off tbe reservoir walls.
rather bulky cabinet th~t holds a . Consumer Reports' medical con· Then pour out the bleach and Iinse
-·resePVol~of~·a4e-r,- and a pad that~ .,._.sultants- say t-t.at.. ·humiditier-s ··earr
-· - ~ res~rvuir i huruughiY'\YHirpiain .,.

frommld·morning until dark.
x 12 foot lodgf'-type tent which Is aoesn't matter what time of year
you visit the park, there' ssoml"thlng
The various length hiking trails already set up on a wooden pia !form
are rugged In some places but well along with a l2foot square dining fly
for everyone.
marked so even the inexperienced sheltering a picnic table. Other , - - - - - - - - - - - hiker can find his or her way.
equipment includes two cots, two
Barbeque grills and picnic tables slx·foot foam sleeping pads, a 60
abound and many family reunions quart cooler. a two burner propane
are held at. the park during the stove, lantern, fire dng with grill,
summer:
!Ire extinguisher. throw mat, broom ,
A 198-unit class A camping area
and dustpan. Rent-A-Campsites are
suitable for tents or trailers',available from the second Friday In
located on the SO\Ith.slde ofti:!e l&lt;)ke. . May through the third SUnday in
IA.IIlUl.D Y .CAlC
. Heated shOwer houses and iaundry . 'September~--"·~- - . ... . ,.
Forked Run State Park has made
facUlties help provide for a comfor·
table viSit. Sltesarerentedonaflrst continuous Improvements smce its
come, first served basis and are constuction first began in May 1951.
limited to 14 days of camping In any Some might remember Harold A.
ROLL FOR
30 day period. Pets are also aUowed &amp;rnhart, the first park manager,
in designated camping locations.
appointed March 1. 1953. Darts
ANP GET
TltroughtheDivlsionofParksand Hensler, park secretary, will soon
SECOND
Recreation, Forked Run Is prov!d· !Jegin her fifteenth year at Forked
DOUBLE
ing families with the opportunity to Run.
ROLL •
exper!ence1ent·camping-duringthe
Both. Ms. Hensler and Wachl&lt;'r,
9,000 ROLLS TO SELECT FROM
suriuner In an easy, inexpensive and who's been tnanag&lt;ir at the facility
All NEW PAmRNS
· enjoyabl!"way.
since last year, can be found ·at the
HURRY
IN FOR BEST SELECTION
ft'S called Rent·A·Camp, and for park office and are anxious to h!"lp
.' about$12anight,renterscanuseal0 visitors In any way posslbl~. The
704 GRAND CENtRAL AVE.
telephone number at the park ·is
PARKERSBURG
37&amp;6206.
Suprlsingly enough, there ar!"
763 3rd AVENUE
soml" Meigs County residents who
HUNTINGTON, WV.
have never visited Forked Run
State Park. For those individuals it
Mon. thru Fri. 9 A.M.-9 P.M.
1-1:20 p.m.; Myers (Mary\. 1::ll- will be good to !mow that It really
~nlourd11v 9 A.M.-5 P.M.
1:45 p.m.; Mercerville, 1: 5().2: 19
p.m.; Swain's Store, 2:20-2:50 p.m.;
cr6wn City, 3:45-4:30 p.m .; 'Grace
Shaffer, 4:45-5 p.m.; Ohio Town·
house, 5: 15-5:45 p.m.; Eureka,
6-6:30 p.m. ··
Thursday- Cora, 3: 15-3: 30 p.m.;
Raccoon Tr. Ct., ·3: 404 p.m.;
Patriot, 4:154:45 p.m.; Cadmus,

FREE

. being placed oon winter recreation, State Park Day In
May, and sununer activities In the planning, Randy
Wachter, park manager, looks lmward the corning
year at "Ohio's best kept secret."

OIDO'S BESt KEPT SECRET~ Tucked away in
Melp County, three mUes south of ReedsvUle on
state Jlol!te 124, Forked Run State Park is a pleasant
get·a-way for any tbne of the year. With emphasis

Don 't use blech on the humldlfi·
er's exaporation pad. If you do, the
odor of the bleach may fill the room
when the humidifiE'r is turned on,
If you have mold allergies, the
medical c.onsultants suggest that
you be carefUl when cleaning a
humidifier because scraping · and
scrubbing can stir up lots of mold.
Llquids ·or tablets that are often
provided by humidifier manufac·
turers might help prevent. mineral
buildup In the reservoirs. but should
not be relied upon as a disinfectant.
(For a special reprint of Consu·
mers Union's evaluation of smoke
detectors, send $1 for each copy to ,
CONSl]MERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio
City Station, New York, NY 10019 .

Bookmob~les
Meigs County '

through area announce routes

(Civic Center). 6:30-8 p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 15 - Portland
(Post Office). 2: 1().2:40 p.m.; Le·
tart Fails (Effie's Restaurant),
3:05-3: 50 p.m.
·Racine (Bank), 4: 35-6: 05 p.m,
Syracuse (Pool), 6:20·7:50 p.m. -·
Wednesday, Jan .. 16 - Chestl"r
(Fire Station)' 2: 15·2:45 p.m.; Keno
(North side of Keno Bridge)' 3·3: 30

3:45-4:15 p.m.; Reedsville (Reed 's
Store), 5:2().6:20 p.m.; Tuppers
Plains tLodwlck'sl, 7:20.8:05p.m.;
Baum Addition, 8: 25-8: 55 p.m.

POMEROY _ Bookmobile ser·
. vice in Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County PUblic Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule .for Mon·
day, Jim. 14- carpenter (Laura's ,
GALLIPOLIS - The Samuel L.
Store). 3:10.3:40 p:m.; Dext&lt;'r
(Church)' 4: 10.4:·40 p.m.; Danville
Bossard Library announces Its
· l&gt;5: 50· p:Jtr.;· Fiutlarnl ""' ,._ PJ!'~.....S.uccess_ Ro~rt,.,(~a r,.,'!~ rrrn'- iuuiffilOOU~"SCh~llle-"'for .
Be-·~s-urt=tiT'us'MoF"if'l€' t-epitnf' nrr-·"-·"· - -rEonllrcrrr.-5:·:&lt;

Gallia Comity

WE WISH TO extend our sincere
appreciation to

:-d::H H these ~who l--·-·-1-"1

;

A daughter for Lucie Arnaz
'

NEW YORK tAP)- Actress Lucie Arnaz and her husband were
watching "African Queen" when Ms. Arnaz wl"nt into labor with her
third child, who they named aiter her maternal great gran~mother
and Katharine Hepburn.
Eight,pound Katharine Desiree was Ms. Arnaz' first daughter,
said spokesman Charles Pomerantz In Los Angeles. Ms. Arnaz, who
ls on vacation from an upcoming CBS comedy sei'ies, has long
admired Ms: Hepburn, he said.
·
She and husband Laurence Lucklnblll Wl"re watching a videotape
of Ms. Hepburn in "African Queen" when she went Into labor, he
said.

rotating drums for rollers. A fan
forces air through the pad, evapo.
rating moisture and distributing It
Into the room.
Two models tested - the Sears

Shaving doesn't cause more hatr
to grow and I.t doe§n't darken hair.
Both growth and color are natural
processes from within.
Another myth Is that shaving

.

REALISTIC ·p. C. 2000.
PERMANENT WAVE COMPUTER

Get a facial

THIS WILL ANALYZE YOUR HAIR
FOR BEST PERMANENT EVER

Cleanse your complexion wen in

JANET'S JIAIR-GO-ROUND

make state Farm

77~-5404

h01neowners
insurance a good buy

causes fine hair to become coarse.
Thlschangelsalsoanaturalone.
However,cuttlnghalratsldnlevel.
does give a stubby feeling to the
touchashalrgrowsout. This is why
some women prefl"r lotion depUator!es. These d!soolve and loosen the
hair, thus preventing· the stubbly
feeling.

Mnday - Rodney Village, 3: 3Q.
4:45 p.m.; Gallla Metro Estates,
4:3(1.5:],.~ p.m.; Kerr, 5::ll-6 p.m.;
Bidwell, 6:1().6:30 p.m.; Cochran's,
6:4().7 p.m .: Valley View Apts.,
7:1().8 p.m.
Tuesday - Bane's, 11:55 a.m.·
12:05 p.m.: Dorothy Young, 12:10.
12:20 p.m.; Opal Franklin's, 2: 3(1.
12 = 50 p.m.; Harrison Townhouse,

ville, . 4Q.7: 10 p.m.
Friday - No Route. Malntf'nance Day.
Saturday- K&amp;K Tr. Ct., 9:3(1.10
a.m.; Georges Creek, 10:15·10:45
a.m.; Bulaville Tr. Ct .. 11-11:30
a.m.; Evergreen (Church), U: 45
a.m.·noon; Ewington, 1-1:30 p.m.;
Vinton, 1:35-2 p.m .; Morgan Cen·
ter, 2: l5-3 p.m.

,

winter by mak!ngsteamlngapartof ,.....:.;.;:...::::..........,..._ _ _ _:...._~-----......---------~----------.!....-_i_
your routine.
~
You can use a commercial facial
st!"amer or make one by fiUing a
Monday thru Friday
large metal bowl with balling water
9AM1o9PM
and making a tent over the !Jowl and
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
your head with a big bath towel.
W .O.LK lfll()ft(.All ' ~
First remove.all makeup and soil
1\NAPP()N'M(NT
with cleansing cream or lotion,
using twice. Steam !ace for five
minutes. While skin is wann and
damp, gently use a scrub cleanser.
A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN''
Rinse face and neck.well with warm
water, ftnlsh ;vtth moisturizing
cream.

Call Evelyn, Vera, Diann or J.anet

LOW rates

Eddie Murphy popularizes school
DETROIT (AP) - Fans of comedian Eddie Murphy are
descending in droves on Samuel C. Murnlord High School In Detroit's
northwest side and scooping up gym T-shirts like the one Murphy
wore in the blockbuster movie "Beverly Hills Cop."
For the past week, officials of the aging, 2,35().student high school
have been struggling to keep up with orders for the shirts from all
. over the United States and a few foreign countries, school officials ·
said.
The shirts say "Mumford Phys. Ed. Dept."

clally for people
A
humidifier can promote mold
growth by making a house ioo
humid. One way to prevent this Is to
monitor the level of humidity wtth a

at the park. Wachter is in hopes of a new boat dock for

··:owiit;ioGi'Ess•
:~1~~~£ Sll 99.

What humidifiers do for health

By the Editors
of Consumer Reports

IMPROVEM)l:NTS- Randy Wachter, manager of

Fm...t Roan s,w..........,ru;!b!!f!lnts out lmprov~IJillll\f;.~_the JIIO acr!' l_ali:e. :VIfl.Oid f)fle I&gt;J!,~ se.!Y!'!JJf!l" P!Ui! fo! _" _
that have been made to publlc boat launching lacUltes
about the last fO years and !Silue for replliCement.

fs

From

Consumer
Reports

__.__

signs and picnic tables have been

controiled task force, including Sen.
Grace Drake, R·Solon, signed the
final report except Sen. Donald
Lukens, RMiddletown.

money owed families.
-Repeal of an Ohio law which
prohibits the attachment of unl"m·
ployment beneftts to meet . child

--

!!::: ~rey~a.ceo~oy ift'l"'c oaies in' ~e· al

)3oating Is permitted at the park .
with motors up to four liorsepower. ·
During good weather, row ooats,
canoes and even paddleboats can be
rented on an hourly basis.
For anglers 16 years or older with.
a valid Ohio fishing license, go6d
fisttin~ Is available and catches Qf
s
A cross county ski trail has qeeh
and crappies are
readied. and awaits the first
been renovated, stumps have been
The public swimming area and
~•&lt;&lt;•u:rrmliitlu•ll""vt~ SilOWitliF-- Wit~t ~=~a',vvcd·frvmthe::~..:Hslde 'iibov~tne-~· ·· bcac~~n·frv..u ~. .1cmor'.al B3y towinter finally upon Meigs County,
swimming area, and old benches,
Labor Day with lifeguards on duty

scrap copper," Haering said, ad·
ding that he believes most of the
temple parts are Jntact. "! think it
will take some~lme before anybody
fully determines if It can be rebuilt.
I'm not an architect, bull don't think
It can."

vf

....

During the hot humid months of park. •
.
locations throoghout the park.
summer, many people choose to
Acconting to Ralldy Wachter,
Many odds and ends, such as the
rewiring of an outdoor arnphi·
stay indoors in air conditioned park manager, s!gns.fortheskl trail
comfort. But then there are the have been ordered. Rental equiptheater have also bel"n accomp"back-to-nature" individuals who mentis not available at the park but
!!shed recently. ·
.
pref!"r to dotheir relaxin~ outs~de. -~ "prlmar:_ly..,!h_ls ~~~ we'll ~ how _ _ \Vl!cl!!!'t. _\YhQ carne tQ_forked •
are tU~lcy. Tit~ !be.. sKlilig goes; Wachter ~ld.
Run after five years at SclotoTraUs
·
back·to-n;~ture )overs, the , fisher·
Renlal equ!pmentandsldingcl!rilcs
State ParknearCh!lllcothe,caUsthe
Meigs facility "Ohio's best kept
men, the boat enthusiasts, the could be In Forked Run's future.
swimmers, can all find solace
Ohio's Division of Par]ls and
secret."
·
among the confines of Forked Run
Recreation Is interested in promo!·
·wtth sev!"n tuUttml" and three
Stat&lt;' Park, located on State Route
ing winter actlvltes throughout the
seasonal employees at the park,
124, three mil~ south of ~ville.
state, he added.
Wachter hopes other Improvements
.BuLwhaLahout
souls ·_

"Some oi the shingles were sold as

clear that for many women heading
. farnllles the American dreatn had
become a nightmare.''
He said he plaJ1S to introduce
legislation later this month that will
deal with such matters as child
support, job training and day care.
The task force came up with 142
recommendations to help deal with
the problems, including:
-All unspecified increase in
welfare benefits.
-A child support enforceml"nt

perhaps skiers· will now be able to

-~~l.S!a!!

4

-

ANNIVERSARY NOTED- cara arid Lawrence Lee observed their
25th wedding anniversary Dec. 21. They were marrie!Un Mlddlep\)rt by
the Rev. Fred I. Gardner, Middleport Church of Christ. They are the
parents of slxchtldren, Dianna Lynn Lee, Kathy 1\nnKasseU, Lawrence
R. Lee Jr., Sandy Marie Lee, Randy J{evin Lee and Tracy WUllam Lee.
They have one grandchlld.

apreldJna 111

. -

.The Sunday Times-Sentinei.:....Page.,-8·1

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

within Meigs - Forked ;Run park

.

I

·,By M.R. KROPKO

Pomeroy-Middleport..,..~alliPolis,

Ohio~s lJest kept secret' may lie

January 13. 1986

Pomeroy-Middlepim..:..G8Jiipolis, Ohio-Point Pl&amp;alant, W. Va.

Undone. Chinese temple may y~t .be rebuilt
.

~People

.

-----~

MASON

CAROLL ·SNOWDEN

417 Second Ave.
Gillipolis, Oh.

_:========:._~

[g)~~

446-9510

Our service makes it even .better.
Call me for all the details.

t th Galli a
0
e
County
Chi Idren's Home
during the past
Holiday Season.

CHECKING ACCOUNT
IN SOUT ERN OHIO

PhoneU6-4290
Hom• 446-4511

SPECIALIZED
CLEANSING AND
PACKAGING SER\ilCE.

t/,

0

THE 1985 DOG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC~
1st
·,
...

&lt;

Where more ·
Americans find
.a b!Uer rem
r.

Lucie Arnaz

H&amp;R BLOCit

. 10' U.P. ALUMINUM WIRE MESH DISH
DRAKE 324 OR UNDEN 1000 RECEIVER
•DIAICE 100 ° LNA (LOW NOISE AMPM)

IIIISIALLED'$1765
8' SYSTEM $1645

COMPLETELY

HOUSTON TIACIEI 2
~-

··--·-

S41 0

F1iTURE iV SAiELUTI SYSTEMS ·
614-669-3761 or 614·669-3766.
SAnSFACTION 18 GUARANTEED

Found Michael Monical

$394!

this, but In a recent survey
or .customers who,' got re-

funds, 3 out of 4 6c:lteve
they aot bigger refunds
than tfthey ard their own
taxes. 3 out of 41

618 E. Main St 27 Sycamore St
~ ~,

G811lpollo, Ohio
Phone ~41~

Ph.Ma.992·3795

Open II AM.. PM Weel&lt;devo, H let.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILAIIU!

'

I

CDI'IIIIIIJ CBMr . , _ AWa&amp;MU - WI CAllY MOWM ACCOWI1

ChOOH From The Lorgest Selection• In
.. CentNI and Sovtlt-•t•rn Ohio

.-----couPON·-----,I

1 Lopr1 Monument COml]any
Olio - Yinllln. Ohoo
I D I'IMPomerov.
.. -ctm•lrMbaok.. ttthoMng
I -'""'"""'"""' .....,_...
~WieetlltM&gt;If.
I a ............
,
_ meollinfarmallon llboln
I

J
I
II

1 OKinlll, .,._.on
.uthorlmd lopr~
I
eo.
coli ot'my
I .....
I
I OrteoMt..cl"'e~ltobovtMcw... 1
Mot!V~Mnf

We can•t promiRe everyone

What can we find for you?
Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

.

t.u.n• w1"'"' obl~ttetkln.
1 HarM
'
·

' ~lfJorfown

L-

.._ Ald1.1
IWI
....
to• DepolIt 1111 d n.•
~uee
fO

Ia Comveolemt Low M011thly Po)'llleDt.a

OPEN EVENINGS AND

,._~I._.

I

I ,.,.., or •cute

M•- 11111 •- "- ft.l.. ........._ __ ...
..,.. uw --r - ··

SUNDAYS BY

APPOINTMENT

.1 Simply Mail U1 The Coupon For Furth• lnlormatloll
1 '

I

J

WRITE FOil BOOKLE'\'8 SHOWI"'G .
M£MORI~ IN FULL OOWR WITH

SIZDANDPRICESSTATED.

-LOGAN-MONUMENT co., INC •.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Meig1 County
Dlapl•v Yard N•r
..... Pomef'oy·M&amp;iGii Biidje
. Leo L,. Vlughln,Mgr.
Phone 912·2188

-

.'
'

.
Addrns ......................... ....... ....... ....... ..... ............ -.. .................................................
....................... ...... .....

Your gown is scientifically 'processed.
triple-wrapped in blue tissue, sealed in
a special container. which is acain pits·
tic · sealed, and returned with beauty
prmrved for-alflhe yeiri to come.

.,\ '.1

Township .............................................. ........... ... :.................................................................................. ..

Ask about the &lt;deal service now'

..•'.'
.•.

Compound 'e .d

"
Name .............................. ........................... ...... .............................................. ,...........................
..

Owner's

'

Kennel License S20.00

Female $4.00

Spayed Female $4.00

Male $4.00

e·······•···· ••• ••·· ··· •· ···• · ··· ·· ····• •·•· •· · ·· ····•·••••·•·· ·· • ··· ··· ·•··H· ·•··•·• "s"retIf·d· ·"•• ••• •• ••••
1

• Ace :• Sex •
: Yr. Mo.• 11. F.: Blk.
1

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1

COLOR
Tan Brown ·

11

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Yellow : .Lon(

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Short: Known : Paad :

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Ronald

GALLIPOLIS
SAVllN

Ohio Valley Laundry
and Drydeaners
Ph. 446-1842

S

121 State Street, Gallipolis

Robinson's laundrY
and Drycleaners

'

• . •••••• •••••...
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.-······-···· ..

Vinton. Ohio
Gallia County
Di1play Yard
J;;n"'.v; 0. Buih

'

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441 2nd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
• (614) 446a3382

·Ph. 992-5428
Second St.. Pomeroy

Maniger
Phone 388·8803

'

.,

•
...

�..

.

---~·

Pomeroy-Middkt~-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Pege-8•8-The Sunday .Times-Sentinel .

GALUPOLIS - The annual
Ohio State Pharmaceutical Associ· General Hospital, the University of
educational serolnar for the
atlon, the Arnertcan.Pharrnaet)utl· Cincinnati. He came to HMC and
members of, the Holzer Medical · cal Association, the Amertcan the clinic, as a surgeon In 1!N6, and
Center· Volunteer Service League • Society of Consultant Pharmacists has been presl~nt of the medical
will be Thursday, Jan. 17, In the
and the Amertcan Society of staff since 148.
·---"'-En!-n::h.51!l_Eoom--~uu•..c.~rn- .Hcspl!a\£1'..-.r.:-.ae-!st.s-; H~ ~r.~.A fellaw.JnJhe.~anCpJJe~&lt;e
Ing to Deanna Morgan, president of
tatlan will cover the tight person, of Surgeons ·and Diplomate on the
. the volunteer ser:vlce league.
the right medicine, the right route, Amertcan Board of Surgery. he Is a
Following registration, the prothe right dosage and the right time. member of the Central Surgical
gram will begin at 9:30 a .m . and
Following Mrs. Beebe, a tum Association, clinical professor of
feature three speakers and 'lfllm.
titled "At 99" will be shown, surgery at the University of
Participating will be Dr. Charles E .
Introduced by Mary Harrison, Cincinnati College of Medlclne,.and
-FfoiZer.Ji'., pteslaenc onhe- hosplral- "R.N.;frm lhe-Hol2ef staff develop- ·ts--a· ·m..,mber · of the· &amp;oar-a ot··
medical staff and . member of
ment qepartinent. This tum Is Trustees of the Holzer Hospital
Holzer Clinic Ltd.;. Sharmi Beebe,
narrated by a 99 year old woman Foundation . •
R. Ph., and Susan Cheney, R.D.,
who practices yoga, does e&gt;&lt;erclse · To close the morning se;;,slol!,
tl1et apeutlc dletlclan .
on a slant board, plays the plano Mrs. Cheney wUI talk about -GetOpenlngtheprogramwUlbeMi-s. · and sings, lives alone, and spreads ·ling to the Heart of the Matter
Beebe ~peaking on "The Five
shE! ~s.
through_ Diet." A native of RlchMedlclne." A
..a
·
_ mood, Ind .• Mrs. Cheney
a BS
!

.... ,

slty and a native of Antwerp, Ohio.
she was a retail pharmacist for 19
years and a nursing home consultant for seven years before joining
Holzer Medic Center.
· She holds membership in the

RIO GRANDE -

GALUPOLIS - THe fourth
annual observance of the Week of

Charles E. )Jolzer Jr.
for Volunteer
{'I

on "How to Add Life to Your
Years." A graduate of Haverford
College and Cornell University
Medical College where he earned
his M.D. · In 1941, Holzer did his
surgical residency at Cincinnati

Purdue University, and did her
dietetic Internship th~re. She joined
the staff of Holzer Medical Center In
March, 1983.
A luncheon Is scheduled to follow
the full morning program at noon.

co8tor -etmn.:h; ..,.Rev:-'i)(il'l-·Mat&gt;&lt;.in ,

tm(meal. · g
.
The Gallla County Ministerial
Association 1s sponsoring thi.s observance locally and Jnvltes the
publlc to attend. Ma.ny area
churches will be represented In this
·
·

~

-'

-

.....__

..._

~

--,..--

Grande United Methodist Church; . r
Rev. Bob Mlldison, Church of the ; ·
Naza~ene; Rev. AI MacKe~le, St. :
·Peter.s Episcopal Church, Rev, •
John ·Jackson, New Life Lutheran .
Church; Mrs. Barbara Epling, :
Ftrst
Church; aruL. .

. - --

----------

~imes- i"entintl S~ction

January 13, 1985

By DAVE GOLDBERG
It's a matchup so enticing, In fact, that the people
with 5,(fl4, Hts 421 yards and tour TD passes In last
AP Sports Writer
most concerned - particularly at ABC, which Is
week's 45-28 victory over PittsbUrgh both were AFC
-~·~~S""
T.ywQB~J,~allf. _ (APJ =~In ._this season:;:o=f~~te.~sl_!lg..the ..St!per..aowuor.the.flrsLt!me_ -:. bellf__Jlt!e..game.remms-il.!!d .!&gt;e feU. jlll!U2 y.anlubQO_ot ~

.'

decllnlilg television ratings, court fights, escallltlng ·
salartes and the shift and · near-shift of long·
established franchises, the National Football League
may have found an answe~ to Its troUbles ln a dream
matchup for Super Bowl XIX.
. .
,
A week from Sunday, the San Francisco 49erS 81!d
the Miami Dolphins take to the natural turf at
I I

j

Ginger Tayntor, Director of Volunteer Services said reservations are
to be in to her office by noon
Monday.

-·

unity within the Christian .
Community.
_ .

.., ~- ~~!~C.~~aa.~ U !""Jt)•J:•.n.!! ~
~arli~Q(Ult~=-'leat:s_o"'er:.. * _
celebrated on Frtday, Jan. 18,. at. vance Include: Rev. BW Myers. St. &lt;
noon at the Grace United Methodist Louis Cathollc Church; Rev. Bru(!f
Church at the corner of Cedar St. Harris, Grace United Methodist ·,
and Second Ave. tn Galllpolls.
Church; Sister Judy Norwlck, :
A luncheon wtll be served In the _F .S.C.C., St. Louis Church; Rev. :
dlnlng room at 12: 30 p.m . _with a Bob Col~, Good News Baptist •
-treew~ro1ferii1'1Dc6Vertbe

-- --- ----·*-- - --

Sports

Prayer Week ser-Vices
scheduled in Gallia area

Program set for hospital volunteers

'

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

~--

their breath last Sunday as the Dolphins won the AFC
title by beating the Pittsburgh Steelers and the 49ers
dispoSed of the Chicago Bears for the NFC crown.
Why might this Super Bowl be. dlfferent fr!&gt;m all
those otllet Super Bowls that In the end seemed to
· produce. so much less than expected?
Tostartwlth, there'snoquestl0 nthattheteamsare

matching Dan Fouts' NFL playoff yardage record,
set In overtime agalnst Miami three years ago.
. Montana, · Jl!'Obably the NFL's best on~the-spot
Improviser. doeSn't have the figures·, but he has the
respect - Including fans such as former Raiders
Coach and CBS 31ll\IYst John Madden who consider
him the best, period.

His forte Is keeping opponentS of! balance. In the
1® NFC title game, he kept running In the last two
_rnlr.&gt;Jtes ~hen Dallas kept e~tlng llll~ -au ~- .. way to the wl.nnlngtouchdown. Last week, against the
Bears, he used guard Guy Mcintyre as a blocking
back and -put wide receiver Freddie Solomon at
quarterback to run an option play.
Add the supporlllig casts.
·
Miami's twin Marks, Clayton and Duper, both are
world-class splinters who caught 73 and 71 passes and

J

BOARD CERTI.FIED

FAMILY PRACTICE &amp; .
PAIN CONTROl

Rlo Grande

· ~Culli;;g~.-.uud,.,,Cemm:.mi ~ - -Gc!!ege

will offer the following courses
beginning Jan. 12.
Fireside Gardening: It Is Important to plan and prepare gardens
before Sprtng. Students will be
Involved with soil testing, extended
garden layout and planning and
seed ordertng. Companion plant·
.lng, organic and · intensive gardening techniques will be highlighted.
A notebock and pencil will. be
necessary.
The class wlll meet on consecu·
live Salt..m:iay--s , 3ail."" :i1, ..1S au~ 2e
from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. in Room 111
· of the Math and Science ~nter.
Kingsley Meyer will be the lnstruc·
tor. There Is a $25 fee .
Deals on Wheels (lor car owners

Hearst, Davies affair,
1Exec-uti(}n,' on television
schedule Sunday night
By FRED R0'111ENBERG
AP Televtslon Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - If Orson
Welles' classic "Citizen Kane" was
one of the beet movies ever, then
ABC's "The Hearst and Davies
Affair' • Is one of the worst. Not even
publisher Wllllam Randolph
Hearst's yellow Jlewspapers COllld
have found anything nice to say
about tonight'sdreadful clinker.
Tonight's competing movie,
NBC's "The Execution," is a much
better _choice. It's about five
Callforrua women who plot the
- - -deaU'i -of..--a former -N82l doctor who

in his characterlza tion of the women
as criminals. The public, of course,
applauds their action.
The women, played with convlc·
lion and credibility by Loretta Swlt,
Valerie Harper, Jessica Walter,
Barbara Barrie and Sandy Dennis.

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before. Although
fetched, It's an engrossing thriller
that generates some of the same
questions about vigilantism that the
Bernhard Goetz subway shootings
In New York City are now raising.
ABC seems to lust after True
Confession tales about romance
among_the beautiful and powerful
people ("Malibu" and the upcoming
"Hollywood Wives"). and the third·
rated network Is at It again with the
scandalous affair between Hearst
(Robert Mitchum) and Marion
Davies (VIrginia Madsen). the
chorus girl he made into a movie
star.
1
1n this film , which ABC says is
· based "on historical records,"
Hearst, the one-time presidential
aspirant whose wife would never
give hlm a dlvoite, gets to utter the
memorable line: "I'm gonna make
you a -star." He does It by buying a
movie . studio and spoon-feeding
Miss Davies the plum roles.
Hearst, more than ll years her
elder, lives by one rilorallty and
foists another on America. He cuts
out a kissing scene from one of Miss
Davies' films because he said It
made her seem cheap. Her movies
seem to get only rave reviews In hls
throughthe
hiscareer.He
tums the power-hungry Hearst Into
· a wounded wimp. What was
supposed to be the romance of the
century Is emotionally unconvlnc·
lng. For theamountofpass!onon the
screen, Miss Davles;who calls him
"W.R." or .','Chief," -could just as
easUy have been ijearst's dutiful,
old-maid secretary.
Anybody reading the New York
papers knows about Bernhard
Goetz, whose alleged shooting of
four youths who asked hlm for
mmiey touched .off a ftrestorm of
debate.
"The ExecutiOn" also ponders the
morality of people overruling a
ju$tlce system they · feel Is not '
working properly. When the film,
based on a book by Oliver Crawford,
was being made last year, NBC
demanded It express a vieWpoint
that vtgllant!sm Is Immoral. Given
the current attention to this Issue,
·~rae "' must- be reUeved. that the
prosecutot In the 111m Is unbending

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Bowl XJX, (AP Laserphoto ).

.

.

after the 1983 season, said the money
Is lmporlant, but the satisfaction of
reaching the ultimate In your
profession Is more Important.
"It's the ultimate," said Shiver.

