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-- - - --

·

-

Page :D-1

Secret satellite deployed
Coping with
the cold
-Page B-1

A grand jury has refused to -return -an attempted·
murdea: indictment agaim the 'subway vigilante'

.;_page D-l

Inside:
Along the River •..••.•••••.••• 8-1-8
~ ........... ................ D-2

Even his detractors have praised Gov. Celeste's
highway constru.c tion prograrn - Page A-2

lleaths ........•: ................... A-4
Edllorlals ......................... /i-2
Farm ............................... C-5

Sports·················.·····..... C.l-4

- Ohio weather:
snow threatens
today, Monday
--Page A-3--

I

.

Vol. 19 No. 51

Middleport-Pome

Copr;:luht.t 1988

llipolit-Point Pleasant

9 Sections. 64 Paget BO Cent•
A.Multimedil Inc. New•p•per

Sunday, January 27, 1985

works
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.
how
the
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Denim Jeans

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Jlen'l bal1c delliml, style'a for a
comfortable fit. Wa.!st siZes 30-42.
Gear up for fitness lk fun In our action-

styled sweat set, Zip-front jacket with
rib knit trtm, two pockets. Pants ha.ve
pull-on watst. Rlly/CCJI;ti;Jn blend. S-M-IrXL.
Sorry, no-ra.inche:ckB. At lea.st 37 per store._

Junion' • mfrlll' feellion ~·
Most wanted siZes. Stylas vary.
SorrY, no ra.lncheckB. At·lea.at 18 per store.

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Smart solid color and subtly-striped
duos tc wear now and rtght Into the
sprtngl Trlln-fittlng tailored jacket
with ma.tchinl! slim skirt. 'lextur1Zed
polyester for easy care. SiZes 3-1.3.

19.58 .

12.96

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.Aation 1lacll:l with 'comfort-fit'
stretch waistband a.nd belt loops.
woven polyester. Waists 30 to 42 .

gle. . a

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Attorney ·claims·outcome oi
township beer vote in doubt
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
Tlrnes-Sentbtel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Non-residents of
01ay ·Township -were pennltted to
vote in theNov.6,1984eleetiononlhe
question of the sale of beer in that
township and a sufficient number of

11'\.

Piping trtm. SiZes 8-:U:·L.
li&gt;

•······•

..-. . -..

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By NANCY YOACHAM
practice which began retroactively when the income
made.
The Meigs Cou;ry· Sheriff·~ Department. Meigs
·. = _TimesScaltluel ~ =~_ _ _ __ tax ordinance-went Into e~ect Jan. 1.
. .. .
. "It's up lo residents who don't receive tax fonns In
Local School Districl, Veterans Memorial H_ospitai
POMEROY - "What are they going to 1:lo with the
Before April 30, Pomeroy bustnesses anacorpo~~the malf to contact tl\elii'COmetax omce: inif01Jfa'ln --·a"hcro.ffi-6· f'ow~rcirrfii[lat,y1iff•rxi,ffiipi~f=ciiliii'i)~='~~
of employer.
money?"
lions wUldeclareestimated taxes based on what they
the needed forms." said Long.
Sheriff's department employees. such as deputies
According to Terri Long, Pomeroy tax admlnlstra·
think their "net" earnings will be for 1~.
Residents who do not file thelrfonns by April 30 will
who
spend much of their time patroling throughout
tor, this seems to be the question most olten asked
Pomeroy residents who work outside the village
be subject to a penaltY and interest.
the
county,
and school teachers who teach only
when calls come Into her office concerning the Income,
ll,mlts wUl also declare their estimated taxes before
Initial qqestionaires were mailed out by the tax
partttme
Within
the vUlagp at Pomeroy Elementary,
tax ordinance recently enacted within the village.
April30 and pay thcise taxes on their gross . Residents
office about two weeks ago. The malllng list was
will
pay
Income
tax only on the percentage of time
The village will see Its first draw from the Income
With Income !rom renial properties, working faiUlS,
determined from public records.
actually
spent
working
within the village .
tax next month, when, explained Long, "January's
and the like wlll pay on the net profits from those
Long says that tn date, the second greatest number
workers
at
the hospital. such . a s:c
Contract
. wage -Withholding payments become due the end of
sources.
·
of Inquiries concerning Income tax payments have
emergency
room
doctors
and
hospital coru;ultants,
Februar:y."
.
Estimated taxes will be paid on a quarterly basis
been from Pomeroy employers wltl\ employees that
Will
also
pay
lnrome
tax
only
on
the amount of time
, Wage earners within the vlllsge will pay the one
throughout the year. Final Income tax returns will be
work both Inside and outside Pomeroy corporation
Within
the
village
..
actually
spent
percent income tax on "gross" earnings. The income
· du«;&gt; In April of 1~ and at thattiJ11e, any adjus~ents,
limits. yet ate still issued their paychecks In
(Continued on page A-3)
tax will be autnrnaticauy Withheld by employers, a
whether overpayment or underpayment, are to be
Pomeroy.
·

all Jill'--

._

DEFENDS OUTCOME Any errors conunllted by the
Gaill~- Cuu~.:y &amp;A.-d~~ul Eloo

last Nov. 6 "were not of
sufficient weight In overtum the
results of the eledlon," Prosecuting Attomey Joseph Cain told ·
Common Pleas Judge Richard
&amp;derlck Friday.

ballots were cast by unquallfled
voters to throw the outcome o1 the
election In doubt.
The claim was made by Columbus attorney David P. Reiser to
Gallla County Common Pleas Judge
I_Uchard C. Roderick during a
hearing Friday.
Relser,argulngonbehalfofLewis
and Jenny L. Bodlmer, theownersof
L&amp;JGr-ocery,Eureka ,alsosaidthe
question of beer sales In Clay
Township was not on a ballot
separate from the four questions
required by law to be asked .
He said thelackofseparatlonwas
a violation of Ohio !l.w. Reiser also
sald the wording of the ballot was
confusing and vQters In Clay
Township Precinct did not know If
..th,eywerebannlngthesaleofbeerln
Clay Township as a wbole or just tn'
tbat precinct.
L &amp; J Grocery would be forced to
~rap

.

extends
medical aid

testified that he personally knew of
at least slx'.voters who did not live in
Clay Township but voted on the beer
sale opti~Jn.
. ...
Gallipolis attorney Iiarbara
Wallen,. representing Sally Baker, .
one of the circulators of the petition
that pJaced the issue on the ballot,
and Gallla County Prosecuting ,
Attorney Joseph Cain, representing
the board of elections, said the
petition was tlrawn up and placed on
the ballot with wording requd-ed by
Ohio law. The ballot was approved
by the Ohio Secretary of Staw's
office.
They alsosaldanyerrorsrommitted in tbe carrying out the election
"were not of sufflcleril weight to
overturn theresultsoftheelectlon."
Clay Township voters decided on
Nov. 6 to prohibit thesaleofbeer by a
401-348 margin: In Clay Precinct;
where L &amp;J Grocery Is located, the

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

'l'lmes-Sentinel staff
POMEROY - A program of
medical assistance to Mc!gs Countlans disadvantaged by an ·unemployed head of the hou sehold has
been extended,to June 30- oi' until
the funding from the Meigs Job Bill
Program is depleted .
John Jacobs, Meigs County
Health [)(&gt;par1ment administ rator,
announcE&lt;l today that ofthe$7,2001n
state and federal funds allocated for
the program last June. there
rematns $3.169.fll which thl' county
has been authorized to spend on
primary care and acute medical
tn?atment for thP unemployed and
their families.
The funds can be expended for
doctor's fees and laboratory tests.
Dr. James Witherell and Dr. Wilma
Mansfield, Pomeroy. have been the
par1icipat lng physicians ··In the

seiling -beer ano;:&gt;&lt;; wine--1f --sa:e-ot beer -\\~us

.'
election. At the close of the hearing,
Roderick said he hoped to have a
decision next week.
Reiser charged that at least 31
voters lived In one precinct and
voted In another. Lewis Bodlmer

~·~- ~--i~ffim~n~~o.rl'

Precinct
256-146.
Reiser argued that House Bi11502
required the issue be presented by
the precinct "so voters can deter(Continued on pagp A3)
.

Knight steps down. in sherifrs suit
,.,.,...,.,. of p\aytex ® Bras
Enti1'8 o_... tnoludsS "Support. can

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7'·14- At.leut 1.9 perltON.

POMEROY - Meigs Corrunon
Pleas Couri Judge Charles H.
Knight has stepped down from
· presiding over a court action filed by
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank
against the Meigs County Sheriff
Department Employes Local100 A
and the Ohio Council 8, American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes.
AcCOrding to an entry filed In the
court, Judge Knight stepped down
from hearing the case becau~ he
believes himSelf to be unable to

Impartially slf on the matter.
Upon agreement of counsel f&lt;irthe
plaintiff and counsel for the defendants, It Is being requested that the
Ohio Supreme Courtappolnt John C.
Bacon, retired judge, topresldeover
the case.
A hearing on a motion for a
temporary restraining order Is set
for 10 a.m. on Feb..5.
In answer to a grlevanCP filed by
Isaac M. Mohler, Elizabeth A.
Mohler and Donald S. Mohler -

GALLJPOLJS - In Its first full
.year of operation, thenlghtprosecutor program continues to operate at
a savings to lOCal govPrnment and
courts, according to City Solicitor

tween litigants Is reached at the
hearing, thecasesdonotproceedto
munlclpalcourt. ··
Court costs on such ' cases
amounted to approximately $37,00l
In 19113, Cowles said. Preliminary
. ligures from 19841ndlcate that costs

.as_..
out'OI-court hearing for people
Involved In · minor litigation and
mlsdeameanors. If agreement be-

The average cost to attorneys
representlngcllentsln1984was$1C6,
, the city solicitor added.

Tlmes-SenllneiSialf

p;:,.,Theagia•~p:.rogri~"am.;.,. ;~~
-Douglas M. Cowles

---·

NEW MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROVIDER-Dr. James P. Conde
Friday signed a contract wllh the Meigs Coonly Healtlr Deparimenllo
partiCipate bt the state and federally spontiO!'ed medical a-sktance
program lor Meigs Countlans dlsadviiJIIR&amp;ed by an unemployed head of
household~-Dr. Conde joins Dr. James WithereD and Dr. Wlbna
Mansfield as partlclpantbtg physicians In the program which began last
June, and this week was granted a six monlh extenoilon with Iundin! of
$3,168.80. John Jacobs, Health Depariment administrator, met with Dr.
Conde, sealed, Friday momllq: to review the program.

The program's only e'xpendltun?,
Cowles noted, was $1,001 paid to
then-Assistant City Solicitor Bn?nt
A. Saunders, the hearing officer.
Although Saunders has recently
joined GaUia. County Prosecutor
Joseph L.. Cain's staff, he will

outside of court, and It lncn?ases
people's ability to n?late to each
other. They just want thelrpi'Oblem
solved."
Statistics released by Cowles
show that between October 1983,
wl)en the program started. and

April and May and 14 were held In
Decernber1983.
Out ·of that total number of
hearings. 135caseswereresolved. a
clearance rate of91 percent . Cowles
said. From t.hc total.l14ofthecases
were Indigent . with the largest.

cantly to that decrease," Cowles of hearings- 23 ·-were held In
said. "But outside of the money, It . June, while 15 were conducted In
(the program) gives peoPJPa forum
·

Theindigentcasesrepresented77
percent of the total cases heard
Cowles said.
'

~a~" :~;.;;;;,~;;h;;;-;;"":u;~;~-. =~~~~~:::~;~~~;;tXl s~lfl-~ ;::;:;;.,1~~~~*":;;!"'- ~~~ber l~f--~(n~~Jft~

City's proposed '~5
budget set for revtew

IndepeQdent budget study proposes
eutting 1640,000·from city finances
5.50 '' ,n.., nq.IU
___..
wtth leather-look uppers.
. Special

we .-rn the J'!Cht to !1mit qU&amp;nt!tt.eo.

Comfy Joggers In-2 Favorite Styles!

•8
6

Your
Chllloe

Fttpula.r aelf oklsure8 Cl' t.radlttcn&amp;l ~ IQ!e.

M&amp;n-ma.da matar1&amp;18- l'llddll4 ocil&amp;l'. lllm'l. bqrl'
.....~._,_ _._ - - f.OO.
and youths\ siZeS.-·__, ·-·

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Self olOIUNI-Ihn'a. bo,yl',

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=.-~;:a:~::;:otoro=.-~Y!f~h~e~n~y~o~u~sh!:~~p~M:,:u:r:.:p~h::Y~'.:•:.:•=a:::.r.:.t.:Y:..o:.u.:.:..'r_e_b_e_i:-n...:g=-M-u_r...;p:;;..·_h...;:y;....S_m_a_rt
1

By IARBY EWJNO
'nme8-l!entlnel

sua

GALLIPOLIS-Aslheclb'nears
consideration of Its ~Iopoeed $4.6
·mUllonbudgetforl!e,anln4fpenclent study-conductedbytheleader
of the comnilttee that succestMIY
challenged a water rate lncre-ln
mld-Ocfober- proposes an alter\la·
tlve budgetthatwooldcutmunlcl~
expl!ildltures by nearly 14 percent,
The proposal, whlchwouldcutthe
city's budget by $640,744, was
submitted to Gallipolis City Man·
_ ager Chris Morrts Friday by local
attomey John E . HaUlday.
'!be 11-page document propuses
speclllccutsln191rudgetcategorles,

• ~ ··

_Program saves mon,ey, court time, says solicitor
By KEVIN KELLY

City

former sheriffs department empioyeswhoallegetheywerecovered
by a oontract which would not have
expired untU March 31, 19lfi ~
Sheriff Frank flied a suit charging
thatthecontractisnotvalldbecause
II was not ra tifled by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
j{night was asked to dismiss
himself from the case because of his
long frlelndshlp and political support for Frank, said Barry BoUn, the
union's staff represenlatlve.
.

signed on to work with the
unemployed a nd their families.
As -explained by Jacobs. the
amount of assistance available ro
the unemployed and his family will
be determined on the basis of
Income by Health [)(&gt;partment
personnel prior to their visit .to the
doctor.
A sliding lee scale wUI be used to
determine what P.,rcentag&lt;' of the
payment can be made from the
funds. AccordlngtoJacobs. families
of two where the head of the·
household Is umemployed and the
household income is $6,73l, In·
families oflourwithlessthan$10,200
Income and families of six with less
than $13.00 In inoome, will pay
nothing to participate in the medical
program .
·
Others With more Income will pay
(Continued on page A3)

Including the pollee department,
lire departmellt, city manager's
ot11re and wall'r treatment plant
operations.
'lbeclty'sbudgetaryprocesswas
brought under scrutiny In October
when a large number of citizens
reacted to an attempt by the city
commission to lncrease.wall'r rates
an average of 38 percent.
- That &amp;GtiOil-locUo the IIMiedlate
gathering of more that 850 signatures on a referendum petition. The
. petition effectively halted the warer
rate Increase. '!be lasue Is~
to go .before city voters dWini the
llt'layprtmary.
'
While the city admlnlsiratlon

maintains Increased revenues are
needed to offset projected deficits In
the water department, petitioners ·
have Insisted that the Increase is
Ul1Jle(.'e5sary- arguing thatany
shOrtfalls ' could be reversed by
ti1JilmiDg the city's overall budget.
Halliday- who was Instrumental
·mthe reterendwn lnltlatlve - says
the pulllOSI' of his proposed alternalive budget is to "show that this
budget can be cut when Uie city
manager and cltyconunlsslon say It
cannOt be."
In addition to targeting spectllc
llpolill Ct&amp;y Mallll&amp;et' Chrlll Mordepariinenis Wid ¥riiiiuns, Hitiii- ... - rill pae "ed hli buiipt iii'Uiiday takes sharp aim at certain
.-1 1o 111e comrnltl8lo!l
(Continued on page A3) ·
December.
'

!Pearly

By LARRY EWING
December. Since then, the fivp.
'l'lmes-Sellllnel Slalf
. member commission has worked to.
GALLIPOLIS - Two public flnallzE'thebudgetduringaseriesoC:
bearings on the city's proposed $4.6 budget study sessions held through-'
mUllan 1985 budget have been outDecemberandJanuary. '
·
scheduled for February.
The . city's budgetary operalion'
The p1oposed budget - which was brought Into sharp focus 1n• 0
reflects estimated revenues of $&lt;1..6 October when a commJttee ·o1 •.
million and expenditures totaling cltlzims, through referendum. chal$4.4 million- wlll be publicly aired
Jenged a municipal ordinance that
on Feb. 5 and 19. The commission is would have Increased water ratPS. ;
--expected to Place- the '85_budget
_ At the time, the "oornmlnee or
resolution on Its first reading during
five " that sponsorea !he petition:
the Initial hearing and !!nallzE' It at
argued that the city should "cut Its:
the second sessiOn.
budget" before acting on rate
Call1p:ill5 -City M:n!ger-£h.r!.s increases.
,
_ _
;,
MoiTI.S presented his budget propWblletherewasllttlepublictnput'
ossl to the commission In early
(Continued on page A3)
,
'

�.•

·-

----·&gt;r

-··-

January 27, 1985

~

COmmentary and perspectiVe

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page-A-2
January 27. 1986

'
'

....

Baldness &amp; the con _____;..___J_am_e_sJ_.

...

K_i...::..lpa_
· t_ric_k

A Division of
A~

.

istm~ .~.__...,..... f"T""':::::! c::l·-=~v

11211 'l1drd Ave.;·Gam..,q., Ohio
(614) 446-2342

lll Court •SL, Pomen&gt;y, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI

WASHINGTON -The Foqd and
Drug Administration reached out
with Its long arm the other day and
formally set up two whole classes of
non-prescription products for early
obliteration. If the FDA has Its way
. - and he assured the FDA wlll
have Its way - lt soon wlll be
unlawful to sell any
that

the government decree "effective-

ness" also·.

'

. Mind you, I am not writing In
brief lor any particular aphrodisiac
or cul'e for balditess. To the best of
my kndwledge, \the--FDA's expert
panels were exactly right In saying
that all these things are junk. The
exr&gt;erts on baldness said fiatly that
dnnoPtn the hair shaft once

possibility that they may be wron11,
hopeful customers have trled over·
and that even the best experts
thelcounter concoctions of B·
cannot know the Infinite forms and . vttamlns, various minerals, sultan!·
conditions of mankind.
· !amide, lanolin, ascorbic acid,
In brief, I raise again the same paraffin, wheat germ and jojoba
oil. The FDA scorns them all.
arguments I raised with such
eloquence and futility when Lae·
Nothing demostrably works. So
!rile was much In the news. The
henceforth, after a mday waiting
probabilities are a mllllon-to-o~e
perlnd, all wlll be banned.
that Laetrile Is no more effective
In my vtew, It should make no

eather!.------..--. Stomt stirs ·'mini-blizzards' across Ohio ..~~:
.

...

By The~ PreM
Hundreds of school children left
stranded' In their buildings by
.
.,.
- - "'
.•h!»_stezy _.,.t•&gt;!m .ll!!gal!o~Dg
home early Saturday after dlmln·
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
lshlngwlnds bnprovedvlslbU!tyand .
Chance of snow Monday and Wednesday. Fair on Tuesday. Hlgbs
gave road crews a chance to cut Into
. generally In the JOs. Lowsmostiy 15 to25Monday and Tuesday and In
snow drifts.
the 20s on Wednesday.
"We may ·have set some kind of
record for the longest day in
~~1 - sesston~·-sat\1 -Torn ·sooernake1". .....
superintendent of the Madison
.
By The AMoclaled l'MII .
Plains Local School District.
Two developing low presSure systems will bring back the threat of
About IUl students and 80
stranded motorists from Interstate
snow to Ohio Sunday night and Monday.
.One system wlll enter the upper lakes region Sunday and the other
71 spent the night in six district
will move out of the southern Rockies Into the lower Mississippi
buildings, he said.

a

Extended Ohio forecast

Threat o/-sn-ow- today-,-M-6nday ·

buildings, pl'!!parlng dinner Friday

night and breakfast this morning
before the st'udents began boarding buses for their delayed trip home.
,Sllofoenvioi&lt;P _sa!rl Jb&lt;&gt;'l' w.en&gt; no~~
problems. "Everybody's been so
cooperative. Everybody just kind of
made the most pleasant experience
out of a possibly bad experience.
We're thankful that we didn't have
any buses stranded anyplace," he
L~td. - - - · -- - ·- --,_~,- , ·-~Madison County sheriff's deputies
used snowmobiles togetmedlclneto
thestrandedstudents,lncludlngone
who Is a diabetic and needed Insulin
to make It through the night. said
Sheriff Steve Saltsman.

near Dayton, also began returning

five hours Friday between "the

to their homes from the four . Akron-Canton airport and Belden
buUdlngs In which they had been VIllage Mall to clear away a
she~ieo,:&lt;.l.

~ ~J:yeql~plleup _ _

.
The storm, which spawned
thunder, lightning and what Na·
tiona! Weather Service forecasters
called "snowbursts,' ' raced across
Ohio Friday along with an Arctic ·
cold front that the weather service :
iatanrn.---~·-·-.....·---~ · ~
;-=-S&lt;~id-mu~ ·ht--ingwL"1d-ehiH:; as-ki~·;as ., ~·
Authorities In the OevE&gt;land, minus 40 degrees Saturday.
·
ColumbUs, Akron-Canton, Mans·
Held and Toledo areas reported
Meteorologist Brad Vrcek of the·
accldeius Involving more than 100
National Weather Service at CleVevehicles sent at least 45 people to
land fopklns International Airport,
hospitals.
said a snowburst that contributed to

Less than 6 Inches of ·snow fell
Friday In many places across Ohio,
but drtven by winds up to 50 mph II
turned Into a near blizzard that
played havoc with traffic, and
contributed to at least three

--

view school district In Jamestown,

state 77 were closed for more than

-

weather front .

City budgel..-.._____.;.__ __;______________&lt;c_on_tln_ued_rro_m...:.p_:age_A_
·H

A MEMBEB o( The AMoclated PreiUI, Inland D&amp;lly PreaS Alloelacton and &amp;he

American New1paper Publt.hen Auoclatloo.

•

The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel Page A·3

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Plea•nt. W; Va.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

HOBART WILSON JR.
E,xecutlve Editor

---

·

LEftERS OF' OPINION are welcomed, they should be less thaa 300 words
. loaa. Allletien are .aubjeet to edltlaa aad muat be eiJPed wltb·aame, acldreu and
• &amp;e:lepbone awnber11. No ..tped lelten wUI be pubUsbed. Lette1'11 should be Ia
10011 tute, addreul•aluuet, aot penoaaliUea . .

Even his political detractors have to grudgingly take their hats off to
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste for the public relations campaign
drummed up to suppor\_hls highway construction.program. .
·
Although there was little new in the approach or the publicity
surrounding It, the adml)'llstratlon strategy successfully generated .
favorable newspaper and broadcast storles, and cut off any chance of even
mUd criticism from opponents .
•Celeste's campaign opened with mention of his $1.9 billion "Operation
'JobS-Highways" program In the ~tate of theStale message 0., udiv'NEOl iv
a joint session of the General Assembly.
·
As Is usual in' big highway projects, most o! the money would come from
the federal government.
ThP governor said he would use SZIO million In state highway money to
attract the federal cash for 22 new highway projects, aoonstructlon effort
that would create 100,CXXl jobs.
~~ or all, no Increase in the gasoline tax, the levy that exclusively .
provides money lor highway pu!lX&gt;ses; would be required to pay for II.
Like the State of the Statp address itself, the program Immediately
brought to mlnd1he ~'jolls.and progress" slogan so often erQployed, with
equal success. by former Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes .
Where did the $270 mllllon come from? "The product o! good .
nnanagement," Celeste said. Mainly. it was unspent money from the past,
repayments of state money for work that should have been paid by the
federal government', and Interest payments stemming from a lawsuit by
the Ohio Contractors' Association.
NPver mind that by law the money couldn't be spent for an,ything but
transportation work, anyway. "The $Z70 million represents money which
was not previously ctimmltted," Celeste said .
.The governor dld n6t anhounce specific projects during his State ollhe
State address. That was saved lor a Statehouse news conference · the
1olluwDig Monday.

0/;M

......~,..,~

'WB wt&gt;S umNIN' 't&gt; A~RIC~ SING, ~N SU&gt;tiNL.V aRl'li l'Jmt UP. •

Peasants as victims.____~_ _;___ _

.

·Just In case the word wasn't spread from that event, the governor and
transportation officials hopped into a plane the next day for flight s to
Akron, Cleveland, Lorain, Sandusky, a nd 'lfoledo to hold local news
coriferences.
· '
.
There was more oft he same on Wednesday, with flights to Youngstown,
Athens and Cincinnati.
Celeste, who days earlier had offered a political olive branch to
Republicans, Invited GOP legislators to attend the highway briefings .
..,.. Eew !egis!alm;s.are !LI&lt;e!ydo t&gt;.1rno!!own tbe.opporturuty to be pri&gt;seQt at

was
St~lehouse

..

as

as

news conferen.ce, for pxampiP.

ft&gt;I{aLiTYQUiZ
..

A.

:oNe oF Tl-ie~e i~ u§eo
:e;y ViCioll~ TeRRORiHS

:wHo Have NO ReGaRD
,FoR HUMaNiTY To.
:sLoW UP PoLiTiCaL

:r.aRGe.Tg,.

:= :s.

TI-le. oTtleR

i~ u~eD

B'l'

Dinner for two.
.

Art Buchwald

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

•

6oD-FeaRiN6 CiTiZetl~
To DeMoNaTRaTe
TtleiR BelieF iN THe
~aNCTiT'l of LiFe
B'l BLO.WiNG uP

aBoRTiON

·----

'

-

HOLZER CLINIC
CARDIAC
REHABILITATION
CENTER

CLiNiC~.

·...•

,....................
-="r;:;: ~:;..oo::z=;:.;:

)ACK&amp; JILL'S

: Today Is Sunday, Jan. '!/, the 27th day of 1985. There are 338 days left In
the year.
: :.Today's highlight in history:
· , On Jan. 27. 1973, the Vietnam peace accords were signed In Paris,
IJrlnglng to an end the longest foreign war In U.S. history.
:. On this date:
In 17li6, composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born In Salzburg,
"'ustrla.
: In 1832, Charles -Lutwidge Dodgson, who would gain fame as author
J.ew!s Carrnll, was horn.
; ; In lBSl, naturalist and author John JameS AudubOn died In New York at
t~ age of 65.
:' In 1810, the first Greek-letter sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta, was founded
Ill Indiana Asllury University, now De Pauw University.
; In tlB), Tbomas Edison received a patent for his electric Incandescent

Phone 446-4343

\WINTER
CLEARANCE
CONTINUES

I!Jht.

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE

. • In 1888, the National Geograpblc Society was founded.
:. It\ 1901, composer Giuseppe Verdi died.
•: m·J.943, the ftrst all-American a1r raid tookpJace against Germany In
World War II.
.: ln_l951, an era of atom!c testing began In the. Nevada desert as Air
l!:oice plane d!IJill)ed a one-ldloton bomb on ~.!tm•n.FJ•t• · __
-~ lp 1181, astronauts VIrgil!, "Gus" Grtaaom, Edward H. White and Roger
!Jiaftee were k!lled In a flash fire during a routine test aboard their
~ 1 spacecralt at Cape Kennedy.
. -in-1973, the mlll'!U'Y draft ended In the United States.

1/2 PRICE

an

SORRY, -LL SALES FIMAL
. 110 LAY·AtfAYS

a.

.

.,

\

To ........................ .

"F•ohfono fur the Young"
326 Second Ave.

&lt;

j

.

c

·Today
in history.
.

·'

'.' .

J

Providing ............. ..

By ........................ .

:;.;;r--=·==-

:x;;_·_

"*""

=~;;-:--~;::

:=:::-_=---;:

~·'--·..;:;_~

Patients who have had heart attacks (acute myocardial in·
farctions), heart pain (angina), or cardiac by:pass surgery.
Help restore patients to the highest level of activity possible
and help redu~e the risk of future heart att,cks.
Education and cksely monitored ellercise.

At ....................... ..

Suzanne Mize, M.D~. Cardiologist and Center Director.
Ro1er Gilders, M.S., Exercise Physiologist and Supervisor.
and Nursin1 Staff trained in cardiac care.
Hcilzer. Ciinic Sycamore Branch facility in Gallipolis.

Beginning ............. .

Febru!Jry 1985

-.
-.
..
. '
'

~

'

.'

.

Consisting of ....... ..

Three·1-hour exercise periods a week for 12·18 weeks, plus
education and EKG testin1.
·
·
.
Insurance coverage by Medicare, Blue Shield, Aetna and most 1roup plans.
To learn more or re1ister for this new pro1ram, consult your doctor and/or call Holzer
Clinic's CardioloiY Department at 446·5348.
·

__

un
-n
v

~---

'

--

••

...,'

...

-------

~

�~

~--..:... -

··-

....

"" -- - ~ --

--

- ~-..

-

-~

-

-

.,.._

~

•
Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 27. 1986

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

•• 1

STORE HOURS:
MON .-THURS ..
9 am til10 pm
FRI.-SAT.
9 am ti110
CLOSED SUNDAY

Area deaths
· • Sarah E. Baker
COOLVILLE- Sarah E. Baker.
'' 79, Coolville, died Friday in Arradla
Nursing Home, Coolville, following
an extended illness.
:Mrs. Baker wa~ born in Coolvllk&gt;,
a daughter of the late Frank and
Allee Chevalier Shanks. She was a
member of the Ireland Community
'Church.
·
Surviving are three sons, Ray·
mond E . Baker of Beverly, Harold
Baker of Norman, Okla ., and Glen

and lour nephews and two nieces.
He was pn&gt;cedf&lt;'d ln death by four
stepchildren.
Funeral services will be held all
p.m. Monday in Ewing Funeral
Home, wllhHllton WolfPofflcialing.
Burial wUI be in Letart Fall s
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 24 and 7·9 p.m .
today.

John W. Hall
GALLIPOLIS- John W. Hall,82,
44 Bell Ave.. Gaiiipolls, died at 7:45
a.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical
Center, following a brief illness.
Arrangements will be annoo·
unced later by Miller's Home for
Funerals.

Thru Feb. 2, 1915
. We Resarve The Right!,!&gt; Limit Quantities.

CENTER CUT

Mary Ellen Mayes
Several cases

~==~~~~~~~:;#~~.'; .1~-'"'~~~~Tg~~~;~=w~~-q-~~l.v~~~:JJ::£o~Meigs _ ,_,:_-:_:::--_ . - -

Sand~~;~[s;~

Athens, Thelma J .
Bernardino, Calif., and Carolyn
Hapney of Coolville; a brother, John
Shanks of Parkersburg, W.Va .; a
sister, Helen Shanks of Coolville
and 23 grandchildren and several
great.grandchildren.
• Precedin~ her in death besides
· h€r parents were her husband
_A:]va;

an.d,!J~ a~_(lthe~.:,o,three§,ls.ter~

a'ftd a grand~aughter. ·· ·· --- - ~-

Tlleyuftludeadlvo~eactlonluea

died Friday morning af " hef
residence.
Born March 15, 1929, in Mason
County,shewasthedaughterofthe
iale Orville and Ethel Jeffers.
Funeral services will be held all
p.m. Monday in Chapman'sMortu,
ary, Huntington, with the Rev.
Marshall . D. Hickman officiating.
Burial will be in Greenbottom

by Louise Staats, Pomeroy. against ·
Wayne Staats: a .suit lot money by
Killbarger Construction, Ogan,
against Warren E. Miller, Alas·
cadero, Calif.; and a suit by the
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan, Lima.
·against Timothy J. Sayre, Albany .
The new divorce actions have
been filed in the court and one

,-,,.-;;;~iv,,a~K.Yri.ru~-:n..;;,.·-.:-u!!,;,~ '

Gross neglect of duly and extreme
. Funeral services will be held at 1 I he morl)lary from 6-9 tonight.
cruelty
are charged in all of the
p.!!'! ... -M!.3~a~~~ Wh!te Funen~!
&gt; - = " - : 1 " _,.,_.'
d[vorce ac tions which include
liome, Coolville, with I he Rev. Eric
Barbara Carver, Racine, against
SJarr officiating. Burial will be in
Mary M. Morgan
Arthur· Carver Jr .. Crystal River,
Coolville Cemetery. Friends 'may .
Fla.: Deanne C. Fisher •. Pomeroy,
call al the funeral home anytime
GALLIPOLIS ...:. Word has been
against Theodore C. Fisher, Pome·
alter 2 p.m. today.
received by the Times·Sentinei of
roy, and John Wesley Roush.
the death of Mary M. Morgan, wife
Pomeroy, against Linda Roush,
of Dr. RobertT. Morgan, 918Timber
Henry M. Doss
Charleston, W.Va.
Trail, Cincinnati. Dr. Morgan,
Teresa Gordon, Belpre, was
. GALLIPOLIS - Henry Melvin brother of D. Kenneth Morgan of
granled a dlvorcefromRoyGordon,
Doss, 61, 716Second AVI'., Gallipo!Js, Gallipolis, was a former Gaiiipolls
Alloy, W.Va., on grounds of gross
·
died at 5:30a.m. Saturday in Holzer resident.
neglect of duty.
Also surviving are three daugh·
Medlcpl Center, having been in
An entry was filed in the court
falling health for the pas I few years. ters, Mrs. Stephen (Cathy) McClary . f!ndin_g, ~.O..'!Ic:l. Jeffers guilty of
- - Born Nov.l7;TI:ii, at P&lt;icahantas, Of ~OhimOUs;--Mrs.-Harry .. (Anni
con tempi of court In a child support
son of the tate Benjamin and Lukens of Libertyville, Ind ., and
action filro by Rise Jeffers. Jeffers
Sally, a t home; and four
~arrie Dudley Doss, he retired in
was found to be behind In payments
from Lakin Stale Hospital. grandchildren.·
by $3,716.88. However, 'no penalties
Friends may call from 2·5 p.m.
wher~ he had been employed for 13
were issued because the aefendant
today al Vorhes Funeral Home,
years.
is In poor health. The Social Security
' 'Earlier. he had been employed at Springfield Pike, Wyoming, Ohio. ' administration was ordered . lo
the La fa yette Hotel In Gallipolis for Funeral services Will be held at ll
withhold child support payments in
more than 27 years, and hosted a a.m. Monday in Wyoming Presby· ' thl' futuJ1'.
l!ffigram on WJEH Radio called terlan Churth.
The court ordered the arl1'st of
'Viseing wilh Doss."
Michael V. Gar.dner on contempt of
: He was a member of Paint Creek Alfred R. Still
court charges. Gardner. allegedly
•f3aptist Churrh · and Ancient York
should have paid $19,950 in child
support since Nov. 30, 1919, bullias
4Jdge 33, F&amp;AM.
.
POMEROY · - Alfred Roland
· ; l'le married Minnie Hurt, who ''Jake" Stilt, 61, County Road 28, only paid $4,0:14, according to court
•, sinvives, on . Dt?c. 26. 1948. at Racine, died Saturday morning in
records.
qalllpolis.
· the Veterans Administration Hospi·
.
: • Alsosurvivingareason, HenryM. . tal at Chillicothe.
Doss Jr. of Louisville, Kv: two
Veterans Memorial
Born May 5, 19?3, at Minersville,
(ll&gt;ughters, Mrs. CamUJeTho~pson son of Alva Douglas and BeSJ!je
Admitled -ShirleyDerenberger,
gf . Columbus, and Mrs. Rhonda
Nance Stitt, hewas a farmer, World
Albany; Uoyd King, Pomeroy;
l!&lt;lgan of GalliPQiis; five grand· War II veteran and member of the
Robert Parsons, Racine; Ray
¢hllclren. Henry Melvin Doss Ill, VFW Post at Mason, W.Va.
.
Brunty. Racine; Betty Maife,
Brandon Doss, W. Thompson,
Surviving are his wife, Ethel Mae
Rerosvll)&lt;&gt;; Marjorie Tromm,
Heather Doss and Jam€'s . Henry Stilt; a stepdaughter, Josephine
Hogan; and a sister, Mrs: Bernice Boyles of Middleport; two sisters,
Rutland.
Discharged - John Guinther,
J{ing of Gallipolis.
Rena Meyers of Columbus, and
Beatrice
Price, Clara Miller.
·: He was preceded In death by tWo
Anna Wheeler of Bowling Green:
brothers, Luther and Lonnie, and by
tw(l sisters. Mrs. Helen Cordell and
rylt;s. Mary Lucill~ Craig.
_...... L. Funera! scr.tlc=:es-wi!!@he!c!-at 2.-

•.

TUrner and the Rev. John King
o!ficiating. Burial will be in Pine
S~t Cemetery. Friends may call
&lt;tl : Waugh·Halley·WO&lt;Xj Funeral
I:fb!ne!rom 2-4and7·9p.m. Monday.
·,Masonic services by Ancien! York
Ledge 33, F&amp;AM, will be held In Ihe
f)lilerai home at 8 p.m. Monday.
·:The body will lie In state in the
cl)urch one hour prior to the service.
: I;'allbearers will be Charles Willi·
'lfT'.S•. Bobby Casey: Jessie Saunder,s. Jack Carr, Giiberl Craig Jr. and
JI!Dmy Williams.
.
•

'

.

1l'imes- ltmthtel

~s::+S:~~~=-=~~-·1-::t-:

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HAM
t-.....,-':"""___________.__;....____-i SALAD
LEAN &amp; JUICY
SUPERIOR
WIENERS
·-

American ;\J E'w spaper Publishers As·

sociat!on . National 1\dvc;&gt; rllslng Represf'nlallvE'. Branham , 1717 Wrst
N,ln(' Mile Road. Suite 204. Dctrou.

MIChigan. oi8075.
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REYNOLDS
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=~-

!f you are !ike ~ost p,eople with hearing loss you hear well
m s~me ~1tuat1ons and have difficulty in others. A new
hearmg a1d has been developed that can give you the help
y~u .need, ~he.n you nee.d it The Arg~sy CCA Canal hearing
a~d 1s so tmy 1t ca~ be Inserted in a matter of seconds. It
f1ts comfortably Within the ear canal and is barely visible
'Help is finally here for those "part time" hearing problems:

HElPJ/tl !EOflE HEAR
WIUIAM S. DILES
326 W. Union Slriet

a.....r. Oltlt 45701

16141 594-3571

.wo-car accident on 'Bidwell·
'\odlley Roap, which caused heavy
lamage loonecarandllghtdamage.
·o th&lt;&gt; otl!l'c. Pat J .llunter. 37, o!Rt. .
:!, Bidwell, wassouthooundandBilly
.r. Patterson, 40, of Rt. 3, Texas
Road, GaUipolls, was northbound
w~ they collided at 2: ai p.m.
'The accident resulted in heavy
damage· io Hunter's car and light
damage to PattersOn's. No injuries
were reportro.
Two Gallia County driVers es·
caped Injury when the "cars they
were driving collided on Ohio 554.
Rita D. Shriver, 411, ofRt.l, Bidwell.
was eastbound and James E.
Greene, 37, of
Star Route,

ate damage in the accident, uwpers
said. No citations were Issued.
A two-car collision on Gallia
County Rqad . 5. Friday 100rning
resulted in heavy damage to a car
driven by a Gallipolis woman ..
Troopers said cars driven by
'3hlrley M. Shmigal, :Kl, ol 50~
Grape St., Galllpolls, and Belinda K.
Layne, ~. of Rt. 3, Gallipolis, were
northbound on 5, When Shmlgal
apparently loSt control of her car,
went elf the right stdeof the road and ·
Into a ditch.
Troopers said Layne apParently
also lost control of herca rand struck
Shmlgal'.s vehicle from behind at
9:10a.m . Shmigal's car sustained

·ently lost control of her car . and
struck Greene's vehicle at 11: 15
a.m. Shriver' scar sustalnedmoder·

troopers said
moderately damaged. No injuries
or citations were reported .

681 In Meigs County and struck a

Farm bureau seeks market-oriented legislation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
!'resident of the Ohio Farm Bureau
,Federation says he' supports the
natiOnal organization's call !Or
·=-'~l!aJng:illl!'jtO'deJtaU'atllllll!!llcy irom a
. ' price support to an income siiPiiort
program.

income support mechanisms, said
MUler, who also Is a member of
national organization's . board of
directors.
\
be set at
"The loan rates

prices need to be
In the
l,
n
mll)P
S!J!J..DOJt1lOt,!!pl.:!!'~
... De-iegate3Cit-the :A.-nel'~an Fmm _..
support for·farmers, "Miller said.
Bureau Federation's recent annual
"The Farm Bureau recommends·
meeting adopted policy calling for
that the (federal) farm bUi must
Joan rates to help the producer
carry
much of the same language of
market his productslnsteadolbelng
previous
bills but the mE:anings of
used to support the price, according
need to be definitely
those
words
to David 0. Mllier, of Newark,
different
,"
MUier
said.
president ol the Ohio Farm Bul1'au
Cl!anging
the
thruSt
of the farm
Federatioit.
bill
from
a
price
support'
to an
The delegates also agreed that
income
Support.
program
would
target prices must be used as
])lit as an

-

PQMEROY - Icy streets causect
two ·traffic accidents iii Pomeroy·
Friday afternoon.
' At 2:53p.m., a vehicle driven by
Lisa Baxter, Pomeroy, traveling
north on Brick Street, skidded left of
center and struck a car driven by
Carol Gibbs, Syracuse. Damages to
the vehicle driven by Baxter were
moderate. and heavy to the Gibbs
vehicle.
·
At 4:06p.m. acardrivenbyJanet
Persons, Mulberry Avenue, Pome,
roy, skidded on the ice and slruck a
utlllty pol~. There were heavy
damages to the vehicle and Persons
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospllal where she was treated for
..JnJ!Iri~&lt;and rele~ ·
· • .

.

C&amp;SOE office manager Lonnie
Leonard said the accident, which
happened at ll::Kl a.m., did not
break the pole but caused a line to
snap, affecting customers in the
lower end of the city, Orchard Hill,
Chiiilcothe Road and Ohio 7 south.
Crews restore&lt;.! power to half of
l~e customers within 15 to 20
minutes, Leonard said, a)ld the
majority or customers were l:iack on
line by 12: 50 p.m.
City pollee said the tractor·lraller
was driven. by Frederick W.
Shaffner, 29, Kenova, W.Va., who
was not cited. The trailer Is owned
by Fleet ·TransportatiOn, Catletts·
burg, Ky.

POMEROY - Local units ans·
werro seven ca lis Friday, 1he Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servi·
ces reports.
A~ 1:57 a.m., Rutland look Shirley
Derenberger from Pageville to ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
1;49 p.m. Middleport took Harry
Garnes Jr., ·r rom ~h Street and
Hartinger Parkway to Veterans
Memorial. Tuppers Plains al 2.:43
p.m. went to Ohio 248 for an auto
accident, treating Garth Smith but
providing no transportation; Pomeroy at 4:09p.m. went to Mulberry
Avenue for Janet Persons, Injured
in an auto accident, and took ber to
Veterans Memorial. .
Tuppers Plains at 4: 5:l p.m. took
Belly · Maiie' from the Moreland
addition to Veterans Memorial and
Racine at. 9:25 p.m. took Olester
Shahan from Great Bl'nd to
Veterans Memorial.
\

resull in less costly farm programs
because the income support could

be targeted to farmers who need it , .
Miller :;aid.

