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Page-1 0- The Daily Santinel

Friday, November 8, 1986·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r-Localbrie&amp;·.------------------------1\Jeigs court hears 24 cases

Meigs EMS answers five calls
.

roy; Gladys Taylor, Pomeroy;
Kenneth Lee, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Timothy Bearhs,
George Greene, Gladys Dillon.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Nov. 7
Admitted ~ Margaret Goett,
Pomeroy; Denver Hysell, !'Orne·

'

Twenty.four cases were processed this week In Meigs County
Coun by Judge Patrtck O'Brien.
Fined was John Eblin, Pomeroy, $100 and costs with fine
suspended, possession of marijuana; six months in jail 1111h all but :;n
days suspended, a year probation, domestic violence; !XJ days in jail
wilh all but ~ days suspended, resisting arrest; six months in jail
with ail but~ days suspended , a year probation, for two charges r:i
assault; and c9sts on all charges.
Fined for OWl were Dannie Bissell, Long Bottom, $.}))and costs,
30. days in jail, Ohio license suspended indefinitely; costs only lor
failings to yield hall of roadway; Melvin Tallman, Ravenswood, $',250
and costs, three days In jail, 60 day license suspension; $25 and costs
for possession of marijuana; James Heaton, bpomeroy, $~ and
costs,"lllree days in jail, 60 day license suspension; costs only for left
of center; Keith Myers, Tuppers Plains, $250 and costs. lllree days In
jail, 60 day license suspension; $50 and costs and three days in jail for
no driver's license.
..
Also fined were Teddy Oslxlrne, Reedsville, S!!ill and costs, six
monllls In jail willl ail but five days suspended, receiving stolen
propeny; Douglas Taylor, Tuppers Plains, $100 and costs, fine
suspended, a year probation and refrain from complainant on each
of two charges of disorderly conduct; Marvin Oiler, Shade, $25 and
costs, failed to report an accident; $25 and costs, !allure to control;
Dorothy Hysell, $10 and costs, failed to yield; Woodrow Owens,
Ravenswood, $10 and costs, assured clear distance; Jeffrey Kauff,
Fairmont, W.Va., S20and costs, passing on yellow line; Brian Arms,
Minersville, $10 and costs; failed to display valid registration;
Randy HalleY. New Plymouth, $10 and costs, failed to yield; Jeffrey
Friend, Long Bottom, $li and costs, failed to register; PhUiip
ShOPmaker, Middleport, $40 and costs and obtain dog license within
30 days; failed to license dog.
Fined for speeding were Steven Nease, Racine, $24 and costs;
Gary Kirk, Srottown, $20 and costs: James Glaze, Pomeroy, $22 and
costs; Jerry Crum, Chauncey, S23 and costs; Kevin Knopp,
Pomeroy, $~ and costs.
Forleiting lxlnds for speeding were Bryan Benedict, Galion, $44;
Donald Dailey, Middlepon , $70; John M. Fultz, Middleport, SOO.

Square dance canceled

Five calls were answered by local units Thursday and on Friday
morning, llle Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Thursday calls Included: Friday, 6:46 a.m., Mona Lisa Haynes
from near the Pomeroy·Mason Brtdge io Veterans Memorial
Hospital, by the Middleport Unit; 11:19 a.m., Ruth Maag from
Lincoln St., Middleport, to Holzer Medical Center by Middleport
Unit;, 4 p.m., Pomeroy Unit took Gladys Taylor from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial; 9:50p.m., pome'roy Unit
took William Collins from Dark Hollow Road to Veterans Memortal.
AT 1:12 a.m. Friday, Tuppers Plains took Mary Jo Roberts from
Callaway Ridge to St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg.

~n

Marriage licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Johney Ray Russell , :Jl, and Brenda Sue Rucker. 22; John
Wilson Young, 49, and Wilma Francis Baker, 57, all of Reedsville.

-Page 8-l

-Page A-4

Compromising

Marie
PG-13

R
Evenings 7:00
Fri. , Sot •. Tues .. 7:00·9:00
Sot. &amp; Sun. Mat ., 2:00

Evenings, 7: 10
Fri., Sot ., Tues ., 7:10&amp;9:10
Sol.'&amp; Sun, Mot., 2:10

Sot . Midnight ,. 12 :00

Sot. Midnig~t. 12:10

Coming Attractions: Commando, Once Bitten, ·
Jagged Edge

IZI Purina®
®

FIRST 10 CUSTOIERS Will RECEIVE A FREE HAIRCUT
OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON

SYRACUSE. OHIO

savaged the administration of Democratic Gov.
Richard F. Celeste, ~ying It Is crooked and
inrompetenf.
"We cannot trust any administration that acts like
they have a stolen c)'edlt card," thundered the
four-term fanner governor, to the deiJght or
Dag-wavlng, pll!card-carrylng Republll'ans, woo
chanted "Rhodes In '86! "
"Secondly, I cannot stand idly by and watch Ohio
being tom apart, tax by tax, blunder by blunder, and
scandal hy scandal.
.
''There must be a change In the g~~vernor's office,"

REGULAR 511.95

Robert Hawk

SALE PRICE GOOD
THRU NOV. 16, 1985

MODERN SUPPLY
· Pomeroy

344 W. Main

Ph. 992-2164

'

OH.

The Store witll "All Kinds of Stuff"- For Pets, Stables, Large &amp; Small
Antmals, Lawns and Gardens.
·

Paid for by Robert Hawk
Hemllock Grove , OH.