Georgetown 52-50 winner in overti~e;
Duke romps, 7l-59;Tar Heels triumph
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
APSports Writer
PHll.ADELPHIA (AP) -A pair
of free throws by David Wingate
with 12 seconds remaining In
overtime triggered No. 1-rariked
Georgetown to a 52·50 victory over
16th-ranked Vlllanova Saturday.
The trtuinph was Georgetown's
15th straight this season, whUe
VUlano\ia's record dropped to
9-J.Regulatlon ended 43-43 when
VUlanova's Ed Pinckney made two
free throws with 11 seconds
remaining.
VUlanova pulled within a point at
49-48 on a pair of free throws by
Harold Pressieywlth 16seconds left.
Then came Wingate's free throws,
which made it 51-48.
VUlanova made It 51'50 when

man Tisdale, scored 21 points and In the midst of a nine-game losing
llecame the Big Eight Conference's streak, and started with four
all·tlme scortng leader as the No. 8 freshmen.
Sooners overwhelmed NorthwestGeorge Jones led Northwestern
ern Louisiana State 98-621n noncon- Louisiana with 17 points. Troy
terence college basketba'll Turner had l2 points.
Saturday.
Duke 71, Washington 59
Tisdale,a6-fool-9junlor,brokethe
DURHAM, N.C . (AP)- Johnny
recordof2,115polnts,heidbyformer Dawkins' 19 points led second·
Kansas State player Mike Evans, ranked Duke to a 71-59 college
with a Five-foot turnaround jumper basketball victory over Washington
at 11:29 In the first half. He also Saturday, giving the Blue DevUs a
grabbed 10 re_!xlunds to lead , the measure of revenge for last year's
Sooners.
·
NCAA tournament.
The Sooners used hie game as a
Washington defeated Duke In the
tuneup for thefr Blg Eight opener second round of last year's postsea·
Wednesday night against Mlssourt.
son tournament ID-78.
Shawn Clark had 19 Points and
'The Blue Devils led 41-34 at
Tim McCallster pumped In .16,
halftime, but Washington scored six
mostly on deadly accurate outside straight points to open the second
jump shots as part of a balanced half and pull within 41-40. The

make All-Pro,
never
a
chance to play in the Super Bowl. I
just hope I can contribute."
Special Teams- Good Year
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (API -

contributions to the team 's 15-1
record durtng the 19St National
Football League season included 16
tackles and a blocked punt In special
learns assignments and 162yardson
38 carries as a reserverunn!ngback.

ence basketball.
The Cavaliers' Tom Sheehey
missed the front end of 1-1
opportunities at the free throw line ,
with 1:32 and 1: 17 to play before
Peterson popped In his only field ·
goal from the left sideofthefoulllne.
VIrginia's Darrick Simms was off
target with 33seconds left, and In tl1e
scrambie for the rebound, the ball
was knocked out of bounds and
awarded to Carolina.
Curtis Hunter got free for a dunk
with 19 seconds left to put the Tar
Heels up 63-59. A jum~r by Simms
and a palr of free t~tWNs by Kenny
Smith at the: 03mark accounted for
the final margin.
Carolina, Improving Its overall
record to 12·1 and Atlantic Coast
Conference mark to 3-0, got 16polnts

I~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~®~~~~~
and David
Delle! Schreinpf's short jumper -~rr~i~~~~~l~~oo=
erty, '"""'v"'
Georgetown's Ralph Dalton sank a
The S&lt;x111e1·s. 11-4, raced to a 16-4
foul shot for the Hoyas' final point.
lead 1n the first hal! and were never
Wingate~· with 11 points, and
threatened byNorthwesternLoulsl·
Patrick Ewing with to; led Georgeana, 1-13. Oklahoma stretched Its
town's scoring.
leadtoasmanyas21polntstowarda
· Soo
NW
La
82
.47-261ead at halftime.
ners98,
.,
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Oklaho- ' 'The Demons, members' of the
rna's two-time AII·Amerlcan, Way· Gulf Star Conference, were playing
. _ c;atlet'. Schedule
Week of Jan. 13, IJIIG
Oak - G)'flliJMiam

•

,
·'

..,__,
rUOI

Jan. 13 Noon-3 p.m. open RE'C. ...... ,. .... ................... ..................... Noon-3 p.m. Open Swtm
6-8 p.m. College R&lt;c ............ .............. '" ......... ,. .......... ....... _.. 6-8 p.m. College Swim
Jan. 14 6-8 p.m. College Rec . ........... :.......... ....... :.................. 12::J)..1:30 p.m. Fitness SWim
·
~
6.8 p.m. College Swim
Jan. 15 Closed·Basketball ..................... ................................. 12:l).l::lt p.m. Fllnes.! Swim
5 p.m. Redwoi'T'Ien vs. Ohio Domlnlcan ............ ................. ......... .............. ....Closed
7: :11 p.m. RedmE'I1 vs. Urbana
Jan. 16 6-8 p.m. College Rec ..... ....... ,.......... ,............... : ...... ~ .. 12:J)..l :10 p.m. Fltne!l5 Swim
,
6-8 p.m. CoUege Swtm
Jan . 17 Cfosed-Basketba\1 ......... ..... ., .. ....... .. ............. .:... .: .... . 12::lt·l:30 p.m. Fltneu Swim
7 p.m. RedWOIT!en vs. W.Va. State ....... ................... ............ .... ............ i..... .. c;Josed
Jan. 18 6-8 p.m. Open R&lt;c......................... ......... ......... .. .. ..... 12:ll-I :JO p.m. F tness Swim
,
6-8 p.m. Open Swtm
Jan. 191-3 p.m. Open Rec .... ......~ .......... ............................................. l-3 p.m. Open Swim
Clooed-Baskctb&gt;III ..................... -....................... :............................. .. ...... Ciosed
7: :J) p.m. Redmen vs. TlHln
( Bob Evans Booster Nighlt
.,. ,_.,..Jan~l!iocm...\p.m, ~-Re$; 1 ,,, ••• ,, 1, 1,, • •• , ••• ~ -· · ·--·····, •• Noon.J p.m._Open Sw:tm
6-8 p.m. Collegt! R&gt;c.. _............... .... ...................... ... ............... 6-8 p.m. COllege Swim

with 15:06 left, but Duke quickly
regained the lead on re,serve David
Henderson'sjumper from thetopot
tl1e key.
'
Duke then ran a stall offense,
content to take Inside plays when
tl1eypresentedthemselvesandfree
throws.
,.
•
Duke, at12&lt;!,andGeorgetownare
the only Division I teams stlll ·
undefeated.
~
Mark Alarie, who sat out nearly
hal! of the second half due to foul
trouble, scored 13 of his 17 points In
the first half for Duke. Tommy
Amaker had 13 and Henderson

from Hunter.
VIrginia, which fell to 7·7and0-41n
ACC play, gotgame-hlgh totalsot22
points and 14 rebounds from
sophomore Olden Polynlce. Shee- ·
hey added 15 points while Slnims
. _.,
M 1K ""''
ano fellow-freshman e enn~,
each CQDtrlbuted 10. ·

.

Coli• Roundup

_. .,_ .......
ByfteAMoclaiH .......

EAST

8\lctlneu 75. Rldl!r 57
~own ~2.

Schremp! led Washington, now
10-4, with 15 points. Paul Fortier had
14 and center Chris Welp added ll.
Tar Heels 611, Caw 61
CHARLO'ITESVILLE, Va. (AP)
- North Carolina's Buzz Peterson
snapped a 59-59 tte with a minute lett

~:·~:st~~~; :~~:;;;--;;·

Villanova 50, O'r

U&gt;l\lgtl 64, Delawa rt&gt; 63
~er' s 00. La Sa~:!!
Syr&amp;CWJf' 71, Pn'JI.•Idl!ftc(&gt; 63

SC.

addedll.

Cavaliers In Atlantic C6asl Confer·

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Alabama at, K@ftlock,Y 58
Auburn 62, MIMisslppl S:t. ~ ..
DJke 71, WashlnJ'c.t 59

M!rcer 93. Georala St. 82
Ncrtll Carolina

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'1'11.-Cttattanoota 64, Marshall &amp;'1 , OT
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FLOOR SCRAMBLE- VIllanova's Ed Pinckney, center, 110M alter
a 1oot1e bill! as Gt!of'l'!lawn's Pen7 McDonald, left loeb oa. llanee
Brolldnax, rtpl. lrlell 10 Jnb the ball. G-.etown beJtl OB to edae

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---- •

·-· - -

--

-

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- ·--·

- -----'""'-

•
--~-----

...... _

-·---

. Januarv 13, 1986

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

Page-C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-· --·-

,.

Athens tops lro~ton, Logan slaps 57M loss on Zanesville
~

ffiONTON - ChriS Gerig, 6-7 ·
sen!Qr,scored:ilJpolntslindgrabbed
19 reboundS Friday night In leading
- - ttie Athens·· :BiiUdOgs to a "'59!~2SEOAL vlcto~ over the Ironton
•J
Tigers.
It was Athens third straight
victory follOWing a.5149 holiday klss
to Meigs. .
Gerig -led.. four. AHS players In
double digit scortng as Jeff Dean
and ChriS l...&lt;,oonard each tallied 14,
.
./

By KErtH MSUUP

t7 at lnlj!rmlSSion. •
.....
ers and Melgs-13. The FaiwnsWilft!
'l'ln-.seallne1 Staff
"I was disappointed In our first
called for 23 foulS and Meigs 14.
HEMLOCK -Rick Wise's 22 half play. We had Carpenter,
MelgsreturnshomeTUesdaylna .
_points and a strong second half · Chancey, and Powell aU on the
battle for first place with
powered Meigs to a -7842 win over
bench with foul trouble and we got
Nelsonville-York. The Buckeyes
Muter here Friday nlgfht. ·
caught standing around nat-footed.
won a thruter In Buchtel las.! month
--It-was-Meigs' sevoot!tconseeutlve- -But-- played-really. good In the --In-overt~. _64,62,· Mlller_goes to
lliumph, a new school record.
second half. I was real haPPY 011r
Trimble.
The previous MilS mark ot six bench played so well In the fourth
Box score:
straight had stood for 15 years quarter, especially Rodd Harrt' MUGS ('131 - Rick Wise 9-4 ·22: Brad RoQin5011
(J.9&amp;.1.70) In the J.S.year history of son," said Drummer.
(){)-(); Davf' F'l shef 2~1-7~ Jo)' Carf)t&gt;Oier ~1-11 ; Mike
Meigs High.
Meigs hit on 30of 61 from the fielc;l. Chanrt'Y 5-7-li ; l..el&gt; P&lt;wi&lt;'lll·M ; ChriS Kenl'lt'dyJ.&lt;l-2:
Shawn Baker J-:.!4; Rodd Harrlsoo4·1·9: P11rkt&gt;r l..ong
Up By Nine At Half
'for 49.5
while Miller canned
IW-0: ChriS ShWik :l-o-4. TQTAL8 3&amp;-18-lS..
54
from 16of49
Mlu.r.R
- Brian
; Kl&gt;ilh Rob!r15

11

11

'

Meigs ........................... ..... ............ :n 15 21 21-18

Miller ................................ .......... 10 17 7 8--42
Halltn'l.'l!l - M&lt;"lgs 62, Mlllcr 45.

eight each. Rich Nichols led Miiler,
now J.7 In the TVC, with 17 points.
The Little F'alcons had won four of
their last five games, Including one

• WISE SCORES TWO -Meigs's Rick Wise (11)
• goes high for two ,points In Ibis Dave Harris photo at
· Miller Friday nighl. MUS won the 'l'ri·Valley

-

in
the paint No
withother
19 points
and eight
rebounds.
Falcon
had

Southern frosh
win first tilt

stymledFHHS.

percent"
1 Ravenswood was led In se&lt;nir1g

CHANCEY FffiE'i AWAY- Meigs' Mike Chancey (15) uncorks a
jumper over the defensive effort of Miller's Paul Thompson (33) In this
Dave Harrts photo at Miller Friday night.· Meigs won its seventh

straight, 78-;42.

four, .
Steve Akers with two:
Southern was nine of 25 shots for
38 percent and hit 13 of 20 free
throws for 65 percent. They had 20
turnovers, 23 rebounds and I2
steals.

Tll~

StW In F1rst Place
The Marauders are now In a
three-way lle at 8-21n theTVC along
with Belpre and Nelsonvute-York,
who viSit Meigs TUesday In a blg
loop showdown. Meigs .ts 9-3 overall.
Miller fell to 1·11 overall and 1·9 In
theTVC.
In the last tour of Meigs' seven
_straight wins, Marauder opponents
have been held under 50- points.
Meigs remained the stingiest defen·
stve team In the TVC, allowing 53.5
pergame,fourpolntsagamebetter
than second-best Belpre.
Despite Its Impressive defensive
stats, Meigs had a hard time holding
down Mlller In the first half as the
normally low-scortng Falcons had

Alcohol biggest
problem of atl1ttetes-l
MISSION,Kan: (AP) -Alcohol IS
the most widely used drug among
college athletes, according to prell·
mlnary results of an NCAA·
sponsored study that alSo shows 37
"'"'"""' of the sampled athletes had
The NCAA News showed that 88
percent of the 2,048 athletes who
completetfquestlonnalres had used
alcohol in the year prtor to the start
of the fall term, but 6 percent said
they had stoppeduslngalcoholat the
tlmeofth¢survey.

3 786 6.17
J 745 684
J 7'1.8 6~
4 726 717.

.. ..... 5 · 7 738 763
R 690 n6
Warrm Local ............. ......... 3 7 tll1 'T.fl

•

. .................... t 11 556 ·

.

615

torn SoUth ... one o f the ffiOJ\ eagerly-

llatt Hall
Bobby Halley
Mr. Paul Halley

enh~nced cfor -st eroo

Mr. Fred Hastwell
Mr, Terry Hawt, Game Protector

Mr. Cor! Holtman
Mr. Gene Honcho!, Cooper Hollow
Mr. Rick Howell, Gallia Academy
Mr. Andrew Hunt

progrbm

·t-

W L

BE-lpre-.. .............. ................ ........ .....9
\Yarrrn Local ..................... . ........... .. 8
Meigs ................ ............... . ............ . 7
Ak&gt;xander ... ... .. ..................... ......... 6
--· VInTon Coun""., •.-.·............... .. ........... 6
Tr1mble ......... ... ................................ 5
,el.sonv1ll~York ........................... ... .. 3
Miller ...........
.. ..................... 3
Fedrrai-Hocklmt ..............

1
1
3
3

RESERVE YOUR COPY

- COMIM8

Wr!ls1on . .'...... ,.".. .. ................. .. ... ....... .0 10

Jan, 11 re8ldi8:

Meigs 78 Miller 42

Belpre 65 Wellston .ll
Neto;onvtii('-Vork 68 VInton CounTy !ll
Trimble~

Fedt&gt;raHiocklng 62
· Ale11ander at Wan·en Local j ppd, bad

MPigs 62

JiUJ. 15 gamet!l:

-N~lo:oovtllp. York

a!

M~ g.t:. =

,-

F'ederaJ-Hocldng at Belpre
Wellston at Alexander
Miller .at Trimble
VInTon (:ounry at Warren Local

'

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Columbus S1. Charl€'5 at Portsmouth

Or. Barry Thompson, Department of

Anthropoloo. Rio Gtande College
Mt. Pete thompson. O.D.N.R.
Mt. Ken toml inson. O.D.N. R.

Wheelen;burg at Jackson

Gf'('('nf!t'ld a t East Clln1on

after m1 y 's rebate

with purchase of 2

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'standings

J.R.'s Flower Shop

ALLGI\MES

Jividen's Farm Equipment •

Kln&amp;dom Hall
l.O.R.V.B. Chapter Arehaootogieat Society

I

Lon&amp; John Silvers
Mad River Mountain Ski Resort
McDonald's Restaurant
Modem Woodmen of America
Mournlns's Inc.
Occupational Work bperience Program ·

WLPOP
Hantlfln Trace ..................... 8 1 536 4.;5
&amp;luthf&gt;m ......... ................ .... 6 3 531 &lt;81
Eas1em ........ :................... 3 5 467 ~
North Gallla ..... ·................... ~ 6 577 637

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Kyger Creek ........................ 2 7 443 473
Sollthwest~n

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O'Dell lumber Company

Team
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WLPOP
Southern ........................... 3 0 20l 129
Hannan Trare ........... , ........ 3 0 JTl 144
Eastern .............................. 2 1 179 1!ll
North Galli a ........... ... ..........1 2 187 213
Kyger CrE"ek ....... ....... ... :....0 3 141 176
Southwestern ............ .. .......0 . 3 153 U16

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Ohio Valley Foodland
OHKAN Wanderers - National Campers
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Par Mar Oil
Pizza Hut
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-~--- -~ ·-~-PHONE

-446-.;,·¢517-· -~··

Boso ~ri-Center
Buckeye BuUdin&amp; &amp; loan Company

Cltmichatl's Farm Supply
Carter Tractor Slits

rt&gt;SCheduled Saturday (last nlghn .
SouthE-rn at Eastf'rn. postponed, l"f'SChe-

Church

David Atho Family
S.tz Hondo

UPPEI ROUTE 7
NEXT TO BUZ HONDA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

·Vinton Coon1y 47 Nels:onvllle--York 38
Trlmblt&gt; 42 Federal-Hocking .J;
Alexander at Warrpn Local (J)IXI., bad
WE&gt;attw&gt;r)

~

Jan. 19 gamE~~:

'

FARM-CITY

,,._

Miller 15

&amp;.&gt;!pre fi2 Wellston .a:J

_.

Mr. Mark Stockman

Mr. Roy Wilkins

Guyan Valley Missionary

~~' '?iff:'

weather. Ff'b. 22 make-up\

378-6158

North Gallla aTHannan Trace, pa!il-poned,

NOW ····~···································

RHINESTQI'(I;,
ALL OF ME
THE WOMAN IN RED
THE EVIL THAT MEN DO
BEST DEfENSE
CLOAK llo DAGGER

.. ..

installed

West at WhEOelersburg

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Keith Sorrell

AssociatiOn

4

..., ....... 2 8

TutU

&lt;"'--l

.. .

I Simpson

The Woodward family

gu ide .

CALL

5
7
7

fTH6C

· ·

·

Howard Childers Chainuw

Civilian Conservation Corps
CommerciJI &amp; Savin&amp;s Bank
Cross &amp; Sons farm Equipment
flrmers Home Administration

Fedora! lind Bank Association
G&amp;J Auto Ports
Gallia County A,ricultural Society
Galtia County Alricultural Stobilization
&amp;Con10tvation District (ASCS)
Gallio County ASCS Committao
Galtia County Animal WeHato lea1ue
Galllo County Co11misslontrs
Gatlia
CoootrotiYo E.tonsion Sorvlce
Galtio
Dairy Committto
Gallio
Dairy 4-HClub ·
Gallil
Emorllft&lt;Y Medical Smieo
Galllo
En&amp;iottr'a Oltieo
Galllo
Ertonsion Beof Committto
Gallia
Galtlo
Jlaltll &lt;j,QUtlb~~·-"·
Gallil
Galli I
Galli•

Gallia County Pride in Tobacco Association
Gallia County Senior Citizens
. Gallia Soil &amp; Water Conservation District
&amp; Soil Conserntion Service
Gallia Soil &amp; Waier ladies Au~~:iliary
Gallipolis Area Chambe.r of Commerce
G1llipolis Ci~ Commiuioners
·
Gallipolis Oatly Tribune • ~
Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department
Gallipolis S.vin15 &amp; Loan Company

Friday's

lax's

Swisher Implement Coinpany
The Ctnttal !rust Company
~!J~~--! ~~C ~!!!i~-,=n•

..

..

Waflllll Hill Oai'Y. ICI~ Hartman. l'tlil Nisly
&amp; tho M'"ill Corter. familios)

Reg. up to 44 .95

.

Sta·rters or
Alternators

KITZBUEilliL, Austria IAP) All-round skier Plrmln Zul'brlggen
or Switzerland upset a field of
downhill specialists on the world's
toughest course and took the lead·in
the World Cup standings.
Zurbrlggen. averaging 98.21 kl·
tometers per hour (61 mph),
barreled down the Icy Hahnen·
kamm course In a ttmeof2mlnutes,
O.!fl seconds to win the first downhill
hiS career. Second was Switzer·
. ~-·-··"'land's Franz 1-ieiJizer., cz:Cll:98).
Aus,trta 's Peter Wlrnsberger fin.
!shed third with 2: 09.33.
I

·"

Universal ·
Choke Kit
Converts a u1 o ma!ic

High TorQue Starter

39.
Premium

Takes Cup lead

"'

lio Grande lllmorial Associalion
Rose flr11 Eqwipment'

-~~..,~·

Starters

Pm1smouth
Notl'f'
Dame aTK_vger Creek
.
.

M&lt;Donald's
llr. lly&lt;on "Bud" MGhee
Milk Marlotin&amp;

Production Credit A$sociation

Remfg.

dan. 11 game:

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Glenn Graham
Jim's.Farm Equipment
Jividtf)'s Farm Equipment

Ohio Vallty Bank

.

Hannan Trace aT SOuthern
Kyger Creek at North Gallla
Eastern at Southwf&gt;Stt'rn

Gallipolis Vault Company

Ohio Dep1rtment of Natural Resourses :
Divisions of Soil &amp;Watl" Conservation.
Gall Ia County Soil Survew. &amp;·Wildlife

pme~;

,,..__.• 21.88 .,~&gt;1 2.88
Perfection

35.88
Premium

duled Tul&gt;sday.
TUesday•s 1ante1:
Hanna I) 'T'ra(.'(' ·at BoYd County
Oak Hill ~ Southwf'Stem
Nor1h OOila at South Point

24.88
· Integral Alte rnat ors.

32.88

Alternators

Prlctisln affect J•nuary 13, thru January 19.- 19_8!5.

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD

·

-·

""

chokes to hand control

for quicker start s
in any weather Pre·

ven(s st1Ck1ng cho~es
1m proves gas
mileage #f04.001

· · 3r.1d

ReQ • 25

446-3107
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
'

WI """' tho right 10 limit quontltlll.

•
•

Systems from $1695

Sat. 11-6

Reg . 99'

Hollywood Adjustable
Filter Wrench

games:

Rock Hill at Oak lim
Symllll'S Valley at Chesapeake

~·

TO RESERVE A
COPY - GIVE A I

RES ERVIN

lei begmri~away:-f$'ZOii
Retail Valuel

_____________L__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1.88

Jacloonat Ironton

"J.F,JO,~ctWlN,l

:t;)l)

Reg . 3.95 · Limit

PI. PJ(&gt;asanl at Hunicane
Chilllcothf' at Athens
Logan at Lancaster
N~or!l~h~Gj~a~lllaSt.atjoe
South PoinT
at Chesapl'like

Division of Wildlife

Head Start
local S&lt;:hools
Sheriff's

sound ond dose

Watchman TV

FL·1A, FL-300 &amp; FL400

..0 3 IIJ ns
9 9 731 T.lO

Tuettday's ~ett.:
Southern at EasTern, ma.keup

~

BY THE POST OFFICI
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 2·6

Motorcraft or AC
Oil Filters

Fridaf·'fil reault:
Ironton 56 Alhell.'i 35
Gallipolis at JfK&gt;kson, ppnd., reset Fi&gt;b. 22.

·Mr. Billy Statcher

ctaptiOnin g. Adeluxe leathe rette double&lt;:asseue with a beautiful B-pafle,4-color

,,,.:;_-,·,1~1;.·'--'ll.~I~J

j

Tolah

Ross. Zaleski Civilian
Consen11_ti1&gt;n Corps

Mr. &amp;Mrs.

Fairboard

qtJallty tl-u~n ever before , with ·dlgitaUy-

Feb. 22.

_

ON RT; 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

'

l't'Set

·-- · _

'

F.F.A. Clubs

awaited videocassette releases in his·
. tory! Thanks to a newly discovered negative, GWTW will now be seen in bette r

Mll"'r .. ..... ........................ 1 9 !;j 642
'"""==&lt;"=.,f,
W,1.i&lt;l~rst:~on ................ ............ o 10
m

Team

'

Mr. Diet Roderick
Mr. Jack Roderus
Mr. Wa~ne Rose

Conservation Club
Ga\lia c:oun,h E.M.l. &amp; Paramedic Service
btension Sen~ice

dassic epic or the! Civil Wa r and the war-

TVC GAMIN ONLV
Team
WLPOP
Meigs
..... .............. ..... .. 8 2 687 535
Belp["(' .. ,...
.. ... R 2 ffi7 5Tl
N«:&gt;lsonville- York ............. .. 8 2 692 Qli
Alrxander ..................... .. ... 7 2 678 5!il
Trimble ............ .'........... .. ... 7 :l 672 64.1
Vinton County ..........
. .. A 6 613 624
warren local ..... ,. ........... ..3 6 ~ 6ffi
F('d(&gt;rai- Hockifl~ ............ ." ... .. 3 7 601 6.11

~ ;,;.

Jackson .....................

""-'-'- ' - • -

PENNZOI~
.

Gallipolis ................. .... ...... .2 1 132 128
Athens . 1 .... .................. . ...... 1 3 150 181

Mr. Dan Polcyn

Gollia Aead!my
Bonds

Clerk Cable andVivlen Leigh star in this

~::..=....::=::.:..:..::.:..:::::...:..::.::...:..:::_

-

DISHES ON DISPLAY

Game Postponed
VINCENT - The Alexander·
Warren Local game was postoned
due to bad weather. The game has
been re-scheduled for Feb. 22.

... , ... -..

Logan ...................... ...........1 I · 170 146
Ironton ........ ............... . .. ..3 1 189 157

Mr. Tom Osborne, Professor of Biolol)'
Rio Grande Colle&amp;e
_Ms. Julie Pace
Mr. John Pierotti

~:.:::,l~:::;:~ Key
p
PAWSclub
Club

THEWIND

~ .

Vinton CouniY.................... 4

13 18 Zl-lll

Fl'tk&gt;raJ-Hocklnx ....... .... ............. .t'j J) 14 IJ-frl '
ReRrves- Trimble &amp;2, Fl'dl&gt;ral·Hol'ltlng :fi.

-

·

. ...... , lJ · 7 'l1 24-ffi
Wellston .................... , ............... 11 8 8 11-:IJ
ReservES- B('!p!'('62 Wt•llston4J.

ets

afterpoorflrsthalftoposta65-38win
over Wellston. Leading only 20-19
the winless 'Rockets after two ·

- - ·r

ORA~O
O~fNIN~
·

Byquanl'f'S:
Bt&gt;lpre ......... ,................

WE'U..S'TQN -Belpre regrouped

_..::::.:=..:.:::====:.::;:::.:::..___

SEOAL RESERVIN
WLPOP

Team

-~-!!.. ~-""=-

Lome

SONY
gIJ~ O.f/I_RQOU
m_ """~

1~.

9 9 1122 1122

Athens 59 Ironton 52
Gallipolis at .Jackson, ppnd ..

* f1JlR.

wtu.sroN
(31)Newman.
LlodaiH'r.
.1-2-!1;.
Frtdt, 142
; Roystl.'l',
.\ .M;.3-0-li;
,lf&gt;nklll~
. HlU:
Ot&gt;ck, 0.2-2; Jkorlson. 1-M; Malone, :IJ.2-2. TOTAlS

Friday'• result:

. Coach Jim Osborne. Gallia Academy

Oel)lrtment of Youth Services
Donneti's Pizza
Federal
I Recreation Council
French
&amp; Hikers
French

GONE WITH

Fedrrai -Hocking ........

Wells!on .... ............... ......... 0 1.1

Totals

Dr. Dan Notter
Mr. Btion O'Dell

Captain D's
Crown City Mining; U.M.W.A. loeal K2150

The Grealesl Film 0( All Time/

·· .... ..........

Rock

'"""14

.•

SA'I'IlU.I~I
~'l'&amp;'l'llMS

Ralen·es- VInton Countyh47, Nelsofl\•llle-YO..kll.

Eagles RDtd

""

sn.vmmmo

f.0.2; Rayslf"r].{).6; Jenkln54-2-10: DecklE!·\!: Benson

II' L P OP
Logan ................................ 4 0 259 236
Gallipolis...................
. .2 1 179 166
Athen.•L .......... .........., .•., ..•.~. ,2 -2 ~263 2rJ9
Jackson ............................. 1 2 189 D
IronTon ............ ....... ....
..0 4 232 253

Mr. Jim Morrison

American le1ion, Lafayette Post # 27 ·
Backwoodsman Muzzleloadlng Rifle Club
Bossard Memorial Ubrary

TVC CAGE STANDINGS
1\LL (0.\..'WES
TeiUTI
W L P OP
Belpre .. ..... ........................9 2 721 635

1 7 422 m7

Bullock 9-2-n '

-HI-8.TOO'ALSJD.8.48.
VINTON COUNn' ($11 -Hamon 4-3-11: GIUlland
l-1·7; BoliEinder 1-2-4: Silunderi 4-2-10; Mace 2.{}.4;
Boott.o l-2·8: Wright 2-04: Bates J.l -3, TOTAUJ
!1).11·5l
Byquar1(&gt;J"S:
' N~We-Yllf"k ............ ............... .li Z! 14 16-fS
Vlnton Cwmy ......... ... .............·.. .....l4 U 14 12-51

t-G-2; McPhl'I'SOrl1·2-l . TOT..US~IU2..

Athens

i

NDF.ONVli..LE-VOKK fill) -

a..,-----r.;ey~ ;2-:&lt;•'ln, Klin~ iiW. ;;..!Ia)(~ 1'-Hi:- W«iwrr""'' ""!.U::t~u.-Fci'O-i'.ii.li-Z.'t"....;L =

•

8"13 19 17-"

·,.,·.

;,;;· .,
Wellston's19.
Belpre was led by Robert Muter's
21 points while Lee Holder added 17
lncludlr!g nine free throws. Shawn
Jenkins led Weltston}Vlth 10.
The Eagles spent a good portion of
the ,::arne at lout line where they
tossed up 38 attempts, making 21.
Wellston was eight of 14.

SEOAL \' MISITV

BUSINESS , INDUSTRIES llo CLUBS

standings

Mllk&gt;r ....

B)lquar1l'l""5:
T&gt;im~e.. .

York getting nine.
"""'"''~rt~c
l..of;:an ... : .. ,.......
Zanesvutedroppedto2-10ona38 . zan•""''·

the

Team

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bert McGuiro
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Charles McKean
Mr. Hoyt Miller

Mr. Mile Hunt

Mt'IIZS ..................
.. ......9
NeLsbnvl.ll~Yurk ...
. ......R
Alt&gt;xandt'r' ............
. .. 7
Trlmblf' ...... ....... ................ 7

Pl. PleasanT .... .................... 2 3 324 347
South Point ............ :...... ... 4 6 6.'fi 594
Portsmouth ........ ................. 3 7 590 ffiO

004

• • • .. ....... • • • • • • • • • •
oJV
NorthwesT ..........................
.1 9 553 663
Frtda.v's re8Uit!l:
,.
Loiarl 57 Zanesville 44
Fairland ~ Chesapeake 49
Grcen!lckJ 61 Clrclevtlle :iJ
South Poln1 74 Oak Hill 55
Pl. Pl€'asant at Milton, ppnd.
Portsmouth Wes1 at Waverly, ppnd .. reset
J an. l2
Wheelersburg at Minford , ppnd.
Lucasville Valley at Norfhwl'St, ppnd.

INDIVIDUALS

Ms.

Rock Hill ......... " ............... '.5 6 723 771

Wheelersburg

0.0. Mcintyre Park Com·_

Mr.

582

TRIMBI.E (WI)- GAtchel R-J.11 ; Stegman 1}1-l:
MorrlSon !'rl-tt; Da vis B-2·18; Campb&gt;!! 0-1 ·1: Lent
9·2-lO.TOTMJi,ao.s.ll.
FEDERAL-HOCKING (at) - Matladc ~-22:
O..~er 1-3·5: Ethrl~ ~1-U ; Barnharl S.2·l8: Howell

lron1on ........... ...... .............. 5 6 670

1975-1984

Mr.
Mr. ~"'' ""

1 740

.......... .............. ..... 6 3 531 480
Chesapeake ............... ~~ .. , ..... 6 4 699 58.1
WowrJy ........... :......
.. .. 5 3 45.1 4JJ

to .!'ark Commissioner
Dr. Clyde M. Evans. President
0 .0 . Mcintyre Park Comn\ission

Mr. Glrland Davis

WLPOP

&amp;!l~lhern

Speciai _Than~s

Mr. Ranny Blackburn
Ms. Shirley Blackledge
Ms. Beth BrO&lt;kway
Mr. Dean Brownell
Mr. Rocer Brumfield, O.W.E.
Mr. Jim Burns
Mr. S.n Campbell
Mr. Mike C.rter
Mr. Dale Chatterton
Ms. Judy Clark
Mr. Chris Cowpr
Mr. Clrl Curry .

'

!~:=~~~:~~~~~:;,;; £i"~~Ei~~~.~:.~·:~~~:;!i.

·

8EU'RE (1:1)- Ru~f!' 1-l .J: LindaiJI!rJ-2·8: F'r1ck

Athen..... .............. ........ , ... .. 8 5 ~ 700

Best Wishes for a Happy and Pro~perous New Year!

Mr. Verlon Back
Mr. Craia Bar~es

·

rebounds.
Federal-Hocking was . led by
Randy Matlack with 22 points and10
rebounds: Barnhart added 18.
Box score:

Logan .............. ................ 10 1 n3 lni
Gallipolis .......... ................ .. 8 1 581 442
Jackson ...... ... .. :.:............ ... 1 2 G.Jt • m

mission and Staff publicly thank
all those who have donated man,
power, equipment, supplies, ma·
terials, technical assistance. and
financial . contributions during
the past year. These gifts are
deeply appreciated.
·

Mr. Jay Jarvis
Mr. R. William Kenkins ·
Mr. Katsuyuki Kasama

TVC

Team

Gll'('nflf'ld ........................ 11

~.

·'

Vinton County never recovered as
the Buckeyes coasted to a 68-51 win.
NYHS' 6-6 senior center T. L.
Bentley was near unstoppabie
against the much smaller VIkings
with 26 points. Outside shooting
Brian Bullock added 20. Steve
HamonledabalancedVIklngattack
with 11 whle Mark Saunders had 10.