.$ SAVE $

·

GALLIPOLIS

TH.E ~DENUL

Edward B.

Ave., and Michael A. Carter, 19,
Were- eaeil'-'--li·fit&gt;U - ;11,
SJJO, sentenced to three days in jail, received a suspeMed six ·month jail
given a 6Cklay driver's license sentence and six montbs probation
suspensiOn and 18 months probl)tion for no operator's license.
Frederick L. Barker, 22, 197
Friday in · Gallipolis Municipal
Kelton Road, was fined $12 for
Court.
,.
RobertS. Hill,l9, Rt. 3, Gallipolis , speeding, and Roger L. Hall, 32,
Thunnan, was fined $15 for speed·
forfeited $40 bond, for ieft of center;
Robert A. McLean·, 29, Eu11'ka Star ing. David D. Preston, 41, Oak Hill,
Route, forfeited $39 bond for forfeited $40 bond for following too
speeding; and' Paul J. Gentleu, 43, closely.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Kraft, Calif., forfeited $38 bond for
James
M. Savage, 46, Belle Haven,
speeding. .
Va.,
$36;
Timothy G. Jones, 36,
L~ ffi'!Xll&lt;:lpal court Thursday, a ..
Mouftt-carrner
·Ttmn·.. - $37;· r.
fine of $25 was handed to Melvin
Dianne Oliver, 29, Oak Hiil, $38;
Kirby on a domestic violence
Donald L. Dollar, 35, Davison,
charge. He was 'also given a
$39; Johnny R. Beegle, 36,
Mich.,
suspended six·month jail sentence
Leon,
W.Va.,$41;
KonnieZ.Zinn,33,
and 18 months probation.
203
Kineon
Drive,.$44.
James C. Krebs, 38,1734 Chatham

BiOUtlt, -19."RiO ··aii iiCJe, waS fined ~~-e-nillicothe-;

ON

.tENTER __

DENTURES
STARTING JANUARY SAVE
1

S120 .

ON A SET OF OUR VERY BEST DENTURES

SAVE S6ooo PER DENTURE
·

PH. (304) 372-3222
RIPLEY, W. VA.

R. B. SMITH

YOU GR
WHATY
PAY FOil

COFFEE

3-Lb.$
• Can

6 99
.,
e

The Sti.hJ ® 028 Wood Boss'"
- plenty of muscle for any
cutting chore large or small.
Easy to handle. Wood Boss ••
digs its Ieeth iri and won't let
·up until you do. There are
lots of chain saws on the
market. so why buy Stihl7
Simply because you get what
you pay for!

RIDENOUR···
SUPPLY
CHESTER. OH. ·
985-3308

PTOtomeet
MIDDLEPORT ~ Middlwart

PTO wUI meet at 7: :ll p.m. Monday
at the school, weather permllling.
Carl
wlli speak on drug and

MAXWELL .HOUSE

RENTAL OFFER-For a llmitttl time, rent the canal aid (or
· ' any htari,. aid! for 6 wttks for on]y $:0.00.
TIY IEFOIE YOU IUYI
· See lit at Holzer Clinic E~h WttiiiHIIay, 1:00 p.M.

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER

.ditch. ~
· Troopers said Mary. V. Lee was
westbound when sbe wparently lost
control in a curve. The 5::Kl p.m.
accident caused modef'ate damage
to ber car, troOpers said.
Light damage was reported to two
cars loUowing a coUislon on Gallla
County Road 3, troOpers said.
Rebecca A. Stover, l'l, ol Rt. 2,
Vinton, was eastbound and Betty L.
'Clarkson, 30, also of Rt. 2, Vinton.
·was westbpund, when troopers said
their vehicles coilided in a curve.
a proximately one and two-tenths of
a mile north ol0hio325. No injuries
were reported in the 5 p.m. Incident.
winds and blowing snow

Emergency runs

COUNTRY CROCK

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN
YOU NEED IT.

tiled llY troopersTorfeftotCenterGallipo~. stniei&lt; 'a part(i;ij c ar On. anVhigwebT i.JJt,i.,t,gm&gt;i=v~·~ou.;

following a two-car accident at the

-Accidents probed ·

$

PICKLE
LOAF -

Gaiila County Road 5.
Russell was northbound when
troopers said she was apparently
una tile to stop ill time and struck a
parked car owned by Lois J.
Mitchell of 21 Evans Heights,
Gallipolis.
The forre of the collisiOn report·
edly knocked Mitchell's car into
anoth-:r parked car, Which was
ownedbyMlchaeiD.SheetsofRt.4,
Gallipolis. Troopers said the acci·
dent caused mOderate damage to
Russell's car and light daJ!iage to
Mllcbeil's. No damage was re·
portro to Sheets' vehicle.
A ~year-aid Albany woman

"Bt~..hu..l~~-'~)~ELJ_r..o.nt.ae:_ _ ~.bu..A:n~T.iia1:;l~---g_u~U_:n1::.olRL..2. ~~ __esc.aued.in.J~ when thecarshewas

$

PEPSI, Reg. or .Diet
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

HI-DRI

GALLIPOLIS - Two drtvers Intersection of ohio 100 and U.S. 35
wel'l' cited Friday by. the Gallla· was lJI.year-old Gary A. Morgan of
Meigs post of the State Highway Jackson.
·
Patrol following separate accidents
The patrol said il car drtven by
inGalliaCounty.
'
John M. Lusk, 59, of Huntington.
A car driven by.lra E. Eggleton, W.Va. , was stopped in traffic on 100
38, of Rt. 1, Bidwell, was eastbound when Morgan apparently loSt
control of his car on an icy roadway
on Ohio 554 when the patrol said a
westbound car, driven by Walter E.
and slid left of center, striking
Vance, 28. of Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Lusk'scar In the side.
,
, apparently slid left of center In a
No Injuries were reported in the
rurveanclstruckEggleion'svehlcle · 2:45p.m. accident, which caused
·In the side.
light damage to ..tusk's car. No
. No inju~ were reported follow·
damage was reported to Morgan's
ing the 4:20p.m. Incident, which the
vehicle, troopers said.
patrol said caused moderate dam· . No injuries wererepprted In a9: 15 ·
age to both vehicles. Vance was
a.m. Incident in which a car driven

$299

KAHN'S

~

Highway patrol tickets· two .m otorists following accidents

GALLIPOLIS- Power was off to
approximately UlXl Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. customers in the Gallipolis area Friday
,after a tractor-trailer reportroiy
struck a power pole.at the corner of
Second Avenue and Vine Street,

299

- .- - -

•

•

.

SUPER

~-

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

January 27, 1986

Outag~ _affec!~_J,~QQ_users
..

DANISH CREAM

.,

$149

CHiCKEN·
SALAD

t----------------------1 BUTTER

2%

Six months ... .............. ........... $13.00

52 Weeks ...................... ......... $59.80
26 w... ks ........ ..... .................. $31.20

99(

HOMEMADE

VALLEY BELL

One yea,r ... .. .................. ....... . $26.8o

13 Weeks ........ .... . .... " ............ $14.56
• ~ _..-· !1'...=::: !!~= !:*.!~

LB.

PORK
SAUSAGE

PRE-SLICED

SHEDD
SPREAD

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsldf! Ohio
52 WefC&gt;kS .............................. $,1)8 . 2~
26 Weeks ...........•........ ........... $29.12

oz.

EXTRA LEAN

·=
.. =
.. ·=·

The Assoclat('d Press In , Press Assorlatlon and th('

12

HOMEMADE

Buy one pair of shoes at the regular price, and get
the second pair of equal or less value

....c=~·=·

rl-!•&gt;ml&gt;l"':

$139

11.

.... _

'

"· SJ. 99

VALLEY BELL

USP $25·81Hl

.SPARE

HOMEMADE

SELECTED GROUP .OF SHOES

E. Evans

: 'VINTON - Margaret E. Evans,
tot. Rt. 2. Thurman , dlro F.rlday in
~gcare Extendro Care Center,
€lak Hill.
: • Arrangements will be announced
later by McCoy·Moore Funeral
lf~me, Vinton.

..

'oc:S:£52._s.::;LB·~·.· . , ' I' ."-'".~' ~
" c:~
·

-

2 FOR 1 SALE .

.

~argaret

HOLLYWOOD

-~~

va ..
l!l82

.

PORK
'CHOPS

PORK CHOPS

·Cases dismissed
POMEROY -

LOIN ENO

-- -

·

STINt.

PI otect your hOme .
against fire anc:t burglary,

. and save on your

hOineowne• s inSU• ance. tOo.
Ask me about State Farm's Home
'Alert Protection Plan. ·
CAROLLSNOWDEN
411 Second Avo.
Gallipolis. CHI.

OTATOES
ii,

911(

WINESAP OR
ROME

APPLES

Ll•

89

YELLOW

CRISP

ONIONS

CARROTS

I

3·LB.

iAG

59( 4 $1
rKGS.

there are, they're not important. But what
could be more important than your savings
and financial security? None of tho8e others
have the experience and training
ofreal bankers in the professional
handling of your accounts. Its
as s~f~e as that. Come in soon
and
to one of the real bankers at our Full Service Bank~

.
'

...

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

Pllont ..6-4HO

MICHIGAN

••

Of course its not. And beware of those
who ask you to believe that one thing is just
like another. For instance, those who tell
you they're exactly like real banks.
You hear it from stockbrokers, sav. ings and loan employees, retailers,
etc. They would sometimes· have
you believe there are no differences
between them and bankers, or if

Home..._.SII
Like a flOOd neif//IIXX,IS/818

Stete Farm Fire.and casualtv

CompanY

Home OtfM;e: BkXlmlngUJn. lltinois

•

~;;:;\Ohio
~ey
J.~#
.-""""'"-~

.

..
..
' ..
•

-

�-

--'-··--

Pornerov-Middleport-Galllpolia, Ohlo..:...Pofn1 Plaal8nt, W.Va.

January 27,1986

Section~,

er

1980

January 27,

SOLIUTDE- Tile OhiO River
last week, partly
lrwat W!'f' durtilg the below
zero weiiiJier. Residents of the
area were stucll, stranded and
1111111Y juot stayed home In the ~
~e~~ere weather. Some began '
lbon trips and were forced
tum b""k becawle of. ,;now
Ice. OtherS are coping
walking up their frozen hills.

Wll8 quiet

.. .
~

'

.

'l

'

.. ' .•, ....
J

·....... ::.: .. -;-rt-

~

~

'

..

Deep freeze:
.,.n
:::.:Z

::z::

:o- . ....'" ...

--

., Gil -&lt;
Cl

..0

.ft..

,
:iii"\ ,..
~,..

:z:

::a.
:Ill:

By LEE ANN WELCH
TIJnes..Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Schools have
been closed, then opened, then
closed again. Athletic games
called off and organization
meetings postponed - winter
has hit and hit hard. ·
While the . kids . enjoyed the
time away from the classroom,
building snow creatures and
generally playing around, the
adults coped With the more
serious problems at hand.
When the temperatures fell to
16 degrees below zero Sunday,
fUrnaces and portable heaters
worked double time to meet the

:I:,..
co""
..0 M;-;

""

- needs
outside In zero-degree weather.
Those who did, did so out of
necessity, like work.

•
EMPTY PARK- The Galli·
poll&lt;l City Pal'k was deserted
during the severe cold snap
early In the last week. A lew
days later, it was the scene of
snow sculptures, including a
Snoopy character.

'

Icy winter blast slows area

•

Karen Knox didn't go to class
However, some gave It the old
last Monday or .Friday, because
"college try," attempting to go
the roads were just too bad. "I
to work or school, to no avail.
didn't want tochancethem," she
Others were simply stranded
said.
·
where they were at the time.
Another reason she was a little
The car wouldn't start, despite
hesitant on making the trip up
the dwindling heating fuel
Route 33 was the fact she'd had
supply at the home of Nancy
an accident on the q, snowy
Moeller on K.eu·Bethel Road.
road two weeks ago at Darwin.
She got a neighbor with a car to
On one day, she drove to the
take her to get fUel, then stayed
Meigs County line and turned
home the rest of the day,
back. because the road and
·enjoying the time to play video
weather got worse the farther
games with her grandson and
she went.
daughter.
The lee and snow compounded
A woman from Northup was
the
problem for the older citizens
stranded from Saturday until
of
Gall
!a County,
them
Tuesday last · week. Linda Nl·
bert, a paramedic -Wi!.l'L..Gallla- -

the staff not to bring · her ineal
because of the icy hlll , but she
was going with her family for a
while, leaving in a four-wheel
drive.
The aloneness of seniors has
been enhan~ this week, and
the phones at the center have
been blisy. with theolderc\tizens
calling in , just to let the staff
know tlley were fine.
0thi'I'S have called for assist .
ailce In getting food, medicine or
going to the doctor's office, and
the staff has made certain these
got done.
Mrs. Niday said she's proud of
this community - of those who
have
reached out
to help a
"
....,.,...-"-..··'neie:hbor durlne: t~ iCY blast.

(icy) we'd don'tencouragethem
to come out to the center," Jean
Niday, director of the facUlty,
· The se)"VIces were cancelled on
Tuesday due In anticipatiOn of
the weather, and It was closed
Monday due to the Martin
L~ther King Jr. holiday, she
said.
.
\
The home-delivered meals
have gone out and the staff able
ID get in, but very few · seniOrs
have been at the center. she
added. One woman called to t.ell

sidewalks and being of general
assistance to others.
Gallla County has survived
this round of winter weather the inconvenience a.J)d the uncertainty. School may he in session
next week. but then again,
maybe not. Games may he
played or postponed again, and
meetings called ofC unt!l a better
time. Look at the calendar,
seven weeks to spring.

bUs on Satun:lay, and was unable
to return to her Coon Creek
home after getting back. "I
wanted to get home, but It was
just impossible." To get home
now, she said she will take to the
road on foot - approximately
two miles, because it is solid lee
and impassible. '
No.t ail schools were cancelled
during the frigid spell and
Hocking Technical College was
one of them.
Reglsterd Nurse student

.

•

~

'

\.

•

Phr~to.r

bJ•
LmJ' fuinR

•

••
•
•

.•.

••

'

I

,.,.. I .

J

I

DEEP FREEZE ON
WATER - Tile ice pier.; at

Ga!llpn!h Launclt area
IRUTOUJICied by a frw.ea river
IJIOIIt of lhe week. 1bls h a tar •

cry from the summer, when •
, swbiMioas take the plunge
the piers thlll jut out from
waler. Barges continue~

trom:

•
'

.

treks

lflrouch the

Oblo

Rived

despite tile Icy waters.

•

.,

•
~

�Pomeroy~

.

..

.

"--' n,e surn~av nm.a-s.ntine~.:. Paue~a-a_

Mlddleport-GaHipolil; Ohio- Point Pleaaant, W,-Va.

·Teens
learn
self-confidence, .etiquette, through course
.
.
a, DIANE M. BALK

A

a 'a• ad rr- Writer

MID~, Ohio (AP) -

Ann Scllellenbach believes that
modern living. has left some
teen-agers In the cold, so she's

We Reserv~ fhe Riehl ro
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
· Mon.·Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

SUNDAY,
MONDA-Y.

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

and

Angela Marie Mehl

otterJng a course to. Mlp them
• developself-conlldenceandinter!lct
with others.
"Wit~ the lifestyle today, we don't
really have time to sit down and talk
to children as we used to," said Mrs.
Schellenach. who has one son and
four grandchildren.
Parents may lind themselves
rearing children in a world quill!.
different from the one In which they
grew up, . said the Middletown
woman.
Partofthelacko!timefortalklng

divorce, children may not spend

The coune wllllnclude aamP!e
much tim• wlth one parent, Meals
meetlniJ the younpterl wlllle&amp;d,
can be lntem.apted by telephoiii'S or
andadlliCUulonofhowtotaketetts.
televtalon watching. Then there are
Mrs. Schellenbaeh nrst aave her
friends and extra-curricular
course about25year$ago, when she
activities. · .
lived in Hamilton. She's decided to
Mts. Scbelienooeh's"te€11 t!IC'· 'TeV!vi; 1tn: %'llliiP d&amp;."USS!oro;· o.;.
tics" course wlll cover everything . cause "I'm not quite readY to sit by
from values to "how to ask for dates,
and see all the ~lcetles of the world
and how to refuse dates without
going l)y."
devastating the other person .'"
The $50, seven-week course lor
. "It's just a general building-up of
13-to 15-year..,lds which begins Jan.
, their self.leellng and their building· 31 will be led by Mrs. Schellenbach
ami Bruce Huntsharger, a teacher ·
up of good will. One of the things
we're going to stress Is they're
always 'loved but they have to earn
respect.
"We are going to talk about
getting along at home," getting
along with
and "how to

Limit
20'.
GRADE A WHOLE

--·-~ -·-~ ~ .~

- ---

=~ coupons-~--···

---·..

~

..

Elizabeth Chapel Church.

~

Chickens •••••••~·••••••• 49(
BUCKET
$2
_
49
Cube-·Steaks .•.••L:·•
.- .. ,...,

Mrs. Schellenbachalloteachesa

BasiC Awareneu and Special Enrlchment program that offers help
. with everything from phonics to

be thlnklng about asking tor dates
and doing thl.s sort o! thing," Mrs.
etiquette tor children under age 12.
Schellenbach said. "l thought by 16, · She offers communication sldllsand
.by .t.'!e !!.me they're Olh!eJ" &amp;!'"'""' ~E.'!! ll!o;,o~1.tion · for, jun!t&gt;f h!gh
they're sort of off on their'own. and
school students.
·
not wUIIng to llsteli.
"We're not going to get Into drugs
and sex education per se lor !lie
simple reason they know It a11. We
take the position 'you:retoosmartto
mess yourself up:••• ' ~~ ~-- - -·

WATER BED SHEET .SALE
KING $299S
QUEEN

G.lUl\;:'

GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Anita Dray
of Gallipolis and Michael Mehl of
Gretma, La., announce the forth·
coming marriage of their daughter,
Angela · Marte Mehl, to Charles
EdwanJ Cline, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Cline of Gallipolis.
The open-church wedding w,UJ

atMJamJValleySchoollnWaahfna·

ton Township near Dayton."I thouahi 12wasallttleyoungto

'

I

THE DAILY SENTINEL IS NOW
TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR
CARRIERS IN THE POMEROY AREA

..

.

.

.

-

SATIN WATER BED SHEETS
$3599

MFG. PRICE '49.95

Water Res~stcrtt

50Me&lt;en

CALL 99.2-2155
BETWEEN ~ ~A.ifTO 5 P.M.~.

P n

P-11..... P'PftPP'I'

J,)~\.0\llftl"""-;Ji'IJU;~I ~

..---

-~

·-==

"Across From The Municipal Lot"

°

.

Ground Beef ••••
LB •

USDA
CHOICE
.

Alexandra Dea Vaughan
Brian Keith Well

.

Chuck Roast ••••••
LB.

U1

Sau~age •••••••••••••
LB. ROLL

0A

BATTER DIPPED

Fish Sticks ••••••••
LB.

_.._-.....

&gt;
~

~

&gt;

=
~

""

~

0

Spectacula, ¥·u•flu

Vaughan - Well

.~

HOMEMADE

.

~

~

m
,..
,..

-

Ill

~

-

0""=
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-~

!WDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard W. Vaughan, Middleport,
are announcing ' the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Alexandra Ilea, to Brian
Keith Well, son of Mrs. Evelyn WeU,
Pomeroy. and the late Floyd
Eugene Well.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Meigs High School, and attends Rio
Grande College. Her fiance Is a
graduate of Eastern High Scliooi,
and Is employed at Imperial
Electrtc'ln Middleport.
The open-church wedding . will
take-pla('E' Juiy Zi, 6:~ p.n1., at-ttoe- 1
Church with Duane Sydenstrlcker
of South Be1hel officiating.
-·~

Calendar
~

~

....
,.
4'
9
(
·Onions •••••••••••••••••
• ""=
0 Cottage Cheese ••
o·
'YELLOW

&gt;

~

~

&gt;

3-LB. BAG

.

~

•

VALLEY BELL

24

&lt;

~

~

""=
0
:;z

TROPICANA

.

BANQUET

•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 61 ¢ will be
redeemed at face value
only.

.

Fruit Drinks~••:2 /SJ POf"Pies ::::.:..:~!

THRIFT KIN~
•

'

1114

oz.

Mac./ Cheese,.·••

PUREX DETERGENT
'

CHARMIN

•

BATHROOM TISSUE

: 6 ROLL PACK

s,. s1·

$1 69

1470Z.

$389

Limit Ont Ptr C•t-r
Good On!~ At l'ewol1'1
Offer bpirn fob. 2, 1914

· limit Four Per Customer

Good Onl~ At Powell' I
Offer Erpirts Fob. 2, 1914

BANQUET

coupon per item.

'

.

. KRAFT

2 LB. JAR

OR

JAM

99(

limit Ont Ptr Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offor bpirts Fob. 2, 1914

... ..
~

11

oz.

SHURFINE GRANULATED

SUGAR
SLB. BAG

$149

limit Ono Ptr Customer
Good IIIII~ At Powol1'1
Offor Erpirtl Fob. 2, 1984

"\..
)

POMEROY - Meigs Genea·
logical Society meeting 2 p.m.,
Sunday at Meigs County Mu·
seum; Margaret Parker will
demonstrate use of mlcro!llm .

Get a matching recliner ......

FREE!

Get a matching recliner . .....

NOW ONLY . 'rransitional styling with lots

NOW ONLY

-MONDAY .

$4 49

POMEROY - OH RAN Coin
Club regular meeting Monday at
Riv~rboat Room of Dlamond
Savings and Loan Co.. West
· Main., Pomeroy. Social hour and
trading session with dealers at 7
p.m ., preceding ihe meeting.
Planning of the coin show In
March wlll take place and a coin
auction and refreshments follow
the meeting; anyone interested '
in coins or paper money Is
Invited.

fREE!

Traditional recliner Ideal ·
lor TV or lounging. A deep
button-tufted back In your
. choice of smart colors.

$29995

of comfort as you sink into
the soft tufted back, pillow
arms and extra soft seat.

TlJFSDAY
GALLIPOLIS -

6
9
(
.TV Dinner ••••••••••••
'~.

GRAPE JELLY

z

•The total value of the double coupon may not exceed
$1 .00.

Orange
~!:.=-~~~c=c!4· _JI .u _oz_

~

~

0

oz.$

....
0
....
....

SUNDAY

"

•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchase
'price of the item. Money '
will not be refunded .
•This offer does notapply to
Powell's Super ilalu Cou·
pons, free coupons. or any
competitor's coupons.
•This offer excludes ciga·
rettes, or any other items
prohibited by law.
•Offer is only good for pro·
duct on hand . No · Rainchecks.
•
•T.oere is a limit of 20 coupons you may redeem.

p.m. at Oscar's.
•
GALLIPOLIS - Open Gate
Garden Club will meet Tuesday,
. 7: 30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Ernest Covert.

WEDNESDAY
GALLIPOLIS Gallla
County Board of Health will
meet WedDesday, 9. a.m. at the
offices in the Courthouse.

Happenings

Get " matching Wall-Save~
NOW ON~Y Comforting curved tufted

NOW ONLY

$ S79

$64 9

FREE!

.

back with thick 8881
cushion and pillow arms.
The g18111 relaxer.

Get a matching Wall-Saver·

FREE!

Billowy pillow anns:
Deep tufted back. An
extra thick seat cushion.
Lots ol relaxing comlol).

Meetings set
POMEROY - The board of
trustees of Columbus Town8hl1J6
have set their 1985 regular
meellngsfor7:llp.m.onlhellrst ·
Monday of each month.

SALE STARTS MONDAY
9 O'CLOCK SHARP

JANUARY 28·29-~0-31 ONLY

FURNitURE
SHOWCASE

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�~---

-

-~-

--:--· -.......-

•

Pege-B-4-The

Times-Sentinel

Beat of the bend

.,

27.' 1986'

Ohio-Point Pleasant,·W. Va.

Pom&amp;rOV-Middli!Port-GaHipolis; Ohio- Point Pleasant, w~ Va·.

Martins who wU!
he moving to
·Texa s, come
February.
Mary, Osby
and Adam will he
settling in Katy,
TE'xas near her
son, Frank, and will actually be
working there IIi his business.
They wE're honored at a dinnE'r
Sunday at the Middleport Church of
Christ where they've been active for
years and were presented a

._ _________ _

In its mission to provide quality
educational opportunity for needy
young men. and women of southeastern Ohio. The FruE'aurt Foundation is making a significant
lnvestmE'nt In educating productive'
citiz&lt;&gt;ns In this area." ·

u av~

tape of religious singer, Amy Grant.
In appreciation forhlsfaltltfulnE'Ss Itt
ringing the church bell.
. Saturday from 2 to4apheTrlnity
Churchsoclairoom, the Meigs Salon
710, Eight and Forty, and thE'
American Legion AuxlllaryofDmw

-xra-rt"e·. · u~-l·d·ak·e·r-~om·e·~ ~

CLEVELAND &lt;APl -A positive

!ion "such as rf"Palrlng thatleaklng

attitudeopportunity
can tum cabin
fever into
a
}:olden
to tackle
those
!'llggingchores ora special project,
say two clinical psychologists.
. The best known cure for cabin
fE'VE'r is activity consistent with thE'
individual's personality, said Dr.

faucet, a straightening
a picture,
f~ing
door so it dOE'sn't
stick

· 3:45-4:30
;&gt; Roma
MyE'rs, -4:
354: 50 p.m.;p.m.
Ohio
Townhouse,
5: 15-

Hope you are E'nj6ying the wave
of Ronald Reagan moviE'S which
are hitting your 1V scrf"E'n now,
apparently due to the Inauguration.
Those plus-the-fact that--March 20 Is .
the first day of spring •should hE'Ip
you to keep smiling.

: Gay Fields - whE'rever you arE'
SIQ Manwaring has--been trying
1o contact you for four years.
; Sid writes that Gay, from the
~rtland area as near as he knows.

~-::...

.. '

:Take advantage of time
~indoors, psychologist says
anymore. Small things that don't
rf"qulre a major work effort."
He said a positiVE' attitudE' Is
E'Ssential.
"It's not-all thatbadbelngaloneif

Nursery, 12:30-1 p.m.; P inecrest.
l -1:15 p.m.; Children's HomE',
2-2:30 p.m.; Children's Residential
Treatment CE'nter , 2:30-3 p.m.
Saturday - K&amp;K Trailer Court,
9:30-10 a.l]l.; GrorgE'S Creek, 10;15·
10:45 a. m.; Bulaville Trailer- ct.:
11-11:30 a.m.; EvE'rgreen Church,
11:45 a.m.-noon; Ewlngton, 1-1:30
p.m.; Vinton, 1:35-2 p.m .; Morgan
Center. 2:15-3 p.m .

FINAL

~: 45 p.m.: Eureka, 6-6:30 p.m .
. Thursday- Cora, 3: 15-3:30 p.m.;
Raccoon Tr. Ct.. 3:40-4 p.m .:
Patriot, 4: 15-4:45 p.m.; Cadmus.
5-5:30 p.m. ; Gal!ia, 5:30-6 p.m .:

"It can he used as
rE'Construction, both physical and
mental."
·

•

PH. 992-3795

----

You can get -anything donE' theSe '
days if you have enough money.
Dfd YDil kftow'that there-IS a new ·
surgical technique called Natural
EyE'S that cosmetically (and per- ·
manently) enhances eyes without ·
·the dally application of eye
cosmetics?
ThE' prcx:edure, which by the way has to be. performed by either a
plastic surgron or an ophtahlmologlst . places natural colored plgmE'nt
at the base of the eyelashE'S on both
the upPf"r and lowE'r E'yelids.
It 's a convenient way. the ·
company advises, to have attractive ·
such ·
as
and other sports, Now that's
important!
Hang in there and quit fussin' '
about 'the snow. spring is just seven ·
weeks away.

Brian Ross, also of Middleport.
Music for thE' wedding was played
1lY Joan Robinson, Middleport.
A reception was held at the church
!oii&lt;JW!ng the wedding. Guests wert'
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Ross and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Charlls
Burton, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Adam Oldaker, Mason; Otho 01-

Florence Smith per!onned the
CE'remony. Catherllte Oldaker, Ra·
cine, was thE' maid o! IIDnor, and
Harold Pet!Jt, .Pomeroy, the best
man, FlowE'r girl was AprU Ross,
Mlddlepott. !l!ld thE' ring bl&gt;arerwas

Har1ford, W.Va.; Tammy PE'ttlt,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Charlls
Oldaker, Mason; Mr. and Mrs .
Clayton Oldaker, Racine; Allceand
PattyFields,Mason,Caro!Duncan,
Point Pleasant.

- ~~~~
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•HAWAII
•LAS VEGAS

1US DATES TO CHOOSE FROM
July
O&lt;tober

1&gt;-19

12-25

4 ISLAND
HAWAII
1985 DATES
April 20
-May 4

HAWAII

The Rev. Robert Roblnson -ana···- dakt•r, 1\-~r;--aii·M,~~~ f':':!.~k-O!da...l!er,

1/2 PRICE

June

I S-19

TWO ISLAND ESCAPE
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3 NIGHTS ON MAUl
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let H&amp;R Block evaluate your situation and then
accurately complete the proper forms. Come
on in to our convenient office at:

Pomeroy, OH.

onthecostofthechair.andtoseeiflt
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Open Daily 1 0 -9;

Is your unemployment
income taxable?
618 E. Main St.

YhoE'arnosr__~wm host a farewell tE'a in her

NOW

,......

p.m.; DE'poslt Collections, Meadowbrook, 11:45 a.m.-noon; Scenic
Hills, 12:05-12:20 p.m.; Sun Valley

·~

· MIDDLEPORT - Heath United
Methodist · Church or Middleport
was the setting for the Nov. 9
wedding of Allee Marie Oldaker and
Harry A. PE'ttlt. ·
ThE' bride Is the daughter of Otho
Oldaker of Hartford, W.Va. and the
groom Is the son of Avenell Pettit of
Pomeroy,_3J!qJhel!teJosephPettlt.

r~Rese.~rv~e~co~mm~~ls~SI~·o~n.• • • •~iiiiiiiiiiii~ii~i~~====~

. n~n~~~~
7t:.~6t:
10 J~!i~6:-:lll~n~.m~
··- -.~-cicf
~
" anifel Rubin, ""'f ...c:C~.: i~E'V~
· e~ian
;7rd~;";a~~Fclc~a.~·~·~~.c;;&lt;w~t~~n.e~r~.jo~1H~'~"t
~-ilh~£;=-~·~~C~e~nj;~-6:40.
er~oo~in~
.:P~---n ~tP~r-pp
' "We don't always combat it the
.. !"!me way and not evE'ryonE'
~xperlencE'S it," he said "To some
it's a blesslng.... a time to enjoy thP
quiet. Me, I woulddoalotofreadlng.
: "RathE'r than see it as a form of
invo]Jlntary confinE'mE'nt, peoplE'
should look upon it as an opportunity
to do that thing they've always
wished they had tln)e to do," Rubin
Said. "The project' the'vE' been
· saving for a rainy day. WE'll, that
rainy day is herE'."
It's Important to he creative when
Jhe WE'ather. hampers mobility and
keeps everyone inside, says Dr.
' Harold R. FishE'r, co-director oflhe
ClE'Veland Insltute for Rational
Living.
"I believE' that the people who .ff"E'i
trapped are thosewhohavebecome
dependent upon a singular activity
_outside the home," said Fisher, also
.a clinical psychologist. " People
· should look upon It as anopporutnlty
..to get tngethf"r as a family and do
some talking. Mother, dad, the kids,
E'VE'rybody can discuss things withaut outside _activities or work getting
in thE' way. "
Fisher's rE'medy also includes
doing thosE' small chores that havE'
belen a const311t source of aggrava-

STARTS MONDAY
10 A.M. SHARP
ALL -WINTER MERCHANDISE

Merchant Marine
The U.S. Merchant Marine
Academy at Kings Pint, N.Y..
awards a bachE'Ior's of science
degree, a licE'OSe as a deck engineer
or dual officer, and a u.s. Naval

LA..~'

bride of Harry A. Pettit Nov. 9

CLEARANCE
. GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. S~muel
L. Bossard Library announces its
schedule for thE' week of Jan. 28 to
•
Feb. 2.
1
Monday Rodney Village,
3: 30-4: 45 p.m.; Gal!ia Metro Estates, 4:30-5:15 p.m.; KE'rr, 5:30-6
p.m.; Bidwell, 6: 10-6:30 . p.m.;
Cochran's, 6: 40-i p.m .; Valley View
Apts .. 7: 10-8 p.m.
Tuesday - Bane's, 11: 55-12: m
[l.m.; Dorothy Young, 12:10-12:20
p.m.; Clay Chapel Road (Opal
Franklin's),12:30-12:50 p.m.; Harrison Townhouse, 1-1:20 p.m.;
· Myers (Mary \, 1:30-1:45 p.m.;
Mercerville, 1: 50-2:10 p.m . ;
Swain's Store, 2: 20-2: 50 p.m.;
Lunch. 3:10-3:40 p.m:; Crown City,

County this past WE'E'k to visit her
family and take care of some other
business. She and her husband,
Evangelist Arthur Kishba ugh, ar~
in Colorado Springs, Colo. and both
of t.heir sons arE' now in colleges in

Colorado.

·"""="""'-=-=~~""~;~:~:;;:-~~~~;~~;~;-- -crTh
[a~e~w1~~iiico~n~ta~ccit~ed~11~th~e~~~ ·--;o::=-·- _

~Al-t"ce 1Vl:

k!D!t§!Op

performing the ceremony. Becky
Jotmson was maid of honor and Jeff
Holtz, best man.
The groom has now returned to
Sheppard Air Force Base In Texas,
to complete his technical schooling.
From there the rouple will go to
March Air ForcE' Base in California.

VISitS

needs a
chair, the doctor agreE'S
and signed the nf"cessary papers so
she could get it through Medicare.
The chair was delivered In
November. · But despite adding
pillows and pads, no ODE' can sit
comfortably In the chair for more
than a few minutes. So it's been
moved to a storagE' room.

beE'h enjoyed by many, was glwn a

~--

~~~~-

The public Is Invited to atterid tile
tea for Mary who has been a rea)
contributor Itt time and service to
others thmugh the. yea~~·

'nmeli-Sentlnel staff
Meigs County Is sure to miss the

RIO GRANDE -The Charles A. demonstrate tlnanclal need and
academic excellenJ:e.
Fruesuff Foundation of New York
Depending on the tlnanclal need
City has made a $20,000 grant to Rlo
pf
potential recipients and the fundi!
Grande College and Community
~available
each_year, more than one
~-O:&gt;Ilei~e to establlsh a new scholarscholarship
may he granted annuship program.
ally.
The
first
awards will he made
The money wtll he used to create
for the .fall of 1985.
the Charles A. Frueaurt Foundation
Accordbtg to 'Ceorge J . Lukac,
Scholarship Endowment. The invice
president for development at
vestment earnings from the enRio Grande College, "There Is no
dowed fund wlll he used annually
doul&gt;t that the Charles A. Frueauf!
for
for

a

refunded to· MediCare - after all
we're talking tax dollars here. and
pmhably many more uncomlorta·
ble and unused chairs are out there.
ShE' was toldltcost SU85. A refund
was out. bu) they said they havE'
'' It's the hardeSt chair I ever sat more comfortable chairs and wlll
ln.ln!actlh•dthreedifferentyoung bring one In nE'x t month for thE'
and healthy people try it out and Middleport woman . The famlly.
nonE' of them could sit in it for more concerned about government waste
than a few m~utes_. It w;\s so - an,dlnferlorpro(lu~t s,can'thelpbut
uncomfortable. I m JUSt tired of · wondE'r how many more of those
seE'Ing the taxpayers being took."
chairs pu re~ with Medl&amp;lre
A Middleport Woman was talking · funds have been relegated to back
about an electric l!ft chalrwhlch has rooms .
been widely advE'rtlsedon televts!on
· And tney're goingtoaskquestlons
·
obtained from a Cincinnati firm and raise the lssu~.

ByCIIAIIJ.DIEHOEFUCH .

. scholarship.~program --.

'timl
.
~ .~
a Dm_

.:

•

Honoring a family moving _from Meigs

·College.establishes

years.
The limitation to students In the
· final · two years at the college Is
Intended to help defray the Increase
In tuition costs when a Rio Grande
Community College student enters
the. private college. Recipients of
the Frueauff SQholarship must

The Sunday Jimes.Sentinei=-Page-JHi

·Community Corner

·Grant to Rio Grande

What a.snow storm!

~-

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Team ·approach taken to addr,ess child abuse ·
attended bY repreientattvee of an
social agencies lnelutllng the Melp

POMEROY- An organizational
met&gt;tlng regarding the fonnatlon of
an lnteragtoncy clusrer and team
approach to the problems of child
abUse . -a nd neglect will be held
\\'ednesday at noon at Veterans
· Memorial HospitaL
The Meigs County Department o!
Human Services Is hosting the
meeting wliich Is expected to be

Dear Meg

reqtll!lt tor·pladJII child-

u a prtorlty

of
Departments of Human SeiVicelln
011 qendu

County Health Department, CrlaiJ
Line, Serenity Houae, Mfnllterlal theatate.
Associations, physicians ~d other
The program l'egulatlona have
health providers.
one clear foewt; IICC!&gt;rding to Jim
Emphasis Is being placed this LardleofthatDEpartment, and that .
year on redrafting the state's major Is to Insure sate permanent bomes
regulationS attectlitg clllldreil In . tor Ohio's children and to proVIde
conjunctlon -wlthGovemorRlch~rd the resources which will allow all

'

DEARMEG-lama26-year-old
female, bright, . but not exactly

are plenty of avallables for a
womantruly ready for a .commltmen!, as the following letter.

greatfnlllmosteveryway.
each other and 1 want to get
engaged. Chris says he's not ready
yet, and the mere mention of
marriage makes him nervous and
defensive. Then he blames me for
even thinkJng about it.
If he really loves me, why won't
he make a commitment? Does this

-anq. Dixie Wamsley, Margie and
John Sk)dmore, and Charlle Leo·
nard. The on.ly one missing was
Larry Meadows I of Sunrise, Fla.
Great-grandchildren attending
were Larry II, Tootsle, Leon and
N? than Meadows: Timothy Wams-

P".!&lt;!~~ ~=~lUJ-

~;;;'!en formed and the
' ~0 rinlng
11

emphasis

n~

Inon h county

lnterage~cy~ste~':_l&gt;~~
can be
0
•~
so that
the

addressed wltho~t :lng back
responsibilities an P
ems
andforthbetweenagencles.

are they hiding? Don't get me
wrong. 1 have no desire to keep
anyone from pursuing her own

Is deceiving me or you're · not
looking In the right places. There
are scores Qf women. looking for

!Ah
-I'd do all I could tp help her. LONGS TO BE A HUSBAND,
OCALA, FLA.
DEAR LONGS-Eithermy_mall

men just like you. However, tn
cancomo)ne ·
U.S. census data show that women
In big-buckS jobs ($25,®$50,001 a
year) have a divorce rate four
times the national rate.

~a~nd~SMbr:~:r-~D.~"a~n~·u~s~~~e~t~hre~rh~o~lt~~~~rff::r~:~F~o~r~t~w~o~~~I~ha~v~e~~s~u~gg~e~s~ts~::;~~~~~~f;~~;~~b~us~iness~~~~n~te~r~es~ts~a~~or;c~a~ree~r~.
:::---·":':~~ed)1~M~r:E.
·wetffeffldJ
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.
Darius Wetherholt of Wells Road ,
Middleport , were honored recently
with a surprise 60th anniversary
party.
They were married on Dec, 24,
1924 in Point Pleasnt, the late Rev.

ehfltlren to grow_ :to healthy,

She wants to wed, but he .say£ no

By Meg Whitcomb

·

Celette'a
1'!11

and considered good-looking.
problem Is that every time I tell a
woman I want to get manied and
have a family, she backs ott and
ends the relationship. I don't get it.
My job pays more than $40,&lt;ro a
year and I have good Investments ,
so I can easily support a family. I'm

Pomeroy Middleport =Gallipolis. Ohlo--Poiut Pleasant. W.-Va.

27,f91&amp;

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

~~:mer Repons Srrioke out the right detector for ·your home needs
By the Editors
disrupt an electric current Inside
of Consumer Reports
.
the unit's lonlzatlon chamber; and
U a fire breaks out In your home, combination units _that Incorporate
a smoke detector ..,.. In good
both detectors.
,
working order- could alert you In
U YO!I can afford only one smoke
time to save your life.
detector, the engineers recommend
Consumer" -rulports' · electronics
a model that contains a photoelect·
englneerstested24smokedetectors
riC detector. Thephotoelectrtcunlts
tested responded laster lhan lonlza·
recently and found that some types
respond more quickly .than .others
tton models to common slow,
to certain kinds of fire.
smoldering fires- such as the fire
Three types ol sirioke ,detectors
that develops from .a cigarette
.are. avaiLable: photoelectric models
dropped on-- a- mattress--or-- o!!
that'are triggered when particles of
upholstery. These fires are apt to
smoke pass Into a· chamber that - break out at the most dangerous
contains a _!)earn or light_ Into the
time - at night, when people are
cell; . Ionization deteclors that ~-t!L., ·:sleeping.
PHotoelectrtcs cost about twice
triggered .when smoke particles

--- ·

Meigs Bookmobile set
POMEROY - Bookmobile service ln Meigs County Is brought by
ihe Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
A,rea Libraries.
Bookmobile Schedule for Mortday, Jan. 28- Carpent er (Laura's
Store), 3:10.3:40 p.m.; . Dexter
(Church), 4:10-4:40 p.m.; Danville
(Church), 5:20.5:50 p.m.; Rutland
(Civic Center), 6:3().8 p.m.
Tuesday - Portland (Post Office), 2:10.2:40 p.m.; Letari Falls
(Effie's Restaurant), 3:05.-3:50
p.m.; Racine (Bank). 4:35-6:05
p.m.; Syracuse (Poo]), 6:20-7:50
p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 30 - Chesler
(Fire Station), 2:15-2:45p.m.; Keno

· (North side of Keno Bridge). 3-3:30
p.m.; Success Road tnear 39060),
3:45-4:15 p.m.; Long Bottom (Post
Office), 4:25-5:10 p.m.; Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Thppers Plains (Lodwick 's), 7:2Q.
8:05p.m.; BaumAddltion,8:25-8:55
p.m.

want to leave him. I'm not even
s~ur.,g_I go'!}!L...J:Jn ~uch ln !o_ye-- ..
Please help. No one else seems to
know the answer. - NOT GET·
TING ANY YOUNGER. MACON, ,
GA.
.
DEAR N.G.A.Y. - Chrts is a
classic case of Mr. Unattainable.
His genus of the male animal preys
on the female who Jacks confidence
and the ability to have and hold a
man of 'her own. She may have
competed with her mother for her
f&lt;~ther's affections and _
be repeating
the pattern with equally unattainable men.
These guys can be devastat-Ingly
attractive and charming. They
keep their women dependent 'and
romantically entrapped by staying
just out of reach emotionally. Often
too immature or uncaring for an
adult rei a tionship, Mr. Unattainable alwa~s finds another victim If
Ills current lady wises .up to the
unfair bargain she has struck. So
·strike out before it's too late. There

r;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::j

PROJECT
ro SPRING
BUY SEWING IT .
ALL UPI

Patd Newman

" ......LOS ANGELES ·(J\P 't - Paui Newman turned 60 Sa1uftiay,~th.il-~
because his wife, actress Joanne Woodward, has the flu, the coup!~
celebrated quietly at home, a spokesman said.
Th~ couple had planned to sUp away for the weekend to celebrate
his birthday and their 27th wedding anniversary on Tuesday, but
Miss Woodward contracted Influenza, publicist Warren Cowan said
Friday.
The Newmans live in Westport, Conn .. but were staying at their
Malibu home because Miss Woodward is filming a television movie.