PHONE 992-3982

..

~~~~~~~~~===;===~~~~~~~~j ~--------------------------------A sincere "Thank
You"for all the
wonderful support
from Bedford
Township residents
in electing me as
your clerk.
Barbara J. Grueser

THE GINGERBREAD BOY
SAYS'"

Load. on
SAVI Sl

J:,~ · VISIT OUR

SHOP
AND
LAYAWAY
FOR
CHRISTMAS
suooamm

I!!Oti,W. Il

Pa id for by Candidate
77U977
Today- Mostly sunny with a high
near 55. Southwest winds 5 to 15
mph.
r-------------------~----------------~
Tonight Becoming . partly
cloudy with a low 35 to40. Southeast
winds 5 to 15 mph.
SaturdiiY- Partly cloudy with a
high 60to65.
0tance of rain - Near zero
percent today, 10 percent tonight
and 20 percent Saturday.
Extended forecast Sunday
thnJugh Tuesday - Chance of rain '
each day except possibly somes now
Ourrlesearly Monday and Tuesday.
Highs In llle mid 50s to mid 60s
Sunday coollng to the mid 40s to mid
50s Monday and Tuesday. Lows in ·
the 40s early Sunday morning and
the 30s Monday andTuesd~y.

SYMBOL OF HERri'AGE - 'l11e new Gallla
County Cout1house symbolize! Gallipolis' hertlage,

Clarenre J. Bmwn. Deputy Secretary or the u.s.
Commerce Department said ~nlay during

tlmes-Sentlnel Stall

·· POMEROY - A $642,000 housing rehabilitation
project for Meigs County will be underway in the near
fUture , now tbat a housing rehabilitation specialist
has been hired to head the program.
Richard E. McDonald, of 37459 King Hill Rd.,
Pomeroy, started Monday as the Me)gs County
hOusing rehabilitation specialist.
McDonald is presently involved In training with
George Violand, specialist for Ga!Ua Cronty.
Sid Edwards, director of the Ga!lia·Melgs
c ommunity Action Agency, says McDonald is
"highly qualilled'' for the position, with a background

'86 FORD RANGER S
LO~AS •6,388~
FU'MB"' 1P
• 2.0l4•cytinder enolne
• Halot~en headlamps

• Bright front bumper
• La&lt;lder·lype frame
• 6·1001 picl&lt;up box

• Twin·I·Btam independent tront
suspension (4 x·21
• Easrly removob~ tai~ate
• P·metric ai~seasoo tread
.steel·belted radial tires

031 JACKSON PfKE ·Rt3&gt; WEST

- -·4524

&lt;.
5

Your e1og1 -'11 be INIIp movln' •ttop lp8ld
lot I'INrty ... lllgll qu81ttp,' nulrillout cnunka
oontalnlno • hMrtr 21 ~ p!Oitln cant11111o

lltlp tiM your IIMI w01111ng, 11M11118l'in8
,.,, mra "*ttr 8IICI " " ' ~~e~~tni

'86 FORD F-BES !4•21

L~\s 510,617.'

10,684~

• 2.9l Eft V·6 engine
• Halogen heidiamps
• Spon wheel covers
• udder·type frame
• 23·g!IIOO tuel tank

FEA'IINS-....:
• 4.9li·6 cyHnder engine

• Tinted glass ,
• Twin·Traction Beam

• Halogen headlamps

independent lmnt suspension
• P·me:ric: all-season
st!M!I·betfed radial tires

• Maintenance ~.. banery
• Power steering
• Power brakes

• Removable taiiQilte

• 3-speed manual
uaosmlssion
• Twln+Beam Independent
lront suspension

\

. . 101111 ~ .....

@nation @mpany
,

MILLING DIVISION ·

110 Mui'-Y Aft.

I

said ·Rhodes.
James A. Duerk, a spokesman lor Rhodes, said
later that when the former governor talked aoout the
Celeste administration "stmllng from the taxpayers"
he was relerrtng to fired Youth Services DirECtor
James Rogers, woo allegedly approved illegal
contracts with favored vendors.
Rhodes blamed Celeste lor driving business from
Ohio, "1'1/en to Michigan," with high taxes; wrecking
the workers' compensation system: and politicizing a
prtson construction program.
"I'm not going to discuss tax~ until we get a look at

the budget," he said. The next budget wlll be proposed
by the next governor in 1987.
Rhodes said he has "abOut a dozen possibilities" for
a running mate," which he 11111 choose by alxlut Jan.
15. One of those on the list is state Rep. ThomasA. Van
Meter of Ashland, who ran for governor In 1982 but lost
lhe Republican primary.
Van Meter was In a prominent spot Saturday, said
he has abandoned the notion r:i running lor governor
in 1986 and admitted to talking to Rhodes alxlut the
second posilion. "I'm just here to help rot however I
can," he smiled.

!'--------.rr-o--,

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
TlmM Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - The new Gallia
County courthouse symlxlllzes one
cif tile greatest needs r:i a commun·
· ity- the malntalningofltsheritage,
Clarence J. Brown, Deputy Secre·
tary of the United States Depan·
ment of COIT\I!Ierce, said Saturday
at dedication ceremonies for tbe$2.5
mllllon·racility.
"Few have done this with greater
purpose than llle citizens of Gailia
County," he said. "The spirit Or the
French 500 lives on and Its herttage
ot character leeds tills community
and its comri)ihJ~mt to build for the
luture.~'lk. Dames obcatastrophe
are alWays t~ Iiiii 'l'lie Gallla •
CountlansoftafJIYwouldstartieand
please those pioneers. This (the
courthouse) l'l'presents 1'1/erythlng
vaiua ble In this community today."
The construction of the new
counhouse, which was dedicated 58
FLAG HAJSING - A color pard from &amp;lie United &amp;alee Marine
months and one day after a Ore
Corpe
olftclally ralle8 the American and Ohio nap ~rinl the
destroyed the 10l·year old wing ort
dedication
ol the GaiDa Couiiy Courthouse Satunlay. 'l11e IIIIJ, lobe
Jan. 8, 1981, "May not have been
flown
al the cwrihouse, W118 brou&amp;fll by Rep. Clarencle Mnler after It
completed in record t !me but it is a
was Oown over the U.S. CIIPitol tn Octobe~.
(Continued on page A3 J

in the construction· contracting field. McDonilld was
recommended lor the position by llle Meigs County
Commissioners.
,
C.A.A. is administering the Meigs' housing rehab
grant on behalf of the county commission.
Operating monies lor the program are from
Community Development Block Grant furids through
the Ohio Department of Development.
McDonald will occupy an ctlice on the grourid ll'llel
floor of the Meigs County Court muse Edwards says.
However, Edwards adds, McDonald will need some
additional training at llle state level before
applications from prospective clients can be
accepted.

tlnued. "With the $100 million in
Times-Sentinel staff
COLUMBUS - "Tuesday's vote research funds to be generated by
by Ohio voters in favor of State Issue this borid program, there Is renewed
One was an historic victory for Ohio hope we can find a clean and
coal and Ohio jobs," State Senator efficient way to bum Ohio's high·
Oakley C. Collins, Rlronton, said in sulfur coal and put Southeastern
Ohio's coal mining industry back on
a statement released Friday.
State Issue One amends the state Us feet."
Collins said the state leglslatul'l'
constitution to allow support ti
research to discover new ways to . mustadoptnewleglslatlontoputlhe
make clean, inexpensive use o!Ohlo Ohio coal research and develoP"
coal. Such research would helurided men! program in motion. The
through loans; loan guarantees or program Is expected to be coordi·
grants trom . a $100 million lxlnd nated by the Ohio Coal Development
Office.
fund.
"I plant to work Immediately and
"The overwhelming support llle
with other leglslaUve lead·
closely
people of Ohio have given Issue One
ers
in
the
Senate and House to see
demonstrates oor citizens' commit·
ment to finding an Ohio solution to a tbat llle General Assembly adopts
big Ohio problem," Collins ron· the necessary legislation as soon as

possible. Our ecooomy has been
devastated by llle decllne of Ohio's
coal industry. The sooner we move
forward 'to solve tills probletn, llle
better," Colllns said.
Colllns said he hoped a good share
of the state research money would
be channeled directly into Sou·
lheastem Ohio so the region's
economy rould feel some Immediate positive Impact from passage
of the state ballot Issue.
"We have the lngr!nuitytofindthe
solutions. We just DEeded the
nnanclal abiUty to get the job done
right," Collins said. "I realize the
.solutions won't b, developed over·
night. But, fm q~tlmlstlc ror hope
wUI become reality. We must put
our people back to work."

An announcement will be published In the
newspaper when the program is ready for actual
Implementation.
Afive-person board, appointed hy lhe Meigs County
Commissioners, wlll oversee the project and screen
applications.
Serving on that lxlard wUI be Elmer Bailey ,
Darwin; Iris Payne, Middleport; Roy Christy,
Chester; Carl Qualls, Pomeroy; and Earl Shuler,
•
Racine.
The Meigs' rehab program, . just as Gallia 's
program, allows for rehabilitation of 23 major
projects and five emergency projects per yt'ar. A

total of 56 projects wUI he allowed over a two·year
grant period. Emergency cases have been described
as leaking roofs, faulty furnaces and rolling floor
joists.
Although applicants who are accepted lor
rehabilitation do not spend any money for the l'l'pairs,
a five-yt'ar Uen with the county is placed agillnst their
propeny. That lien decreases by 2ll percent each
year.
II the owner sells the rehabilitated oome before the
five-year Uen is up, the remaining portion must be
paid to the county.
If the resident continues to live In the home for the
five-year perbd, llle lien is then terminated.

Reagan, Weinberger divert
budget cutters from defense
Both balaneed budget Ol('asures
would impose cuts in federal
Caspar Weinberger are Insisting spending If preset annualtargetsfor
that Congress steer budget balanc· shrlnidng the deficit are missed, but
lng cuts away from the adminlstra· neither plan would protect defense
lion's military buildup, because from those cuts.
The Hou se version exempts many
they risk harming arms control
poverty programs from spending
talks.
Reagan said Friday although he reductions, which would makeother
suppons the "Gramm·Rudman" areas, hicluding the mllitary. more
balaneed budget measurt&gt;approved vulnerable to the budget ax.
"In a lime of reduced budgets, t tre
by the ·Senate, he doesn't !Ike the
House's alternative plan because he prudent course of action is to apply
thinks It would hurt defense too cutswherethcy wUI hurt the leastto protect those programs most vit al
much.
Weinberger, in remarks at to national S&lt;'CUrity and reduce
Brigham Young University In those programs that are less
· Provo, Utah, worMed that defense urgent ," Weinberger said. "This
cuts required In either version of the · legislation will not aii&lt;JII&lt; us to do
legislation could "undermine nego. that."
Weinberger has ar]:!Ued for yL•ars
tiatlons with the Soviets in the
(Continued on page A.1)
future."
WASHINGTON iUPI I - Presl-

~nt Reagan and Defense Secrt&gt;tary

Gallia trus~ees, clerks seek county-wide
toll
free
service
.
'

Taatllrlva

.

SUGAR ·RUN
FLOUR
MILLS,__,, OM.
P'l:f, 9+2-1115

dedlc8tloa ce•emnle !lortheStlmlllon ladllly. '111e
oolldlnr, Brown said, aiao 1s a l!lp or G•lllpolk'
"commllmeot to ooBd lor &amp;lie future."

Issue One vote 'an historic
victory,' says Sen. Collins

LJJAs
FU'IINS ICU.

•

Housing specialist hired to head ·Meigs rehab program
By NANCY VOACHAM

'86 FORO BRONCO :0:!4121

11 Sections, 86 Pages 60 Centt
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Gallia dedicates its new courthouse:
'a symbol ·of the community's heritage'

SAVE $2.00

Meigs Local Band Booster s will meet Mond ay,' 7 p .'m., at
the ·high school.

10 SESSIONS_,,.............. ONLY $2750

LOCAJED AT

BRAND Caf fOOd

Band boosters meeting set

Thank you for your
vote of confidence
for Bedford
Township Trustee.

··Page A-3-·

Take-()ne ..................... Insert

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant . Sunday. November 10, 1985

1985

COLUMBUS !UP! 1 - Promising to shon-ctrcult
"an administration that acts like they have a stolen
credit card," former Gov. James A. Rhodes ctDcially
announced Saturday that he will seek a fifth term as
the state's chief.executive in l!l&amp;i.
Rhodes, 76, addressed an estimated 3,000 noisy·
supporters from aU over the state who braved a
steady rainstorm to witness the start ct what Rhodes
called a "crusade to clean out the most corrupt and
most inept administration in the history of Ohio."
In a 30-mlnute speech which held much of his
audience's attention tor half that time, Rhodes

ON SALE NOW...

The Grande Squares will hold a Western style square dance
Saturday at St. Pezer's Episcopal Church, 541 Second Ave.,
Ga llipolis from 8 to 11 p.m. Caller wUI be Ed Clark.

()eaths ............ ........ ....... .. A·1
Editorials ......................... A-1
Spcirla ........................... ' C.J.6

showers forecast
for Sunday

Rhodes announces hid for record fifth term

(

20 LB. ·

Along the River ............... 8- 1·8
Business .... ....................... A·Z ·

Vol. 20 No. 40
Copyrighted

Susan M. Sanders, Pomeroy, has flied for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court from John A. Sanders, Pomeroy, charging
gross neglect of duty, extrem~cruelty and adultery. The rourt has
Issued a restraining order against the defendant Pending final'ctlon
in ihe matter.
Christina Estep, Shade, has filed for divorce from Roy Estep,
Shade, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
John Dale Jcobs, Gallipolis, and Luz Eneida Jacobs, Rutland,
have filed for a dissolution of marriage.

••

•
tmts

·Positions

Two couples file for divorce

NEXT 10 DAYS ONLY

Bob Hoeflich discusses the return of the
Pomeroy parking meters - Page 8-8
James J, Kilpatrick says farewell to 'ladies' day'

Starts Friday, Nov. 8, 1985

A foreclosure action has been tued in Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun by Farmers Bank and Savings Co. against Harold P. Jones,
Pomeroy, for property in Columbia Township.
An action has been !Ued by Clarence and Sharon Mattox,
Pomeroy, against Maria Romine, Reyooldsburg, requesting a
judgment of $5000.
·
A preliminary injunction has been issued by llle court In an action
to quiet title which was filed by James H . Hoyt, Cheshire, against
I.R.D. Corp., Chagrin Falls, et a!, restraining the defendants from
coming on the plaintiff's property or about wells located on the
propeny, pending a final hearing in the case.

SUN SOLUTIONS TANNING SALON
FANTASTIC TEN

Camp;
Sheets 1I
of
Nitro,one
W.brother,
Va.; oneEdward
sister, Carne
Wears of Rutland: and one
grandsOn.
Funeral services will he 2 p.m.
Saturday at llle Mill Creek Baptist
Church with Rev. Herman Robin·
son officiating. Burial will be in the
Jackson Memorial Gardens at
Cottagl'llille. Friends may call at the
Vail Funeral Home In Ripley after 2
p.m. today.

Weather forecast

...

lJ~,II!IOtS St&lt; Q?~I ~ G ~l~l A

d,

Foreclosure action filed

IArea death Ir-r;;;;;;;;;Lo;;;tt;;;ery=w;;;in;;;ni;;;ng;;;;;;nu;;;m;;;be;;;rs;;;:;;;5;;;;;28,;;;8;;;1;;;29=~
Mae Pearl Lee. Tl, of Frozen
Camp, near Ripley, W. Va., died
Thursday at her home.
She was lxlrn May ~. 19!1l In
Putnam County, W.Va., to the late
Annett and Ora Nichols Sheets. She
was a member of llle Mill Creek
Baptist Church and was a former
Mason County school teacher.
Su!VIving are her husband, Dale;
one son, Edward Lee of Frozen

(inema,.'])

·· ~· Buffington Island
Memorial Park

Admission Price Policy '
Barga in Matinees
Sot . &amp; Sun .. All Seoh $2.25
Adm . E.. ery Tuesday, $2.25

Square dance scheduled

Tonight's (Friday's) square dance In Long Bottom has
ca nceled due to high water.

Mae Pearl Lee

MOUN1AINHR

BBt"""'"FREE
FDI'II
"''No.

Best-Buin TPUCkl

1Win1 foof Thleb dUrii'PI yo~Jf lOt.ll fOtd Dllllrt
TRUCII MONTH and "'*"- a ford Cap ffiEE ... while the su~ lasts .

Tilt dtM

·~ · 1 ...--,-a.(IIIOIIItw.nMII A.".I.DW!RIOJI~I""--1
• 'IW ~ ftlf Delltl .... ,._ ........... n. l ~~~~ -~ 1111 .. II Y -.1ft&amp; D1 ID t'A.IDIIII_..

"hll-*1*..._, . . . . . . ., . . . nM, Itll

SPECIAL

8.8°/o'" ~ . ;,(

'-"1l.,,...,...._ s..,... ........--.
...

Oat monthly rate to call any ex'changr! In the rounty
'l'lmet&amp;nllnel Stall
toll free. The 446 exchange is county wide, however,
An extended telephOne service may be a new
1he other exchanges are subject to a toll call.
service for Gaiiia County residents if a majodty ct the
Russell said the service would be an advantage for
people want 11. ·
elderly people on a ftxed Income and people dealing.
For several months the GaiUa County Township
with businesses on a regular basis· that now have to
Tnlstees and Clerks Association have been working
payatolleverytlmetheycaU.Studentswborommute
on getting a county wide extended phone service IQ~. . • to Rio Grande College would also find It to be an
Gall Ia residents.
'"···iidvantage when they need to contact ilstruclors.
A service Uke this, said Johnnie Russell, president
In order to get.this service, subscribers from each
of the association, would mell!l residents would pay a
By JANET HORKY

lt ...... lfllll¥ JM

illoctlllf-....

_.C..

ON SELECTED '85 &amp;'BG ESCORTS &amp;TEMPOS

exchange must nrst sign a petition soowlng they want
'the service. When enough petitions are signed tbey
are submitted to the Publll' Utilities Commission of
Ohio and a hearing is scheduled.
·
"It is up to us to have witnesses" ·to testifY why It is
necessary for Gallla County to have an extended
phone service, said Russell ..•
The PUCO will look at how many people actually
want this service, the amount ol toll calls between
each exchange, the distribution of the calls and the

rates.
"This has been trted befort' but for some reason It
never happened," Russell said.
One rt&gt;ason other counties have fa iled to get this
servll'e is lllat they have to deal with more than ooe
telephone company while Gallta County only has.to
deal with Ohio Bell TelephOne Co., explained Russell.
A rate adjustment wUI probably be necessary, but
some areas will probably pay less than they were
paying while others wUI pay a lillie more, he said.

�P,age-A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 10. 1985

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

'

November 10, 1985

Plan workshop

Earns gold award

·•·, KATHERINE CASEY
Cook retires

RepOrts earnings
GREENVU.LE, S.C.- Multlme·
dla, Inc., has reported third quarter
net earnings of $7.4 million, an
Increase ol14 percent over the same
rerlod last year.
.
Earnings per share were 44 cents;
compared with 39 cents last year, a
13 percent Increase. Revenues lor
the third quarter were$83,276,00J,10
percent more ttian $75,401,!XXI1n the
third quarter of 1984.
For the nine months ending-Sept.
30, net earnings were $27,860,!XXI,
compared with $24,248,!XXI, an