Stand_i~J{S~."-·--··1·-.G~t!:!l!!!Lwl.&lt;!thl;:;&lt;1&gt;7~·.A~Il l ·ITVJ~..C~:,rm~~
ALL GAMI'll

1984 HONOR ROL.L

RAVENSWOOD- Winning their __ sev~ retxmnd-"-

first - game of the season, the
Southern Tornado freshman has·
ketball team of Coach Bill Hensler
won their first gameoftheseason to
a close 31·26 victory over the young
-:- Ravenswood Red Devils:
A close game !rpm the start,
Southern led most of the way,
jumping to a !HI first quarter lead.
Southern held a sllm 17-15 lead at
the half, however, tn a very tight ~
third frame Ravenswood took Its
first lead. That lead was short-lived
as Southern tied the score at 23-23.
Southern made several key shots
from both the field and the foulllne
In the last frame, while holding
Ravenswood to just three points.
Leading scorers for Southern
were Chris Baer with 12, Shawn
Cunningham with eight points and
ntne rebounds, Rick Sellers flve
points, John Riffle four, and Scott
. McPhail two. . ·
Coach Hensler credited hls team
with Its "best defensive effort of the
year against a much taller Ravenswood team. They all gave 1()0

.. ,

l·'"·

Eason 1·7·9: Stove Musser
Jes~&lt;&gt;
Howard 1·24: Donnl~;&gt; Becker 9-2 -W: Scott
Powell 2.().1; Marty Hart ~2-H; Phil King
2·15: Marty Cline WO: J•ff NelSon WO.
~~40 1 _Rich Nichols s.1.17: Ron
Fenkhauser 0.1·1: Shawn Darcey 1.().2: RDb
Paytoo Hl1 : Dave Stlckdorn H·ll; l.any
Herges HJ-2· Carl M~M' 1-0-2. Totals 20-5-45.
By ••~,
·
·
M•lgs ............................ . n 18 1 3 - -

f~~~~~~==~H=art=a:d:d:ed==· ~Ml~l~l"'~·:.. :.. .:...:..:...:..:...:..:...:...:.. :.. ~~0~12~13=1G-4~5~

doubteflgures,butsophomoreGreg
Wilson, recently called up from the
reserves, had seven points and

''"""m"'"''",.,..,"''''"'n

,

' kuckeyesRomp

Trimble, which made only five of
12 free throws in the fourth quarter
of20for
wasted

~ •tralghL !ii!!lll!,._\Y~_.£@!!~&lt;t IL ..JJJJaJ ,silt ml.lll!!~llllt,l!e_a(lJ)Uoul ..-~GS &lt;6!.L -::.,~_&lt;1 Khche~. ~C. Huey_

Conference game, 78-42. Miller defenders are Jeff
Glenamann (45) 1111d Keith Roberts (41). On left· is
Meigs' Dave Fisher (33).

""=

·

After leading by eight at the half,
35-Z7, the Lancers tncreas~ their
margin to 12, but thedefenqlng TVC
champs· put on a strong press thai

out. .

Meigs led onty42·35headlnglntothe
shooting and all-round good play
'
·
widened the gap to put the game out
of reach. Coach Mlck Chllds' Little
Marauders cliR:lbed Into third place
In the TVC wlth a 7,3 mark. Meigs Is
8-4 overall.
Also leading Melgs·ln scoring was
Huey Eason with nine points while

'

. Donovan 'Lent and

Ui:lU,

30-foot shot at the first period's
buzzer.
Mike Chancey added 17 points
plus eight rebounds and six 'steats.
Co-captain _Jay Carpenter carne
through with 11 points and a
:
team-high nme rebounds.
.
MiUer's Keith Roberts was tougl]

Chiefs Roll On
percent shooting effort (19 of 50) •
ZANESVIll.E - 'n!e Logan made six of 13 at the line, and
Chieftains outscored the Zanesvllle grabbed 28 rebounds , nine by Larry
Blue oevl.ls ~21tn the'Secorn'i iiaii - D!ek~..=::-=•·· •• '
J..rr o..,
Frtday ~lght enroute to a 5744 .
Kerry York led all scorerswtthJII
74M: Chrlil..ronl.rd7~a: Da\'f'MeAlllst..rs.o-10;
m
k
t the Chiefs whHe
~""'c.n.&gt;~~&gt;:ll. TOToWI,._II...
non-league trtumph.
ar ers or
•
~ -.;:!:~;:::-;;::::, ~t'\.!:~
After spotting ZHS quarter leads •Dickerson and Trent McGiadeea~;:b
• ·J . Ectworoa&gt;.., Jom.. c.wu1&lt;&gt;2; Dwo Gaml&gt;lll of lfl.S and 23-21 lAgan scored \he taUled 10 for the losers.
i,".'i.,""""' L•tt,..., M'"'"' Boron '"1·ror.us first six points and nine of the lastill
Box score:
: :
""""""'""'..,.' .'
_
_
_
fllllnts
ln.the
thJxd
.per.lot:lto
build.
a.-~
·too""mt _
~
'"""' .........................................!3 19 u ,._~ 40-Jllead a !tel- three stanzas
D.J.eon.ao1&lt;&gt;• M*eHoodfl.2·2c "'"'w"""'"'~
·~·,;;;;;;;·i;;;;;i;;;·;s:·;;;;;;;;;:;;• ~ ... ,_,
In running their season~~ to i:r~•.:::,K"''M'.:"•'·'· K..,..,vockl04·)1.
lO.lthe Chiefs shot ~1 pereent (24 of
ZANfJSvnu: ,.,, _ ""'' MeGt•""'-'·1~ '"""
RyanAinsworth.
Box score:
'
-A'niENIIt•l - 1111 ,.,...., ~H

as

Trimble outscored
In the final quarter tp take a 68-62
win.
.
The •tough-luck Lancers had a
four-polr!t lead wltl),lwo mmutes to
go when ace.Keith Barnhart fouled

Byquancn:

Miller no match for .MilS reserves

added Drummer. For the second

line:and claimed 29 rebounds, U by

six points ofthe fourth quarter
Jognup49-35.
Steve WilliS and Todd Warner
sbtfrih'Ed substitutes :ilsltigufu.Y·nve pa&lt;:W Jron!on W!tllliand 10 points
players,
hiS te...;., moved to 8-5 respectively as the Ttgers dropped
overall aod 2·21n league play.
to :&gt;-6 overall and remained winless
The host Tigers enjeyed one lead, In four league outings.
7-6, with 2: 54 left In the first quarter,
The Bulldogs shot 58.5 percent on
then trailed between three and 14 24 ol41, made 11 of19 treebles, and
!lOinIS the fe!l.)aiD&lt;!er of the contest. • Pl!il~ !!own 3:1 rebounds.
,
Atl)ens posted quarter leads of
Ironton hit 22 of 52 fielders tor 42
13-9, 32·25, and 43-35, then tallied the pe,ent, convyrted elghtolll at the
.
.

STEWART_

Miller

HEMLOCK - Eignt for eight
free throw shooting In the fourth
quarter and Donnie Becker's 20
points led the
reserves to a

~rst

Dave McACtster !lntshed wlih 10
markers.
Athens Coach Fred Gibson

Lr;mb·le . Nelsonv;l-le Belp
. rep
· ost TVC caue
wins
~

Paul

Control Uoarcis
Tlie Marauders controlled the
boards, 43-28. Miller had 22 turnOV·

·-··--

~~-

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

January 13, 1985

Meigs records seventh win
.
in row for new. school rOark

early fourth quarter .action,
Marauders had stretched their lead
to 30 points. ·
Wise, whodld not see any action In
the final period, played a super
game, according to Coach Greg
Drummer. "He was In charge
and helped'us

- - - ·-·----'-·
·..

---·~

--

Your Choice

10.88

Big G or
Tribute
Mufflers

Orlg1na1 eqUipment.
lilel l,me guarantee

�~

.

,..

-

---

.......-

---

---

---

----

- ,.....

~

J

Pomeroy-Middleport-GalliJ,olis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va..

Ja~rv

13, 1986

.

January 13, 1985

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

High school results
OWu H.S. aa,.1 •ntrtb•
Byfte ~ Prftll

St.V·SI.M

CaraWay 18, Indian VaUey N. M
Cartleld Htli. 52, Parma 51

Lak~1Xld

·111.

Carrt'tll\1lle Ill, Slreelsboro ~
Ct&gt;ncva 64, PalfK.'5\1JI(&gt; Rlversi&lt;F 61 OT

SI.Edward 52
Akron ~rln(l. 64. Tallmadat' 62
Amtlla M. lkthf'I·Tate 52
Anha f1. Russia 43

Gm001 44, WO(Xbnorfi 43
Girard ~. Salem 58
Gosilen 57, N(&gt;W RidUMnd 56
Grand Ri\•er 66, H&lt;M·Iand Q\r. 64

_AnfhQm'.JYJID'~ ..-:.... .an~ lhviPw

~

..._56

Granil\1cw 52;1XIbUri 46 ~ -

Crecnsbl.lllt C."t't'n 6'7, f'l('!d J2
GI'O\'qlOI't Ill , Grove C.lty 44
HlllTlll1on W. W. Cllt'S!er Litkota 66
Hamilton Badin !'il. On. McNichOlas 00
Hardin N. 51 MrComb 43
Hrbron Lakl'Yt'ood M, Jk&gt;alh 52
Holland Spring. :11. Bowling Grt'm :U
Hu~ &amp;"i, Rcvf'l'e b3. OT

A'lhlab.Jia St..lohn 82, Conneaut 6:2
Athens
52
81. OT
Young. Moo~· 49

· • -.. ··- Fal ls 37
Labrae 54

Huron liG.

.'
Brdford a!,
I
Becllord Chan('! 711, Ck&gt;. Cmtrat QJ
Bellefontalnt&gt; aJ. Greenon m
Bclk&gt;\·ue ~ Norwalk w
lietpl't'l 66, Wellston JB .,
~lllll:

SprinJt,

~l

0.0. MciNTYRE PARK DISmlcr WOMEN'S
VOLLEYBALL CHAMPS - )'lnlshlng in llrSt place
with a record ul 34 wins and Uve losses in the O.Q.
Mcintyre Park D.istrict Women's Volleyball League
held the Gallipolis D.evcloJI!llel!taJ Center Activities

at

Bnlldlnr: gymn1181um was Jaymar Coal. Pictured
. front row, left to right: Patsy Fields, Cathy BaUey,
Penny Preston, Kim Larkins. Back row, left to right:
Terry HaD, RObin Lane, SheUy Haskins, Jackie Case,
Mary HaD.

•
SMU tn

Scoreboard ...
Lo&amp;An~lf's

NBA results
Bwdu-~haU ~"•~on
i\~lalt&gt;d Prt~
~bllon

w Lf&gt;t.1 .

.11

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6

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ca~·~Gam~t
Sumi\Y·~
Games
C1
Ph 1
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Mllwaukt'('

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DHII:JS

l'lllh
San ,,ntoolo
K;msus Clfv

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5
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rra t Cathullc ~51. bf&gt;at TIJI('do
:J.'".. 51l, pla~"&lt;'d Cmrcn •Wf' Srl turday.

sr ..JoM's

" c• 1 , ,
eo;
"''l' an ' I.J~h. 9-Z. plays AI Ak·
nm Sr . \'lnCf'flHSt .M1l ~· Saturday.

•

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4. n. . . 1'1and Glilft VUie, H]-{1, !rat Clrvrland MM, Hay!'!&gt; 94-ll
~. l\:(-'1tt,·lng Atrt'r, 11 -o. brat Lima Ct•n ·

71.1:1 ·"" , , ,
459

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high

1. Ck'veland su~adus, ll -0. playMl at ·
Akron Cm tral ·HrMw Salurtlay.
2 T lroo
101
T
I C
. . bl•at OICdo rnr~. l.~ra~l'~lng. 10.0, IX'UI Fr'('mont Rll!is

-

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L.A. Lukn -:.
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OW t ey fared

Assotli!ll'l'l Pr('S.~· ~ •are-rank('(!
lK'hool 11),\'s' l:laskt~b&lt;lllll'WllS f.ll't'd:

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Toronro ar Vam.'OIJ~W

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9 2-1 .21.1
10 26 ·
lndb.niJ
Wl-.." •r!l:ltN CO!Irri"FER t.:NI'E
Mldwt"!CillvWoo
Dm\('r
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f\'i6 10 ~
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15 21

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17 211
1:1 $
( 't'ltt!'i" Ulvlo;ion
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Qut&gt;trr 4.

Natlotud
Hy 1111'
F.ASTF.RN CONFf..RENCE
Atl111111c

l'lo&lt;-lol\
Phlladl'l ])hi&lt;l
W:tshln,L,l"!Oil
Nl'"' .J£&gt;rSI"1'
N('\\' Yol'k ·

9-.-,-~;o 118

1616
10 :iJ!

\"anC'OU\'('r

t~d ~~~~a.;-C:c~~~~: 2 ·

lh~lon 10.1. w.... hlngf(m Jnl
Do•rrofl ]',!jt. lndl,u:w 100
i\•'\1' -'•' 1-,..--.v 1!1. Atlan la 1n1
Phllm.ldphia 115. lkttston 1~
Oticago Jt:l, ;\pt,~• \'ork fJ7
' LA I.:JkPn- 121. I)&lt;•II:• ~ ]()2
t&gt;unlantl l2:t. S.:..n Ant onio JQ.1

plaY«! . Cll'\'{"
II, Sprl!lJ:flrld Sbuth. lfH . bl&gt;al Falrb.wn
fl.i.!XJ. pi3.\'M Columbu~ East Salurdav.
9, Akron Ccntrui·HO'.\('f, R-l bl•at.Akron
Ga r nr ld .-..:
.on Phl,l1'd Ck&gt;\Y&gt;Iand S!.I){Jialllih
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Satllrt!H'.
9. Cl nrlnnaU O.t k Hill~. R-:l, iosl IO C'ln·
~lnn(ltl FOtl"St Pai·k 7943. tx&gt;m Clnrlnn:JII
Turpin !I''·~
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fo.tJI\I.':tUkfo(• 1.111, (1(•\'f'land U7

1. ,\kron Sl.\ih,ll'flt ·ST.Mal)'. Ifi-ll: brat
Lools\il1r Aquln~ ~ 10.62, tx&gt;i.t Lakw.·mJ

(;olrlf'rl St;tiP

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73..60 loen
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COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(AP) - Coaches Dave BUss of
Southern Methodist ait"d Shelby
Metcalf of Texas A&amp;M each said a
defensive change late in the game
was a key in the No.4 Mustangs'
7J..60 victory over A&amp;M in a
Southwest Conference basketball
game.
A&amp;M guard Kenny Brown was
hltt ' bo bs ( •~
dh d
Ulg
m a IURgrangean a
the Aggies wit.hln 56-54 with 5; 56
remaining Friday night. SMU
h ged
bo
d
f
c an
to a x-an -one de ense,
with .Johnny Fuller alternating with
B
utch Moore to harass Brown.
"That got Brownoffjustenoughto
change the tempo around," Bliss
said.
"Their box-and-one defense
rea lly wor ked On ·arown, " MetCa If
d I ed
.
ec ar ·
Jon Koncalt, SMU's 7-fqot· center,
I I ed
ll th
gn t
a fa Y at SaW the PonieS
run off 12 straight points for a 68-56
I d ith 1 171 ft

strokes of Stadler were Fred
CoupIes and Doug "'
II tied a t
J. f!We ,
204. Couples, the current Tourna·

Ope
S C,
e
season..opening event on the PGA
Tour.
'
Stadler, who scored thefirstofhis
i h T
t i ln hi
ft
eg t ourvicores t sevent ve
years ago, completed 54 holes in 198.
That'
dist nt 18 h t
d
'
Sa
a
S 0 S UD . er par
With two rounds to go in this 5-day,
90-hole event.
Hemissedonlyonegreen,didn't
·eveitcomeclose tomaking abogey
and, he said. he could have been a
few shots better.

an J.ewe
Dunes.

,vuu

Tim

a

S 0

ITnU

"- ~~!~i~:~~~~;·:"
c·-a• .. MocII {'f" "''

C1n ' El....,.r '7' OT
55 ·
Cin. Purcell-Marian 79, Ctn , LaSalk! G3

6

.................... ".~

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.......... 0

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

~: :,~~~· ~~~ ~.R~. 5~km 47• OT,
,

ooctw rdt»

g::~~e:~~~~.~n~~!try~y " 7

Cin. Summ.ll1ffi. New Miami 58
CJn_ S~'CanlOJl' !'6. Gk'l'l E511' 55
Cln. Wyoming 91. Re&gt;adln~ 70
C'laytoo Northmont T&amp;. T{'('um.'io"h 57
c tl"dr Fork 611. Lc.J.JdonviiJe 49
Cl Bel Is 6.1 Elyria 0pm J:h:Jor 35
"· · ptt ·
Cit'. Brush ~ ~1t&gt;nlor 511 , 0 1
Cll' East 99 Oe Collinw~EO

34
39

· · "'

·THE DENTAL cEN
' TER·

4;

DENTuREs
ON ·

!'~;')

.

STARTING JA~UARY 1 SAVE s120
ON A SET OF OUR VERY BEST DENTURES
.

Massi llOn

experiences. He Is a very friendly the year, Sundays Included. All
..
'ded h kl)l
o)l.!l\l. hospitable per&gt;;Qn. In a~~(tlon ~- hunts ar_
e gut _
un!l; on a ng- - tO being quite a hunter. he also no-pay baSIS. $hiJwn&lt;:e encommounts his own heads and animals. . passes approximately 600 acres:of
·
·
He had three full mounted hogs, a rough and rugged hlll country
·couple of llfe·llke buck deer, an which Is equivalent to about a
antelope, several cats, and a·hyena square mile. There Is plenty of

Wa~hlnltf&lt;itl
"'

..,.,.

•
F'enwlrk 96, ·Trernon Edgp-

Mlddi£'1&lt;M'n MadJ!lOn • Ea!On
76
Mid\'lt"W ~.Lorain Cif'aNIC'A·
5T61
Milford 5'1, Madrlra 56
Miller cuy 61 • coounrntal-16
Mll1('ral AI• til, S. Rangl' S7

""""',.,Phi~ n

Mt.HI'allhy 56. Cin . COlerain S7

~~- ~:~~~-~~fo~.e~~~~ &amp;1

~:~~~~~y~:_"yc~~~3~-o. 51

Col: EKSI to. Col. Ceti!Cflnlal lit
Col. Lindon Bapt . 57, M.aranath.a Ou,

Nf'W Albany !rl; Lucas 6li
Nrw London !'tl, S. CC'rtltal 48. (Jf
Nw.· Ph!ladt&gt;Jphla 73, WOO!ile r li4
Nrwton
F'all'l 11!,
~1. Ortawa
CortlandHill&lt;;
Lakf"lew
4T .
N. Ba limon&gt;
72
1
N. Canl""' 7:\. Canton Gk&gt;nOak Gl
N. Col~ Hill ?2 . Norv.·oo:t 7()
N. Olmsted 40. f'alrv\('W Park~

cot. WhMstone 61. GJI. Brookhttven
Columbu!f Grovt' 86, Bluffton 43

~

·

.

Northmor 67, Mt.GIIvad 62

=~ ~a~'i:n~~~!UST

l'hli&lt;uiclphla t\1 Washlnl?fon
lk lroil at Mllwauk«'
Por!lantl at Dallas

Kansas City 111

:1. Willard. 9-:l, t:.--111 Tiffin Columlllan
71·46. pla)fti al Tk!JI\•Ilk&gt; Clt'ar F'ork Sat ur·
d:Jy.
4. Or!:lwa.Ciandnrf. 9.11. briir Lima Buth
141·M.
.'1. C'i nrinf);lli Mc!"lchola!&gt;. 10.1. losr 10
Hamilton Radin ~M(l.
n, N.... Cunuml .John Glmn, 10.0, b('at
Zlill~I·IIIP Wesl Musklngum $16-83, brat
1l1urn1~lll' Sh£&gt;1i dan 11~79.
7
IJOl'l· ('olu
46--13,mbus
tx•at llr!iiP.
Dl&gt;lau·arl'
, 10-2.
01m1an~~:o·
loot to Grow•.5443
!( YOUrlf.,'!ll&lt;M'n Ra~·t&gt;n, 8- 1. ix' al Young·
siiAA'n Wilson 6J..J5.

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( 'onf••rml.1' ( 'hampklrr.hipt~

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Miami -l.'i. I ' I IIWu~h !l

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Coli
7.m11'SI"ilil • Rost&gt;ttan5 Saturday.

e~ s~res

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62 211

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172

MociOO. 101. """Foci

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162 m
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XI 141! 1l'ol

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17 12:.!
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Troll. "' 1·

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· beat Mont~J k'r 68-li
A!'('l1001d.n "
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Sourtw&gt;rn MI'IMd,lst 73, 'rt&gt;xas A&amp;M frO
TP.. liS A&amp; I 8t Trxas Wl'!iir)'an 7R

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i\10ntana

61

FAKW&gt;l!r

· Botst Sl . ~ 1

Montana State 79, Idaho 74.
Saturday's meeting. of VU!anova with Georgetown, at 1&lt;1-0one of
only two undefeated teams left
among
' NCAA Division I clubs, has
been long awaited by Vlllanova, one
of the contenders ln the Big East
race.
"Teams get In trouble when they,
get away !rom what they do best,"
said Ed Pinckney, the Vlllanova
center wh0 wil' J be c harged with
guardlngUootPatEwing. "We're
to be ourselves. Sure, Patrick

11

last year's No. 2
money·winner, and Larry Mlze
were nextat203. O'Meara hada69at
La Qulnta and Mize shot 67 at
Bermuda Dunes.
Th
I
the
wi hin
' e On Y 0
fS
t
seven

.. e

RIPLEY

I

w VA
•

·

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Day. Carroll 51, Kt&gt;ll{'f"ln,ll f airmonT 42
Da~·~ DI.Inblir 74. Day. Whit(' [f.!
Day. Jcfff&gt;l'l'oOn 00, Day . Chnm·.IUI rl4
Day. {);jkwood 58. Da)' . NorlhM~ 46
Oav. Wavl'l(&gt; 62, Da,·. Strbbln.~ 61
Orilaru'I-' 4-I,· Kmt~ :1!1
[){olawart&gt; 5.~. Pld&lt;.£'rlngton 11
Ol:&gt;lpOOs St..John 5T, N{'W Knoxvllk&gt; ~.

.

R B SMITH

•

•

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•

DEL I

•

'I·.

c·

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" '"

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Chr. 60 IMI•·h&lt; T••mple "'· F.m"""""
Dl:d" 61. Day . Belltrook 00· (7J'
Do\-•t&gt;r m. A~hland 40
Doyle!it&lt;M'n oo. Rt11man 62
E . Canlon 48, Carro11100 44

I

,
~

Tested Tough
BATTERIES

~~

...., :;:----

....

~

--

~'t',.._.

Ill- . ,

Ill\

HANEY'S
CUSTOM BUCHER Phone
SHOP
Porter, Ohio . ,
311-1101

••

•
•

WE'RE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE AN ADDmON

•

. Complete Smokehouse ·Faclitias
'We're using an old fas~ion brown sugar cure · redpa.
Gently smoked to enhance its flawor. Specialiting il! (UStom curing of all part$ of your hog.

SLAUGHTER .......................................... Sl 0.00
CUT, WRAPPED &amp; FROZEN .................!f:.... 16&lt;
'
CURING &amp; SMOKING ..........................lt.....30&lt;
.....

C1111lt1f

...._.... ............;, "' ~·'· ~·

Soon ....................................... SMOKED BEEF SAUSAGE

,

·

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.:

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Is Wee 's Special

ALL BATHROOM VANITIES AND
·
·
MEDICINE CABINETS FEATURE
,A BIG
DISCOUNT.

15•/o
,. ·

50 MONTH

•• MONTH

REGULAR 39.89
Sale
29.89

· REGULAR 49.89
SALE
39.89

489 3-489
AFTDI

"Ami: •

MfG. IUISATt

MFG •EIATF

~..TH

W!TM

[XOIAHGE

IXCHAMGI

SALE PRICE

3.44

LIMIT4 GAL .
AT SALE PII!Cl

Poland
ro11 Clinton
7'1. c.mrleld
18, Mar~ur{&gt;ua
3.1
ID
Tl, Nordunia 13
JtJva1113 SE 78. WaterlOO 67

at

TheShMedica
•
oppe
4.46-2206

*

Rld,•wocd&lt;?,
RIVt'r Val. 58, "'"'"'"'"
Buckr;;r ~m ira!
River Vltw oo. Maysvllk' 48
St .Hmry 00, Mlnstrr ll

S.1tf'm twa.J Llfr 68.

~'

IMPORn .

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Adult

·:~ 3999

Yru!IJ:~ Chrl'i tlan r.t

CARBURETORS

89
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6989
4 BARREL FROt'A

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CYBEX

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Progra~s

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;. SUPPLY COMPANY
Point Pleasant, WV.

.

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Comprehensive Cardiac Rehabilitation

Vo11 R.lhtbllltlflon, Phgtlolllhlltpg tnd
Er11ol11 Sps~illllfl

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE,· INC.

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STEERING
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SINGLE BARREL FROM

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PAm

FUEL

~~

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CARBURETOR
CLEANER

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REMOVIS FUEL LINE MOISTURE

BLOWIR MOTORS

2279
~ED 2589
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NEW HEATER COlES
FROM

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REPLACEMENT

MIRRORS

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FIAHIRIS

WI GUARANTII YOUR SATISFACTION ... FORIVIRI

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•

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SEALS AND INFLATES

•Comprehensive Back Program Utilizing
. Sophisticated Equipmel)t

:

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"Everything

MINSTANT·
.SPARE ·

JWv~llil

featuring

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Ottawa Glandorf'"·
Rath ~
PandOra -GIItm 57 · V.anluf' ~
Parkway 71. NJ"W llrrmcn 53
Parma P&lt;tctua ¥.I. L.ak r c.arh. 47
Parrrui Valley Forgto M . Shakt'l' Hts. :11
l1ltrr.~hurg Spring. 66, McD:muld 4!i
Piq ua i1, \'an dalla·Bu!k..- 51
PIP1L~ant .74. Wynlord 6.1
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.. .......... .......... , ................. . 4
You may choose to stay in the
Shawnee lodge with meals nro
Smlth·Nel'&gt;Cm Motors .... ........... , ......~ ...... 4
.~
-· ~-. ..... ~-,&lt;.,..: _
'··"'-~· '"···~- .~.-~ . :4
Vfileil Or CampsiteS With eleclrtClly
Hlg~ se,li'S- ftay Ro•&lt;h 57ll. Bob Hensley
are available for a small fee. Or If . .. 522; Cacolyn llaclmec 4114. Hde' PheiJ&gt;! 47&lt; .
f
1
· High gam ('- Ra y Roach 245, Bob Hen~ ley
you pre er mote and restaurant
zn: Marlene Wilson 195. Ca1plyn Bach'"'
accommodations are located a
Tram series - M;ddleport Lu"h Room
short distance away. P aul recom·
"'~!~~~;'!_No. 5153.

Motorcrafl
f T-- 1=,

~~·~~~~~~~~~~. ~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··~=~-~-~~~~~~~~~**~*******~*****~**~******~*****~*~*~*~*~*~*~~~~~1--t~~~~~~i~·m-m·-··,~~
• •

z.

1OW-30 or 1OW-40

I lOU .CAN'T BUY Bffi!R. ..ANlWHER!!

A Complet, Line of Supp.l"•es
'.

Wednesday Mixed
.JU. 1985

01-L-.:;:.
.ZEREX ANTI.FREEZE - J----,,---~""'--,;.;M;;O,TO;;;;;R;:-c =--=--==-

-BAUEIIES . -

All with rebuildoble txchonge

•K ITCH EN CABINETS
BATHROOM VANITIES
•

Earl)'

~

Cn&gt;Siwood •
47
OidPrsvllll: f'forry '12. I
riB
Crooks,1 11" oo. N('W Uo!dnRfon &amp;1

fl~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

session.

·
•
•
• •
Brooklyn
College
82, • Maine
67;•
Montana 61, Boise State 51; and

u·C~ s

37

At Mobile, Ala., Greg Dreiling
SCOre 3Q pointS, inClUding fOUr free
throws hi overtime, for the visiting
Jayhawks. Dexter Shouse of South
Alabama hit two free throws to tie
the score at ·71 and force the extra

'"""'"'" •···"' ·
'""• ·''"''~"""
.,,

c""""'
'""'''·
'· N~· w,.hmwoo ""''" ''

m

.,..,...

In other Division I action Friday
night , it Was Hatvard 60, Princeton
50; Penn 83, Dartmouth 59; Loyola,
Md 61 St Francis N Y 42·

·' · ~·lptus ST.J om ·s. 1(1.(1, tx·a • "'"~~-'·

nl\lo.loa
21 1.1 ~ ."il l!ii I.W
ur 12 10 .JI! 1:n 122
211 n +i lJ!i
1~

•televised matchup with No.5
Carolina on Sunday. A&amp;M 1s now9-5
overall and 1-2 in the conference.
In the only Other game inVOlVing a
.
ranked teatn, Kansas beat South
Alabama ""81 m
· overtime.

I. C"l"m"" Wehcle. '"· """' Col"m"'"
waul'r~n 61 -.17.
"
:l. \'an Bun.'n . Jl}.fl. brat Arcadia 9R.:w;,
'\. \\'tndhnm. u.o. t-J:&gt;al Rm·{'llna So.tlh•
..a~t ~r~'J3. t.:&gt;at MO!ol';Om&gt; '1'f.l-44.

Kno~ "llll' 5T- ~.

J\dwn~

Montwal
BuJrmo
Q.it'IX'&lt;'
Hoi.!On

~{)

Hl, LO~.Jlo;vU ir Aquinas. 7-3. los! lo Akron
st.\'ln('('nt st.Ma~· lfl.li2. bo&gt;• to SIQY.·
WaM1 .JI'Sult 76-QI.
OA.I.i..'\.\

NHL results
Natll)n~

~·I,"'"

'· c;,,.,"'"

Mct:loln,
Wash
illh'1011 C'oo l1 Hou.
sr 5H8. IX'al Orclf'villr

Su p~ •r Ruwl

Sunday, ,Jan . :ro
,
,\t l'aJo Alto. Calif.
Miami n . S.1n Fr.md!o(o

1

1

TE'am S('ries ....:. No. 5 2172.
TPam game - .No.5 751.

liGHT TO LIMIT QUANrmiS-PIICES:,GOOD:;;:.;;lR::,:I::,U.:,ll:,;l,;.t:.;ll:;,5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~

~;;;;~;t;;~~,.ij~ ,~ ,~,·~.~· ,g~~~~c~~~~";l~~;;:;;---;t~~~.E~,~.,~m~~~~~.:~~~~;ro~~"~c~~ ·~~~~~;~Jf; ea~t:;vv~~~:~~e~.~~a~~~~~;;~a~d~~~~a~t~~~·~a~~s~,~a~o~nm~e~r1r~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f,t~i~-;-~·;· · ~~~;;,;~tJ;~~'~co ~v~· ~'~~~·~~~~·1~•·~~ ;•oc.:::'~~"~~;-~·~-·-o.; ; }~~'~·~'"~~N;."~~~~~1~~~~"'a~~;~;;;:;~~
pH (304) 372 3222
NFL playoffs
1 1

.. ... 50

High series T" Ray Roac h 565. MarJ('O(•
WU!&gt;on562: Bob hensley 555. Helen Ptwlps 515
_H!gh game ..-.John Ty rN.&gt; 211, Ra,v RoaC'h
· :!.E; Marie~ Wilson '!1!1. Helem Pht.&gt;lp:o, 202:

..,.

MiddlllfUI'o·n86.nn. P~on78
1to11ddl£'1{lll."n Chr, 59, Temple dr. 50

- coI. L'-.._
l\or1hhUld ...,,
u....,.~ , 43
S!.Charii'S ffi, Col. Hartk&lt;)l f\2
&amp;J.Hh 00, Col. Easlmoor ~14
Wa lnut RldgP 36, Col. Brli!J!S 34
Cot Wchrlr 61 , Col. Watlt'l'!jOO :J1
Col. Wrst 7l, Col. Marlon-Frankllri 61

Room .
MOIONi &lt;-............

ffi. CaJIIOii. Cat h.

MrlgS TR, Mllk&gt;r 42
Mlamlsbur~ G.'i. Franklin 50 ·

Col. Madl:&gt;my fit. MaryMllt' G5

l

your business!"

j

~~CM'n

the rams taste good as well . So,
whether you are a trophy hunter or
a meat hunter or both, Shawnee
just might be ihe place to.book your ·
next hunt. You just might kill two
birds with one stone, so to speak. If
you score they will take care of
your meat and Paul or hls brothe~
Davtd wlll mount your trophy at a

Local liowlirlg

--~-~~'re~

Mchl'lin62.Cln:I£'V IIIf'~
M h K'd:Ju ft4 .dJe(J tf RNff!;~_.')l
oc an
11! •
~ra .
Mcdlna 72, Rocky Ri~· il"r GJ
MOO!na &amp;ckey£&gt; ffl, Cuyahog.a H• ~. 4..,

C'ol.
Col.
Cot
COl.