SIMPJ.KlTY &amp;
M&lt;CAllS

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Never roo old, says Grammy nominee

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NEW YORK (API -You're never too old to try something new, ·
says jazz great Lionel Hampton, who reeelved his first Grammy
nomination for a rock instrumental tune after more than 50 years In
the business. ,
Hampton, 71, says the success of "VIbromatlc" "just goes to show
you if you stay in there and keep pltchln' you're likely to hit paydirt."
But Hampton says rock Is not really a "new attitude" for him.
"I've always played with a heavy beat," Hampton, who has
recorded more than 100 albums, said recently by telephone from
New Orleans. "I'm the one who put the beat in the band back In the

FABRICS

PRICE

THE FABRIC
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11 S W. 2nd
Ph- 992-2214 .
Singer Appro"d .Doaltr

~' '40s."

Mamie Van Doren aaing her age?
LOS ANGELES (API - Mamie Van Doren, known for her 1950s
blond bombshell roles, is going new wave. But at 51, she says she'll
act. her age.
Miss Van Doren, whose films include "Running Wild,'' opens Jan.
30 at the Palomino.
"Of course 1 don't think new wave is really new. It's been around
- "I!Ils~tie_:50s',"Sile'sald.'"You ~· ther~'s a-real trend now Toward

'

;: PJ;LICAN.RA-eiDs. Min!\. lAP)
_Hundrecl.._

)?ut the trouble isn't too serious.
:: None of those expelled were
~uman.
.
,· But Principal Bill Stutsman has
lOcked out tho&gt; Transformers, Go·
bots and Cabbage Patch gll.ng that
have ·invaded his classrooms, halls,
t:afeterla and gym since Christmas.
. : Stutsman said children are usually encouraged to bring toys they
~eive for Christmas to school for
•!show and tell." But this year, the
tbys that came to school came to
Stay, he said.
:. "I was amazed at the number of
Cabbage Patch Kids and Transformers coming to school," said
Stutsman. ''They were begiiming to
$how up everywhere."
·: So Stutsman conducted a s urvey
i(nd found 166 doils of the Cabbage .
Pl!tch genre, including look-allkes,
and 166 toys of the CobolTransformer ilk, which convert to
various robotic forms. '

· l.Jonel Hampton

, Quiet celebration for Newman, wife

Spllflf Ftbtlet
A,iri"S Otllg

-Hundreds
(:xpelled
..l-

COH~NT

CRIOIT TDlMS

~YAIAIII-WE

CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNTS

they respond to the music, as well."
Miss Van Doren says she recognizes "there's

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that line between
looking nat ural and being an embarrassment for trying too hard to
appear young. I'm Mamie Van Doren, and I fully Intend to act my

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James 0. Bush,

~

TAXPREPARERS .
WASHINGTON (API - More
than 41 percent of the couples and
Individuals who fllect federal tax
returns last year paid professionals
topreparethosereturns.
The statistic r~ects the complextty of the tax system but It also

deduction as It used to be knowndivided more evenly than 81
fromyourltemlzeddeductlons.
percent-~ percent, they will pay
-Deducting more than -$75 for
more tax than It they were single.
charitable contributions unless you
A working couple may claim the
Itemize deductions.
special deduction by tWng a joint
-Ignoring the April 15 futng
return on either Form 1040 plus a
deadllne. U you can't get all your . Schedule w or on Form 1040A.
records together In tlme,flleaForm . A simple calculation Is made tor

the Internal Revenue Service. Even
...~,ui.l pe:ople~wix:fiiiOO i:he s1ngit:"-'
page Form 1040EZ hired professlonal preparers.
U you want to fill out your own
return, the IRS offers vartous types
of assistance. Telepbone numbers
and addresses are llsted In the
Instructions that the IRS mailed
you.
. .
,-Dozens of special. publlcatlons
with detailed explanations of swclflc situations - such as moving
expenses, Social Security and small
business - are available free of
cnai'ge~ar:rns·oniees in each slale.
The most helpful Is PubUcatlon 17,
11
Your Federal Income Tax/' a
guldefilledwithexarnplesonhowto
fill out an Individual return.
-More than 150 tape recordings ,
each covering a specific subject, are
availabl~ for listening by telephOne.
You will have .to pay long-distance
charges If there Is no Tele-Tax
number in your area.
~The IRS toll-free "hot line': will
answer specific questions about
your return, . such as whether you
may claim a casualty-Joss deduc-·
lion If termites destroy your
too!shed. But remember that I! you
file an incorrect return, you can't
escape penalties just bY saying you
relied on IRS answers.

estimate and pay your taxes

capital gains) and subtract payments to an lndlvldual Retirement
Account or Keogh retirement plan
and . adjustments for employee
· bUsiness el&lt;Jl!!flSI'S. That leaves
"qualified earned income."
Compare each spouse's qualified
· earned Income and take 10 percent

.

.

___.!~::~~";;~"=~~~~ =~~t:.~.~aaH!JF~::ril!1'=t9~=~~~;:, ~~i' ~= ~~~·~"9Mi~ :~:: . ---~c-

I've never Jacked for lovers .)
.
_ I'~ - an old-fash~ RU¥ who
wants a famlJY-:7\ren t there any
women leftwhodo, too? If so, where

112

tires as the top-rated Sears . .Their · about :Jl seconds. Try to do this test
low-battery signalS lasted tor :Kl every week.
days.
The engineers add .that Installing .
No smoke detector wtll protect
extra detectors, eSpecially on each
you If It doesn't work when It's
level of a multilevel ctweUing, may
needt!IJ. Ypu j:an use a detector's seem costly, bUt not when YoU '
test bUtion tO see !fit's-functioning. . eonslder tne prolei:uon tneY pro.
However, the engineers think that
vide all around the bouse. (ln a
exposing a detector to real smoke is
multl-detectllr Installation, make '
a better test.
one of them an Ionization model.) :
A burn1ng wood match held six
(For a special reprint of ConsU·
Inches from an lonlzatlon model mer Unlon's evaluation of burglar
-p!!o!ce!retrt~ l"'K-Nay Flioh..lert· !thould . trlg.,"'e!'--•·!1&amp;--,.e.!~. Fer. -- alarms,.se!!l) :$1 .. for P~eh _copy 1P
SA 202, $.11, and two combination photoek!ctrlc models, especially
CONSUMERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio
models, the Sears Early one those made before 1979, blow out
City Station, New York, NY 10019.
Catalog No. 57363,$.llplusshlpptng,
the nuitch and let the smoke drift
Be sure to ask for the reprtnt on •
and Plttway Flr$t Aleri .SA301, $40 Into the detector. In either case, the
"Burglar alarms.")
•
- responded nearly as·tast to slow alanns
should
be
triggered
within
(Newspaper
Enterprllle
AlBa.)
'
1•·
· The only noteworthy drawback
with the ·Sears No. 57:Jl7 was its
low-battery signal. (When battei-les
start to· tan, detectors give out a
gentje, periodic beep. With some,
you get.at least__a :nQay w~.)
That Sears model's low-battery
signal lasted tor only sewn dsys.
That · could be meaningful If, tor
ex11ffiple, you return home alter an
extended vacation.
.Three other detectorS - the

de~n~.~g~;~w~ho~~~~~~~;~~=~~~~~=!~2~i~~j~~~2~,l~t~~~~~J~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::;=~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~3C==::;~=~?:
-"...._
· ..:-... ..., _ _ _ ..... .__.

-c=~~~-~~~~.~~~ffe_M:~: .. ~-ii:~!~:W:!~'i~~~e~,:~~7~~ "' ~=~~~,;,e,,~.~~~·~~~;.;;~~ru'!,~,-~=:.~~~~~-~~.::,';;;;~~man could want,
Skidmore and Dixie Wamsley. The
brothers and sisters there were Bill
~~~~-~ -~~rated. -'-'!!!!!_.rl0~~...- J¥g_thffhnltanrlJ2DmthyJ'VIrs., Al!t'e.-.
cherubs, and holly by Jennifer
Plantz,. dand Dale Wood, and other
Harrison.
relatives therewereTomaodBecky
Daughters of the couple and their
Wetherholt, Robert an Wilda Pethusbands atdtending wwere Mr.
try. Nelghliors and friends attend ·
and Mrs. Granvil (Juanita) Warnsing included DixJe Sayre, Wayne
Ca~hart, Betty Hutchinson, Canie
ley, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Moore, Annie Franke, Paul, Lucille
Everette (Annilee) Meadows, CoJumbus; Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
and J.P. Skidmore.
(Mary Gall) Bugg, Leon, W.Va.
Others presenting gifts to the
Grandchildren at the observances . couple were Mrs. Stella Mayes, Mr.
were Rh.onda and David Meadows,
and . Mrs. Lewis Mayes, and the
Ellen,Janice and Jonathan Bugg,
Hysell Run Holiness-Church.
Jackie, Kim ~uel. Jacqueline,

as much as many loillzatlon models
and are harder to find in tHe stores.
But the engineers· .tlllnk they're
worth the extra pt:tce and sbopplng
effort.
The combination models tested
were nearly ·1)5 fast as the photoelectrtcs at responding to slow,
smoldering fines. Ionization models
were best lor relatively smokeless,
fast, raging fires.
The photO&lt;jlectriC Sears Catalog
5?J07,....$21L. p!us ... shlpptog,_ was_
top-rated. It responded quickly to
slow, smoldering fires. It alsO
senses faster-developlngflresabol!t
as quickly as the Ionization
detectors.

African unity

And Get a Free Polaroid
600 Instant camera when
you buy 10 rolls or
more of Owens-Coming
pink Fiberglas"' insulation. camera comes
with carrying strap
and full one-year warranty. No focusing
necessary. Just
aim and
shoot.

The OrganlzatlonofAfrlcan Unity

was fonned May 25, 1963, by African
countries to coordinate cultural,
political, scientific and economic
policies; to end colonialism in
Africa, and promote a common
·defense of members' independence.
Its headquarters Is In Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia. In 1984 there were 50
member states.

bY

Interest, dividends, pensions or

deduCtion.

· Ap7-J-~t)'uu·t:}t"aa-:;~u.~ ~..:-~"::::-..:r. · r·-------======--------=;:.;:=====---::::':~
months to file the return.
TAX wrrHOWING
.WASIDNGTON (AP) .- Are you
Monday thru Fridiy
giving the federal government tree
9 AM to9 PM
use of your money for more than a
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
year?
More than 72 mflllon couples and
WAL'- t~ ~(.At \ f~
Ah APP()!N I M(~l
individualS did just that by having
toomuchmoneywlthheldfromthelr.
paychecks In 1982. The Internal
Revenue SeiVlce Ukes the money
bllt would prefer to save the time
A NEW DIIIEC TION IN HAIR OESIGN"
and expense of J118lllng. 72 million

ERRORS
WASHINGTON (API -There's
something abOut deallng with the
Internal Revenue Service that
causes heavy breathing, sweaty
.palms- anderrors, errors, errors.
More than 6 rnilUon .taxpayers
made mistakes on the returns they
!lied last year, and one of the biggest
errors involved nothing more com- _
pllcated than writing down the
.c!!ITI'Ct taxe.&lt;.-owed figure frpm the

446-9510

-A..o•A-. ..... ..J~ .. ~.....l.- • ....._..._.,
, I. ~I.U.U•U 1..11~~ II;;U.'-&amp;1 J.,;c;u. , ·

U you complete your 1984 tax
return and find you are due a sizable
refund, chances are you can prevent
that from happening a year from
now by having less money withbeld
'from your paychecks this year. U
you qualify to claim more withhold- ·
lng allowances, all you have to do Is
file a new Form W-4 with your
employer.
MARRIAGE PENALTY
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The new
deduction for tw~arner couples Is
a popular one: more than 46 percent
of the joint returns tiled last year
used It to save an taxes.
The deduction offsets a portion of
the extra taxes - known as the
maniage penalty - that result
when two spouses earn incomes that
are relatively clooe In sl&gt;e. On tile
other hand, H one spouse earns
considerably more than the other,
.there Is a bonus in lower taxes. In
most cases, If the couple's Income Is

SIJ,VERBIHD

SATEI~m:
~m~TilMS

I

*ANNOUNCING*

Come !n and Register for

SONY Watchman TV

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-Falling to subtract the zero
bracket amount - or standard

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Store Hours: Monday-Friday
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'

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446-1171

Oelllpolls, Ohio .·-

�-

.' ..... _
B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'•

-~

~--

~

--

Jam.iifY 27, 198!

Senior citizen center activities ·planned

Srudents ·
to learn

Gatlia County

from gas
,~ program_,.

,'

.

h;~~;~~~=~~:trt~fu=f~~b~i~pt.~ri~.~ ~~;:;.

lc;IIUt

play a vital role in m eeting
America's energy treeds.
"The inflatable dinosaur illustrates the origin of fossil fuels, and a
sponge cake is used to demonstrate
how super-cold temperatures can
liquefy natural gas for · overseas
transportation.
"GasWorks" also features a
demonstration of natural gas storage in underground wells and tips to
encourage wise energy use in ·the
home, " Koebel said.
Students- take par-t-in-mes+-ef-~he -~

demonstrations led by teacherdemonstrator A. M. Lindsey of Oak
Ridge. Lindsey, a former teacher.
received extensive training in
energy technology and research to
prepare her to present the "Ga s-

'

Population
For tl!e first time In world history,
the growth rate of the world's
population has declined, according
to United Nations report. It states
that the annual population growth
rate declined from two percent to1.7
percent in the last decade. But
world's-t&gt;opulatkin siilfplcked
million to 90 mllllon people a year
over the 11}year period.

DAPHNE THE TEACHER - With the help of an ·Inflatable
prehistoric lrlend, Daphne, A.M. Lindsey will present "GasWorks:
Pipeline to the Future," at Kyger Creek ltigh School on Tmisday and
Meigs ltigh School on Thursday. The traveling program Is sponsored by
Columbia Gas of Ohio.
............,...._ ... ,..._..,..;:..,.:
Works" program, Koebel said .
The assembly prograll\ may be
followed by classroom sessions
where teachers and students discuss current energy concerns 'i'Dd

.

..

M

the impact ol science and technology on social issues.
To reinforce the energy concepts
presented in the program, Columbia supplies teaching materials for
science, language arts, social studies and home economics claSses.
Koebel ~aid .

1'

29-game winning streak, 66-65
Bla&amp; and Adrian Branch, MaryLANDOVER, Md. (AP) ~Chris
Mullin seored 20 points as third- land's only scorers In double figures
ranked St. John's withstood a · for the season, had only two points

JOHN, A. WADE, M.D~ Inc.

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LAFAYETTE MALL
GA

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_

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00 .

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GALUPOUS, OHIO

_"A"tss From Tht Municipal lot"

~~oncludes._ . ~oday
HONOLULU (AP) - Last year,
Brian Hansen had just wound up his
career as a punter and part-time
_ wide r~lver al§loux Falls Co)lege
and was f~rlnE: If hep~r

. $269
--..

&amp; SAT. 11-11

Bible ...
PRIVATE INTERPRETATIONS
William B. K ugh'!
"Knowing this fint, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any
private inte,.-etation. For· the prophecy came not in old time by tile
will of man; but haly men of God 1pakt a. they were moved by the Holy
Gllost"(2 Pet. 1:20,21).
..
.
WoraDefiDed
"Prophecy" is to speak the· mind and counsel of God, while
"scripture" has reference to the writing of the will or counsel of God.
"Is" comes from the Greek verb, denotintr to become or spring into

being. ..Private''is one's own. "lnterpretat1011" means explanation.

One of the first truths Peter established in his epistle was that the
mind and will of God did not spring into being as the result of the
prophet's own will and explanatton, but that the mind and counsel of
God were spoken and written by the holy men of God who were Jed by
the Holy Spirit.
'
. ·
Tho•Law-TheGoopel .
.
"The scripture" is ~tsed to describe both Old and New Testament
scriptures, with special emphasis made to the Old Testament In the
statement, "For the prophecy came not in old time by ·the will of man"
(v.21). As the prophets of old were led by the Holy Spirit in speaking
the mind of God and writing His will, the law, so were the·al""'tlesled
hy the Holy Spirit in s)leaking the mind of God and writing Hts will, tile
gospeL When men, wlio were not led by the Holy Spirit in the apostolk
days or miraculous age, spoke, they spoke their own (private)
explanations (interpr:etat~) which eame from their own wW!om,
kn~~ledge, and opmton_s (will oJ.11111ft). When they ignored the Holy
Sptnt and turned to thell' own wisdom, knowledge, and opinions they

-

.

He did, conslantly dropping balls
dead or out of boundS lnskle
In the exhibition
opponents'

:ns

way.
•
'
bounds," says New ur.learts
Instead, he'sherethisweekforthe Bum Phillips.
Pro Bowl with the National Football
Hansen continued the success In
League's elite-Joe Montana, Dan
the regular season, leading the NFC
Marino and all the rest of your NFL In punting most of the year and
household names. Of which, Brian finishing with a 43.6-yard average
Hansen - the only rookie on the that was good enough . to get him
NFC squad and undoubtedly the
voted by players and coaches to the
least recognized player here - Is NFC Pro Bowl team. Miami's
not.
.
f\egg!e Roby was selected to handle
In "his senior year, Hansen had a the punting chores for the AFC.
~.5-yard per punt average that was
A problem for Hansen: Tuesday
the best among the NAIA schools evening he stepped off one of the
durlnl: the 1983seasonan(l was gOOd many "speed bumps" ·used to slow
enough to make him the ninth-round
the traffic here and ·sprained his
draft choice of the New Orleans right ankle, the one on his kicking
Saints. But when he arrlved In leg. He expects to be ready for
training camp, he was confronted
Sunday's game, but he hopes the
with five-year veteran Russell
NFC scores a lot.:.. "I don't want to
Erxleben, a one-tlnoe first-rounder
kick too much."
from the University of Texas.
Despite the Injury, the Pro Bowl
"I didn't know what the situation· . remains a·dream for Hansen.
was," Hansen says. "I knew I had to
"I know I had a good average, but
have a heck of a camp just to make It didn't occur to me I'd get picked,"
the team."
·
he says,

Price

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

~·-··

.... -.·I

MON. &amp; FRI. nL 8 P.M.
.TUES., WEDY THUI. &amp; SAT.
nL s

-

"lit...... Fro""
n.~~~~e··

Olllr • ,.-n;H

•'

/'

SVAC
standings
ALL GAMES
Team

WLPOP

Hannan Trace ................... 10 3 747 003

South&lt;rn ......... ....... ........... .. 1 5 70! titi5
5~

Eas1e_l'p .... .... ......... ............ .4 5

North Callla ........................ 3

fi26

·s 681 762 .

Kyger Cret'k ... .................... 2 7 4:13 4i3
SouthwesiM'n ... .... .. .. .... .... 1 9 ~12 619
'l'ue8day'l ft'!'lulbt:
SouthwPSttorn at Wahama. ppnd.
Easl£11'n at Porkershur~ Cattlollc . ppnd .
Kyg£&gt;r Crt"E'k at Nonh Gallla. ppnd.

Frkl&amp;s'
•......,,
Hannan Tta('(' 53 SouthW£'St('rn
EaSiern at Kyger

Cr~k.

ppnd .,

3,')

.

fl'S{'I

F('b.

16
Southern at North Callla, ppnd. tl"St'' F('b.

. 19
~·~ pma!i:

Hannan TraCE' at Fai rland
Wahama at

Ky~('r

Cr·E."C'k

Southwtst('rn at ·Cross Lam:-s
Nonh Gallla at Oak Hill
Eastern at Ft. F~;o~P
Feh. I 11ames:
K~er

"

Crrek at Hannan Trace
Soulhwf'Stern at Southcrn
North Gallia at Eastern

closed io
sion and Notre
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Robert
Ohio,l34 overall and 7-11n the
withln~1-35wlth12:04remalnlng .
Tatum poured In 23 points and Rick conference, scored the first seven
An eight-point Maryland string
Scarberry 21 while Eddie Hicks' potntsofthegameandnE'Vertrailed.
stopped Notre Dame and theTerps
five-point play helped Ohio Unlver- The Bobcats led 35-29 at halftlnoe
Increased thelrleadto60-40wlth5: 57
slty pull away from Kent State to a and steadily bull! that margin tnt he
left .
77-58 victory Saturday that gave-the second half.
Ken Barlow led Notre Dame with
Bobcats a tw&lt;rg~e lead in the
Larry Robbins scored 19 points to
16 points , Donald _Royal had 12 and
Mid-American Co"nference basket- lead Ken1 State, 1[\.6 overall and 5-3
freshman guard David Rivers
ballrace.
lntheconterence.RussKotalacand
scored five, 10 below his season
HickS- hit a .lleu1goot ana -was l\IItnony un~r.iiiU&gt;:; ,..,.~.--:~:-:.~-"--Wer§ge.- --·- --.-==-~~
fouled on the play, which led to a Golden Flasbes.
. ,
.
Catlln finished with 14 points for
t~~~"l!~a! ""!~! .mt...the.....Kent State _ ·vic Alexap€!er, 9h)Q_S l~a&lt;!mg J beJ;'crp...§._j)OW_].5.5, l!_nd Tom Jon~
bench with 2: 20 remaining. Hicks · scorer and rebounder, played only
and Jeff Baxter each hadlO: Branchsank the - personal foul and two 16 minuteS because of a naggl~g
managed only six points, ending a
technlcals to push the Bobcats' lead shinbone bruise. He scored stx
streak of 30 conseq~tlve gam~ In
to 71-56.
points and collected eight rebounds. . double figures .

Computers determine rank,
gr~de - long-distance runners
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Joan Benoit won the 1984

subcontractor in Denver gathered environmental
data, and road .racing experts helped put it all
together. '
The data develops a runner's standard "pace per
Olympic gold medal In the marathon with an mile," a figure the computer uses to assigq
Impressive tlnoe of 2 hours, 24 minutes and 52 seconds, performance points to each runner .
In 1984 , Benoit· Jed all . women with 877M points,
the third-fastest women's marathon ever, but a
computer analysis indicates she might have done easlly beating Grete Waltz o! Norway, who was
better.·
.
•,
nmner-up with 869.55. Ingrid Kristiansen of Norway
If . the marathon had been run under - Ideal was third with 833.17, followed by Rosa Mota of
condttlons. rather than In the heat and humidity of Los - Portugal with 801.66 and Lisa Martin of Atistralia with
t"geles, Benoit would likely have run the course 80l.a9. ·
hree minutes faster and beat her own world record of
Among , the best male runners, Lopes had 871.71
2:22:43, according to a computer analysis by the points. edging out runner-up Rob de Castella of
C!evelan~-based Int~rnattonal Management Group.
Australia with 871 _62 points. Nick Rose of Great
IMG, the world s largest sports management Britain was third with 820.40 points, followed by
agency representing hundreds of athletes, ha~ Americans Peter Pfilzinger with 817.35 and Mark
devised a computerized method of ranking the Nenow with 800.27.
performances of long-dtstance runners that confirms
Benott as the top women's distance runner of 1984.
Likewise, Portugal's Carlos Lopes, who won the
men 's Olympic marathon In 2:09:21, was confirmed
by the computer as the best male runner of the year.
Lopes would , h~ve run the Olympic course In a
record tlnoe of less than 2: 08 under Ideal running
conditions of 55 degrees and 30 percent l)umldity, the
computer showed.
IMG developed the Levi's Runners Ranking
Service last year In an effort to compare
performances of distance runners who compete
under widely varying conditlorisin races throughout

rights." said Mike
scrYice. "Take two twin brothers. One's racing In
South Carolina and tbe oth40'r one's racing in Oregon
under different environmental conditions and In
different geographies.
"One might brag about running faster than the
other, but the other one can say, 'Yeah, but my
ranking is higher than yours because I run in tQ~gher
events. The wind's In my face, lt'salways hot up here,
I run up and down hills. You run on flat land when it's
cooL'
"It offers a chance for people to truly compaJ-ewha t
their times and performances are- not just on a fun
basis for people who are recreational runners, but
also as the standard to compare world class runners,"
Fruchey said.
'
The complex formula used to rank runners starts
with their tlnoes and their tinlshes In races ranging In
distance from 5 kilometers to marathon distances of
more than 26 mU~. More than a half-dozen other
factors are then entered Into the computer, including
temperature, h~mldlty, distance, wind direction and
velocity. course difficulty and strength of field.
The formula was developed from a base of more
than 250,000 race finishes, Fruchey said. An IMG

executive director of lhe U.vl's Rwmers Ranking
Service developed by the Cleveland-based lntematonaJ Management Gmup, shows a typical record of a ·
distance runner subscribin~ 1o the system. 1be
computer I1'Je!l a complex fonnula lakin~ Into~
weather conditions, cour!ie and slr'e11gth of the field, to
rate nmoers In distances from live kilometers to the
2&amp; mOe maratbon. (AP Laserphoto).

,.;.mihan&lt;j,r"''iled&amp;2recvrd·:;;lt~ a-

• ....
..2.42 earned run average and 90

_p~st

strikeouts. In his two-year · pro
you can't beat it. You get to play school, "butnowschoollsoverwlth
career, Montgome~ is 13-7 with 25 everyday for five months stralg~t. and hopefully I'll get to play."
saves and a 2.30earti.ed run average
you get a lot of travellngexperiehe&lt;;&gt;
Montgomery. who has had a sore
~~ r&lt;&gt;IIPf oltche_{'.__
_ _ e·- ·~-~and~ a IQt mpi~~·" ~ . --~ , __
arm, is aware that only a handful of
But Montgilmery says he d&amp;Snf=~uiillketfiell'ffiliJor · rrmoorreagui•'Pii:IYl'mii'&gt;iEroirnlt'ii""'~=Zc
want to stop untu he makes the big league counterparts• who stay In skills to
that they can
time, pitching In Clnctnnatl'sRlverflrst-class_ botels and travel by perform In the major leagues. That
front Stadium for Manager-Player plarle, mmor leaguers, ·especially Is why he has spent ,the past two
Pete Rose. ·
AA, A and Rookie ~gue players, .!!_ff·se~ns in Huntington. flnl~hing
Rose said he thinks Montgomery travel by bus and stay In the 1&lt;-;al · tfil'fequlrements for his computer
ca~ make It, along with many young Holiday Inn.
science &lt;iegre(' from Marshall
players In the,
organization If
"That part of li ts..not much fun," University.
they" work hard enough and be
Montgomery said, but Its a great
"I wanted to get my schooling
patient.
experience."
over with In case SOmething
"lthlnklhaveachancetomakelt,
Whlle he Isn't making the thou- happens In baseball. That way, I
otherwise I wouldn't be here,"
sands maJor leaguers are, Montl!O; lillve something to get Into after n\y
Montgomery said. Montgomery
mery said he looks at his time In the career is over."
was at the Convention Center Hotel
~ors as an Investment.
If nothing else happens as far as ·
here, along with Rose, general
I can make a lot more money baseballlsconcerned,Montgomeryma,nager Bill Bergesch, outfielder doing other things, that's for sure,"
says the experience has been
Ertc DaviS' and pitchers Ted Power the 22-year-okl said. "But It's Uke a
valuable In boosting his selfandJayTibbsattheftnalstoponthe tlmelnvestment.I'mgolngtolnvest contldence.
Reds' seven-city, four-state my time and maybe have 5&lt;ime
"All through high school and
caravan.
.
better financial rewards In the ~liege." Montgomery said, "I was
Lellftl)ngexpertence
future."
an above average pitcher and when
Life In the minor leagues,
Many minor leaguers use the 1 got Into pro ball, I decided It I'm
Montgomery said, Is a learning off-seasontosharpenthlersldllsby evergoingtogoanywhere,lt'sgotto
experience.
playing winter balL Montgomery
be my own doings.
"It luis Its ups and downs," he says he hasn't takA!I) advantage of
"lt's!IMlething I've really tnotlsal!! ••rf ~ILl!!!!' t!!..play basebi!U" ." that OllPOI'I\Inlty ye!_ becau~ of vated myself about and gotten a lot
ol conllill"'lce In myseiC'

=· •

.........,..,nal
stiii;"

11:511 '1, ••

Wellston's Jeff Monl@Omery
'

=

most

w.-....,..:
... St..,.
7:00•···

-.

Saturday~

w

m

,....,Jiill
....
...
....,9!,.
• ....., ll:lt

MarylaE dumps Notre Qame
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) Len Bias scored 16 of his 18polnts In
the second half, taking the sco.Q!lg
burden off Maryland's guards, as
the Terps held off a Notre Dame
the Irish 77-65\n
and

ByJOHNFRIEDMAN
Tlne-&amp;ntlnelltalf
HUNTINGTON
VA _ Local
=W.Jrncmo_,-~,u;;.',..;;;;,;
' ~.:.;;-~::;;:,
Wellston's Jeff Montgomery Is
concerned he hasn't made It far
·enoogh. '
After graduating' !rOm Wellston
.High In 1980, Montgomery enrolled
at Marshall University. Following
three stellar years oil the mound as a
pitcher for the Thundering Herd. he
was the ninth round draft choice of
the Cincinnati Reds In the regular
phaseoftheJune19113draft.
He gave up his senior year'for the
Herd and stgned a contract with the
Reds. A starter In high school and
collegi! Montganery was converted 'by the Reds to short relief,
perhaps the
pressurized
position tn bUeball. Generally,
whenever he comes Into the game,
there are runners on base and the
conte&amp;t 11 on the line.
Montgomeryhasrespondedtothe
pressure and In 111s first year 1n
baseball at the Reds'
Mont., farrtl'team, theS.ll

•

BJ.avUie Rood • p; 0. Box.JOI
Galli!IOllo, Olllo -1!631

Saturday.
TheRalmen,wholedbyasmany
as 18 points early 1n the second half,
were hard-pressed to extend their
winning streak to 10 and raise their
season record to15-1.
' Georgetown !)lllde only 11 of 21
tree tiu'lJWs, AU-American center
Patrick EWtngwas held to just nine .
·"'!"'l'~~but.ba•:IJ4~
_,.
It was first lois for the the
defending NCAA champions since
~;,.-.;--p•;.t;:, 2i~· 1S33, ·whe-n St. Jc!"...,!s ""''·
beat them -r.;:n
·
St. John's winning margin came
with 25 seconds left when Mullin hit
the second of two h;ee throws to
make It 66-61. Michael Jackson .
· scoredwithlBsecondsleftandagaln
with six seconds left for Georgetown's final four points. Mullin then
held the ball out of bounds before
throwing It In just as time ran out.
When the Redmen beat Georgetown last year, they did not have
Walter Berry, then at San Jacinto
JuniarCull~e. Out Saturday, &amp;rry~
added 14 points and grabbed 13
rebounds as the only other St.John's
player In double figures. David
Wingate's 16 . points paced
Georgetown.
St. John's held a 40-30 lead at
Intermission.
Finally, St. John's began to fold
under ~rgetown 's relentless full- .
..court delense and the HQYas scored
seven straight points to pull \vlthln
63-$) with 1: 23 remaining on a
basket by Wingate.
Mullin then scored &lt;in three foul
shots, while Jackson got the Hoyas'
last five points.
St. John's took over the Big East
lead with a 7-0 record, while
Georgetown dropped to 18-1 overall
and 7-11n the conference.
Willie Glass added 11 points for St.
John's, while Jackson _had 12 and
Martin 10 for Georgetown.

and a 29-18 Maryland lead . Notre
Dame shot only 21 pen,-ent in the
opening 20 minutes.
Notre Dame. 9-5. traUed29-13wlth
2:33 left In the first half, but B;,u-ry
five consecutive

Montgomery seeking Reds' bullpen

(will) of God, serving
i'ttterpl'lltler,
and teaching God's message.
When religious teachers today ignore the Holy Spirit's tea&lt;:hing in
the Word, and turn to their own wisdom, .knowledge, and opinions,
they speak their own "prioote inte,.-etationl. "By their "prioole ...,....
pretatiom, "they try to inRuence the seriptures by their own will, and
present an explanation that is foreign to God's message. To justify
their error, they combat truth, crying, "That Is your private interpretation of the scripture, and everyone his a right to his ownl" But, do
we, accordinl)' to the scriptures? Of course not! Today, true ~pel
teachers rece1ve the intewretation of the seripture as revealed God'•
word apd shun their own 'private interpretattons"l
ForFneBibleCorrelfiOIIcleaceCo......,,Write ...

l

· OFF

·

MEAL DEALS

~:;~ES•Tr0I-',6•9~-~0~::~~-~~-'~""11li~~S~i~noo~w~e~are~n3M~~-~in~t~he§!~~f:i~o~r~~]E~~~jf
aa
i~t:::~==~

Men '$. Western Boots
· $4()00 .
$
I
6
Now
' D &amp; COSUO I Shoes
LARGE SELECTION Men S ress

KITCHEN CURTAINS

MONDAY, TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY 5:00 P.M. Till 10:00 P.M.

spoketheir"Pri"l't·~=r.;~libleToday

.O
0
$2
's
Wori_
Shoes
S ONE GR0UP
Men
K

OFF

Pro grid ·season

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

Women's Con,..ie Dress shoes
GROUP OF CONNIE &amp; HUSHPUPPIES

.

FAMILY MITE

OPE.N SUN.THRU THURS. 11-10; FRI.

at
Our Fall and Winter Clearance
Now 1f2 PRICE

HE GETS. FOULED - Walter Barry ol St. John'sls fouled by 881
Martkt of GeorpMtlm durin&amp; Salurday's top coflese battle. St. John's
. held nearly a 00 point lead late In the pme, then ·had to hold off a
last-minute rally by the Hoyas to win, 88-415. 1be loas IIII8IJIIIlll
Georgetown's two-year, $pme winning streak. (AP l•sei-pholo).

SUNDAY

CALL (614) 992-2104
675-1244

DRAPES -

/"""' -

49&lt; TACOS

apiece In the first half. But . the
Mar-Yland guards, led by Keith
Gatlin with 12, teamed for 19 points

!:!~~~~r:~~'f~~:~George-

Itom

ALL CO-ORDINATES • ALL DRESSES •
ENTIRE COAT SELECTION • ALL .
SWEATERS AND BLOUSES • ALL FALL
&amp; WINTER MERCHANDISE

~imea- i~ntiaut Sect·ion

St. John's ends Georgetown's ·

Fiberglas
Mesh
Aluminum
8 Ft. to 20 Ft.

LIMIT 10- NO COUPON NEEDED

...

January 27. 1985

WEEKEND SPECIAL ,.

Semi-Annual
Clea.rance Sale

0ng0

--

,_

Ph~slca; Flin~. '~~;;:;;;;.;;;;;:;;;,::=~.ho·- -~~-- . ,__,___,,. . .

Tac

~----

'

gravy, mashed potatoes, broccoli,
apple pie, rolls, bu_tter.
Friday-- · Sausage ·paTtie', -"" '-~-.­
sauce, beets, jell!&gt; with topping,
bread, butter.

DETROIT ·(APt - ·A computerthe data, according to the medical
based Information management . journal.
system for gastrointestinal t~sts ··
In addition to providing intethat Integrates · the results of. grated and rapidly retrievable data
radiologic, endoscopic and pathoon Individual patients, the lnformalion system is also useful In
logic studies has been developed at
Detroit's Henry Ford Hospital, says. research, In preparing conferences
Internal Medicine News.
and lectures. and as a teaching tool
The system allows doctors to
for residents.
move .easily between programs,
correlate results betWeen testing
1a
procedures and access studies, and
Mongolia Is one of the world's
channeltbefblalprodUcttoaprlllte~ oldest countries. It reached the
or display terminaL
.zenith of its power In the 13th century
Home-based personal computers when Genghls Khan and his
also can be used to obtain access fo successors conquered all of China.

TOWELS- BLANKETSBEDSPREADS &amp; 'MORE
DURING OUR
INTER
WHITE SALE.

Sports

;L Thursday The Senior Nutrition Program 11: 45 a.m.; Ceramics, 10 a.m.- 2
Choice of milk, coffee, or tea
will serve the following menus:
p.m.
.
available with meals. Call the
Monday - Meat loaf, ooodies, The "Over 50" Exercise Class
center at.992-2161 by 9 a.m. If you
plan to attend the Nutrition Progreen beans, peaches, rolls , butter. will continue on Tuesdays and
Tuesday - Carry-In dinner and Thursdays at 3:30 p.m., weather
gram f~r the meal on any day,
. seminar at Holzer Medical Center.
1
Wednesday - Fish, pork and . - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "
beans, carrots, pudding, wheat
bread, butter.

--GI tests coordinated-

·

permitting. The cost Is 50 cents for
each session attended, exercises
are mlld cardiovascular, and bendIng and stretching for muscle tone ·•
and to help keep joints Umber.
Anyone over 50 Is Invited to attend.
The Senior. Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday - Wiener, sauerkraut,
mashed potatoes, mixed !rult.
Tuesday - Johnny Marzettl,
cauliflower, tossed salad,
pineapple-marshmallow delight.
Wronesday - Salisbury steak,
mixed vegetables. mashed pota·
toes, banana and oranges.
Thursday Salmon pattie,,
buttered carrots, tossed salad,
tapioca pudding.
.
Friday - · Escalloped potatoes

Meig:r County

according to
M.
Columbia manager in Gallipolis.
"GasWorks" was developed by
Oak Hill Associated Universities, a
not-for-profit science education and
research organization headquartered at Oak Ridge, Tenn.
A representative of Oak Ridge
uses a variety of colorful graphic

SAVE

Ch61~ of beverage servejl with

each meal.
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
Meals subject to change wllhout
the week of Jan. 28'Feb. 1 at the
notice.
,
Senior Citizens Ceiller located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday ~Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday- S.T.O.P . Class, 10:80
POMEROY- The Meigs County
a.m,; Physlca,l Fttness,11: 15 a.m.;
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Potluck dinner, noon; Malntern~nce Heights, Pomeroy, has the followof Health &amp;5ston at Holzer Medical lng activities scheduled for the
Center, 1-4 p.m.
week of Jan. 28-Feb. 1:
~ Wednesday ~ Vinton Bible
Monday - · P}jyslcal Fitness~
Study, 1 ·p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 . 11:~5 a.m.; Square Dance.1-3 p.m.
p.m.; CPR Lessons, 1-5 and 6-10
Tuesday . - _Physical Fitness·.
p.m.
.'"
11 . ·~ a .m.; Cho rus, ·12
- p.m.;
Thursday - Bible Study, lJ Exe rc·lse Cla s s, 3; 30 p.m. .
a .in.-noon; Blood Pressure Check
Wednesday .,. Physical Fitness,
at Vinton; CPR Lessons, 1-5 and 11:45 a.m.; Social Secutlty Repre6-10p.m.
sentative, 10 a.m.-noon; Bingo, 1-2

GALLIPOLIS - An eight-foot
dinosaur and a sponge cake are
part of an assembly program to
help area students understand
natural gas energy.
- - - - "'GasWorkS: - Pipeline· to~·the
Future," 'fill be·presented at Ky~r
Creek High School in Cheshire on
Tuesday and at Meigs High School
on Thursday.
The program Is sponsored by
Columbia Gas of Ohio to incrase

S3 COURT STRUT

- ' - w, •

Reds

;

�-:-~~...:

.

·~-

.

-

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

-

-·..--- .....

~ C-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

_

---~

January 27, 1985

January 27. 1985

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

Wildcats trip
SW five, 53-35

Meigs triumphs, takes· over firSt plaCe alone
By Khll'll WISECUP
. 'l1rnes&amp;ntlllel Staff
"
ROCK SPRINGS - Keyed by two second half eight point outbursts,
M~gs fought back alter tralllng the entire first half for a 57-50 win over
' Belpre here Friday that propelled ihe Marauders Inio sole posSession of
first place in the Tri-VaUey Conference.
Meigs scored the first eight points of the third quarter to wipe o~t
Belpre's 29.26 Intermission edge to take a 34-29 lead, one that the
·Marauders li!'Ver relinquished.
. A second eight-point spree In the
Meigs is 11-3 overall on the year,
·fourth period doused a Belpre rally winning for the ninth straight time,
:arid put the game out of reach. The and took over the TVC by a half a
·Eagles had battled back to within game over Alexander with a 1().2
·43-4i. at the six minute mark, but slate. Belpre fell to 1().4 overall and
for to9-3ln the TVC.
:Meigs held the

~P.A~..!OT'- - - -£~!!!

t~~c --!~Ut:· -~ -:~·

x

~. ~

plagued Southwestern on its home
liT, through the otlenslve efforts
court during the second half of of Bill Swain, Deke Barnes, Phil
Friday's SVAC tilt with Hannan Bailey and MlkeDavls, broke loose
Trace as ~ WUdca Is moved back · In the third quarter and the WildCats
Into undisputed first place with a pulled away to put the score at 37-22
53-l'! wln.
as the fourth !"'riod opened. While
viCtory boosls- HT's reco"rd · SW rallle~no pos03 P91itfs for !lie ·
overall to 1().3 and 5-11n the league, period, the Wildcats boosted their
· The Highlanders are 1.9 on the scortng ' for the quarter by 16 and
seas&lt;in and winless .In four league citnch the game;
.
..
starfs,
"The defense he (Myers) used on
"It's orie of those games," us gave us some problems," noted
Highlander Coach Llcyd Myers Wildcat mentor Mike Jenkins.

It
d M IcSheets
Bailey. Steve St tan . g arfor the·
nn
t
rou nded ou sea
Wild ats
c '
lded
th H,;,h
Pelfrey was a
on e Yb lander side with seven from Mike
Batley and six supplied by Sean _
Colley.
·
.. .
_ Statl'l!;lrssho~.@D.trolled t~ __
floor shooting, postlng 58 percent on
. 25 of 43 shOts. The Highlanders
caiu!M 17 of '53 attempts from the

-me

:S:=:,:=:~~~~~~~mln':'."u~t:e_sn;~~e- .- ;: ~e Meigs half-~ame 1~'!'!,:'~ ~-, _ , _,

The Sunday Times-Sentiriei-Page-C-3

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

wrested a 4().38 victory away from
Creek In a makeup game Saturtlil);,
travel to Cross Lanes Christ~,n
the Wildcats . Jason· Hill was sW·s
Tuesday and be hosted by Sou
top scorer with 14, while Steve
Jarrell and Richard Stitt had 10
Friday·
: ;
HANNAN TRACE (53) - S•·aln 1-2~•:
points each for liT.
Ra""" 11-1-17: llalloy 1-0-2: StJu -1-0:2: o.-; ,
The.WUdcats opened a buSy week
'&gt;1!-JO: SheO!o l&lt;l-2: Kirk 2-fl-ot. 'f...., ~W:
Saturday night by hosting Symmes
Ba~~: ~1: -P~~.';!,op,.!~~:
to SW~~ 13. The WUdca!S, I)Q:!ted~, ""'Va~- 1'hey_ t;_a~el_to Fair_IJ:n'!__ . ~n 1-0:2: Jetl\f.•J;Ot .T..~ il-1-35.
seven assiStSafld the hosts had six.
luesctay ana return to league j:llayc- Hannan!;?,:,~............ 22 , 11 i~~1
In an exc1tlng double overtime . Friday at Kyger Creek. The
Soulhwestern ............... ...... l2 6 &lt; 13....;,
battle, the Highlander reserve -Highlanders were to play · Kyger
n..erv .. - sw o)(] H'r Jll.
floor for 32 percent.
liT sank three of Its eight
free-throws\ for 3l percent , but SW
was good on Its single atte' mpt from
the charity stripe. In rebounding,
the Wildcats had 18 and SW had 24,
and the visitors posted 14 turnovers

· P.UIL!·C· AUC-TI-O·t l-- -·

NOW fiAYE A

SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECEIVED BY THE OHIO ,
VALLEY BANK COMPANY AT 420 THIRD AVENUE;:'
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631 BEGINNING JANUARY-.
28, 1985 ON THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY;

SATELLITE SYSTEM
WITH A S YEAR GUARANTEE
n. SYSTEM

THAT HAS THE BEST PICTURE AVAILABLE IN A 10

getnocloserthan seven polnts go to Alexander, who had Its game
In the final minutes.
with Nelsonville-York postponed
Meigs' Nick WiSe dropped In 10of Friday due to bad weather.
-12 free throws enroute lo· a
Meigs coach Greg Drummer
team-high 16 points and was . knew the importance of its win over
.Instrumental in giving the Maraud- Belpre and the Alexander game
ers a cushion going into the final right around the corner, "We had to
quarter.
wln In order to take some of the
WithMelgscllngingtpa36-351ead pressure off the Alexander game.
and 12 seconds left jn

th~~~~ ·-~"m~e~·-~·;)~~~j~~~~~~!~~~~--i

scored on a Jay-up nine seconds
~

.

Belpre does not put us In a must-win

son Intercepted a Belpre pass and
tossed a perfect half-court one
bounce pass to Wise streaking
toward the.hoop. ThatgaveMelgsa
40-35 advantage after thre&lt;;' period~.
Marauder ace forward 6-4 Mike
Chancey put In 15 points and combed
·: · b)e .boards for a game-high 16
.: 1-ebounds, but his defensive work on
: Belpre star Robert Miller played the
- , most Important part of his game,
:. ; -Miller, normally scoring well Into
· · the20s, had16)l0lntswlthsixofthooe
~ · comLI'!g !n-H"~£ final minute after
. : Chancey had fouled out at the 1:10
: mark. Miller, who had scored 'l:l
: points and grabbed 18 rebounds In
, Meigs' 82-72 win over Belpre earlier
the year, was held to only six
· , · rebOunds by the brawny, but smooth
::: Chancey.
'
:,
Junior Lee Powell had his best
: game of the year as the 6-5 center
: tame off the bench to score 12 points
· - and pull down 10 rebounds. Powell
~· entered the gary~e late _In the first
. •· quarter after senior center Dave
. : Fisher accumulated three fouls.
:; _Powell played most of the game
: • thereafter.
: · Other Meigs siarter Jay Car; petner rounded a balanced Meigs'
.1" attaCk With eight pointS and WaS
.~ "heads up" throughout the night on
. ~ the defensive end. ,

_;;In

;: Belpre's Russ Logue Jed the
:;; Eagles with 19 polnts. The quick 5-10
~. guard has dumped in49polnts In his

; . Jast two games.

"Any time you hold ·a good bail
club to 50 points, It has to be a good
defensive effort. We forced them
Into a lot of turnovers, ... added
Drummer.
Coach Dave Wilcoxen thought the
Meigs' defensive pressure was the
difference In the game. "Meigs
pressured out of our offense and
caused our kids to stand around, We
thought they would come out In a
zone, but theywentafteruslnagood
man-to-man. They have a nil-e ball
rlub and shot thPir .frPe throws
super. l think the TVC coaches
picked the right ball club when they
picked Meigs to win it," commented
Wilcoxen.
Neither team shot well from the
field as Meigs hit on 16 of 50 for 32
percent and Belpre canned 20 of 60
for 33 percent. The difference came
atthefoullinewheretheMarauders
blistered the nets, maklng25of 30for
83 percent while Belpre canned 10ofl-19for53percent.
.
Meigs controlled the boards with
37 compared to the Eagles' 25. Both
teams ' turned the ball over often,
Meigs 16 and Belpre 21. Belpre was
called for 24 fouls and Meigs 14.
BELPRE i50)- RoRPr

reserves,
J:!elpre.
;,~~~,~~~~~~~~~;
:
why they're
where
they
,they ra:n" past Meigs ·ru.::J~~~~~~~~~.~~'

-

: ·· . The Little Marauders had taken a
: :COmfortable 34-21 lead Into the
· :halftime Intermission, but a Belpre
; ;ione' press in the second half
: -completely stymied the bosts as the
&lt;'t ittle Eagles bllt2ed to a 49-19
: ;9econd half advantage.
: ·: Rich Turner paced all seorers
; 4oltt&gt; 21 for .Belpre while Brian
• :c;r.ene added 18 and Mike Linder
: ;ohlll,lied In 12. Huey Eason paced

,oli~

:

~

RubiP ().1.1: ~..w Hul&lt;h

Slmmorl.'i 1·2-1: Chris NN 'bl'rl)' 1.().2. TutU !t--10.50.
MEIGS m1- Rlt'k WisE&gt; J..tO-t6: .Ja~· CilrJX'"'''r

Uniden" Bearcat" scanner
radios help your Neighborhood Watch Group know what
to watch out lor-and when
to be on the alert. And right
now, we're offering rebates
of up to $35 on selected
scanners. But hurry! This
offer ends March 31 , 1985.

~-1-8; Mlkf' Chano•~' 4·7·1!1: Brad Robin.~oo -~(1.6: O;nl'
Jo15hrr

001~

l...f'l' Pml'&lt;'ll 4-4·12: Slhuwn Bah•r 1).(1-();

"'"'"""""""...""""'.._...,_
""~"''~' .
&amp;·lpll'
..... 10 1!-1 n 1:-~
..,.,.,. .: ::::.::::: ·
.... ···' " '' ,_,

-Meigs y;ith 17 and Jesse Howard
had
11. Mlck Childs' Little MaCoach
crauiH:rs went tu-8~ unlhe:year--and.
,.

BELPRE (701 - Mlkr Sro11 2-0-4: M\kf'
Fulmer 1·2-4: Brian Gr"ff'nr 5·8·18: Mlkf'
McVey 3-1·7: Blll Ruth 1-0·2: Rlt'h 'Furner
8-5-21; MlkP LlndE&gt;r 4--1·11. Totah 25-20-70.
MEIGS (53) - Ed Kilche-n 3-2·8; Hue-v
Eason 6-~17: Steve Mu.sser 4.0-8: Jess£.
Howard 5-1·11: Donnlf:' Recker :W.Ii: Scott
PoW("I\ 0.2·2: Marty Hart 0.1 -1: Phil King
(}..().{); JE&gt;ff Nelson (}0-0 . TutUs tl-11·53.
Byquaners:
Bc&gt;lpre .......... ... ................... 9 12 2-1; 2S--JO
Mel~s .. ..........
. ...... 12 17 Hl 9-53

triumph of ye~r

~ClNE
Faced
&gt; ex~ted hard-luck of a

with the
rebuilding
;:year, the Southern Tornadoes
: : Jalned the "elusive" first victory of
• ;:iiMI year by pulling away In the third
: .quarter with 16 points enroute to a
0:45--30 SVAC girls' triumph over the
: ; North Gallla "Lady Pirates."
,
: ··- In a very c lose· first period,
: · :;outhern slipped to an 8-7 advan. , rage, then climbed to a 19-13: · halftime lead.
; :; Sophomore forward Joyce Fore: : !)18n led the way to vl~tory with 11
;
by hitting five of six field
·•
most of
caine on fine

••

unlden·..
Bpnncar

CARPENTER DRIVES easy layup in this 'l1rne!&gt;Sentlnel photo during Friday night's key TVC
encounter at Morri&lt;;on Gym, Rock Springs. Meigs defeated visiting
Belpre, 5'7-50, Tr!\lllng play is Belpre's ROger Ruble (10).

$319.95...- -

McEhi'O&lt;', the top-ranked ,player
Championship.
in the world, defeated fifth-seeded
Yannlck Noah of France 6-2, 6-4.

$35.00

Rebate

$204 95

Top seeds advanfe in tennis tournament
Connors defeated 66th-ranked Mel
Purcell6-4, 7-6 (7-3).
' In theotherquarter!lnalmatches,
, Scott Davis eliminated fourth seeded Eliot Teltscher 6-3, 6-2 whUe
Czechoslovakia's Mlloslav Meclr

UPPER ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLI$, OHIO
NEXT TO BETZ HONI!A

ECTRONICS

.~

Uniden""

By TOM BELVILLE
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - Many times l
have been asked that queStion by
people wbo do not hupt. As a point of ·
clarification Jet me explain that
most people who do not hunt are not
anti-hunting. They just choose not
to hunt, much the same as some
~iJle-Jjl~efnot to ski, play tenn:s •
or participate In any other activity.
It is just a matter of personal
preferences. Those of us who do ·
hunt know why.
It is not just the killing of game
that draws millions of hunters to the
woods each year. More often than
not the huntet loses the battle of
wits being on the animais' home
turf. F_or instance, the deer succ'ess
rate In Ohio and surrounding states
usually runs from 15 percent to 25
percent. That means that only one
out of every four to six hunters
scores. So, the odds definitely are
not In tile hunters' favor. That
ch&amp;llenge Is one reason we hunt.
With some It might be the
nostalgic appeal. It takes us back to
a day. .gqne by, the days when
our
..
forefathers hunted actually out of
necessll)l. They had to hunt In order
to eat and survive. And they were
very good at It. Some hunters pride
themselves on how good · a hunter
they can become In our day and
time as ·compared to those oldtimers .
AlthOugh In this day hunting
might hot be considered a neces.u~, to SQ!!l£ it Is_that way _In a
~

liST -

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Topseeded John McE;nroe, secondseeded Jimmy Connors and two
_:comparitive·unknowns advanced to
the semifinal round Friday night In
the $XO,OCK) U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis

Why do you hunt?

Bsarcat"' scanners are. approved for use in neighborhood cr(me

prevention programs.

C198C Unlden Cor~ralion ol Arner1ca

•

.

ro~u~s~ted~J~o=ao=Soa~=res=o~f~B=raz~ll~7-~5~,7~-5=-~=~~================~====~.

~

meat. I know many people who
would rather have a deer In the
freezer than a beef. with good
reason too. A deer steak, according
to reports, contains about a third
Jess calories than a beef steak of the
same proportion. It also has a
different flavor . A taste many refer
to as "wild." That Is a fitting term.
$orne folk!; just like to huntforthe .
exercise it provides. Walking, even
casually, up and down hills and
through the woods is very good for
your health. It tones the legs'
muscles, Increases lung capacity,
and Is good for the heart.

In today'_s fast-paced society
many people just like to be outdoors
to gef away from It all. Getting
away from dally job pressures,
social pressures, a nd the like to
most people Is a necessity. Being
outdoors In the peace and qulel of
the woods Is good therapy. A man
(or woman) can forget about other
•'"''
.............
~ _4"''-"-"""'
....... . ,. "'''tt;on:lor. ;;r.·t~to&lt;? -- l -"'
u•u•6""
c.ouy
IUOJ ""'
forest and the sights and sounds
therein. One can even do a little
soul-searching If he wishes. It can
be a time of uninterrupted thougl1t.
A fondness for guns can,also be a
reason for hunting or vice-versa.
Some people become fascinated
with guns then become hunters so
they can use different guns for
different types of hunting. Making a
tough shot wiih one of your favorite
guns can be very -satiSfying.
The excitement of the hunt
cannot be overlooked. Big game,
not to mention potentially dangerous big game, most always provides plenty of thrills and excitement. But even small game hunting
provides plenty of excitement · at
limes. A squirrel flashing across
limb. A rabbit streaking out from
under-foot. A grouse bursting out of
a honeysuckle patch. Wow!

TVC

After his young team's first win, ·
Coach Hlllon Wolfe, Jr. stated,
"Every girl played fine ball as they
are starting to gel as a team. We
have no seniors, but are a team of
the future." Southern has three
T\IC Cage Standlng!i
AD Games
juniors, six sophomores and a
W 1. P
reserve earn of mostly freshmen. Team
MC'Igs ···'· ·········· ..... ....... .. l1 3 \117
The Tornadoettes were futt her AIE&gt;xandC'r .
. ............... 9 3 Hill
praised for their "best game of the Bt&gt;lpr(' ... ... ........... .. ......... .. IO 4 899
NPISOO\'Uif'-York .. .... .•......•... B ~ 8J:l
year."
Trlmblr ................ .............. 8 5 BOO
In the preliminary contest South- Fedt&gt;rai · Hockln~ ..... ., ........... 6 7 !IW
Vlnl on Cou nly ........ ............. 4 8 !Bl
ern's Junior High girls posted a
~am&gt;n Local ... .. ................ .:l 1 600
39-23 triumph over the little Pirates. Miller ..... .. ............. ......... ... .] 13 668
Wellston .... ... ,......... .......... ... O 13 742
Southern led 14-2 In the first
1'\'C Gamet Only
quarter, -then built up an' early 27-4 Team
W· L P

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OP

Southern substituted freely the fl,e-lpi'P ....... ................ .. ....... 9 3
·· Adams. who registered the assists.
second half, playing 16 players
Nf:'lsonvlllf'- York ... .. . . . . .... 8 3 700 fm
; · Adams, In addition to a good floor
Trimble .. . .
. .... .......... .8 4 BOO 762
along the wa)'.
: game, had eight points, Sophomore
VInton Counly .. ....... , ...... .... .. 4 fi 613 624
Debbie Greathouse led Southern Fedcrai · Hock tn~ .. ... .. .......... A 7 6TT 688
; • J(arla Smith .added l'ight, Rachel
. ...3 6 6~ 665
with 12 points, Becky Evans added Warren Local ... .........
· : Rieber sev.eo, Tony a Cummins
r,llller -·----· ......... ... . .. .J 11 586 784
10, Becky Winebrenner eight, Dawn • ·wellston
: ; ilve, Mandy Hill four, and Tammy
............ ........ . ., ... .... o 12 68.5 929
Johnson seven, Leslie Dudding and t'olal!t
:O 'l'helss two.
·
56 56 ltll llll
~rves (TVC Only)
'
Crystal Hill one each.
• _• Smith was· also credited with-a
W L
• •
HUJ led Southern with four Team
• !(lOd floor game, while Reiber held
Belpre ....... ........ .. ......... ... ............. l1 1
assists, while Greathouse, Hlil and Warrm,Local ..... ... ........ ... ................. 8 1
: · {he high-scoring Michele George to
................ ... ...... .. ........ ...... 8 3
Winebrenner each had iour re- Alexander
::Just seven points, while equalling
Mel¥5 ......... .... ..... ..... .... ... .......... ...... 8 4
·: that mark oUens!vely.
· bounds. Tammy Coe led North VInton County ............ ..... , ...... ...... ... ... 6 4
" · Trimble- ....... ............ .......... ...•... .. ... ..:&amp; 6
Galila with six rebounds.
; : Jayne Campbell of North Gallla
F'edt?rai·Hocklng ................. ........ .. ..... J 8
· · led all scorers with 14 points on six
Coe also tossed In 12. points,
Ne18onv111e-York ................. .. ............. 3 8
MIIIE't' .:.......... ... .................. ... ........ ... 3 9
Mellayne Stout a&lt;!ded three, while
.• peld goals and two free throws,
Wellston .... ... .. ... .................. .. ..... ....... 0 12
Cardell. Borden, Axline and Wood- ToWo
· while playln!l' a steady game both
.
56,.
sOn each had two points.
:- ways. George added seven, Gina
Jon. II"""*'
Meigs 57 BE'IprE' 5(}
,
Southern's Junior High is now S-1.
:· Rutan toSsed In five, while Tina
·FC'dl'rai·Hocklng 76 Wellston 57
·: plackiiurn and Lisa Lemaster
Box """"':' (v~~nlty)
Trimble at Vinton County !ppnd. no r~t
~t )
.
•
SOt.JTHERN (45)- Tonya Cummins 2-Hj;
: added two apiece.
A)('xander al NeiSonvUie-York lppnd. no
Mandy
HUI
244:
Lort
Adams
3-2-8:
Rachel
•. For Southern Mandy Hill and
rewt yt&gt;ll
Reiber :l-l-7: Joyce t--.oreman 5-1-11; Karla
Warren a1 Miller t ppnd. no reset yet 1
: ,Joyce Foremar&gt; had seven reSmith 4-0-8: Tammy Theiss 1..(1..2. TotUr
JWenoes
tll-1-46.
: po_unds each, while Cum11Jlns
Belpre 70 Meigs 53
NOJml GAUIA (311) - Michele George
added five of the team's total 'n.
Federal-Hocking 58 Wellston 38
.l-1·7; Tina Blackburn 1.0.2: Gina Rulan l-J.5:
Jan. mgames:
Usa Lemast~r 1-0-2; JaynE' Campbell6-2-14;
Southern hit 19 of 45 from the field
K~rcn Stcds·OM. 'Th'..=!: !!·!-!e.
--.------. M.l'l~ at Alexander~
for 42 percenf and hit seven of i1 ai
Trimble at Belpre
&amp;:ore .,. quartet's:
VInton Coonry at Federai·Hock.Jng
the line for 64 percent. North GaUia ·.sour hem ..............
........ 8 U 16 lo.-45
Miller at Wellston
WI _six of 12 from the line for 50 North Gallla ........ ............ ."..1 6 9 &amp;-.t}
NPisonvlllf'- York at WarrPn Local
percent.

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OPEN 7 DAYS
MON. thru FRI. 8 to 8
SATURDAY 8 to 6
SUNOAY 9 to S

a

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:)Jelpre reserves cop 70-53 victory
• .• ROCK SPRINGS - The TVC's

F

SWIMMING PQQL KITS &amp; SPAS
Sl 00 Diseount

ROBINSON DRI.VES - Meigs' Brad Rohlnson (5) drives aroWjd
Belpre's Robert Miller (42) In this '11rnes-Sentlnel photo. 'lbe
Marauders won, 5'7-50, fAI take over undisputed first place In the TVC
cage standings.

K.f'Mrn·eK- &amp;o!Pn•m. Mel"' a.1.

-·.

P''"""

PASSING GAME-~· day Carpenlei- (00) Is engaced ba
game Wiih teUi'iiiiiifi!8 aQmgFi'liliij' Jililil'&amp; 'I'Vt; ai 'ROOil: ,.
Sprlnp. 'lbe Marwiolers WOII, ll'l-50, over visiting Belpre, knocl&lt;lnl the
Eqles out of a tie lorftnt place. Looldllgon JsBelpre'sRussLope (28~.

.!att.o.t.J£!!PnJzwurl-rnate Brad Rollin· ~ situation nyPr Alex~nder-

'

�.

-~---

-

....

'

•'

~unday

Page C-4-The

Times-Sentinel

.··

·January 27, 1985

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

Victory Circle:

Howsam steps down , as Reds' chief

Bad weather puts freeze
on local sporting e~ents .

play.,r-manag.,r. 'llte popularRost&gt;,
By JOE KAY
outfield. 'llte t"am tumblro to the
left Cincinnati as a free agent
who
. AP Sports Writer
worst record in tbe National
·
alter
the 1978 season, w.a s reacCINCINNATI (AP) -Bob
HowLt&gt;agu.,, and was on Its way to Its
.
qulred
lrorit Montreal to replare
!;am said he decided st&gt;Veral months
second consecutive last-plaCI' finish
Manager
Vern Rapp In August.
ago to SteP doWrt as president ancf
in the NL Wt&gt;SI wht&gt;n Wagner was
He
also
hired Bt&gt;rgesch, a
chief exreuttve ofllrer o! tht&gt;
fired.
long-tbn"
frl.,nd
and former New
Cincinnati Reds, a team ··he was
Perhaps Howsan\'s .master
York Yankees executive, to share
commissioned to reconstruct In
strok" since returning to the front
duties
in running the club last
1983.
offie&lt;&gt; has peen hiring P"t" ROSE' as
How!;am announced Friday that
he'll become vice chalrrnan and
consultantfortheNationaiL!&gt;ague .
club on July 1, with C.,n.,ral
Manager Bill &amp;rgt&gt;seh assuming
.
dutlt&gt;S of operating th" club.
•
Howsam, 66, was brought· out of
St&gt;mi-retlrement In July 1983 by
~

-

By SOOIT WOI.FE
OVP News Staff
The cold weather certainly has put a "freeze" on local sportlng.,vents
ot lati· (some 26 area games hav" been PoStponed th" past 8 days). The
snow and its "chills" have opened up another area of winter recreation.
Bt&gt;sldes the usual sledding, snow-ball battl.,s, "tubing," skiing and other
g.arn&lt;'s some new forms of winter sports have beCome quit"
related
.

popu~~idt&gt;Sibeusualwinte;"fender-benders"andcarsldddlng"eventsl

n!Cently bec~me Involved In lbe popular . auromoblle gaDII&gt;S of
"ditch-jumping'' and car-Dying, the latter ol which I don't care !AI
participate in again. Besides the initial thrill ofOylnglhrough the air no one
.comes out a winner.
.
bod ru

---~ - . -

January 27, 1985

Ohio-Point

.

Meigs County agent's corner

Octobt&gt;r.
. ...
"On the field, WI&gt; ·hav" taken
number or steps. to make the fait(,
realize that w" are Wol'ldng hard to ;
restOre the Reds to the dominant :
position that we expert""ced In lhli;
pas\, and tbat we wlll hi&gt; pi'I!SI'ntlng•
good, exciting, "njoyabdle ba$ebalf:
forthem,"Howsamilll.
••
...
..

a.

Melgs
• O"Jr
• I'sup
· mar
· 'k. to· .13•1. -~'-~
e- h '42 40
_
. • .-~=,
on year .WI.t
. -. .cag
' e WID

~==;-~~~A;t~f~lr~s~tl~~;·~a·s~a~f~ra~l~d~t~ha~t~m:y~e~xJ,pe~r~le~n;c~e~w~a~s~g~o~ln~git~o~be~a~"~No~~y~w~Sc~~~·i~lll~am~~an;·d~~Ja~m~es~VV~ll~l~lam~s~,~th~e~n:CT~~R~OC~K~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~"~~~s~.~t~rn~v~e~ls~~t~o~~-s.,~Jip;r;e~thl~s==~~ -'":::=..::"'~'--'~-~QA_n.v_RQmA.J:\ti~~-~---'l...._D.l..-......._....,~~_..- ,- '"' ';'o set t~e stage Tdt&gt;par_ted for bas~"tball pr~ctlce under sunny ski~~ ~ -PresHo
. wsamxient who buWatlgntther.,- ~aBsl firR·~
wtth 15 s.,.;;;~d~l~f("to give the ~n;; Maraud.,rettt&gt;S were
of time af'Melgs'on 'lllUrsaay-wnen ~ ~11

g
th" powerful Lady Spartans come
with the thermometer nearmg th" 40 degree mark Friday aftenroon. 0 n
M h' :. f h
70s
'd t th"'
Meigs Marauderettes their 13th win . 28 turnovers an d rnad e 12· of22 f ro m
19
mY way to pick up severaJ 'of my players In Rt&gt;edsvill.,, I continued undt&gt;r
~c ~n.~ ~
S~l . a 1the In 14 outings with an exciting 42-40 thl&gt; line for 55 pere&lt;&gt;nt. Trtmbl" to town .
•
su nny skies as I passed Forked Run State Park 'and the roads almost eblede ts Y tong~oug t~ge e
triumph over Trimble her" made 14 of 25 from the line for 56
~~~J~~jK,;.;~~n~~~1:,!~;,!:;~·
0
1
1t 1 1
·
rou
earn UffiL""'U aroun~o.~.
Thursday.
percent.
•
H-3; Mlchellt&gt;TI'alrwr 44-10. Totah 13-14-40.
comp e e Y c ear.
"I feel that I have accomplished
In tbe reserve contest, Trimble
MEIGS 14'1 - Jennl Couch 3-2-8; B. J.
h 1 1 t t 10 d , H
ld
Trimble was setting up an offense
Gordon 2_7:n: .Jenny Mllk'r 4.o.s: Jodi ..
In just minutes the Sky blackened, snow star-ted falling, and the winds
wF a "" ou
o,
owsam sa
for ·a chance at a tie, but the
came away with a 42-27wln. Teresa
Harrison 2.().4; Jutk&gt; Mill"' 2-2-6: Jenny :
rtday. "I talked to the Williams
ever-pr.,sent Miller drew a charge
Johnson led Meigs with nine whll"
Swanz Hl-2; Rhonda Haddox 1·1·3. Tolak
blew violently, slowing my pace to a m"re crawl. Then before visibility
1 "~~;..,.,..,
reachC'd Z('ro.l notlcC'd a darker, "cyltnder-shaped"lmagethatextended . brothersinlat.,fall~boutthistypeof _
and the Marauderettt&gt;S stalled ball
Marta Musser had six, Tammy
,
==--r --..fn=..tb•n.gr.£!!•01}.1&lt;\.l!J!Llny,;-~\Liine goud,s in_the skY. W!!hln!,he CJ}~nder Jll __ ~~~::_~~.:'?~ ~~~~~~ I made_= down_!Q,.Qne soc_Qlld &lt;!!ld .lhuame -· ~fi~ht_~lx: Shelly Stobart five, an'!-, _Trlll'\9~· .::;.o:;:~ .....: .cc . .. ~ !! _s!i,.!L ~~-~
was the closest thing to a funnel cloud I ever went to s""! l; the winds were ·
uq•~v" ' w""" _..... , · .
· ended after the missed fr"" throw. · su" Parsons on.,. Jennuer cowery "'""" ............................ i .,. •· • ~ . .
The Reds lost $4.5 million last
,
.
led Trimble with 5
. ~~~~i-~~- mo~e_v aole~t~y __t~an on_ t~ ~~ ts~~-';~_ . _, __ - _____._, __ ..... ~~... ..~"'.. ..,~
season, and controlJingtnterest was ,.. :~~h .,.R~"-.~~~~~ ~ 4~~?:':_~:~
wn_n nowm:•n.• m go J .ran m1u 111c LJUll.:-r..ly' aW• QC:l\,.u•u·6 '"'-, ,.....,._. l ...... - -. ld I ·t DeCi?rilDer ' to -einci nfl'afr-=-,~·· ··l-""'o;o-•v-~· '"fU~ .... n: ~..,, ... H-;:.cpcJ •vo.o
-=:,··;;:_.=-:;.;,;;,;;;;:;;.....;.;;;;:"--:::.-..-..-...--.--...,_..-.,......,-:-===~~--~,~
rather it ran into me. and visibility reached an absolute zero. As It hit the,
~sin:s~woman Marge Schott.
lead but sophomore center .Jenny .
Lyne Ceraer Schedule
almost-stopped-ca r, I f"lt the car "lilt-up" slightly and I got a flying
The team was In the midst of it s Mill.,r. twin-sister to Julie, picked
Week ot Jan. Z7. 1985
second consocutive last-place St&gt;a- up her thi rd foul early In th" second
sensation as the force of tbe wind blew snow into tbe car around the
Oak - Gytnl'llWum
Pool
Jan. 'lT Noon-3 p.m. 0pE'n Rec .................................................... Noon-3 p.m. OpE'n Swim
windows and doors. Needless to say 1 wasn't very calm and I thought lor
son when Wagner was fired as team quarter and had to go to tlje bench.
____ ...
Jan . ~ 1).~ p.m. Coli®' Rcc.... ..... ....................... ....
. 12: ,"(1.] : 30 p.m. Filnt&gt;Ss Swi m
sure that was "it," however,! did get a somewhat soft landingstraddllnga
president In July 1983 and How sam She also picked up ht&gt;r fourth early
6-8 p.m. Collf'g£' Swim
ditch and adjacent corn f1eld.
a .,ee to return to the froitt·offle&lt;&gt;.
In the I bird quarter and returned to
Jan. 29 6-8 p.m. College Ret&gt;........... ..... ............... .
.. 12: Xl-1: 30 p.m. Flttlf'Ss Swim
6--8 p.m . Collew;&gt; Sll.1m
, After I came to my St&gt;nses Wtd the winds calmed sDshtly, I decided !AI
~owsam ran the Reds' front - the bench for most of the second
Jan. l) 6-8 p.m. Coll~e Rec ..... .
... . 12::1'1-1 :.'11 p.m. Fltn~ S'A1m
~ lor help, the_n '·heart it thunder !llld wondered Ill had_come to my se,ns&lt;&gt;s.
office operations for 11 years before ha 1f.
6-8 g.rn. CollegE&gt; Swim
Jnn. 31 CIOSPd -Baskf'tbaU................................. .
............................. .. .....Ctos.d
~.Jiut,r h~ve w~~n.eSS~&gt;s for that one!)
stepping down 10 become vice
M"lgs shot a blistering 11 of i8tn
7 p.m .. Redwomen vs. Urbana
Thunder m the wtnt~r t:me? And some r"ports o! lightning too.
chairman on March 1, 1978 _ The the first half for 61 perCI'nt, but
. ,;. ]2:.}_1·1: .10 p.m. rltnl'SS Swim
Feb. 1 7-!l p.m. OP£&gt;n Re&lt;' .................... .
.
..
t"am won world championships In tailed off for only four of 14 in the
7-9 p.m. Open Swim
Fortunately, I saw no tlghtnmg.
Feb. 21-3 p.m. OJX'n Re&lt;' ................................. .
......... :: .. 1-.1 p.m. Open Swim
Anyway, to makE' a long story short , desp1te tbe cold weather outs1de,
and
four
National
Lt&gt;ague
second
half
for
a
47
percent
average
1975
1976
Feb. 31-3 p.m. Open H.ec ........ ....................... .
................... 1-3 p.m. (}pl&gt;ri Swim
the hearts of those who helped me were warm and I thank y.ou! I really
pennants and five NL West titles ~ fo~;~::_~a-~~-•-•-- •-- ·~ •-- .,_,
6-8 p.m. Colk&gt;ge Rec.............................. ..
............. 6-8 p.m. CoiiE'Rt' Swim
- --appreaate '(:'\ 'eryortes heip and a"rrl Vt'ry tiTtmktuL ---'--during his 11-year span: - - - . •••'-'&amp;"'• I '"''~~111111,!; Ill a lit" IVJ lll;:tl
1 was also relieved to know that a slmilarbllv.ard hit Racine to make
'·I've always felt he's one of !he In the TVC w1th Alexander at 10-1,
tlte true, "Nobody will believe litis one" story bell.,veabl.,.
most brilliant exocutlves in baSl'- were led in scoring by senior !3. J.
•. Wllh God's help a nd watchful eye we can all reach the "Victory
ball, one of the great innovators in Gordon with 11. includtpg St&gt;ven of
Circle. "
the game,"· &amp;rgesch said. "Cer- etght from the foul line. Jenny
tatnty the record speaks for ttSt&gt;if, in · Miller and .Jenn! Couch added eight
. 1 what he's accomplished."
each. Jan Downs led Tnmble with
~M. 'lith . .
~ l&lt;HI 'MnL·~. t lliiu ,,,,. , - Hn.. '11•• ·
/
St .M~r;.-s Mf·morl•t l~ ruldar
.
The OOUom fell out for the Reds in 20. The Lady Tomcats fell 1o 8-3 in