Increase of 15 percent In 1985 over
1984. Earnings persharewere$1.67,
a 14 percent gain over the $1.46

RIO GRANDE - Katherine
Capey has recently retired as a cook
at' the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Cllleterla.
.She had been an employee of the
district from its origin In 1975.
llci9re coming to Buckeye Hills,she
wo~ed In · food service at the
Cfl)tervUie Elementary School and
C&lt;;llllpolls State Instltull'.

•

THIS COUPON WORTH SlOO.OO
ON ANY

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FLOW

SUNDAY'S WEATHER MAP - Snow will be likely from the upper
Great Lakes through the norihem haH of the plains to the central ood
northern rockies: Snow will Increase over the oorthem hall oft he plateau
• and higher elevations ol the Pacific Northwest. RalnsloJwers will he
- numerous along the northern and central Pacific poast. Rain will also
extend from Kansas ood eastern Oklahoma to the lower Great Lakes,
:changing to snow over upstate New York ood Vennont. Fair sides will
prevail over the Atlootlc coastal states. tnghtemperalores wiD only be In
the teens ood 20s from the northern ~s across the Dakotas to upper
· MlchlgiUI. Readings In the 30s and 40s will be oommon lrom the Pacific
· Northwest through tbe plateau region. From thoi central Rockies through
: lowalo lower Michigan andover oorthem p~rtlot~~ofNewYork and New
· England. Temperatures will reach the 70s over I be desert !lluthwest and
lrom the southern Plains through the GuU ooasl states wtth the Ills over
. the southwestern haH ol Texas and sout h Florida.
-

S~rvices offerred

State zone fore(/Usts

••

SAVE ON ANEW

Northwest, West Central
Rain and a chance of thunderstorms Saturday night with highs
between 55 and 60. Rain likLy Saturday night and Sunday. Lows
were expected to be near 50 and highs Sunday between 60 and 65.
The probability of precipitation was 8J rercent Saturday arid 00
percent Saturday night and Suoday.
Winds were expected to be from the !Olutheast at 15 to 25 mph
Saturday and from the south at10 to 20 mph Saturday night.
Northeast Inland, Central tnghlands
Rain Saturday wll~a chance of thuoderstorms and a high near 00.
Rain likely Saturday night and Sunday. Lows Saturday night were
expected to be near f&gt;l and highs Sunday between 00 and 65.
The probability of precipitation wa s 8J percent Saturday and 00
percent Saturday night and Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 15 to' 25 mph
Saturday and from the south 1 10 to 20 mph Saturday night .
Miami Valley
Variable cloudiness and windy Saturday with a chance of s howers
or thunderstorms. The highs will rang» between 00 and 65_ Partly
cloudy Saturday nlghl and Suoday with a chance of rain. Lows will
range between 50 and 55 and highs Suoday were expected to be In the
upper 60s.
The probability of precipitation was 50 pert'€nt Saturday, 30
rerct&gt;nt Saturday night and 40 rercent Sunday.
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 15 to 25 mph
• ~ turday and lrom tlje south at 10 to 20 mph Saturday night.
•
·
Central, East Central
Variable cloudiness and windy Saturday with a chance of sho wers
or thunderstorms. The highs will rang» between 00 and 65. Pat1ly
cloudy Saturday night and Sunday with a chanCE' of rain . The lows
will range betw('('n 50 and 55 and highs Sunday in the upper OOs.
The probability of precipitation was f&gt;J percent Satu rday and 40
rercent Saturday night and Sunday. .
Winds were expected to be from the southeast at 15 to 20 mph
Saturday am\, from the south at 10 to 20 mph Saturday night .
Southwest, South Central
Partly cloudy and windy with a chance of showers Saturday. The
highs wil l range between 65 and 70, Partly cloudy Sa turday night and
· Sunday with a chance of showers. Lows were exrected to be near :D
and ·highs Sunday were expected to be In thP luw 70s.
The probability of precipitation was 20 perc'&lt;'nl through Suod ay.
Winds wer~ expected to be from the south at 15 ro25 mph Saturday
and decreasing to 10 to 20 mph Saturday night .

ALL 6-10-12

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{U'rn releases
coal figures
lANCASTER- Thethreemlnes
oc Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division accounted for mQre
than 40 percent of 8,859,527 clean
tons ol coal produced by American
Electrtc Power's affiliated mining
operations lor the AEP system's
generating plants durtng the first
nine months of 1985, according to
J .E. "Jack" Katllc, senior vice
president of fuel supply lor the AEP
Service Corporation.
The three mines accounted lor
3,779,266 clean tons, with the Meigs
Nci. 2 mlne leading the way with
2.~.963 clean tons. The Meigs No. I
m~ produced 923,847 clean tons
an¢1he Raccoon No. 3 mine 843,816
cliaittons.
·~e American Elec1!1c Power
syl{em provides electric service to
c#mers In portions of seven East
c~al states..!\"d ranks as one of
t~natlon'slargest coal consumers.
Last year, AEP also ranked asoneof
the country's 15 largest coal
producers.

f7""':'1

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UP! WEATHER FOTOCAST ••,

PRICES IN

'1699.95

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LITE PINE

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BEDROOM SUITE

•-

,CLEVELAND &lt;UPII- Friday's
w,lnnlng Ohio Lottery numbers:
Dally Number: .198.
:Ticket sales totaled $1,423,.181l.!i0,
"'ith a payoff du eof $317,120.50.
PICK-4 : 5258.
. PICK-4 ticket sales total!'d
$200,043, with a pa yoff dur of$~. 730.
· PICK-4$1 straight bet pays$5,280.
P1CK-4$llxlx bet pays$410.

INCUNE

INCUNE

REGULAR $2095 IQ. YD.

Lonery winning
numbers: 398,5258

88

$

88

By United Press lnletnatlonal
Gus Douglass said about 4,!XX1acres
\\'est Virginia counties a disaster
Rain and snow·sllckened roads In of land ravaged by flooding Is ·so area. About 4,00) homes were
Minnesota and South Dakota
badly damaged It wlll no longer be damaged ·or lost, and damage
snarled traffic for the start of the ·used for farming. Another 10,00J ligures ·soared toward 1he $200
deer hunting season' Saturday as
acres Is moderately to heavily
million mark.
residents across the Mld·Atlantlc damaged.'
In Pennsylvania, Gov. Dick
coast cleaned up aftl'r raging floods
"There are several places where Thornburgh Friday asked Presithat killed 41 and left thousands
the top soU of entire fields has been
dent Reagan to declare six !llulhwhomeless.
eroded to the subsoil," Douglass estern counties a disaster area due
A winter storm warnillg was said. There also was extenslv~
to flooding.
posted for southeastern South damage to farm equipment and""
More than 1,200 people have been
Dakota, where up to81nchesolsnow buUdlngs, and millions of farm
treated for lnjut1es, and thousands
had fallen by early Saturday. Parts animals have been killed.
have been housed In shelters In the
of southern Minnesota were a !so
President Reagan declared eight
covered with up to 81ncches of snow.
Numerous traffic accidents were
reported In southwestern and souCOLUMBUS (UP!) -Paper bags carrying the m0ssage "If you
theastern Minnesota, Including a
drink,
don't drive" wUI package any liquor sold at state stores
jackknifed semitrailer on Highway
starting
In December.
169, which connects MlnneapoUs·St.
The Idea to putt he message on the bags came from Gov. Richard
Paul to Mankato.
F. Celeste, said Paul H. Coleman, director of the Governor's Office of
Both Minnesota and South Dakota
Recovery Services.
roads were expected to be bu sY
"The governor came home from one of his trips with a paper bag
early Saturday as the deer hunting
that
had a circle logo on It with the slash and a set d car keys within
season opened. Ahout 400,001 deer
the circle and the drinkdon't drive slogan beneath It ," said Coleman.
hunting licenses had been Issued In
Minnesota alone, and most of those
,c_o_nt_ln_uoo_rr_o_m_pa_g_e_Al_l
Issued licenses were expected to be
hunting Saturday.
In South Dakota, light rain about that defense srendlng does not "He doesn't want to go over there
40 miles south of Sioux Falls contribute to the federal deDclt. He having the House put the handcuffs
combined with temperatures In the maintains that Congress cannot on defense."
low 30s to create a "solid sheet ol treat the Pentagon budget as It does
But Rep. Edward Roybal, chairIce" on roads, said South Dakota other federal agencies because Its man d the House Select Committ('('
budget needs are measured against on Aging , blasted the Senate Frtday
state radio communications dis·
patcher Craig Jensen. "We are a perceived growing Soviet threat, for falling to exempt veterans
not U.S. economic health.
advising no travel In that area,"
pension and compensation pro·
"Gramm· Rudman" would lmpo- grams from the cuts as the House
Jensen said.
In Mankato, Minn ., stall see uniform budget reductions did.
members at television station "without any concern for defense
"It is indeed tragic that (with
KEYC-TV were not allowed to leave prtoritles or the securtty needsol the Veterans Day this weekend), as we
the station for their dinner break . nation," tbe Pentagon chief said. honor the men and women who have
Friday night because of slippery "This Is a dangerous proposition.
served their nation, we must
roads . Management feared the staff
Senate Republican leader Robert celebrate In the shadow of a Senate
would not be abletomakelt back for Dole, who met with Reagan early decision that falls far shot1 on the
the 10 p.m. report.
Friday. told reporters the president country's commitment to veteFloodwaters from rain-swollen stUI supports the ortgtnal Senate rans," said Roybal, D-Calif.
HouSe-Senate negotiations on ba·
Appalachian nvers this week killed version of strtct balanced budget
41 people- 20 In West Virginia, 171n legislation and declared the House lancing the budget will likely begin
Virginia, three In Pennsylvania and Democrats' alternative "a phony." on Tuesday. Congress Is lacing a ·
But Dole said Reagan told GOP Thursday midnight deadline to act
one In Maryland.
In West Virginia, 39 people were leaders he wants to stick with his because the balanced budget legis·
still missing four days after the plan to exempt the defense buildup Ia lion Is a ttached to a bill needed by
worst floods In a century surged from the budget cuts.
then to lilt the federal debt ceiling to
Otherwise, "It could be a prob,lem a record $2 trillion or force the
through 33 of the sta te's 55 counties,
for Geneva tarms talks next week) · government Into default .
offlclals said .
State agriculture commissioner as the president sees 11," Dole sa id.

flooded areas.
In the natlon'scapltal, workcrewl;;
cleared away standing water, mwk
and debris left by the raging:·
Potomac, which crested at just
12 feet late Thursday - 5 feet over •
flood level.
In Virginia, where flood damage
estimates soared to SQXJ million,
Cov. Charles Robb asked President
Reagan for federal disaster aid lor
flve cities, Including Roanoke, and
five counties.

over:

Paper bags carry message

WAREHOUSE SALES/DISCOUNT PRICES

,•

GALLIPOLIS - Professional
an(l.personal development training
aqd consulting are major services
oftered by Ruthchlld·Guinter Sys·
teros .(RGSI Training and Develop' . Consultants, 414 Second Ave.,
ment
Stll!~ :aJO. Office hours are 8: ro-5
p.m., with evenings and Saturdays
by Jppolntment.
Caryl Kiser and Myrtam Ruth·
child created RGS to serve the
training and development needs of
Individuals, groups and organlza·
t~. Workshops, seminars and
gni.ps designed to assist lndlvidu·
als' In their professional and
personal development will be
OfiE{ed.
RGS has developed a program of
can!er consulting that will help
Individuals assess their a bllltles and
neids and seek appropriatealterna·
tlves .. Additionally, RGS offers
services to business, groups and
organizations that features pro·
grams designed to solve specific
IIi·service training needs.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A·3

Weather:----.. Mid-Atlantic hegins cleanup after floods :

'

for an audit) charged.
For more Information, contact
the· School of Education at Rio
RIO GRANDE - A workshop
Grande College at 245-5353 or
stressing the Importance of self·
esteem In helping teachers manage · toll·tree In Ohio at 1-800282-7al1.
students positively will be conducted at Rio Grande College on
Dec.6and7.
GALLIPOLIS- AGallipolis tnan
The presentation will help
has
earned a Gold Award , the
teachers recognize ways In which
children express their need for highest level of achievement ill
sell·esteem and provide them with Dodge's Sales Professionals Club.
James M. Northup earned the
ways to respond appropnately. ,
recognition
lor individual per!or·
Instructors wUI be Carl Arlotta,
mance In selling Dodge vehicles.
M.S., and Susan Arlotta, M.S.
Specially designed Incentives and
Reglstra tlon wUI be Dec. 6 from
5:30-6 p.m. In the College's Techni- awards are provided for outstand·
cal Center student lounge. Program lng . product knowledge and sales
times are Dec. 6 from 6-9: 30 p.m. achlevement -arthree rertormance
and Dec. 7 from 9-3: 30 p.m. will all levels - Bronze, Sliver and Gold.
sessions to be conducted In Room 138 Membership In each level js
of the Technical Careers Center. determined by points earned for
One quarter hour of graduate credit sales of new cars and trucks.
The program will continue
wUI be awarded wltha$75fee ($37.50

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

$

Reagan.u..._______

significant -achievement - greater with technical knowledge moving
than you may think," Brown added . rapidly. One of our greatest needs Is
The building, which was com· to maintain our continuity of
pleted and open to county govern· heritage, where we have come from
ment In October 1984. was con· and where we are going."
Grouod·breaklng ceremonies for
structed with local money and
without federal or state aid, a fact the new building were conducted on
that was not lost on representative March 14, 19&amp;'1 following the signing
of loan papers two weeks earlier
Clarence Miller, R-Ohlo.
"It' s good to know you did II with the city's three banks. The
Gallla County Commission borwithout federal and state funds,"
rowed abou 1$1.3 million to finish the
Miller said. "It was built by you, the
project after receiving a $1.1 million
people, and It Is wonderlulthat II can
stU! be done . The pioneers did It, you Insurance settlement.
The courthouse was constructed
did 11. Facilities stand lor ever white
the pecple who did the hard work In two phases, with construction on
the first and third floors beginning
will move on."
The new courthouse, Brown said. Immedia tely. Construction on the
Is a testlment to chang&lt;&gt; evident ' basement and secood floors began
throughout society mixed with a severa l months later.
need to remember its heritage.
Dedication ceremonies were put
Change "was slow ill Biblical times. off after county olflclals moved Into
Now, It Is rapid, all encompassing, the building untU final touch ups,
exterior landscaping and parking
lot renovations were completed.

Richard Pryor Goes For Broke
Spending Brewster's Millions.

Now available on .:
vldeocasseffe from
MCA.

~\t.\11811~ .

, 11118 ~ '
STITIOJ

THE MOYIE PlACES
Tht Alcove, Gallipolis
All Fruth Pharmaciu
All Shriwwr's Pharmacies · ·
H&amp;B TV -Jackson
·

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

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• Epidural Deliveries
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OFFICE HOURS 10:00 A.M . - 5:00 P.M. MON.-FRI.
OPEN TUESDAY AND THURSDAY EVENINGS

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Porn! Pleasant . W. Va . 255 50

(USI' 525·810)
Published each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Galllpolls, Ohio, by the Ohio ValleyPubUsh1ng Company/ Multimedia, Inc. Se·

ENDS MONDAY, NOV. 11, 8:00 P.M.

•

concl clas! postage paid al Ca lllpolls,

Ohio 45631. Entered u serond class
mailing rna11er at .Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

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New York. New York 10017.
Newspa~r

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A~•·

Phoftt 446· U05
Gollipoli•

.,

REMOUNTING YOUR DIAMONDS
Buy for Christmas Now and Savel
Layaways Invited

�November 10, 1986

State gains $10 million in proposed bankruptcy settlement (~

'
.:

.Commentary and perspective

The Sunday Times-Sentinel :
November 10. 1986

ltnmav 1ta :. itutind
A Division of

.~~
~v

""'-'' ..,...I I"'T"a!!c::llo=o .

825 'lblrd A•e., GaiBpolls, Ohio
(614) M&amp;-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oldo
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Exeeutlve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher&gt;Controller

l.ETTERS Of OPI NJO~ an' W&lt;' lro mNI. th&lt;'\' should bt&gt; lt'Ss than 300 "':ords
lon~ . Al l J('! t rr~ art' 'IUh jN"t to f'd illng tt nd m ust ~ ~~~ n rd wllh nam(', addrf"s!' and
tf' IC'phon(' numbc&gt;rs. No u ns l ~ n f'd lt' llf'r'S ~: 1 11 br pub ll shro . L€'11 f'rs should bt&gt; In
~ood

tas te'.

~:~ dd rrss l n ~

lssu&lt;'s. not pc'rsona llllrs.

Jfahrenkopf finds
·~ pony in Virginia
'
• ,.' When the VIrginia returns came In last week, GOP natJonal chairman

' hank Fahrenkopf demonstrated President Reagan's favorite story about
!he Incurably opllmlstic youngster woo happily shovels out a stable full d.
l'nanure because "there must be a ~my In here somewhere."
- The Deinocrats won everything In Virginia except the furntture In the
state Republican headquarlers. Not mly did they sweep the three top state
otnces, rut they did It with a ticket that many neutral ObseiVers trough! .
RtOre closely resembled a suicide pact than a wbmlng team.
~:In a state that replied to the judicial and legislative civD rights advances
o(,the 19815 with the doctrine of ''massive resistance" -a typically genteel
\4rgmta-Uke way of saying, "Su!Tl'!lder, hell! " -the Deroocrats elected a
blaCk man lieutenant governor.
:Not even dur1ng the carpetbag days d. the ~nstruction, when states
11J1e Mi'islslppl, Lou slana, South Carolina and North Carolina sent blacks to
dmgress, was a black elected to statewide d.tlce In Virginia.
;'Yet VIrginia elected Dooglas WUder, a black and a liberal activist to