I

to
Red Stag In Europe, 3J!d opportunity to discuss hunting.
Shawnee Ridge Hunting Prenutn.f'rous other animals in both
serve Is located approximately 28
North and South America. He Is
also a former bear hunting g\ilde tn. · miles west . of POrtsmouth. It Is
Ontarto. His lodge Is well stocked about 90 miles lrom the Gallipolis·
area. It ·takes a little more than an
with trophies he has taken ihrough
·
hour and a half to f!lake the drive
the years.
there.
I drove down to Portsmouth 'last
No license fs 'reQuired to hunt
summer and talked · with Paul

~~~
1 L~_,, ':!,·."'c.,""",11_,~•"'· ~· OT

..-...vl

43

to 1&gt;¥. _

Massi llOn JaCkson 6J Massillon Pcny
•
Massmon Tustaw fl.1, 'I'u5carawas Val.

!'i7

Coltlris w. Reser.'(' 55, Mapleton~
Col011t'l CruwfOrd ID. Rldi!C'dalr 51
Columbia 61. s. Amhl'rsi :J?. 20'1'
cotumhtana !N. JaC"itson Millon 641
Columbiana Creslvif'w 54i. StAnton l.ocal

~

·. GALLIPOLIS- How would you
like to go hunting for wild boar.
wild goat, or exotic deer close by?
You - can! The Shawnee Ridge
Hunting Preserve · located near
Portsmouth, Ohio, offers all the
abo\.·e. - ~
- .......... --Paul Richter, owner and opera·
tor of Shawnee Ridge has been In
business there for 12 years. Paul
has hUnters come In from Ohio and
aU the surrounding states as well as
Canada and Europe.
A well traveled hunter himself

Maple Hts. tu, wula!Jahtw s. !K)
MarlOn Local 6.1, F ort Recovery 35
Massillon C'hr . !i.l, Medirla Fir'S! Bap1.

54

g:::~~~t~~~~~P/Iew '
.coJdwutn ti2. Mcndnon UniOn ..o

.;

AT

He was foUowed by Lanny
W
.
W dkin
f

·

te!Tltory for · seeking out your
mends one" lull day of hunting for
trophy, Th~ , type~ of hunting each trophy _,!l";,';ies you ~~·h to
just to see Paul's trophies. He had
~etnods are used, sllilklng, stand'
. e.
·
flOUnts ol animals manyofushave
lng, or hunting behind dogs . Rlfle,
You can get more ln!ormatlon
never ·seen except maybe on T.V.
bow and arrow, or pistol of .357
about Shawnee and a free brochure
·Some of his head mounts lnclulle
caliber or larger are pennitted for
by writing to Paul Richter, West
cape buffalo, giraffe,. hudu, elk,
taking game.
Fork Rnad, Stout. Ohio 45684 or
moose, wild boar, and many, many .
Shawnee ~as three species of
phone him at (513) 549·2346.
..others. -:-..!G;t=of--1!he~ mG"G»ts ~Paui- --Wild.... Jxw; _RazocM~-o=R!.!.SSia.n,......._,_£..QI'V'I JijJCk , ruld.ll aflr~Juuru.ng!..._~_;,;,._ _
has done hlmseH. He Is a quallty and European. Barblroussa, Bar·
taxidennlst as l)ls trophies testify. mbaadkoe, Mouflthoen,,sah.nd Cofrslcalln Rams ..
I'll make a conservative e~lmate ·
up ·
. eep am y. Wild
POnlei'O)' BowUn~ Lanes
and say he has over 200 mounts In goats Included are Spanish, Catal·
EIU'Iy Wednaid.aJ Mixed
his lodge. The lodge Is like a ina, and Angora. The exotic deer
Doc. IS, 11184
museum ~nd I am sure it would are Sika and tallow. Numerous
draw a cro~d If It were located In or wtld turkey also roam Shawnee .

Mans.
SI.Pt&gt;ter'li
Newark
Calh . Ill
Mans. Temple
89,T1.
Ohkl
Deaf 38

:f)

ae. Mar'!l hlll l 47. Cte. Adams o&amp;J
Cl(', South Sl, Cit&gt;. R~ &lt;&amp;!!
Ctt&gt;.TMn ltyfi4,0&lt;&gt;. HQIYNam(' S7
.
5I!

.

1.

·

· just to na;,e a few.

_,_ lt 'S.,.\"&lt;!!h_t~ -.\'10

_;;~~:·~}!~-; .-

~~: ~i~~~~e~.~~- 1&lt;.::'&gt;~~

$ SAVE $

''lmissedthreemakableputtson
th f I nJn "Stadl
'd d
e ron
e,
er S3J 'an he
3·putted for par-5on the 18th.
Stadler. a fonner Masters chamI
h
((
Th
p on w a's ca ed " e Walrus" by
others on the tour, Will play
Saturday's round at Tamarisk and,
with the other suzvivors of the
72-hole cut, will be atindlan Wells on
Sunday'
Ron Streck, who scored an
eagIe-3, dropped ,..
.L.I"JCIOt bird! e pu ttS
h' I tth
hoi I I d' W II ,
Ofl lS 3S
ree esa n tan e S
to complete a 66 and take second at
20

''

By TOM BELVJLi.E

!!~!Ill COI'J'.!'SJIOP~nt

...,,,. King"'· •~"' ""''"
J..ords)own 71· Mathews$
L..;•llsvUk• 44, Marling~ on &lt;ao
Lutheran E. 19, C1e. Griswold .a

~~: ~h.;;: :i,·2:·~1n~

·······•············· · 29 10

Put On Shop· ··················

..,
•J
LlbrrtY Benton 72 ArUnRton 00
!Jl. Falr11ctd lJnkln 71
Lima 67, Falrfkokl 64
Lima Shawl'ft 55. Wapakoocta 53
Uma TtmPie 6IS. Fot1 Wayne (Ind. I
Black Hawk 62
Ll.9bon Ill. Southt'm Local t2 •
Llttlll" Miami £6, Blanchr-stil"'' 6l
.
~an 57, Zl'lne!lvi llc 44
,
Logan Elm 16, Lltrrty Uhkm G8
l..oodon fn, ~OMjhan Alli'r .'i!
Lorain Brook.•ildl&gt; 51, Vermilion .all
Loraln"Cath , 1!1, Elyria Cat h. 00
Lld!.tni: Hts.

~~~~~~ ~~~:!~~~~:;ttall

123
.. .. ~ 1
Ponys ......... .. ............... ................. 2&gt; 14
HlJlcrestSurgtca!Ciinic ................... 22 17
LuckyLucy ArnuseJllE''nl s ................. lll 19
VillaR&lt;' Quick ShOp .................... ..... 20 19
Frulh Pharmacy....... ....
. ... ·.. 12 27
Sport About ......... . ,.. ........... , , .....•.... 11 28
Bf'rnadln&lt;&gt;'s Bomtx&gt;rs ....•.................. 7 :r1

Spikers

-~~~')(!.Co~~~~ 5J ........ ""

Canton South 63, Alllant"e l9
Canton Trinity ~1. Elyria Chr. 59
Card inal 00. Perry t2
Card lnJ:ton 7J, Marlon Cath. 64
C('darvlllt' 117. W.ay~villf' 52
Ct'l lna 78, E ll~ 5G
CeniM"burf[ 71, E . KnOx $3
Ch1111:rln Fall§ !11, Cl£&gt;. Oranf" 45
w. 0.,,.,,"'
Chlllk'Oihl• 76, Col. F nmklln H1s.fd
46

g:;~~Hmvc:~grs· .... ...

leader, slipped to a 74 at La Qulnta
d
in hot
an wasn es sbackat207. .
Arnold Palmer and Jack Nick·
la both 1 ylng I La Quint h d
US,
p8
a
a, a
matching 72s and were tied at 212.

Ledgmwn !58. ~tunlnR Val. .'\'i

a,'"'""·

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

McDonald's ···········

s•~pson.
tho second round
u4•
..,

1\vp. 51

canal Winchester 73, Amanda-Ck'ar·

'lllrough Jan. :t, 1~

Jewels

15, E~rta Flr&amp;t Bapt. .43
, ParnW Norll\iUldy 43

crt'('k 47

~ults
Women'sFinal
Volleyball Standings

a

Kl'fter!ng Altil"r 55, Tol. SI.JotJn 5o

. A.von77

8~!~-.!9. ~!.b~.E-..

c--~u~/~~~1~!t~G~~~~:
~~~
--~r:/~~~~e:~~~~~g~~~~;~gt~~~
I~.,~:~·~~:=. ~=:rlt1 .:~
$500""" Bob H
Cia sl
th
d .,..
II h I 70 t Be
d
l1
1

62

Bruldwlck 62, MlqJark 40
Bryan 91, Ltbl&gt;rty .;enter~
Buckey\' Val. ro, W. Jeffl'!'SOII &lt;16
B~· Ns 47, Gallon%

ties
·
·record,,_,;_____~-----.
.
OOM.
grabs Hope lead
Standings
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) . dJ er tied the course record
Cra Ig Sta
at Bennuda Dunes 'with an S-under:-

"

UniTed Local 39

II , PK . G3, Bloomfield 56

Stradl~r

.

'

BrOOklyn T4, f1n.&gt;lan&amp; 61

=Ut.;.-...

fi.1

.Jt:fferson 00. F'alrp)l'1 Harding 49
JM'ff"rYoon Union~ . Oak Glm . W.Va. 4ft
John Giffin 118, Shll"rKlan '1'9
Kalida &lt;l'l, F'oyt Jennings 42
Kansali l..&lt;tkol.a ffr,':()llk HarOOr 54
Kenstcn 61 . 'TWinsbu~ 58
Kflnt Rooi.."'ll\'11 19, CuyahogK Falls 63
Kentoo Rldgif&gt; 75, Spring. Not1hwt'Stcrn

Bcrleshlrt' d. Newbury :tJ ~
Berlin HUand 81 MaiVf'rn .'ill
W. ~'(' 71J. )..&amp;M't'llvll!t&gt; ~
Teays Val. 47
........ -·· Natbna.l Trail 74
. OlmtMgy 43
N. Union 45
, Ashland
4T

the 0.0. Mcintyre
Leagu~
WUson, Tent
\.with a record ol 33 wins and six losses was Jewels. ' H.,.,.,.,.y, ~prll Gordon, Karen Sprague, Mary RAJU1ns
,... . ,. .,.,.. ,.f'l.ct-Wi?d,.trunt ·ruw,..-:.:.~-tu-rlghtt c.Lu!al ~M"!T.!:".::e•j., ... -. - !!00 Sa.~ Hurl..er..--=Y·•~ ""-="-'~~-·--·~~.~~ -

-

GranvUk' W ••Johnsta.vn Northrid~ tl'i

An:.htnld 61, MontpPI'er 3J
AshlatJJia 54, Ashtabula HarOOr 51
AshtaD.Ibl EdgewOC?d 64. Mad®n ~

•

-~

"""looU.J-.., .

FroniiPr 7:1, W11tt'rlonl 611

Akron Hoban !il, Qe. UnlwTsll)' .t!l
Akron K!rlm:~re 77, Akton N. m
Akron

Nearby Shawnee Preserve hunter's paradise

E. L1in10n a!, 'n•lltl-N Sprlngs62

E. ~

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-'C·5

Wildlife happenings:

Ea1twuxl iS, Elmwood !W
Elyria 51, Lenin 54
El)'r1P W. 70. Lcraln So\llhY\l&gt;W 68
F~rnlt~_l! ~~~hln&amp;~o!,~

~· .._...
'*
A.;la 8:l, Allen E. 56
.
. :. Akron Cen-Hower !il;i,,Akron .Q!lrtleld ~9
_,.,
~wA:Ja'Ofl"l:.ilf'l'--'t,£, AkJ"Ori &amp;i'bif.l 55 -~~ t:\)fl ....:,.,:..,"rift• ..,,

N!roo Flre&amp;ICI'II' 60, AkrOn

.

4

$]LIMIT

EACI

•

~~Queen
RUBBER

SPLASH

�•

~-----------~-------

--

~-

·--··---

~

-~-

-..... .

--·--

--·-

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio...:..Point Pleasant.

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs County agents corner

buoclmarl&lt;ll or Vlatoa and predaled
Special Correspoodeat
the 111e 1111 a Bapllot cllllreh by
GALLIPOLIS '- "Vinton has BeVeralyean.
.
engine cold any more than Is
dE'strilcfive !Ire!" This was tpe
VlntonBaptlstchurchwasorgan·
· ~I"y:'
aallne of"ffie GallllCTilnes"for--l2i!O- ·on Juiy n. "1895 • wtth a
Farmhind PricE's Down- FarmThursday, January 12, 1928.
membership o121. They met first In
"land values continue to decline.
'Ole 'I'Imes rethe Masonic bul)dlng, calling their
Farmland prices are 23 percent
ported: "A..,...
first pastor, Peter .WIUlams, on
below the high of 1~1 . The decline
slderable porUon
August 4, 19115.
. Aceordlllclo the GaDia 'l'lmes of
reflects depresSed farm ·earillngs . of the lrnln eo s
'!_nd __ pessl)llism ,.bq_u_t future __ dlstrtct.of. Vlntpn
July 4,1128: "A bullilll!ramunlltee ·
earnings.
w1111 swept by lire
Willi aelected (In 1.811'7) &lt;"'' 1 ""'of
Houseplahts ~ Usually, during ·Th1U'1111ay night
W. F. Butler,.J. H.'F~, G. W.
winter our houses dry o~t because
(J-ary 5) lUicl
Shack, J. D. Sback, and M. M.
of furnaces being turned on. This
a muclt greater 1oM was prevented ~ who JIIII'ChMed a buildcal1Ses houseplants to sitffer.
only by valiant work by voluraeer lag. lot of J. T. Malthewo for S2ill
tire llgliters.
lnrh......r 1111 the 11o11e and limber of
Humidifiers add much needed
. moisture to the air, which benefits
The fire began In the A. L. the old Tan HOWII! IbM could be

By JAMES !lANDS.·

By "JOHN C. RICE
----'~
·· xten8kiit Agene
, Agrl~, Meigs County
Wednesday, Jan. 16 · - Corn
School at Meigs Inn from 9:30a.m .
to 2:30p.m .
Monday, Jan. 21 - Meigs County
.,,~----"""'~·~=-"Beet-~CatUe...Asscc!a.t! o ~-mae! !.'1g.-at
7 p .m. at the Extension Office.
Thursday, Jari. 24 - Forage
School. More details to follow.
Income Tax - If you paid an
individual over $600 for work in
1984, don't forget to flip form 1099.

.

a.m., and Included on the program
given by Jake SOden of Gallipolis,
were: the Vllllon . Ill gil School
and a. new pulpit Bible and the
directed by Prolet110r
Americantlagglvenbytheordero!
Lewla,aiOiobytheRev.McMIDan
American Mechanics.
(Ute jllllllur In llltrtliiWed; •Open .._ • lno I'M eu w1111tlaamAII w..-beld
'Ole Gates lotheTemple," a duet by
perhapl'lhe I.,.. teni..-IID!fln
Ma)' KeDy aad Marie Alellllllder, a
GaDtpnlw h181ory.ln January or 1128
"""""" by_ the Rev. Latta o1 ·· nearthepl"'!!ll!!llplllllofflce.Several
lklnna, an addreas by Dr. T. F.
hundred people crowded In eacb
Chambers, reports from the buildevenlnc despite the cold we!Uher,
lng comrnlltee, a · hlatory of the
Dr. Feltman In his history of the
church by w. C. Fellman, as weD as
church remarked in' 1929: "With
- • · prayers, readings, and only limited membership, yet each
ICI'Ipture given by lhe Rev. George
and everyone did his bit and !rom
Sagen of GaDipolls.
one plan to a"!lther they kept
The church received several gifts
hammering away until at last their
at this tkne: a pulpit chair glv~n bY
sacrifices were rewarded by the
the men's class, light fixtures given
of this new home to

name.

It Is not doing a satisfactory job, add
some other means of providing
moisture. Plants may he grouped
and placed abQve a try of moist
gravel, sand or peat moss. Some
people kPep a misting bottle handy
and wet the plants periodically with
mist. Of course, kPep~ng 'them
watered properly is . the most

Church met !rom
store, the Baptist church, the Vinton
J.O.O.F. lodge haD, and the Kerr 1897 until the fire or 1928. Services
Butler funeral home and garage. were then transferred to tbe VInton
The losses amounted to · some High School auditorium where the1
$53,000 with Insurance CO\Ierlng . remained untu January 6, 1929. '1t
only about ro percent of the total was on that date that the present
worth. The buildings hit by !ire church building minus later add!·
!Ions waS first used.
were damaged ~?E"yond repair.
Ground had been bro!len lor the
"FortuJtately, there Willi DICie .

entire vOiage might have been
swept away." (Times).
" illl'illi!M'Sn T~pop - wE'll; · a da tWo- - Corrilng ctoseTo 6elng des!i'oyea"·
your operator's manual
t&lt;)blespoons of water per pound of
were: The Kerr Butler home, the
oil changes. Be sure that the
Quickie restaurani and store, Alex·
filter Is changed regularly and that corn in a jar. Shake the jar to mix
water through the corn and allow to · ander garage and home, Asa
there are no leaks on the air intake
stand
for several days. The drier
Stevens store, and the James
that would bypass thE' filter. Use the
the
corn
geis,
the
less
It
will
pop.
produce house. Although "much
proper thermostat and don't run the
damage was done these buildings
as the great heat broke windows,
scorched paint and did other
damage," the bucket brigadE' saved
them.
The building which housed the
Baptist church was one of the old
through
Popcorn

~

U popcorn Is

too dry

Agriculture and our community

· Milk production down in '84

cement foundallon laid the riext
day. The church had 1111 old lot,
ii,oou 1n ~liiiiiilmolieYinini the
burned cllurcb, and oome exira
ground donllled by Ken: Buller lo
begin work.
By September 5, 1928, the build·
lng had progressed far emugh to
Install a new church bell donated by
J. H. Feltman.• who had served as
Sabbath School superintendent for
many years.
Dedication exerclaes of the
church were hel_d June 23, 1129, 11110

, HEn.BRONN, West Germany (AP) ~ The U.S.
Anny was trying Saturday to find out what Ignited a
. fire on a Pershing 2 missile that klUed tllree U.~.
soldiers and Injured at least seven during a routine
training exercise.
-- "Ifawears like lt~was just an ac. cident ~' sata Maj .
Michael Griffon, a spokesman for the 56th Field
Arllliery Brigade. 'Tiie reason for the fire Is still

unknown.''

,

He said "there was no explosion and no nuclear
weapons involved" In the fire at ·the "Red Leg"
missile site outside Hellbronn In the south of the
,;.;,____

Bassett

1iy-Blt¥SoNR. CARTER
Exte~lon Agent
GaDia County
GALLIPOLIS- Milk production
In 1984 was about three percent
below that in 1983, and this was the
first annual decline In six years.

January

-

•
time sucl\ an accident had happened and he had
Darryl Shirley or Irving, Texas.
ordered an InVestigation ,
The 35-foot missiles weigh 7 tons and measure 40
The fire broke .out in a missile parts stor~e area
inches In diameter. Like the Pershing l ·A misSiles
they replaced, the Pershing 2s are pl'li!Jelled by a
while an equipment ttralnlng exercise was being
conducted un~r . ,!!l.!' superylslo!'_ o,r a CB£~in!... -= ~e _soli&lt;!~ l!J~l .~~et. :ne dltssil~ _are .~
Haddock said. The missiles are stored separately · transported on large Oatbed trucks, ",\,IUch would ·
!rom their warheads and Griffon said, "there are no
serve as their launchers In wartime.
warheads In the area" of the fire.
In Washington , White House deputy press
secretary Bob Sims said President Reagan "Is aware
Haddock said the engine ot the missile's first stage
had Ignited wlthou\ warning. };;arller, Griffon had
of the incident. He Is distressed and expressed sorrow
said the missile's solid fuel propellant had Ignited and . at the tdss of life.'
Sims said Reagan received updates on the accldE'nt
bumecl.
to '

mander, told a news conference that It was the first

D. Leach, of Salem, Mo.; and Pvt . 1st Class

weapons .
The 572 medium-range Pershing 2s and cruise
missiles being deployed by NATO are designed to
counter Soviet ss.ro nuclear missiles aimed at
. Western ;Europe.
·
- •'The acCident" _oc-.;ilcred -wlthln-·r.:~ sm a'J l:loS.· controlled area. At no time was there any dan ger to
the German civilian population,'' said Griffon.
The missile base outside Heljbronri is one of three
Army Installations In south Germany where Per shing
2s are being deployed.
The Pershing 2s are stored at thE'
guarded
bases and 1aken Into the field In
for

would have no Impact on continued deployment of the

•

'

·Kennedy getS
jeers, cheers
inS. Africa

'

Gov. Celeste ·calls death of
ohil Carroll a
GARFIElD

HEJGIITS, , Ohio

"In the past few years, I had taken

..J'!atl!!!l~.Jl_lai).=

•

~

"I will go back totheSenateofthe
United States to say I have met
brave men and women In Namibia,
whose only destre Is to be tree," he
said outside a Roman Catholic
church where he met church and
nationalist leaders lor two hours.
Among topics discussed by the
leaders and the Massachusetts
Democrat were the long-delayed,
·- U.&amp;-led -negotiatlons for Namibian
Independence, and allegations bY
blacks of pollee and military .
atrocities.
Kennedy said he would work to
end · the Reagan administration's
policy of cOnstructive engagement
with South Africa, "which has been
an Ineffective and bad poDcy.''
Constructive engagement is the
policy of political and economic
COI\tacts with South Africa seen by
the Reagan administration as the
best way to promote peaceful
change In South Africa.

All MIRRORS
AT LEAST

·50°/o OFF

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

Rep. John "Jay" Carroll, who had
been sworn for his first term only
fivedayseartler, was a "tragedy for
all Ohioans," says Gov. Richard
Celeste.
Carroll, 29, a Democrat repres·
entlng several Cleveland suburbs at
the Statehouse, was found dE'ad
Friday at his home. The cause of his
death was being Investigated, and
the Cuyahoga County coroner's
office said an autopsy was to be
perfonned Saturday.
·

Saturdayhewlllreturnhometoseek
Independence for the disputed
territory of South-West Africa, and
to oppose President Reagan's policy
toward South Atrlca.
Kennedy told several hundred
people In the black township or
Katutura outside Windhoek that the
next tkne he visited the territory,
known widely as Jl!amlbia, he ,
wanted to see It Independent
according to a long-standing United ·

'
BAPTIST
CHURCH buDt 1111 sanctuary bt 1128111 a cost
S2,03U3. "- tire on Jan. 5, 1928 deslroyed the previous Baptlsl Church
building In Vinton as weD 1111several other Vinton edifices ..Qround was
broken for the sanctuary on July Ill, 1J28, wllh the first sefilces held on
Jan. 6, 1929; the dedication came .., June 23, lll29.
··

Farmer's Tax Guides rein. Stop
by and pick up your free copy at
1500 Eastern Avenue or call us at
446-7007.
The hooklet explains how the
federal tax laws apply to farming.
Farmers can use it as a guide to
"Managing Your Future' ' Is the figuring their taxes and filling out
topic of our 1985 bairy Meeting their farm tax return.
'
'-scheduled-for- Feb. 610 a.m.-3 p.m.
You mlssed-a ·g(\Od meetlngJfyou
'a t thio Southern Ohio Production · misSed the Farmer's Income Tax
' Credit Association Building, Upper Update Meeting on Jan. 3- .Glenn
River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Graham IS having one this coming
The. program Is designed to help Monday evening, Jan. 19. Call
dairy producers. develop business Glenn for more details.
management strategies and apply
Mr. and Mrs. Karl A Kebler
production practices that should from Kehler Business Services,
make their business more Pomeroy, and Mis. June Wall of. H
profitable.
&amp; R Block, Gallipolis, did outstandBe sure to let our office know by Ing jobs In presenting the tax
Friday, Feb. 1, If you plan to atie11d Information. Twenty-eight people
so we ca.n make meal
attended the meeting.

SOME MORE

""'~~~:~~:~invesiigu-aun -ur

Heights pollee indlFated
Carroll died of natural causes.
A woman who knew Carroll,
Denise San Antonio, . said she
became concerned when he did not
arrive for a meeting with her
Friday. She said she went to his
home and found him apparent!)'
dead in his bedroom.
Ms. San Antonio said she knmedlately called police.
Garfield Heights police Capt.
Thomas Murphy said police and
paramedics responded to 2 p.m.
call to go to Carroll's residence.
Carroll's body was found at the
house, Murphy said.
The coroner's spokesman said
Carroll was pronounced dead on
arrival at 4:10 p.m. at Southwest
General Hosp[tal .
"Cutting short thecareerofsucha
young person 1s a tragedy for all
Ohioans," Celeste said In Columbus.

a

ASHE ARRESTED AT EMBASSY- A handcuffed Arthur Ashe Is
led away !rom the South African Embassy by police In Washington
Friday. The retired tennis liar, alongwllht6olllers, were arrested near
lhe embassy during their demonstration against the apartheid policies
of the South African government. (AJ&gt; Lasel1lhoto) . .

political career blossom. I was
proud to count him among my key
supporters in Cuyahoga County
during the 1982 election.
"HE' became a shining star in his .
own, right bY winning a seat tn the
General Assembly In 1984. In his
campaign and In~ personaltlie, he
demonstrated concern and compas·
slon for the eldE'rly and_for school
children.''
Carroll a native of Cincinnati
represenied the 13th Legislativ~
-uistrict, . W!iiCfl ihciudes Brt'Cks·
Vole, Broadview Heights , part of
Parma, Seven HiUs, Brooklyn
.Heights, Cuyahoga Heights, Garfield Heights, Independence and
Valley View.
Carroll, who was single and
workedparttimeasalawyerfor the
Cleveland law firm of Arter a nd
Hadden, was elected to the Legisla·
ture In November, &lt;jefeatlngfonner
seven Hills Mayor Richard Ganim
bY a vote of 29,75lto 18,726.
"I have known Jay Carroli for a
little less thanayear. butl!elt he and
I were close friends . Rep. Ca rroll
loved people and working for them.
He had looked forward to serving his
const,ituents," said House Speaker
Vern·RiffeJr., D-New Boston.
Carroll, a graduate of Princeton
and Yale Law School was active in
the Cuyahoga County Democra tic
organization.
·

CARROLL FOUND DEADSlate Rep. John "day" Carroll;
1&gt;-Garllcld Heights, was found
dead Fliday at his residence, but
lhe cause of death was not
· Immediately revealed pending
further investigation. A spokesman at the Cuyahoga Councy
coroner's office !l8id an autopsy
would he perlonned Saturday
on Carron, 29, who was elected to
the Legislature in Novemher,
Carroll was single. A woman
wbo was acquainted with CarroD said she became concerned
when he· did not show up at a
scheduled meeting with her. She
then went to his residence and
found him apparently dead In his
bedroom. The woman said she
Immediately called pollee.

Jailed Democrat furloughed to attend Reagan inaugural

· Headlines subject -to rare_
~-I!!!~!!!~!Pr~~!i~J!!, be~~e(___

'
jailedt-.-- But wha.t W.tUiams...

really~.reoolY-ed-.

was one o

the Ironton Tribune:
story
reads that an e1!5ement notice In
Lawrence County found favor with
a sewer district advisory board and
the Lawrence County
Commissioners.

On that first headline, the AP out
of Bismarck, N. D., reads: "The
· North Dakota Supreme Court on
Friday" - Jan. 4 - "ruled that
Gecirge Sinner legally became
governor on Jan . 1. despite argu ments by the man he defeated in
thE' election that his term does not
expire until Saturday. :· What difference does It make? At stake Is
the chance to.appolnt two judges to
the state's highest court. ·

REG. S329.95

88
148
55 '/o = 1181.07 SAiliNGS

Sale Price

They're going to put on a
one-hour birthday "paity" for
Maybelle Mcintyre, widow of the
famous columnist, !tom 2: 30to3: 30
p.in. Feb. 8 a.t the Pleasant Valley
Nursing Care Untt above Point
Pleasant. She will be 101 years of
~ge on Feb. 9, but they're "preponlng" the birthday doings because
Feb. 9 is a Saturday, and nobody
wants to do anything on a
Saturday.

Don Mayne, whq got his start In
journalism two or three decades

I

SOFA, LOVESEAT
REG. S999.95
Ssle Pri~e

$ele P1lee

1 BLUE, 2 BEIGE VELVET

REG. 1449.95

•

S-ele P1lce

.
$19888
Save S6'/o =IZ51.07

Sa~lng 1

RECLINER

'

Comprehensive
Cardiac.
Rehabilitation

.Public ·Open House
'

THE MEDICAL
'

$sle Mce

$68888 .

Save 54., = *811.07

RECLINERS .

Ssle Ptlee
1411.07

CHEST OF DRAuli'RS
Rlt

BEDROOM SUITE

Sale Ptl~e

Ssle Price

'$19988

SOLID MAPLE KINCAID

BEDROOM SUITE
REG. $1799.95
Ssle Pti~e

$88888

SOLID OAK

T~LL

CITY

,.._

'

,__.

~·~'·"-

.

"'""

.... ,...,......._.._.

$q/e P~i~e

$

REG. 52270.00

$98888

51'/o = 1911.07

Celeste announces appointment

8 88

1 BLACKSMIT,H SHOP

1 BLACKSMITH SHOP

BAR STOOL

BAR STOOL

REG.Sl 59.95

-r

$78888

Sau 51'ft = 181.07

'
Sa~e

WOOD W/VELVET
REG. S309.95

WOOD W/VELVET

,::~: 95 Ssle Ptlce

St~e

·

~.. ,

g

$14888

Meshel files amendment
•

REG.

•

=

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
•

1 CHEVAL

MIRROR
$349.95

· Stle Ptl~•
~$1-4888 sm 57 0ft = 1201.07

2

SLEEP SOFAS
RUST. BEIGE PLAID

I

Riffe announces_appointment.

Sels Price

12499.95$98 88

REG. •1099.95

ssi~ p-,r~e$5

222-2-

Sm S2'ft • •n?.U

BLUE, BEIGE FLAME 'triTr~

p,,,

Celeste signs loon bill

REG. S$99.95

Stfe

$2

bill j,ermlttlng the state and its potltlcalsubdlvlstons to Issue bonds to
provide low-Interest loans through participating banks to financially
burdened farmers.
The so-called "Aggie bonds" bill was one of two approved by the
governor Fliday. Both will beCOme e!fectlve April 12.
Sponsored by Rep. Dwight Wise Jr .. D-Fremont, thE' bonds blll
creates an agriculture financing commission which wUI administer
the loan program.
, _
QuaUtylng farmers are expected to get loans at interest rates two
or three percentage points below market rates as ~ result of the
bonds' tax-fr,i!e status.
The second measure permits metropolitan housing authorities to
employ pollee officers to enforce laws within housing projects and
l!isewhere If permitted by local laws. New officers must have

Smith enters hospital

$13333
57 'fo '176.62 Savlags

CciCktail Table., 2 End Tables
Corner Table

He said WIUlams' release date would be delayed
four days because of his furlough , scheduled from
Jan. 18 to Jan. 22.
Silas said the board wpuld order the vPteran civil
rights activist not to consume alcoholic beverages or
drive during the furlough.
"I would have no problem with that," Williams said
In a .telephone interv!PW last week from the DeKalb
County jail. .
. .
Williams Is a fonher state representative who
backed Reagan againSt Grorglan Jimmy Carter In
1900 but supported fellow Democrat Jesse Jackson in
1984. He went to jail Dec. 19 to serve the remaining 41

~·-

~-'-""""'""·

an 8\&gt;·bY·ll·inch sheet labeled as an inv itation to the
inaugura tion.
In a telephonE' Inte rview from Washington. Cattan
sa id that- invita tion actually was one of 400,1XXJ
commemorative document s " m ailed dn a bipartisan
basis to people all over the count ry."
"It was merely intended to give people, you know,
.
somethlng to put on the wall ," Catta n sa id .
Williams had been quoted as saying he had been
invited to thE' private swearing-in ceremony at the
White House on Jan. 20, but Cat tan said I hat event
would "be attended only by the first family, by the
Ca binet and by very senior White House aides_"

disag'ree over threat
of violence at clinics·
ByMERRILLHARTI!ON
.\ssoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Leaders
of two pro-choice organizations,
concerned about possible violence
by abortion opponents later this
month , are urging women's rights
activists to avoid demonstrations at
abortion clinics.

.
.
. M~el. ~ ~ . compl«;!.ed 8Jl-J!!'Prov&lt;;,:lg;&gt;llce}ffl~~ ~aln!ng_E._!'&gt;~."..~ ,= ~~ ~. r. .!!t:~....!9:.u.Co.lr.l~_jt h:[lmc~pt 1 ~f
D· Youngstown,
filed for Introduction In
a proposed
.
·
the National . Organization for
constitutional amendment which woHld permit tlie sale of•up to $1
Women, said Friday her organl2a·
·bUlion In bonds to help local, governments rebuild · Ohio's
.
· .
lion intends to conduct sit-in vigils at
infrastructure.
•
in llstates betweenJan. 18-20
clinics
COLUMBUS (AP) - State Transportation Director Warren J .
He said Friday that his previously announced concept already has
the advice of the National
despite
Smith has ·e ntered University Hospitals to under!:? heart bYpass
attracted Ci)nslderable support. "I tiave asked mayors of our cities to
. Abonlon FedE'ratlon and Planned
review and comment on my proposal, and suggestions !rom them
ParenthOod of America.
· su~~r:'-Richard Celeste's office said Friday mat tllidtrector Is.
and others have been requested."
expected to be in the hospital torabout a week, then wiD complete his -, - The dltferences of opinion sur·
Meshel's proposall!e!ines infrastructure as "roads and bridges,
faced as thE' federal Bureau of
recuperation at home.
wastewater treatme~~t systems, water supply systems, storm water
Alcohol, Tobacco and Flreanns
The governor's office quoted doctors as saying the prlignoSis for
and sanitary treaknent systems, storage.and treatment facUlties,
warned abonlon clinics nationwide
his swift recovery Is good and that he sbould be back on the job In
Including land, Interest In real property, factlltles, and equipment
to be aleri for potential violent
three months.
related or lncldE'ntaf!herelo."
attacks tied to the anniversary oft he
The amendment, which would go llefore voters In November,
Supreme · Coun's 1973 decision
WOUld permit the sale of up to $IDf million In bonds a year, to a
legalizing abortions .
maximum of $1 billion.
.
The warning was delivered to the
'
Proceeds trom the bonds would be usect.as matching funds for
COLUMBUS (AP) - House Speaker· Vern Riffe Jr., D·New
'National Abortion Federation,
local infrastructure projects.
Boston, has announced the appointment of Aristotle L. Hutras as
which In tum distributed the letter to
Me$hel said state Investment In locaf communities will preserve
executive secretary of the House.
Its members and other groups that
and enhance the utestyle of all Ohioans while also giving a .boost to
Hutras, 34, was sworn In Friday to succeed Thomas Winters who
support abortion rights.
economlc development programs.
became legal coumel to the speaker.
I
The native or Dover, Ohio, formerly served as a legislative aide
"NOW Is continuing with our
and more recently as a lobbyist for the Ohio State Medical
plans." Ms. Goldsmith said In !lJl
Association.
Interview. "I think perhaps our
perspectives are dlf!erent . . . . The
ieilvtiSm- U'·iafs· occurring 1G net

•

Ssle P1ice ·

·. $liJ222

WOOD DESK CHAIR
REG S349 95
•
11 •·1e p,;~,

Ssle Ptice

$111
11
S2 r. .,__IUB.84 Stvl

1 ROCKER

Save 56 '!&gt; =ft'n. 73 Sa~l•e•

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste bas annOunced the
appointment or fonner state Sen. Steven Maurer, Botkins, as
assistant director of the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
Maurer, 38, a Democrat and former mayor of Botkins, was
dE'feated last November In his bid for a second, four-year tenn in the
Senate.
He will be the assistant of Director Dale Locker, Anna, a forlner
state representative. ·
'

REG. $229.95

$ele Ptlce

.... ...

------Ohio briefs:-----_, Pro-abortion groups

4 CHAIRS
REG.
11199.95

as
Inaugural press aiqe Will Ca ttan said Friday.
Williams also received a bona fide Invitation to an
Inaugural ball, but Eskew said Friday, "It was a
mistake, an oversight."
The paiole board said it wasn't freeing Williams for
the four di!YS just so he could live it up.
"We're certainly not allowing him to go there to
have a gooq tkneor for the festivities," said board
spokesman Silas Moore. The trip was granted "on the
basis that It would allow hkn to make contacts In ·
Washington that would benefit his community,
especially the needy," Moore said.
"The board took this action. not thinking that they
were doing something for the president or the

_,.,..

=

•

DROPLEAF TABLE

!~""~=r.'3;5~1 .~07~~!:.+~s~av:•!5~6 ""¥t"~~1~28r,1;·1~2r=~+~s:ve~srs~""~=ii•tot.!'!o7!'!!S!!'!•!!"vl.•a.·~.-;,;,;,oiiPiijl"ii!
REG.

'

REG. $149995

$288 88

REG. S549.95'

l

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

88
$2·
8
8
Seve SB'fo *411.07
S DRAWER

OFF

Savlag1
~~~~==~~~~~

REG. 5699.95

!s.:v:,a 64

Sunday, Jan. 27
3:00 to S100 p.m.