1

.

J~ill~iJ~~~cn

\

Ho·w they· fared.·••

A~&lt;u"l.&lt;lo..:.t ,,,\.,.,_,· •h•tt·· l.onk&lt;'d
~...-~~~·1 l ui~ tm~kt•t h: dl II',IHllo fan'(] ;

.m.•ln
•~\ 'lo'1,w l1;~--Jti
.

12~1. ,\AA
bi;'JI
nA«

to.: lnJ.:.

l1igh
'

Loml n !'.lllllh·

-

SEOAL

Meigs had 29

~bounds

Wl' th Julio

r;~~~to~re~-s~Jgn~:t~h:e~st:a:rt:in~g==~~~~~"=~=~=~"~

,\l lo•r. Jau, ll1'11! F alrbol'n
[Ja; ton l,lrlmunt 7'1-!il, pl8 _1'o•d

~~ -17. ()! •,•i
{'k-..f'l;ond .'it

1)!11/ltlu~ ~l!utdii.l ".

warm

l.1hd l-\,o\ Tut"&gt;dJI. j"'I!Ylllo-d bt.•at W;u·

oij1wlllf' llo&gt;l¢1 1&gt;; :11-:."L
~ . Toh~lu ~1"111 .

J:ll. l_..,;11 TolrU:o Start

~ .'¥.1 .

Clt•l('land '11.11-.'Tli ll lu~ . 1.l 1. lx•ar l~•1'.
f,1 lil;-+1 . pltm:'d :11 1\!•IIPI'Ing Alll'f S;uu r
d:l\ .
•
'
n. Sp!·in)..11f•ld ~lh , 1:11. ~- ~ K!'ll£'1"\n_e
l'';:llrl1l001 Ftidll~' . Pflol pOriN1 1Jhi11'd ol Wa
~l&lt;o~·T ; t Sa1 unla1.
7. WIUW!l ~\I ''IC'I'n 1{1-&lt;;J"•n •l'. 111 . l~·l1l

• ·\

. ,\usltniO'&gt;\'n 1-'llc·h
rlin ~

1-U--4~.

,..,_ Warrrn Har

Frida\ . pcr-;11Yl111il.

R r.mlon Md{lnlf&gt;l. II J

pl;, ~'r'l:l

1\kron

Sr \"lnco~ nl Sr _M;ln S. rlu I"(! a.' . ·
II. l'h ~ PL.u rd S1. J~ oph . \) :l. bi•ul ( 'In
l'inni!TI l l u,::tw&lt;- R.J.ti2, plan•d Gil C'indnnali

Ekk&gt;r .'i.:lt UTtl;i\'.
IIi. Mc10n Ci'lllr'&lt;ll -llfM·pr. l fl.2. ~~ Ak
l"lm lltK'hlf•l f'l'loia,o·. ~"I J)')Ju od .
(1.,\'liol i\.'\

o. Ak'"' '' ,.,,,.,.,,,,.,,,,.,., 110. """'

Bai1Jt •r10fl ~)-J-1.+,
plll \r'(j
Ml"l\inll~ S&lt;Jrur'tL1_
1

. :1!

C'ar"Ji on

.HOLZER CLINIC

standings

,1. Clr••:dand ( jlt'll\'1114'. tHI. \'S. f"IPI'(' •

•

the TVC.

Thiak

J\f'!l~&gt;rl riJ.:

2.

r

l9S2, after Wagner either traded or

10. ~pl'ln"'idd carholic. lH. 1·s. Y. C'St
Milton Milton•l,;nkm Frldil)-', fiMI~nr&gt;d .

MLGAM~

Team
- WLP 01'
Grcenflrld ........................ 12 l 79,3 632
Log-an .
. ........... IO 2. 763 600
C.all!polls ... ........ ..... ........... 9 1 647 492
.Jackson .............................9 2 792 615
Athens . ............................ 9 5 fW
Chi:'SapcakC' ..... ..... ., ........ 8 4 K31

....

743

SouThern .. .......... ..... . .'......... 7 ~ 7111 665
Wawrty ........ ......................6 4 500 537
Sodlh Potnt ..
.. .... ... .....ii ll 7!11 711
lmnton, .... ..
.........5 6 670 664
Por1smouth ... .. ............ ... .....5 7 716 700
P1. Pk'asant ................. .. .....2 4 373 399

R()('k Hlll ...

.. ................. ~'&gt; 9 884 951
10 614 m
11 662 '794

\Vhet•l\'1:-sbur~ ............... .. ..... 2
Nor1hwes1 .......................... .1

JIUl. 21 remit :
Pt
at HurrlCtlfX', ppnd.
J Plti'Jsant
••
utts
'

an .~ l'f8 at: Huntington St. .JOe-,
Chf'Sapeakt&gt;
•

ppnd.

Point at

-:;;,(~;'i~.'r_
t'£!.::~ ~"1. - 0 ""•.'d~a!..,r\stll1ti1
1.
=:._;,;~;;;e
"

.lo')hn C:i('fm . Jl .O, lx•:il
~-~ .

Fdda~ .

;,_

01f''o(kn Tri-\ 'all!'\

P'"'' lllno,J .

Yoonwo; tc~~~o·fl lb~·~ ·n .

1U l.

~-R. Yoon~t

'!r"'m f:a~t1'ut-&gt;.,.l..1\' , ]Xt.tpon!'d.
ti, St• •uWft\'11l0. 1 1~ I, In&lt;: I IO Nf"..'· · Phlla
ck•lphltl 7)-to!l, fllli_\'Nt \l.'lniPIMilk' Sit!Utf!tl\
7. Clrwlnn:lll l\-lt' J\'IrhOJu, , 11 1. pluH'Cl
li nd rtna!l ".ummll l 'll\Jnll":&gt;" Dm· S.t lurd:t~·
1', Ct"('{'flflf' ld r\kCiuln . lll. ,-~- Wll
mln1-.'1on F! Jdn\'. poi.1p"f'll'fl. tlla~ ·,, t IIJIJ, _
ltOro Slt lun la\
!l. llf&gt;ll"' · ~. 11 2. , .~ r.,ol lon F'rlda_\',

flO! tpooo 'd.
111, ttr "lllt'. 11 I, 1·~ . WIIO!:TN ". 1"1"1\\'11\
F'rkl.i l , ]X !!.I ] J'!flf(l
l ll. \\'lll:trd. llkl. 1 ~ Ko'liWaiK F rh!a1 ,
J)(f.IJlMI'(]

1. Columhtb l'.'r htiC'. 1 :1~1. br'llt Wot11l
in,e1on Cn ti~IIJn K'&gt;l{l. 11f'at C'olumr... .~
Sl .( ltarl•'!- 1f&gt;-F!11.
~-

Wirwltl,om . 1.'\~l. h C noJl'tb\'lllf' (~ r­
fhfrl 'l'uf"o....:t.o~ . prfiljJIIII• I.
:1, \ ';o n R llll 'fl. lTD. '' ~ R: twson Cnr:o.·
ftiJ\\Sf,Jn t•rit l lt\ . ]Y" I J)(lnf~l

~- O!'lptu. St.John ' •. ~~~~ - , .... ft(lf'kfOI'd
PaJkW:I\ l'l'ld:ly, ~lpollf'( l

'i, MI!Jrfll~t;I'A'n FPnwlrk , t! I. \'!0 Oxton!

l'' tld:h. poc-.TjXJnNl.
li. i\t"C'hl;old. !HI. ''~~· Hn mlf'r Pom'k'k
Hmry Frida.\. pil'-I]JOIY'fl. pl;r_lf'&lt;:l llf Wf"!&gt;o t
Unltv llllllop S.11 urrlm
7. Old W.r slll n~ on liuckP\f' Trllll. 9-0.
\'!&gt;. R.o.n l(..,I'!Jh · '1~..,.1.11, pusljX)Ilf'd.
M. C. i"ii}'l'l\'lllr '\lo \1M ', 10-1. \'S. WOOtJ, fk•ld ~ -rh tl~. pt:tilj)IJnf'll piiiW'&lt;I a1 H:tnnlb~ 11 Hi\"f'l" S.uwdn\.
!J, M arla S!l&gt;ln :\l~ rlnn, Ill I. \ "S, Ml'n·
IIOr1 Urtlfln
Frtdtll.
pa.IIXJ(If'd
Talwand&lt;~

&gt;&gt;~day'• '"""""'

"'':l)

~'::~·~·,:~:,_,':~48
wnnung~on.

~

","''

~­

'£'· """

CAROL M. SHOLTIS, M.D.

REG. $16.95

tiJ

SlODO~

MARK A. WALKER, M.D.

--~

BOARD CERTIFIED ONCOLOGISTS
AVAILABLE FOR DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF
CANCEROUS TUMORS

~-......

H

SALE . ~

AND

SERVICES PROVIDED
•Examinations 8t Evaluations

m
~-

248 SECOND AYE.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO
1-~~ PHONE 446-0093

FREE PARKING
ON LOT •

.....:::::::......::::;:~..........;:..!;i

•Major or Minor Surgery
•Pa.t ient Teaching &amp; Counseling
•Dietary Consulting

.Column has -~guest writer
who extols
.of
By OLD COUNTRY JAKE
--o.=cwl"IIQ!ri'J'I_
I!J:IR .......
v "'.
.1 Q&amp;MJllt':l _
._ .___ , ____
........
~

ppnd.

Tuesday'8 games: .
,
So4th Polnt at Coal Grove (makeup \
Rock Hlll at Portsmouth West
Logan at WehrlE'

pipes, no •vater, "tc., all happen
when
get weathe~ cold as·we
had this past week. H!J many of us
had water pipes freeze beCause we
.dod not make adequate preparalions back In too fall? Luck could lie
like 511at belts~ we Qn!y need them
when we have an accident So,
make a list of' all thost&gt;thlngs which
went wrong this wlnt"r and mak"
plans to correct them.
Lice - I belit&gt;Ve that cattl.,. llce
may oo worSt&gt; this y"ar. From now
till April II~ can build up on cattle
and r.eally cauS&lt;&gt; a problem. Watch
for rubbing, loss of hair, and a (lull
hair coat.
. &amp; sure to make two applications

';:.ducing the
r~i;;g-herd
replacements are three of the
· 1oplcs. Survival is'th" nam&lt;&gt; of the

prtres to Ohio dairy farmers.
· Bad Luck? Bad luck dO&lt;&gt;s oocur

sure the label on the package says
you can.

gam".
The Ohio dally Industry Is In a
period of adjusim&lt;1nt. Milk productlon in 1984 was down three

at
for all of
In spite
of all
thetlmt&gt;S
precautions
weus.take,
things
do
liappen. But som"tlll)e$ bad luck Is
caused by po6r planning. Frozt!n

_ t_h__
e

Frtday'li games: .
Gallip:&gt;lls at Ironton

logan at Jackson
Pt. Pl('asant at Wahama
CinclnnBt1 Woodward at Portsmouth
Ft~irland at Soulh Polnt

Nonhwrst at Ponsmouth W('l;t ·
Gr('('nfleld a! Miami TraC('

.-

fast a pace.
-

,_ _

•

Coa l Gro\'(1 at Whef:&gt;J(&gt;tsburg
Rock Hill at Oak Hill (makeupJ

set
., Feb. 6

RUTLAND
TIRE SALES
"Ge tting You There Safely" ·
MID-WINTER

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Alieni
GalUaCmmty
·• GALUPOLIS - All local dairy
farm famlll"s are welcome to
.:

1---

36 month battery 139.95 IMtoW
Nati-1 IXT 60 All Season StHI lleltttl Radials
Frn loplaco111ont Up To SO"fe OH 1'111 Usual TriCid

P-155-80113 .............. $36.00
P-165 /IOR13 ............. $38.00
P-185/80113............. $41.00
P-195175114 ............. $47.00
P-205175114 ............. $50.00

lhm P1ices tncludt fiN lubblo Bal .. FrH lountiftl &amp; frH Velvt Sttnts

EXTRA SPECIAL- Buy 4 l'ettongotr Tlret, Bring Thi't
Ad In end Get Computer Bolonce FREE.
Ofter Explreo Fob. 7, 18811.