bOot, lieutenant governor.
:•Just as remarkable was the election d. Mary Sue Terry , an unmarried
~an. as state attorney general. All she did was lead the ticket with 61 per
Clint of the vote, a certified landslide.
•11 Is oo big thing when some Southern states elect femalesmators, House
niembers, state legislators or evm, In the case ol Alabama, a governor, but
· n1i one can remember when VIrginia gave any major state or
c:"9ngressJonal olflce to a woman:1'n 1984, the Democrats there oomlnated a
woman
for the Senate, but then all but abandoned her as a lost cause before
I
the campaign evm starled.
:So what did Fahrenkopf say when the VIrginia GOP ticket of three white
ll)l'll was beaten?
•"The VIrginia results are not as positive as New Jersey . However, they
too give a clear Indication of the continuing phlla;ophical realignment
14ktng place In this nation," the GOP"chlef said. "Led bY Gov. Robb, the
VJrglnla ticket 'out· Republlcaned' our GOP candidates by adopting as
thrlr 0\VII conservative Republican principles."
:'!bat may be the best job d. putting a good face m a disaster since
~peror Hlrohlto visited Hiroshima and ~Jared , "There seems to have
considerable damage here." · •
·Even • If what Fahrenkopf says Is true - and Virginia Deroocrats
ckNbtless woold dispute It - his analysis can't be regarded as good news
f&lt;li- Republicans.
.
·
:J'hewholestory of Republican growthln the SJuth, which hasbeenooeof
tbf keys to national GOP victories In six of the last nine p~ldential
•e(tctlons; has been the argument that Democrats are Incurable liberals,
cqinpulslve taxers, profligate spenders and dangerously radical social
e'fperlmenters.
.
.u the VIrginia Democratic ticket was able to overcome that Image even
wjule putting forth a ticket that challenged the deep-seated racism and
, 5tlcism Inherent In the state's polltical history, lt Is hard to see how
~bllean candidates can be encouraged.
:If Fahrenkopf were a political theoretician Interested primarily ln
' a11vanctngconservatlve Ideology, his comment might be understandable.
Bl)t his job is to elect Republicans, and not mucholthatgot done in Virginia
Nov.
,. 5.

.

+

.

,·
,•'

Berry's World

Rights Act. It declares that "no she snapped, "Is a far cry from the that the ~s· Club of Santa Cruz
matter what their sex," all persons social policies that have justKied will have to give up Its rule ot
are entitled to equal advantages, other exceptions to the act." The boys-only. The Unruh Act Is broac!
facWtles, privileges or services kl societal Interest that justifies pre. enough to encompass an lnrorpo·
lerentlal treatment n:&gt;r old-fulks rated non-pro!lt community crganl·
all "business establishments" d
hluslng "cannot be compared ., zatlon within the meaning r/.
every klnd whatsoever,
Speaklng through Chief Justice the goal ol attracting young women "business esiabllshment." ·If a girJ
applies to the Boys' Club for
Rose E. Bird, the California to a bar."
membership, she must be
The
defendants
further
con·
Supreme Court conclud?d that
admitted.
'
sex-based discounts were an "ad· tended that no one really was
Justlce
Joseph
R.
Grodin
sought
vantage" forbidden by the law: The Injured by the special favors: 'file
defendants has argued that ladles' court disagreed: "The plaintiff was to soften the Impact of his decision
day discounts were simply good adversely affected bY the price bY emphasizing rertaln facts In ~
business; they were profitable; discounts. His female prers were Santa Cruz case. "Nothing we say
they brought In customers wiD admitted to the bar tree, willie he requires a slmllar result In the case
might never hav come In at all. In had to pay. On the days he vlaltel;l of other single-sex youth organlza·
addition, the bar owners contended the car washes, be had to pay rmre !Ions." Dissenting Justlce Stanley
that their cut-rate COCktails "en· than any woman customer, based Mosk disagreed. We saw It as "a.
couraged more women to attend on his sex. In addition to the deat)l knell for fraternities ani!
,
the bar, thereby promoting more economic lmp~t, the price differ· sororities."
The
two
~lnlons
In
California
11f1!
Interaction betwren the sexes." entlais made him lee! that he was ,
not unique. Coons In Pennsylvania
This they deemed to be a "socially being treated unfairly,"
Foor days after this decision In and New York have Issued slmllar
desirable goal" of the state.
the
matter d. bars and car washes, rulings. In July 1984, the U.S,.
Chief Justice Bird would have
the
California Supreme Couri held Supreme Coort held, 7.0, that th!'·
ooneollt. Any web "social policy,"
Minnesota Jaycees could not exclude women from membership.
The New Jersey ~preme Cour:t.
held In 1974 that Utile League
baseball teams could not ban girls
just because they were girls. The!'\!
Is no denying that a law forbidding
sexual discr1mlnatlon prohibits dis·.
crimination not only agalns.t
women but also against men.
So be It, but let me rue the judicial
trend anyoow. It may ~ mere.
~
....
chauvinism on my pari, but I ~
-~
.... ,
nothing Inherently evll or Jlllrally.
wrong or socially destructtve In,
giving a little extra prlvOege to
ladles. Ladles' day at the ball park
was an ancient American custom.
Unllke the sensitive lad In Callfor.
nla, I never felt the sUghtest sense of
"unfairness" In the arranaement..
Susan McGrelvy, an attorney
with the American ClvU Uberties
Union In Southern California, says
that ladles' nights and all-boy clubs·
are among the "hundreds of little
things that make women sreond·'
class citizens." Sorry she feels that
way, but I was reared In a school
that says boys wW be boysandbQys·
should he nice to girls .
•

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

The most' Important question In
the world Is w!Pther the t.ro
nuclear su~rpowers, the Unit~
States and the Soviet Union, can
'
continue to manage the escalating
arms race to ensure the·sur.ival d
..'
the planet. This Is the rentrallssue
,·
President Reagan and Soviet Pres I·
dent Mikhail Gorbachev will be
discussing at Geneva.
,•'
Obviously there are other differ·
ences between Moscow and Washington. Mr. Reagan chose to
',•
,.
concentrate
on these secondary
.•
Issues
In
his
recent
address at the
,••'
United Nations. What the president
seemed to be saying was tht he
could not negotiate ln a meaningful
''
"Want to hear abovt my mommy and
way with Mr. Gorbachev unless the
daddy?"
Soviets ended their Involvement In
,·
various regional disputes around
..
the world. We can mly hope tha!the
president's U.N. speech was In·
tended ·more as a political statement to please his hard·Hne
domesllc
supporters than as a
TodaY Is Su;nay, Nov. 10, the.314th day ol1985 with 51 to n:&gt;Uow.
negotiating formula for Geneva.
The moon Is approaching Its new phase.
It Is unlikely that the SoViets wlll ~
Tll~ mornlng stars are Venus an!! Mars.
cease their aggressive competition
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Too5e bOrn on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include with us for Influence and power In
the Third World: They wW continue
Marlin Luther, fQUnder of Protestantism, In 1483; Engllsh arllst and
to back their clients In such hot
engraver Wllllam Hogarth In 1697; actor Richard Burton In 1925; actor Roy
spots
as Central America, Cuba,
Scheider In 19li (age 50), and actress Mackenzie PhUIIps In 1959 (age 26).
Africa and the Middle East, just as
On thiS date In history:
·
we will.conUnue to baCk rur clients
In 18'71, journalist Henry Stanley found the missing Scottish missionary
and Interests.
David Livingstone In a small African village and said, "Dr. Livingstone, I
These local or regional disputes
presume?"
·
make
It dK!Icult ~ but not
tn 1917, 4l women from 1!) states were arrested ootslde the White House Impossible
Moscow and
rot sutrragette demonstrations. American women won the right to vote Washlngion -to llr
proceed with the
three years later,
IR 1919, the American Legion held Its first national convention In iargl!r issue d. nuclear anns
control. Both sides must surely
MIJ1lle8JXllls·
.
ln 111112. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev died at age 75 after l8 years In understand that arms control Is a
mutual necessity - not a reward
~.
tlr
good behavior In the Third
A. thought tor the day: Martin Luther said, "There is no rmre lovely, .
World.
trli!ndly aild channing relationship, communion or company than·a good
Former PreslderJ.\ Richard Nlxoo
"
.

.
.
0

0

0

,Today in history

marr1age.

understood this when he negotiated
and secured the ratification of the
SALT I treaty at the height of the
Vietnam War. At that time the
SJvlets were arming the North
VIetnamese to kill American sold!·
ers 1n the south. For Its part, the
United States mined and bombed
Haiphong harbor while it was being
used as a port rt mil by SJvlet ships.
Recognizing their sharp differences
over VIetnam and other concerns,
Washington and Moscow under·
stood, nonetheless, that controlling
the nuclear arms race was d. such
compelling lmportanre that they
had ,to proceed with it despite t!Eir
other quarrels.
All of these considerations are
even !Y¥lre relevant In 1985. What
happens In Afghanistan 1s Important, but It Is dwarfed by the
posslbllity that nuclear arms might
take over ruler space. Nicaragua ls
Important, too, but Its slgnKicance
pales alongside the real posslblllty
that nuclear arms arsenalsaremw
so large that a rudear war,
whether bY accident &lt;r design,
could end all fonns of life oo the
entire planet.
With each passing year the
nuclear competition becomes more
dangerous. The Increasing accuracy arrd destructtve power d.
weapons enhanres the fear that
each slde Is rmvtng toward a "first
strlke" posture. Uhder such clr·
cumstances, already tense commanders become more jittery, and
the temptation to hit !lrst becomes
ITIQre compelling. The lntro&lt;Uctlon
of "Star Wars" - Mr. Reagan's
proposed nuclear defense umbrella
- has had the same elfret. If we.
were to !X"Oceed with such, an
enormously complicated, oornpu-

est:

'

.

WllLIAM c. cAUJHAN, n,

AnENTION RAILROAD EMPLOYEES:

HERBERT L. BERNSTEEN,

Patriot man fmed,
sentenced for DWI

-

armed forces are "angry about ,
Qaddall's free-wheeling approach
to n:&gt;reign policy and his refusal to
share the making of major elect· ,
slons wlth them." As a measure ci
this growing discontent armng the '
omcer corps, the CIA points rut that ·
there have been more - many
more- spontaneouscoupattempts
bY the mllltary the past !lve years,
than In the 10 years after he and hiS
fellow officers seized power In 19Ql.
Qaddafl's fellow Bedouins stU!
make up the rank·and-file of the
armed forces, and their loyalty
may thwarl future coups as It has
done In the past. Qaddafl has been:·
able to control LibYa "from a ·
narrow power base, primarily
because Ub.vans, bynature,areoot
Inclined -to fonn cohesive grOUiJIII ·
that go beyond their parochial :
Inleresis," the CIA report ex~alns .

lng on \he line, Including the cruise
mlssUe, will be more difficult to
verify. Without a dependable verlfl·
cation system, there can be no'
meaningful arms control.
,
All ol this adds an Increasing
urgency to an arms control break·
through at Geneva before the race 1
n:&gt;r nuclear supremacy passes !hi!
point of oo return.
·

Doonesbury

,•

•,
I

dollars amounts to spit In the bucket
when you con.•lder that Ohio
taxpayers anted up more than~
miiUon to ball rut Home State
Savings Bank."
;.
"This Is the first In what we ooflli
wUI be a series of distributionS'
through the ESM bankruptcy
ate," said Harris. "We Intend to:
vigorously purnue the aetions which: ·
wt&gt; have previously filed against·
MaiVIn Warner and the othe~:
officers and directors d. Home:
State, and against Alexander; •
Gran t."

PEDIATRICS

George McGover~

other camp that they were losing
their retaliatory capability would
·drive them either to Increase their
offensive power or to buUd a
"defense" shield d. their own. The
result In either case Is a larger,
more destabilizing.and more costly
arms race.
Beyond this, new weapons COln·

1n llne for more In 31JY future
distribution."
Home State lost $152 million
through Imprudent Investments In
ESM. In addition.to the $92 mUllon,
the state placed $28 million In a
reserve fund to protect Hunter
against bad debts , and another $60
million lnaspeclai fund to help small
thrifts reopen.
"I can understand why the
governor decided against announcIng this personally," said Sen. Paul
E. Pfelf~. R· Bucyrus, a candidate
for governor In 19116. "Ten million

M.D.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

terlzed system, the fears In the

receive at least S4 mlllion under the
settlement proposed by Thomas
Tew, the court ·appointed receiver
furESM.
The governor, who had lett to
spend the weekend In Chicago, was
not at the press conference, but
Issued a statement.
"This Is a significant first step In
the recovery of state dollars used t6
protect the depositors of Home State
Bank," he said. "I am pleased that
the stated Ohio wUl receive nearly
on~·thlrd ol the first distribution In
the bankruptcy proceedings and Is

. CINCINNATI \UP!I - Charges Investigation's findings, but his
that General Electric Co.'s Even- lawyer,JamesHelmer,calledthem
IF YOU HAVE BEEN INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT, YOU MAY
dale plant defrauded the govern· "astonishing."
BE ENTinED TO RECEIVE MONEY UNDER A SPECIAL FE·
ment of SllO,(W In work on aircraft
"I don't know howyoo can submit
DERAL LAW, EVEN IF THE ACCIDENT OCCURRED UP TO
engines lor the Air Force bY false voochers overcharging the
.
.
charging the government for time ·government for work on governTHREE YEARS AGO AND WAS PARTIALLY YOUR FAULT.
I would like to announce
GE workers spent working on ment contracts and then claim as a
the opening of my new office in
FREE CONSULTAliON-CALL COLLECT.
private contracts were proved false result of that the government paid
Paint
Pleasant,
West
Virginia
bY an FBI Investigation, a govt&gt;rn· you less than you are entitled to,"
OYER 31 YEARS EXPERIENCE
ment offtclal said Friday.
Helmer said.
OFFICE HOURS
.' "We've finished the lnvestlgaEarlier this year, GE, the nation's
Monday through Friday
tlon," said Ann Marie Tracey, fourth largest defense contractor,
AnORNEY·AT·LIW
9:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
assistant U.S. ahorneywhldlrected paid tines ot $2 mUIIon because Its
..
the Inquiry. "We have detennlned Plllladelphla plant had defreauded
(3041 675· 7300
216/621-1865 ldal1l
that there Is lnsuf!lclent evidence the government of Slm,&lt;nl on
216/442-6424 (nentngl
LOCATED: Suile 113111odlcot Oflico
and the decision Is not to prosecute Minuteman mlssllecontractsandto
Building ot Pleasant Vall•'f Hospital
FULL LEGAL SERVICES ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO
the corporation or any employees.'' settle a claim that the company
Point Pleasant Watt Virginia
INinAL CONSULTADON FlEE
· GE spokesman William Black mlscbarged the federal govern·
said company officials "were ment m a satellite contract.
pleased," and pointed out that the .-;;;;;~~:;;;:::~:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;;;:~
lftvestigatlon turned up Information I
that GE actually had undercharged
the government more .than $100,(01
for Air Force jet engines.
'•
' The Investigation stemmed from
a' civil suit !lied against the company
tiy !onner GE foreman John
Gravitt. Gravitt said he was told to
c~targe dv Ualn contract work to the
g\)vernrnent. He later lost his job.
' Gravitt had m comment on the

•

WASHINGTON - Libyan dicta - said In regard to the Soviets. Their 99 percent o!Libya'sexports, andlt
tor Muammar Qaddafi Is nmnlng hopesofconsolldatlngtheirfootoold no longer brings In the moota.
scared these days. He's so fearful of In Ubya have Improved dramatl- Qaddafl oow gets less than half the
his own military that he won'teven cally In recent months asQaddafl's $22 billion a year that oil brought
let them leave their barracks n:&gt;r a troubles have mounted. And their him In 1981.
oollday parade. The last time he man Is already In place In Tripoli:
Ubyans realize that they are
sent his troops Into acti:m He's Qaddafl's doses! associate, deep In debt to the SJvlet.s and
order1ng them to Invade Thnlsla Maj. Abdul Salam Jalloud. There others as a result of loans Qaddafl
last August - they turned their are clear Indications that the got to further his .grandiose plans,
gons on him Instead.
Kremlin would look with favor on Shorlages anr soowing up eveyQaddafl Is probably not 100 Qaddafl's roster - with Jalloud where, and Qaddafl's fabled cha·
worried bY recent disclosures that stepping ln.
rlsma can't disguise the hard times
the CIA has put him on Its enemies
Qaddafl's biggest problem right - or the tact that he's laraely
list with President Reagan's bless· ·now Is money - and It could be responsible.
lng. As we first reported In June, the fatal . In the first decade of his rule,
We've seen a secret CIA assessCIA, along with the Saudis, sup- he could always placate his people ment that Usts Ubyans' "grlevan·
ported the disastrous coup attempt with oil ·money, and with glib ces" against Qaddafl. One d. these
by LibYan exiles In May 1984. the
promises of continued prosperity. Is that he has been "squander1ng
CIA continues to back the leader d
Even his most expensive-mistakes LibYan money, promoting utopian
that fiasco, Mohammed Youssef could be papered over with
schemes and Ignoring the rountry's
best Interests."
Magarleff, trough his chanres of petrodollars.
success apear no brighter now.
But the world on glut changed
Perhaps more significantly, the
But If Qaddafl has Httie to lear everything. 011 makes up more that report notes that at least the
from the CIA, the same cannot be
higher-ups 1n LibYa's 73,000.man

which stlll must be approved bY
pr1nclpal creditors and a Miami
bankruptcy court judge, would
permit the state to locus attention on
Its multi-million dollar lawsuits
against MaiV!n L. Warner, the
former Home State owner, and
Alexander Grant &amp; Co., an auditing.
firm which Issued a fraudulent audit
on lhe financial health of ESM