Sa~e S3'fo = 221.07 Savlwgs

REG. 5699.95

1 BLUE

' Gene Abels, M.D., Cardiologist, Medical Director
• Timothy Bttz, Program Coordinator , ·

88
$198
1

BlUE &amp; TAN PLAID

=

¥ Beginning Jan. 21-Now Accepting Referrals
'Call The Medical Shoppe at 446-2206

REG. S419.95

RUST PRINT

$ale Ptlce

'

2... WING CHAIRS
WOOD, DARK GREEN VELVET

3 TUB CHAIRS

•

50°/o OR

-":,..-.,

CHAIR .

$38888

See yQu In church!

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY .TIL 8 P.M. -

Sm 61'1&gt; = *611.07 Saving•

It

furlough to attend President
. Georgia Republicans who wer!!n't
to the
fesilvllles were understandably perturbed.
"How did a Democrat In jail get one?" they asked
the Inaugural committee, said Its spokesman, Tucker
Eskew.
The ,answer Is, he didn't, according to inaugural
otflclats. But Williams, a former officer of the
Southern Chrl!ltlan Leadership Conference, did get an
invitation to one of the .Inaugural balls.
Williams, in jail lor a "m otor vehicle off~. showed
,the state Board of Pardons and Parole a document
last week which he said Invited hkn to the private
swearlng·ln ceremony set for Jan. 20.

OYER 28

..

a sentence for leav ing the · scene of an

... ~L'laugural.-;:committee. but..

I .

GALLIPOLIS - Headline In the
Mnultrle, Ga., Observer: "Sinner
ruled governor of North Dakota."
Headline in the Ironton Tribune:
"Sewer language OK' d. "

..

"''"'(-fir)""" "'"'"'fhe-st«iUeu ·u"eiith'of·state----grea C:pieasUfe"""'il'F'Watching · ;,;, . -.q""''*'

. arriWgeme-nts ~

-··~- ----~

~imt•- -~na•.,! Section13,'---""'
1986

Ore""'*•

"

address,
Identification number
must be filed on the form.
More detailed records on cars·
·and trucks Is needed in 1985. IRS
says no car or truck Is used
e xclusively for farming. You should
keep a record of truck . and car
usage. This .would include miles
· driven, dates : and reason for

o.

State/ ational

January 13. 1985

Fire hits Vinton business district buildings in 1928

Extension notes••• .

l

W. Va.

--

•

aga inst buildings bui Is terrorism
against women" who are seeking to
exercise their free choice, she said,
"What Is not acceptable is to sQ
back on our hands that weekend ana
give them tthose whoatt ack clinicS)
a free hand to blow them up. ·· M&amp;.
Goldsmith said. " We are doing it
very responsibly ."
. !"'.:.:r- ¥£ '"~ ~if!l~~1 -~ i!'l-

Instances where local authoritil'li
have asked NOW to refrai n fmrl!
conducting any vigi ls,.the organiz{
tlon Is cooperating.
Faye Wattleton, president of th~
Planned Parenthood Federation of
America, in a telephone lntE'rvlew
fro_m the organization's New Yor~
headquarlers, said, "We believe
any activity . .. which In any wa~
heightens the tensions should It
discouraged . . . . We would hoP$
action could be taken to reduce the
tension and the polaril. ation ."
In Washington. Barbara Radfollh
executive director of the NAF, sal~
''The position of this organization ti
that no abortlon-rela ted laclll!t
should . have anyone staytnc
overnight."
Federal authorities say there
have been 30 Instances of bombing.
firebombing and arson at abonlon
clinics since May 1982, with a receni
upsurge In such actions across th;

nutter.. ·~==--......

'

~...... '"···

••
•

. . .•

�-·-------I

Pomeroy~ Middleport-:-Gallipolia,

Page-0-2-The Sunday Ti~s-Sentinel

--Brlsine8s Briefs·.--•

~

'

--------

------

Kaiser's refractory business sold

__.,...

,

---

. OAKLAND, Call!. - Most of Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
ncth _j\_m.,-.i&lt;'__,.n rPiractoriPS bave~~n -¥Jit:I!Q NationaL
Refractories and Minerals Corp., Kaiser managemen) said.
National Refractories is a company formed by the management or
Kaiser.Refractories and Kelso &amp; Co., an investment banker.
The sale was closed on ~ - 31 for an undisclosed sum. A
spokesperson lor the corporation said that it has provided Interim
financing pending completion of permanent financing by the new
company:-Th;rt Is el!,pected·to ·happen-soon, the 'Sll&lt;Jkesperson said.
In · September, Kaiser announced a $65 million loss provision In
antlcipalloil .of this and other·asset sales.
The: new company Is headed by former plvlslonal general
manager C.C. Smith, and has 1,300 employees in manufacturing and
adrilinlstratlvc facilities In California, Indiana, Missouri, Ohio and
Ontario, Canada.
·

-

-~

-

-

:Ill"

.~....

-.

....

Teachers, district at ·odds
•

ovsr--futul!e -payJncreases

•!!._

LANCASTER - ·Hugh H. Lucas
will be named vice president of
mining operations for the American Electric Power Service Corp.'s
.fuel supply department, according
toJ. E. Katilc, senlorVicepres!denl
ui-iuei-~upply:--.... · ..... - ·Lucas succeeds Gerald Hartley,
who resigned · from the AEP rue! ~
supply department to accept ~a
position as senior vice president. of
operations with Old Ben Coal Co. in
Lexington, Ky.

LIBERTY, Ind. (AP)- Negotiators lor striking teachers and the
Union County School Corporation
made little headway In their first
unKli -StnceB2"teac1u!rslaullehedthe ·
district's first strike siX days ago. No
new talks were scheduled.
"We are waiting lor the board to
make some effort toe.nd the strike,"
Steve · Stewart · of the Indiana
Teachers Association said early
'I Jle_jjy_e-hollt..

0

..

.' ,

COLUMBUS - Four loans from the U.S. Small Business
Administration have been issued In 1984 In Gallta and fv!eig~
cou nties.

Katllc ann~unced that Lucas wUI
continue to be responsible for AEP
""fuel supply's planning and enn-~Construction.

One loan for $132,926 was given in Gallla County, and three
totalling $578,(XX) were issued in Meigs, according to Frank Ray,
director of SBA's Columbus district office.

1

•

,l
INCUBATOR IN WAITING

- ·

Nonn Falling,

eco'nomlc development director lor the city of Elyrta,
Ohio, stands on a roof overlooking a 276,000 square

- other cllles- Ohio, piau to lease cheap factory
space to new businesses In the so-called "Incubator"
approach to expand business In their 81'f!88. (AP

e.-. ._

1959, flrsf at Johnstown, Pa., and
0
PORTSMOUTII - Two management promotions have been
later at Fairmont, W.Va. He
•
made within the,Automoblle Club of Southeastern Ohio.
Initially held several positions in
William J _Nelson of Portsmouth, the club's comptroller, has now
underground mining, but later
becorile director of office operations, and Mlch;lel A. Morgan,
became Involved In coal preparacurrently emergency road service director, will also be direCtor of
tion and was division preparation
ByROBERTGREENE
pany building, )louses 14 firms
. slat! oper ations.
engineer when ·he left Bethlehem In
employing about 100 people, be said.
A!6oclatro Press Wrtror ~
Nelson will now be responsible for the club's ll offices in Athens,
1969.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Idea
Although Balbierz says It Is good
Belpre , Gallipolis, Ironton, J ackson, Logan, Marietta, Nelsonvllle,
He then joined Consolidation Coal of using abandoned f:;ictories and
for lncuba torS to have an Industrial
Portsmouth, Steubenville anq Waverly.
'
Co. In Wheeling, W.Va. as a other Idle Industrial reai estate as
"niche" such as electronics, polyHe has been employed by the club since June 1981, is a graduate of
preparation engineer lor both the temporary homes for new bust- mers or some other techoology, the
West Liberty State College, West LibertY, W.Va .,- anti holds a
Ohio Valley and Hanna divisions, nesses ts gathering momentum In
Akron Incubator has opted for
.-h&lt;lchPior:s..deg1:~ ln.busine$S a&lt;!minlstratlon \llld accounting, ~ ..
••
....
!--' !"''"- ~am2 ch!ef.~ng!n~r forth~.
V D. I l C"LJ' •
Morgan, a .Jackson resident, wtil beresponslbleforactlvlti!'Softhe
Ohio Valley region. During this
The
incubator
houses electronics
Butnoteveryoneiswarmlngupto
club's staff areas, auto travel, corporate business travel, driver's
period, he served as chief engineer the so-called "Incubators," which
films, a robotics firm and a
training, emergency road service, Insurance, membership sales,
. for the Installation of the first shield · offer low rent, short-term leases, company developing brake pads
motorcoach, travel agency grm,tp tours and safety.
longwall face In the United States. flexible amounts offloor space and a
and other frlction materials !rom
Morgan is a graduate of Easteni Kentucky University and has a
Lucas -became manager of engi- variety of advice to new
acrylics - ln 'line with attempts to
bachelor's degree in education. He has been employed by tihe club
neering for Consol's eastern region, entrepreneurs.
make the area a "polymer research
since J une 1981.
·
then technical assistant to the vice
The idea is to protect the center." Otiher Industries Include a
president of Moundsvllleoperatlons newcomers In those very fragile
company making a special bowling
before leaving -Consol In 1980 to early stages when businesses have
glove and one !llaklng custom wood
become general superintendent of the highest failure rate.
furniture.
North . Ametl_san--coal Corp. 's
"You can even do retail IncubaIn recent months, plahs for
Quarto No. 4 mine. He moved to incubators have been announced In
Balblerz said, eKplainlngthat
tors,"
RICHMOND, Va. - Best Products has appointed E. Woodrow
Island Creek as vice president of Elyria and Youngstown. A moveincubators can.also VPY accordln&amp;
Fleming to a new position, viceprestdent of tbefirm'sjewelry group.
construction In 1982,
to the degree of publf~nd''J)rivate
ment
is
upder
way
start
an
Fleming, 41, has heen owner and operator of Flemirig &amp; Son, a
A member of the National Society Incubator In Cleveland.
support. He't:alls the Akron incubaca ta logue showroom in Tupelo, Miss., since October 1982.
of Professional Engineers, he and
tor a "hVbrlfl."
Akron has . been · home to an
He was employed for 16 years at H.J . Wilson's, a catalogue
his wife Kay have two daughters, lncuba'tor for more tihan a year.
The variety of enterprises in tihe
showroom retailer based in Baton Rouge, La ., where he held various
Carrie and Kathryn, ages 16 and 13. Backers of the otiher Incubators Akron Incubator has drawn the
jewelry posit ions, Including senior vice president of jewelry.
have visited Akron to examine that Interest of Joe Isaacs, a retired
operation, said Greg Balbierz, who Cleveland businessman who heads
works In the Oeveland mayor's · the area Service Corps of Retired
Executives In the Small Business
economic
development office .
•
Balblerz jokes that Incubators Administration.
In that position, Isaacs says, he
have become so popular in the
FORT WORTH, Texas - Tandy Corp.'s consolidated sales for
and
about ~ other volunteers give .
Midwest and Northeast that there
December were $414,279,!XXl, compared to December 1983 sales of
free
counseling
to people who run or
are now about 70 to ~ nationwide .
$415,065,000.
'
want
to
start
small
businesses.
Tandy's Radio S)18ck division recorded a slight gain te$349,938,(XX)
SHIREMANSTOWN, Pa. ~Rite "as of a minute ago."
Isaacs
said
he
has
run across
during December 19!3'1 from $349,149,!XXl In December 1lm. Sales of
Aid Corp. has achtevedrecord sales
The Akron incubator has been In
many
businesses
which
families
run
Radio Shack stores lit existenCe more than one year were down less
and earnlngs for the 40th ronsecu - operation about 11h years and has so
out
of
the
basement
of
their
borne
as
I han 1 percent during Decemher.
live period during the third quarter far "graduated" one ten_ant, Allied
~ supp)ernent to_j!Jh.lns&lt;:'!JIO:·
---consuttda ted"'Salesi'ur1:l1e qua.-tert.'la~ ended-Bee;---31;-1984, we'w- 1. .- or-useaJyear·19E67'""' =
.....,.,....... Elect..-:cnics,£o.~The L'1cubator; -L11..a

ev~ryon~

warms to concept ~....J

~.

Best- names jewelry executive

to

Rite Aid's

Tandy's December sales noted

eammgs _up
in 3rd quarte_r

, ~e husJJ!es.~mulil

ended Dec. 31, 1983. Second quarter eamlngs will be
·
!alter part of January .

New general manager named
HUJ\'TINGTQN, W.Va. - Toufle Kassab has been named vice
pres ident a nd geneni l manager of WKEE-WKEE-FM in
Huntington, replacing Charles A. Hicks, who resigned to take a new
radio position in Charlotte , N~C.
·
. Kassab, a Huntington native, has worked in radio In Huntington for
more than 17 years.
N.C.
Broadcasting Co., .
WKEE is an affUiate of

Government to bear
cost of new bonds
CLEVELAND (AP) -Privatepurpose, tax-exempt bonds issued
by state and local governments will
eoot the federal government $13
billion a year over the next five
years, according to an economic
&lt;:J)mmentary Issued by the Federal
: ~~eserve Bank of Cleveland.
The commentary by economist
Paul G. Wyckoff said that is more
than the federal government plans
tospendineachoftbenext!lveyears
on highways or to help public transit

firm topayo!!thebonds.
Thelnterestisnottaxable,sobond
buyers usually are willing to accept
a lowerlnterestratethanfortaxable
bonds.
.
The credit of the government that
Issues the bonds Is not affected .
, because they are backed by revenue ·
of tbe leasing firm . 1f the leasing.
firm goes bankrupt, the Issuing
government is not required to pay
off tihe bonds.
•·.

I, 1984, advanced to S368,420,!XXl, a
25.1 percent gain over th e
$294,409,!XXl reported for ·the comparable perlnd last year. Net
Income rose to $15,453,!XX), or 16.4
percent more · than last year's
$13,275,!XXl. On a per sbare basis,
earnings rose 22.6 percent to 38
cents frm 31 cents.
For the 39-week period ending
Dec. 1, net income climbed to
$43,663,!XXl, a 17.2 percent gain from
last year's $37,258,!XXl. Sales for the
39 weeks were ahead 21 percent to
$1,037,407,!XXl from $&amp;'i7,547,00l a
year earlier. Earnings per share
advanced 20.5 percent to $Ul6 from
88 cents.
Earnings per share and' average
shares outstanding for fiscal 1964
have been restated to reflect the
two-lor-one split of Jan. 30,1984. In
addition, sales and earnings for
fiscal 1984 have been changed to
account lor Super Rite Foods Inc.,
on the equity method.
Alex Grass, chairman of the
board and president, attributed the
favorable third quarter to strong
sales In the company's drugstore
division along with the successful
Integration of the company 's speclalty retailing units Into the
corporate structure.

becometull-lledgedoperationsifthe
owners !!ad just a little extra space
temporarily.
Most such family businesses are
run by "good, hard-working propie," he said,
Isaacs said his enthusiasm grew
&lt;··e!ter v'~it!.!'.g t~.e-A-¥_r.o!!. o~!':!LV.m .

and one in Chicago during an SEA
conference. "Surely we could do
what Akron has done depending on
the building we get,'' he said.
Gary Conley, head of economic
development in the city administra·
lion, said his research and the few
available studies Indicate that "the
jury is still out" on inCUbators. He
said questions remain about
whether heheflts outweigh \he costs
of starting the Incubators and
whether the Incubators help any but
a few "fast-growth" businesses
develop.
Cleveland; he said, has · an
enormous amount of business real
estateavallableatlowcost. The city
belps with a numher of programs to
help out small businesses, Including .
a $.1) mtlllon veriture capital fund, he
said.
The city of Elyria, on the other
hand, has one huge chunk of real
estate just walling for someone to
use It: a 276,ml-square-foot factory
building donated by the Tappan Co.
Tappan built air conditioners and
furnaces at the plant, and employed
1,!XXl people at Its peak in the 197111,

'Y!ld Elyrl~erono!lllcQ.evelopr:nenL ·-

4 door sedan, twc tone beige &amp; brown, cloth interior, V-8, auto. trans., PS, PB, air cond.,
AMIFM stereo, a-track tape player, radial tires
artd just 42,000 miles on this locally owned· one
owner trade-in.

-

2 door sedan, silver metallic with custom red

orange stripes. 4 cylinder eng .. 4 speed trans.,
air cond ., AMIFM cassette, flip-up ~unroof, wire
wheel covers, radial tires. Special Th;, W••k -- Wos
14,300.00.

84 Regal Trade In

1

'3,90000

Now Only

'3~50000

:_ J

(:VCt~m$ resources,
. w.as~.c......
tre~tm!n~t~·lcr~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;;;;;;,;;::;;;:;:;:~'t=~~=
"iE~~
water
alrp&lt;)rts,
air1
traffic control and municipal water·
•
supply systems.
, Wyckoff said a significant portion
of federal government resources
I
:ate used by government subdivisions to subsidize activities of
households and private firms.
'
'
Wyckoff Mid the slngl£'-largest
Two tone blue- Sierra Package- 6.2 Litre Diesel engine, auto. ovlrdrlve trans., PS, PB, vinyl interior,
segment of the private-plirpose,
AMIFM casstttestereo, air cond., dual fuel tanks, rally wheels, Daytona radial mud &amp; snow tires, rear
tax-exempt bond market , more
step bumjler, auto. locking front hubs, 26,000 miles. WAS Sl 1,500,00.
!han one-fifth of the total volume of
No Trades At
new is~ues - Is made up of
This Price Please!
sma ll-issue lndustrtal development
bonds.
Homellte• Super XL
• An industrtaldeVelopmentbondls
• '6"-24" guide bars available
Jay
IN
SEE· M
Alan Evans
a corporate bond which, through the
Automatic and manual chain oiling
intervention of a government, Is
• Displacement 3.55 cu . in. (57.4cc)
treated as a municipal bond tor
Chromed chain
' federal income tax purposes. They
• Full radius handle bar
are termed smaU-Issue because
' Heavy duty

1983 GMC C-1500 4X4 TRUCK
Now ~9

,aoooo

OPEN Monday .thru Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-3 p.m.

they are granted tax exemption
through a law that limits tbelrslzeto
$10 million.

:

iS&gt;~~~:?;.:,..~o.1~~ ~':';r:; ..

. to build an Industrial plant or buy
• equipment, thenleaseslttoaprivate

SEE ONE AT

-~RID.fNOUR

915-3301

.SU,.PLY
.
.
CHESTEI I

11...,~• • • • •·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ; ; , ; . ; . ; .• •.1.

&amp;

community sentiment
the
number of students who attended
lor
1984 plus
school last week.
, a 7.5 pen;ent hike for tihe 1984 portion
On Frfday less than 500 students of the school year thrugh June.
books. by 1bOmas Merton. Mott has wrltron a
attended classes, which were being
The teachers union rejected both
blograpby of the monk. (AP Laserphoto).
taught by substitute teachers, a
of the district's offers. ·
school spokesWoman said.
The salary provision of the
The strike has been relatively
teachers' existing contract expired
I'• ·
I
·
quiet, but Stewart sald a complaint · In mid-August.
.
T•
:-=
'
I~D~~CI~~Q~~_._,_~~~-~af~t
~
e~rn
l
!loo=
n~
in
i
ls!\!
UlllPOO
!.&gt;g!:
rt_o!the
teachers,
was·!lled Friday With Union County
Dr. Ellen Bueschel, school super·
.JL&amp;•;a~~
stewart
- sa ld . -- SJj:n..
~""iOn..
.
....,__~.o..JJ-~·....1_.,. _~.........___ .
Jt'rllf's
........_t-&lt;Urtment over a p!CKe·
u~"tcuu c•n , hll •u Lu........... .. "... ~ - - -- · ·-·
·
CitiZens from Liberty and College ter who allegedly was struck by a ·have money to pay th~ salary

teachi•1g
~at~"'BCs-~ ~ ·"~ ··-"--:~~~=~;·~:~~~~:r;;=~:~~~~~f;;;~~~~~~~;,·-'iia~e~~.tror~·
~t~~~~-kr•~
Court House here .
tng lot.
teachers is $13,437. A teacher with a

·
.
'
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) literary Kenyon Review, published
-British-born authcr Michael Molt · at Kenyon College In Gambler. Molt
has created a comfortable creative says he bas been writing and
nlche for himself on the flat
publishing all his adult life. His work
farmland of northwest Ohio, far Includes two novels, two children's
!rom the world's literary and
books and siX volumes of poetrv.
He was best known as a poet until
cultural meccas.
"There's a library ,right around · . his bo!&gt;k on Merton was published.
the corner," said Mott In a The biography required slxyearsof
pronounced British accent. "I don't travel and research, Moll said. The ·
. t.~L"lk..,t~re's.any ex~use~nc·N~ny~"-T'"~~~s-!.'!··ri "'--~!!Y~' sJJl)r~ry.Jn
for that kind of attitude. Yllu don't rows of black binders containing
have to be In large clUes to have material he gathered on Merton .
cultural opportunities. I haven't
The solitude needed to write the
even taken advantage of all the book attracted him to Merton's llf~
in tihe ftrstplace, Molt said.
opportunities here yet."
Molt Is considered by some to he , ''I share with Merton this weird
aboutasmuch 'acelebrltyasthereis "-Idea of liking solitude, or enjoying
among American writers..
my ownrompany while s till needing
His recent book, "The Seven other 'people," he said. "Writing is
.Mountains of Thomas Merton, " a the most anti-social sport in tihe
biography of the late monk and world. Y6u'realwaysinttolibleWith
author, is enthralling critics and those you love, for not being there
- readers alike. The subject, the late when they need you." - Molt Is.
Thomas Mertoli, wrote his best· married and has two . grown
selling autobiography, ''The Seven daughters.
Storey Mountain," In 1948, about~
Molt explains in the biography
years hefore ~died In an accident how Merton transformed his longlng for solitude Into a religious
while traveling In Thailand.
Molt now is an English professor vocation. After graduating from
at Bowling Green State University. Columbia University, MPrton
1'\ former poetry editor of the joined a Trappist monastery In

"My
Kentucky where he became a
prodigious writer of poems, essays,
ctlticlsm and philosophy.
"The Seven Storey Mountain''
maintains Its popularity in literary
circles.
"This does seem to be a good time
for a life story of Merton, but that Is
Merton's doing, not Moll' s," the
Bowling Green professor said. He
rnahll~Ws J;tta~e~on's con~er~~
about a search for meaning in a
world Intimately acquainted with
war and inhumanity are universal
and enduring.
"What's relevant about Merton,
and what Is likely to stay relevant
forever, is his recognition of our
corilmon humanity," Molt said. "He
taught us bow to oppose things we
deeply disagree with, without ailenatlng the other person. When he
drives someone Into a corner on an
argument, he realizes he's losing
something inore important than the
argument
"Merton brought ihat idea to
everything, from his opposition to
the (Vietnam) war and his Ideas
about nuclear disarmament, to his
relationships In the monastery,"
Motts said.

Released nun _blasts Nicaraguans
The force has an estimated 12,!XXl
Nicaragua (AP) guerrillas
fighting the government
An Amerlcah Roman Catholic nun
Jn_
northern
Nicaragua.
beld by anti-Sandinista rebels for
"We-question
the authenticity of
nine hours has accused the rebels of
the
reports,
given
the hlstocy of open
.
killing thousands of clvUians and
·
OrdeF support for" the
... ·~""'-charged sueh-aitiicks-areuntz!er ise:~AGUA,

•

1980 FORD 'MUSTANG

979 CHEVROLET MALIBU CLASSIC

SXL Chain Saw

\ i

-· niche

::
:•:
;
:;
•
:
•

'

All but four of 86 teachers In the
district, which straddles the
Indiana-Ohio line In the rural area
northwest of Cincinnati,_walked off
their jobs last Monday. in a salary
dispute. The four-school distti~l
serves 1,000 students.
· Agroupofparentswasorganlzlng
a community rally to be held this

6

•
:
•
•
•
•

.•

[

MEln'ON BIOGRAPHER - Michael Molt, a
· profeslior at Bowling Green.Stale University, stands
In lhe library Of his honie, where be has a collecllon of

·

----~-l~~.,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~984~i~nj.~~~~~M~Id~·--~~~~rfr~~~-ln~a~d~d~ltl~o~n~~t·o~---~~~~~~ad~ory~b:uU~dln~g~t~he~cl~cy~awns~~·Eiy~~rt~a:;·Wre~~num~~y~----'=":R:~~~:L:mW::)~.-,~------~-~~-----------~~-n;&gt;lnes and preparation plimts.
1'
L
•
~~~~:~~~~~t;;~IilCU"D'&amp;:lu:rs· . ·orAWID!!,6

education, quality education and
was "shook up" by the Incident , but
quality teachers," said Ron Soper of uninjured, Stewart said.
LibertY, who has been helping
The incident is being investigated,
organize the rally.
a spokeswoman In the UnlonCourty
- "0urcttildren-havl'put trust-lnour--·Pr:osecutor~s.off!ce.saidFridaY- _
Before the strtke began, St~art
teachers," said Soper, whose son is a
high pcbool freshman . "Then tor said, the teachers had requested a 10
teachers to receive an offer of 6 percent wage lilcrease, but were
percent like they got In September
willing to accept . the compromise
andtomakethem!folhrough allthls
7.42 percent recommended by a
is
outrageous."
state !act-finder . The schOOl district
offered two alternatives, a 6 percent

"

department last January as vice
president of planning and engineerIng. He came to the AEP System
from Island Creek Coal Co., where
he had been vice president of

Four SBA loans issued in area

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0-3

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

. e

1--..- - -1-.._&lt;;•:&gt;rr-'s

-.

-------

.

Janu.rv 13, 19815

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Fuel.supply
division gets
new executive

&gt;;\

r

~

Managua , Sister Nancy Donovan,
52,aMaryknollnunfromWaterbuy,
Conn., said the killings of "thousands of Innocent people"' have
taken place over the past four years.
- "The attacks have heen made on
civilian, not military targets, and
they are Increasing," said the small,
gray-haired nun.
In Washlngion, her charges were
denied by Adolfo Calero, president
of the Nicaraguan Democratic
Force, whO said In a statement the
Maryknoll order has a history of
Supporting the leftist Sandinista
government In Nicaragua.

The U.S. Congress voted last
summer to end· funding for t)le
guerrillas, but the rebels say they
have received millions of dollars in
donations from private sources and
other governments.
Sister Donovan said she was
neither )!armed nor mistreated
during her captivitY last Tuesday by
. the guerrillas, also known as
"contras," and would return to her
pastorage In San Juan de Limay, a
vlllage ·abOut 95 miles north of
Managua.
,
She has been a Maryknoll nun for
30 years, and has spent 29 years In

Man, woman found

:· guilty of sex abuse
•'
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Mary man told the jury: "Whatever It
• Jenny Wilcox was led from a • wouldtaketoconvinceyouthattihis
::. Montgomery County courtroom man and this woman did those
::. screaming wildly moments after horrible things to those children, 1
she and Roher! Dale Aldridge were couldn't say It any better than those
: convlctedofsexuallyabuslngchlld- siX children did from that witness
•· ren at a suburban Huber Heights stand.
apartment complex last summer.
''They had the courage In' their
W
:_
Common Pleas J udge John · tender years to tell :,:ou the plain,
,._ Kessler scheduled sentencing for ugly truth of what we'll on last

Central America and the last five in
Nicaragua . . ·
The nun said she heard reports
after her release thaI the rebels who
beld her had killed 14 civilians In
whe(~.she

I!'

didn't say where she heard about the
killings.
She said the dead reportedly
ineluded nine construction workers,
two employees of the Natural
Resources Ministry, two coffee
pickers and a truck driver.
Some coffee pickers and construction workers in Nicaragua's war
zones are members of the Sand!nista militia and frequently carry
arms on the job.

File for marriage
GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples recently filed for marriage
licenses in Gallla County Probate
Court.
Michael D. Pa~quale, 20, Rt 2,
Gaal!lpolls, McDonald's employee,
and Daphne C. Barnett, 17, Rt. 2,
Crown City, student.
Rocky E. Frazier, 33, 307Upper
River Road, unemployed, and
ConnleS. Shaffer, l'i, Rt.1, Northup,
unemployed .
Johnnie J. McGuire, 26, R!. 1,
Northup, l!jllorer, and Mary A.
Church, 23, Rt. 1, Northup, at horne.
Dwayne A. "Layne, ~. Bidwell,
unemployed, and Kimberly S.

main concern

is

pro-

MlchaelFishers,a musicteacher,

master' s degree and 10 years '
experience earns $1B,ffi2.

Tribune - 446-2342 Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

'Mil@ II*""·M

11 0 1 4
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•J •armo le o h•&lt;
.., l iD•"·~ ·

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'U' """'~ ~'"'""
··· ·~ICI lor 11..,1

1• Bu""''' """' " ~
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...
. ..... "'""'"
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U Muo •&lt;OI '"'..,"""""
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tzw ..... ,,,..,.

,-, Mio&lt;OIIonoouo
\ ftW..,II~la Oo

PUBUC NOTICE
A Cou nty Public Heanng on
the Proposed Comprehensive
Soc•al Serv1ce Plan FY86·8 will
be held a! 900 A M on
February 12. 1 985 1n the Mc1gs
County Court All mteres ted
par11es and proV1ders should
anend

11110 11. 19 3tc

Public Notice

Paul E Kloes

Seoetat'y
( 12)27111 3. 9. 13. 41c

Anno unee111 ent s
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mila up
Georg8s Creek Rd.
Call

614-446-0294.

361

c........

II ~

~ .oQ•..,Io

11• G••!f'&lt;"·•

.. .""'. ."'.••"II,. .•. . . . . . I

&amp; I~

J79

Ou,o•O·"
llr.•ob •I D &lt;"
...,.....

Hoo•:• •

U• to 1~ ,...,,,
uooa1&amp; worto
'u ota lb Wa• ao
.

·~-

...

,r-...........

!ol~

'"""
•VfiO.()on ..

7TJ
Ul
11'1'!
'!t~l

..."'""'"
,., ...
~~~ .....