•ALIGNMENTS •SHOCKS INStALLED
*FRONT END REPAIR dRAKE WORK
*FRONT END PARTS IN STOCK ·diRE REPAIR
TALK TO EARL 01 MAlTY AftiD liT THEM HELP YOU
WITH YOUR niE NEEDS.
MASTER CARO &amp; VISA WELCOME

PHONE: 742·3018
· 8-

L..-.....;,;:.;.;,;;;,;,;.....,..
'

.-:m

P-215/75114 ..,.......... $52.00
P-205/75115 ............. $50.00
P-215/75115 ............. $53.00
P-225/7511 5.........-. $55.00
P-23S/75115 ............. $57.50

L4icateti iiiaili ii., ioiiand
FrldBV '

'

Power W110n club cab. 360 V-8 encine, 4speed trans., white spokes
wl&amp;ood rubber, AII-FII-Stereo. Local trade in. Bei&amp;e.

CHECI TIIS

ONLY

$4400

IN AND SEE FlA. GHEEN

~-·-.;..., kr.mo
11"111~ •"" ....
UIOR'"&gt;O'Uoo· - r""

. W" plan to have the m"al
I)

Nuce

by Kandy

Dl.

and

ror

vutage

rrom Super Valu. Elaine Ryan had hlghserles
ot 503 for Catn'steam; a~ vondl,l. Jordan h~d
""w~~.'i::f"~~~~"' woo stx potnos rrorn
Moon&lt;'Y's Body Soop. For Ways!..,, Karen
Taylor had 447, and ror Mooney'&gt;• .JO)'Cf'
Mooney had 514. ·

.

.

auzens _ Bank woo s1x

,.

potnt£ )rqm
series ror Citizens

Market. High
0
&amp;:.:~~~J
.•"" toe .Johnson's, .
SpillS convened: usa Thon)poon, 4·5 ;pllt:
Rachel Whl&lt;ehalr, ~ 7 •9 · 10 ·
Te':.""'ngs "'"'Jan. 21 '
w. L.
c t11zrns Bank ............................... Ill! :.;
Jolonsoo's

i::'

2

Wayside Furnl!Ur(&gt; ................ ......... 47 73
Johnson's mark~! .... .: ..................... 34 UO

rliiiiii!!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii...;· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;!iiiiiijj

I A

-----

Men's Suits ..............~.....·............. 1/3 on

.Men's ·Sport Coats ...................... 1/3 OFF
Men's &amp;Boys'Winter Jackets .... 1I 3 OFF
Men's Leather Jackets ................ 1I 3 OFF .
U--'-"----~ tL~-&amp;-__
__
.1_/'1 nn
men
5 ure51 ~n•r., ...................... · ·,~VII

Men's Flannel Shirts ................... 1I 3 OFF
Men's (orduroy Slacks ........... ~... 113 OFF
Men's All Weather Coats ........... 1I 3 Off
Luggage.............~ ......................... l/3 OFF ·
'Men~s Sweaters .......................... 1I 3 OH
OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY NIT£5 TIL I

59.~.

3.29
----- -·

. Nationwid~ 10W4Q

Anti-Freeze
and Coolant

79.~.

Protects all year against freeze-ups.
boilovers and corrosion . Reg . 4 8B

Sate 4.29

69~
non-resistor

Autolite
Spark Plugs
Reg . 87'

89'resistor Reg. 1 07
Fused glass seal for
full power.

Kendall 10W40
Motor Oil Reg 94 L1m1t t 2

77~.g

99'

Windshield
Washer Fluid

ss~
Qualco lock
De-Icer Reg t 29

2.49

Pres tone
Anti-Freeze
Testers Reg 3 99

1.99

Flush N Fill Kit

Reg J 49

44~
. Atlas 7"

~~ie~~~~:~~ic~e~a~~nd s~no~w~w~t~h c~~~~~~~~~;:~~ ~-~~~~~~0~~!-"

..-;:.!.:~~~ ~~!"! };"~-- ~~~~Q'!~:b
Road Show," 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
theo -· Southern Ohio Production
Association Building, Upper Rlver
Road, Gallipolis. Tbe program Is
sponsored by the OhloCoopooratlve
Extension Service and four of our
Ohio State University Dairy
~t.,nce Speelallst
be the
speakers.
· Th" them&lt;&gt; of tht&gt; meeting Is
•iManaglng Your Future ... " Herb
Crown will speak on "Evaluating'_
irour Dairy Operation"; Dr. John
Sfaubus wtll address "Cutting Ft&gt;ed
Costs"; Dr. David L. Zartman wlll
discuss the '' Importanre of Sup(jlrtlng Dairy R!&gt;St&gt;arch In Ext""·
ston"; Dr. Ha!TY Barr will talk on
"Increasing Pronts By Controlling
Mastitis and Improving ReproductiV&lt;&gt; Perlormanre"; Dr. Don PritChard's topic wlll be "Reduclng'llte
Cost of Dairy H"rd Repiae&lt;&gt;ments"
apct Mr. Crown will toon wind up tbe.
session wtth a discussion of key

Motors

.,....,.,
M.ryGie.,.-;n ltJd ""· ·
Atlorney Joe Cain's team won six: poin.li

SELECT GROUP OF

~riu_s__a

Dairy show

lron10n at Falrvtew

_..., ....,...
Electric M_otors wpn Ovfl' points from
v1....,
Pizza • 1,h hlg~ """" tor El&lt;otr1c

I/50Jf'

A LOT OF THE girls met th.,re.
Some of them went to a movie. The
movl" theatre had been bought' by
Fred Wheeler from Julius Kaufman a few years before. Through
th" week tht&gt;re was usu ally a
·-l'!.ll'!!antl!'c"PICture
favored

f.!ur community

2 s-~: ·
Portsmouth at Gallipolis
Parkl'rsbur~ South at Pt. Pleasant

Jo~e h.

'l1lul!ldiYSwtiiiU&amp;

._~~~-C_u_tt:~~-·~ts, ~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~ ~!~=~~:_~~~~~~;o:~·d~~~~?~s a~pa~:rt~.2!.JOf'~C~at;":l·~t,..~~uy~Y~---~-~~-~-·~·-~: ·:·~: : ~: ~: :~·: ?: :~102~~
·-~ ~;-:::=~
.;;st;,,
" y.,ar. Thtseould ~ean low~r rillr
u you ani trea'ting ~ cows,
·...........................

LAKE CITY, Pa. _. The Pet&gt;ps
OWEN (PEANUTS) Hall was
column today has a guest writer,
usually
available to do this. Occawho extols wiiting of th" pllst. Old
sionally
if It was Icy, the daredevils
Country Jake calls your attention to
·would
put
gn a pair of clamps on Ice
the fact that w" hear the expresskat"s and take hold of a roPt&gt;tit&gt;d to
sion, "Never look back, for that Is
the back of a car and lc.,-skat" up
all . bt&gt;hlnd you. Look att&lt;&gt;ad to the
and
down the str&lt;&gt;ets.
" future ." Bul I ask you If It had not
been for the past how would th"re ·
RADIOS WERE just coming into
have been a future•
exist.,nce·, and you had to be real
careful and patl.,nt to be able to
LifE IN Gallipolis sixty years
tune In one where you could get
ago had to be a lot different from
good
roception. Font~n;Ls was a..lso
wha~ His tvday; Thcr-e!cre, !-•.-viU-t-rJ
a
favorite
hangout In 1925. Th"re
to bring you a little btl of how life
were
at
least
four drug stort&gt;S: C. D.
was In Gallipolis In 1925. If there's
Kerr's,
Rathburn'
s, E. L. Neal, and
something herein with which you
Gillingham
and
Neal. The word
disagree or which you want to
pharmacy
had
not come . into
expand on, you can write to Old
general
·
use
at
that time In
Country Jake, 252 Hawthorne
Gallipolis.
"
Drive, Lake City, Pa. 16423 or you
could telephone 1-814-774-3989.
THERE WERE no supermarkets,
but many friendly ""lghINASMUCH AS THERE Is this
borhood
grocery stores; most
vast difference, I will try to bring
carried
credit
and If a man got sick
you a little btl of how life was in
or
out
qf
work,
the store owner
Gallipolis In 1925.
rarely. shut th" credit ofrunless it
got to the pi are where h" really had
IN THE EVENING inost of the
to.
young folk had a choice.of going to
Oscar's to shoot poar or just to
(More "Old Country Jake" on
watch. Of course, this was only for
Feb.
3).
the male population , and some of
them went to C. D. Kerr Drug Store
and sat and drank coke or soda and
at" tee cream, and no one ever
worried about a diet.

~griculture,

ChE"!'apE'akE&gt; at Coai ·Gro\.'{&gt;

Southwest('Tn at Southern

w"

get somron" to tow them at a not too

~-· -· -....;- ~·----".---=--

• ON COLD SNOWY nights sl.,ighrldlng was th" thing to do; out Rt .
141 - Ingalls Hill was the favorite
spot. Around town som.,tim"s six or
seven sleds would hook on behind a
car and be towed all over Gallipolis .
Aaron Davis had a super large
Flexible Fly"r that would hold eight
peopiP sitting; h" would load It and

Wavt&gt;rly at .Jackson
BarboursvtllC' a! Pt. Pleasant
Athens a t Gallipolis (ml.lkPUPI

Extension notes .I..ocaJ bowling

Cow numbers w"re loW&lt;&gt;r by nmrly
three poorcent, larg.,ly beeaUSt&gt; of
th" mllk diversion program. Milk
-" 1n
Prod uct Ion per cow a lso declln.,.,
respons&lt;&gt; to higher ft&gt;ed costs and
lower. milk prices last Y"ar. Milk
prices were CUI .further by a 50
cent -per-hu·ndred -assessinent tb
h"IP cover federal dairy program
costs.
Lower milk prices along with
stronger consum"r Incomes and
new dairy products and low&lt;&gt;r
Production brought about a 50
Pt&gt;rcent'. drop In governm.,nt purChast&gt;S of dally products from a
year earlier. Predictions are, however, that milk production 'fill still

• By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Melp Counly .
POMEROY - Calendar- Monday, Jan. 28 - .Four-H Comnnlttee
m&lt;!l&gt;ting at 7 p.m. at the Ext.,nslon
Offlre.
Tuesday - Feb. 5- Dalry Road
Show at 10 a.m. at tbe Athens
County Extension Office.
Woonesday, F.,b, 6- Dally Road
·
Show at 10 a.m. i~ Gallla County at
the Southern Ohio Production
Credit Association Building, Upper
River Road, Gallipolis.
Th" "Dairy Road Show" provt&gt;S
to be an excell.,nt and valuable
m""ting. "Strategit&gt;Sior '85" wUI be

ON sATURDAY you would see
Buck Jones, Tom Mix, William S.
· Hart, Art Acord, Dustin Farnum, or
William Farnum In a wild West
show which every young boy with 20
·r ents attended. mostly in the
afternoon.

Huntington East al Pt. Pl£&gt;asant, ppnd.
lronion at Lo~-an, ppod., reset Feb. 19

Valley at Wh£&gt;(-lersburjjl
Rock Hill at Symmes Valley
Wavf'rly at Mlnfllrd

-

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

the .fP-rnJ1le

FOR INFORMATION .... CALL 446-5131

South Polnt 82 Rock HUI 00
Mlnrord 6S Northw\'St 59

Grcenfl('ld at

l

s~"'

385 JACKSON PIKE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

- - - ·, .... ~-C-Omplete .uruQ Therapy ..

Athens at Ga Uipolls, ppnd .. r"('S('t Tu&lt;'Sday,
re;eJVl'S stal1 al6, varsity
p.m.
19 Southern al North Gallla. ppnd.. reset f'eb.

Super
5ports
Special

of Jhe week_ _ _ _ _

Man"~,~,..~,~~-~,,,~,_,~,··~':'~':'~·~r~n+='~,,~.,~~=-lco~a~tc~r~" ~·;:';~1R~oc~k;:H:IIt:9:;;,:;~;U_:_:::=~·~T~r~e~a~t~m~~e~n~t:~s~~a~n~d~T~r~a:~n~s~f~u~s~i:o;n:s~"--;~~J-t
4

are

i" •

·-

·.

on ooe comer of wrdch toore
these wor&amp;, "Manu!~ bYJay A_VWt .VIeck; GaiUpoUs, Ohio." The houo;e Is 150 years old. It Is adobe.

The Sunday

W.Va.

10" teo Scraper 18734
Reg. t .09 ........... . 55'

ease Sturdy handle wit h
tough plastic scraper

19833

While Supp lies Last!t

3.29

Anco Wiper
Blades each &amp;
Refills pw

Tough rubbtH cover,
sturdy metal frame.
Improves visibility and
fits most U.S. and
Fo"'tgn cars. Reg . • .29

Reg. 1.69

While Sup'plles Last!!

Combination

ICC

and snow

scraper along WT \h
squeege~ lor eli.tra

clean

windows #9612 Reg 2 49

1.29

Bars Leaks
Sealant

•

lasting seal in radiators.

Reg. t8.95

heaters and hose
connections, ,R-6
5th-OZ. Reg. 1.69

7.8

.
'

•

•
•

•

�'-L

===

c:=-==--~===::===

--·

•

~"'----·-==-&gt;-Lo=·

The

.
Ohio-Point Plarem. W. Ve.

Tmes-Sentinel

Clark Chapel dates to 1889' -Alpha Clark early teacher · .
By JAME! SANDS
Special Correspolldellt

'

,
• GALLIPOUS - The present
-· -. ,. Cla~I&lt;-Cb,;I.J!g) C~u«'h t\"-'"" to l&gt;h!•'
1889 and was named after one of the
prominent families In this communlt y , w b Ic h Is II!"'Olill!:
about one mile
from. Porter. Dr.
. Milton Grover, In
-·-- ·· hrs
graphy ,
tliat he grew up
· about one mile
northwest of Clark Chapel and
remembered that In 1889, when his
grandfather's funeral was held at
Among the recollections of
Grbver about Clark Chapel was
"the democratic spirit In · the
church." There was no particular ·
creed; everyone searched the
Scriptures for his own understandlng. Grover remembered the protracted meetings and the baptisms
by. Immersion as weD as the many

J)is~oveey's

note: the Bible, a geography book,
and what was known_by the family
as the "war book."

Frederick, and he also remem- sheep dog named "Old Marge,"
bered a ·or. Todd GWlan of and a pet Poland China bog named
Columbus perfonnlng surgery on "Jim Porter" named after a friend
• The_"wpt..booJC.w~_a lll!ltor.rcPJ ~ ,soml'()neon the dln!!!g,'Yl'mt~ ble_ at _ who llxed _abo)!t §0 mlles ~wa~ ·
the CfvU War. Milton's grandfather
Bill Clark's house. Other peoPfe mentioned by
often delighted the famUy with his
Among the remedies used In the Grover ln hls autobiography were
~ o1 marching with Shennan, -Clark Chapel community were
John P. Grover, WWiam Grover,
and' bow he marked down ·Penn· horehound, boneset, and catnip tea. Wren Clark, and Aurllla Wilt who
sylvania Avenue at the end of the Many people vaccinated them- are probably all burled In the Clark
war.
selves for smallpox.
·Chapel Cemetery. Milton Grover
•· lia n~gam to urg-ans~aecvn:llng to- ~-:- · J•Jl..-n -Pn:-t,:,~'--~"!!~ ·-- .-~ ._ -·- became ::-dxtor in N2'~· Yvrk Rfh&gt;r --1-Grover, few famllles in that area
Another remembrance was the teaching school, atteildlng medical ·
owned a plano, but many owned
animals they kept: the oxen they school In Columbus, and practicing
organs.
used for plowing and for pulling medicine brleOy In Bidwell.
The Grover house sat offthe main grain to the mill; the horse they
'Sands' address Is Box 92, Clarksroad and "we had three pairs of rode to Porter to sen eggs; the burg, Ohio 43115.
bars to let down and a small stream

•

th~ u.~.._,~f

17

_

The Sli:li Door is a redian af The La$alle Restaurant far great
food, fine cocktails and good limes in the atmosphere al
Yesteryear's Music.
• . SUPU SNACKS &amp; SANDWICHES AVAILABlE!
DEEP FRIED VEGn AILES
•IIUSHROOIIS

•ZUCCHI~~PPER

Slay '1'111 4 a.m.
"Neighbors . visited longer back
then," according to Grover and one
time some neighbors decided to .
play a trick on Grover, who was
fond of saying: "Ther~ Is no need to .
hurry off now." One was not sure
whether he meant It or If he was
only being polite. The neighbors In
concert with other members of the
Grover family decided that each
time Grover ~ould make this
statement they would be convinced
ub!c c-;ent ut th~s~school ~·as when-~ to stay-.-. RL11!illy at 4 .g:!!!. the
Santa Claus showed up one evening. neighbors could hold out _!!l), ,longer
The entertainment · at home and gave up the ruse. ~'
centered around the family organ
Of course, doctors ,-fiack then
which accompanied the singing of made a Jot of ho~Jl!(&gt; calls by
popular and religious music. The horseback. Grover redaUed Dr. C.
family owned only three books of G. Parker of Porter coming to the
house to deliver hls''§lster, Lucy

.

pounds of good quality legume
grass-mixed
hay.
sponsored, so please ·make your
If the cow Is not fed properly
luncheon reservations with the
Gallla County Extension Office by during this peliod, calf growih will
be retarded, the cow will lose
Feb. 1 (phone 446-7007) .
_.:l_
weigh( and she will not cycle, breed
The right nutritl~ program for a · or· conceive. Calving next spring
beef herd Is one of the detePrnlnlng will he delayed, and each 21 days
factors In successful spring calving. delay will cost the owner several
An adequate feeding program for dollars when he he sells the calf In
the beef cow Is particularly crttical autumn.
· To be. sure your beef cows are
to two stages of production. The
getting
all the necessary nutrients
first stage Is pre-calving In January
In
adequate amounis, we
and
and February. About !lJ pereent of
of your
fetal growth nr'curs ....during_.. tbts
or
pound cow has a TON requirement
of 11 or 12 pounds, or 22 to 24 pounds
of a good quality legume grassmixed hay.
The other stage is post-calving,
!rum March until pasture season.
This is the most Important period In
the reproductive cycle of the c9w,
for this Is the time ~be gives birth.
The reproductive tract has to
involute and return to normal in 40
days. She has to laciate at her
maximum and maintain her body
at fhe same time. Mcist important,
she must recycle, rebreed and
conceive.
. This Is the time when It Is easy to
not' feed adequately. A 1,&lt;XXJ to 1.100
pound cow In this stage requires
12-14 pounds of IDN, or 27 to 28

ARMANO.....At,.•tlnRTh•~tdtg;Frlltll,
end !eturdtg 7·10 .
11-10 FIIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

SIDE DOOR HOURS: 11 A.M.·????
'

LaSALLE RESTAURANT

THE SIDE DOOR
. '.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

battles lie ahc1nd," ~.:--~!d.

~ .51

ffi

AT LEAST

SOME MORE

ALL LANE

CEDAR CHESTS

88
148
= 118(07 SAVINGS

Price

. SOFA, LOVESEAT
CHAIR
REG. S999.95

2 WING CHAIRS

WOOD, DAR~ GREEN VELVET
REG. $419.95

8
$3888
Sm 6t'ft =1611.07 S.vlngc
S.198B8

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$198 88

Sm S31t = '221.07 Snlngs

Save

SOFA{.OLIOLOVESEAT
BEIGE
SJ299.9S

715 MAIN STREET
711~ MAI!I STREIT
!"QQ"IIfT !lfi..!AIAHT,IIIII1!810
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____ ___ ____
,, 1114

"'Rff'l Semlnlf
_..

-

I

..

•

BEDROOM SUITE

Stle Pries

Ssle Price

REG. '1999.95

88
$788
Sm
=
SlviR91
60~

11211.07

MAY COMPANY
l·ONLY FUll SIZE

MAmtESS &amp; BOX SPRINGS
REG. SS99. 95

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$58888

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WOOD W/,YELVET

,::~:95 Sel1 Ptle1

. :$15222

$58888

SIWI 56.,. = It 57, 7S Sul•t•

S1vlng1 .

s Pc. ·

1 BWE VELVET S DRAWER

CHEST OF DJL\WERS ·

BEDROOM SUITE
REG. S2,70.00

REG. S549.95

Sels Ptlee

Sale P1les

.
$19988
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$9.888~

s... 56'fo =

12

2

c...,,.. Chic

OAK HUTCH

Sale P1iee

.REG. • .

Sals-Ptiee

55~ = '711.07

BASSETT TRADITIOAL OAK

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SOFA
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REG.
S1299.9S

. TELL CITY

Ss/e p,iee

S11le Prlee

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AocW.11t a
........ ..., Clillic

5 0°/o OR MORE O~F

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL .8 P.M.

1 BLUE, 2 BEIGE VEL VET
REG: S449. 95

T•JIIr

diplomatic ctimrnunicatlons In
much of Europe, Asia and Africa.
according to other sources.
The boost to higher orbit was the
job of a powerful Inertial upper
stage, or IUS, which was making Its
first flight since one of Its predecessors failed on Its first shuttle
mission, tossing a NASA communications satellite Into an Improper
orbit.

'

The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration -and the Air .
Force plan to use the IUS on several
upcoming shutile missions. Another
failure would not qnly ruin the
current mission, which began
Thursday, but would severely
Interrupt a crowded shuttle launch
schedule.
There was no official conflrma·
Uon of the satellite release from

•

NASA or the Air Force, In keeping
with the Pentagon-Imposed silence'
surrounding most details of America's flrsf mUitary man-In-space
r:ntsslon.
Reporters are not belngallowed to
monitor -$pace-to-ground conversa·
. tlons, as they have done for years ..
Even H they could listen In; the·
· conversations areencoded.lnsteild,

SLEEP SOFAS

REG.-•~•,.,.,,::a

. S•l• P1l~e

$]4888
Sm 57ft = 1201.07

Stwl

CIRCULAR
PITT
lUST
REG
51299.95

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$58888

n.,.. •7tt.07 •••'•••

2

BLUE,

RUST, BEIGE PLAID

lEG • .ss..:95

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s.,,

·22

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22
Sm Sh ~ t'5'77.7JStwlnat

__

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IJ

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$88888
Save 5t'ft ='91 1.07
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REG. S229.95

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WOOD W/VELVET
REG. S309.9S

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.. $.1 33 3 3
Sm 51'1\ ·= 1176.62 Savings

WOOD SWIVEL

DESK CHAIR

REG. S349.95 ·

$4/e Ptiee

$14888

Sm 51 'l'o = 1201.07 Savings

$f/e Ptlce

M~rgenthau

said he hoped the
d th t . thl
pu IC wou
rea a m s case,
.
f
the grand JUry ound j ustH'1ca 11on. 1
,
·
hope they won t read anything else
Into it."
Goetz had been charged by the
distr.ct a ttorney's office with .attempted murder, but no case can be
brought to trial in New York unless a
grand J~ry indicts . If a grand jury
refuses to ·indict, that brings an end
to those charges - unless new
bl .

WARMING UP - President Reagan lets loose a
snowball outside the White House Friday after
returning from speaking at Constitution Hall to

government appointees. David Fisher, an lisslstant to
the president, looks on as the snowball rues. (i\P
Laserphoto ).

embarrassed with that kind of reimbursement. "
Grassley' s comments at a news conference came
after a federal court unsealed documents showing
that the Justice Department Is chaUenging Meese's
reimbursement request.
The Iowa Republican also said he would demand at
the confirmation hearings that Meese pledge that if
confirmed as attorney general, he would make
available to senators the records of a J ustice

·

'

ld ..

$250-an-hour lawyers who represented him when
Independent counsel Jacob A. . Stein Investigated
allegations of financial misconduct and conflict of
Interest." His request to be reimbursed $'1.lO,&lt;XKJ is
contained In SOO'pages of documents and affidavitS
filed with a special three-judge federal court.
Stein concluded Sept.~ that he had no basis tofile
criminal charges against Meese, but he said he could
not rule on whether Meesevlola tedethlcsregulatlons.

Department investigation into Navy submarlnP

'

In the shootings of four. young
men on a •ubway, and mstead
. dieted hi
n1
th
m
m o y on
ree
unts
ri · a1 '
of
co

o1 c mm

a weapon.

possess1on
rp o 1,.

(. u Lase hot
.~

evidence is brought forward in th~: .
case.
The jury indicted Goetz on one ~
count of third-degree criminal •
possession of a weapon- illegally .
carryiilga loaded pistol.
• •:

had 'requested

the investigation after

The Justice Depanment challenged Meese'sclalm
that he should be reimbursed for the " prevailing
market rates" for lawyers' servit-es in Washington . .
The 'Justice Deparlment documents sought by
Grassley are from an investigation of submarinE'
contracts between the Navy and General [Jynamlcs
Electric Boat division In Groton. Conn.
''
The department last·year reopened an investiga · '
tlon ipto whether company contract claims wen' '
Inflated, after closing an Initial probe in [)(occmtJer ,

·rt;~,~~-~;--~co~n~t~rn~c~·i-~-~~~~~-~~-~~-~~~~~~:~~~-~~~~~~w~er~e~~~~~~~~~-;~a~·u~li:n~~~a•~•~rn~U~~~~~~~~~~:-~~~=~~~·~~~;;~~~~~~j;~
~ ,. '

circles of the legal profession that Meese basprotbably
had relationships with, 1 would nol be embarrassed,"
Grassley said.
"But as an Iowa farmer ; I would be very

confirmation, commenting, ''it could be· a tough
decision, but only time Will tell."
Meese wants reimburser:nent to pay for the

.------~Ohio
Brown considers party post

COLUMBUS (AP) - William J. Brown, former Ohio a ttorney
general, says he misses politics and Is considering suggestions from
other Democrats that he become chairman of the Franklin County
Democratic Party.
"I'll think It over," Brown said of the possibility of assuming the
post soon to be vacated by John E. Jones, county chainnan sln~e
19'19.
.
"A lot of people have asked me to dolt. I thought it was an honor.
I'm kind of flattered people have asked."
,
Brown, 44, of Worthington, Is a partner In the Columbus law finn of ,
Crabbe Brown Jones Potts &amp; Schmidt. He was elected attorney
general In 1970, 1974 and 1978, and bowed out of politics after losing
the 1982 Democratic gubernatorial plimary to Richard F . Celeste. .
Brown Indicated his he health might inOuence his decision. He had
a heart valve operation In 1983.

AFSCME cfr,ief named
COLUMBUS (AP)- Russell G. Murray has been appointed
executive director of tbe.Ohlo Civil Service Employees Association,
a division of
American Federation of State, County and
Murray, who was appointed to the post
an ·;;;,;ittm;l"'
area director of the AFSCME. In that post he
formulate the
union's proposed bargaining units for state workers under the new
state collective bargaining law.
.
He succeeds Les 1lest, who served as Interim executive director
who was appointed after James monroe resigned in September.
·
·

Celeste names judge
COLUMBUS (AP) - Attoniey Walter A. Porter has been
appointed a Montgomery CountJ Common Pleas Court judge by
Gov. Richard Celeste for a term beginning Feb. 9.
.
Porter, 60, will serve until e. successor Is elected In November 1986.
· The governor's ofnce said Friday that Porter would replace Judge
George J . Gounarls, who Js resigning elfectiye Feb. 8. Porter wUI be
paid $00,500 annually.
Porter has been a partner In the law linn of Smith &amp; Schnacke
since 1961. He was an assistant prosecutor for Montgomery County
from 1951-56.
• ,

Housing officers reappointed
COLUMBUS (AP) - Two members of the Ohio Housing Finance

$~8R88

---

In the documents released Friday, the special
three-judge panel ordered Meese's lawyers, Leonard
Garment and E. Robert Wallach, to furnish more
documentation to substantiate Meese's reo""'"'

the records for their own joint probe of
contracts.
The departmenl has refused on grounds that the '
investigation Is open once again.

briefs:----------, Democrats balk at

4 SWIVEL CHAIRS
REG. 1699.95

T

NASA has bee~ releasing a brief '
statement every eight hours.So far ,
they 've all said the same lhing, that
spaceship and crew are doing fine.· '
· NaV)! Capt. Thomas K. Mattingly '
is commander. The others are Air ·
Force Lt. CoL Loren Shrivl'r, .
Marine Lt. Col. James BuchU and Air Force majors Ellison Onlzuka
and Gary Payton.

refuses

5

-

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

•

only on three counts of criminal
possession of a weapon.
· - "What !lfe grand JUlY decided here was that he was Illegally
carrying a pistol, but he was
justHied In protecting himself from
a robbery," said Manhattan District
Attorney Robert Morgenthau, In
announcing the indictment.
Goetz. 37, remains free on ~.&lt;XKJ
bail. Arraignment was scheduled
for Feb. 6.
The Indictment by the 23-member
grand jury was the latest twist In a
case that bas drawn national
attentioll_--"ce _0e:·}2.__ w~e~. the----- INDICfED - A ~and jury
Friday refused to lndlcl Bembtour youms asKeo GOPtz to gtve
t~~ $5 and be reeled off five shots
ard Goetz for ilttempted murder

_ C ft Ol~~ft2~1C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~;~~-;;J~~~~~~~~~~~~--~·~ev~e~ry~lll~tl~e~c~lt17.en of

REG. S329. 95

Jenueri 27, 1986 -:.

NEWYORK(AP)-Agrandjury
on Friday refused to Indict Bernh·
ard Goetz for attempted murder' In
the
menon a

WASHINGTON (AP )- A Republican member of
the Senate panel that will consider Edwin Meese Ill's
nomination as attorney generallscrltlclzlngMeese's
reimbursement request for $1.lO,&lt;XKJ In legal lees
incurred for defending against conOict-of-futerest
allegations.
·
Sen. Charles E. Grassley, ~ member of the
Judiciary Committee that wUI begin hearings on the
appointment Tuesday, says HMeese "Is serious about