before It collapsed.
Connie J. Harris, state superln·
tendent d. savings and loan assocla·
tlons, said the dty of Toledo, which
lost $19 mWion to ESM, would

GE cleared of overcharging

rur.

Qaddafi successor

theclosingof70other0hlothrlfts.
Rayrmnd T. Sawyer, the gover·
nor's cb(ef of staff. told a press
conference the money would be paid
Into the worlrers' compensation
trust fund, from which $92 million
was bOrrowed last spring to assist
with the sale of Home State, which
reopened In :June as Hunter Savings
Association.
•
''This Is a first rut Important step
lntherecOverylorthestateofOblo,"
said Sawyer, adding It would "save
us months If not yearsoflltlgatlon."
Sawyer said the settlement .

•'

-

1st priority at Geneva
.

,,s s~are of a pro~ settlement d.
S35 mUIJon In clatins against a
l»ankrupt F1ol1da securities "firm
;which precipitated Ohio's .savings
and loan crisis last spring.
The olfice of Gov. Richard F.
Celeste reported Friday that Ohio
would r'l'reive SlO, 126,(8] of the
remaining assets of ESM Govern·
ment Securities, Inc., Fort Lauder·
dalt&gt;, whose collapse last March
brought down Home State Savings
Bank of Cincinnati and resulted In

James J. Kilpatrick

Farewell.to ladies' day
WASHINGTON - It all began
one day In 1979 when Derinls Kolre
went to the Metro Car Wa3h. He
was an 18-year-old student In
Anaheim, Calif. To hJs chagr1n, he
discovered thalli was ladles' day at
the car wash, and women were
getting a discount that he couldn't
have.
This horrendous Imposition
struck hlm to the core. Determined
to end the outrage, young Koire
brought suit against 11 car washes
and seven bars that similarly gave
speetal treatment tn the girls. His
case faUed to Impress a Superior
Court judge In Orange County; It
fuund no favor In the view of a
three·ju~e panel of the Court of
Appeal; but last month the California Supreme Court reversed the
lower courts. Farewell to ladles'
day!
Young Kolre brouught his suit
under California's Unruh Clvll

' COLUMBUS (UPIJ -The slate

:!1' Ohio stands to gain SlO million as

Page-A·~

.

'

The Sunday limes-Sentinei- Page- A-5

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

GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot man
was given a three day jail sentence,
l8 months probation and fined $.llO
and costs lor DWI Friday In the
Gallla County Municipal Court.
. Stephen L. Barirum, 35. of Rt. 2,
~as also given a 60 day license
suspension for DWI.
. For taking a deer dur1ng closed
gun season, Harold D. Thacker. 33,
~ Rt. 2, Patrtot, W"!! given a two day
)all eentence, l8 months probation.
two years suspension of hunting
rights and fined $100 and costs.
· Also!lnedfortakingadeerduling
closed gun season was George K
Ball, 37, of Rt. 2, Oak Hlll. He was
given a two day jail sentence, 18
months probation, two years sus·
Pension of hunting rights and was
lined SlOO and costs.
Betty L. McGowan, 41, of Rt. 1.
Gallipolis was fined $12 and costs for
a'defective exhaust.
·
. F1ned S12 and costs for an expired
driver's license was Garland Van·
sk7kle, 24. of Bidwell.
A charge of aggravated menace
aild domestic violence against
james Manuel Marcum, of Vinton,
was dismissed at the request of the
. comlalnlng witnesses.
:Forfeiting bond .for speeding was
Curils Jenklris. of 138 Electric Park
lid.,Wellston, $42.
Also forfeiting bond was Danny J .
Reynolds. 37,o1Rt. 2, VInton, falling
to stop at an assured clear diStance.
$40.

.•

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~-·
~

••

•

GALLIPOLIS

•

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•.-

..' -·

•

§AVllNG§

'.
.,

Old Friend With A New Name

.,
'•

..•

SINCE 1886, WE'VE SERVED GALLI A COUNTY.
WE SHALL CONTINUE TO DO SO. WE WILL
STILL BE THE SAME PLACE WITH THE SAME PEOPLE.

All We've

I...oCal board
~ember attends

ed Is Our Name

~tate convention.
. . COLUMBUS - Over 1m school
b(lards from all over thestatewtllbe
represented at tht&gt; Ohio School
Boards Association ((&gt;SBAI Dele~att&gt; Assembly on, November 11 In
Columbus. The delegates will con·
sld&lt;&gt;r association resolutions, legislative policies and ·positions, and
other Issues vital to educational
advancement In theupcomlngyear.
RE'(lresentlng the Meigs County
Board of Educational the Delegate
Assembly will be Harold Roush o1
Racine.
Th&lt;' Monday meeting of the
delegates Is the first event d.the30th
annual OSBA Capital Conference
and Trade Soow to be held at
Veterans Memorial and the Hyatt
Regency from November 11·13.
Over rroJ school board members,
superintendents, schooladmlnlstra·
tors, treasurers and other education
practitioners are expected,to attend
this year's ronference. The three·
day program Is designed to give
these officials an opportunity to
exchange Ideas and gain Insight on
the major Issues that wlll be facing
education In the upcoming year.
Educator Dr. Ernest Boyer, Dr.
Betty~l. president d. Kennesaw
College, John Walsh, chairman of
the Adam Walsh ResiR!rce Center,
and Governor Richard F. Ct&gt;leste
head the list of speal!ers at the
Capital Conference.
The Ohio School Boards represents all but threeof0hlo's741 boards
of education.
'• +

JUMIU

B

507 Emmitt Avenue
Waverly
947-7718

Ohio River Road
Wheelersburg
574-2524

A

N

K

507 Chillicothe Street
Portsmouth
354-6611

•
1.:
,,

I,

In ..

'

738 East Main Street
Jackson
286-6355

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis
446-3832

27 East Second Street
Manchester
(513)549-2472
&lt;

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'·t.

,,
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ltl
A

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Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 10, 1985

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

------Local

•

briefs:------------_,~

CAA closed Monday

J~mes

CHESHIRE - The Gallla-Metgs Community Action Agency will
be closed Monday In observance of Veterans Day, according tO
Director Sidney Edwards. The CM wUI observe regular&lt;ince hours
Tuesday.

Gerst and Paul Eric Gerst, Sr., all d Caldwell, agaslnt CD.
Drilling Co., Inc., Racine, and James E. Diddle, Racine, requesting a
judgment or $23,500.

Divorce granted

POMEROY - The Meigs County CourttDuse will be closed
Monday In observance of Veterans Day.

J?river cited by patrol

GALLIPOLIS- Write-In candidate, Regina Terry. for Centerville
council received 39 votes and was oot defeated as stated In
Wednesday's paper.

POMEROY - A divorce has been granted In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Carla Sue Bennett, Rutland, from John C.
Bennett, Brunswick, Ga .. on grounds of gross neglect or duty. The
plalntl!t was restored by the court to her fonner name Smith.
Lena Kay Rllfle, ReedsvUie, and Bruce F. Rl!fle,ln care of Roy F.
Rl!fle, Chester, have flied lor a dissolution of marriage.

Driver cited after accident

Meeting date changed

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallla County man was cited by the Gallipolis
city pallce Friday for failing to yield from a stop sign.
Willard H. Clagg, 'IIi, ofRt.1, Bidwell. pulled out from Crozet Street
Into the path of a car driven by Allen E. Baker, 'IIi, of 145 Woodland
Dr., Gallipolis, and struck his vehicle In the rtght rear.
Clagg's Vehicle suffered moderate damage while Baker's vehicle
suffered light damage. Clagg was cited In the Incident.
In another traffic Incident Friday, Mary S. Burris, 63, of Rt. 3,
BldwPII, was turning from Sycamore Street onto Second Avenue
when sbe struck the vehicle of Roberl I. FreybPrg, 34, of Rt. 1,
BldwPII, whlch was stopped beyond the line limit waiting to turn onto
Second Avenue.

POMEROY - Meigs County School Boardmember Harold Roush
will be In attendance Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the Ohio
School Boards Association Capital Conference and Trade Show In
Columbus. BecauSI' of !his, the regular meeting of the Meigs Coilnty
Board of Education will be held Thursday evening at 7 p.m. Instead
of Tuesday.

Election
.
- correction

Courthouse closed Monday

GALLIPOLIS - A Columbus woman was cited by tlle
Gallla-Meigs post of the Ohio State Patrol Friday for following too
cloSI'Iy.
'
Janice L.Crabtree, 35, of Columbus, was eastbound on Rt. 35 when
she struck the rear of a car driven by Randall S. Price, 21, of Rt. I,
Patrlol , as he was turning onto Co. Rd. aJ. Crabtree wa s cited In the
Incident.

.Large Selection

MAliA, FORMER SAlESPERSON FROM POINT PLEASANT
WAllPAPER STORE IS NOW LOCATED AT THE SPRING
YAWY PLAZA. SO COME AND SAY HEUO AND jJJ
THE STOCK Of WAllPAPER.
BUY 1 SINGlE ROLL AND GET 2 SINGLE ROLL

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-· ---~--

WALLPAPER MILL OUTLET

EMS answers four calls

1 MILE FROM HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

POMEROY -Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports
four calls Friday; Middleport at 9: :ll a.m. to Dr. Conde's office for
Clarence Norris who was treated but not transported; Middleport
Fire Department at 1: 29 p.m. to an automobile nre In Cheshire
Township--vehicle owned by Joseph Morgan--oo Injuries; Rutland at
6:04 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Terry Staten to Holzer Medical
Center; ·columbia Township Fire Department at 6:36 p.m. to a
minor structure fire at !he Musser residence In Carpenter.

OPEN 10 A.M.·5 P.M;

446-3131

81EINENIDOS AMIOOSI

- - ·---

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MON., TUES., THUR. &amp; FRI. 9 A.M. TIL 4:30

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MONUMENTSGallipolis . OH .
352 Third Ave .
PH . 446-2327

Open Daily 10-9; Sun. 12-6

ON SALE SUN., NOV. 10
THRU lUES~, NOV. 12

Action filed in Meigs court
'

'

POMEROY - An action has been filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Jeffrey Lee Gerst, Gerald Roger Gerst, Edward
'

•

•

THE FOLLOWING GALLIPOLIS

.- •

...

FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS WILL BE
CLOSED MONDAY, NOV. 11th IN
OBSERVANCE OF VETERANS DAY:
Buckeye Building and Loan
Central Trust
Civic Savina$ Bank

•

lbe Duslllullw. C01dless, rechargeable
vacuum cleaner wlfll
unn. Save lodoy.

.......

(ForiWtrly GalipoiJi Sawlngs &amp; Loan)

C&amp;S Bank
Ohio Valle Bank

~

A M&lt;•.SSII1!1' from Tl"• Bible...

3.97

BORN AGAIN
William B. Kughn
"Please an' "'' the following question for me and print in your ani-

t

,· h: : Doe ... the phrase 'being born again.' describe what the sinner gets in
,al\·at iun rat her tha~ being some1hing he does?"
To \ il )' that there is nothing a man must do in the "new birth." or
· 'fu•in,R h_om anui11. ·· b t~ advocate that ~an is passi.~e (not active). haY ·
in).! not hmg tn do or o;ay m regard to the new btrth .
Io Mon P111ln Or Actlve1
JL·s u~ l'nl pharically states. "Except a man be bor" dgain, he cannot
.&lt;we· '"" kinpdom uf Gud. '' The phrase "kingdom of God " has reference
to the church . Since ..ki11gdom ·· ha s reference to a system of governnu:nt. ~ n docs it ha,·e reference to the spirit ual kingdom (ch urch) or
con: rn mcnt established by God on earth according to His wisdom and
jwwcr. T ( t beco me a subjec t.o~' this kingdom (church), one muat enter lt.
I' he only woy one can enter 11 ts by belna bom opln!

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Cnrinthians the gospel. had IJeaoCIA!n them lh......p the gospti (I Cor.
4: 15) The t"onceptlon takes place when the heart receives with meekness

impl:tntcd in rhc hean . bu t there is no birth at this moment, only the

m11

I&gt;&lt;Melllng and con&lt;tptlon. The birth is complete at dtll'"'1, a coming
l'nrth from one state and passing into another. When man ts immersed
in w ; tt~r. he comes ou t of the water, by the power and work of God, a
IIL' W t•rcaturc. pass ing from a lost state to the saved state, from the king·
clom ol' darkness to the kingdom of God's dear Son, and becom":s a par·
111t.a:r oft he divine nature.
Man is deflnlttly actl•• in the new birth! H~ must be be...ten by

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the gu&gt;pcl : therefore. man must hear the gosp&lt;l. He must ton..,lte the
~ocl.'d .

In 1hc physica l birth . we have no control over our being begotte~ , or

hnrn. hut in the spiritual bin h. ail are under the control of the subject.
Man ran refuse to hear (be begotten). believe (conceive), or obey (in
l;t~1 pti .\ nl) the gospel. His being in control makes him acdte in the new

birth!

For F... Bible Cormpondtnce Coane, Write ...

'

Bulavllie Road • P. 0. Box 308
Gallipolis, Ohio ~I
~unda .l' ~or•lll(:

lilmtd.ay EYtnln• :

WtdntMdar:

1!.11\h• "tudyt: JII
" '1W11IIIp 11:311

Wunhlpl:ft

lllbl• SCvdy

Weinberger subsequently flled a
$10 mluton lawsuit against Sentry
and Joanls, which was settled out of
court In September 1983.
Weinberger, 54, has been a vice
president of Nationwide and will
retain that post In addition io his new
position.
Wausau's affiUation with Nationwide, announced Wednesday, will
.create ttl&gt; fourth· largest propertycasualty Insurer in the country. The
deal is expected to be COtJfpleted In
:ll days and possibly as sobn as 10
days, Weinberger said.
The plan calls lor Nationwide to
Infuse $250 million In cash Into tlle
Wausau Insurer.
The insurance Industry has haDed
tne merger as healthy. Marshall
. Loeb, managing editor of Money
magazine, said II Insures_a br)Bht

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Detroit-D.C. route through Valley possible
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. iUPli
town committee. "All three projects
- West VIrginia and Ohio officials belong together."
are combining forces In an effort to
The group approved a joint effort
promote the routing of a COMector to push for the new Interstate as a
highway between Washington and means of hastening their own
Detroit through the Ohio Valley.
. projects.
Representatives of .organtown's
The Morgantown group had
Committee lor the Extension of U.S. proposed a 56-mile stretch of new
48, the Bellaire, Ohio Route 7 highway to provide a four- lane link
Committee and tlle U.S. 250 Task between Washington and the new
Force from Catllz, Ohio, met In Moundsville bridge.
Bellaire last week to discuss the
project.
All three groups endorsed a
"There's a tremendous amount of . proposal by Tony Iannarelli, cocompatibility here," said David chairman of the Route7Commlllee.
Yoder, chainnan of the Morgan- lannarelli envisions combining the

"Mf'llllllfi'PFMm
t ... Bllllfl"

Oally • " '.JEH

l :u •. m.

..

three projects to form a northwest-:
southeast corrtdorto shorten Ihe trip j
through an area where east. wrstr
and north-south Interstates are ••
dominant.
:
"All you have todolslookat a map :
and visualize a road from Dei roil to•
Washington, D.C.." said lannarelli. ;
"We're right in the middle of it." '
The new proposal would extend •
the Morgantown plan by routing.
traffic from the Moundsville bridge:
to Ohio 7, 1- 470 west and 1-70, then:
north on a proposed four-lane U.S. ·
250 from St. Clairsville, Ohio. to :
Cadg.
.

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Wausau Insurance Is "a great
local company that by everybody's
reckoning has been In trouble,"
Loeb said at an Insurance lndustty
dinner In
night.

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-7

Pleasant, W. Va .

If you're unfortunate enough to injure
your hand or your foot, it shouldn't cost
you an arm or a leg.

RechasgN!Ie Shawr

Save
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2.96 Ea. Air Iuten

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

WAUSAU, Wis. (UPI)-Thenew
president of the Wausau Insurance
. Cos. said Friday his finn will
,i,remaln autonomous despite affiliation with the Nationwide Insurance
Co. and that he expects It to prosper.
• Leon Weinberger spoke at a news
conference one day after tieing
named to the top post at the
financially troubled finn .
. Weinberger said he Is looking at a
five-year plan of development that
will broaden the com~any's
strength through a dl!terenl kind or
product Une. He would ndtelaborate
on lhoSI' plans.
"The company (Wausau) Is
lmmedl'ltely stabilized with a
pooollng arrangement and reenron;ernent promised by NatiOnwide," he said .
Paul Donald, president rt Nation·
wide, praised the merger as a good
one tor both firms.
"We hope to get out of It a better
ability to service the national
marketplace, " said Donald. "It's an
important strategic move on our
part because Wausau Is strong
where we're weak and we think
we're strong where Wausau Is weak .
It's just a very good match."
Weinberger, whO grew up In
Wisconsin. said he was happy to bP
b;.ck In the state.
:· ''And besides," he joked, "I pever
gat used to Ohio State fQOthall ...
The company laid off more than
200 employees In the Wausau area ,
and hundreds more nationwide this
year. But !hose layoffs, will end and
hiring may begin, Weinberger said.
His problems at Sentry Insurance
In Stevens Point are behind him and
will not affect his new job, said
Weinberger, a former Sentry executive Nice president. He was ftred in
December 1979 In il dispute with
John Joanls. Sentry's chief execu-

55.97
Nortlco

and 1hercfore. he rewiYet the gospel in his heart with meekness.

He must be dellven,d from the water; therefore. he completes his birth
;~t baptism.

,The memorial In Marion may he
the nrst to honor ali women who
upported this country's war efforts,
says the Veterans Memorial Park
Committee.
The group started planning the
monurnnet after learning that Rep .
Mary RoSI' Oakar, D- Ohio, had
Introduced a bill In Congress to erect
a women's memorial in
Washington.
"We wanted to have it first, " said
Claire Campbell, a membPr of the
Veterans Memorial Park
Committee.
She said · the granite monument
honors "the women who worked In
factories, the women who stayed
ltbme and were the mother and
father; the women who were in the
Red Cross" and others.
"You can even goalllhewayback
to the pioneer women whO heloed

RACINE -Roy W. Rtlfle, 81, of
Vine Street, Racine, died Saturday
their husbands light against ·the
morning atn Veterans Memorial
Indians," she said.
j'lospltal In Pomeroy.
·
Oakar will dedicate the
He was born March 14, 1904 at
monumemt.
Hartford, W. Va .. to the the late