..

~ 19

c....

M

"""''"~

looo.,hll&lt;
• ..,,..

7 1. 1 Mo . .... .
1&gt;81 c ... &lt;•·"~

Help wanted part-time gen·
eral office duties, receptionest &amp; sales positiOn. Future
.potantiel tor full time . Sand

;etourr1o to Box 985 , Gallipo.:\~63!-

"' "c~

Acton-Models

FURNITURE. Beds, , iron ,
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chests, baskets. dishes .
stone jars, antiques, gotd
and silver . Write - M . D .
Millar. Rt.2, Pomeroy , Ohio

All ages for regional TV
commercials. experience
not necessary . Interviews
weak of January 28 . For
appointment call fi 14-890-

0222.

Situations
Wanted

Christian Singles,' pen pals,
friends. dates , 18 to 108 .
Box 189. Allegany NY

147o6.
Personal Care . Will take 3
elderly people to live in my
home with me &amp; my husband . Pleanty of TLC . Near
Cheshire on Gallia &amp; Meigs
line . 24 hour, care . Call

614-367-7148 .
lady to live in maintain
home partially care for
eldery lady .. Pay negotiable
upon inqui~ . Prefer lady
with no perSonal reaponli·
bilily. Call304 -773-5784or ·

-

17 Miscellaneous
Dozer work. land clearing,
landscaping, etc . Free estimate . Phone 614 - 992 ~

1 B Wanted to Do

tripping supplies . Wheat
lights, night lights. George

naw AVON . Drtmetic new
"rnings plen, profeaaional
new nles training. make up.
color analysis. unlimited
new growth potential. 304-

Serv1ces

&gt;lOG
&gt;I Oil
11 GO

anytime.

Middleport, Oh. 61 4-992- ·Person or couple to provide
custodial care for elderly
3476.
- - - - - -- -lc - men in his home. Prefer
BUYING RAW FURS . Beef someone who will live ln .
and Dear Hides. Ginseng and Phone 614-949 -2008 ofter
yellow root . Selling - 5:00p.m.

[ mploymenl

~" ~·•'"" ''&gt;&lt;&gt;~

7119 or 614 -446 -80JB "

Buying daily · gold. silver
· coina, rings. jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large currency. Top priceJ. Ed . B~,o~r ·
katt Berber Shop , 2nd. Ave.

only.

'"""""''"'"'' ~"

773 -5534 .
""''"·' """'.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

45769 or cell 614·992 7760.

Ono dOo "'""'~"

12

Help Wanted

446"3672

Giveaway

,.,~

~h·,.~~ · ......·~- ......, ---~J

ARMY NATIONAL GUARD .
Enlist, and you have a
Buckley,phone
614
-664
Balloons for Get Well , Anni~
pert -time career, educa •
4761
,houra
12-9PM
doiloy.
versarys, Binhdays, parties. ------~-lc- tional and retirement banef·
Singing Gorrilla . 4(:all BalParts. .good condition for its. t35,000 life insurance.
loons &amp; Co. 446·4313 .
1963 olds 98. Two rear ANO A MONTHLY PAY doors, one sliding aide door CHECK. 176·3960 01 1Gun shoot at Racine Gun
for 1977 chevy van. Call 800-642-36t9 .
Club every Sunday, 1 :00
304-773-6651 .
p.m . Factory chocfc;ed guns
JOIN THE LEADER. Tho
4

'llli
Jll
l17

wv

lho• Cnd o ln•

991 _.....,,. , • ..._

ne v......
Zst

"""A~cc

"' "'"' C•••••

••u Co.f•\' •

A··~CW•6 1 •

Wanted : Part-time e,;pe ·
rienced RN to work as
charge 8a unit nurse. Must be
Auction everY Fridev night at - flexible to work all shihs.
the Hanford Community Apply at Scenic Hills Nurs·
Center. Truckloads of new · ing Center. 8-12, Mon.·Fri
merchandin ev'ltry week. only.
Consigmentl of new &amp; used
merchandise always w«!'l· Wanted: experienced RN
comed. Richard Reynolds, charge nurse . Mon .- Fri .
Auctioneer . Call 304-276 - hours 3PM-7PM . Must be
3069 . .
flexible to work other hours
also. Apply at Scenic Hilts
Nursing Center . B-12,
9 Wanted To Buy
Mon .·fri only.
"

Street.

bylaws. on the th1rd
dav ot Jantli'lry 1985. at 4 00
p m lor the purpose o f elect•ng
dtrectors and the uansact•nn of
such othflr bus1ness as may
propefly corue before sa•d.

...... c......

·~·"

7 1 Com'"''
71
"···fouro"'onl
·

I

We pay cash tor late model
clean used cars .
!'h.e annual meR tmg of 1M .
Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc .
RtocKr1olders 0f The Farmers
Bill Gene Johnson
Bnn k. and Sav1nQ s Company of
secOnd

H lloon l ~·"'"''

1e .. "'".''" ' "" "'"''"''

t 1 ~""' "'"

LEGAL NOTICE

West

f"l'"""'ll ,,.,,.,,1........... /l .,tll'•'•

H MOl"''"''"

I I Go&lt;&gt;o•ol "o ul,.l
IIU&gt;&lt; Me~ "''

N0 11Ce IS he reby g1ven tHai

211

f /•t•"l" ''' f"'ll' '''"INIII&lt;•

.\

v.........o

:.:~~~-.~·:::.~........... ---------~ _ _ _ __j

14·H
•• . G• o••
U •h oO .T.,,o,...,

- Public Sale
8o Auction

8

Public Notice

7J

11

IJ.L.t ,.o&lt; &lt;&gt;&lt; •

H Wonl o , og flonl
· - ~~ ·hU &gt;p&lt;YIIOO lc&lt;flo•&lt;
• t ·h•hiM

, o Mo&lt;oo, tv • ce Roo"'

·j

.,
..""" '"' h"'
n . ...... ,,.~ ...

" '• •hlo orl•odl

"'"'' 'ott

I.

28 - ~.-1 ho~

..
...... oc .....,..,...... .
61"'··~·

~

llH,...n l "'l.,o
U Mob~oH o.._ l "' 1010

7 YoodSo loll&gt;•od •n •""•~•••
6 I'~~"' Solo

II H........ DIIG.,..&lt;h
II Cl, TV I ........ Eouo ~"'' "'

Typing: Need some typtng
done? Contact Mrs . Charyl

(Baird) Swain at 16141 266 1419 aher 5PM on week ·
days or anv time on
weekends.
Would lika.to. do babysitting
in my home. references . Call
614-379-2706 anytime.
Experienced carpenter, fin ish and cabinet work . Qual ity work guaranteed . Refer:~~~~o~9~' Mike Pohlman,

Ftna nml

676-1429.

Toke vou1 pick·lots of puppies. Cat\614-367-7773.
3 puppies, 6 waeka old. Call
614-266-1686.

11

Help Wanted

Avon

Occuional hbaby
sitter
neededinmy
ometowatch
7 01 1o yaor old for aubatltulo tNcher.
maby

21

Business
Opportunity

Ms.Wilcox,24,wasfound;u;;:r~d~~~·;::~=~·~--:~~ad~=ci~Le~w~i~s T~-~Bowm~~a:n:~.~31f.~~R't '~;2,:{~d~o~w~n~.~~~~1~6~0~4ii.~f+~~~~~~~~;~~:f:"'"~n~~~~i~to~w~n~~or~c11~~~w~t§i~+~~~~;,~W~;~=

•
" !ivecountsofrapeandfivecountso! with those children took away Ga llipolis, accountant, and Jan T.
gross sexual bnposltlon. Aldridge, forever the innocence of their McCormick, 35, 138 Second Ave.,
: ~.was found guUty "' s~ counts of youth."
secretary.
·~•· rapeandelghtcountso!grossS(!xual
Ms.
Wilcox
tes'tl!led
Friday
that
David A. Harmon,
l'i, Rt. 2, Point
The
bn
in 1 ed
1
• ImpoSition.
cr es vov
shewasnotlnvolvedlnthetncldents Pleasant, welder, anc! Gina T.
:; chlldrenunderage:UI.
and,badnokn,;."ledgethatanyofthe
Wolford, 24, Rt. 2, Vinton, factory
v"
:
The couple was indicted on ·chlldrenweresevuatlyabused.
worker.
.
0
:: charges Involving Iourcblldren, but
Aldridge test111ed Thursday he
: pollee have maintained that as had riever see!l nve of the slx
,: many as 15 children living at the children who testified.
.
The witnesses Included a 12-year- Marriage license
., a(lftrtment complex were victims of
• sexual abuse between July 8 and old boy whc testified that he and
POMEROY - A marriage llAug. 13 last. year.· Six children anotherboywef'!!forcedtohavesex
witih Ms. Wilcox. He said Aldridge - cense has been issued In the Meigs
• testl!led during the trial.
:
"She didn't do It," Ms. Wilcox's threatened to kill his mother and County Probate Court to James
I:lcmald Riffle, l'i, and Barbara Jean
: visibly shaken mother said as she brothers if be told anyone. ·
Hendrix, :io,'both of Syracuse.
' • left. ·
Other prosecution witnesses In·
:
As the courtroom emptied, sev- eluded an ll-year-old boy, a
:! eralofthechlldren'srnotbers,along 1(J.year-ok1 boy, an S.year-old boy
: wtl)l some friends and other and two 9-year-old girls _who said
: relati\Tell, gathered In the hallway theY were sexually abused.
: and rejoiced, tearfUlly.
During closing arguments, Ms.
Veterans Memorial
:
"We did It! We did It! Our kids Wilcox's attorney, Laurence Rab,
Admitted - Clyde' Tucker, Radumb as they thought said: ''This Isn't your average
• weren't
"·- : ... Uley were~ were ihey7-·· one·wori1an -criminai case!'-i:B:ause oi its heavy · cli1E; Piittr _.,\'iiJd, New-~Haven 1
~ l&amp;ld tollllltbel' • they bugled.
_reliance on tbeii!Btlrnoeyttchlldren w .va .; John Guinther, PomeroY .
Discharged - Normart Wood,
'" J::luJ1q her clolbla statement, and because Ultle physical evidence ·
LynneO'ow.
~ p~t proaecutor AJ181!Ia Flydwas presented.
.ii-I'

.

i

'as

6

Lost and Found

Found: Clasa ling. 198~
Gellis
Academy High
School. ·call Tammy at the
Tribune to identify. Coli
446.2342.
LOST: Beagle. one-crippled
rMr leg. Kerr-Harrisburg Rd .

Call 614-245 -5189 or 446·
4090.
LOST: :Z..6 mo . old 1ed &amp;
white Beagle pups. One red
coller. one blue collar . Ba·
twMn Kyger
Tutir.ay A_un .

a.

Call614-367 -7888.

1 ·Card of Th•nke
We would like to th1nk
all the friends 1nd relat!~!!

who doM!!d b!!'OO

Jor Estell Mink on

13, 1984.
Estell Mink and

Dee.

Famil

free

E•perioncod
cook.
kitchen
worker
. Apply
in person.
Holidoy Inn, Gallipolis. -No
phone cello.
Wente d, k1;yboard player
who olngo. To work with
'Tbt Sto_ve
_ Yst.oa_ Band ' To_
arrongo
an oudition call
614-245 -6868.
Opportunity : Ambitious
men or women evailebte for
Immediate employment.
Mmlngs opportunity • 300
per week to start. lg. national company. No phone
c:~tllo pNOM.

E.O.E. 1....,.vf-lng ol 417 2nd. AVa .
Room 18. Golllpollo. Mon.·9
to 12. Tue.- Sol. 10 til 2.
Dtfta oocordlngly.

46 Spac• for Rent

FOR RENT

1600 square foot com·
merc!a! building.
town Pt. Pleasant.

Phone 675-5000

..
'Meadowbrook
.
reforoncoo
·
3 04 676·
required.
coli
"
·
6030
·
Gino's, Point Pleeoant now
f
accepting applicot 1ona or
delivery
person. Muot hove·
own vehicle.
0 h 11 3 p. m '
No phone colla plaaoa .

established
accounlto
ces. plants and
retail stores .
Will take approximotelv
a13,000 cash. No selling .
10
st1ock
and collect $300
cash.
Wil
net approximately
per week ._ Writa. including
your telephone number ond
O&lt;ldrel$
withSt.
zip;NW,
ENTECH
910 Church
Hunts-.
ville, AL 35801 .

Autos for

1982 BUICK SKYLARK

4 Speed, Standard Tnns .. hcellent Con~ition.
(1111 bt at 221 Upper linr Rd., Galliptlii ,
WEEKDAYS 1:00-4:30
SUIMIT SEALED liDS TO. ·
•
, ........... lank ~iation

P. 0. Ia• U7, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.
Or at the Allow AchlrHs
·

~-::;~~;:1:!:~2~~1\\\~rt~~~ibid~~BtMrn.tl@
Far mort iltfor~on (all 446-0203

I,

�I

-----.

- ·· -

'

-:----+-

~-

,..

Times-Sentinel

21

- thll

Buainesa
'Opportunity

23 · Professional
Services

people you ttnow. and
to aend money through the
mail until you have tnveeti·
gated the offering.

KIT 'N''CAIILYLE

Real EsiHie
31

Income Tax.

Federal and

22 Mon11y to loan

bury, Oh Call 992· 7228.

--·-----

--- ~-

--,-;

til 5:00PM, after 6:00PM
call 614-245 -5859.

44

ee

llille. Cell 441-3111
814-2118-1552 .....

/r

Mlddlepon home priced to
sell ! And we mean priced to
sell!t Call 614-992· 6941 .

I

SAT., JAN. 19, 1985-9 A.M.
_CONSIGNMENT SALE
McCAULEY TRACTOR SALES

Three bedroom mobile
home. Utilltlts peld . One kid
••c•ted, no peta, drunkl or

HEA TID BUILDING &amp; PLENTY OF PAUING
1omtthtnt for horyDM-Now, Usod &amp; Antiquo-Weekly

:--

Door Prizes Given Every Saie - ·

42 Mobile Homes
for

Apartment
for Rent

FurnisMd 1pt .• 2 bdr, 243
Jackson Pike. redecorated,

$240
utilltioo pd. Coli
441·4418 41fter 7pm.

Rent~

""'r"" - lmmaculatf 2 bedrm bricl&lt; home. Kitl:hen
liY,;~/:.~~m~:odern appliances FuH basement central
Ac.,.(
Price $55,500 00 Call forappomtment!•

Renta ls

Call 614-843-5384.

Houses for Rent

SAT., JAN. 19, 1983
10:00 A'.M.

Real Estate for Sale .or Trade
for farm w1th tillable land, 3
bedroom rancher. Gallipolis

Ferry, 304·675-6851.

1% storv house, one acre
plus, partly · furnished, city
water, Gallipolis Fe.-ry.

phone 304-675-2760.

3 bedroom, double garage,
electric, small down
payment assume loan. 304·

all

675-7753

•

House on Glen-Summit Rd.
Completely redecorated.

Call 614-388-9909.

Furnished house S210, wa·
ter paid, 2 bdr , 1136 2nd
Ava. Gallipolis. Call 446 4416 after 7PM.
2 bdr house with fireplace
near town, S235 mo. Call

446-6610.

Fof sale complele beehives
and misc. accessories &amp;
Sears house "dehumidifier .

Coli 446-0501.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale_

house. 3 mi. from

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm. roiiBge klCaled alOng Central- Avenue. •
Nal gas heat, city wamr arrl ,...., Pnce $24,000
•

•
•
•

PRICE REDUCED 1111 2 BEDRII. HOM( located tust outside •
city along Rl 141 Inclosed flO'Ch. NICe l!i!fden area, dose to •
City $31,900.00.
•

•

BRAND NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME With famoly room and lormat •
dmmg room, focal!!d withm Plants S.D, penty private, nat gas, •
wbfp Pnce $59.000 00

, ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES

: SUNDAY, JAN. 20, 12:30 P.M.
lew Location

- A New Public Auction House on
lloute 50 live miles west of Athens. annex to Athens
~ivestock Sales.
!ltd Silver money, dollars, dtmes Quarters, nockels and olh
1!rs, furmture edra mce pnmrllve smk , step back cup-

boards, round lables, oak and walnut; two wooden 1ce boxes,
wall telephone, Hoos~er, Flatwall and Baker cabtnets, was h
stands, pte safe, walnut desk, small roll-top desk, 7 foot stde·
iloard, good highboys marble top pieces. hogh oak beds, oval
:Qiass chma cabmet, 11on and brass bed, good uon beds, Man
tn Mountamcha1r, WICker swmg and more w1cker p1eces, 36
lfrawer file cabtnet, large famtmg couch, plus a small sales·
Jnan's sample faotong couch, church pew, chtld's pressback
locker and others, dressers and much more.

~iscelltntous: Old clocks. two set sle1gh bells, 75 pound an-

.vil. Enterpme

coffee m1ll, 16 secton wrought 11on fence.
.,.ooden churn , stone churh, ch01ce apple butler ketlles.
Jrunks, _cow bells, school bells, bulchenng ketlle, wooden
'tllanes. carbtde hghls sad 11on, tool bo•. buck saw, lamps,
)lee smokers. 25 or more stone tugs , many w1t~ wnlmg from
vanous places .. old blue crock, set of White House tugs, small
):ollectton of lnd11n arrowheads
1lld guns, long muzzle ball nile, double barrel muzzle loader

~nd many more.

•

lll11s: Depression. one p10ce slow blue, miScella neou s
'!liOCes of all ktnds
•
This will be a
for evetrvonte.
]lttces are
i 1 and others are
)lot. ·Also thts will be a becinninc monthly sales- ev,.ry month. Come out and see our new locatton.
]lenty ol mts. heated buildin&amp;. bathrooms. etc.
•,
No1 responsible lor accidents.
Tlfmi.
Cash or Check with positive I.D.
•

..
't

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
ASSOCIATE: FRANK HUTCHINSON
Elts Available.

••

NEW USTING- Only 5 mmutes from Rio Grande, approx. 11
acres: wrth 3 bedrm. modern home- PiiCe $58,000.00.- -

•

PURCHASE FROII I TO 5 ACIIES wrth ths 3 bedrm. laon

•
•

home located along Rl 218, HarnSDn Tw~ Pnced from
$50,000 to $75,000.
'

•
•
•
•

lOCATED WITHIN TH( 'lli.LAGE OF RODNEY - 2 bedon.
cottage with 86'x202' kt Nal!!i!S FA furnace, King coal and
woodbumer, septic tank, GaHipol~ city school distncl Priced to
sell' $20,000.

•
•

MOBILE HOllE LOT - located appro• 2 m~es below Ell'eka
$4,000.00

•

NICE 2 tw 3 BEDRM. COlONIAl DUTCH HOME - located
across from new courthouse. Excellent location lor attorney's

•

off•ce'

•
•

COMMERCIAL BLDG - 700-block ol 2nd Ave Purchase 01
lease lot 22,620 SQ It; bwldmg 7,'$0 SQ It Excellent cond1·
lion

• ~~~

::::::c·.:c-'·-·• 3 dr. Cell 446-

1 4~~.:70 all elec:1ric trailer,

992-8723.

Calf 614·256 - Two bedroom, all electric
homo with full basement,

Repossessed!

Several to

choose from $500 cash
~epo&amp;it. · take over payments E·Z credit check No
charge for delivery Call
bank rep. 614 -772 · 1220 or
614-773 -3926

1983 Joy Skvliner 14x52.
completely furnished, ex·

cept bedrooms. set upon
private lot. Call 446 -7200.

Schult 50th Anmversary Re·
bate $1.000 . Rebate on any
Schultz purchased . French
City Mob•le Homes Call

466 -9340

1985 Sect1onal 24~~.:40 , 3
bdr., 2 full baths, fireplace .
Delivered in set. 818.600 .

French C1ty Mobile Homes.

large patio and carport on
wooden area. One mile back
of Racine. $200.00 per
month plus deposit. Call

614·949-2849

1- ---,-----,--,2

bedroom hou1e in
Middleport. all utilities tn·
eluded. Furnished or unfurLarge

niohed. Call 614-992-2381
or night, 614-992·2609.

2 bedroom. living, dining, .
and sun rooms, one bath, full
buement 222 N Th~rd in
Middleport. $240.00 month
plus security deposit. No
pets. Call614-992-7437.

5 room house end bath,
trailer spot, sleeping rooms,

304-676-6720.

1------ - - - -

Call 466-9340

33

Farms for Sale

5acMfpflM
THIS ONE YOU WllllOVE!ICUSTOMBUILT FIR SIDED HOME HAS
3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS OAK CABINETS IN AVERY EFFICIENT
KITCHEN A,NDERSON WOOD WINDOWS, HEAT PUMP PLUS
WOOD BURNER. 40 FRUIT TREES,NICE GARDEN SPACE HOME IS
PICTURE PERFECT INSIDE AND OUT $54,000

for Rent

mineral right.!, good timber
Call alter 8, 614-3677147.

2- 2 bdr. mobile homes.
completely furnished. Call

60 acre farm m Bodford
Township. recently drilled

2 bdr. trailer compete tv
furnished, ell utilities paid,

gas well
5pm

WEST •

UNCI IIOVH

EAST

""~·~~~~u~nit~t~t·~·~-~:~u~..~d~t~a~M~ ~~otte...tte.
v•. 22101. , ~., '•
804-173-8841.
,._
--::;-

~

electric

---~

Fire wood for 1611, delivered,
304-571-25,84

+H5
+J
• KIOS42
.J763
tK9S
tJJ072
+KID
+AQ91
SOUTH

Corol 'a Conery, 232 a_. .,
dole Road. Camelot, Cher· •

1979

Tree

F1rmers Log

Fir-ood 120.00 piCiwB
lo.d. •30.00 d.IWered. c..,
304·175· 6762 or 875·
2991 .

Skiddtor, 3,000 houro, 4 and
m1nual. 3113 De-

.9 '

COMPLETE ONE STOP

•

- .KlfBT 03
til
+J 7 2

Vulnerable: Botll
Dealer: West

Opening lead·

64 Miac. Merchandl111

Check Our
Low, Low Prices

1 wood heater with blower.
2 wood end coal hee•ers. 4
oa• hhters, eeverel hundred
palre of ledies erkl childrens
new shoes and rubber boots
&amp;Oc to *2 .00 . Leon Flea
Market 304 -468 .,1672.,

•4

Large aelectlon Antique
Pocket Watches, fully gua·
ranteed. Herry Siders Jewelare, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

FERTIUZER

WE WILl SAVE YOU
MONEY

•
•

304-676 -3857.

(

••
••
••
••
••
•••
••

VINTON: EXTRA CLEAN - Clean, cool and convenient 2
bedrm home located along Mam Street Refn&amp; and many
other ilems of furniture will IJl With house. Ideal for newlyweds
and pnced at only $22,500.

2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD. with Raccoon Creek ~ontage.
$7,500 each.

2 BEDRM. COTTAGE, located along Whrte Ave. Buy now for
$8,500 ()()
VICTORIAN BRICK HOME - lower Rtver Road Mar aay
School Outbuildings and 1 acres. Buy for $37,500

S.gl1111111 ol flit

VINTON: Brick l·floor buildtng. formerly used for ban~
Reduced to $42,000.00.
VINTON: Commercial bu1~1ng. w~h 2 apts upstairs.
For~ used as hardware ~ore. Reduced to:
$28, .00
.

Ranch style, lg caiJ)Oit,
and on-ground
swimrrong pool. Price reduced to $38,000.00:

446-9669.

DONT OVERIDOX THIS BARGAIN 1n Eureka. 2
bedroom home with 2 baths and lots of room for
expaiiSIOn located tust off Rl 7 near dam Reduced to
$20,000.00.
used for 3 or 4

M~GHEE

mosl
M. l. "'IHr llcGH((

Three room furnished apertmant. No pete. Call 614·
949·2253.
Unfurnished apenment for
rent in SvrecuH. Call614-

992-7889.

~I serviCes.

walkmg diStance from

APA~TMENTS.

,~UtpoQtr. ~klo

SEWNG JM IIUl mAll IS Ill IUSINESS...
All All ill
• ...
MIIIPIIIOIII

BMR 444 - OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL! 3 BR ranch situated
on 2.35 acre lot m/1 Pos~ble 8%loan assumption to qualified
buyer. Includes lg. eat-m k1tchen. separate. ut1ilty room. famtly
toom -wtth wb I! replace. Call lor an appotntment today!
BMR 446 - NEW LISTING - In town local1on mcludes 3
BRs, llvmg room, dmmg room, bath &amp; basemen! lots of carpet Gas' heal Pnced at $29,900. Call for det311s

N

Nice 2 bedroom apt, unfur·

Real Estate General

Apt m Henderson, 8160 00
partly turnlahed, 304-8751972 after 6:00.

EAL ESTATE
1----4A~~20b --~--~
Sonseerhay
(Sonny) Garnes Cathy Clarfl a.rdetie
Assoc.
Assoc.
U6-27DU:venints 3U-8! L8J~eni!'&amp;S

1982.

Furni:l-.ed

••
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FOUR IN ONE BUSINESS- EX&lt;on gas statoo n,
three
re staurant and
w1th

I

Fumiohod room. •125. UtMi·
tiel, range. ref. Shere bath
Men only 919 Sec • Galllpo-

GOOD AS NEW - 3 bedroom r01ch Ev"!!h~g • ~ bptDI) shatlf. New
carpoling won~~&gt;ws and &lt;1Jor5. paont, paper, elc Owi!IJ is """"'gaway and
needs 1o sel Ill• home. IIOW!! living room ~rge Ntchen ar&lt;l dinong orea.
Garlllt ()ty schooi1 Good IIIJgh!J&gt;rhood. f'ncOO m11!e 405.
·

46 Space for Rent-

STATELY HOllE - 658 acre ol wm!Ond and 16 acres m/1can at.&gt; be
purchst&lt;l For!lllll enlly. liwlg room and lor""l d~~g room, roodern
kill:hefl. lamiy room w/Wb fir!pla&lt;e 3 BRs. 2 baths. 2 cor ga.agt. 8'llo
&lt;tleresl rate a'""mable Shown by aPIJOII!Imenl Prtced ., 00s

lio: 448-4418 after B p.m.

Mobile home lot. e7&amp; weter
pa1d, 4th &amp; Neil, Gallipolis
Mobile home space 1 mile
out Neighborhood Rd Cell

Perk, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Cell

614-992-7479.
CommerCii! apate for rent.
1600 square feet . Suit1blw
tor offices. studio, small
buliness. plua ahop. New
Haven, W.Va .• in town Call

614-992-7481 .

Nice trailer space on Rt 7.
neer town Call 814·317·

0232 or 446-4215 .

49

For Ll!ase

SQ
I
,
troom s, 24x24 canopy over pumps Garage has
two 10&lt;10 overhead doors and on e !Oxl 2 All on
l00'xl30' corner lot Inc luded on pnce are three
hoiSts, alig nment rack, Su n computers, t11e changer brake drum eQUi pment and other garage
tools Also. walk·m cooker Call lm appointm ent to
v1s1t lh1s successful busm ess. Owners want torellle Asking $1B5.00 D
-

NEW LISTING - COZY 2 STORY HOME IN TOWN
- Perteclfor young couple N1cel y dec orated an d
well kepi Move nght in 2 BR, l 'A bath, I!Vmg
room dmmg room and eat-In kttchen. Fenced
yard 'w/ garden Reasona bly pnced at $4 1.500.

the 20's
I

; 6.7 ACRES- More or less of vacant land 25t50 bUilding w/con
crete floors Gas IS available Owner wrll1ng to.taketra1ler 1n onfrade

C~y 5thools. Call lor more detJt ls
SIIIIIIG IN 20 ACR£5 Of 'tiOOOIMO- Co olen., MY homeleatunnga
Sllia"'m w/001 tub
by an open lormaiiMng and !ln"f! room
w/ atnum llxls. massrve stone fireplace a rren oomPiete litd11m and a
brea~il5t noo~ 2'h ballt~ 3 bedrooms w/master 0111t, - g cltas loa
patiO area. laundry and mud room Unlioished biisement 2 1'.111 garage
vegelable garden m &lt;fwartlruit tr= Siwn by

.,,pped

OWNER NEE OS OFFER - Has 2 ho mes and must
sell thos spacious 3 bedroom home 1n town and
good neighborh ood lor chold re n Offers large lam
ol y room woth stone fireplace, l 'h balh, eQuipped
krtc hen, dmmg

,_._t

li'l•g room. off,;, or den. Noce ktland sl!nge llli~on~ City schooi1 Shown
by aiJI)l Prtced ktw 50s.

room .nat gas heat and cent arr.

Pnced at $53,000
AN OUTSTANDING PROPERTY- AHract1ve con·
tempom y located on an 8 acre knoll on an excel·
lent neighborhood Includes forma l domng, sun
deck oH the lamol y room. very noce ktlchen with
snack ba1 . 3 or 4 bed 10oms olhce or den, 2'h
baths, pl us a full basement BONUS' New 30x46
steel buoldong $69,000 Owne1 woll help fmance.

HILLTOP VIEW FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT - 122
acre unit has ! 2 yr old 1400 sq ft home Full ba
semeht, forced air furii ace wtth wood add on , cen
tral a11, 2 baths, 3 bed rooms. All Quality butlt
Good water supply from 2 wells Spnng develop·
ments w1th extra pu mp lor home ~se and liVes·
tock 27x30 barn cnb 60-70 acr.es hay and pas·
• ture la nd balan ce m woods and butldmg area.
Coal and other mme rals incl uded in pnce

'
IIORIIIUP .IIIEA- 3BR home. large modern eat-it kitChen Famo~ room.

water. sewer

BLUE JEAN COUNTRY- Get awa y lromthe noose
of the crty when you buy thrs newer bnck ranch
on George's Cree k Excellent cond1hon msrde and
out featunng full bsmt 3 BRs, slepsave1kitchen,
dm rng room and l car garage Huge garden area .
woth frUit trees Scen•c country voe w $53.5QU:'

HAS IT All - 8 acre' bottom land I S acre pas
tu re. 25 acre woods , pond, stream, green house,
good mod~rn home pnvate locat1on and only 9 5
moles lo Holzer Hosp1tal ~ne ed at $57.500.

MOTHERS OF BAll PLAYERS wtll appreCiate
where I hiS home IS loc ated Close to the ballfoelds
and schools You'll also love the space 11 offers 4
BRs, 217 baths large lovmg/ donong 1oom. eat-in
kitchen. fa m1 ly room and lois of storage on top of
!hat Plus 12x 2! screened on porch and Buyers
Protectio n Plan Can't moss at $49,500

IAIIO COIIIRACT- lll'b lltrwn Payment Ill% lnleresl Rale- 3950
acres d vacant lartd ~ack walootlDis of wmlland AW&gt;terfal Secluded
and prNale lllacklop road i'Ticed $20,000.
SECLUDED PRIVATE NEIGHBORIIOOO within Willl&lt;ing dolance lo

dowrmwn and CliY scooots. l!ridllt'l-iMI
room with fireplila! and a brealltloki1g

I
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II
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~~~~~!:~~~~~J,k;~~wit:h~~~·~··n~~~~~
recently-·1~~~~§~~E~~==~ WCtl
tllilt-11
home has

barbecue

llf•.

"""[J!Idscaped ktllo accent

RIO GRANDE - 2 •• Q \.-0 ome w/ 4 BR, 2
baths. eal-lq kotcS• •. .. oilY roQ m. garage
$55,000

ll!e botuly ol this qualrty "'"'" Give us • call today

15 ACRES IIOIIE OR LESS~ Sprilgfield lownshop.- ltllteral nghls

w......