50°/o OFF

~~~~~" " IV ~~~
&amp; MIRRORS

--

GOP Senator criticizes Meese's reimbursement request .

ALL MIRRORS

3 TUB CHAIRS.

Pity the carl But save your neck .
Whiplash Injuries are very serious. Treatment should not be put·
off. Or you may experience headaches, stiff neck, nervousness,
nausea or other aches and pains In the days, weeks ... and even
years ahead . 85% of neck dlaorders are the rnu~ of autq
accidents. Every accident vlctlm •hould be thoroughly examined
by a doctor of chiropractiC, a specialist In problems of the spine,
nerves a~d muocles. Please ... save your neck.

&lt;

~-

"ln the next four yeeyrs, all of us,
together, are going to transform
America," Reagan promised.
"We're going to lower tax niles
further by instituting, lor the first
time since the Income tax began,
real tax reform. to make the entire
system more simple, more fair and
· more efficient. " .
In a separate address lot he same
aucience, Treasury Secretary-Do·
nald T. Regan, the incoming White
Hol,ISe chief of staff, emphasized,
"We must move ahead quickly with
historic, comprebenslve tax reform .

Com production up

Now You've Done It!

'

political appointees oil Friday,
Reagan .cautioned . against resting
on the victories of his first tenn.
"From here on In ," Reagan said,'
" it's shake, rattle and roll."
"l think there's an understanda·
· tile tendency when a second· term
begins to think that all the great
work is behind us; that the big
ba ttleli have been fought and all the
rest Is anticlimax," Reagan said.
"Well that's not true. What's gone
before is prologue. Our greatest

RESTAURANT HOURS AS USUAL-11·9 MONDAY-THURSDAY

9

WASHINGTON tAP ) - Co111
production bounced back sharply
last year over the skimpy 1.91!3 U.S.
crop, the Agriculture Department
says, but fell short of 1982's record
output.
.
In a year-end estimate Issued"
Friday, · the department's Crop
Reporting Board said last •year's
com production hlt 7.65 bllllon
bushels, up&amp;'lpercentoverl91!3,but
still7percent less than the 1982blgh
of 8.2 billion bushels.
The figure was up by~ rniUlon
bushels from the November estl·
mateof7.53bllllonbushels.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
'•dent Reagan , warning that "our
~:greatest battles lie ahead," Is
;pn:•m~;lng a flgtit to make the tax

MUSIC by AlMAND
. St1no or P.layer Piano
lADIES SPECIALS

2-·

AND

-.-

.simplification

Agriculture and our community

Dairy road show scheduled
Feb. 6, at PCA building

· .

ON THE HALF SHEll

ClARK CHAPEL'CIIURCH, located Deal' Porter, was b!dll shOOt
1889 as a Chrlstlaa denomlnallonat hou8e o1 wonhfp. Many of the
bulwuics, lncludlag members ol the Clark lUid Grover farnllleo, are
burled In the church cemaery. A hundred yean ap there wu a ochool
acroils theroad from the church, known as the Clark Chapel School, and
at least two future docton taagllt there.

.

~m-- _...m..d Section D-

.. .

•

typhoid fever. The year was 189J.
Grover also dlSCU$sed In his
autobiography the Clark Chapel
School which sat across the road
from the church. Grover walked the
one mile through fields along a foot
path. Among his teachers were
Alpha T. Clark, who later became
an M.D. Iii Vinton; Harley Wood·
ruff , who later was editor of the
Vinton Leader newspaper; and
Charles Ely, wholaterwasadoctor
In Cheshire. Grover's most memor·

~

::~[2~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~---:~~--~;;.~~~~~~~,~-~~~=- ~"~~·~;~!~~~t:~~~~~:~:=t~~

eight-year-old Grover sat with his
grandfather to watch people walk
to the polls. When Milton asked
what the day was called, his
grandfather remarked that II' was
election day. Young MUton had
heard a word. similar to that in
church one Easter Sunday. He then
decided that he would soon see

!rem ~ ·~, tinr!.-f~!'~~!LJTff"tnn __ , =""-

===·

-~--=-

satellite deployed; questions linger

'

Identified, reported the $aX! million
· CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
Intelligence satellite was deployed
- Dlscovery·contl!lued Its secrecy'
about 7 a.m. Friday, buttheyhadno
shrouded space mission Saturday,
lnfotmation on the performance of
. with two major mystertes remain·
an atlached rocket that was to have
lng now that sources say the
'IS!ronaut.• l!role. ..tl'ieased a SPY _ p~lled the_payload Into station·
~ry orbit 22,:KJO mUes above tht&gt;
•satellite: Did the satellite's rocket
work, and when Is the shuttle · equator, south of the Soviet Union.
The 2~·ton .satellite was designed
coming home?' ·
to monitor Soviet missile tesis and
Sources close to the project, who
eavesdrop on selected mUitary and
spoke on condition they not be

.., ~~ni~~~ )~=~atlc .~d~ltll"IOi:-~~~~fPtWhe~ro~adMJ
al~lt~he~~~
Milton was that of his brother Bert,
· ~o:.~~C'!~u.t

'

----...

ion&amp;I

ate/

.

-~-

Agency have been reappointed to new tenns by Gov. Richard
Celeste.
·
The two are Ronald A. Plzzut i of Columbus, president of Rann
Properties Inc. and general partner In several rPal estate oriented
ventures. and Almon R. Smith of MarysviUe, executive vice
president ol the Ohio Association of Realtors and executive vice
president of the C1ncinnati Board of Realtors.
Both new terms expire Jan . 31, 1991.

Wildlife council terms filled
COLUMBUS (AP ) - Gov. Richard Celeste has ilPpointed two
members of the Ohio Wildlife Council to new terms that wUI expire
Jan. 31, 19ffi.
One of the appointees, Dan C. Howley of VeJmillon, is president
and owner of Elyria Spring &amp; Specialty Co. in Elyria. The olher, Val
B. Mowrey Jr. of Chillicothe, is Ross County Common Pleas Court
J udge.

Lotto tickets validated
CLEVELAND (AP) - Nine or the 11 winning _tickets from
Wednesday's drawing In the "Ohio Lotto" game have been turned In,

GOP budget proposal
WASHINGTON (APl -Democrats who control the House of
Representatives aie balkjng at a
Republican plan to try to rush a
"razzle-dazzle" deficlt-C\Ittlng plan
througbCongresslnaslnglepleceof
legislation.
"We're not going to do it,"
asserted House Majority Leader
Jim Wright, 0-Texas, after Senate
Republican Leader Robert Dole,
R-Kans .. indicated he wouW try to
use a procedural shortcut this year
'lndealingwithbudgetcuts.
"II we go through the regular
budget process, we'll be still here in
September doing less and less. I
hope we cans~ up the process,"
Dole said Friday.
Hesaldhehopedtocomblneall
budget actions lnlo an omnibus bill
like the measure that transported

refusal ofDefenseSI?&lt;'rNai1'Caspar ,
Weinberger to yield any ground on
defense spending levels.
...
In an unusually sharp attack on
the administra tion offic ial, r ~
Kansas Republican suggested that
Weinberger had exaggerated the .
Pentagon's belt -lightening effort,s
and was expressing-unwillingness to
compromise fur1her.
"I'm willing to go after sensitive
programs ... but don't counl on mE' if
Weinberger continues to sit it 'out , ..
Dole told a ga thering of public
relations officia ls. " We're in real
trouble if we can't get togcth&lt;'r on
defense numbers:·
"l won't say everything is lost If
we don't g~et more defensespmding
restralnt- butwe mightbecloSE' IQ (
~ ,
11 ," he added.
The defense secretary did no!: 1

:_,Jol~~~h'!l:t-ir!: ;i~i~kets is ~"Trth ~467, to~.;Pal;n~ ~iiUal · ;-=;b,;;;u~d,g~~~~!~:~~~~;:~~:;·=-~~~;;.;::;:Y=~i!.!.'~~--'.a!e,tl' ".~~~,~~
installments of $19,373 over 20 years, lottery officials said. The
jackpot totaled $4,262,137.
Ohio Lottery officials sa id Friday they were still waiting for the
last two ilckets to be submitted for validation.
·
The winners announced Friday were Edward M. I.chnl~kl of
Cleveland: Floyd McCoy of Cincinnati; Karen Mefford of
Middletown; Myrt le Hickey of Harrison; Joseph P. Myers of
Cedarville; Dorman Ross of . Ha milton; James A. Johnson of
Columbus; Thomas A. Borcher of Meiboume, Ky.; and Beulah F. ·
Hasemeler of Richmond , Ind.
Each of the 11 tickets listed all six numbers drawn Wednesday In
the semiweekly game - 6, 13, 19, 'l:l, 29 and 39.
Anne Blootnberg, a lottery spokeswoman, said not all of the
winners agreed to release personal lnfonnatlon.
McCoy, 69, told the lottery he Is retired and he plans to take a trip
and buy a $40 pair of shoes.
•
Mrs. Mefford, 38. who ls self-employed, said she wants to buy a car.
Myers, 39, a self-employed logger, said he planned to "work for
Jesus Christ my savior."
Borcher, 42, a laboratory technlclan at Procter&amp;GambleCo., said
he will share his winnings with his children and church.
The estimated jackpot for Saturday night's Lotto drawing Is $1
million, Ms. Bloomberg said.

1981 .
House Minority Leader Robert
Michel , R-111., endorsed the prop. osal, claiming that "If you handle it
in one package" budget-cutting
beeomesmorepoUtlcaliy palatable.
"If you slice 11 up, the heat gets too
great."
"The House is not going to go
1
1 h that "w lgh
red
a ong w t
'
r t counte ·
He sald;.1he House Intended to
stick tb' the usual procedure of
requirlng .. a congressional budget
outline to be completed by May 15,
with measures 10 Implement the
oulllne tofollowlaterln the~ear.
"Tile Idea that you can come up
with .a r~azzle package and
expect us to swallow It wholE! Is poor
reasoning,"Wrlghtsald. "We're not
going to dolt."
Meanwhile, Dole said etlorts to
reach agreement among Republlcans are belll,ll hampered by the

issued a statemM!t not lng Ihat it was
not Weinberger's propo.&lt;;alsat Issue..;
"but the president' s budget."
~
· dr1ense dors not ,r
"And· cuttmg
solve the deficit problem," Burch •
added. "Cutting defense means the ..
loss of national security, the loss of
jobs, the loss oft axes. Every billion
dollars of defense spending means
35 &lt;XXJ J0 bs "
'
·
• ·
~
Dole and other top Sena te ,
Republicans met Friday wilh White
HouseChief ofStaffJamesA.Baker ,
to discuss the budget . .
:
Afterthe sesslon ,Sen.JohnHclnz, '
R-Pa. , predicted that the admlnls- ''
tratlon and GOP senators would :
probably reach a compromise ;
embracing "some kind of a frreze" .~
oncostofllvinglncreases, includlt12 ~
those lor Social Security recipients, :
and "some, klnd of a substantial ~
reduction" 1n proposed military ;
spending.
• •

= 1311.07

•

••
•

'"
'

�.. .
----

'

.

Page-0-2-.:The

985

Tandy's ·second quarter earnings
FORT WORTI!, Texas -Tandy Corp.'s consolldsated sales for
the second quarter of fiscal year 19ll5 were $893,334,1XXl, compared to
sales of $898,266,1XXl for the second quarter of flscal1984.
per share for
quarter were 86 cents, based on
for the
, ,_'"'1111

~-

'

forSohio

.·

.

Sa les for the six-month pericd ended Dec. 31, 1981 and 1~.
respectively, were $1 ,489,107,1XXl and $1,481,695,1XXl. Eai-nlngs per
share for I he first half of fiscall985 were$1.26, compared to $1.54 in
the year earlier pericd. Net Income (or the first halfoffiscall985Was

'\

--....... · -

A rea cinema to

-

close-,---

RIPLEY. W.Va. - Due to lack of business. the Mountaineer
Cinem a al Heck's Shopping Plaza here will close its doors Feb. 1.
Bill Duerson, the I healer's owner, said the cinema's last•showing
wUI be Jan, 31.

'

in1984,aswellasunusualexpenses.

EQUIPMENT DEMONSTRATED - Tim Be1z.
Medical Shoppe to Jolm CIIJIIIInsham. IIetz and
left, e&gt;tplalns operation of one of the pieces of
Cunnbtgham are InvolVed in nullling the center,
"'!nl!'''"""!_!n_the ~lat-..reha!J!lltg.tlon CJ'I!er_l)t_th!t~ _:~-~~g s~wn
~f~urlng an o~ house today,

c

d-•
h h•J• •
~- .....:~ uu:•~re Sl l lf:.flon
__ _ ...,

·

----

The 1984 fourth quarter included
GALLIPOLIS _ A new feature
an after taxchargeo!$50milllo or·
·
·
n,
has been added to the Medical
21 cents per share, related to certain
regulatory issues pertaining to the . Shoppe's line of physical therapy
• AI kan d 11
treatment.
company s as
cru e-o opera·
In k"""ingwith thefirm.'.spurpose
"Y
lions, Whitehouse said.
"I
ddltl
the f rth
In providing comprehensive rehan a
on,
ou quarter bllltatlon and physical therapy· , a
decline can be attributed to tower
refined prcduct prices, higher
cardiac rehabilitation and sports
1 tlo
In 1 d
medicine program has been opened
exp ora n expenses c u ing dry
within the business at 565 Jackson
holes and Impaired leases, lower
Pike.

.~:.~:~:~:.~~~,!'~wn':~~ ~~ ~ :'lt's,!ntnex~nslon
o~oursel'/tce,"
n
house said
·
·

I Personnel file I

saia
J:ietz, rne program
coordinator. "The driving force
behind it has been my feeling for tbe
need for comprehensive rehabilltalion services in our area." ·
The program Is hoped to reduce
heart disease levels in the area and
return to cardiac patients to an
active llfestyle through a regular

---~----

opens

cent~r

.
.
.
program of exercise a nd treatment.
Betz; an M.S. student in exercise
physiology who holds other physical
treatment degrees, is coordinating
the program with Herman Dillon, a
licensed physical therapist, Dee
Dillon, R.N., and John Cun·
niitgham, another M.S. student. Dr.
Gene Abels is medical director for

Betz said the program also
handles back rehabilitation and is
conducting fitness prograif\s on the
adult and corporate levels.
"Through a comprehensive process, we wlll assist our patients'
restoration to optimum levels of
physical, mental, social and voca·
tiona! functioning,'" Betz said.
Evening group sessions, address·
the program. ·
ing stress reduction-slress manage·
..
rn~nt. weight reduction. low cl!Oies·
and treaamfll, tne progranlnas"· terol diet information, hypertension
been furnlshedwllhstate-of-tbe-art,
and smoking, are open to tile public,
computerized equipment designed
Betz said. Shower facllltles are
to rehabilitate any sports-related or
available for participants in any of
joint Injury, post-surgical or
the programs.
otherwise. ·
The progra m is accepting referAn open house showing off ·the
rals and more information may be
equlpmenl used in the program is
obtained by calllr1g the Medical
being held tcday from 3-5 p.rri.
·
Shoppe.

rr::U:e~~~::':s ;~ ,;:~~ ::~~~

-:R ecord -earnings, sales aid RCA ;
.

&amp;berfE. Freed

"=cH''"" .o~'-'~"' ~-~

-

,,.-,w...

.

By JAMES F . PELTZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- RCA Corp.
is picking up Its slep along Ihe
comeback trail.
Nine months after RCA's chairman assert.e d thai the company
finally had its house In order, RCA
emerged from 1984 with record
earnings and sales- earnings that
jumped 50 percentfrom 1983.
RCA's profit m argin also rose, its
stock Is near a !;2-week high and the.
company's most. visible unit, Na·
tiona! Broadcasting Co., is outperforming Wall Street expectations.
1'\ot that RCA's rebOUnd is
complete. The company's balance

tum over and, despite increases in
sales, profit as a percentage of sales
remained flat. .
In mld-1981. Thornton F. Bradshaw came from Allan tic Richfield
Co. to be RCA's chairman. Since
then Brads"•w has
,~
""
RCA'sefforttoimproveitsfinanclal
·
hea lth by returrung to its three core
businesses, resulting in lhe sale of .
most of the unrelaled operations.
Yet even within the hounds of
RCA's "electronic roots," Brad·
shaw and 1\is management lea rn
have been forced lo make drastic

spearhead~

moves in order lo protect RCA's
recovery.

thedelay.
.
· · On the eve of his bip, the pope
made a SU!l&gt;rise announcement that
llew!U callbishopsfromaUoverfhe
world to the Vatican for a synod
from Nov. 25toDec. Storeview lhe
work of the Second Vatican Council
and prepare the church for its third

I•

bringamessageof"recon~ill,ation"

when he stops · at the airport in
Ayacucho, the center of the Andean
warzone,9,00Jfeetabovesealevel.
Just before his trip, the human
rights group Amnesty International
charged that hundreds of people
have been kl!led whUe •-taln-' by
""
""
Peruvian security forces during the
military's two-year campaign
against the Maoist guerrillas of the
Shining P~th group.
The office of President Fernando
Belaunde Terry of Peru said he
dlsmlssed the report and was
angered that It came out just before
the papal visit.
According to Peruvian military
and pollee reports, tlteSbintngPalh

,.

......-~. I

tH - l 01oi1

Ul - k 1 -

,~

!lu~" "'T' ol-'""1

O" o~u -•oo&lt;«.,..

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

·~

u~ ,,. , .,.,.~,

'"~••••••''"'~

1100

lt-w .. ..,.r~oo

~regory D. Kaylor

. IJ:l~l_CREAT

·Public Notice

of

appoint police chiefs
;!Q!]ll~r -.li&lt;iw. J:Iav~n.

00

Now hiring your area .

open

1

true ? Find out now. Cell

-re!atier~ ~~

LOS ANGELES lAP) - Cathy of Belushl in his final days, testified
Evelyn Smllh repeatedly injected · lhat she watched Ms. Smith inJ'ect
com~· J hn o-1 h' 'th dru
""'an o ""us 1 WI
gs Belushi repeatedly during the firs I
in th• days before the portly f
d
fM
!982 h H ld
'
our ays o arch
. I e era
"Saturday Nigh I Live" slar's drug- Examiner reported.
overdose death, twowllnesses told a
Ms . Smilh, a .former backup
grand jury.
singer to Hoy I Axlon and Gordon
-The sealed teslimony, inadvert · Lightfoot and companion to several
ently 1 ed b · n F ld b
.
re eas
ne Y r ay Y a singers, wa s quoled in Ihe Nalional
court clerk to the Los Angeles Enquirer In 1982 as admitting that
Hlerald Examiner, also provided a she lnjecled Belushi wilh dtugs. She
g irnpses of Belushi 's last night.
has claimed she was under the
Ms. mlth, a Canadlantndicledon influence of a lcohol when she gave

I

Motel . ·Tues. Jaii.- 2!1'. 9"to'··-·
9:30AM.

=-

~---

KN ~ ·'7 C'n8rge-r4Urie . Must
be willing to work ·au shifts.
APply in.person: Scenic Hills
Nursing Center. Mon.· Fri'.. ·

ClAC~IFIED AD~

Director

8:00-4:30.

Public Notice.

4
The Gallia County Soard of
Mental Retardalion/ Developmentallheresponsibility
Disabilities has of.,.
betn
given
semblinfacountyserviceplan
for the iscal years 1986 and
1987·

:--~' ~ i~ ~~~~~
"'"ru ........,,,u~

'""''of Mental Retardltion/Oev·
elopmental Disabilities maridate
unclef Senate Billl60.
The Counly 8oa'd of Mental
Retantation/llevtlopmental Dis·
abilrties is sol~itin&amp;pubticparti·
cipation
inputtestimony
in the form~nof
vedialandand
writte11
ceming the lollowinc catoconcat
aiea~: I. habilitation. 2. residen·
tia1. 3. prevention. 4. administration.
This initial planning effort is
involve into an oneoinnlan·
ningprocessthalwillbeannual
in cycle and shall improve t~e
qualily ollifefor persons with
handicapping condihons within
Gallia County.
1

51 ~0! "'~s ::::"~:"'~:,~

_~ J

Ladies needed for good
paying temporary office like
work. No experience nec81 ·
sary. Also need ladles with
car for light delivery work ,
gas allowance. Apply in
parson only (absolutely no .
phone calls) to Mr~ . Carter:, ,
R12!;HO . 12 . Eco.no.,....Lodae ·~- ·

1
the
r1ght to retect any and all btds

no '"""fiUU:nf •u

A resident of Mason, he Is the son
of Mayor Agnes Roush. During the
last four months ol his 4% years of
service with the Mason police, he
was a sergeant. On May 11, 1984, he
_. a 10-week Iaw en forcecompIet.,
men! program at the West Virginia
State Pollee Academy. He was also
f
........
a ormer Su-=Tiff's dispalcher.

80 -687 -6000 ext. R-4562.

4 56 14. Febr uary 15. 198 5 at
2 00 p. m , lor the purpose ol
Aud•t•ng the fincmc1al records
of the Hous1ng Authortty SpeC• ·
f1 cattons may be obta1ned fro m
the
Authonty D1rector.
' 44 6-025 t '

' H~vGn Pol~~ De~G.r"u~.C~t . ~"'--~ Juin't r~Rfue ni'S

Kaylor and his wife. Connie,
resldeln New Haven. The cnlef has
taken ·several courses in law
enforcement at Marshall University and Is ~ _,:1!!.78 graduate of
Wahartta-Hig~ SCnciol.
Roush, 23,\s a 19&amp;1WHSgraduate.
He will also supervise two palrolmen, Terry J ohnson a nd Rich Sines
. auxiliary poli·ce off leers.
11 , and siX
Some of Roush's responsibilities
include traffic patrol, handling
s omplaints and communily .

Help Wanted

1 ti .

the

HOUS10Q

dispatcher. For 10 years he has
served as a volunteer with the New
Haven Fire Department and is an
emergency medical technician with
the.New Haven R2scue Squad.
Afirm believer in i&gt;ubllcrela ttons,
KaYJOr saldlle hope5·to 'esratillsh- a
good public image for the New

.

11

se aled b1dS clt thetr ofl1ce. At 2.
Bldg No 14. BtdWell. Ohto.

T es
' ,-.·mo'ny released ··n·
B e Jushi death inquirv
. .

' "'"~ 0 .,;,.,~. P" IOOOj

I

Gregory S. Roush

NEW HAVEN, W.Va . _ The
communities of New Haven and
Mason have two new faces heading
their- pollee departments this
month .

10300

l,lpt~1~'"""''

VP,o(:'~ -h

•

!7 -Moocollo•U...

ruter venezuela, tne ponun ww POllee C!ilef Ronnie Russell · is
vlsltEeuadorandPeruandmakea Gregory D. Kaylor. Kaylor, pre·
---== br-!9f !t!.'pi'Jver .at '!T!n!d~~ -a.!!d ~ 'v-i.rusly -chtcf c f -pc!!~c ut r-.~u.son.~fcr__.__
Tobago in the West Indies before two years, started his new .job Jan.
returning to Rome on Feb. 6.
21.
It Is the 25th foreign trip for the
Filling the vacancy at Mason on
pope, who will make 45 speeches, Jan, 11 was Gregory s. Roush,
standing firm on church teaching appointed by Mason town council on
while emphasizing. the dignity of Jan. 7. Russell is working 1n various
man, the rights of workers, the capacities for New Haven and and
sanctity of the famlly and the has not been reassigned to a new
responsibilities of political leaders, position, according to New Haven
Vatlcan Radio said.
Mayor Grayson "P_a,, .. WiIIiamson.
After a 10-hour, 20-minute flight
Kaylor's genera l duties Include
from Rome on a special Alltalia
supervision of two patrolmen and
DC·lOjetllner,thepopeisscheduled
four auxiUary police officers, han·
tc meet '.1.1!h -·~~t-- -.:.la!.~e -- wu"' ,-;;;;eo · ,.,...,w
~ ,-,..~,~,oo,~"' "'" .,. .;o&lt;"tA-"..,.._.•
~~u.-~
.. ..., ",,vo::-.
LUSinChJ at the presidential palace and New Haven Municipal Court
and ll!ter deliver an address to
docket, reporting to New Haven
Venezeula's bishops.
council monthly on pollee departAbout J million people are
ment activities and supervision of
investigations. He will also have
expected to altend a papal Masson
Sunday in the poor Caracas neigh·
patrolman responsibilities.
borhocd of Montalban, within sight
His police work spans five years
of the slums that surround the
as a New Haven police officer,
capital.
.
Mason County sheriffs deputy and
In Peru, troubled by a bloody
guerrtlla rehelllon, the · pope will

.

WI/

liM

•w - u..ft
6?f ~ ....... lll.....
HJ ~'""".
•
111 - llolo• M -

··-~·
!l-Aodoo, Til l. C:l lll.,o•

:="'="' .E.l_~!niUJ!l·..c ;~~ -=----- :-&amp;epla_cjn~

never mel sales expectations and
genera led losses of $58') million
slnceitsintrcducllonin 1981.
RCA's profit margin, while still
modes!, edged up In 1984 to 3.4
percent of revf'nues from about 2.8
percent in 1982-83 and a paltry 0.7
percent In 1981.
.
I th d 1 ·
n o er eve opments this past
week:
. -The .U.S. economy expanded by
6.8 percent in 1984, the strongest
growth since 1951, the Commeree
,
Department sa1il. Fourth-quarter
1984 growth was revised upward to
3.9 percent from the 2.8 percent rate
initially estimaled.
-Consumer pli('('s rose4 percent

-....c:~
...... c...

12. 1/t!IAMW....M
I l -Ift ........

'
airport, but no reason was gtven for

--,c,.

'~--=·-

Re&amp;tltlr - 675-1333

,....,..lied

earned S290mil!Jon,
on sales and operating revenue of
$3.2 billion. In the same 1983 period,
Sohio earned $324 mllllon, $1.32 a
share, on !ialesandotherrevenueof .
$3.16 billion.
Chairman Alton W. Whitehouse
said the oil, chemicals' and metals
corporation
lower

lowermetals

01110-Pomf

Tribune - ~2342
Sentinel - 992·2156

By VJC'l'ORL SIMI'SON
F..- Wrller
ROME (AP)-PopeJohnPauiii
departed for Latin America Satur·
day on a grueling, 30,®mlle trip
that will take tum to tour countries
and include visits to a warzonein the
Andes and the edge of the Amazon
jungle.
It is the 64-year-old P9"tlff's sixth
tour of a region that colltains half the .
world's Roman Catholics.
The 5,192-mlle' Dight to Caracas,
VP"?Luela, , took off 20 minutes
behind schedule at

CLEVELAND tAP) .;_ The
Standard 011 Co. · (Ohio) has
reported a 10 percent drop in
earnings in the final quarter of 1984
and a decline of jiboUt 1.3 percent in
its yearly earnings, compared with
I~ results.
Sohto' s on Thursday reported
earnings of Sl.49 blllion, or $6.14 per
share, on sales and revenue of $12.25
bllllon in 1984. In 1~, Sohio earned
about $1.51 billion, $6.14 a share, on
sales and operating revenue of
$11.96 billion.
·

'

outstanding. It represented a 12 percent decline,
said.
Net income for the three months ended Dec.
1984, were
$76,549,00J, compared to $101,241,1XXl for tile !~months ended Dec.

---

Pontiff
begins25thtour

.----Business Briefs:-..., Earnings
.incorporatiOn artic~es filed
decrease
GALLIPOLIS - Incorporation articles for Holzer Cllnic Inc;,
Gallipolis, have been filed with Secretary of State Sherrod Bro~W's
offiCf;' .
lhe&lt;:&gt;rporators are Oscar w . Clar ke. · J.R. Magnussen, R.a.·
Simpson and J .C. Strafford. The agent Is AGC Co., Cleveland.
Also llling with Brown for incorporation Is -Bobby . Joe Adams
Drilling Co. Inc., Bobby Joe Adams is llsled as incorporator, and Bob
Joe Adams Jr., 34420 Stale Route 7, Pomeroy, ls .the agent. ,

-- .'

Code and Adminis~ative mg.
13-03 and sec;tion 5!26.05(c) of
.,:11 be held .
"""
on Mooday, January 28, 1985
f 700 to 800
· the 1
rom :
: p.m. "
o·

theTheiJo~!•1 ,',isfedoruCodem

8

Giveaway

Pu lilic Sale
&amp; Auction

BleCk &amp; white Dutch rabbit ,
2 female long haired, Out ·

side dog. call 992-3283.
2 puppies, 1 male and 1
female. half Pit Bull; half
Black Labrador . 2 other
puppies. males, half German
S.hAnh111rd aru:t.....half lllack
La·a;;·ador~ Call 6-14-94-9-

2936.

From Gallipolis , take Rt.141. turn left onto Rt. 775.
turn right onto the Patriot Cadmus Roa~ . Watch for
signs: -,- --="
--·
~-.,.-·

Sale Every Saturday at 7:00 P.M.

One black and w:hite long
haired medium sized male
dog . To good farm home .

304-895 -3850 .
4 puppies, collie and G8r·
man Shepherd mix . 304-

773-5367.

Console TV does not

'304-675 -6222 .

work,

1 black Angora cat and 3
!ihort hairtld to a goOd home .
100 Ferry St. Henderson.

6

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

Lost and Found

lots and lots of NEW &amp; USED Merchandise. Some .
Antiques . Something for Everyone.
New &amp; Used Misc . Farm Equipment
Door Prizes Given Every Saturday
Have something you want to sell? Bring it to the Patriot
Auction Barn and we'll sell it for you. Consignment accepted from 1:00·5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctioneer
245-5152 - 388-8249
Finis (IKE) lsaac-388-9370

AUCTI 0N
FEBRUARY 3, 1985-1 p.M,

1
LOST
yr . old English
Setter, blacks. white, childrons pet. Lost Tuo ., vicinity
of Lower River Rd . call

ANTIQUES &amp;COLLECTABLES

~~~t::"l~.i~l'l!~e~h~l

_&lt;~_4_6_·3_3_8_6_.- - - - -lc-

At the ~owery. Auction House . 5 miles west of
Athens , Ohio on Rt. 50. The Auction House with
1 t 1h ·
· 'd
~o~~~ - o eattng, tnSI e loading, parking and rest-

The Administration and RepresMtatiw of the Gattia County
Board of Mental Rltanlation will
be .pros01t to hear both written
and oral toslirnonies con"""i"J
ir~~~ut for the 1986 and 198
wo'"t"hnlymen~~~ i,.ce~plr:_n,,...for.."J"'~,.'
lop"""laidisabimies.
All individuals
1

Lost: black puppy with white
on· chest and 2 white feet .
Black collar. Call 614-843·
5460.

This is a beginning of monthly sales on the 1st Sunday of
every month . This is an emptional clean sale with good
pieces for home and shops . everyone welcome.

~~·

AKc Siberian Huskv. a
;":;::':;"!d. B~a~~ a~dh ':~i!e
S15o.oo . can 6t 4·9 492779 after 5:00.

Bra.ss cash register. good ice box. n~ce pie sale, llatwal l cupboard, set ol 4 pressbac~ cha~rs and other sets, secretary

~."e~~~a,;~,Sb~~~~~k s~~~~d~~~~:';~:;ds:~~~~~ ~;fh ~:~hwT!~~

round oak tilt top tabte,

hump ba ck trunk, V(alnui

~~i·~~~~~··~~~-~·~·-~·c-~,u~r,"~~~sr~~l ~t~:v~u~~d~~ ue~~s t~R~n~-i~,t~.~ ·~ea~t~u~rt~hBe~r,~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~£~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~h~e~t~hr ~·~d~s~tr~ ~ig~h~l~y~- ~~-~~~~-~~~~~e~rr~ill~a~s~~~~e~-~;·,~~-~~~e~n~tira~i~ds~o~n~~a~m~u~~~e~r~:~h~?f~g~e~i~n~Be~l~~~sh~i~'s~·d~e~a~th;,~~h~e~in~l~ein ~·-ew~-~ ~~1~~:;f~~~~~-~~ ;~~ s·-'P~-'-i~-~-d.iin~a~~&amp;i~:l~~~~~~~~~~====~·1r~lw~sh
oi:v~e~s~ea~t.~l~owf~b~oy~~~~~~~:~d:r~e~s :er.~ ch~'l~'ds~ o~a:k~i~~
~~~!!~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=1~~~·~·f~~~~·~·~
-~

Clinic's cardiac rehabilitation center
the
center's director, whUe Jayne KlesUng, R.N., walches. The center will
be ready for use by Feb. 18, acconllng to Robert E. Daniel, the clinlc
administrator.

.Clinic prepares
·s ycamore branch
:as cardiac rehab
treatment center
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
\viii beg in ca rdiac rehabllitalion
serv ices on Feb. 18, according to
Ro b er! E. Daniel, clinic
administrator.
Representing several months of
planning 'and development. the new
cenler, localed al lhe clinic's
:;ycam orc St reet branch facility in
Gallipolis, promises to be a valuable service to ca rdiac patients in
!his area.
· Daniel commented, " quality of
e ra lion in designing the Holzer
j::linic program. We have emp)oyed
registered nurses With both training
a nd experience In inlensive and
cardiac care. A physician will be In
•the facility al all Urnes. in case of.
emergency."
Daniel said tha t " we ll -trained
nursing slaU. the finest in tesling
and m onitoring equipment , an
'e xercise plan tailored for ~ach
patient, and a physician on hand for
e mergencies at? just some of lhe
reasons the patient may select the
~Holzer Clinic program."
Daniel also stressed that Medl·
:·care and mosl commercial group
; Insurance plans cover most of I he
· cost of cardiac rehabilitation.
·- Holzer clinic has adopted a special
.policy for lhesc pallents In accepl·
. \ng I he Medicare or group lnsu· ranee payment as payme nl In full .
•:fhese patients will nol be required
: to pay any of the cost of this
program personally.
-

said
Dav id E . 'J
·
· ones, superintendent of
nJectrlcal oper tio
'
a ns.
""""-' joined
' OVEC I J
n=u
n anuary
1956 as a field relay, meter and
communication engineer in Ihe
e lectrical operationsdepartmenl al
d •· J
the Piknton ~•fi e
'
"' c • an ' 11 anuary
!~gi7
promoted to senior field

n'::.

In September 1974, he was
promoted to area supe
· rvisor at the
company's Kyger Creek station at
Cheshire.

Before joining OVEC, Freed
worked for Ohio Power Co. in
~ani~ ~';!:lestAppalaWchian Power
o.
ton,
.Va., for a
combined period of14 years, giving
him a total of 43years in the electric
.
utility industry.
The clinic's cardiac rehabiliiaFreed. is a native of Ironton: He
tlon center w\11 function under the currently serves as president of t•'"'
medical direclion of Dr. Suzanne Jaymar Golf Club and is a member
- of the Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Mize, clinic cardiologist .
" Cardiac rehabilitation helps res- both in Pomeroy, and tile American
tore cardiac patients to their Legion in Waverly.
He and his wlfe, June, reside at 60
highest safe level of activity and
Riverview
Drive, Middleport.
helps lhem reduce their risk of
future cardiac problems," Mlze
sa id. "This Is done lhrough a series
of educational presentations and by
COLUMBUS - C. Ronald TUley
an exercise program that Is tailored
to the · patient's condition and' has been elected president of

"This program Is most beneficial
for patients who have experienced
hear! attacks; angina, or Who have
had cardiac bypass surgery," slle
said.
The program normally involves
three one-hour exercise sessions
perweekforaperlcdof12weeks . At
certain stages of the program,
patients are given speelal EKG
lesls. On completing the program,
patients normally have . slgnlftcantiy increased their capacity for
physical activity and can confidently maintain that level of
activity through planned and reguJar exercise at home.
Patients who believe they are
candidates lor this program should
consult with and suggest a referral·
by their . personal physician. PaI Ients seeki ng more tniormation or
desiring to schedule enrollment in
Ihe program should call Holzer
Clinic's cardiology department at
-416-5348.

Wf\~;;; Jimit8fi.__.____!Q- 4.

undPr severe price
from overseas rivals, and Us Hertz type of video record player that .
Com. a uto- rental subsidian• re·
•~
•'
ma ins a question mark, RCA
followe rs say.
Still, it appears at leas! financially
FAIRFIELD, Ohio (AP) I hal thestrucluralchangesRCAhas
Officials of this Cinclnnall' suburb
•
made over. the past two years have hopeful of coaxing General Motors
improved It~ fortunes.
Corp. to bring in the new Saturn
Five years ago ~A .was a automaklng planl, · have passed .
company that had mushroomed · emergency legislation to grant GM
f
rom its core businesses - com- a tax break for mcdernJZ·1·ng 1·ts
munic.a.tlons, broadcastingandelec- Fisher Body plan I here.
tronics - into a host of unrelated
The City Council passed Ihe
operations, such as financial servi- legislation Tuesday night to grant
ces, greetfug cards, publishing and GM'sFisherBody plan I a 50 percent
focds .
personal properiy•taxexemptionon
Yet RCA lacked a coherenl
$12.3 million that the automaker
stralegy to operate lhese disparate
plans to spend on reloolingtheplant
units into a successful whole. Along
to produce fenders a nd hoods for
the way, lis balance sheet deterlo·
1986 GM luxury cars.
rated under the weight of excessive
Ohio Gov. Richard F . Celeste Is
debi; management continued to
among officials from various states

menl said .

Tax b rea k approve
.
' d ~IOr p Iant_

panles,
Tilley will succeed John D. Daly,
who has been elected chairman and
chief executive officer of Columbia
Gas Transmission Coil&gt; .. Charles·
ton, W.Va .
Tilley has been CDC's senior vice
president since 1982. In his new post,
he wlll be clllel administrative
officer of six CDC units - Columbia
Gas of Kentucky, Columbia Gas of
Maryland, Columbia Gas of New
York, Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Columbia Gas r1 Pennsylvania and
Columbia Gas oiVIrglnia.
In that position, Tilley's primary
responsibility for rates and financial
matters.
A native ol Welch, W.Va., Tilley
joined Columbia at Charleston in
LARGEST SALES INCREASE - MGM Fann
1957 and has been involved in rate
City Inc. employee!l attending a recent area-wide
activities lor Columbia companies
Lal!dmark feed awards banquet in Lancaster were
in Charleston, New York, Wilminghonored for the llll'pl!Jt inerearJe In fonnula feed sales
ton, DeL, and Marble Cliff, Ohio, and
In thebo area of the alate for the Landmark feed
in federal regulatory affairs in
syllfem In Ohio. MGM Farm City frinn.,;, In
w~•!IJngton, n ,c.
··-Me!ge, Gl!!!!R-!!!!d MMonooo•~ J!.'f ~. ~ ~

who are trying to persuade General
Motorstolocateaplannedautomaklng planl for Ihe company's new
Saturn Corp. subsidiary In their
states.
Fairfield city officials said the
II . -~A
counc
pas,.,. emergency legisla.
l!on for GM's local tax b!&lt;'ak
becauseCelestelstomeefThursday
in Detroit With G(l'l executives.
Celeste inlends to use Fairfield's
actions as an example of an Ohio
community's effort to keep business
within Ohio by granting a lax
exemption through creation of a n
ente!l&gt;rtse zone, governor's press .
secretary Brian Usher said.
Fairfield officials said the city ·
intends to bid (orGM's Sallirn plant.

""

""-""'8uauuOIYeG 1le:F t:'Xi1'B.Uii10ff

government.
In outlining the nrnv&gt;'s trip, the
Vatican newspaper L'Qsservatore
Romano recalled his warning
against "illusory and dangerous
Ideological and liberation proposals
... which would be used as a pretexl
.formoresufferingand more serious
oppression.''
The pope and officials of the
V tl
h
ft
d
_. th
a can ave o en con emn., e
Marxist influence In "liberation
theology," adopted by many prt~ts
working for social change in Latin
America and elsewhere in the Third
World . The pope has criticized the
belief th~t forcible political change
and class struggle are necessary to
help the poor, whom he says are the
first to suffer from violence.
On Friday, John Paul met
privately with Tancredo Nev~.
presldeilt-elect of Brazll, which Is
not on the pope's itinerary. No
details were provided ahout the
meeting with Neves, elected Jan . 15
as the nrst civilian head of state
after 21 years of mUitary rule.

....

Driver cited
GALLIPOLIS Route youth was

I

from rflht In the ab!lve photo, u MGM feed
salesman, received special recopitlon when he wa8
nained feed sal....-..an ol the year for the area.
Pictured above are, from Wt, Jbn EllloU, Llllldmark
feed aad supply dlvWon vice pre.fdeot; Lawrence
Buah, Richard WIIhml, Cba11e8 Btall, Reed and

MGM Manager Jack W. Caney. ~

•

un d er a plea-bargain arranged by
tho d' t . I tt
•,
ff'
A
c
IS nc " orney s o tee.
prosecutor ' d ' ted th 0ff'
mICa
e
ICC
would be willing to reduce a
second-degree murder charge to
involuntary manslaughler and drop
manyofl3drugchargesaga l'nslheJIn exchange for a guilty pl ea.

Nnison s Lyon a formor wn't.er
•o •"Sat .rd·
Nl· ht L' ' .. d
' ' r'bed uh _
ayA gd
1b'
ve,
es·
cn
a 1 r=-uay rug mge that
began March 2, 1982, when Belushi ,
33, and Ms. Smith, now ;17, came to
Lyon''s house, I he newspaper said.
"I have a big surprise for you ,"
Lyon said Belushl told him. " Roll up
your sleeve."
Ms. Smith then injected what
Lyon believed was cocaine into him
-' 1n lh e
and Bel ushi • w ho s1arrn~
movies, "Animal House," "The
Blues Brothers" and "Continental
Divide."
In the 24 hours before Belushl's
death on March 5, 191!2, Ms. Smith
administered at least six injections
Into Lyon and Belu.s hl, Lyon
testified.
Leslie Ma1·ks: anolher companion

oA ·,,.h:;h, n

Cited by police

was given in theoffice ofthe privale
nighlclub, On lhP Rox.on I he Sunsel
Strip,whereBeiushi,Ms.Smithand
Lyon parlied with Rober! DeNiro
a nd Harry Dean Stanton. He said
nell her actor took drugs.
n·
1 h'1 a nd L yon beearne VJO
""us
·
lently ill andvomited,lhrn •&lt;&gt;turned
lo Belushl 's $200-a ·day Chateau
Marmont b~ngalow In Wesl Holly·
wood Lyon said
•
D N'ro
and ·
ctor comedian
1
e
· b b
R b' Will'
da . ped
0 m
Jams rop
y, u1
Lyon, De}'liro and Williams lefl ,
leaving Belu shi a lqne with Ms.
Smith. .
.
She was quoted as telling the
National Enquirer she had inj ected
Belushi wilh the "coup de grace"
when they were alone, but de nied
giving him more drugs afler Lyon
Ieft ·
The three-volume lranscrlpt,
which runs more lhan 600 pages.
provided the basis for the indict·
ment agalnsl Ms. Smllh. II is
lechnlcally sealed until Wednesday
bul a clerk inadvertenlly releasedil.
The court retrieved It from the
Herald Examiner before it could be
fully read.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sowing machino repair, parts. and
supplies .·
Pick up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, -one half mite up
Geoogos c rea k Ad · c a11
614-446-0294.

~::~~~:. f~;..~~~-:,~~~~~~!:
Singing Gorritla. Call Bat·
loons So Co . 446 -43t 3.
Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Ctub every Sunday, '1 :00
p.m. Factooy chocked guns
only .
P.J .'a garage now open. for
business .. upper end -of Ma ~
son complete auto repair.

304-773 -5212 . Owner
Terry

Cantrell

and

Jack

Promp. 24 hour road
service .

4 -

Giveaway

Part Dalmation.
m6.. old.
r-----------------------~-----! female
. Call 446-42208

Auction avery Friday night at
tho Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of now
merchandise every week .
Consigments of now So used
merchandioa always wet·
corned. Richard Reynolds .
~o~~onoer . can 304 ' 275.
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
ctaan used cars .
Jim Mink Chev .- Otds Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
446 -3672
scash$ $25 end up for your
junk car or truck . Free
~~~~:: Call614-245 ·9681 ,
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs ,
chests , bukets , dishes ,
stone jars. antiques. gold
and silver . Write - M . 0 .
Millar, Rt .2, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 . or call 614 ·992 ·
7760 . '
Buying daily gold. silver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
Ware. old coins, large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Middlopon. Oh. 614 -9923476.
- - - - - - --· tc RAW FURS. Beef

.......

3 Announcements

'

Make You, Ow" Vslentln;d

-NOTICE-

MEN AND WOMEN

WE HAVE SUCKER AND CANDY MOLDS, SUCKER
snCKS, CHOCOLATE AND COLORED ;:oAnNGS.

Standing

NO HIGH SCHOOL NECESSARY
POSITIONS START AS HIGH AS

$1Q-62
• POST O,FIC£

Ohio Valley Bulk foods

• MECHANtCS

•

• CLERICAL

INSPIC~ORI

PRI!PARIHG AT HOME 'OR
GOVERNMENT EXAMS

-..

Write &amp; Include Phone No. To:

National Training

Service, Inc.
lOX 160

. HADDONFIELD,
NEW JERSEY 01033

-

•

AI

E111plnv111r.n1
St:l VILI!;

11

Help Wanted

HOUR

KEEP PRESENT JQI WHILI

514 (. MAIN, POMEROY

Timber· Call

Tromm ot 614 ·742 -2328 .

17- 62

WE ALSO HAY£ THE SMALL CONVERSATION HEA!ITS AND
RED HOT CINNAMON HEARTS IN BULK.

992-6910

yetlow root.
ng ·
trapping supplies. Wheat
lights. night lights . George
Buckley. phone 614-684 4761 ,houra12 · 9PM dailey .

TRAIN NOW FOR CIVIL SERVICE
'
EXAMS

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by city
pollee Friday lor driving under
financial responsibility suspension
was Walter L. Watson II, Zl,
Gallipolis.

''

..desk,. ~o

ubiic· Saie -

believed l o

A Eureka Star
by city pollee

' Eastern
Friday. .
BUiy L. Walter, 27, Rt.l, Northup,
was northbQund on Eastern when
police said he reportedly slowed to
make a right tum into the Pony Keg
·Carry-Out.
Police said a car driven by
17-year-old Denver A. Larson of
Eureka Slar Route apparently
tailed to stop in ·time and struck
walter's pick-up from behind.
No injuries were reported follow·
tng the 7:16 p.m. Incident, which
police said· caused mcderate dam·
age to both vehicles. Larson was
cited by police tor assured clear
distance.

l

iJailiE"

Actors-Models
All ages for regionei TV
commercials, e11.parience
not necessary. Interviews
week of J1nuary 28 . For
1ppointment call 814-890·

0222.
Government job•.

et&amp;.ooo-

150,000 vr. PC&gt;IIIbto . All
occupation•. Find out How ,
Coli 805·887·8000 Ext. R·
10189.

·
with zinc top one drawe~ , tivo small
barrels, good old
wooden baskets. tools, gramte wa re , coltee grinder, washboards,copper!mllers, oldwoodenpla nes.earlykrautcutter
w1th dove tailed box, small church bench , good selection of
stone jarsand jugs, carnival glass - pu rple &amp; marigold PIC lure lrame s. bid milk bottles, depression glass, Bavanan cho·
colet set, other olass &amp; pottery, walnut one drawer night
stan d, cherry on~ dra wer night stan d, 3 No. 1 kerosene
lamps, square tabl e, porcelain and biSque dolls. 1-18" with
k1d body, bpen mouth. porcela m hand s. workmg ayes.
Si lverware . 2 wall telep hones - one w1th double box doll.
hump back trunk. doll dresser w•th m1rror . QUills, two hand
woven coverlets, 2 pocket watches . old wooden washtub
with base, lanterns, misc . Items, 011. paintings by 81lly Milli- •
gan, ch aracter ol book and the moVIe to be made. 90 %ar~
· refm!Shed.
Eats Available
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check witW Positive I. D.
Auctioneer: Rodney Howery, 614-698-7231
Associate: Frank Hutchinson, .614·592-4349

11

Help Wanted

X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST

The College of Osj~opathic Medicine is currently accepting applicatifm lor an X-Ray Technologist. Job
duties include the operation of x-ray ond ultr01ound
equipment to perform general and SfMCial pracedurts; diroct tlfl"ration of a small x-ray clinic, pre·
pares roports, maintains personnel re&lt;ords, traim
employees, consults with medical personnel. Pracess '
exposed •·rays and ultrasound. Performs rtlatod d- ·
erical and le&lt;hnical tasks.
QUALIFICAnONS: AART certification. bperitnco in
ultrasound pracodures prtflrred. Canditlatos must

~ ~-IJ•-c~!-~'l,u~ . ;.,.__th~ n~ta-!"1. ~~~~,.! ="'

equipment.
Starting hourly rate is $7.4 L Make applicati1111 at
Ohio Uniwertity Personnel Deportment, 44 Uniwtr- ·
sity Terrace, McKee House, Athens, Ohio 45701 by
Friday, February 't, 1915.
;

OHIO U...VERSITY

Ohio

AHirmati'll

71.

Autos for Sale

l 982 BUICK SKYLARK
4 Speed. Standard Trans. , Excellent Condition. ,
Can be seen al 221 Upptr Riwer Rd_, Gallipolis
WEEKDAYS 1:00-4:30
SUIMIT SEALED liDS TO:

Ftdtral Land lank Association
P, 0. lox 937, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or at the Allavt Acldrtu

Seller res~rves the ricllt to rtiU11.tttlids.lkls to be
opened on Jan. 28, 1985.

For mare information Call 446-0203

"

,,

�\__

"Times-Sentinel .
11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by

Help Wimted

33

Farms for Sale

142 acre farm, will consider

Full·tirM opening for lndivltluill to deliver furniture &amp;

anythtng of value on trade

$79,000

inat:•ll carpet, experience
preffered. Apply in person at

Coli 814-246·

~281 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Government
I

Jobs .

Beautiful land, 88 acres with

*'!!,'1~ $!50,~c-~·a-.

po11ible

41
-

Houaea for Rent

Houaes for Rent

42 Mobile Hom81
41

Houaita for Rent

Houoo for rent":' Call 304·
8711·72&amp;3 876· 5104 or
6711-&amp;388.

- - - - -- . , - - -

Two atory hou•• with bti.U·
liful river view, 3 or 4
bedroom•. 1 Y.r bath•. refer-

Tope FUrniture. 1 0 · 4, Mon.

Jan 28 only.

41

Small fUJnlshed haute In

city, adults only. Cell 4411·
0338.

once• required. U50.00
monthly 304-676-6646.

"m;iliJOii rfghu. 06 acres

All occupations

R-9806 for Information

NATIONAL GUARD.
Enlist. and you have a

for Rent
depoolt, gclod roforenco. On
Clerk Chepel Rd. 'Call 114·
388•8473 wHI axcept omall
children.

2 bdr. ""lie~ . c~P*tolv
furnlohod,.
ulill~ Hit,

•n

except electric. goOd "ffeti~

tlon. Coli ""..."""
Furni1hed. ~o e'ftY' taxte.
K1nauga. fo1ter'1

Nice . 14x70, 3 bdr in city,
• 210 mo •• plua utUitNI•. C.ll

In Middleport on North 41~
Ava.

Two bedroom fur-

nllhad lplrtment. Alto, •
l1rge

2

room

furnished

apartment. Call 304·BB2·
2118

61 Houaahold Gooda

Mobile

Mobile heme In Galllpolla.
nice for Hnior citizens or
marritd , couple with one
child~ no pett. daposit and
reference• reqolrtd. K • K

part-ttme career, educa -

Mobile Homn, Inc.• 304·
6711·3000.

tional and retirement benef1-·····-~·- 111. 'Jti ,OOO life insurince-:-

AND A MONTHLY PAY·
CHECK. 676-3960 or 1.
800-642-3619

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furniture,

new

LAFF·A·DAY

•

u••l. Urge HCtlon of .-•I·

ltv furniture. 1211
Ave . Gelllpolia.

E••*"

9 piece formal Cllnlnoroom
Mt, exc . cond ., 1800 Cell

l.aurelend Apts now accept·
ing eppllcations for 2 bed·
room apts, basic rent
1183.00, Equal Housing
Opportunity.

Judy D,WIIt-Realtw-388-81 55
1 Merrill Carter-Realtor-379-2184

Call-61 4·446 -0766.

•so.

$1 ,500 per month for 2
montht whtle in school .

•24.000 par year ~fter
Sales and ma"·

~aduat10n

agement 811.perlenca helpful.

6.14-446-B237 between 9

am-2 pm Mon. thru Fri.

t2

23

If you
reeatve

1

Professional
Services

Ptano Tunmg and Repatr.
Brunicardi Mustc Co., 446~
0687. Twentieth year of
quality IEINice Lane Da-

SOUTHERN HlU.S R.E., INC.

627 3rd

OH

Bedroom suite, • 100.00.
Uving room suite, I 60.00
Overst\.ffed c:h1irs. t1bl81,

614-992-6941

64 Misc . Merchandise

etc. Coll814·992·3267.

Woodburnmg furnance, au·
tomatic controls, blower,
ready to hook up, never u1ed

8400 Cell 614·256·1216

reasonable,
evenings.

675-6483 or 676· 1460.

,.

PJJrsonal Care. Will take 3
elderly people to l1ve m my
home with me &amp; my husband. Pleanty of TLC. Near
31 Homes for Sale
Cheshire on Galha &amp; Meigs
line. 24 hour care. Call ' ~-------Three bedrooms. central air.
814·367-714B.
vmyl wall paper, carpet
throughout, well insulated.
McCormick Rd area. child
care any age, reference
new patnt, attached garage.
gas outdoor grill, awnings,
aveilable Call 446-4426.

Rea l Estate

manv extrao. Caii446·25B3
til 6·00PM. alter 6·00PM
caii614-;!45·6B59.

6861

'79 Chevy Malibu, 8 cvl.
standard shih. will trade for
mob•le home 304· 882 ·

3590

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

HOME WITH 2 ACRESmu~seethrs3 bedroom
tri·level to apprectale rts value Very nrce hvmg room,
flimrly room wrth fireplace or woodburner hookup, 2
balhs, large ulrlrty room, 2~ car garage, Thermopane
wondows w~h mar~e wmdow ~lis central arr plu1
many more eKtras

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES
'

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Localed al upper Rt 7
Appro• 4n acres, large melal burklrng wrth concrete
Hoor. 2 smaller burldrngs, 14'155' mo~le home, rural
water Land all lays ftat

#744
I YEAR BUYER PROTECTION - 3 bedroom home
srtuated on 3'h acres near Crown City Over 1400 sq It
rncludes 2 baths lamrly room woodburner, wet bar,
central arr, large barn plus frurt treesand good garden
Pn£~ ·~! ·!J9,51JQ,

18 Wanted to Do
Typmg Need some typ1ng
done? Contact Mrs Cheryl
(Baird) Swam at (614)266 1419 after 6PM on week·
days or any time on
Weekends
ixper1enced carpenter. fin ·
1ih and cabinet work Qual·
ity work guaranteed. References Call Mike Pohlman.