All rough there are some monu- Jacob Wilson and Myrtle Lee Riffle.
ments to WACS and WAVES, they He was a retired salesman with the
do oot stand women · who made POII'leroy Cement Block Co. and
contributions, said committee attended !he Racine First Baptist
member Valerie Flavell.
Church.
An American flag will fly lor the
Survivors Include his wife, Laura
dedication ceremony. then It will be Shain Riffle: one son, Melvin Rlffte
taken down as the committee tries to rt Columbus: two step sons, David
prevent thefts.
McKenzi~ of GaiUPQUs and Guy
"We've had four nags stolen In Morris &lt;i Pomeroy.
two days," said Flavell. "That
He Will! preceded In death by one
makes nine flags stotrn wllhln the brother and his first wile, Edith
past year. That's too much."
Rigggs Riffle.
Authorities say t~ofthe park's
Graveside services will he I p.m.
five ftags were stolen Tuesday and Monday at tlle Burlingham Cemeone Wednesday.
tery wltll Rev. Steve Deaver ·
"The park looks barren without officiating. Friends may call at the
tbem," she said, whOaddedtheDags Ewing Funeral Home from 7-9p.m.
cost bPtween $40and $50 and that the Sunday.
Veterans Memorial Park Associa·
lion Is running out of money to
replace them.
Two of the ftags stolen this year RevolutiOn up," said Ralph Shuping
of the Barbed Wire Association's
we~eMlAPOWftags.Thegrouphas
decided not to display nags at tlle monument committee that sponsored the memorial.
park untll further notice.
The committee Is made up of :ll
In Lancaster, , a $3l;OOO- black
former
prisoners of war whO llve In
marble monument will be Ui!veUed
Falt11eld
County.
In front of Anchor Hocking's
Shuping said hls group, which
corporate office as a tribute to the
tx&gt;gan
collecting money In April for
county's veterans.
the
memorial,
had surpassed the
"This Is representative of all
b'Jal
of
$.'1).
[OJ.
veterans from thls county from the

60°/o

m sowmg the mcorrupttble seed. Paul, by teachmg the

tlw engr;~ftcd word (Jm s. I:20). At this time, the word (seed) has been

By United l'nlsalntemallonal
Memorials will be .dedicated
Monday- Veterans Day- to honor
tbose ·who served thls country's
anned forces, Including what may
be the {irst memorlal to honor the
\jlomen who gave their support.
A monument will be .unveiled at
Veterans Memorlal Park at Marion
t.o pay tribute to the womefl whO
served In Armed Forces while
another memortal wlll be dedicated
fpr the Fairlleld County war

1·

Pl. PLEASAIIT FOODLAND
OPEN 24 HIS. WEilDin

tnt he physical birth. there is a btaetdna, ..,...,ptlon, and dtUmy;
"'it i' with the spiritual birth. The word of God (the gosp&lt;l) is the in&lt;&lt;&gt;rruptiblc seed (Lk. 8:1: I Pet. 1:23; Jms. 1:18) by which we are
spiritual!\' hc~ouen._ God ha~ appoint~d the teachers of the truth as the
imlnllllCnt~o

Women's.memorial I ~ea death
tQ be dedicated . RoyW.Rirne

Poii;~t

Wausau lo stay autonomous
despite Nationwide affiliation
.

Marriage licenses issued
POMEROY - Marriage UcenSI'S have been Issued In Meigs
Coonty Probate Court to Christopher Lee Richmond,~. Middleport,
and Valerie AM Pauley, 17, Pomeroy; Robert Eug~&gt;ne Landers, 22,
and Margaret Ann Riffle, 24, both or Parkersrurg.

Pomliroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

veterans..

Veterans Memorial news
POM-EROY - Admissions: Gelna Pellegrllio, Racine: Jennifer
Barrett, Rutland.
Discharges: Benjamin Fields. Walter Harris, Juanita Chapman.
Elvira Barr. Leola Cooper.

November 10, 1985

ncn

•.

�November 10, 1986

1!imes • ientin:el

section~
November 10, 1985

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STONE BUILDING - Frank CorneD and Jack Jordan are Jordan was described as an expert brick mason wtio did ~of the
-' rememhered by local resldenls as two who worked on corwtructlng the t'CIIIStruction asslstOO by ComeU woo split lhe shingles ilr the original
park buDding which houses the 1'\!St rooins, a store room, lUid a shop. roof.

A quiet place now, Buffington Island park
.was anyting but that .during Civil War times
By CHARI..ENE HOEFUCH
'llmes&amp;ntlnel Staff ·
- "The ~nal memories of any
country are lis richest possessions;
They are rjcher than mines Gl gold,
fields of com, or cattle before a
thousand hills. They are .more
enobUng than elites fiUed wllh
trelilynls. They are a greater
secbt:IIY than lliiii'Chlnlllf'mies or
salJing navies. 'l'l!!lY arestorebouses
" ..,....." U&amp; ~Of" .JNIIrkl&amp;k ferviJfi
Thomaa
.,eaklng at the
1~ dedlcallall of the Buffington
lsllind Me~ · state Park at
.
d "l'•'l'
.. &gt;•'
P. rtlan

:.t. 1wn

0

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., -

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--"-'-

PORTI..ANb ~As autumn sets In
is qulei orr &lt;1· stroU through the
Buffington Island Memortal State
Park at Portland· except for the
rustle of dry leaves under1oot.
And It's· the very silence of the
park which moves the Imagination
Into visualizing a scene which took
place there more than 120 years ago

311

- the repuise of that famous of the park dedicatiOn. the fall of did lots of work in that park. He and
Confederate General John Hunt 1933, Mrs. C.F.Rathbum,oneofthe Jake Jordan had a lor to do with
Morgan and his troops as the war speakers and contributors to the constructing that stone buldlng at
between the north and the south development , rededicated the the park." It houses restrooms, a
moved to a close. .
mound as a "memorial to the shop and storage area.
According to Price. Jordan was
The park Is a memortal to the distinguished l;lut extinct race of our
battle of Buffington Island, to the forefathers ."
an expert brlckmasonanddldlotsof
valor and courage of the soldiers • Before the dedication, the mound the construction, while Cornell split
·who died there in July, 1863.
was restored by the state. As Gay le all·of the shingles that went onfo the
It Is located on three acres, which Price, Portland history buff, recalls, ortginal roof. Lots of people were
Interested and helped with the park,
was a gift of Noi1Tla Call~lns the work was done by the WPA.
STQNE AND MORTAR - Allee Adams, a sister to Nonna Calkins
Peoples, granddaugher of Charles
Numerous residents with many according to Prtce, whose life has
Peoples, donor of the land lor the park, Is pictured with the original
andSarahPricewhoownedtheland names stU! prominent In Mejgs been spent In Portland In the
monument constriH:ted at the site. In later years, the monument either
at the time of the battle.
County- the Philsons, Rathbums, homeplace boUt by hls grandfather
feU or was knocked over and was re-erected In two paris in dlllerent
She gave It for a state park to . Comptons, Goesslers, Reeds. Elber· In 1875.
locations.
The original tall stone monument
perpetuate the memory of the U.S.
·
felds,
Downlngs,
Rawlings,
Bolces,
'
TroopsandtheOiilo Volunteers who Glllllands , Philsons, Fin laws, toppled over a numberofyearsafter
fought and fell In the battle of Millers, and Duerrs - contributed It was constructed and Is now In two caravan ot automobiles wt'llded its sacrifice of those who died here on
Buffington Island. Mrs. Peoples' to the stone memortal tablets which SECtions,' ea ch with brass plates way upriver to this site In east ern July 19, 1863."
"The ca use Morgan reprPS·
detailing the battles which took Meigs County following a banquet
,' political lnfiuence was sufficient were erected at the site.
ented,"
th&lt;' congressman con.
served
to
several
hundred
In
place
there
and
the
slgnlfl~ance
of
Price who has done exten sive
durtngthosedepresslonyearstoget
cludt'd
,
"gained
no addlti:Jnal sup.
Pomeroy."
thestatetodeveloptheacreagelnto research on the battle which took the sHe and listing the names of
porters
by
his
raid
In Ohio, but on the
The
band
played,
legionnaires
led
a park.
plate at Portland and the develop· those who worked to develop the
contrary
taught
that
liberty and
In a patriotic opening, a congress·
Located on the site was an Indlan ment of the park, recalls the · park.
The occasiOn 52 years..ago thls man and governors of two states, union arc one and inseparable."
mound, wlthagapplngcraterwhere contributions of several local
The park, always popular for
month
for the tiny village of along with other political notables,
residents had dug hoping to find residents.
family
reunions and school gather·
extolled
on
the
significance
of
"Frank Cornell." he says, "was a Portland, oo prominent In the
something of value. The mound was
lngs,
remains
an attraction for
memorializing
the
battle
site.
restored bythestate,andonthedate poor man with a team of mules who concluding da)'S of the ClvU War,
scholars.
teachers
and historians.
U.S. Rep. Thomas A. Jenkins
drew a crowd of rmre than 2,!XXJ
And Price. who has Interviewed
. (10th district) In his address
from three states.
Price attended the dedication and described the monument as "some· residents and recorded their memo.
thing of stone and mortar, mute and rles of In cidents relating to that
remembers It well.
Inanim
ate , yet oomethlngwhlch wil famous battle on Oh io shores at
A retlred school teacher. he
described ·the occasion as drawing continue to be more eloquent than PorUand and Ihe ~t rangers It
"the biggest crowd we ever had anythlngsald or done here today, for brought into the tiny village, as well
It Is at once a compliment to the as the dedicat ion of th&lt;' park to
here."
"The state road hadn't evm been valor and courage ot thousands of commemorate it, enthu siastically
built yet", Price recalls, "but a our soldiers and a monument to the shares his knowledge.

,.

..

"
.

" ...

.... '
\

~

INDIAN MOUND REDEDICATED - Gayle
Price, a ClvD War hlstoly bull, wallis up the 8leps of
the lldan mound at the Buffington bland l\lemorlal
Stale Park at Portland. 'lbe mound wblch was a

. ·~
gapping crater creaied by residents digging to
recover burial treasures was reconstructed by the
state prior to It's rededication In the laD Gl1933.

TODAV'S MEMORIAL Brass plaques on the four sides
of this monument, a part of the
original one dedlcaled In 1933,
detaU the story Gl Morgan's
arrival In Portland and the
battle between the loroes of the
Confederate leader and the
pursu•g Union foroes led by
Brig. Gen. Henry M. Judah and
Edward H. Hobson In mld.Jul:y,
111413. Morgan and hl8 troop!
were foroed to Dee up the Ohio,
side of the river untO finally
captured near Ushon m July 28,
1883.

I

•

�November 10, 19R!'

Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Calendar

usa Burdette, Robert Allbright wed in ceremon:y

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Umw f'amlly
will be at Mr. Zion Baptist Church.
Sunday, 7 p.m.

.'

LECTA - Rev. Ernest Baker at
Walnut Ridge Chu rch, Surxlay, 7:30
p.m.

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va - On
bet. 19 at Krebs Chapel Unltoo
Methodist Church, Lisa Burdette
and Robert Allbright were united In
marriage by the groom's fathe r,
the Rev. Robert Allbright ,
· Henderson.
The bride was escort!II by her
father, Robert Burdette, Point
Pleasant. She wore a noor·length
white satin gown with an overlay ct.
lace and pearls. Her v~l was
trimmed In lace and was attacht&gt;d
to a tiara of satin and pearls. The
gown and veUwere creat!II by the
bride's mother, Mrs. Robert
Burdette, and the Bride's aunt,
Ruby Bennett.
The bride carried a bouquet of
burgurxly and pink roses with white
daisies, baby's breath, and t:Ai r·
gurxly rlbllon tied In love knots. The
bouquet was arranged bY the
groom's mother, Mrs. RotErt
Allbright, Henderson.
Maid of honor was Karen
Spencer, cousin of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Gloria Burdette.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

. STORt I'IOURS
Mon.·Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M

GALLIPOLIS- Triedstone Baptist Church notesl5thannlversaryd
its pastor, Rey. John D. King,
Sunday, 3 p.m. SpeakerwUl be Rev.
Roger Ford. Morning service at
10: 45, dinner the church.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gospel
Tones wUl be at Faith Temple
Chruch. Surxlay 10 a.m.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 16, 1985

LEON, W.Va. - Grubb FamUy
Singt&gt;rs at ShUoh Chureh, Sunday,
7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Revival Pomeroy
Chureh of Christ, tllrough Nov. 19,
7:30p.m. Evangelist Gus Andrews,
speaker. Everyone welcome.

..,..

·, ..

ROYAL OAK - Royal Oak
· Ballroom Dance Club tea dance,
Sunday 4·7 p.m.. Point Pleasant
: AmPrlcan Legion. Admission $15
: per couple.

.~

1/4

· RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
BasebaU Association ml'l'ts Mon·
day, 7 p.m. at municipal buDding.
Bring candles.

.

~-5681.

: : POMEROY - Twin City Shrlnt&gt;
'Club meets Monday, 7 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs County
Pomona Grange Officers Confer· ·
ence Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Rnck
Springs Grange Hall.

$1 69

USDA CHOICE BONELES$ .

Chuck Roast •• ~..... .

; · PT. F:LEASANT, W.Va- PhysJ.

the OMEN programs fi:Jr the past 8
' clans at Pleasant Valley Hospltalln years.
l Point Pleasant Is participating In a
The once-a-week, hour-long,
: iertes of continuing medical !IIuca· noon-hour conferences originate
• pon teleconferences, which began "live" from Ohio State University.
Sl!pt. 17.
Through these teleconferences, the
• ": The JO.progra m Ohio Medica l doctors at Pleasant Valley Interact
: ~ducatlon Network (OMEN) ser· . with guest lecturers from six
.les Is one way that doctors at medical Institutions: Ohio State
; i&gt;leasant Valley keep abreast of University; the University of Cln·
•• hew advances In medicine, result· ctJmatl; Case Western Re.serve
•lilg In belter patient care for the University In Cleveland; The Cleve·
Physicians at Plea· land Clinic; Wright State UtlverVaUey have been taking part In slty In Dayton; and Medical College

!

99

Sausage .........~·..... $1
SUPERIOR
$ll 9
Sliced Bacon •. ~2.~;
•• .

.

MIXED

Fryer Parts ••••~••••••
TURKEY

9(

•

of Ohio at Toledo. Over ooe·third of
all Ohio hospitalS parilclpate In
OMEN.
The first 00 minutes &lt;1 each
program Is devoted to a sllde/ lt&gt;e·
ture presentation by at least two
physlclan-panellsts. The last half
hour consists of a t~·way discus·

Arts &amp; Crafts
fair slated
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - La·
wanda Rodgers of Kerr, will
present the craft ci cut and pierced
lamp shades at the Capital City Art
and Craft Show, Nov. 15-17, at the
Charleston Civic Center.
The show wUl be open to the
PJbllc on Friday, Nov. 15, !rom 4
p.m. untU 10 p.m.; Saturday, Nov.
16, from 10 a.m. untU 10 p.m., and
Sunday. Nov. 18, from noon untU 7
p.m.
CCAC Is sponsored by the
Kanawha City Lions Club, and
proceeds from the show go toward
the club's charity projt&gt;ets, such as
sight conservaton.
Tickets will be !Did at tile door.
Prices are$2.50 for adults, with a 50
cent discount for senior citizens,
and$1 forchUdren l2 years of age or
younger.

Drumsticks •••••••••••• 3
11

TO THE VOTERS OF
WALNUT TOWNSHIP

•

Than• You
For Your Support
WANDA HIVELY

PT. PLEASANT. W.Va. - Point

Pleasant LaLeche League meets
Monday, 7:30p.m. at the homt&gt; d.
Tammy McCormick, 410 Cypress
Court. For Information ca11675-44ll.

.
)·
••

TUE!IDAY
Running Club rnet&gt;ts Tuesday. 7
p.m., Mary's Danre Studio, Pt.
Pleasant.

•

·~

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro·
tary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m.. Down
Under.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
meet Tuesday 7 p.m., at the school.
Abook fair wUI be held.

center.

POMEROY - thud Assault
Prevention public awareness meetIng, 7 to 9 p.m.. at JTPA building,
West Secorxl Street, Pomeroy;
presentell by the Chlld Assault
Prevention projt&gt;et of Gallla, Jack·
son and Meigs Counties; refresh·
ments and chlld care.

MARTHA ~HITE CO~N

Muff1n M1x ••• i.~~; 6I

$

49
2% Milk ........~~~·:.. $1

$

DOMINO 1OX, LT. or DARK

Brown Sugar •.••• 21
1-LI. BOX

1

JENO'S FROZEN

1

WHITE CASTLE FROZEN

Pizza .............. ~~!~~.. 89C

21

oz.

Limit 3

9·9(

FLOUR
SLB.

BAG

Limit 3 Per Customer
GoOCI Ullly AI rowott's ;:rmallcot
Olfor bpirn S..t.JIIv. 6, I 985

..

.

VELVET

CHERRY PIE FILLING

89(

limit 1 Per Cuttemer
At Powol'o 141ptrmt~ilcot

Sat. Nlf. 16, 1915

..

TOILET TISSUE
8 Roll
Pkg.

99&lt;

,Limit 1 Por Customor
Good Only At Powoll's S..Ormallcot
Olfor &amp;piros Sat., Nov. 16, 1915

••• •••

·''

DETERGENT
147

&amp;

11:

oz.$4 99

Umit 1 Por Customor
Good Only At Powoll's S~ormallcot
Offor bpirts Sat., Nn 16, 1985

"

•

sian In which panelists respond to
"live" questions and oomments
phoned In from hospitals taking
part In the two-way visually
augmented and amplified tele·
phone network programs. All ques·
lions and all answers are heard by
all of the participating hospitals.

DAN THOMAS
&amp; SON
SHOE STORE

:Residents can sign up lor tllelr
tlpiden Buckeye Cards at tl)e
libraries now. At the Pomeroy
LJl)rary you can sign up anytime the
library Is open .. Monday, Friday,
SaCurday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursd ~jl, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sign up time at
Ml!ldleport wUI be on the third
Thursday of yach month.

1reasured

"Across from the Park"

Then and Now ...

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

Lovely duc hess and princess rings yo u'll treasure
a lifetime. Crafted with the same fin e quality work·
manshlp that recalls yesteryear so bea ulifully !
Your choice of fancy setlings with diamond accents. Available in white
NOW
or yellow 10 kt. gold.

$

MUST BE TAKEN BY
NOVEMBER 16 TO
INSURE DELIVERY BY

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
113 COURT
POMEROY
992-2054

(Earlier if you plan to
mail them.)

EVENING APPOINTMENTS
ARE AVAILABLE
(614) 446-7494

SEARS

PHOTOGRAPHY

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION SALE

SPf11NG VAWY PlAIA • GAWPOUS
CLOSfD MONDAYS

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MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

,.., NEWEST • MODERN EQUIPMENT
., PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH NURSES

,.., WE DO ALL BILLING
,.., 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