ODDD USED APPUANCES
dryer•. retrteer•toro, ,.._, Bluoggo Applle-1, U - Alvor Ad.
bloide ltone C - Motel.
114-441-7388.
County Apptlonce, Inc.
Good uled ...-anM• end
TV Mto Open eAM to &amp;PM.
Mort t.oru lat. 441·1111,
127 3rd. Ave. OeHipolto,
DH.

v.e.,.

fumlluro. •
...... ...... o.tlon of Q. .l:
tty furnltu,.. 1211 !ootorn
Ave., Qolltpotlo.

n

o-\.-V

0

"j91j FAIRIIOIII llilatLE HOllE - !4x52 on ,......,,_ On a
61 Houaehold GIIOd1

BARGAIN PRICED LUXURY HOME -Thos os the
most home for the money on the mar ket today. Fo·
nest quality constru CtiOn •· matena ls. Slon e
and flame 2 story ·~
1 bedrooms. for·
mal dming, 217 batt~- _, , tst roomwotb pleasant
VIC I' of the back lawn. lull' base ment, 2foreplaces,
tam1ly room, hardwood floor s wrlh e-.pensr vew/ w
carpetm g

OlDER HOME &amp; 30 ~··· · l·O o~on Townsh1p
3 BR, LR, KitchenS· " . " "; at $21 ,000

with ll!e proper1y Oriy $7,500,

'

crty

Perfect place to ra1se child ren.

NEW LISTING ON 86 ACRES- Good locatoon for
home Has two. barn s 2 large ponds. wells, some
40 acres of wooded area Bala nce m pasture and
reclaomed area N1ce la ymg lan d Tobacco base
reported located 2 5 m1 les from Mmerv1lle on
Cham bers Rd Pnced at $2&amp;,500

1.6 ACRES - More or less, 3 bedroom mob1le home, atso 2 add l·
tiOnal mob1le home hook-ups Kyger Creek School D1str1ct Pr1ced m

446-1340.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

GOOD INVESTMENT- WILL PAY FOR ITSELFDoubiU. ouse - 5 roo ms and bath on each Sid ~
Both 1n mce conditoton One Side Is attractiVely
furniShed . Furmshmgs tncl ude ra nge, refngera·
tor. washer / d1yer, aor cond•tooner, 2 bed rooms
and llvmg room. You can ll v m onestd e and let the
other Side make lhe payments ThiS IS a go od op
portunoty- 4 blocks !rom cl!y park Sod11ig IS gua
ranteed for 50 years

GREEN ACRES - Newly tal]leled 3 bedroom,IOOdem kitchen and lining
room comb with slidong !IJors, IMng room. ball\ lauoory room, ""~' car
garlllt ()ty 5tlms. Gas heat ~. rondiboti&lt;~e

Coll446·3844 after 7PM .

area,
tieo. Coli PJ' 448-1818
.

2 BEDROOIIIIOIIL£ IIOIE located along Hazel Ridge ~. 25
acres, more or less, with ntee prden att!a and wooded area
Pnced,$27,500.
·

109 ICIIS IDeated m lAwrence Co. near "
ll!da. Colis less lhln $lXl per ecte Buy now lor $32,000.

~

nished, downtown,
$176 .00 month. plus utili·
toeo. 304-675-4624 after
5·00 PM.

WE HAVE A· HOllE AND PERFtCT LOCAnON for a lamtly
located almost ICitl5S '""" Washington School 3 bedrm
home, 2 balhs, 2 k£hens1nid!lol WhiCh IS Wide and 'deetJ ,
enough lor e-den arrJ swrmming pool. Needs some W«~

NEW USTIIIG -

Beth Null 245-9507
Steve McGhee
446-1255

8221 .

lflYWJIOO PIOP£1!Y .:. .S.JQQIIIs and-hath d&lt;bvn aod 4
rooms anifiiith ufJibiiS.localed ~ong 2nd Ave Buy now for •
$17,000. Price reduced!!
'

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm home along Smithers S1 15'x20'
famiy rm. Some oppliances with homa Buy Ill for $28,000 00.

M~GHEE

and Gallipolis. 814 ~ 441·

NEW USTING 4th Ave. Off-street parking, ·""'" matntamed lol $26,000

- 2S-~.!St.-St;.eet.,.

mobilo

bath, e190 mo plul utili-

NEW LISJING - 2 bedrm. Ql!tage with extra klt. Buy allllll'
$29,900.00.

..

·~wt·

home1, houses . Pt. PleeMnt

' 500 Uoc1&lt;
Comfortable 3-4 bedrm. cottage.

c..,
-~~-··
l'lllint

742-3171
MMR 539- Owner super an&lt;~us to sel th~ 4 bedroom, 2 bath
hom~ 01mng room, eat-1n k1tchen, small yard wrthoutbuild1ng. RE·
OUCED to $15,000
MMR 552 -located on Leadmg Creek Rd 3 bedroom ranch w~h
stone fireplace tn hving room, lull basemen( l!i!rage N1ce country
setting. $35,000.
MMR 55L- Executive all bnck home on ltncoln H1ll ~bedroom~
2 baths, ~rge 36x15 hvtng room. d1nong room combo Famtly room
w/fireplace. Full basemett Call today. Shown by ap(t
MMI 555 - Ovenookmg Oh~ RIVer. Urge 2 slo!y home 1n Middleport on Fronl St. 4 bedrooms, dmmg room A ~ priQ! of
$25,000. '
MIIR 554- Price Reduced- Coklmal home on Wehe Terrace 3
bedrooms, sitttng room, family room. Ahome with alol of possibility.
NOW $28,500.
MMR 557 - REAUY REDUCED! Owners say for us tl sell th~
home now Features 3 bedrOO""' d1nmg room, large utility, play
room or sew•ng room NICe lot in MlddlefXJfl on Beech st Give usa
call. Ready for you to move inlo fpr ONLY $~.000.
MMR 556 - In RuUarrJ, a flOSS'bfe VA loan assumption on th~
home. 1.redf!:&lt;l_ms,dimn,g room".@l steam lltial Nice yard ~rth
cham link fence. Sells for $42,000
MMR 537 - Super neat and dean ranch home. Brand new carpet throughout 3 bedrooms, mamtenance free outside, gantge.
Look at th~ one, you'll really fall1n love w~h it Selb for $36,500.

y,., Sp1clelr

l1oker-Auctionnr
Call 446-0552 Any1tmt

992-7481.

-~---

3 B£DROOM HOllE -

By1appointment · except electric, good loc•·
after lion Call 446-8658.

~ud·

--

•adaJed lor woodburner, leoced yard

614-843-6372

"Rent~

sot your tllumbe bandy,

up to

Ul.

2 bedroom apartmenta In
('lew Heven. Newly ramodeled. In town. call 814-

BEAUnFUL BRICk 3 BEDROOM HOME wrth 21\ acres, 1yrs
okl Just off Bidwell-Rodney Rd Elec heat pump. fireplace,
cent vacuum .system. $70,000.

APPROX. TWO AND ATHIRD ACRES wrthtn city hmlls.
Zoned commerc~l. Along Rl 7 Pnce reduced to
$20,000.00

42 Mobile l:lomes

75 acres hunting cabin, all

call

headboarde • 38 •

5 room epartment for rent.
Coli 814-985· 3310.

-~-- ---·~~

ties negotiable. Day
992-2381, evenings

PUBLIC AUCTION

AND USED

~­

. +BIS3

end Cening luppl•....
price lot.

e•

•

•

$4,500
1393

.AQ8
-&amp;.,!-Q~.!:~~ -

stan. When Eut jump-raised his
·
one-heart bid to
SOuIIi; · passed.
When four hearts came back around
to bim, he bid lour spades, promptly
.doubled by West.
The opening lead was the four of
hearts, and rm sure you m~de the
same play tllat Fazli did - you piit in
tile
of hearts. When tha,t

Picken• - d fumltun. 304·
075·11483 or 07&amp;-1450.

...utlful oolld dorto oek well

•••et

wnw tor ''"

~~roo~m.~~~;;baths.~.~we~;,~~~·~::~:.·~~.~~~-~-~ • -

..-· PUBLIC AUCTION

.:
"HOUSEHOLD"
QUeen SIZe bedroom sutte, roll-away bed, records &amp; tapes, 2
Wall ClOCkS, tWin bedS, WOOden high Chair, standS, WIC ker
su1tcase. won, 110nmg board, wooden cha11s, shetvmg, cloth ·
lng, hot plate, 5 gal Igloo water cooler, donetle table &amp; 4
cha~rs. blankets, boots, fans, pots &amp; pans, la mps, love seal,
ltereo, globe, 35mm Argus camera, metal detector a11plane
''IJodel, 01llam p, piCture, dresser, m1&gt;er, Kasmo PAsyslem 12
lg speakers), toaster and more
••
"ANTIQUES OR COLLECTIBLES"
lionel tram·engme with 5 cars &amp; track, 2 w1cker cha11 s, PIC·
lore
,
,
and more.
BROWNING
;:;;~o·u;;;,; &amp; I. 0. McCOY

u you've

1·12·U

64 Mlac.

•
•

purchaser.
NEW LISTING- 3:"., ·- .. ,
picturesque Wllow

•

i.oated at D.J.'s Trading Post. 923 S. Second Ave. ,
Middleport, Oh. This is from Crows house in Polileroy arid Kim Browning has sold home and moved.

NORTH

+102

cover up the Eut and West cards and
see if you can play today's hand u
well u Jan-E-Alam Fazli of Paki·

fromoo no.
klnu ,,...,. teo.
lion of t.lroom aultea.
rockera. metal cebinetl.

Sunday

•

It floor space. Sprinkler system Complete~ carpeted ServiCe
elevator. Modem 11 """'Y way!' Flnancong available to QualdiOO

1---------

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•

COMMERCIAlii.DG.: llowniDwn Galllpol~ Approx. 4,000 SQ

4:00 and 6 ·00PM at 614·
949-2103.

The

Firewood dellv1r1d. Call
876-20711 or 171· 2018. .

Shutting down
communication
By Jamn Jaeelly

full or twin, •&amp;8., firm, t418.
end t78. OUHn 1011, t1 9&amp;.
4 dr. cheoto, •4B. I dr.
•59.

Farm land for rent 3 .7 acres
on old Rt. 33. Call between

Have somtthinc you want to soll7 Brine it to the Patriot
A~ctton Bam and we'll sell ot for vou. Consignmen1s ac·
~tPted from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
•
Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctioneer
·245-5152 - 388-8249
Finis
Isaac - 388-9370

I

W. Va . .

mett,.....,

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

- ---·

"'--

1?4 Miac. Merchandlae

dryer wortoa -d.
•150. Call448-0813 ofter I
114·317·02114.

MattretMa Of' box aprlngs.

port on At. 7.

SANDYVILLE, W. VA.

..

w-.
up to
Hutch....
Bunlc bod complote wit~
mattr....a, *275. and up to
U95. Beby bo&lt;lo, t110 .

dope. Cell 814-387-0111.
3\'1 mile• South of Middle-

44

-

II 1 Houaehold Goods

I

back porch. carpeted and
jnsullated. on level lot, no

In Southern School District.
Mod1fied A -frame on 6
acres Fully carpeted with
wood burner FHA. VAA or
conventional loan will buy lt.
Owner movmg out of state.

--

~---

utlttflt pd, share

adults,

5th . St m Racme, 1 floor, 3

$27 ,500. Call 614-949·
2933

--

Poritero_y -Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

1 bclr opt., 2 bel! opt.,
•1110-UIO. Cofl 304·17&amp;·
· 7213 675·6104 or 175e3Dv :'",....

bdr .. large kitchen. enclosed
heat

-· ·

both. I072nd. Ave. Golllpo,
flo. Coli 441-4411 oftor
7PM.

Remodeled 2 bdr vinyled
home, carpeted, 2 acre.,

heating bills-wood

----~""""""':-

Ap1rtment
for R11nt

1224

AUCtiON

~

Fumlol!ed efflclenc:y •110,

Fool'&gt;.

Open House· new moaeo.

.. .

1986

Trailer for rent nMr

I HI\Te

---.:.:.t_.. __ ~c.:-.;_--'---.......--

•

13,1986

EvergrHn. Call

~leN

. ~- ~--

~

3 bdr. mobile
from HMC on

-

/

up. Caii1 -614-8B8-7311 .

Public Sale

----

-

~

for Rent

b1g country home, 3
bUilt on yoUr lot,-$16.9'00

8

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

42 Mobile Home•

Homes for Sale

·v81,,- 0f'j \l'i-ffffilihc.on, 1;;.·;:;;: ~ in;,Jul.ata d.
new paint. attached garage.
gas outdoor gnll, awnings,
many extr.. CaU 446-2583
state. Wallace Russell. Brad·

-

. ..

. .

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Three bedrooms, central air,
vinyl wall paper, carpet

vou

-...-

.

-~...:.-......... _-,..._r·---~-·

rented kt1 ~ co1y o:hoollillrict Oltlr SUllO.

twmiiM I'IOt'fm - 641 IIWtl A"' 2!lory lmte or can be """'
as 2 rot'Ub. lJ~ge modern ltldtal. 3 ,.. 4 IUrtoms. lormal dintrtl and
IMni room Nice bact&lt; pllio Also a 14x70
pd shape. A
"""'ed arprt Priced mll!e 40&lt; Sluwn by -tbolb'll ll1y $450.00

motile-"

l!lllal

IOCAftD IN coUrrriY - lR. 3 BRs. ltldtal, bolh,llilily room. cedar

- .ltyof, .
01 more or less. 2,.. 3
todroom ""*'
2 ""'"" ..........

- - . . '"" c:arpeled, " ' - . - " ' . - r,
111 milO outbuildin&amp; garden, 16 acra 'KIISIIIIor $32.0110.

tMD atiiiMCI -Marne l'ome on .65 ICIO
~ 1~ bllh, IMna room, kitchen. &lt;liliiY rnom.llinl

be llllld "" l.rnily ...... ~ and drytr &lt;~elUded. l'licoiiiDL

mttm LDCATIOI -

Wallili-., 111 Iii -

-la!nilyrroom.
'**'I room.IIOflroltop.

2

::;.'"' . ..

-

2

I

llblem 4

blll!s.built..,_IMI'Croom.~
lnil'*.
sa-... porch,'"""""'·

~::~2:::_-_lalr:-..,·.~..-oo~.:::
.;
··-~ooooc

•

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56 ACRES IN GREEN •s";Q.l·{)t RT 538 Sold
for $75.000.
·

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CHAROLAIS HILLS- R•· · home w/loads of
room AbedroomI s-O-l· 0 I me rn ber mclud;
ui'g m-laws Pool. . ""'"'· 12 ac. Brealhtakmg
vrew.

· -l·O· w/ oak wood ·
BIDWELL- Beaulil"s' ··o
work large porch 1 • _.. •"' ·000
RT. 35 WEST - Clc•· •· '
Eat·tn kotchen. Fam1

S-0-l-D

3 BR bt·level

0-

PATRIOT- 2 story hrS-l-0 OR, FR, Ea l·tn
kitchen. Ntce lot. $21 •

I 2 STORY REMODELED Hnu&lt; "'o'"HIRD AVE.NICe deep lot. 3 s-O-l- oom , carport
JAY DRIVE- Ranch r•s-·o-::(.0 room ,eat·ln
I $58
000
k1lchen. $40.000.
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LIST WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER.
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1
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IN GALLIA COUNTY

-~Ois.:.~Ejc.~nJLS-fA
AYJ_Q.... D
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-

I

SPRING VALLEY - R•-'•· ·o ome w/ 3 BR, 2
bath,eat-•n kitchens-O·l· liv•ng room, ftreptace BUYERS PR . • uoti!N $61 ,500.
RENTAL PROPERTY II Tn•"'o· Duplex on 2nd
Ave. Each un1t has
hen. DR and utll·
~Y- Plus ranch hor... " ' &gt; ~R. bath. $44,000

S-0-l·

file

Wlsetrwl. BloW 446-3~

J

CALL EVf~NG
~~~:!:;,.~2::&amp;s~~~
446-3643
GAll: =-E-=~-~~:.~6-'

...I.R,
..
dfl....;......
_ _ _ __._-Jbmorrl5.1n1Jrmm.
_ _ _ _ _• •I
•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .,. _ _ _._ _
..
orrt.Uif.LIIIfl~iiij;i;;i;;i;;iijl.i;;i;;i;;
....iiiiiHiiii.;;id~ ••••,

,
:

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·'

~-

.

---

. ..- --

-~

----

-'.

Ohio-Point. Pleeunt. W. Va;

,)
54

56

Misc. Merchandise

Pets for Sale

6.1

Ohio-Point

Farm Equipment

64

Hey •

84

Grain

Mi:~Mf hay for Ula. never
wet . ., ,5!1 bolo. Call 446·
40&amp;3.

Hey •

Page-0-6-The

W.Va ..

84

Grain

Oood hoy for ..le. 11 .50
bole, 171 bolet. CtH tvenlngo S14-388.·8111.

uround .. , corn, •1.00 per
hun*td, bring own Mcko.
304-178-3308.

Hey

&amp;

Grain

Times-Sentinel
64

Hay •

:I

Grain ·

.71

II

I' Ill

L1il 11ll

Autos for S•te

72

Truck• for Sale

1874.Chovy pickup with
topper, 304·171·1153.

81

Boata•nd

For Nfe.large round bele1 of . Purine "super Block 500 lb
US. 50 . Yougor Farm
Supply. Rt. 36, Soutlloldo.
2331.

• Hutlng

Low-line Big John 14 fl.

IAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondHionoll"-tlmt guo•

CARTER'I PLUMBING
AND .HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pint
Gtlllpollo, Ohio

or

Reel Ettete General

itf}l}f.\/ll fi}it f!l THAT SCRAMBL£0 WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~· by 1-tenrl Arnold and Bob Lee

Improvements

Cell 441-2322.

w.v•.

Horne

Motors for 8•1•
jo)1n boat, 18 HP Mercury
motor with tr•ller 1nd 1cc .

l)ty 120.00. Coli 814·742-

·Real Eatate General

76

rantH. loCIII

--

furnl-. F - .-tlmotto. ~no 814·448 · 3888 or
114"441 ' 4477
Coli oolltct 1-814·237·
.
D.Da..-.-.m, to 5 p .n, , c .. I Jl!\!1.' ! PLI,!MJ!IN'll!o HUT.
I I It m 0 n
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 3118. Golll·
polio . Cell 114·317· 0875~

Scr v11:1'S
81

refer~c:e•

Unacramble lhele tour Jumbles,
one le1ter to each square.lo form
four Ofdlnarv words.

Home
Improvements

I RYBUL±

Services
fiiEWOOD fOI SALE

.

You 'kk Up '25 loa4
Wt Deliver '30 leo4
· '7S Dump Truck Loatl

I I r_X]
I'SUMOE I
I I .I ·. ()
t:;...=.:.liddP="" .

Business

~- ~~ .:U:" ':~
AIIICt (.......,o.l-lp tht TM

,W1i_

RUSS AND-MAX
ELLIOTT

Judfo.wm-=~-311,81 ss-

WHAT 'THAT
INQUISITIVE'
CHILD WA fS.

J. Mllrill &lt;-ttr-lllaltor-379-2184
Becky. lane
' lllalhlr-446-0458
.
i
lin Codlran-lllaltor-446-7881
~

63
Silver

· Large hay bales for sale,

57

fllly .·Call
Cabin1 Bee K8aper. April

Call614·992·7401 .

new. worn4times. $200 .00
regular price, will sell for
$60.. 00. Medium siz8. Call
. 614·992· 2063. 1972 Co·
dillac,
condition ~

Spinet-Console piano ·bargain, WANTED : Responsible pany to take over low
monthly payments on spinet

piano. Can be seen locally.

Write Credit Manager: P. 0 .
33.

White oak firewood for sale.
-s25~~oo "pick-Up~loia deli-'

Sears

Snow

Blower

for

Remington Model 1 100
Magnum, 30 inch full choke
vented rib barrell. fleece
hned gun cue. Only shot 6

times. Cell614·986·4346 .

New Seara fancy storm
door, $50 .00. 4 Thermalpane windows, $9.00 each .

&amp;
61

LIVf&lt;SIIIi;k

1983, 8Qrrel gelding, tire
CabirT Bee. pictured in 1982
Quarter Horae Congress Edi-

tion, grandton of Mr. Cabin
Bar, AQHA supaior halter

446-6610

·Put Nt••nber 1 to work ·roryou:

Farm Equipment

Trovbilt now good time to
buy. Buy before spring.
Swisher's Implement. 446-

0~76 .

loader, dozer, 2 tone truck,
VW, Jeep, compre11or.
trailer, SS Chev., lots, win·

dowo. Cell 814·388-8246 .

Central (Vienna ). W. Va .
PH. 304·295·8615
18 Oldo, 2 dr.,
Co11 814-258-

.
bits, 304·676·2379.
large Iittau. reasonable,
304·676· 7241 '

64 .

Hay •

Grain

large round bales of hay S20
each . Call 446· 1062 atter5.

·~

NEW LISTING -HOME WITH A WARM HEART"
the new owner of this ranch. Appealing
to the pocketbook as w.ell as the eye. 2 bedrooms,
·possibility of 3rd bedroom. living room, bath,
kitchen, basement, carport, I acre, more or less.
C1ty school system. $34,900.
#757

NEW LISTING - BETWEEN GALLIPOLIS &amp;
JACKSON on old Slate Roule 35. You w1lllike this
semi· private vinyl ranch Includes a large family
and d'"ing room, woodburner, nice kitchen, elec·
tric heat, oversized 2 car garage plus over 1h acre
fenced yard . Southwestern Schools. $40,000.
'
#751

A LITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY - Very nice, neat
brick ranch on 2 acres. Nice landscaping, low
maintenance, 2 car garage with automatic
opener, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, storage buld,.g,
garden area, concrete drive Original owners,
quality built C1ly school dislncl. Rodney area.

Call 614·949·2237.

---:-===-=,..,..===,..,======.
,. .:.
- . - -ReaT ESiateGenerar-

J' nced)u!ll~.--- -

----~

•

!~~SE~m~E FOR RlliNG THE WHOLE

· BUilding Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
wlindows. lintels . etc:.
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

0. Coll614·245·6121.

RIVER VIEW - 4 Bedroom ranch with full
completed basement, 3 baths, fam1ly room, beau·
tlful m-ground pool with deck plus refreshment
bar and bath. Garage in basement level, office
area. Central air and heat Approx. 2 acres.
#762

*Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446-9539
*Ed Evans. Realtor. Ph. Home 446-0825

PH. OFFICE 446-7699
HOME AND INCOME! - $22,000. 2 bedroom,
din1ng room, eat·m kitchen . .Features IO'x48'
trailer lor added income. Well worth a look!! New
liSting.

Pets for Sale

1915 Dido 18. V-8, eU1o.

4 BEDROOM - 1\i story frame home. located 3
mi les from town. Eal·in kitchen, bath, liv'"g room,
•partial basement with garage 1n the basement
level. Home has new roof, new lurnace. Pnced in
the 30s.

LOOK WHAT
SO LITTLE
Will BUY
3 bedroms. 2 baths.

BLACKBURN

PS, PB. 2 new tires, INIAV
new p1rt1. good fem . car or

RIAL TV

coli. c.,, 1650. Cell 448·
4412.

· 71 Dido Cutlooo Supremo,
AC, crui11, tilt wheel,
ltereo·tape. axe. cond ..
n~m-u

-:: - Rill

SCENIC SETTING- Approximately 40 acres with
nice bi-level home surrounded by natue. 3 or 4
bedrooms, 2 bat,hs, kitchen and family area plus
utility room. large separate gaage, oulbuilding.
Tobacco base, approx. 5 acres l1llable. Beautiful
woods.
#651

State Block. Rt. 33. New
Haven, W. Va . 304·882 ·

56

cond. Ctll 114-245-5820
ofttr IPM.

iei9.

-

446-0008

1'!.-IUUA.?Ji!iiA..

-

Upholstery ·
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .• Gallipolis.

614-446·7833 orl14-446·
1833.

."

ture.

needl work. Excellant me·

R •

M Furniture

Mlnufacturing, St. Rt. 7,

. chanlc1l condition.
., 146!1.00. Coil 814 -992·
7314tvenlneo.

NEW LISTING- GALLIPOLIS CITY- Super and
immaculate low ma,.tenance 3 bedroom home 2
full baths large living room with wb fireplace, gas
furnace ~ttached garage. No steps, level corner
lot Walking'distance to downlown. lmmedl8te oc·
cupancy Anxious for quick sale.
· -.
#758

ken's Water Service. Wells,

ciaterna, pool• filled . Phone
St 4·387·0123 or 814-3 67·
7741 night or day.~
·

New S. Reupholstered furni·

1971 Dodge Aopln . Body

Crown City, Oh. Cell 614·
258-1470. cell Eve. 446·
3438.

1972 Novt'l c~lindor. oU1o.
· 11180.00. Good condition.
: con 814-892-1258.

.

' 1 980 Thunderbird. Two
tone; - AM-FM stero gpe,
. ,.., window defroat. Cell
814·949·2182 otter 8:30
PM.

t

EVERYTHING YOU'D WANT for only $34,000. N1·
cely redecorated 3 bed room home W1th steel Sid·
mg, new carpet, 24' pool, lovely pnvacy fence,
wood burner, garage. located 1n c1ty school diS·
trict. A must to see.
#690

Ask Yourself This Question.

2222.

~--:--

JUST LISTED ~ WANT A MODERN DAIRY
FARM?- Th1s 163 acre farm has all the modern
c.onveniences. 60 acres cropland, adjacent silos,
6000 bu. corn crib and milking parlor 90 acres
tillable, double four herringbone w1th gl1zed tile,
modern manure system, large machinery shed, 3
acre dry cow lot with new barn 2story farm home
with aluminum sid1ng, needs remodeled Very
nice 14x70' V1ctorian mobil ehome. All this and
lois, lots more Call for details.
#735

COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?

Block. brick. mortar and
masonry supplies . Mountain

..,--

gauges, local owner, good

LOOK FORWARD TO COMING HOME To this
unique remodeled home. 3 large bedrooms, 2
balhs, eat·1 n kitchen, formal dining, spac1ous for,
mal entry. Oeck, barn. 3 acres Owners have re·
duced pnce and w1ll consider reasonable offer.
Make an appointmenltodayl
#756

Real Eatate General

"'=·-

1980 Chtv. Citotlon 4 dr.
hotchbock. I cyl.. luto
ban•. fr. wh. drive. AC.

wa~ting lor

Mixed grass hay for sale.

(Coal Delivered) good lump
house coal 1 to 7 ton. call
Jim Lanier 676·7397 or

Building Supplies

S&amp;H PLASTICS

horse, al1o Reg. Sorrel plea·

2546 .

55

Also pipe connections and water pipe:

,ure gelding. Shown in
Quarter horse shows. Call

Fire wood for sale. 826.00
pick -up truck or $35.00
delivered. Call 614· 742·

304·676· 1247.

lllaltor-388-8826

·'

'

3 bred sows, due in March,

~_!~!,!!_m_E
~ -~..,ou~~.etj_
~~· __
&lt;;O'IJ'U vu
'-'•11
.... ::r .. ::r·
2801 '

Pa .

....E.ii!:.ru.Jl.llllltllll

vered Dennis or Dale Teaford. Call 614·843·5394 .

Garden tractor. Call 614·
843·5247.

Friedens ,

'

Morgan

ply retreads, 840.00 each.

· Mans lamb skin coat, like

Ylrgiria Snitl:

miniatura

Musical
Instruments

820 .00. 2 tiroo, 900· 20. 10

Livestock

1878 Novo wrecked. good
for porto. PS. PB. 380 tU1o,
with new Cragar SST'• cell
304-175·4848.

200 ACRES 1/l, FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Ap~rox. 65 acres tillabl~ and 135
acres woods Comfortable two slory home off··
ers 4 BRs, bath , kitchen. hv1ng room, family
room, two tireplaces. barn, 2 large screened
porches. lovely QUiet sett1ng.

ACROII

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

1 Flavor
6 J,..._tree

'11 Flootwood . Codllloc
. showroom 'clean. liat price
110,000 .00 will ooll
17.100.00. 304-8822220.

WITHIN YOUR MEANS - Pnce jusl reduced to
$25,000 on thiS 14'&gt;70' Holly Park mobile home
and 2 acres. 2 bed rooms, lor mal d1ningarea, boil·
t·'" k1tchen Completely underpmned. covered
lronl pat1o, 2 car well·constructed garage. Stale
Route 160.

72

Truckl for Sale

1971 Dottun PU, 1800 or
tr1de for car. Call
81 4 -211·1393.

will

~NI&gt;AY- PUZZLER n ~

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,500!- 3 BR ranch .
on 11-acres more or less. Pond,-full basement,
family room w1th woodlwllfer, living room,
equi pped kitchen. din10g room, 11h baths, at!ached 2 car garage.

10 Hit hard: collOq.
14 Merits
19 MacaM
21 Country of South

Amertca

REDUCED TO $35,000 - NEAR HOLZER This ranch style home offers 3 BRs, kitchen,
22x24 FR, LR, bath, central air, woodburning
stove, eleotnc heat, 16x28 unattached garage.
KC school district

YOU'll BE OELIGHTED .... with this 3 BR bi·
level located just m'"ules from town . Also lea·
tures 2'h baths. LR. kilchen. carpeting, heat
pump, city school dislrict Call for more 1nfor·
rnatiOn.

Coli 814·

22 S~ of glass
23 Thoroughfare
24 Slgnlfle4
26 To hove reference
28 Sleep
29 Perform
30 Blunl end
32 Shrewd
33 Turkish regiment

73 Kind of baseball
phch
75 Articles of furniture
77 Ventilates •
78 cOunt,Y of Asia
80 Wipe out
81 Crafty
82 City In Washington
84 Pledge
86 Pounding
Instrument
87 Under
89 Retlremenl-plan
lnlts.
92 Unit of Chinese

currency
95 Fruit cakes
98 Discards

34 Fruitlifrik' ---~ne«r· I U3 Chevy 4x4 'h' ton
loodod with optlono, I ln.
lift. - IInor, tool box, 1700

has
Owner transferred.

#710
Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
net. CFA Himalayan , Persian
and Siamese kittens . AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614·
446 -3844 after 7.
Spec•al · Price· AKC regis·

tered Cocker Spaniel pup·
pies.

buff

color.

1n

Call

614·388-9755 .

Real Estate General

E.

M-;, i ,,L.f,lii!QIII.I..II

POMEROY • 0 .
992· 2259
NEW LISTING - Mobile
Home - Purchased new,
used 6 months. 12&gt;50. 2ll&lt;ld·
room, range, ref.. includes awn·
1n~ lie downs, underpinn'"g &amp;
blocks. hcellent condition.
$1 1,000.00.
_ PornerPRICE REDUCED
.,

f~lr!

Ir=."'""'===~=!! £1'!1.."!'.'Li•~t~"
- A
with .3,. hr&gt;dl''1%
In town,
home,
· 2 fireplaces,
fam1iy room, gas fa heat Wllh
woodburn'"g add·on Nice
krtchen wrth builtin unils, garage, full basement, on lwo lois.
N1ce back yard. $59,900.00.

RUTlAND - Business bUild·
ing wth 2 bedroom apartment
Owner wants an offee
PRICE REDUCED- Com mer·
c~al bUilding 2 story, 3,200 sq.
It, set up as lwo bu~ness
rooms $35,000.00.
MiDDLEPORT - Stately &lt;Jder
home wrth up to 4 bedrooms. a
24x28 recreation room. fam;ly
room, &amp; basement 2 car gar·
age, on a good street You must
see th~ one! $45.900.00.
•. ]IEALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 985·4466

A

l'iz ACRES WITH COUNTRY SffiiNG
N1ce and sohd 2 bedroom home located on state highway. Rural
water system plus drilled and dug welL Extra water tap for amo!Jie
home hookup. N1ce res«ul area atter a day'~ workc
#574
35'x35' GARAGE &amp; 3 LOTS
2 'mob1ie home or build1ng s1tes w1th all Uti lilies available. 3
waler taps. Garage w1lh air compressor and ot)ler major air
tools, spray pa,.ting gun, etc BoUle gas furnace heat in gar·
age w1lh 13' h1gh door. 2 n~ce landscaped lots ready for mo·
bile home, double w1de or build a new home and operate a
body shop or mechanic garage, appro• \i m1le off highway
35 west of Gallipolis. Business with your home nearby.
#624
30 ACRES Ml QUALITY HOME &amp; BARN
Top quality 9 room house wrth 7roomscarpeled 4 bedroom~ bath
and full basement plus 3 car gara~e. Good bam approx 30'&gt;40'
plus chicken house appro&gt;. 12'&gt;30 Appro• 10 acres tillable and
20 acres pasture with large pond. Beautifullocalion W11h hall m1ie
frontage on blacklop stale highway.
#598
2 ACRES PLUS NICE COUNTRY HOME
large 12 room remodeled hpme.. 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, Wllh
modern krtchen. Home covered w1th carelree alum1num ~ dmg
Thermopane Windows 2 sundecks. fuel 011 FA turnace w1th a
woodburner insert 4 car garage and numerous storage bldgs.
2093 acres. Rolling levelland. A real Country Genlleman Home,
PhoQe now
.
#578
117 A. CLEARED ROLLING lAND
Appro&gt;. 40' A. tillable, 60 A pasture. tile block barn, appro&gt;.
40'x60' eqwpment shed and lots of other buildings, 4cherry lrees,
1
arbor Slream flows
property All mineral

JUST LISTED -LIKE NEW, 430 LewiSOrive. This
adorable ranch home IS perfect for anyone. 3 bed·
rooms. 1\\ baths 11ovely carpet, very large eat·in
k1tchen. cenlral !ir, well insulated. City schools,
water and sewer.
#754

URBAN LIVING FOR THE EXECUTIVE- 10 acre
estate. lake, shrubbery, lrees, 3 bedroom bnck
home. built'" 1975. EffiCient heatmg,low mainle·
nance. SIX m1les from Gallipolis, 5 m1les from hospilal. One of Gallia County's best.
#674

BRICK RANCH IN CITY- 3 bedrooms, bath, din·
ing room, living room, kitchen , utility room At·
.jached 1 car garage with breezeway. Nice size
lawn wilh new chain link fence in back. N1cely
landscaped. Home in e&gt;cellent 'cond1lion.
#740

SPRING BARGAIN, CHRISTMAS TIME - 3.8
acres, more or less. Tycoon Road. $1,200.
•
#745

j

COUNTRY STYLE HOME- Custom buill w1th over
5,000 sq II R81sed ranch with 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, formal di nl(lg, spacious kilchen, fireplace,
lull dlvidell basement. 2 car garage, ln·ground
pool plus 40 acres. Don'l hesitate, make an ap·
pomtment today.
#741
HUNTING FOR A SMAll FARM'- Then let us
•
show you this one. Nice 2 story home w1th 4 bed·
rooms, bath, fUel oil furnace, 37'h acres more or
less, tobacco base. 30x30 barn plus other out·
buildings, lra1ier hookup . Owner would consider
land contract
#736

. NEW LISTING - I YEAR BUYER PROTECTION3 bedroom home situated on 3\\ acres near Crown
C1ty. Over 1400 sq. ft. includes. 2 baths, fam1ly
room, wood burner, wet bar, central air,large barn
plus fru1t trees and good garden . Pnced at
$3l500.
#739
JUST LISTED- BARGAIN BUY!! $14,000. 2 bed·
rooms extensively remodeled home situated on
appro&gt;. 1 acre. W~ring, p)umbing, roof, sept1c sys·
tern replaced Cellar, storage building. located at
the edge of Pomeroy.
#759
EWINGTON _ $16.500 _ Remodeled 2 room
slum. Sided ranch on Rt. 160. Includes d'"mg
room, ath and shower, part basement, 011 furpace,
rural water. Large garde~ area. Storage buildings.
#711
HOLLIDAY HILLS RETREAT- 1972 Spartum 26'
self·contained camper witli shelter house and

ISTED - FRONTAGE ON RIVER -

mil••· Excelant condhion.

Ctll 114-188-3828 or 1~4·
911·3114, 1979 FOI'd F180
4•4. 400 engine, auto.• 41n.
lift. Good condition. Coli
114-885·3828 or 1114-988 ·
3884

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Must sell 3 bed· .
rooms,- [\\ story wilh new carpet. basemen! and ·
garage. Close to town and hospita l Pomeroy
Priced in the 30s.

#738
Real Estate General

200 ACRES - PARADISE LAKE -Year around
retreat. located on, Hannan Trace Road 3 bed·
rooms, 2 story charmmg older home Beauliful
slacked lake. Wooded land lo hunl deer and wild·
life. Tobacco base. Owner will se ll all or part
#669

TEAFORD
Real Estate

I

I

m1les to grocery and school. Call now.

m
IJ::!
REALTOR

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614)-992- 3326

JUST LISTED - WANT SMALL ACREAGE -Ideal
for building yo\Jr new home or ;usts a good place
for getting away from 1t all 7.5 acres, more or less,
of rolli ng land. Drilled well . rural water and septic
tank already insta lled . Call for det81ls.
' #729

IIIDDLEPO«T - Walk to the
stan!, work or school Real
handy fam~y home.
OORCAS - 3 BR trailer,
12x65. On~ $5,600.

ACREAGE located on Cheatwood·Waggoner Road.
5 acres total. 1 acre cleared. Holding la nk for spr·
ing and rural water available. Owners will":ell on
land ~ontract. Mostly wooded
•
#643

PGMEROY - View of. river
near Kroger's lg. 3 BR home
with db!. garage. Also 3 BR
home &amp; one acre.
RUTlAND - N1ce home on
large level lot Remodeled w1th
nice bath, modem krthen.

DON'T DRIVE BY THIS BRICK HOME wilhout \
viewing the inside and seeing the
, of the
construclion and 1 3 bed

rflhi,~tf:l~i~~~~~fr~~;~~::~~~;.:~r1~~WI:~nd~o~wi~
s. ~ HI"" f~~;~t~~~~J~~~~~?~.~3~b~ed~ro~o~m~r1er~m~od~e~le~d~,~~~~·~"=~:,~~~,i~~~:i~~Hit~jl
~~~·~H~a~sj;~~~~ro~a~d~ ~to~""'·~w~ith~i~\~;~1~;~1~1?~~\~·~d:iengo~r:;~:.;~~~;~~i~l
a~r furnace Plenty of water. 2 garages. Areal
farm only I 'll
opportu01ty for
i