'446-B039
T-elephone servtce for repair
&lt;ir installation etc Call 446-

41B2

3 bdr .• 2 ba .• cathedral ceil.
oak fir , wbfp, oil ht, ctl a~r,
new appl, cnty water 1983
barn, 1982 equipped wood·
working shop, oil &amp; minerals
incl. Centrally located btwn
Athens, GJ~IIipols ~ Wellston, sacrif•ce -due

$1 69K 614·669·631 1.
6 minute dn\1&amp; from town.
located on Rt 588 tn Green
Township, 3 bdr, LR, lcit·
chen. famtly room,"' 1/z bath.
142,000. Call anyt1me 446·

9396

Mature woman w1ll do babyllttmg 1n my home Call

446·7166

For aele, rent or trade Nice 3
bdr. home in Plantz Subdivi·
sion. $43,000 or $326 rent

'(Viii do baby sttting in my

call 614·245·5281

hqme. 304-675-6652 .

21

Business
Opportunity

charge for delivery
1982 Kirkwood 14x70 2
bdr. , 2 full baths, washer.
dryer. CA. axe. cond , utility
building, underpinning,
porch. private lot, downtown. Call 446·0208

Ulibf' .. ........
JUST LISTED- BARGAIN BUY!! ·
bedrooms elctensrvely remodeled home srtU&lt;tled· on
approx- 1- acrec\Ytnng plumbrng. roof.
system
replaced Cellar. storage burldrng located at the edge
of Pomeroy
#759

1980 K1ngsley 14x70, w•th
7x24 expando, set up in
mobile home park. ready to..
move into, total electric,
microwave, stereo, AC ,
skinmg, outbuilding avatla -

Call BAM·6PM, Mon.·
Sat. 441·3&amp;47 or eve. 448·
4237.
Must sell. 12x66 Torch. 2-3

For sale by Owner: 3 bdr.
remodeled country home
w1th e.~~:posed inteJior _log
walls &amp; addittonal woodMaster bdr .

:

models cell 814 -772-1220
or 614 · 773·3926 No

~le

4 bdr. houaefor sale must be
removed from lot. Call 675·

5104 or 676 ·63B6

Fin anci al

Looking for a Jijtal7 Patt
credit problems or lack of a
huge down payment? Own a
re-claimed home today I E-Z
credit check and a small cash
deposit. For a list of our

bath.

bedroom, unfurntshed. In ·
eludes storm window1 and

screens.
7132

Call 61 4· 446·

OWNERS WANT OFFER - Have translened out ol
town and must sell Attractrve 3 bedroom home wtlh
1 ~ baths. fireplace, equrpped krtchen, full basement
wrth rec and lamtly room plus 16'•32' rn-ground pool
#769

1976 14x70, all electrtc,

tflat you do bu11ness wrth
people you know. and NOT
te aend money through the
mail unttl you have investtgll)ed the offartng .
Route for sale

Handling
national
b-rands Servtce pre fthbhthed accounts m offtC.s. plants and retail stores.
Will take approiumetely
f~st - moving

•13,000 c11h No selling •

rft.tock and collect cash.
W{JI net approximately 1300
per week. Write, mcluding
your telephone number and
ai:ldress with zip, ENTECH,

910 Church St. NW, Hunts·
ville. AL 35B01

22

Money to loan

HOME OWNERS~·Refmance

tO low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose Leader

Mortgege Co ., 614-592·
~61 .

with fuel furnence 8t county
water.
3 .ft
car workshop
garage with
1000 tq
8t
outbuildings. 40 acres. good
fenc1ng 9 water Some
timber 130 acres with pond
It 8000 white pine also
available) 1 mtle off Rt.
1 60, 11 miles past Holzer

Hoopltel. priced $54,500.
Cell 614·3B8·8710
Beautiful, older house for
aale by owner 7 rooms, 2
baths, full basement, 1 acre
lot, b1g garden, cham link
fence. apple trees. grapes.
plenty of shade trees. extra
24x30 budding, 1 Ox30
building, city water. electric
and gas heat Bes1de Hilltop
Service Station, Coolville,
Ohio. Good neighborgood
Wdl sell or swap for farm
near Chester . Ohio .

$49.000 . caah

60 acre farm tn Bedford
Town1hip. recently drilled
gas well. Bylappointment
call 614-843-6372 after
6pm .

Real Estate Gener~l

TEAFORD
Real Estate

m
u:!
R£1lTOR

216 E. 2nd St
Phone

1·(6, 4)·992-3325

826.000

NEW LISTING - 122 acres,
M ool, m Chesler Townshi p,
3 BR ranch lull basement,
barn, pond &amp; 'h mrnerals.
$65,000

cash, will carry balance -land
contract. Call 614-6876648 even1ngs' Manon F.
Reynolds, Box 304. Cool-

ville, Ohio 46723

:

TUPPERS PLAINS - Near
the school 6 rms balh,
auto heat and lg level lot.
$23,800
LOT - Nnt to golf course,
elec &amp; water a'arlable Also
one tn Southern
BUSINESS BLDG. -Pomeroy
or Middleport locations

WANT A MODERN DAIRY FARM? - Thrs 163,acre
farm has all the modern convenrences 60 acres
cropland, ad1acent silos, 6000 bu corn cnb and
mrlkrng parlor. !ll acres trllable. double lour
hernngbone wrth ~azed tile, modern manure system,
large machrnery shed, 3 acre dry cow lot wrth new
• barn, 2 story farm home wrth alulmnum srdrng. needs
remodeled Very nrce 14x 70' Vrctonan mobile ho m~ All
lhrs and lots, lots more Call for details
#735
COUNTRY STYLE HOM£ - Cu~om burll wrth over
5,000 sq It Rtased ranch wrth 4 bedrooms, 3 balhs,
formal dmrng spacrous kitchen, fireplace, lull drvrded
baS&lt;!ment 2 car garage, rn -ground pool plus 40 acres
Don't hesllate make an appomtment today
#74J
FRONTAGE ON RIVER - Only $25,000. 1~ story, 3
bedroom remodeled, bath, large krtchen and drmng
area ~nng plumbing roof have been replaced Vrnyl
sdrn&amp; lmmedrate possessron
#750
URBAN LIVING FOR THE EXECUTIVE - 10 acre
estate. lake, sh rubbery, trees, 3 bedroom bnck home,
built rn 1975 Efficrenl heating, low mamtenance Srx
mrles lrom Galltpolrs. 5mrles from hos~lal Oneol Gallra
County's best

#674
$5,500 LOT - Off Clark Chapel Road Owner woll
survey Levelland
•
#706

POMEROY - Nrce 3 BR
home wrth storms. auto.
heat &amp; lg basement, front &amp;
back porches
'. EXC£PTIOUL VALUE ON CALIIFORINIA
•
FOR SALE BY OWNER
: Owner recently relocated rn same area .and rs now offerong a
• prrce reductron on qualrty, well mamtaoned home located on
: Sprrng Velley area 2200 sq ft hvrng area , rncludong 3 large
)led rooms, 21h ceramrc baths, hvrng room wrth frreplace and
donong area large lamrly room oncludes tndoor barbecue;
• Mchen features new cabonets, Form rca tops, stove and double wall ovens Drshwasher, dosposal, refrogerator and mosl
• wmdow treatments remam Carpeting throughout Outdoor
• recreatron area featur~s deveoed patto woth wr~ught non
: tnm and Warm Mornmg gas dnll permanently aflo~ed, regu·
• latron badmmlon court wrth nrght loghting. Ampl~ slora~e
• areas mcluded m-basement and attic wotn descendong starrway. Single car, enclosed garage with ad1acent oHoce area .
Recenllfupdated wilh new rool, asphalt drove, outdoor car·
ileting and ondoor pamtrng. A real bargaon for someone who
: )pprecrales fme construction and e1cellent marntenance

.I

'

c.= 44~-:7:4

VI

RIVER FRONT - 12 acres,
1010 feet of frontage &amp; 3 BR
home Wrll drvrde. $32,000.
LETART - Remodeled rn·
srde &amp; out. 4BRs, oollurnace
&amp; drtlled well.
45 ACRES - All monerals,
water &amp; elec avarlable
Sue Murphy, Milton Roush
Htltn, Vlrlil and
Bruco Tnford

Housing

: program. For further dotails anti ...,ointNnl

·

NEAR ATHENS 3 95
acres, 1 BR trailer &amp; 2nd wa·
ter tap $10,500,..

44:; .. ::=e

''l:C""''U'f':l* I

-- •'

WITHIN YOUR MEANS - Pnce 1u~ reduced to
$25,000 on thos 14'x70' Holly Park mo~te home and 2
acres 2 BR~ formal dmrng area, burll·m kitchen
Completely underprnned, covered lronl patio, 2 car
well • constructed garage State Route 160.
11761

A~RES

MOBILE HOME PLUS 4%
- 10x50 1963
mobile home wrth I 0'126' addition. 3 bedrooms. bath,
l~mg room, krtchen with range and relngera!Qr
Woodbumer tnduded. Located Vinlon area
#623
NEW LISTING - HOME WRH A WARM HEART rs
wartong for the new owner of thrs ranch Appealing to
the pocketbook as w~l as the eye. 2 bedrooms,
possrbility of 3rd bedroom, INing room, bath, krtchen,
basement carport. I acre mi{C or less City school
system. $34,900.

bath. 607 2nd. Ave Gelllpo·
lis. Call 446·4416 otter
· 7PM

Firewood cut up slabs. f16
PU load. Larg.e~ load• deh·
verad . Call for prices, 614-

12) 10'x 10' garage door1,
complete $160 aa Can be
seen at or call Betz Honda.

1 commercial space for rant

1600 1q. ft.. in town.
Suitable for offtces, studio.
smell bustnell, pizza shop
New Haven. W Va Call
814·992 -7481

Call 446·0390.

49

For lease

Furnlohed effalcloncy 920
Fourth , adult1, 8185 utili-

ties pd Call 446·4416 otter
7pm.

#766

865

Furniahed efficiency apt .,

Perfect location. 749 Second Ave., 2 bdr., furniahed.
utihttes paid. deposit Celt

•

I

Merchand i se

51 Household Goods

51 3"12 Third Ave , 1 bdr ..
water Included, n 35 mo .

depooot roq . Call 446·4222
between 9 6 6

FURNITURE. Used stoves
and refrlgaretors .
our prices. save

304·675·8222.

WEL-l PRESERVED - ifJVrting country home wrth 4
bedrooms, bath, large oozy krtchen. dmrng room hvrng
room, fireplace, partial basement Natural gas forced
arr heat rural water Great location Centenary area.
Priced at $32,500
#7Q4

Aiveraide Aptl Mtddlepon.
Spacial rates for Sen1or
Cfti~en• $130 . Equal Housing Opportunttie•
14 ·

GALLIPOLIS CITY - Super and rmmaculate low
mamtenance 3 bedroom home 21ull baths, large hvrng
room woth WB frreplace, gas furnace attached garage
No steps, level comer lot Walkrng doslance to
downlown lmmedrate occupancy AnKious for qurck
sale

#758
6 ACRES WOODED CORNER LOT - Blacktop road
Electnc and rural waler avarlab~. $4,500.
#742
EVERYTHING YOU'D WANT lor only $34,000. Nrcely
re&lt;fecorated 3 bedroom home wrlh ~eel srdmg new
carpet 24' pool, lovely pnvacy lence. woodburner,
garage Localed rn crty school drstrrct. A musl to see.

#690
JUST LISTED - 1984 DOUBLEWIDE 24'x48' - 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, krtchen complete wrth
ap~rances Calhedral ceolrn&amp; garden lub and walk-rn
closet rn ma~er bath, all .carpeted, woodburner
Ntcluded Must be moved lrom present locaMn. Call tor
more detatls

#730
· FOR THE INVESTOR - 4800 sq ft commercial
butldtng Offtce area, sales space, storage space, 3
rental unrts, 2 bedroom mobile home, 2apartments All
presently rented Good income Excellent tn·town
location
~712

WANT SMALL ACREAGE? - Ideal for bt~ldmg your
new home or lUst as a~ place for getting away from
rt all. 7 5 acres, more or less, of ronrng land. Drilled well,
rural water and saptrc tank already rnstalled Call for
delatb
#729

4 BEDROOM - 1\7 story frame home Located 3 mrles
from town Eal·tn krtchen, balh, iving room, partial
basement wolh garage mthe basement level Home has
new roof, new furnace '·~ed rn the 30s.#709

.

Older ga1 range 136.00,

reclinen 199, new &amp; used
bedroom suite~. range• ,
walhera; &amp; - shoes·
om su1tes
,
also
buying coal &amp; wood stoves

Coll614·446 ·3159 .

Unfum11hed 2 bdr in Crown

City. Call 614·256·6620 .

A UTILE BIT OF COUNTRY - Very 111ce, neat brick
ranch on 2 acres Nrce landscapm~ low marntenace, 2
car garage wrth automatic opener, 3 bedrooms, 2
balhs, storage liurldrn~ garden area, concrete dnve
Ongrnal owner1;. Quality burll Crty school drslrict.
Rodney area Pnced to S&lt;!ll

e

Pomeroy 2 bedr., Naylor's
Run area. $100 dep. req.

Call eftor &amp;PM , 992·6BB6.

Canaday Realty
446-3636Ji~

Brooklide Apts 1 bdr
laundry, water-trash p11d,
no pats, 8217 mo . plus
deposit Call 446-3474 after

-..,.------·IC- .

Piorieer electric power pl1nt. ~

touesvillo. Va. 22901 . 1·
B04-973 -6646
820.00

pic~up

load. S30 00 deh\lered Call

304 -675 -6762
2991 .

0'

675 ·

ranteed
1
ers, Gallipohs Ferry, W

304-675-3B57.

10 HP, 8 - S engtne. used lei' _
than 8 hour•. t795.00. Call

614-367-7750

For sale, like new 12 gun :
cabmet, $250 00 Call614 ·

742·2433
N ew alum1num 11d1ng .
S23 00 a sguare Stx new
white storm Windows. "

$8 00 aach Call 614 -949-

D-;;n;,;~,;;o 1good lump
coal 1 to 7 ton call
Jim Lanier 675 -7397 or ~

304-675· 1247

Real Estate General

I
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N9·l

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IN REAL ESTATE
SALES IN GALLIA CO.

REALTOR"

REDUCED PRICE'
WILL SELL ON LAND CONTRACT
3 BR ranch w/ partral basement on Rt 7 oilers tre·
mendous nver vrew and ~omforta ble hvmg WJHm___
frreplace, hardwood floors, large eat·r n krtchen ,
plus block outburldmg perfecl for auto work,"IC
and toarler pad All for a bargarn pnc e ol $3 9.900
Convenrent to lown Buyers Prote clron Plan
11
ma kes worry free
# 2l6

IS PROPERTY
SELLING?
,
,
•
•
Jhat sa question we are asked almost eyery day. Frankly the way
11

,

•

a property
moves
depends a
lot on how it is handled. For this
reason, when you are selling. we
suggest that you giye us a call.
We are old enough to be experi-

LOW CALORIE SALARY?
You can Slrelch you r housr ng dollars wrth th rs 3
BR ranch Oflers cozy family room wrth bnck Ire·
pla ce, knotty pme krtchen and dr nmg room, large
attracllve hvrng ooom and sparklmg ceramrc balh
New-carpet-throughout most of home Convenr ·
ently located totown and hos prtal. Buyers Prolectron Plan cover s componenls for a full year Ask·
rng $47,900
I

EXCEPTIONALLY WELL DECORATED
In Early Amencan charm 3·4 bedrooms. beautrful
hvmg room wrth frreplace and lantastrc vrew of the
nve r Nrcy shady lawn runs lo !he nver (frsh or
have a boat dock myour own Iron I yard) In town
locat1 on. very QUiet and peaceful surroun dmgs
$89,200

enced, young enough to be aggressiYe, large enough to be efficient and small enough to be per·
sonalized. For more information
and a professional market surYey, call the professionals at The
Wiseman Real Estate Agency.

4

6 room apartment for rent.

2 bedroom apt1 in New
Heven . Newlv rtmodeled.
well insulated . tn town. Call

614·992-74B1
'•

HUNTING FOR A SMALL FARM?- Then let us show
you thrs one Nrce 2 story home wrth4 bedrooms, bath,
fu~ otllurnace, 37,. acres more or less, tobacco base,
30x30 barn plus other outbiJrldrngs Trarler hookup
Owner would consrder land contract
#736
MINI FARM - 14 ACRES - Oay Townshrp City
sc hool dostnct Lrke new 3 bedroom modern house.
large comfortable rooms. 2 barns recentlY. coostructed,
one equrpped wrth sla bles. Six acres lertile land, lots of
lertrl~er and lrme has been used Tobacco base. A
bargarn at $51 ,500
11715
HOME AND INCOME! - $22,000 - 2 bedroom.
dmrng room,eat-rn krtchen Features IO'x48' trailer for
added rncome Well worth a loo~'

#752
GENERAL FARM, HARRISON lWP. - 175 acres.
Many acres have been treated for extra proouctton.
Two sprong developments One large barn Tobacco
base Approxrmataly 2,000 Chroslmas trees, 4th year of
growth O~er home has been modermzed County
water Owner transferred
#710
EWINGTON - $16.500 - Remode~ 2 bedroom
alum ~ded ranch on Rt 160 Includes dr~mg room,
balh and shower, part basement. ~I furnace, rural
water large garden area Storage burklrngs.
·
' -

RIVER VIEW- 4 bedroom ranch wrth lull completed
baS&lt;!ment 3 baths, fam~y room. beautrfulrn-ground
1'101 wrth deck plus refreshmenl bar and bath Garage
rn basement level, office area Central arr and heat
Approx 2 acres.
11762

200 ACRES - PARADISE LAKE - Year around
relreal Located on Hannan Trace Road 3bedrooms. 2
~ory charmrng older home !leautiful stocked lake
Wooded land to hunt deer and wtldhfe Tobacco base
Owner wrll sell all or part

#669
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Must S&lt;!ll 3 bedroom,
I'h story woth new carpet, basemenI and garage. Close
to town and hospital Pomeroy Priced m lhe 30S
11738

LOOK FORWARD TO COMING HOME to th~ umque
remodeled home 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, eat·m
krtchen, lornlal drnrng, spacrous lormal ent~ Deck.
barn, 3 acres Owners have reduced price ard wrl
consrder reasonable offer Make anapporntment t~

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Real Estate Generel

~~

E.Main1~

POM
OY,O. 992·2259
NEW LISTING - Rental In·
wstment - 2 mobile homes
on a nrce lot, appro1 I acre
Applrances included Propane
gas heal love rn one, renl the
other' Qnly $11 900.00

.5 act1e fpr.m
THIS ONE YOU Will LOVE! CUSTOM BUILTFIR SIDEO HOME HAS
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. OAK CABINETS IN A VERY EFFIOENT
KITCHEN ANDERSON WOOO WINDOWS. HEAT PUMP PLUS
WOOD BURNER, 40 FRUITTREES, NICE GARDEN SPACE. HOME IS
PICTURE PERFECT INSIDE AND OUT. $54.000

PRICE REDUCED- Syracuse
- Needs wak bul houS&lt;! has a
3 room addition wrth garage recently added Marn house has
6 rooms Usa lor rental or remodel for your home SO'xiOO'
lot $11 ,500 00
PRICE REDUCED - On thrs
caPe cod home! A rose gar·
.den wtth a rrver vrew, the
JarRelrolll.DOr£h.Jii.'!fS way to
ii ="='---~··1111efoyer witll!Wo s.!IS ofdiiu·
ble french dooos. 3 bedrooms,
lull basement garage, garden
space and large lot Must be
seen $59,500 00

~and 1111 -trademllt!;~ of Century 21Real F.state ('orporatiun. Prlntal in t.:.S. A. Fo~ 11 ut.lllolL~III~ (lJ)jJ(tnunlty1ir
EACH 'OffiCE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED- AND OPERATED.
-

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BUILDING LOT Nnr Fair·
poilnds - '.4 acre rn an es·
tabl~hed subdrvr~on Water
lap lor T PC waler syslem
Electrrc avaolable, septrc lank
rn place, no leach Want
.$5,000.00.
TUPPERS PlAINS - Country setting on approx 2\?
acres with 3 bedooom ranch,
fireplace, carport. Good oond~
!ion. $36,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
Dottle Turner 992"-56t2
J11n TrusHII 949-2660
Jo Hill ti5·441A

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cost we have heard of thrs wrnte r
I basement
drvrded, garage attached wrth addrllonal carport
Excellent level garden, shaded back lawn Well
located on Sl Rt 7 for convemence to Porn I Plea
san I, WV All for $59' 850
#306

WANT THE BEST ... TAKE A LOOK! BEAUHFUL
STONE
HAS JAPANESE GARDEN, FAMILY RM. WITH
FIREPlfoCE AND DINING TERRACE EQUIPPED KITCHEN , FORMAL
DINING LG LIVING RM PWS GUEST HOUSE COMPLETE WITH
KITCHEN CALl SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENn

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25 ~ocu!lt St~

C 1984 Century 21 Real Estate Cf,trporaUon u tru11tee flfr the NAF

215 in Quesar II eolor TV, ,
beautiful picture. extra co lor, dark wood cabinet on .
rollen. p1rticaaly new. will taka gun on t rade Asking
$276 . Can be seen at K • K
Mobile Home Park .

Call 61 4·9B5·3350.

=;;~==c~!=='=''"""""~-"=~c~="""'==== ..'!'c' ~

RAil£ FINO- 4-levellots~ted Withlft the crty hrmts.
Access to ctty water and sewer. One of city's better
areas
'

82 Oh"'a St ., Gallipolis New

6. used wood -coal ttoves , 6
pc wood LR suite $399,

call 446· 1750

MAKE US AN OFFER - I acre and attractove frame
ranch localed near Mercervrlle 3 bedrooms, hvrng
room, eat·rn krtchen, 2 baths, basement Heat pump,
woodburner Rural water. 2 car garage .
#705

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE

RICK'S NEW ANO USED bunk bedl 8199 , antron
Phone 304· 773·5430

992·7721 .

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LR, .JV1.. _combonotioo ..kit·

For rant furn11had efficiency
apt. Will include waahef' &amp;
dryer For more Information

NEW LISTING- BETWEEN GALLIPOLIS &amp; JACKSON
on old Slate Roule 35. You wolllrke thrs semr-pnvate
vrnyl ranch Includes a large lamrly arod drntng room.
woodburner, nrce krtchen, electnc heat oveos~ed 2 car
garage plus over \? acre fenced yard Southwestern
Schools $40.000
#751

frameo $20, $25 , llo 830,

chan • bath. Private, dep. •
ref Cell 446-4607 or 441·

#682

#666

full or twin, $68., firm,
and •78. Quean seta, 81
4 dr chasti, 149 6 dr
che•ts. $69. Bed fr1mes ,
$20.and 826 , 10 gun - Gun
cabinttl, e3&amp;0. Gat or
electric range1 $3715 . Baby
mattretsel, $26 &amp; 136, bed

king frame $60 . Good selec tion of bedroom IUites,
rockers. metal cabinets,
headboard• 638 8t up tcp

INCOME OPPORTUNITY - Owners have retrred and
are very anKious to sell renlal propertY The pnce has
been reduced on th~ busrness burldrng and 3 mobile
homes Localed on 21ols wrth all utdrlres Thrs property
rs m a pnme location and are all presenffy renlly Call
loday for all the detarls

TRANQUILITY nestled m 108 acres of nature Appro•
40 acres hl~ble wtth pasture and woods Older home
used for hay storage Rural waler avarlable Farm has
been tn famr~ 100 yeaos, bul ready to sell Call for more
'delarls.

lg . load. enytlme. Coll441 · ; '
7993.

4600 wano . 120-240 volto.

Basket and Caning Supplte1,
Write for free price list .
Carol'• Can•!'Y· 232 Barn•dale Road , tamelot, Char·

Firewood

Hardv·ood firewood. spUt. •
st1cked l'ld delivered. • 30

Park, Route

New 1 bdr . efliciency apt.

HARD
famrly
possrble, 2
fireplace rn hvrng room, krtchen wrth
drmng area, large front porch, melal garage burtt rn
1983. 2 llat lots Pm:e reduced to $44:900 Owner
willing to listen to reasonable offer

#757

-

2 bdr apt.,

..~ Furnished efficiency •1 80,
aitulta. utlltiet pd. 1here

446·1457.

iflioi;'K"SPRIJIGS'~ :c.·. =-=~~==-;;;BR"'ICo;;K· C::RA·~N::oC:;;H-::I;N;"C:;I;:;'-""":
TY 3':'"b:~
ed roo-; ~h. drmng -~-­
room. h'llng room. krtchen, utrlity room Attached I car
garage wrth breezeway Nrce stze lawn woth new charn
hnk fence tn back Nrcely landwaped. Home rn
e~eellent condrtron
#740

c-oli 448 -77B5

64 Miac. Merchendlte

;~:g~·:~~-·. ~~~ 3~~·=~~~ I·!;;~~.T~-·~~i~!Y:~ 7~~~~;e!g~::~~-~-~+·~Mattrttolttl
~~:::~~~~~1~~~::;~;
,~,'~"""!- ·~
or

HOLLIDAY HILLS RETREAT - 1972 Spartum 26'
s~f conlarned camper woth sheller house and
barbeque srtuated on 2 lots Has access road to
Raccoon Creek and rrghl to boat dock Excellent
opportunrty for $9,900

#754

Sale

apt.,

SPRING BARGAIN - 3 8 acres more or less Tycoon
Road $1.200
#745

!=======~=
Farms for

bdr

2802.

good shape. $9,500. Call
614·367·0446

33

1

6388.

- -.... -

JUST LISTED - LIKE NEW - 430 l!wis Dnve . Thrs adorable ranch home " perlect lor anyone 3
bedrooms. 1'b baths. lovely carpet verv lar2e e.at-rn
- ~k4ch1m, central arr, wellrnsulated. DIY sehOOis water

PUB·

Umattone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up 1t Rlchtrdt &amp; Son .

Real Estate General

#739
By owner immac custom
brick on 181 beautiful acres,

me he's desCrio-

ing!"

JUST LISTED - INCOME PRODUCER -live rn one
and rent the olhos 3 bedroom home plus 2 bedroom
,---- ,,n, roobue oome. nus a0dl00n31 moOOe nome
space to renl out 3 S&lt;!ptrc lanks, rural waler Shed, 2
run dog ~ennel Mmutes from Holzer Medrcal Center. __
Good rentalrncome Only $31,500
#770

home, large
rooms,
car garage. will
trade for form, 304·675·

Will cut and dehver firewood. Caii614·256-152B

Ptcken• uud furniture . 304·

Vwginia S11ilh Realtor-381-8826
Elizabe!h Lang-Realtor-675-3968

Put ~~~~-~~. to work=f4=or.,-:~,.---.~~=+""'~-.

Real

A\le. Galllpolt1,

258-8246.
..

245-6B04.

446-6610

Real cute Middleport home,
Call
real bargain prtcell

niels, 814·742·2951

Sotuations
Want.. d ~ _

Work wanted W Va. L,t·
censed LPN, private duty
nursing . References Avalla bht . .304·625-7.691;.. ··" -

Homes for Sale

Knauff F.irewood Split· 96"
hlrdwoodt. Se110Md or
green You pick up or we
deliver . HEAP vender 1514·

Mon thru Sot. 441·1699.

.....
Manager trainee
quality you will

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

County Appliance . Inc.
Good uHd appliances and
TV sell. Open SAM to 6PM

45 Furnished Rooms
For rent Slaeplag Rooms
and light house keeping
room1 Perk Central Hotel.

54 Mlac, Merchendiae

814-4411-1398

448·2300.

Call 448·3040

61 Houtehold Gooda

W1shers, dryerw. r•frlgerators, rang11. Skaggs Ap..
plianeet, Upper River Rd.
betide Stone Crest Motel.

Uvlngioom 18t ttiO. bed·
room .uka *200. chest
freezer t50, cerpet

814·317-0446

Home Pork, 446· 1602.

garage Call 446-98B8

Apartment
for Rent

Vtlley
Trailer for rent f.urnlstt.d ,

The Sunday

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
44 ·

for Rent

niohed. baaudtOI 'riverview,

Houae for rent . 2 bdr.
unfurnished houte, range S.

Bridge. Call 814-843-5185
or 304-273-44B5

A~ MY

42 Mobile Hom. .

water and' sa'l¥19• fur·

bonom land in Portland. Oh.
'h mile from Ravenswood

CaH 1·805·687-6000 Ext .

27.1986

27, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~QQtpoQlr ~~to

ONE OF AREA'S GRANDEST HOME'
Thos preslrgrous bnck rs located about one mrle
lrom down town on an absolutely oulsla nd rng lot
2 7 acres ol na ture at rts best, beaullful old lrees,
a pond, huge boulders and lovely manrcured
lawn The house looks like a prc lure from Better
Homes and Garden s and mcludes a large family
room. formal dmrng and large ilvrng room each of
wh rch has a large prclure wrndow offenng a
brealhtakmg "ew ol the nver All 4 bedrooms are
large, 3 ol whrch are connected to a balh There
are lots of closels and 1wo large storage rooms
Beaullful new carpet, centra l arr and an rngroon d
pool add lo comfort and fun ol spe nding more of
your trme at home
·
#134

LOCATION MEANS EVERYTHING'
Th rs brrck ranc h rs very close to Spnng Valley and
hosprtal but has 1.5 acres to romp around on 3
BRs and 1\? bath wrlh attractrve krtchen , frreplace m hvmg room and 2 car garage Well rn·
sulated for easy heatrng and cooling $62 ,500

A PLACE TO CALL HOM£
Owners have put a lot ol work and lrme rn makm g
thrs homea showp lace 1600 SQ It of lrvrn gspace
mcl udes 3 BRs. 1'h baths, lam1ly room and h"ng
room w1th wood bur ner N1ce corn er lot-a«rac·
lively land scaped Good nerghborhood $53 800
#340

MOVE TO THE COUNTRY
BUT DON'T SACRIFICE A THING
Very attractrve clean home on 775 1ust oil 141
Oilers cou nlry features hke 2 acres of goou nd,
beaul1ful vrew and peace and quret, but wrthout
g1vrng up convemences of modern IIVmg 3 BRs,
hvrng room w / wood b~r nel , drnrng room and
equrpped kr lchen and 2 full balhs 2 cao garage
$62 000
#342

ENJOY THE BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY VIEW
from lhrs new 3 bedroom home wrth 2 baths. lul l
basemen t unfrnrshed on a 2 acre lot m/1. one
mrle west of Vrnlon on Jac kson Road Has a large
patro and a double garage 32x32. well water woth
county waler avarlable Over 1700 SQ It of hv1ng
space ready to move m llsled at $54,900
#426

TWO ACRES MI LW/ £XTRA GOOD CONDITIONED
14x70 MOBIL£ HOME
Set on permanent lounda lron w1th e•pando,
screened rn porch, sun porch and deck added to
make a fr ne permanent dwellmg Also 16x24 storage burldmg Localed m Evergreen on Pine Hill
Cemetery Rd Gao den aoea and other burldmg lol
All lor $32.000
#3 15

SPRING VALLEY HOME
wartrng for your hvrng pleasure at 503 Oak orr,e
overlookrng hrll s and valley along Rt 35 Full ba
sement. drvrded, wood s lo ~e natura l gas lorced
arr , crly water and sewer 1'h baths. 3 bedrooms.
hvmg room , con11en1ent k1tchen w1th dtnmg area,
lrreplace Nrce yard , landscaped , len ced area and
storage burldmg
Assumable loan Askrng
" $61,000 lmmedrate possessiOn
#300
IS

ENJOY THE QUIET, SHADE TREES , FRESH AIR
FRESH VEGETABLES FROM THE GARDEN AND
- =m.SH.AILDF COUNTRY LIVING~"iii-.c-'~""'-"'---'-'
1 acre to ~TacreS: Homellas'newOOen c~bt·
PROPERTY!
nets rmproved bath , new roof and spoulrng,
Owners res1dence plus 2 rentals or rent all 3
paroled, also new fence County waler rn house
Bnck twm smgle-1 srde has 3 BRs. LR, OR,
16'x80' shed and other outburldmg I ac prtced
krt che n and bath, lull basement. olher srde has 2
at $22,800 Buy al l 69 acres for $31.800 Partral
BRs, LR, krtchen and bath 2 sto ry Ira me wrt h 3
fmancmg avarlable
#
BRs,
krlchen and bath Owner may help frnance!
347
#211

#211
OWNER WILLING TO SACRIFICE
That means savmgs to you Very coz~ and anrac·
trve bl-level so close to town but on a quret tleadend streel. Home oilers three large bedrooms,
one and half baths , a«ractrve krtchen wrlh eat·m
bar and dmmg area Hardwood floors accent
home mcely as does brrck frre pla ce rn famrly
room Large deck, gara ge and buyers proteclron
Reduced to $54 ,900

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MOVE UP A NOTCH
To lh rs marntenan ce free bnck ranch Beautrlul
home rnsrde and out 3 BRs, large deluxe eat-rn
krtchen wrth oak cabmets and double oven, IIi
bath plus shower rn baseme nt. fmrshed famrly
room rn basement w/ fp, hvmg room w/ wood
burner, 2 car garage, all on 2 3 acre lot overlook ·
mg Rt. 141 1ust mmutes fr om lown. Owner anxr·
ous to sell or tyrade. Assumable low mterest loan
#108

#243

IN GALLIA COUNTY

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WISEMA~S A
HOUSE so WORD

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OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS!
Lrve lrfe at rts ful lest rn one of the county 's most
popular nerghborhoods Thrs I '~ yr old home provrdes 4 bedrooms, sunken hvrng room wrth cathe·
dra l cerlrng and 3 lrvmg levels. Srtuated on 1 6
acres. fronts on Charolars Lake. ha s boal dock,
garden area , butldrng for pony or other anrmal
Just a few mmules from shoppmg area, hospta l.
crty and a new elementary school under construe·
tron. Oon 't 1ust look and admrre. make an oiler!
• Owner wants to S&lt;!ll rmmedrately" Now $99 ,900

#406

Ike WISttlllrl. Broker 44HI96

CALL EVENING
OR B. J.
Assoc. 245-527&amp;
Assoc. 446-4240
446-3643 CAll: =.Ew:=: =:::~
Clyde walker.
Hairston,

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'

�27. 1986:
71
S URI'LUS-Corhort- Army
Qlothing.lined denlmjacketl
t2·1.00, 14 oz denim ptntt
t1 0 .00, D acron intulated

BOOTS, lnoull tod. buckle.
rl,lbber gum. leather army
issue surplut, kfdt camou -

Toughest pair
on the block

fl ege, me"'' army greent.·

heavy insulated underwear.
Mma pric:::es indefinite. Sam · army field jackets. · Sam
.· s o merville 's, East · Somerville' s Surplus. call
304-875·3334. .
· Ravenswood, Old Rt. 21
~overall s .

$26 .00, all tina·

· North, Fri. Sat, Sun, 1 :00-

.7:00 PM, FREE OELIVERY.
. 304-676-3334.

..•lose

w~ight,

feel grea~.
: Herbal nutrition and weiQht
. loee plan. Also complete
· Franklin • tove 8a Ziegler oil
:. heater with tank. Call 614 -

. 367-7695, Addison. Oh .

· :uoed R-65 · Ditch Witch
Trencher with hoe and New
·Holland loader, 614-694-

:7842 or 614-894-5006.

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
w i ndows. ll'n1els. ate .
Claude Winters, Rio 4_rande,

D. Call 614-245-6121 .

Block, brick . m ortar and
masonry tupplies . Mou'ntain

State Block. Rt. 33. New
2222.

new electric wheel

' Antique wood bed refin : i shed 6ft headboard
• $100.00 . New queen size
' Bemco mattress and springe
; $200.00 . New t wivel up·
. holetered chair $50.00. Ze·
· ·nith 19in black and white TV
: $50.00 . Zenith stereo with
. wood cabinet $&amp;0.00. 9x12
· wool rug $35 .00 . Early
' American table lar11p
' S10 .QO. Microwave oven
. • 'Ill n'(i- ;;g :v-1.7.'"'·-;;;:;~ -; a.

2608 .
F ~~~

: : !e.

H~~ 2!"·-- :;"C" !' ! e ~!e

wesher $90. 304 -6762135.
Early American 3 pc . living
room suite. 2 tables $100.

all. 304-882-3581 .

304-882-

WEST

duck
led a low heart.
and cashed her K·Q. clubs and
of diamonds, East having discarded
his low hearts. If East bad foreseen
.the end position, be . would have
unblocked his hearts. He needed to
keep a low heart and throw a high
one, playing his partn~r for the jack,
but sometimes the strain of a major
championship causes careless errors.

Boarding all breeds. Heared
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Do berman puppies;
Stud Service. Call614 ~ 446 -

7796.

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call

814·387-7220.

Profesi '

77 Cutlass Salon, new paint,
111 extr11, extra aharp, new

+9
SOUTH

IPOI't fldioll,

• Qe&amp; 5.2

12.886 Of boot

offer. Call before 1 or after
6. 448-2544.

\OK 107

tAlC

speed ,

Priceie

Real Estate Gen11ral

72

A· 1 shape.

Trtfl:ks for Sale

ENTERPRlSE ASSN.)

Dragonwvnd Cattery Ken -

nal. CFA Himalayan , Persian
and Siamese kittens . AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614 ·
446- 3844 after 7PM .
AKC Labrador Retriever
puppies. Whelped 12 -4 -84,
Champion bloodlioes . Call

614-867-3773.

American Pit Bull puppies.
UKC Reg . .Purple Ribbon

bred. Call 61'4-379-2469.

2 AKC Reg . female PoOdle
puppies . Call 614 - 388 -

56

Pets for Sale

Reg . Minature silver Poodle
pups, had shots. Call 304-

882-3672 '

., ..

top; 6 cyl. , 3 spd .• alum.

57

Musical
.........
._..........

Console cohcert Wurli1:zer
pianO . sable sherry, good
condition , $1 , 800 . Call

742-3147.

446-4426 .

AKC Siberian Husky 8 wks.
old, black S. white female .
had shots . S150. Call 614·

For sale 10 yr. old EvereH

piano. Excellent con d . music

949-2779 after 5PM.

included. Asking $1.000.
Call 446-3145 .

Registered miniature silver
poodle· pups, had shots.

A Conn trumpet for sal~ .
nice. 830 .00 . Five string

Phone 304-882-3672.

Hay for sale. Call 614-992·

banio, $76 .00.' Call 614949-2801 .

Real Estate General.

63

6533.
Purina 500 No. Super

Block• 888.60. Yauger

Farm Supply. Rt. 36 South·
olde, WV. ·

Livestock

_,40!! !b .. · P~r!::!'!!!~!'! m!!r~.
1200 lb. Belgium colt, ear

71

Autos for Sa.le

model and newer used cars.
·Smith Buick-Pontiac, 191 1

Eastern Ave:, Gallipolis. Call

$1 .75 bale. Call446-4053.

eal Estate Gene•al

THE WHOLE
COUNTY,. WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WOIILD?
A1k loursolf This Quodion-Then Ust With Us
•Willis I. Leadingham. Realtor. Ph. Home 44.6-9539

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

Call 448-2322.

NEW
- Immaculate 2 bedrm. brick home. Krtchen
recenty remodeled, modern appliances. Full basement central
A.C., nice garden area. Price $55,500.00. Call for appointment!!
UPPER RIVER RD. - 3-4bedroom home, wbtp, 2 baths, 3-ear
garage, mobile home hookup on 1&amp;. tot Own!r Interested 1n
tradingfor small bu~ness or Will ~I outngh). Pnce $41.5oo.OO.

76

H. ftoor space. Sprinkler system. Completely carpeted. Serv~e

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2 ACRES PLUS NICE
COUNTRY HOME .
large 12 room remodeled
home. 6 bedrooms, 2 baths,
with modern kitchen. Home
covered with carefree alu minum siding. Thermopane
windows, 2 sundecks, tuel
011 FA lurnace with a woodburner insert. 4 car garage
and numerous . storage
bldgs. 2.093 acres. Rolling
level land. A real Coun try
GeJJtleman Home. Phone

now.

.,....

-;

ESTATE! FINANCING
AV~1ILAIILE - EXCEllENT TERMS - Cape
home offers 3 BRs, 2 balhs, kitchen v.ith
.eye-level oven. dinette; livrnglllom hasbeamed
ceilings, utility room, double garage. storm
windows, woodburmng stove, city school
district Additional land can be purchased. Call
for an appointment ·

r- FARMER'S FARM - One of the area's better
~ farms. 101 acres .m/ 1, ~Is of Symmes Creek

bottom land. pond, new tences, ~rge barn
:&amp; several other buildings, ~rge tobacco base'
-o mod. 3 BR home. 2 baths, located on Cadmus
:c Crossroads. Call for more 10formation.

c:::

en
,
.-en
....