,.., PROFESSIONAL COURTEOUS STAFF

.,

WE OFFER.... HOSPITAL BEDS. WHEELCHAlRS, WALKERS, '
OXYGEN CONCENTRATORS, BEDSIDE COMMODES, '
GLUCOMETER, T.E.N.S. UNITS AND MVCH MORE.

"WE SPECIALIZE IN CARING"
'~

BUSINESS HOURS :

Monday thrv Frldoy,I:OOa.m. to 4: 30p. m.

6 7 5-61 00

A.!ll Vlllld Slreet

'

Polol Pleuial
4

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PH. 446· 7441
45 State St., Gallipolis

OlferExplre•Dec . 31,185

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342SECOND
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691

LEAR.

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CHRISTMAS.

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FU&gt;OISAAE

Hamburgers ... !~~~'!'! S369

THANK .YOU

Paid for by Wanda Hively, Rt 2.

;!Library lines

BROUGHTON

RI.J1'LAND - Rutland VUlage
CouncUml'l't Tuesday, 7 p.m.. civic

CAP meetin2

the son of John and VelmaNiclnsky,
Rutland.
The bride wore a tuU length silk
organza gown over taffeta fashi·
oned with a Victorian style nt&gt;ekllne,
and a scalloped Venice lace
trimmed skirt. She wore a wreath of
sllk rosettesandbaby's breath in her
hair. The bridal bouquet was a
cascade of sUk deep pink roses and
white stepha notis.
The bride Is a graduate of Meigs
High
School and atlended Ohio
;
University and Hocking Tt&gt;ehnlcal
'
By RU111 POWERS
·! Nov. 11 to Nov. 16 Is Children's College. She Is employed with
Ewing Funeral Home.
Book Week.
The groom Is also a graduate of
; , Children sign in~ up for a library
Meigs
High School and attended
~ rd this week can take their card to
Ohio
University,
and Musldngum
fJeasers Restauran t and receive a
Area
Technical
College. He Is
s~a il coke or hot chocolate free.
, •Several groups have made ap· employt&gt;d with Herald OU and Gas
polntments for library tours during · Company.
The couple reside at Route 1,
(;j!Jldren's Book Week. The library
Middleport.
~s special lxlokrnarks to pass out
clprtng tht&gt; week. There will be a
~anut guessing game going on all
w'eek and all children can take a
gGess on the amount of peanuts In
til" jar at the desk. A prize will be
given to the child guessing ':Jght or
the closest guess.
;Every da~ a bag of peanuts wUI be
pO!nt&gt;d on the bulletin board and at
dosing a card will be ·picked at
random from the day's cirCUlation
afld whoever's number appears OJl
o;card will win thepeanutsforthat
da\r ..You'd bette~ use the libraries
d ~rlng Children's Book Week. You
ALL VACCUUM
dijn't know what you may miss out
SWEEPERS, IA~S
on.•
BELTS
IJ'he tun starts on Tuesday, Nov.

Grapes •.••••.•••• ~••••.• 79(
GRADE A
.
$
Med. Eggs ......:~•• 2I 1

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter d. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
meet at Dlamorxl Savings and Loan
Tuesday, 7:00p.m.

POMEROY - Meigs County
School Boardmember Harold
Roush wUI be In attendance Mon·
day, Tuesday and Wednesday at the
Ohio School Boards Association
Capital Conferenre and Trade Show
In Columbus. Because of this, the
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Education wUI be
held Thursday evening at 7 p.m.
Instead of Tuesday.

POMEROY - VIcki Lynn Hood
~arne the bride of John Craig
fSJclnsky In an Oct. 4 wrodlng
!:eremony at the First Baptist
Ohurch, Pearisburg, Va. The Rev.
!it&gt;e Ellison performed the double·
Hng ceremony.
.; The bride Is the daughter of Mary
i;. Hood, Pomeroy, and the late
Wilbur C. Hood. The bridt&gt;groDm Is

THOMPSON WHITE SEEDLESS

LECTA -Bible study at Walnut
Ridge Church, Tuesday, 7::rl p.m.
with Rev. Earl Hinkle.

Meeting date changed

Mr. and Mr.r. john Craig Nicinsky

i\licki Lynn Hood trades vows
with John Craig Nicinsky Ocr. 4

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va.- MGM

MIDDLEPORT - Heath Unitro
Methodist Womt&gt;n meet Monday.
7::r&gt;p.m.

Musical selections WEI'e bY tiE
bride's brotll!r, Keith Burdette,
Cottagev llle, They Included
"You're tile Inspiration," 'The
Search Is Always on my Mind,"
"The Wedding Song" and the
traditional "Wedding March."
A reception was held foUowlng
the ceremony at tile Krebs Chapel

United Methodist Fellowship Hall.
A four·tler wt&gt;ddlng cake, which
was baked and decora't!II by the
bride's aunt, Ruby Bennett, was
servro by Vee Ann Smith, Reeca
AUbrlght and aunt of the groom,
Barrl Westfall.
The bride Is employed bY the
Mason County Board of Education
at the Mason County Vocational
Center and the groom Is employed
by Pasquale Elt&gt;etric Co.. Galllpo·
lis. Ohio.
The couple resides at :!710 Lincoln
Ave., Point Pleasant.

~t

29
Pork Loin ..~..... S1

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

POMEORY - Southern Hllls
Arts Council ml'l'ts Monday, Senior
Cltlzt&gt;nCentl'r, Pomeroy, 7::rlp.m.

ROY ALOAK-Bellesand Beaus
•Western Square Dance Club will
:sponsor a square dancing class
:beginning Monday, 7 p.m., contlnu·
;Jng each Monday at the Royal Oak
Park Recreation BuUdlng. John
Waugh, Gallipolis, will Instruct.
First two ll'ssons fnoe of charge. For
;Ill formation call992·2500, 992·7477 or

rose street-length dress and a
corsage of burgundy rosebuds. The
mother of the groom wore a
street-length blue dress and a
corsage ct. burgundy rosebuds.

~OMEN program used at Pleasant Valley

•

MONDAY
, GALLIPOLIS - Revival begins
· Monday, Bell Chapel Church with
· PVangellst Howard White, Madison,
W.Va. Special singing, serv ices 7
p.m. nightly.

('t.VI'.' Pomeroy.

Mr. and Mrs. Robett Allbright

slster·ln·law ci the lrlde, and Cindy
Dl'an, cousin of the bride. They
wore floor-length burguixly &amp;Qwns
also created by tile bride's mother.
They carried bouquets arranged bY
the groom's ~ther.
The groom·wore a black tuxedo
with a boutonniere of burgurxly
rosebuds. Best man was Kerry
Wandling, Point Pleasant. Usll!rs
were Roger Vlthllonl, Barlnurs·
ville and Chris Moody, fulnt ·
Pleasant. They wore gray tuxedos
with a boutonniere of burgundy
rosebuds.
Flower girl · was Arey Spencer,
cousin of the brkl~. Asheville, Ohio.
She wore a floor-length burgurxly
&amp;Qwn matching that of the brides·
maids. She carried a basket IJHro
with burgundy rose petals.
The ring bearer was Scott Wood,
nephew of the groom, Awle Grove.
He wore a gray tuxedo, matd!Jng
that o! the best man and ushers, and
wore a boutonniere of burgundy
rosebuds.
Mother of the bride wore a dusty

,-

. POMEROY - Rev. Cliff Cole.man speakPr Sunday, First South·
t&gt;rn Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
Services !O:OOa.m., 7p.m.

: POMEORY - Disabled Amerl·
:can Veterans of Meigs County meet
;6:00 p.m. Monday, 124 Butternut

The Sunday

r ---------------------,

I I

_____ J

L----------------------I
OlferExp lr.. Dec. 31,198&amp;

•

OBTAIN YOUR COPY FROM
YOUR SEARS CATALOG STORE
BUT hprry, SUPPLIES ARE LIMITED
AS ALWAYS, SEARS 15 HERE
TO SERVE YOU!
S1htl•t. l1on llulteniHd

l!hr
MOIIIINICI'Iti'CIIM IVIIIIOII
ll)r pC~ ,.P WMWI I lew d.ly'

Silvor lridge
Plo1o
Gallipolis, Oh .

Ot row' moner oeu
t..SHrt. AotDI.IC• 1nd Co., INS

tktt~

~e1fll(fltr:t;JiRS

•

�('

November
10, ·1985
.
.'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ()hio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Bradley
Pickens

Revival set

Queen - Skaggs
RIO Grande - Wedding plans
have been completed for the
· marrtage ol Nancy Elaine Quren
and Randall Dean Skaggs, roth of
Rio Grande.
The open-church ceremoro wUI
take place Saturday, Nov. %l at 5:30
p.m. at the Oak HJU Presbyterian
Church, Rev. James A.M. Hanna
officiating. A reception wllt !rome·
dtately follow at the James A.
Rhodes Bulltltng at Rio ~rande
College.
The couple's parmts are Mr. and
Mrs. Wllttam Haydon of Oak Hill
and Mr. and Mrs. James Skaggs c1
Rio Grande.

.
Mr. and

CHESHIRE Mrs.
Jerry Bradley announce the Bl·
gagement and approaching mar·
rtage ol their daughter, SheJU Lym
Bradley. to Gregory Scott PICkens,
son of Mrs. and Mrs. Jack Pickens.
Miss Bradley Is a graduate o1
Kyger Creek High School and
attends Rio Grande College, major·
· ing In Nursing.
Pickens Is a graduate ol l'brth
Gallla High School and Is employed
at Dudley's Flower Shop and
Kroger.
The open-church wedding wlll be
held Dec. 7, at the Nazarme
. Church, Caltpolls, Ohio. A recep·
tton wlll follow at the Kyger Creek
Clubhouse.

Mission, County Road 8, Bashan and
Sttversvtlle Roa&lt;! and Portland
Road with Rev. Clyde Ferrell as

~_.y

Modeling Studio .
&amp;Stlf lmpro~e~nent .:
.

SheiU Lym Bradley
Grepry Scolt Pickens

MeJban Elizabeth Grtfltn
Randall B. Almoe

Manley - Dexter
MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Crystal Dawn Manley to
Ted Lane Dexter on Nov. 16 at2: 30
p.m. at Middleport lndt'pendent
Holiness Church, 75 Pearl St.
Music will begin at 2 p.m. by
organist Mrs. Dorcas Mantey,
Middleport. Tracy Manley, sister a!
the bride, wllt be the maid of honor,
and Janet Dexter, sister of the
groom, wtll be a bridesmaid. Best
man wlll be Jerry Lewis and
groomsman wm be Roger Manley

Jr.
The Rev. Steve Manley and the
Rev. Steve Tomek wilt be ushers.
Steve Manley wll be Bible bearer
and Charla Burge wtll serve as
Dower girl.
•
The ceremony wlll be conducted
by the Rev. Odell Manley, grand·
father of the bride. Relallves and
frtends are Invited to the wedding
and the reception which will be held
following the ceremony at the
Diamond Savings and Loan,
Pomeroy.

••

.'
L

'

..

-

r'

~

WALLPAPER SUPER SAlE·

Turkey supper

,.

Speaker set

•'
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ANSWERS

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ON BEAUTIFUL IM·
PERIAL PATTERNS
. IN STOCK

SYRACUSE -The MeiRS County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Dtsabtllttes will
hold
Its monthly meeting Thursday,
1
; Instead of Monday, 7 p.m.. at
·. Carleton School, John Street, Syra·
CUS('. AU meetings are open to the
·:· publiC'

~

446~6292 .

~DM\N\StUl\OM
M\CRO·
COMPUTER

FINANCIAL AID STILL AVAILABLE
*OIG DEADLINE EXTENDED UNTIL NOV. 29, 1985

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$399
RED TAG AREA ... only ~g~~"

529 JACKSON PIKE

: Tammy Elizabeth jeffers becomes
bride of jeffery Allen Wyers

1

GALLIPPOUS

liSC Accreditation

Mr. and Mrs. jeffery Allen Wyers

Blood pressure clinic
HARRISONVILLE - Harrtson·
ville Senior Citizens will have free
blood pl"l'ssure day, Tuesday, 10
a .m. to noon . Ferndora Story will
supervise. Everyone welcome.

Lodge meetings

&amp;US\NESS

ACCOUNTING

POMEROY -Meigs Local Band
Boosters will meet Monday, 7 p.m.,
at the high school.

POMEROY- Tammy Elizabeth Brothers of the bride, Steve and
,. Jeffers became the brideol Jeffery Dave Jeffers, served as ushers.
~ Allen Wyers In a double ring
Rice was dtstrtbuted by Shane
:: ceremony held at the White Chapel Jeffers. Guests were registered by
Church, Coolvllie. The Rev. P"lil Kathy Klintworth, cousin of the ·
•
.• Rtdenauerofflctated. ,
bride. A reception was held at the
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. · church fellowship building with
RACINE - Regular meeting of
and Mrs. Don Jelfers, CoolvU!e, and Carcella Will, sister of the groom,
Racine
Lodge 461F&amp;AMwlll be held
the groom Is the son of Florence and MelissaScarroroughservingas
Wyers, Reedsvllle, and the tate IDstesses. They were assisted by Tuesday. Officers will he elected
and work will be in the EA Degree.
Audrey Wyers.
Nora Neat and Kelly McCoy.
Pianist was Melissa Scarbo·
The bride Is a graduate of
POMEROY -Pomeroy Chapter
rough, nteceofthe groom. Organist Freedom Christian School and
8C
Royal Arch Masons and Bos·
was Mary Wyers, stster·in·law 'of attended Mountain State College.
worth Council Royal and Select
• the groom.
The groom Is a graduate of Eastern
Masons will meet Wednesd~y
Given in marrtage by her father , High School and Is attending
evening,
7:30 p.m. , in regular
the bride wore her mother's Hocking Technical College in
session
.
wedding gown styled withchantuty Nelsonvllle.
lace bndtce which dipped to a Vat
the waist and featuring a scalloped
sabrina neckline enriched with seed
pearls and trri!lesent sequins. The
draped wingsklrt of acetate peaude
I. &amp;000 Rteeilw
sole was accented with self rows in
Z. Sotrthern Sp1n Olsl1
the back. Her mantUla style veU ot
730 Amllllr
chantilly lace, styled by the bride,
Puii!Otor I
750 LilA
• was held In place by a cUp r1 white
550 w Dan fAIMrtll
• silk rosettes.
•
•
They reside in Amesville.
,
'llle bride carried a bouquet which
she styled ot purple and white silk
roses on a white lace fan aQd tied
I ' ,•
with pink traDing lovers' knots.
•· Matron d honor was Donna
Klintworth, aunt of the bride.
WE IIIIVICIIHAT WE II1J. •
• Bridesmaid was A.nnle Jeffers. Best
IICAIJS£ II! SEll QUILITT
man was Edward Wyers, brother of
S fiAH IXNIIINCI
the groom. Groomsman was Greg

THREE MORNINGS OR THREE EVEINGS A WEEK IS ALL IT
TAKES TO START YOU DOWN
THE. ROAD TO SUCCESS.
.
SO IF SUCCESS IS YOUR GOAL
CALL NOW AT 446-4367 .
BEFORE YOUR FUTURE BECOMES YOUR PAST

ON PAnERNS SELECTED FROM
OUR MANY BOOKS

··

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THns, Adults

414 Second Ave., Suite 203
Gallipolis

.... # 75·02·04721
•

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;.. Trustees to meet

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ABA liNE
WRANGER-ACME
HANOVER-WALKER
BASS-RED WING
GOLDEN RETRIEVER

REG. S$9.00

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$27,101
•Not .I ncluding garage and foundation .

•Foundati on quoted on request ,
:,;.

~

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WALL
HUGGERS

..

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;,:.~r·; ~·,:

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•ln1roduci ng our new mode l

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81,000.00

D
&amp;
W
Homes
second and Vi and st

.S19900

$24900

STAlliNG AT

•

Dnibllt

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Higher R~val ues m e ~n Qreater

insulat ing powe r.

Owens-Corning
·'

·!

"The law provides tax credits of 15% or an accumulated
credit of up to $300 for the purchase co•t of insulation . The
energy tax credit provision expires December 31, 1985. See
IRS publication '103 far complete details .

·,

.,.,
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D!S~NnCHNOLOGT

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DOWN TO BELOW ZERO

MINUS 50 ALSO
IN STOCK

Monument Co. representative call at

my home.

CPime sond me dellill about Mou·
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Name ---------

"IIIMIEI OF filE INmtun OF
COMMEMDIAnVI AlfS"
GUNI1E FIOM QUA•Y

OWIIED BY lOCI OF AGES

LOGAN
MONUMENT
- VINTON. OHIO
W . MAIN STREET

N SHOES

.. IT TO EIIERFElDS IN I'OMiROY

PH . 388·8603

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy-M11on Oridge
PH. 992· 2588

CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidlalres)
State Bank No. 983

THE COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS BANK

·..

R-25/8"

Deposits:
a. In domestic offices .... ...... .... ......... ................................ .. .... .. .. .. ... 44,667,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng ....... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .......... .. ... ~.335,000.00
(2) Interest ·bearing .... ...... .................... , ... ......... 39,332,000.00
Other liabilities .. .......... .. ............... ... ... .. .. ........ ..... .......... .. .. .... ........... .451,000.00
Totalllabtllttes ... ... .... ...... .. ... ..... .. .. .. .. ... .. ....... .... ... .... .. ....... .............. 45,118,000.00

•,

..
•,

CASH-N-CARRY SPECIALS
X

15" KRAFT FACE ••••••••••••
88.12 so.
FT. •11·• 98ROLL
;~........

l, Allee K. Stover, Vice President and Comptroller of the above named bunk do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the besl of my
knowledge and belle! .
Alice K. Slover
Oct. 29, 1985

X

15" KRAn FACE ••••••••••••••••••••••••
48.96 so. n. •11 • 80 Rou

We, the undersig ned d irectors, attest the correctness of t hi s Repor l of Co nd l·
tlon and declare that it has been exa mined by us and to th e best of our knowledge

.',

1/2!1
t:

11"
t4

'x

LAYAWAY UNTIL CHRISTMAS

LIABILITIES

900.000.00
Surplus .... ..... ..... .. : ..... .... ................ .. ............... ...... ..... ... .. ..... .... .... .... 2.850,000.00
Undivided pr ofit s and capital reserves ....... ....... .. ..................... .. ..... .. ... 914,000.00
Tota l equity capital ........... .. .... ................ .. .. ...... ...... .. .... ......... .. ....... 4,664,000.00
Total llabltttles , ttmtted - life preferred stock ,
and equity capit al .. .... ... ... .... ........ .:...... ......... ..................... ..... .. ...49,782.000.00

'•

'•

WHILE THEY LAST! THE COMPANY HAS QUIT MAKING
. LINOLEUM

Cash and ba lances due from depository lnstitu llons:
a. nonlnteresl-bea rlng balances and curre ncy and coin .................. !,594,000.00
b. Interes l·bearing balances ........ .. ......................... .. ......... ............. .. 400,000.00
Securi ties ........................................... ...... ...... ..... .. ... .... .... ...... ... ...... 17, 189,000.00
Federal funds sold an d securlites purchased under agreements
to rersell In dom estic olfices oft~ bank and of
Its Edge and Agreement subsidi aries, and In IBFs ... .. .... ........... .. ... 2.650,000.00
Loans and tease financing receivables:
a . Loans and teases, net of unearned tncome ..... .26,697,000.00
b. LESS: Allowa nce for loan and lease losses ...... .. .322.000.00
d. Loans a nd lea ses, net of unearned Inco me, allowances
and reserve .. .... ..... .. ... ....... : ..... ...... ... .......... .. .... .... .. .. ........ ..... .... 26,375,000.00
Premises and liKed assets lincludtng capitalized leases ....................... 798,000.00
Other assets .. .......................... ............. .. ......... ...... ........... ... .. .. ... ... ...... 776.000.00
Tota l assets .. ......... .... .... .... .. .... ...... .. .. .. .... .................. ........... ...... .... 49,782,000.00

Common Stock (No. ol shares a. Authorized ......... .. ...... ... 1,800
b. Out• tanding .. ........ 1,800

~

.·.•·
·'•

)

I

'

•

15" AniC BLANKET•• A!:~~••~Cl.. !1.·••• ~.10.91 ROLL