&amp; A11 Co,ldl-:1
Insulation,

OWNER MOVED TO FLORIDA AND HAS
ORASTICALLY REDUCED THE PRICE OFT HIS
HOME- Will finance wilh 25%down and 10%
interest on the balance. V1ctonan style 3 bed·.
room also offers I I? baths, k1tchen w1th range,
refrlg., DW, and d1spl., laundry room , l1v1ng
room, fam1ly room . carport, unattached gar·
age, 16x32 fenced pool, alummum Siding At·
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK HOME1- !ached beauty shop would help make the pay·
Then thiS may be' lUSt the one. Conveniently menls.
located on Rt 35 West, th1s home offers alarge
liv'"g room, din'"g room. 3 bedrooms, laundry GREENFIELD TWP. - 74 ACRES... .more or
room, l 'h baths. eQi pped kitchen, carpeling, less. Tobacco base. 16&gt;20 shed , 34x40 barn.
central a11 and a 2 car garage.
Price has been reduced and owner f'"anc1ng
BRAND NEW DUPLEX- GreaiiNVESTMENT is ava ilable
for the buyer' located o~ Graham School Rd.
Each unit offers 2 BRs, balh, liv1ng room, JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR!k1tc hen w1th stove, relrig., DW.and displ.,laun· ln·town co ~venience , e&gt;lra nice lot, 4 BRs,
dry, large carport, central a11 and storagearea. large kitchen, LR, DR, bath, large front porch
and sma ll screened back porch, gas heat,
ADDISON TWP. - Appro&gt;. 7 mile from Gall· unattached one car garage. Call for an appolis. 39 1? acres,m/ 1, fronts on township road . pointment
All woods and brush. $8,900.

FARMER'S FARII - One of the area's better
farms. 101 acres m/ 1, lots of Symmes Creek
bottom land pond new fences large barn
several olhe~ b01ldmgs. large to bacco base:
mod. 3 BR ho-me, 2 baths,localed-on CadmusCrossroads. Call for more mformat1on.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL - GREEN TOWNSHIP GUY AN TOWNSHIP - lOB acres more or less
-180 acre farm locatedln Northup area. Two located south of Mercerville. Appro&gt;. 20 A. hi·
story frame older home with seven rooms and !able. Balance woods, tobacco base. Owner
bath counly water, 16x60 concrete si lo, corn will help f'"ance.
crib,' eqUipment shed, milkhouse and barn. On
paved road
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED - Approx one
THIS COULD BE YOUR PERFECT HOME.1 mile from town this~lder home has had some
10% F.INANCING- FIXED RATE- 20. YRS.! . remodeling. 2 'sRs, kitchen, LR, l4 1h • 151?
· - Th1s home oilers 4 BRs. 2 baths, kitchen . dining room, balh, part basemen I, one car garand eye·level
. 15x48 LR, fire· age. level lawn
front
1

37 Wllhered
39Anger
4!1Cuttlng
41 Cook slowly
42Cut

44-

48Sudl
47 Lean-to
48Relent50 Bullfighters
52 Count,Y ol Africa
53Yes: Sp.
55 lomb's pen name
57J-drama
58 Unusual
59 Urga on
College deQ.
62 Goddess of
destruction
64 House addhlono
58 Fulfill
58 Ri&gt;om: abbr,
89 Great Lalce •
70 Once around lrack
71 StallS

eo

28 Slender
31 Unruly child
33 Word of sorrow
36 Unit of Italian
currency· pl.
38 Short jacket
40 Painful
41 FOOd fish
43 Heap
45 Wears aWfiY
48 Ceremonial
47 Footwear
49 Wire measures
51 Arrows
52 Crucial times
53 Hindu garment
54 Melal
56 River in

94 Roman two

96 Bound
97 Wild plum
100 Therefore

102 Silkworm
105 Forey
109 Transgresses
112 Female horse
113 Scorch
114 Hold in high regard
11 5 Evils
118 Bart&lt; cloth
120 Breastwork

t 2 l Fee
122 Snickers
123lamP(,eys

..............,,_,oown -··------Pennsy1vania~----'

103 Go by water
104 Phchlng slat
105 City In Nevada
106 As far as
107 Mixture
108 Kethlb
11 0 Zodiac sign
111 Pronoun
112 lndeflnhe number
113 Dull ·parson
115 A state: abbr.
117 Soil
119 Prefix: down

120 Remu-otad

137 Fish sauce
139 Exclamation
140 Female
141 Greel&lt;leiler
143 Capuchin monkeys
145 Exist
146 Relies on
146 Lodgers
150 Having folds
152 Places for combal
153 Close
'
154 Disturbance
156 Strike out
157 Maasurlng device
156 Speck
·t59 Rational
160 Is borne

1 Former Egyptian

. proslderlt
2 lletol palm: pl.
3 Gasping for breath
4 Gold: Sp.
5 Rodents

6 Above
7 Vigor
8Wargod
9 Conjecture
10 Extra
11 Linger
12 Yearly: abbr.
13 Symbol for

121 Stadium coontlng
tellurium
devloo
14 Case for small
124 Stndarac tree
articles
126 Droll follow: colloq . 15 Limb
127 Classlty .
16 Refunded
17 Wanted
126Names
130 Barracuda
18 Scatter
132 Additional
20 Series of games
· 23 Strike
133 Out
134 Deposit
25 Fight b e ' - two
135 Sluggish .
27 Intractable person

127 Title of respect pl.
earth
Part of church
129 Cleaning
Things to be done
substance
Father
Native metal
131 Cylindrical
Spanish article
132 Mistress_ or a
Nol exaggerated __ hOIJSB!!Okl
MathematiCal
133 Young goats
134 Youhg hog
ratios
74 Prosecutor: abbr.
138 Untamed
76 Not later than
138 Gives up
77 Book of mops
140 Grbwt
79 Mchammedan •
141 Solicit: colloq.
leader
142
Solo
83 Unit ot Latvian
61
63
65
67
69
70
72

currency

85 Be present
86 Polntad end
87 Concoct
88 Countf'/ of Europe
89 Kind of type: abbr
90 Sharp reply
91 Decorate
92 .Cover
93 Enthusiasm

1&lt;14 Prophet

147 Compass point
148 Greei&lt; letter
149 Offspring
151 Actress McGraw
153 Symbol for
samarium

155 Symbol for
tellurium

1

#617

,
LOVE THE COUNTRY?
N1ce modern 3 bedroom home. 2\.04 acres more or less. Barn, tool
shed and cellar. l ocated on state highway. Priced 10 s~l. Call now.
'
#616
.
BUILDING LOTS
21ols in ·s,dwell area. Su1table for mobile home or build your own
home. Rural water. Buy both for $2,000..
'
#608
VACATION CAMP BY BLUE lAKE
Owner financing. sundeck, rural water, septic system, electric. Buy
rt with camping lraiter or wrtoout. concrete pad Great fish1ng! Buy
and move nght 1n.
#584
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - OWNER FINANCING
Are you loolung tor a 2 bedroom home overlooking the OhKI River
with lillie ma,.tenance. Beginner home or retirement home. We
have ~
·

0

#682

750

WELL PRESERVED -Inviting country home with
4 bedrooms; balh, 1arge cozy kitchen, dining
room, living room, fireplace, partial basement Natural gas forced air heat, rural water Great loca·
liOn. Centenary area Priced at $32,500.
#704

INCOME OPPORTUNITY- Owners have retired
and are very anXIous to sell rental property. T~e
price has been reduced on this business building
and 3 mob1le homes. located on 2 lots with all
UtilitieS. This property IS in a prime location and
are all presenlly rented . Call today for all the de·
tails.
~644

-~=-=""-'1-

#721

MOll WILL LIKE THIS- 5th Avenue KMR. Avery
livable ranch home, convenient locat1on. Featur, ing 3 bedrooms, bath, covered carport and work·
shop. Curtams, refrigerator and range included.
$27,000.
#724
•

RARE FINO- 4 level lots located within the c1ty
hm1ts. Access lo c1ty water and sewer. One of
city',s bett~r areas.
#730

MOBILE HOllE PLUS ~y, ACRES -IO'x50' 1963
mobile home with IO'x26' add1t1on. 3 bedrooms,
bath, hYing room, kitchen with range and refriger·
ator. Wood~urner included. localed Vinton area.
#623

6 ACRES WOODED CORNER LOT - Blacklop
road. Electric and rural water available $4,500.
I
#742

STARTER HOllE OR RENTAL- Excellent oppor·
tunity to own a home with payments under $230
monthly (includes taXes and inlurance), $5,000
dowq, 9% APR, 2 bedroom home, 3 miles from
town. Has fireplace, new roof, low utility bills. 23
acres 1n Washington Elem. District $27,300.

·
TRANQUILITY n'eslled in 108 acres of nature. Ap·
prox. 40 acres tillable wilh pasture and woods.
Older home used for hay storage. Rural water
available. Farm has been in family 100 years, bltt
ready to sell. Call for more details.
#61i 6

·,

EASTERN -Lg. one story modem 3 or 4 BR ranch. low heat
budgel Woodbum10g firep~ce
1n fam1ly rm. and 1.79 acres.
lAND - Buid to suifyourself
on these 5 or 13 acres.
POIIEIOY - [Mer 8 rm.
oome &amp; 2 klts next to fire sta·
tion.
NEAR I'OIIEROY - 2 hOuses,
bath, lg ~ts &amp; city water:..\YII
sell .for $12.000.00 eac~ or
m~ trade one.
·

.
IIAK£ US AN OFFER - I acre and attractive
frame ranch located near Mercerville 3 bed·
rooms, living room, eal·in k1lchen. 2 baths, base·
ment. Heat pump, woodburner. Rural water. 2 car
garage. •

n1s

'""''~

~.,.

""""-' ''""' _,,""""

_,,

Sut lurpiiJ, litton loush
Vlrall tnd
IIICI Tilford

Htt...

•,

*149

'

. HQ!lJi!!fJ. __

F11turo 8yndlcolO

He,ulqllarters

\C&gt;IQ84 Century 21 Real Estate Corporation as~forlbe NAF ~and ""-tradenwt11oiCentury 21 ReafEst.ate('nrporathm. Prinred in l,'.S. A. &amp;,uallluusinR:OJ)PHrtu'niWGl

.

A STYLE OF ITS OWN .... describes this lovely
white brick home with 3100 SQ. R., 3or 4 bed·
rooms 3 baths, 20x40 FR, dinin8 room,
kitchen with OW, d1spl, microwave and trash
compactor. intercom, central air, 2 car garage,
utility bldg., deck and a 20x40 poot Beautl·
fully landscaped.

COUNTRY - 2.8 acres and
country )lome. Basement
barn, for $25,000.00 or good
offer.

'
JUST LISTED - AnRACTIVE CED~R RANCH 1 FOR THE INVESTOR - 4800 sq. II. commerc1a l
building. Office area, sales space, storage space, 3
overlooking the Ohi6 River south of town. 3 bed·rental umts, 2 bedroom mobile home, 2 apart·
rooms, 2 baths, cathedral ceiling, nice kitchen
ments. All presently rented . Good income. E&gt;cel·
and dining room, 2 car garage plus more. Rural
lent ln·town location.
water, central sewage. Loan assumption.
....... .,.._..._~"-

ADDISON TOWNSHIP - 8.8 acres more or
103 ACRES.II/l. SPRINGFIELD TWP. - Ap· less, vacant land on BulaYIIIe Porter Road.
prox. 96 A. tillable land, older hOme has 5 BRs, Electnc, sept1c tank, spnng, rural water ava1la·
bath, LR, kitchen, county water, 40x60 pole ble. Asking $10,900.
bldg., 40&gt;60 tobacco barn, · various other
buildings.

BACROmCIISINDIPENDENTLTOWNEDANDOPEIATED.

•

•
I_

) J

�-

•

PagB

D-8-The S~iulay Tlm8s-Sentinal

-·-- ,_.__.___.-

•
·;.---

January 13. 198~

f»omeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Beat of the Bend'

Syracuse sets pickup
........_cfqr_discarded items ~ ~

~ayor's plans cloud possible Bush visit .

GOP challenger to incumbent conversation Wednesday not to consld!!rtngmaktngtherace.
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste, attend the fund-raiser until he knew
"I told him about the potential ·
dent George Bush at an upcoming has saldhehasnotdecldedwhether · Volnovlch's plans because an ap- pitfalls, which he underStood,"
.lund~''"'-.Jor Maxor. Geonre v. t0 ~k re-electiOn thlsyearandmay _ pearance for a potential candidate Hughes said.
Voinovlch Is in doubt because or '""seektheguberilatorialnomlnatlon:"' for gOvernor mig1t'MeiiU"~l&lt;: tv
TI"ENd\'pro:d:-'.e-Busll-wan:-.llde; - uncerlalntyover'Volnovlch'stutuie
The
fllmg
deadline
·for
the
thlnkBushwastaktngskles.
just
before Christmas by the .
By BOB HOEFU&lt;JH
address Is Ethel Smith, 3528 Harley
f.nd former Gov. James ~odes, · mayor's brother, Paul, and Mifsud, :
polltlcal plans, a situation reflecting mayoral race Is Aug. 22 and for the
'lbnes-Sentlnel staff
RDad., Toledo, Ohlo (l006,
the behind-the-scenes jockeying for state primary, February I98i.
na tiona! committeeman troin Ohio. Bush's coordinator- for Cuyahoga .
When you think of cleaning up ·
·
Gayle
Price
advises
that
there
the
Republlcan
gubernatorial
mmlRobert
E.
Hughes,
Cuyahoga
·
told
State GOP Chairman Michael CoUI,Ity during the 1981 p~ry.
.
around the house
was
a
sumptuous,
superb,
satisfynatlonnextyear.
·
County
GOP
chairman,
said
he
F.
Colley
that
he
,
did
not
think
It
Mifsud
approachedBushsotllce:
· and
rid of
- in~supper glverrlll tile parloro! tHe-.,- - Vulnov1\:il;'wnsldered a:Jl(ltentla~-·.. ·adv~-·Bu"'':~c~c'-".f: a te!ep!lone __ ;~~pJJ.l!i !Je_ af1vjglble JQL.. B~ t\1_ wltl)_ the_mayor's a_pp~va~ Mifsud :
·
a lot- of
M.E. Church on ·Friday, Oct. 14.
.
.
·
appear ,a t the event because ;;aid Friday.
.
cumulation. you
1892.
'
.
.
Volnovlch
Is
a
potential
candlqat¢.
Regl!l"ding
Volnovlch's
political
:
normally think
Th?- menu was done In the •
andBushshouldremalnneutral. ' -. plans~ ""I don't think George h~ :
''spring." Right? ·
.
following
fashion:
·
·
·
made up his mind what to do,
Wrong -If you
Substantials-salt-rlslngscantly
I
Volnovlch could not be reached Mifsud said. .
.
live In Syracuse.
sweetened,
selected
sea
fruit
som!''
.a
'
for
comment
Hughes,
a
longtime
Rhodes
ally,
:
Syracuse VU!age officials have
sage sea.
. . ·I
Schedullng the Volnovlch fund- on Friday asked CoUey, who was :
secured a lr\lckforuseonJan. 14,15

CI..E;VELAND (AP) -

A pro-

poSI'd appearance by VIce Prest-

c·tI y .cod e 0 ff•. tela. I.

I

•e)eases '84 s (at•ISt•I cs.

Sundries shapely, spiced, permits for work totaling more than
slender sour p)ckles; superior $450,001 were Issued In 1984,
slender stalks; sour, stinging, ' according to the annual health
stimulative sauce. Seraphic sweet service report Issued by James T.
Boster, Galllpolls city code enforce- .,
cake and silver spiced sponge.
Sweet-meals- small, succulent, · ment·officer.
L~clucled in the 1984 figures were
SOul satisfying stlmulent.
threepermltsfortheconstructlonof
Sips - special steeped sips.
Steaming . . soul. satiSfying newcommerclalbuildlngs,$211,000.

will move through the town picking
up trash that people want to get rid
. of. This Includes EVERYTI-IINGeveiythlng but routine garbage,
that Is.
. Small stuff Is supposed to bebagged and set at the side of· the
street for pickup during the three
. day period. Refrigerators. old

·
that was son\e menu - I 1
. ·
. .
think?!
.
i and alterations to commercial

picked up.

--"'··~

·Of course, there are always soine
lucky ones who can head for the
sunny south about this time of the
year and that's good. Jestle Molden
and her granddaughter, Martie

ct

Belpre, returned from ,

Florida alter ·a two week visit In
Orlando, Clearwater. Largo and
Kissimmee - unfortunately, they
got home just in time to face the
worst weather of the year.
Fonner Meigs resident Ethel
Smith wlll mark her 95th birthday
on Jan. 21.
Mrs. Smith is in pretty good
health and enjoys reading espeiillly The Dally Sentinel (bless
her! I from cover to cover.
She'd love to hear from Meigs
Countians on her birthday. The

_.. . ._.....___ ....

parks:

five licensed

residential additions and alterslions, $43,100; one permit for new
residential construction, $50,001; 15
permits for two-car garages and
carport construction, $43,810; and
three permits forprivateswtmming
pools, $25,500.

consultations.
· Schools: one school, two lnspec!Ions and two consultations.
Nuisance Investigations: garbage, ?II; refuse, nine; ~age, five;
insects or rodents, 18; and animals,
12.
Rabies control and animal bite
The city also Issued zoning Investigations: dogs)4; and cats,1.
certlflcatesfortwofencesandseven
Watersamples: five collected.
signs, Boster's report said.
Vector control: 144 hours of
Boster's Office reported the fol- spraying operation, 32 hours larva
lowing health prograrhsanddepart- control.

~:~~t~~ ti~~~~~~~,·-~~m~:: tl~~t;;~~ticr~

wheretheywere-onastreet,lna
tree, in a store or wherever - the
music was there. Very unrealistic
way back then. Today, those
movies could be very realistic,
however. There's music - or a
reasonable facsimile - summnd-.
lng us ...even when businesses
_you·~ ~l!)fu&gt;g put you on "hold." So
- go ahead - break Into y0ur song
·and dance no rna Iter where you are.
You might not get "discovered" but
you· ie bound to help everyone-who
views your act to keep smiling.

and consulta-

Foodservlceoperatlons: totalof

a

1-,

lr. the case. The union supports

ofHealth.

T
h u rl ID
• M'etgs
• acct"dent
' wo

GALLIPOLIS - Two Meigs Ohio 715, when troopers said
County residents were treated at Mercer's car hit a patch of Ice,
released at Veterans Memorial causing It to go off the left side of'the
Hospital ·following a two-car acci- road and into a ditch. The patrol Sllld
dent on Ohio 7 Fiiday.atternoon.
the 7:05 p.m . Incident cauSed light
The driver of one-car, Barry W. damage to Mercer's car.
Chapman, :In, and a passenger, ·
38-year-old Sadie Chapman, both of
Rt. 1, Rutland, were treated for
coi111Pl4~ted
scrapes and bruises, a hospital
spokesman said.
GALLIPOLIS - Fifteen school
Barry Chapman was reportedly
bus drivers recently completed the
stopped In northbound traffic on 7,
Ohio pre-service school bus drivers'
approximately eight-tenths of a
tra-ining course, according to lnmile north of the Gallla-Melgs
structorCarl RDuse.
• county llne, _when the Gallla-Melgs
Passing the 20-ou"r course were
post of the State Highway Patrol
Thomas R Beaver, Barbara Botlons, saying the acquisition would
5&lt;1ld a vehicle driven by William C.
wling, Dennis C. Fitch. Millard
save Pabst and help Heileman
Parker, 00, Louisville, was unable to
Foley, Nellie Gray, Joe Hurlow,
compete nationally by obtaining the
stop In !line and struck Chapman
Mark A. l!Win, RDbert ·O'Dell,
Pabst Blue Ribbon brand. Heileman
from behind. The 2:19p.m. accident
Laura Rnberts, Ralph Steinbeck,
doesn •t have a na tlonal brand:
caused moderate damage to both
Ch¥1es Stower, Michael Thomas,
Heileman L~ asking the 6th Circuit
vehicles, troopers said.
Charles T. Walter, Leland D.
to throw out the preliminary
A G.'l,year-old Patriot resident
Watson and Ernest Wigglesworth.

.

Heileman's proposal to pay $11 per
share In cash for Pabst
The appeals court Is to hear
arguments Wednesday In the proposed acquiJ&gt;Itlon, whlcll nas been
blocked temporarily by a lower
·
court. ·
Heileman agteed last month to
buy Pabst for $63 million afte: the
U.S. Justice Department sa1d 11
wouldn't challenge the move under
antitrust regulations.
However, Stroh Brewing Co. and
Christian Schmidt Brewing Co.
challenged the sale and got a
preliminary Injunction temporarily
stopping lt.
Stroh, the nation's thltd-largest
brewer·, and Schmidt, a small
brewer In Philadelphia, contend the
acquisition would give Heileman
unfair advantages and violate
antitrust laws.
Heileman, the nation's fourthlargest brewer, denies the allega-

'

court to let it Intervene because the
jobs of hundreds of Pabst workers
are Involved.
~ "As the record evidence indlcates, each week that passes while
Pabst is prevented from consumatlng a sale or merger makes It less
likely thatPabstwlllcontlnuetohea
' viable competitor, either standing
alone or as part of a larger entity,"
the union said
·

Cited by police
GALLIPOLIS - Cited Friday liy
city pollee for Improper backing
were Anne E. Morgan, '!/, of
Jackson, andWUliamF. MoodyJr.,
21, of 520 Spring Valley Drive,
Gallipolis.
Paul D. Payne, 21, of 906 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis, was .c harged with
disorderly conduct.

---·swiMMING POOt -KiTS~, &amp;-SPAS ,.,_ ···

Sl
00
Discount
One Hundrtd Dollars Off Any In-Ground
Pool Kit or Spa lnvoictd In January
.
Two Hundred Dollars Holds Your Swimming Pool Kit
or Spa at low 1914 Discount Prices Till Summer

HOL~DA Y POOLS, 'INC.

Huntington, W.Va.

429-4788

Training

was westbound on Patriot-Cadmus, approximately nln&lt;'- tenths of a mile west of

SALE . SALE SALE
WOMEN'S
FALL &amp; WINTER

SHOES

20% OFF

SAVE 20%
AND MORE

HANDBAGS

WINTER
BOOTS

WOMEN'S

20°/o OFF

All MEN'S

CHilDREN'S

100foto 10%

TENNIS
S12aS15

TENNIS
OFF
REG. PRICE

=

==-" ·-

YIMI-u

"Cium.ool 23 listings included
•
L!-.:,J.n"
m
tru:t
week's lS.....-..
Station

I~

Huntingtan. WV
CBN Cable Ntrtwok
Sports NetwM&lt;
A-.GA
Columbus. OH
Porkenbu'll. WV
Clwteoton. WV
Huntington. WV
Columbus, OH
Athens, OH
WOWK Huntington, WV
WVAH Humc.ne.wv
Home Box Office
HBO
MAx ' Cinemax
..

WSAZ
CBN
ESPN
WTBS
WTVN
WTAP
WCHS
WPBY
WBNS
WOUB

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST _

MON. &amp; FRI. nt 8 P.M.
TUES., WED., THUI.
&amp; SAT. TIL 5 P.M.

CALL (614) 992-2104
..__ _,_,.(304 675-1244

I-----------------------.....IL---L------------:-----------

•
Ador a de .w.. ,_. iw .........,._ w 1111111111 illlle Marti 'l'llfer
F - I l l Loe An........ ,.._ IDrole .......... 11 etc-Ill ''Travelllrlllllle Dark"
at llle .. 11pue Loe ADpiN llle.... (AP Je I wl: Ia).

NEW aout

.,

-

...,..die

·showbeat
.Page 7

·Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

BQTTOMS are 50/50 Poly/Cot•
ton blend. Minimum shrinkage, maximum warmth and
comfort.
LADIES' SIZES S, M, L, XL

Keep warm in comfortable
Hanes Termal Tops and Bottoms. ,50% Cotto, SO% Polyester in Sizes S, M, L and XL.

TOP or BOnOM

$689
WE ALSO HAVE HANES THERMALS FOR BOYS-PLUS BIG
AND TAU.S FOR MEN AND
THERMAL COLORS TOPS AND
BOTTOMS.

$600 EACH

FREE
,. ..,...

Fllmeter
Pages 5, 6

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

ONLY

~

listings

covered in the course Included pupll
management, pre-trip inspection,
first aid, defensive drlving,la ws and
regulation.

for maximum warmth
and comfort. Reinforced collar
and shoulder seam. Long
·Sleeves. .
·

. O'DELL

Includes complete

WOMEN'S

SAVE .

MEN'S THERMALS

• Self·re!llllatinll to avoid over-heating. • Easy to install available in vanous length~. • Safe to overlap and c;over
with insulation. • No-time-limit
warranty for guaranteed
reliability, long life.
• Good for plastic
pipes, too!

A guide to local J
TeleviSion programming
Jan~ 13 thru Jan. 19

ro~;!~i:~1:ed~~~~~;:=~; , l,;;~~;ii~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;i;

Beer manufacturers
blocking buyout plan
CINCINNATI !API- The union
representing hourly workers of lhe
Pabst Brewing Co. has asked
federal appeals court to clear the
way for the G. Heileman Brewing
Co. to buy the troubled brewer.
The United Auto W,prkers union
· the 6th
filed documents

delay now ts likely, said Paul C. neutral toward the potential guberMifsud, former Berea councilman natorial candidates.
Although Colley claimed neutraland one of the event's organizers.
Hughes said he told the vice Ity Friday, he did say he would use
president that Volnov"lcb's future · polls and sentiment ot party leaders
plans are uncertain. Hughi!s also and contributors to advise potential
told Bush that other people, Includ- candidates of their strenglhs and
Ing Rhodes, a four-tenn governor, wl!aknesses and to avoid a prtmary
and State Senate President Paul E. light, the Cleveland -Plain Dea!&lt;,-

·

Trailer

-·~·-'~···-_..,_,_..,_ b-J.!!d!n~,.$7!7~~~&amp;e'-'""n
_......
c.i_~
b"'
"'~""""'
...... -nn'7"""U"fnr
.,....., ••• n .. ., .. --·..D!l-FI._~::·
----r...... ;o-....r·
-' .~i:ii'...•.,.,.._.tfnnj,.__~:~ond
....,-.-u-•Air- ·_.,
·th·..o"C'':'

Thanks, Marion Michael, for that
reminder to ' keep smiling. Your
timing was perfect - _your message
arrived the same day that 17 boxes
were delivered by United Parcel
Service- all having to be unpacked
and the enclosed "stuff" put away:
Let's just S&lt;IY, "I NEEDED that!"
·
Remember those big musical
movies of the 30s and 40s?
All of this great musical accompanlment · for the singing and

again we w.ere fortunate in not
getting ALL of the snow and rough
weather that was predicted.
Of course, there could be a lot
more bad weather coming but
every day DOES get us closer to
spring and all ready, I'm ready.

- N~chcls

consultations, four time limits.
There was an official state rating of
91.4 percent.
Vending machines: total of four
licensed, four Inspections, two
consultations. The official state
rating was 92.47percent.
Food establishments: total of 10
licensed; 10 Inspections, two .consul-

&amp;l•~rf!!4•.,

...-

-:z~

~~ P.AR.KlN G

\_ ~

J.aG A.M.

I·

•

•w

(])
(J)
. (I)
(I)
(!)

•rn(I)

.'

GD
(jj)

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•

IHIIOI
(OW&lt;)

.

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