COMMERCIAl BUILDING - 62xBO all steel
conslruction w~h fireproof insulation, has
overhead crane. oftice and bath. Formerly used
tor boat sales and repai r. l ocated across lrom
~~~:;ti~~i~~i;~~ed with access to,Ohio River.

·REDUCED TO $44,900- HILLTOP SUBDIVISION - 3 BR home features kitchen, fiving
room. dining room, lamily room, fireplace, gas
heal central air and carpeting, 9%assumable.
A STYLE OF .ITS OWN - describesthis lovely
whrte bricl&lt; home with 3i00 SQ. H., 3 or 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, 20x40 FR, dining room,
kitchen with OW, displ., microwave and trash
compactor. intercom. ceni'al air, 2 car garage,
utility bldg. deck and a20x40 pool. Beautifully
landscaped.
200 ACRES. M/ l, FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - ApproK. 65 acres tillable and 135
acres woods. Comfortable two story home
offers 4 BRs. bath, kitchen, living room. family
room, two fireplaces. barn, 2 large screened
porclres lovely quiet setling_

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED! ·OWNER
SAYS SEll THIS MONTH!- Rio-Cent~nt
Rd. (Cherry Ridge) AtlllfOX. 75acres woodland,
;i! GALLIA'S BEST LAND BUY _ PRice reduced
fronts on 2 roads, county water available. $250
c: to $87,500! - Former diary farm - 7 rm. 2
per acre.
y&gt; story house, several bUildings. 180 acres, more
ADDISON TOWNSHIP - 8.8 acres more or
or tess, located on Northup-Patriot Rd. near
less, vacant land on Bulavitle-Porter Rd.
Northup.
•
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Eleclricity, septic lank, spring. rural water
!!l VACANT FARM lAND - Springfield Twp., 84
availabl~ Asking $10,900.
acres, Mit, level and rot11ng land. ApproK. 33
lOTS FOR SALE _ 100x600 lot on Raccoon
acres tillable, remainder woods.
='--'-'~~=~~===~·=
_jndudes.water lao..otectric.and.seotic.tank.Call
GREENFIELD TWP. - 74 ACRES _ -;;;;-;r~~ for more informatiOn-:-~·
::;:i tess. Tobacco base, i6K20 shed, 34x40 barn.
: Pnce has beenreduced and owner financingis
available.

..!

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_________

BRAND NEW DUPI£X- Great INVESTMENT
for the buyer' located on Graham School Rd.
Each unit offers 2 BRs, living room. bath,
kitchen with stove. refri&amp;. OW and displ ..
laundry, large carport, central air and storage
area.
103 ACRE. M/ l SPRINGFIELD TWP. ApproK. 96 A. tillable land. older home has 5
BRs, bath. LR, kitchen. cou nty water. 40K60
P.Oie bldg., 40x60 tobacco barn, various other
oulbuildings.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED - Approx. one
mile Iromtown, lhis ~d er oome has had some
remodeling. 2 BRs. kitchen. LR 14 1hd5 \7
dimng room, bath, part basement one ca r
garage. Level lawn.
'
~.

THIS COULD BE YOUR PERFECT HOME! 10%FINANCING - FIXED RATE - 20 YRS.!
- This home offers 4 8Rs, 2 baths. kitchen
w/ range and eye-level oven. l5K48 LR
f~repoce, woodburning stove, 6K40 front
porch, I car garage, s1orm windows, nice ltat
garden area. city school district.
·

~o;;

GUYAN TOWNSHIP -lOBacres
or less
located south ol Merce rvi l~. ApproK. 20 -A.
tillable. Balance woods, tobacco base. Owner
v.ill help finance.

f

road. All woods and brush. $8 900
' ·

-~
-:z:_,
r-

YOU'LL BE DELIGHTED... with this 3 BR bi-levet
located just minutes from town. ~ so features
2'h baths, lR. kitchen, carpetin&amp; heat pump,
ely schoo district CAll lor more information.
REDUCED TO J35,000 - NEAR HOUER This ranch slyle home offers 3 BRs, k~chen,
22K24 FR, LR, bath, cenlral air, woodburning
stove. electric heat 16•28 unattached garage.
KC school district
PRICED REDUCED T0$59,500- 3BR ranch
on II acres more or less. Pond full basement.
lamily room with woodburne~. liVIng room
equipped kttchen, d111ing room, 1~ batQs:
attached 2 car garage.
BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY- 132 acres mostly
clean hill pasture, &amp;OOd fences. I \\ ~orY home,
large barn, tobacco base,fronts on3roadsnear
Mudsock Price reduced to $56,900.

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~ MAXE US AN OFFER - OWNERS

HA;.

::E MOVED TO FLORIDA- And would like lo have
their home saM this month. like new split level
~ located on Debby Drive and offers approK.
m sq. It of living area plus2 car garage and
one of the area's nK:est pools.

OWNER MOVED TO FLORIDA
DRASTICALlY REDUCED THE PRICE OF THIS
HOME- Will finance with 25%down and 10%
interest on lhe balance. Victorian style 3
bedroom also offers I \! baths; kitchen wtth
range, reflig_, OW, and displ., ~undry room,
living room, family room. carport. unattached
garage, 16•32 fenced pool. alum. ~ dint
Attached beauty shop would help mal\e the

:c

c:
.,
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK HOfllE1 Then th~ may be just lhe one. Conven~ntly
located on Rl'35 West this home offers alarge
living room, dining room, 3 bedrooms, laundry
room, I \\ baths, equipped kitchen carpetin&amp;
central ar and a 2 car garage. '

LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOIEI - 3 BR !::

ranch style oome offers til, kilchen, bath and ~
utrllty room, gas IN, new sidin&amp; city schools
Call for more information.
·

pickup

lOOK WHAT SO UTILE WILL BUY
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, lovely wooded country selling si tuated
on State Route, lots, tots more. Possi ble land contract.
#621
35'x35' GARAGE &amp; 3 LOTS
2 mobile horne or building s1tes with all uti lilies available-3
water taps. Garage wit.h air compressor and other ma tor air
tools, spray nainti ng gun , etc. Bottle gas furnace heat in garage with 13' high door. 2 nice landscaped tots ready for mobile home, doublewlde or build a new home and operate a
body sh op or mecha nic garage app ro K. 'h mile off highway
35 west of Gallipolis. Busi ness with your home nearby.
#624
FREE NATURAL GAS, 140 ACRES
Approx 10 miles from Gallipolis- lots ol Raccoon Creek
frontage- approx. 30 acres Raccoon Creek bottom land. To·
ta l of approx. 60 acres tillable with lobacco base. Nice
40'x60' barn. 6 rooms, 3 bedroom home with free natural
gas, to heat your home in winter and cook your food. Lots of
fruit trees. Nice country.setling. See this one .
' #419

#616
.

79 Motors Homes

Jam" Bov• Wltfltr Service .

Plumbing

Aloo pool• filled . Coli 114258 -1141 or 614· 441 ·
1171 Of 614-448-7911 .

.
BUILDING LOTS
21ots In Bidwell area: Suitabte tor mobile home or buiid your
own home. Rural water . Buy both for $2,800.
#608
VACATION CAMP BY BLUE LAKE
Owner financing, sundeck, rural water, septi c system , electric. Buy it wth camping trailer or without, concrete pad.
Great fishin g! Buy and move right in. _
#584
lOW DOWN PAYMENT- OWNER FINANCING
Are you look for a 2 bedroom home overlooking the Ohio
River with little maintenance. Beg1nner. home or retiremenl
home. We have it.
·
#260
B ACRES
Within 10 minutes drive to downtown Gallipolis. C1 ty school
system. Has hookup lor mobil ehoJll.e, Galli~ ryr~ l ~ at er.
electric and sepliJ: lank. Nightlight on pole. 200 foot frontage
on Graham School Road. 'Timber. Building sites. Call now.

#477

FIHWOOD FOI SALE
You Pick Up 125 looMI
Wo Doli11• '30 looMI
175
looMI

Now arrange the clrclacllettBJs to

form tne·aurpt'lse answer, as aug·
gested by I he aboYe cartoon.

81

8t Campers

uptic t1nks. la~dscaping .
Call anytime 8 '14 - 446 ~
41537, James L. Davison , Jr.
owner.

Home
Improvements

New • Reupholateuid furniR Sa M Furniture
Manufacturing, St. Rt. 7.

ture .

Crown City, Oh. Call 814·
268 -1470. call Eve. 448~438 .

~~:= !~!!!!2!"!~!"~-!!

R~

•
•
•

MOBILE HOME LOT - located approK. 2 miles belowbeka.
$4.00000
..

•

NICE 2 or 3 BEDRM. COlONIAL DUTCH HOME -localed
across lrom new courthouse. EKcellent location for attorney's
office'

•

BEAUTIFUl BRICK 3 BEDROOM HOME with 2\? acres, 7 yr;
old. Just oft Bidwell-Rodney Rd. Elec. heat pump, fireplac~
cent vacuum system. $70,000.

•

•• 3 BEDROOM HOME wilh 17.9 acres, situated
Huntington Twp. Price $45,000.00.

•

w~hin Sec. 13.

VtNTON: EXTRA ClEAN - . Cleah, cool and convenient 2
.bedrm. home located along Ma1n Street Relri&amp; and -many
other items ot furniture will go witn house. Ideal for newlyweds
and~riced · at only $22,500.

•
•
•

e

2 LOTS ALONG BEAR RUN RD. with Raccoon Creek frontage.
$7,500 each.

•
•

2 BEDRM. COTTAGE. located along White Ave. Buy now for
$8,500.00.

•
•

. VICTORIAN BRICK HOME - Lower River Road near Clay
School. Outbuildings and 7 acres Buy for $37.500.

•

••
••••
••
•

Beginning ol the

y,.,

Spe~ltlt

VINTON: Brick 1-ftoor building. lormerly used for ban~
Reduced to $42.000.00.
VINTON: Commercial building. with 2 apls. upstairs.
Formerly used as hardware store. Reduced to:
$28,000.00'
APPROX. TWO AND ATHIRD ACRES v.ithincity limits.
Zoned commercial. Along Rl 7. Price reduced to
$20,000.00. .
3 BEDROOM HOME - Ranch style, tg. carport
adapted for woodburner, fenced yard and in-ground
sv.imming pool. Price reduced to $38,000.00

--~==-=

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•

•

I
•

.

H &amp; S Home lmprovementa

304 - 675 ~

OON'T OVERLOOK THIS BARGAIN in Eureka. 2
bedroom oome .with 2 baths and ~Is of room for
expansion.localed just off Rl 7 near dam. Reduced to
$20,000.00.

I

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••
••
••
••
••
••
••
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••
••
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•
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2 BEDROOM MOBILE• HOME located along Hazel Ridge Rd. 25 •
acres, roore or less. v.ith nice ga rden area and wooded area.
Priced $27,500.
•

w~h extra lot Buy all for

NEW USTING - 3 bedrm. home along SmttherS St. 15'x20'
family rm. Someappliances with home. Buy all for $28,000.00
NEW LISTING - 109 acres located in lawrence Co. near
1.ecta . Costs less than
$300 pe&lt; acre.
'
. Buy now for $32,000.
SEW~ YOUR REAl ISTAn IS IIG IUSNSS....
AU AN EXPIRIEIKED WOOD. MALlY

•
•

1 5' track door 8a man door:

16238 erected·.

- - - - - - -.
GENE 'S OEEP STREAM
CARPET CLEANING . Oper·

roofing , seamle1s gunera,
storm wi!'dows, overhang .·

scotchguard. FA EE

. BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfe~ime gua rantee. Local reference•
-J'umiit"iiit:.=; Prn w¥tlmitii.

Call collect 1-614-2370488. 9 a .m . to 5 p.m .

Roger• ~ Basement

Watarpr9of1ng .

eted

~Y owner . Qeodorizers·

R oN·s Television Service.

Specializing
Motorola,

in Zenith end
Quazar. and

houoe cello. Cell 304-676·
239~_or 8,1_4~4~~,2.46.4 .

RINGi:ES'S SERVICE. experienced carpenter, electri·
cien , mason, painter. roofIng !including hot rar

application! 304-675-2088
or 876· 7368.

-SUNDAY--PUZZ-LER

446-4206.
Sonseerhay.
Bonnie L Stutes
(Sonny) Garnes Cathy Clark Burdette
Broker ·
Assoc.
Assoc.
446-4206
446-2707 Evenings 388-8118 Evenincs

•••
••

.cabin you'll
cozy ll't'ing
country style
old . setting o~ a

e~ti ­

matao. Coil 614-992-8309
.. 814-742-2211.

L ESTA-TE

WE HAVE A HOME AND PERFECT LOCATION for a family. •
localed almost across from Washington School. 3 bedrm. •
home, 2 baths, 2 kttchen&gt; nice lot which is Wide and deep • •
enough for &amp;.-den and swimming pool. Needs some work

NEW liSTING - 2 bedrm. cottage
· $29.90000

814·332 -9746 Collect .
Winter opl.: 30X40X9 whh

vinyl 8t aluminum siding,

LOCATED WITHIN THE VIllAGE Of RODNEY -:-- 2 bedrm.
cottage with 86'x202' lot. Naqas FA furnace,_King coal and
woodburner, sept~ tank, Gallipolis c1ty school d~tnct Pnced to
seil' $20,000.

•
•

•
•

Home
Improvements

PURCHASE FROM I TO 5 ACRES with tlis 3 bedrm. tarm
. home located aklng R\. 218, Harrison Twp. Priced from
$50.000 to $75.000.

••
••

e•

81

Real Estate General

BRAND NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME v.ith family room and format • ·
dining room. located within Ptanls S.D., plenty private, nat. gas;
f
wbfp. Price: $59,000.00.

•

#574

truck .

6761 .

e

•
•

LOVE THE COUNTRY? '

~= ==-~==

MITCHELL ROAD - GREEN TWP. - .5 acre
m/1, county water available.

]1578

117 A. ClEARED ROLLING LAND
ApproK. 40' A. lillable. ·60 A. pasture. tile block barn , approx.
40'K60' equipment sheet and lots of other buildings, 4 cherry
trees, 3 apple, grape arbor. Stream ltows through property .
All mineral rights go. 6 room home, 3 BR. basemenl; storm
doors and windows. Built-in kitchen cabinets, cook stove and
elec. refrig., fuel oil forced air furna ce. Plenty of water. 2gar.
ages. A real good farm only I ' miles to grocery and school.
Call now.
11617

.,....

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c:

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c:

:&amp;

ADDISON ~ TWP ~.o- ..Aoorox. 7 m1le Jr.om __ _
~lijjOiiS: 39\l acres, l'iill lronls onToWnship•- - ·rr=· .

i::

-

:c

• PRICE REDUCED TO $59,900! -Owner has
bought another home and must sell th~ lovely
3 BR ranch on Debby Drive. Approx. 1700 sq.
ft. dining rm., LR. FR. kitchen, new custom
drapes, carpetin&amp; woodburning ~ove. deck,
central air, natural wood s idi n~
·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Wanted grill and right front
fendertofitF100 1974Ford

elevator. Modern in every way'! Financing available toqualified
purchaser.
NEW LISTING - 3 Bedrm. home outside city situated along
picturesque Willow Or...formal dining room, 21'xl5' family •
room, 2 baths, WB FP, fenced -in backyard. Modern kitchen •
with many amenities. Priced to sell. $58,500 .
NEW USTtNG - 3 bedrm. rottage k&gt;cated along Central Avent
Nat gas heat city waler and sewer. Pnce $24,000.
. •

•
•
•

Real Estate General

30 ACRES M/ L QUALITY
HOfllE &amp; BARN
Top Quality 9 room house
with 7 rooms carpeted. 4
bedrooms. bath and full basement plus. 3 car garage.
Good barn approx. 30 'x40'
plus chicken house approx.
12'K30'. Approx. 10 acres
tillable and 20 acres pasture
with large pond . Beautiful
location with half mile fron tage on blacktop state high way.
·
#598

.

J

Call 614-387 -0409 or 8.14·
367·7244 .

II . COM!E~!At !i!DG.: Dm11r.!!O\I!!'! GaN!po~s. ~.ppro~.-4,/J)fJsq•

•• NEW LISTING- Only 5 minutes from Grande, approx. 11
acres, with 3 bedrm. modern home Price $58,000.00.

.

Boals and
Motors for Sale

•
PRICE REDUCED ON 2 BEDRM. HOME located just outside •
_ __city akmg Rl. 141.Jndosed porch. Nice garden area, close to , .
city. $31.900.00. ·
•
•

_,
:&amp;
_,

B2

Commercial P.ole Bldg1.

Low-line Big John 14 ft .
john boat, 18 HP Mercury
motor with trailer and ace .

owners.

614-448 -2282.

..A

rear

Real Estate General

.&amp;.lllili

story home. Living rm.,
dining rm .• full basement and l woodburning fireplaces . -Lots of
extras!
Located al 614 ht Ave.
mid-60s.

~

·-·~~-

. 75

_!-:: .. (

--·........·---···---..

..n-----·• u........;___

P 'i

742-3171 ·

t.i .. d
lltmiStll

Pomeroy. 814·912·2284.

Servtces

~~

1978, F1 60 Ford pickup, ·
34.600 milee, tor inform•·
tion .call 304-876-3713. ·

1·4 P.M.

TOP CASH peid for '80
sale.

Co.

Sciuore . Febrl c Shop .

I

12,000 mileo, $6,800.00 .
304 -678 -2229.

3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2

5PM, 446-4745.

Hay and straw for

~~ST-~ ~GS-"'&lt;+

lEWlNG Mochlno
oorvlco. Authorized linger
8oteo • lorvlce 8horpon

,

Good-1 Excavating, basements, footers, drivaweya,

814- 367 -

Front rack,

in. 6 cyl, standard shift,

OPEN HOUSE

Transportation

3020 John Dee,e Tractor
gas 1968 model. Also misc.
farm equipment . Call after

Hav 8t Grain

For

r1~

c,u

._Ita.

Business
Services

Vainaha 175 three·

446 ~ NEW LISTING - In town location ·includes 3
·
dimng iiionl;iram·&amp;-baserrieiif. t_omilcar'
at $29,900. Call for details.
•

Real Estate General

corn &amp;2 .76 bu. Call 4462563.

64

body fair. a660.00aliis. Call
814-986-4174.

$1.76 per bale. Call 814843-6390. .
.
. '84 Ford Truck 180; 300 cu

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock

3 akc registered · Shetie
pups, 2 males end 1 female.

0 o ,_,. ....... I I ' " ' ' 0 . . . .

Asking $100 .00 . Call 614-

Conditioned hay for sale.

For sale or trade. 81 Cutlass
Supr'eme. 304 -675-6335 .

7209 or 875-6631 .

$75. each. 304-676-2762.

1976 GMC. '% ton pick -up.
Run1 good, good rubber and

wheoito .
0612 .

BMR 444 - OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL!.3 BRranch situated
on 2.35 acre lot m/ 1. Poss ible8%loan assumption to qualified
buyer. Includes tg. eat-in kitchen, separate, utility room, lamily
room with- w.b. fireplace. Call for an appointment tbday'

sliding back

Hay 8t Grain

64

Blue Doberman . 304· 675-

.

ADBA Registered Pit Bulls
for sale. Have been wormed .

59 For Sale or Trade

I [)

Eleotr!c•l
R•frlg•r•tlon

6

completed ume

.

~

Two Jeeps V6 Buick eng.i nes

1978 "Jeep CJ -6. block oofl

ln~nv ~vAn~::.~~~:!~~~~~:~~~~~:1~~:~:;.~::~~~::::::~~~j;el~=~- ~~!:~~~~~~

throwing a heart, and

Rotory or cable toot' drilling.

Beth Null 245-9507
Steve McGhee
446·1255

a2200.00. Call 614-9928841 .

304-882-2262 after 3:00.

air

11 .600 .00 for both. '71
Comero 11 .000.00. 304·
875-3087.

1978 · Molibu Claooic. Re-

1979 Renault, 8kCellent gas
mileage. also 23" color TV.

ahock1 ,

H.D .

•8eoo.oo. Call 614-742·
2944.

!NT

to . her eight. When sbe got off lead
with a low heart. East was left with a
singleton heart honor, which won the
trick, and the 10·7 of' spades. End
played, be had to lead Into Kathy's Q.
9 of spade8. Nortb-Bouth's excellent

)

1983 Ford Ranger 4x4, 6
cylinder, 4 speed, sport .
Plck•ge. •m·fm stereo. tun
rOof. roll bar. new wheels .
minl -mudders. like new.

lfoolb

motor.

...

romovol. Colt 304· 171·
1331 .

&amp; Heating

3 bedroom.
ing rm., full
places. Loto of

needo head job, ooklng
1360. Call446-3142.

built

I I I
\. r.-:.."":..- -

'I. c-I:·N·ou -_j..
I I V'
conditioner. Call446·2641 .

good

9penJng lead: +5

Fetty TrH Trimming. atump

1981 Dodge • ,., ..,;
'A ton pickup. 360 V-8, 4

1971 Yolkswagon body in
1hape, also motOr

+KQS

~g~7~A~O~-:·:"::·:·-~·=·==·~;:~~::::::::~!:~:::i~~~~::::::=::::i:::::::::::::::::::l~~~~-~,-•o_n~.ca__
~614~

.

814·3!18-9708.

- to.dufn-iDY's ace:

eilities. English
· niel puppies. Call 61

8738.

dUal tanka. more extr... Call

opood Schwoln bike. Colt
814 -241·1131, aok for
John.

+KI0763
\OAQH&amp;
+to 7

· Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Weot · Nol't~ Eul
POSB I+

1980 Chovy 4o4 PS. PB, 4
opd.. V-B.. AIIII-FM rodlo .

78 Pontiac Gr..-d Prbl:. opal
ring wtth dl•monde. 10

EAST

.J!3Z
tQ654
+JS 651

Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS

1·11-15

U

Home
lmprov1ment•
•

1171 Chovrolot llo1or, 380
111glno. 4 whHI drivo, ••to ..
IZOOO. Col1448·7141 .

1980 Chov. Cllotlon 4 dr.
hotchbocll, I Oyi., IUtO
tr~~na. fr. wh. drive, ~c.
gaugea, locel owner, good
cond . CoN 814-246-6820
· otter 8PM.

+AH
\Ot
+UBS2 ·
+AI07% ·

...

By James Jacoby
. The winners of the North American·
Mixed Pairs Championship In San
Diego 18Jit November were Kathy Suigrove and Larry Rock, both of whom
hail from towns in the Cleveland,
Ohio, area. Today's deal shows
Kathy's competence as qeclarer.
With a quick·trick eount of two,
East opened a marginal .hand, trading
on his 5-5 shape in the majors. .Kathy
overca,lled one no-trump, and her ·
partner quickly raised to three.
West led a club, which declarer
won with the 10 in. dummy.· She

55 Building Supplies

Haven . W. Va.

NORTH

V1n1. 4 W.O.

73

Real Eat1te General

Autos for Sale

w.

Ohio-Point

_

i
lot. C1ty schools.
GOOD AS NEW - 3 bedroom rillch. Everything is in bpiiJ!l shii!M!.
carpetin&amp; windoWs and !Don, paint. paper, etc. DwnE!' is movms away and
needs to sell this home. NOW!! l.Mng room, large kitchen and dining area.
Garage Qty schools. Good neighlxnhood. l'rlced in the 40o.
-

STATELY HOME- .658 acre ol woodland and 1.6 ocres m/1can also Ill
purchsed. Formal entry, l1ving rcrm and formal d1mng toom, moderr

kitchen, Iamity room wl wb fireplace. 3.BRs. 2 baths, 2 oar garat!O. 8'11
interest rate assumable. Shown by appomtrnent Pnced 1f1 60s.
GREEN ACRES - Newly carpeted 3 il«&lt;room, modernkitchen and dining

room cximb. with slid1ng doors, IIVJng room, bath, laundry room, sm~e car
garage. City schods.. Gas heal ~r conditioning.
8.6 ACRES - More or less', 3 bedrQom mobile hor:ne •. illso ~ ad~i·
tiona! mobile home hook·ups . l(vger Creek Sc hdo! D1stncl Pnced 1n

the 20's .
6.7 ACRES- More or less ol .acant land. 25x50 building wlconcrete floors.. Gas is available. Owner willing to take tra iler in on trade.
City schools. Call tor more details.

smtNG INlo ACRES OF IIOOOLAND.- Coolemorary home le.lluring a

sdarium w/ hot tub wrapped by an open fOfmal living and dining room
w/atrium doors, massive stooe fireplace. a roodern complete kitchen and a
briakla~ nook. 2~ baths, 3 bedrooms wl master surte, ~~ing doors 1o a
patiO area. Laundry and mud room. Unfinished basemool 2 car garage.

67 Abstract being
131 Tumble
69 Former 1\lsaian
· 132 01 a country:
1 Cooko'""""
suffix
70 Fruit
133 lllllchelangelo
hot coats
71 Edible . soulpture ·
6 Sharpen
72 AbOve: poe111t
135 Bone of body
11 Sufferer from
74 Evaluateo
138 Simian
Hansen's dleease
76 Haul with effort
· 139 Ftytng aeature
1e Caught..- or
77 s-1 coetlng·
1-40 Gr-lettiW
King Lear
78
Strike
141 Burrne native
21 Lasao
79
Chlelex""'f'lves
142 Compass point
22 Self-esteem
82 Departs
•
143 Negative prefix
23 Lyric poeril
84 Vegetable: pt. .
· 144 Clvlllnlury
24 Wear away
85 Soaks up
, 145 Part or flower
25 Ptomlfe
86 Dry
147 Sits for portrait
26 Newly-m&amp;rfled
88
Let
tt
stand
149 llllusic: as ...tu8n
man
89 Bristle
150 Moving part
28 Forgive
90 Backbone
of motor
30 At that time
E~~-y- - - - - 92 Declares
152 Raise the spirit of
-~
·94 Encroacl\e!l"'- - - -,r 5- 4 Wilnlhtji · - ACROSS

35 Fabulous bird
36 Aght be1ween two
37 Suitable
38Condensed
mols1u&lt;e
40 Medicinal plants
42 Prohibit
43 Mountain lake
44 Strikes
45 Before
47 W&lt;lttng tablets
49 Musical instrument
50 Mournful
51 Sandy waste
54 Greenland
settlement
55 Title of respect
56 Trifles
59 Rodent
.60 Angto-Saxoo
money
62 Hermit
64Jump
85 Exclamation
88 King of Bashan

99NOooe

100 Dance step
102 Force air through
nose
103 Dine

104 Doll..- bill
105 Scorch
106 Ll._s
108 Female~
109 Earth goddess
110 Symbol for
tellurium
111 Rip
112 Solldlftes
114 Voungst..116 Sudsy brew
117 Sailing vessels
119 Droop
120 St&lt;ol&lt;es
122 Part of furnlica
124 Morae! •
125 Pellet
• 126 Suppltcattoo
128 Pekoe, e.g.
129 Fog

158 Breathe loudly in
steep

159 Hinder
160 Lock or hair
161 Periods of time

18 Proceed
19 Make-suitable
20 Birds' homes
27 Whiskey
29 Pitching stats.
31 Chk:kan

9i Jury list
92 Aoat In air
93 Oeclared
95 Fly 8811
96 King or birds
97 Beef animal

36 Challenge

99 Meadows

37 Opera by v ..dt
39 Dlractloo
40 Courageous

101 Russian plain
105 Clan
106 Brick lanai
per900
107 Break suddanly
41 Surfeit
111 Ripped
42 Command
112 Mound
43 Heavy volume
113 Walk
44 Mustcatlnstrumeot 115 Facts
46 COnoemlng
116 ArmadHto
48 Sour
49 Chapeaus
118 Soft mud
50 Ast"'lsk
119 Untamed

--,--

53 Walks on
55 Funeral songs
56 Fasten
57 Grain

58 Cleaning
substances

DOWN

1 Intertwine ·
2 Wash lightly
3 Grain
4 Kind of type: abbr.
5 Fall behind
6 Trails
7 Disturb

8Edge
9 Hypothetical force
10 Tl11'ough
11 Chrus fruit
12 Heroic event

13 Vessel
14 Revised: abbr.
15Comeback
16 Walk unsteadily
17 Sea eagle

61 Pol&lt;er stake
63 Belabbr
64 Hawaiian wreaths
68 Lawmaker
70Sham ··
71 Gratify
73 Dwell
741111ature
75 Strip of leather
77 Declares
78 Deposits
eo Offsp&lt;tng: pt.
81 Pose for portrait
83 Unit of Siamese
currency
64Whip
87 Leave
89 Scattll'
90 Narrow openings

126 A continent
127 Rants
129 Fiaments
130 Dress protactor
131 E-green tree
132 Chemical
compound

134 Cravat

136 Bury
137 Eoible seoids
t39 Dull per900
'
140 Nickname lor Peter
144 Rocky hill
145 Strol&lt;e genlly
146 Unit of Latvian
currency
147 American esaaylot
148 Declare
149 The urlal
151 As fa• as
153 French article
155 Physician: abbr.
157 Compass point

Vegetable garden and d~rt lrurt trees. Shown by appointment

NORTHUP AREA - 3 BR home. LJ!rge modem eat- ~ kncilen.Fani~ room,
tr.ingroom. office or den . Nice lot aiKI sto~ge bul~in&amp; City schoo&lt;Sliown
by appl Priced klw 50s.
·
LAND CONTRACT - 10% Down Paymen~ 10% Interest Rate - 39.50
acres cA vacant ~nd. Black walnut lots of woodlan~ Awall!ffall. Secluded
and l&gt;'ivate. B~ckiiJI]road. Priced $20,000.
SECLUDED PRIVATI NEIGHBORHOOD within walking distance to
downtown and tity schools. Bfick tri.Jevel home has a form111 entry, Wing
room wrth 'fireplace and ab!ea1htlking view ol the lllio V~&lt;y. Step-saver
_lritrhM ,.nth huiri,in modem__aolliances. den A
wittL tregtare.
btdt~n·4H==i~!9~~=e~~
lxlokcase and half bali . Midd~levit'otteis ma~lf0edirilin
wn1fiuii'oam:&lt;
larie bedrooms. ceranic tiloo ful bath. lower level with t.-ge lamiljroom,
4th bedroom. ~orage are~ and laundry/ OObby room. THis home ills
recently ooen recart&gt;!ed throoghoul Screened-inback porch wih 00~-in
barbecue (Ifill, dou~e carport with slorat!O area. LJ!n~ped lot to accent
the beauty of llis quality home. Give us a call today.
1981 FAIRMONT MOBtlE HOME - 14x52 in e!celent oondmon On a
rented IJf in city school district. Only $9,800.
INVESTMENT PROti£RTY - 641Third Avo 2slory home 111 can be used
as 2 rel'lal&lt; LJ!rge mortem kitchen. J or 4 bedrooms, lor!M dining illll
ivingroom. Nice back palro. Also a 14x70 mo~~ home in !!JOd shape. A
l:llVeroo cor!&gt;"( Priced in the ~ Shown b! appointment only. $450.00
rental.

•

LOCATIO IN COIINTRY - LR: 3 811&gt; kitchen. bath. utiily room, cedar
ponelioi fuly r:arpeted. air Clllld-. ""'"ap~i8nces, washer. dryer,
tarae metal wlbrrOin&amp; garden, 16 acres. 1\11 sellor $32.000.
WID CONTRACT - A-lrame home M .65 acre IJf """' or less, 2r&lt; 3
bedrooms. I ~ balh. living room, IUtchen, utiily room, llird be«oom OOtld
· be used for !amity room. ~ baseml&gt;ll unfirished. 2 refrillerrlor,
washer and ltjer inclllded. Priclll 2111EXCfllENT I.OCATIDII - Wallling distance to city schools. Morie'n 4
bedroom home. 21amity room. 2 bath~ b~~·in kitchen, livina room, lllllY
i1lllm hobby rooll\ worlrsOO~. trui r:att.r. screened.;. porch, cental air, .9
acre lot with prden, lrui trees and grape arbor. Home ills been wei Clled
lor. EllBII!Y ellicienl
Rllfl~- 2mobjo home lois with water. $45.00 per

..

month. Ky20rC!eelr

-district

J

0

I

\

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�-

,:e.-D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.....-.--Local

,Pome~oy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Ptealiant, W,. Va.

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-

January.,27, ·1986

Briefs:--~ Dexter man· pleads guilty to break-in

MLTA gains contract extension
POMEROY - The Meigs Local Teachers Association has
approved another extension of Its contract with the Meigs Local
. l3oat!LofF;s;!ucali\&gt;JUIS.Jl~otiatigris_~!@l~"·--=,.- _ , •• . ----The present contract exptred Jan. 1. but the association approved
an extension to Feb. 1. -the association has now extended the
contract to Feb. 7.
Meanwhile, negotiations continue with meetings among the ·
negotiators Composed of board membi!rs, administrators, teachers
·and the Ohio Education Association· scheduled. for Monday,

~~•~-····!~- \'+'€dn~~y:

cancellations.

Burley allotritent requests taken
POMEROY ~ Requests for the new farm burley
allotments lp Meigs County will be
until Feb. 15.

toha~o

POMEROY-JeffreyA. Rife,20,
owneras5oonaspossible.Thecase
Dexter, entered a volunteer plea of
wassolvedl!YMelgsSheflf!Howard
guilty when he appeared before
Frank. Rife was a.rrfited Monday
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by sheriff's deputli!l ~t!f Miller and
· Judge Charles H. Knlg!lt Thursday . Jlmmer Soulsby; .
. ·
-.arterrioo'n--on · a ""breruiin · and-~lg!:! -!&gt;~'Ide:! &lt;!Uw:: ·a determf. •
enteriligcharge.
nate sentence of six months In the
In a bUI of Information prepared Chillicothe Correction~! Institute to
by the office of Prosecutor Fred W. . Rife, who was remanded . to the
Crow TIJ, Rife was charged in
custody ofthe sheriff,
:
connection with a
and
· Paul Gerard, special Investigator
:for .cro'-':~s office, said Rife was
on
residence on Painter
offense In Indiana and was on
Jan. 12 this year.
probation from that state when he
Breaking and entering Is a felony
allegedly broke into the Davidson
of the fourth degree carrying a
·
·
residence.
possible penalty of six, 12 or 18
Prosecutor
I. Carson
·
Assistant
months in prison and a fine up to
Crow represented the state at ·

from farming.
ProduCl'ts interested In applyilig or seeking more iJlformatlon
sbould contact the Meigs ' county Agriculture, Stabilization and
Conservation Office on the second floor of the Fanners Eank
. Building. The phone number IS 992-6616.
·

.

.

'

Seed packets sold .

.

.

.

Jennifer Sheets.
Kelly A. Thomas, 22, Painter
. Ridge Road, wastoappearlncounty
courttodayoliachargeofrecelvlng
· stolen pro~ as a part of the case.
"'Thoman;as &amp;r!'eSted iateWedncs·
day by Deputies ))on Snyder and '
Brian BisselL
The county court does not have
authOrity to accept a plea on a felony
charge,. but the initial apjiearance Is
-of the ·charge,
po$$ible penalties and hiS various
constlhltlonal rights; to set a date
for a prellmlnal)' hearing and to set
bond, Gerard reports.
. Divorce actions
.
.
In other ·· court action, several
divorce actions were finalized by

granted In Common Pleas court to
·John Krawscz}n and Bette Krawscz:yn, both.ofRacllle.
James ' Kennedy of Middleport ·
has filed suit tgr divorce in Meigs
County .ag;~lnst .Shercy. Kennedy, ·
New Haven, W.Va. The plalnttff
charges gross neglect of duty imd
extreme cruelty.
·
Judgments rendered
State Farm Insurance, Newark,
.· and Danlo;&gt;l P. Riffle and Denise D.
rume, Racme. have filed suit ln-Meigs County Common Pleas Court
. against Pontiac Motor Division,
General MotorS Corp., Cincinnati,
and Smith.-Nelson · Motors . . Inc.,
.p omeroy.
The plaintiffs allege that General
Motors
a recall of 1979

King,
been granted a divorce
Jack
Fr.a ncls King, atsQ of Pomeroy, on
grounds pf gross neglect of duty.
Ruby Ethel Rowell, Reedsville,
has been granted a divorce from
George Powell, Dickinson, Texas,
on grounds of gross neglect of duty
POMEROY - David M. Har- .. recognizance bond at the time and:.. and .extreme cruelty.
was to
back to ·
for
mon, 40, formerly of Parkersburg,
Donna Lee Sie.)&lt;, Rutland, has
.

hm·IPv production and have

.,

-·

....

faulty rear axles and that Smith··
Nelson was negligent in not report·
ing the recall order to Riffle, wbo
had purchased that make and model
of auto on Feb, 3, 1982. On May 24,
1983, the rear. axle of the vehicle
broke without warning while Rif·
fie's daughter Denise was'drlvlng.
The daughter lost control and had an

.

Man sought by Meigs
authorities·located

.. --

~--~c-

Is offering tree packets and ground cover plants for

Ladies

nanki:iig, ·
cl)erry, redosier dogwood, white mulberry, white pine and green ash
tree seedlings lor $7.
The group is also offering quantity bundles of'25 each ofwhiteplne,
Austrian pine, red pine, Norway spruce, scotch pine or black walnut
tree seedlings for $6 each.
· Fifty vetch crowns are being offered for $13. ·This is a (X'rennial
legume With dark green foliage. and pinkish lavendar to white
clusters of flowers' and is good ground cov~ because it chokes out
weeds, resists drought, disease and insects. ·
The selection of tree seedlings and groupd mver being offered does
not Include any plants which are likely to spread or become a
nuisance but should ·encourage wildlife, help -control erosion and
year,

to grand· theft charges In Meigs

failed to appear a bench warrant
f
I
fd
d
..
. _ .
......
of
Gerard reports that Alabama
of Rutland.
.
·
Also In M~igs County Common
. pnson authonlles were unawa1'€ of
And Dale Luther Ha':'e,y, Albany,
Pleas Court, Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co.,
Ha:mbn's . earlier conviction in
has beel' granted _a dtvorce from
Columbus, has been granted a
Metgs_ County, but are now aware
ArleneGayHarve~ . also of Albany,
$2,782.16 judgment from Titomas
. and a detamer h~s been sent to
on gro~nds,of gross negleo::t.o_f duty.
Weaver, Syracuse, for nonpayment
. them. ijarmon Will he t'eturned
A dissolution of marnage was on account.
when he completes hts sentence In · rp;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
.--AIa_ha_m_a_.-·=··~-~------!
·

~itppea'i""'~~a~~~n~~;:;:l;•I;:~ ~~~ is~~£9.
located.
•
·
Paul Gerard, Investigator for of
ProsecutingAttorneyFredW.Crow
m, reports that Harmon is pres·
ently serving a three-year sentence
at the Kilby. Correction Facility In
Mount Meigs, Ala., lor alleged
. grand theft in that state.
Harmon was charged In Meigs
Countv with taking ·a car .belonging_
to Ba:bara lletzlngof Pomeroy. He
was released on a $,'&gt;,00l .personal

~~~~~-~ ~~:f'd.t":,~~~a~~~n..s1:t:;~ ~~~~~~~~ ~h~. a111ou~~ ms
-~~1,.,570~-,~
an

"liME FOR UC,
"A" WAN! AD

'

A guide to loc~
Televi~ion programming
Jan. 27' thru Feb. -2

..

'B"AINGS VOU

READY 'C"ASII

from the Meigs
SWCD Office, 221 W. Second St., second floor of the Farmers Bank
Building, or orders may be mailed lo the Meigs SWCD Ladies
Auxiliary, P .O. &amp;x 432, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. AU orders must be.
received at the office by March 22 and must be prepaid . .

Giovanni's
Pizza
"The Italian Plaea to Be"

Gallia 169 board to meet
GALLIPOLIS -A special mE:eting of the Galli a Cou nty 169 Board
of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities will be held at
5 p:mcThursday ·at·the Fir~t Presbyteriim Ghurchc·51"State-St-,

'

.

-,

In.cludes complete

eart

This Week's Sf'eeial
•18 in. Pizza with two items
• 5 ~.~9 ba,g of Chi!'_s --~$949
•2 hter Soft .llrink
.·

Comprehensive
· · ·Cardiac· ~-···
Rehabilitation

.

Deputy s name corrected
POMEROY - Among those appointed as deputies for taking
recognizance bonds is Donna Powers. A report on the appointments
. recently gave her name as Donna Ward.

WEDNESDAY

$pe~isl

FAMILY NIGHT

•Regular ·Spaghetti
•Salad
•Sm. Drink

•15 in. pizza with
two items
•Pit,her of Pepsi

$undsg

Tax payment deadlitte extended

listi"-gs

'I Begi~ni11g Jan. ,21-Now Accepting Referrals

• Call The Medical Shoppe at 446-2206
' Gene Abels, M_.D., Cardiologist, Medi&lt;al Director
• Timothy Beti, Program Coordinator

$599

POMEROY ;__The deadline for payment of the first half of 1984
real estate taxes has been extended from ,Tan. 31 to Feb. 12, Meigs
County Treasurer George Collins reports.
Trailer tax deadline, also paid at the county treasurer's office, is
Jan . 31. Deadline for purchasing dog tags is Jan. 31 and they are
· bought at the office of the county auditor.

seas

(EAT IN ONLY)

Showbeat
.Page 3

Public Open House
su.,day, Jan. 2 7
3:oo to s:oo ; .

REMEMBER - WE DELIVER .

.n.

435 Second Ave .. Gallipolis

.THE MEDICAL

Eat In Our Family Restaur!'"' ar Carry Out.

·"'Channel 23 listings included
thi:s ..EJOOk's _gu,i,ck_."
··
........,
~

'"""·-~

'

.-....~

"

POMEROY - A marriagP license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Charles Brian Williamson, 19, Rutland, and
Anna Jo Patrick, 17, Middleport.

Station listings
WSAZ
CBN

ESPN
WTBS

WIC coupon pickup dates set

T~

POMEROY - February's pickup dates for WlC coupons at the
Meigs County Health Department are Feb. 1 for people with last
· names beginning with the letters A·G; Feb. 4 for H-P; and Feb. 5 for

o.z.

.

WlC coupons may be picked up between the hours of 9-11 a.m. and
1·3 p.m. only. Makeup dates fort he pickup will be Feb.-11 and Feb.19,
during the same hours.

December fees distribution
POMEROY - The Bureau of Motor .Vehicles has December
distribution of vehicle registration fees totaling $15,457,~.68 ready
for disbursement to local goveriunents.
Meigs County's portion is $54,474.87.

WTVN

SPECIALS

WTAP
WCHS

WPBY
WBNS
WOUB
WOWK

RCA 25'~,~gonal XL-100
Color TV with
Chann·e lock Digital
Keyboard 1\Jning

__RCA
Xk100 ·

RANDAlL PLAYS WW11
- Ernmy Miner T8Dy RapdaD Man Ill Put&amp;l, lhe
anii.Nazl com e«J• who mocks lhe Tblnl Reich lo I* own peril, In "Hiller's S.S.," a drama about
two Gennan bratben at oppcllilte epds allhe Fuellrer's elite corp11 dudng World War D. 'l1le sbo.w
wiD be tele";11" Sunday, Feb. S.., NBC-"~:V. (AP Lailel'pbolo).

accuracy on all channels-no fine tuning necessary .

00

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

-~
.

SOUTHERN OHIO
.

.

Compounded

GALLI
SAVUN
441 2nd Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.;:::. . . ,. . . . . ..,____._ (614 )-446-3382~-

D a i Iy

•
•
•
•

Automatic colorcontrol and fleshtone correction.
Automatic contrast/color track!ng.
Super Accufilter black, matrix picture tube .
Unitized XtendedLife chassis.

'Loi:lllsystarn:s mall \lary : check your Cllbie company's col'lipt'ltrb•hly rCQwr omchls

RCA 19'~tagonal XL-.100
Roommate~M Color TV with
Electronic Tuning
Bril.liant .color performance leatur,ing the 'convenience
of single-knob electronic tuning.
• 18- position tuning system permits selection of all 12
VHF and up to six UHF channels with one
.
convenient ·conttol. Illuminated ch~nnel numbers.
• Automatic color controt .and lleshtone ·correction.
• Automatic co.n trast/color tracking.
• Super AccuFilter black matrix picture tube.
• Unitized Xten~edlife chassis.
• Automatic Fine Tuning (AFT).
• Contemporary-styled .durable plastic cabinet with
walnut finish.

'

Ex~ellent Setrl~e -

Altet The Ss/;

REGULAR $719oo

SPECIAL

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Atlanta, GA

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·

Columbus. OH
Parkersburg, WV
Charleston. WV

Huntington, WV

WVAH
HBO

Columbus. OH .
Athens, OH
Huntington, WV
Hurricane. WV
Hom&amp; Box. Office

MAX

Cinemax

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DCIJ
Cll
lit
(jj)

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IHBOl
!MAXI

·Ask Dick Kleiner -

Brilliant co lor performance featuring the convenience
of electronic keyboard control and multi-band cable
tuning.
~
• ChanneLock Digital Keyboard Control prov1des
multi-band tuning of up to 127 broadcast and cable
channels.' Bright L E:D, ~hannel number display . ,
• Quartz crystal tunin,g sy'stem teatures pinpoint

•

Huntington, WV
CBN Coble Netwrk
Sports Ne!WOfk

00

3RD FLOOR
STORE
- MAIN
-,
.

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Page7

Serping Gallia, Meigs (Jnd Mason Counties
.

'

'.

�</text>
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