We Also Stock Foil Face,d Insulation

.
..=~·'
.
:·

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Company
312 SIXTH STREET

and belief has been prepared In co nlormance with ofllclallnstructlons and Is true
and correct.
DONALD L. CRANCE
D~ PAUL DAVIES - DlRECTORS
ALVA G. SHOEMAKER
Sworn to and subscrt!J&lt;od before me this 30th day of October, 1985 and I here by
cer tify that I am not an officer or director ol this bank .
Christina Day, Notary Public
My commission expires August l, 1986
·
·

· POINT PLEASANT

STORE HOURS : Monday-Friday, Ba.m·5p.m.; Satur.day, ea .m.· t2 noon

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

~ ~

·~ -1

675-1160

---

Sireet or Routt - - - - - -

EQUITY CAPITAL

9112 LINOLEUM RUGS S3QOO

f!&lt;or.t oWIHHORNING fiBIRGIAs
•

•Savings vary. Find oul why in !he

Seller's Facl Sheet on R·values.

SAVINGS
on

~

REGULAR f999

° ~-~~

COUPON
Loaan Monument Comg1111,
Pomeroy &amp;Vinton. h.
I CP!me send me FR El booklets
I showinc memorieis printed in toll
I , color with sizes ond prices tlstH.
I DKindly hm 1n authorized lopo

I

Federal Reserve District No. 4

$159 95
UPTO $54900

Homes Sold Under The FmHA Loan Pro·
Pt. PI. easan t Wv (304) 675 4424 "gram
Do Not Ou~llly-~or C'!,sh Aebale.
1

HIDE·A·BEDS

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

.Unibilt Homes will send

you arebate c~eck lor

.•

wE•R

•Full modular homes with
drywa lls, Andersen windows
and good insulation .. not to be
confused with mobil e homes.
•Choose the Unlbllt Hom e of your choice from over 30
floorplans.
•Purchase it at guaranteed low ' 85 prices between NOW
and the end of the year. .
•Take Delivery between Jan . 1 and March 31 of 1.986 and .. .

.

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS·:

STARTING AT

REG. S399.00

,•

••

by Thomasville

·. .:·

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

1

ol Galttpolls, GaUl a County , tn the Slate of Ohio at the close ol business oo Seplem·
ber 30, 1985.

..

Homes priced from

'

DINOTE ~
SETS

$17900~

~

't:;,,l
I.:.!)

Write for booklets showin&amp; mt·
morials in full culor with slrts ·
and prices stated.

Nothing can take the fun out of a trip to the
back country or add end less hours nf mh.ery
to a day's work oul!iide like cold wet feet.
Treat your feet to a worm dry wi nter in a
pair of Chippewa® Insulated boots.
Chippewa ' s feature the rinesl
oil tanned and silicone treated
leathers available, 3M Thlnsulate®
thermal insulation and a wide
sclc~;llon of styles and sizes.
Chippewa00 lniulated bool5 ·
"Hand Crafled by
Peoplr Who Care"'."'

5468

M

Federal Reserve .District No. 4

TRUCKLOAD

HEAVY PINE '

•

.....

Treat Your Feet To
A Little Warmth
This Winter.
MINUS 40

''T

,\lU~
l~fll .

ASSETS

Furniture
t

'lh'1ft

401h ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and Mrs. Max Davis, Bradbury Road,
Middleport, celebrated their 41th wedding anniversary oo Nov. 8. They
were recently honored by a family dinner given by their son and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Davis, and daughter and
son·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick !Aichran. Al!;o attending the dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jw,nncdy 1111d Mr. and Mrs. Orin Nelson.

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

Used

~

~ ~ · i7 · ~ 1 7 1

.

We carry
a complete
lh1e of
,: I' .

All ( !'. R

-

4~~~~-~-~
~ ~Sc-ar__bo_nm__~_h._n_ep_he__w_of_t~--groo
__m
__
. j_~"~I)~V~A~~~{:~E~[);:~~~~~~~::2:4~~~~~~~;
WESTERN
BOOTS

POMEROY - Annual Thanks·
giving dinner wtll be held •at 6::ll
p.m. Friday. Turkey, ham and all
the trimmings wilt be served. Those
attending are to takethetrown table
service and a covered dish. The
public Is invited to attend. Therewllt
be a pig In a poke auction following
I lie dinner.

RACINE -Southern Junior High
Athletic Boosters will meet Mon·
day, i: JOp.m., at the schooL

Southeastern Business College

·'

Meeting changed

Childr~n's,

Grange dinner

Boosters meet

Models: Krystal John1on. ·Tammy Smeltzer.
Photographer: Dale Lear

HOW CAN YOU MAKE GOOD MONEY
FOR THE REST OF OUR LIFE?

NEW PATTERNS NOW ARRIVING

TIJPPERS PLAlNS - A turkey
·' supper, sponsored by the Ladles
, Auxutary of the Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department, witt be
held Saturday, Nov. 16, at the
. Tuppers Pt~tns Fire HouS(&gt;. Serving
will begin at 4::ll p.m. The price of
meals will be $4. The menu will
consist ol turkey and dressing,
hOmemade noodles, mashed pota·
: toes and gravy, green beans, salad
liar, rolls and butter, cake, pie,
collee and tea.

..·'.

Fall Classes Now .Forming

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday, 7:00
p.m.,atDtamondSavingsandLoan.

POMEROY - Deadline for
parllclpallon In thP Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant is Sunday. Any
senior girl interest~ In taking part
Is asl«:d to be at Trinity Church at 1
p.m. Sunday.

POMEROY - Karl and Doris
Grueser, MlnersvUie, will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on
Sunday, Nov. 17, with an open house
from 2to 4 p.m.
Marrted on Nov. 18, 1935, at
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Grueser are
the parents of three chlldren,
Marilyn Queen, McConnelsville:
Bob Grueser of Charleston, and
Larry Grueser r1 Minersville. They
have four granchlldren and five
gieat-grandchllclren.
Mr. and Mrs. Grueser cordially
invite their relatives and friends to
attend the celebra1ion and request
that they not bring bring gifts.

..

Sorority to meet

Deadline Sunday

/

'

HOBSON - Ron and Wilma
Priest, of New Guinea, wUI be
featured speakers Wednesday at
Hobson Church ol Christ in Chris·
ttan Union. ServiCes wtlt begin at
7:30p.m.

ThE! Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-8·5

Va.

Gruesers
to note
anmversary

.•

Griffin - Aimoe
GALUPOLJS - Mr.and Mrs.
John T. Grt!fln, !DO LeGrande
Blvd., are announcing the forth·
., coming marrtage of their daughter
• , Meghan Elizabeth to Randall a
Atrnoe, son r1 Mr. and Mrs. Barry
' Atrnoe of Brandon, Manitoba,
Canada.
Atmoe is the Dtstrtct Manager r1
the (Nitrogen Oil Well Service)
:: Statton at Wooster, Ohio.
~
Grtlfin Is an assistant manager
lor Merle Nonnan Costmetics in
:: Wooster, Ohio.
,,
The wedding wtJt take place
Friday, Dec. 6 in Wooster; with a
: reception to follow "at the Free·
:.. .. lander Chalet.
:
Lawrence Aimoe, R.M.C.P., Ot·
" tawa, brother ot the groom, wtJt be
~ best man, and Angela Grtlfin
.: Gillian, sister of the bride wtll be
matron of honor.

PORTLAND - Revival Monday,
7::ll p.m. at Freedom Galpel ·

Ohio-Point

•

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

Senior citizen centers schedule activities
Galha County
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
~us for the week of Nov. 11
tbtough 15 at the Senior Citizens
~ter•. 220 Jackson Pike, are as
follows:
Monday, Nov. 11 - Chorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 12 - S.T.O.P.tl'hyslcal Fitness, 10 a.m.
:wednesday, Nov. 13 - Vinton
Bible Study, I p.m.; Garden Club,!
p:m.; Card Games, 1-3 p.m.;
American Llteratt,~re Class, 1 p.m.
; Thursday, Nov. 14 - Legal'
Services, 8:~ a.m.; Bible Study,
11-noon: Final Payment Mystery
Tour.

November 10, 1985 .

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

Friday, Nov. 15 - Christmas
Bazaar, 9:30-3 p.m.; Craft Mini·
Course, 1-3 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Open Activities, 7JO p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Ham with pinto
beans, cottage cheese, corn brad,
spiced apples.
Tuesday - Pepper steak, noodies, buttered carrots, whole grain
bread, chocolate Plddlng.
Wednesday - Spaghetti, saloo,
Italian bread, fruit ~all.
' Thursday - Meatballs with
tomato sauce, noodles, green
beans, wheat bread, jello with fruit.
Friday - Bar-b-que reef, cole
slaw, potato chips, buns, pears.

Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
·

speaker will be Dr. Dante! H.
Whiteley on the subject "Cancer r:1.
the Colon."
Met'gs Co~nty
Thursday _ Bklod Pressure
CUnlc 9:30-l1:30, Q!ramlcs 10-2,
POMEROY- The Meigs County Slide Show at 1 on the subject of
Senior attz.ens Center, Mulberry "Age Related Hearing and Vision
Heights, Pomeroy, has the follow- Changes."
tng activities scheduled for the
Friday- Quilting, cards, games
week of Nov. 11-15.
The following week the Council
Monday - Square Dance 1-3
an Aging board members will have
Tuesday- Chorus 1-2
a dinner and program on Thursday,
Wednesday - Bingo u, Bowling Nov.21. The meal will be · served ·
1: ~. Health Maintenanre Program from 5:30 to 7, with the menu to he
at 1, sponsored by Holzer Medical ,soup, homemooe pte, and beverage
Center and Holzer CliniC; the for $2.50. The speaker tor the

..----------------------l

Bookmobile route announced
GALLiPOLIS - The Dr. Sa l!'Alel L. 12:30; Lunch 12:30-1:00; Ewlngton
Bossard Library announces Its 1:30-1: 50; Allee 2:00-2: ~; Vinton
l:ilokmoblle schedule for the Wl'f'k 2: 45-3: ~; Mogan Center 3: ~ 20;
of Nov. 11 to 16.
Cheshire 4: 45-5: 30.
·
MONDAY: Rodney VIllage 3:304: 15; GaUia Metro Estates 4:30- 1""""",------------,--1
5: 15; KelT 5: ~-5: 55; Bidwell 6: 106: ~; Harrisburg 6:40-7: 00; Rio
~?ramie Estates 7: 10-8: 10;
"' TUESDAY: Gallla Christian
:Dc110011: 45-2: ~: Roush Lane 2:45;al15; Break 3: 20-3: 50; Addison
:i:00-4:~; Addavllie El. 4:4().5:00;
~uiavllle Tr. Ct. 5: 15-5: 45; Georges
~reek 6:00.6: ~; Kanau~ 5th Ave.
f-35-7:00: Foster Mobile Home
f.ark 7:10-7:~; K&amp;K Tr. Ct. 7:35
.8:00.
T WEDNESDAY: No route maln:tenance day
, 11WRSDAY: Children's Res.
::treatment Center 12:00-12:15;
PJldrens Home 12:15-12: 30; Scenic
illlls 12:40-12:55; Sun Valley 1:00-i: 35; Pinecrest 1:40-2: 10; Break
~:~2:45; Cora 3:00-3: 20; Raccoon
lrr. Ct. 3:30-3:50; Patrlot 4:~4:~;
't;adroos 4: 4().5: 10; Gallla 5: ~-6: 00;
:R:enterpolnt 6: 15-6: 30; Q!ntervllle
;l:45-7: 15.
:UHI Second Ave.
·- FRIDAY: Senklr Clttz.ens indl·
i¥1dual large print day
lafayette Mall
SATURDAY: LeGrande 10:00.
Gallipolis, 0.
McGuire 10: 35-11: 00; Nor-

COAT PROMOTION

20°/o OFF

DATE: NOVEI'I1BER 30, 1985
(Deadline for registration i1 November 22, 1985)

Line· up begins at 12:00 P.M.
Starting Time is 1:00 .P.M.

------------------------------·
NAME OR NAME

HANES TOO SALE
THU NOV. 14

.,~
TREATING PEDIATRIC, OBSTETRICAL, MEDICAL AND
DERMATOLOGICAL PROBLEMS

4 SOLID ALTERNATIVE

Have a nice week!

Aglow
•
meetzng
POMEROY -Pomeroy Chapter,
Women's. Aglow Fellowship, will
observe Its ninth anniversary at a
buffet dinner to be served at 7 p.m.
on Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy.
Speaker for the anniversary
meeting will be Dianne Hayslett of
Dayton. Reservations for the bu!fet,
$3.50 per person, are to be made by
calling 992-5893. Meetings are regularly held on the second Thursday c1
each month.

SHRIKANT VAIDYA, M.D.
.

'

Adult &amp; Pediatric Urology
•URINARY TRACT INFECTION
•INFERTILITY •IMPOTENCE
OFFICES AT:

· PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
675-6060

JACKSON GENERAl HOSPITAL
304-372-5650
BY APPO!NMENT

TYPE OF ENTRY - - - - - - - - - Send All Entries To
Chamber of Commerce, 16 State, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
I
446-0596

.

.•

"THE ITALIAN PLACE TO B,'¥'1

435 SECOND AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.

SYLVANIA t9' DIAGONAL
•
•
•
•

Dark·ute biiCk metrtx picture tube
E·1000 chanll
Mechanical tuning - 82 channet
AutOII'IItto nne tuning

• Sharpneu oontrol
• Highly tlt~ltnt 3' x5'
• VHFIUHF IntiMAl

cxc

141

-ker

$299

258 •
13 IN. REMOTE CAI118WR .............:.................. $3 28
19 IN. PUSH BUTTON CXC 149 ....................;.... $338 .
19 IN. REMOTE CXC 159 ................................... $398
19 IN. REMOTE CXI 158 ................................... $398

13 IN. ElECTRONIC TUNER CAC122 ...................

$

'15995

.

UND·ER NEW
MANAGEMENT

SYLVANIA
AUDIO• VIDEO

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

1 W. MAIN

985-3307

CHESTER

Nowllnlr

'149

8u1 0111 at Reau.Lir Price
- Get Matchinei.Jmp

95

FREEl

RECLINERS
ALL LA·Z·BOY, BERKLINE AND PONTIAC RECUNERS
REDUCED UP TO

WOOD DINETTES

$20000

SAVE AT LEAST
3Q%.ON ALL
7 PIECE SETS IN STOCK!

....-- PARTY SPECIAL-....
18" PIZZA WITH 21TEMS

RECLINERS

(Limited Supply)

BEDROOM SUITES
BASSm AU. WOOD
5 pie~:e poster bed suite.
Reg. $1495 Plus FREE night stand .

Only

OFF LIST PRICEI

'114900

OTHER SUITfS PRICED FROM

"''•••

'17900

•

'

SOFA .SLEEPERS

Trestle Table &amp; 4 Chairs

•

'29900

SAVE UP TO

•

'200

$

499
25 IN. PUSH BUTION CLC2S6P.......................... $548
25 IN. SUPERSET REMOTE IILC378 ..... J..\1!1U...... $698

RIDEN.OURS

00

..

.,

' LARGE CHIPS - 2- 1 LITERS OF POP

ONLY '52900
REMOTE '57900
SPECIAL DISTRIBUTOR PURCHASE!
ONE TIME DEAU
NEVER PRICED THIS LOW BEFORE!

On~

'188

OniJ

PHONE 446-0367

1
- CONSOLE

CURIOS

SWIVEL ROCKERS

Now

25 IN. ElECTRONIC TUNING ...............................

THE OATH OF.
HIPPOCRATES"

•

.

.

ADDRESS--------~--

r&amp;~:J!l

)

ClC226P£-51NGl£ KNOB

11

A publiC awareness m;etlng on
child assault and Its prevention wlll
be held Monday night at the
Community Action Agency buildIng, 117 W. Second, Pomeroy, from
7 to 9 p.m. The public's Invited.
There will be chlld care provided
and refreshments served.

~

.

J

OF ORGANIZATION - - - - - - - - -

CASH &amp; CAIRY PRICES ON TH£ ABOV£ MOD£LS

At

By C~NE HOEFUCH
Jones Ours lamllles have turned to
Line Road, westervllle, 43all.
Tlmee-Sentlnel Stall
Incidentally, Mrs. Smith who has video to further preserve their
Congratulations to five-year-old spent the past live or slx years with history and heritage.
Lester Lowery,
The siblings, Warren Ours, Bether daughter In Toledo, wlll be %on
son of Keith and
nice
Cornell, Gladys Deem, Elsie
Jan. 21.
Rilla Lowery,
Circle, of Meigs County, and John
who collected
BeckyRDushTyreewhohasb!en Ours and Mary Johnson, Washing$336.00 for St.
on dialysis lor more than a year is ton County, met at the homeplace
.
Jude's Children
scheduled for a kidney transplant at on Ross Road In Lebanon Township
Research In a
University Hospital the week of . for the first video. This Included
'
ma,thathon held
Nov. 25. Becky's sister, Judy scenes of the old home and autumn
at the Harrisonville School.
Flowers, wlll be the donor.
follage. They sat around and
·According to Linda McManus,
Since that's Thanksgiving week , related childhood experiences and
teacher, Lester collected more Albert and Velsla Roush decided to memories of their parents for the
money than any other student at the have an early hollday dinner. They camera. Background music was
s~hool and was honored at a party
went for turkey with all the taped and added to enhance the
with Do!Dino's of Athens providing trimmings last Sunday. At the video. Alter the taping , the group
the pizza.: Students using "fun" gathering were Virgil and Gerry went tD the home of Mr. and Mrs.
books got parents and friends to pay Parsons, Kim and Vicky Eblin, Lois Richard Gaul, Chester to view it.
them for doing math problems with Ann Jenkins and J.D., Lanny ,
The second session was held at
the money going to the research Becky and Spanky Tyree, Ken and the home of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
center.
, Lisa Roush and sons, Jason, Justin Circle of Racine and that time the
and Jeremy, all local; Kevin Smith second, third and fourth generaLong-lime Pomeroy resident and Cora Wolfe, Rio Grande; Judy lions were Included. Also photos of
Ethel Smith Is confined to Manor and Larry Flowers, Pickerington;
deceased family members were
Care at Westerville now. She broke Dale, Joy and David Roush, St . filmed.
her hip In a fall a few weeks ago but Albans; Roger, Susan, Dodger and
The family plans to finish the
Is now up and about with a walker. Ryan , Grove City ; an d Lan ny, J r .. three-hour video at their annual
She would enjoy hearing from folks and Jennifer Tyree, Gallipolis .
Christmas party.
here and cards should be addressed
to her at Manor Care, 100 County .

. .

RUTLAND - Rutland junior
. untor ftremen meermgrtremen meeting, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., at the firehouse. .
·

------------------------------

300 SECOND AVE .• GALLIPOLIS

ATOCHA •

Expert Medical Services

St. Jude marathon a success

•

Model CXE141WA

He Understands Your Cares

Community corner

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- B-7

PHONE NO. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

AND REMEMBER

FROM THE

675-4381

Gallia County's Christmas Parade

Parade Munhall: Marianne Campbell
Sponsored by Gallipolis Retail .Merchanls As.~ociation

FALL

SPANISH TREASURE

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

REGISTRATON FORM
FOR

Parade Theme:
"Christmas: A Family Tradilion"

The·
Shoe Cafe

Florida Investors wishes to sell Two Silver
fAMns wHh their Certificates of Authenticity.
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY ONLY
NOV. 9TH &amp; lOTH

evening's program at 7 will be Pat with fruit
Glass, Area Home Extension
Wednesday- Beef cubes oo rice,
Agent, on the subject "Energy lima beans, cole slaw, apple crisp
Savings In the Home."
Thursday - Broasted chicken,
The Senior Nutrillon Program mashed potatoes, green beans, ·
mentl for the week ,Is:
chocolate pu&lt;kling on graham
Monday- Navy beans with ham, cracker crust
tossed salad, cornbread, sugar
Friday · - Meatloaf, parslled
cookie
pltatoes, creamed rom, plums
Tuesday - Sausage llqk,
Choice of milk, co!fee, or tea
r;cre:a:rned=:pe:as:,f:rl:ed:a:pp:les:':ge:la:tln::a:v~ail:a:ble:w:l:th:;me:a:::ls:.= = = ;
It

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

November 10, 1985

00

FULL OR QUEEN BED SIZES AVAilABLE
PRICED FROM

SALAD SPECIALS
LG. CHEF OR ANTI

$229

BEDDING

SMALL SANDWICH
FRENCH FRIES
SMALL DRINK

LIVING ROOM SUITES
. COMPLETELY OVERSTOCKED .
AND NO WHERE TO PUT INCOMING SUITES.
2 &amp; 3 PIECE SUITES

8emco mattress and bo:w springs at

55% ·

SM. CHEF OR ANTI

$199

•29900 Full Size

UPTo50%0FF

OFF SAVINGS

2 PIECE SUITES AS LOW AS

•Free Delivery •Carry Out •Dine IN

MICROWAVE OVENS
Choose from Moytog and Sonya ovens.

Priced From

'19900
We olsq corry mic-rowave sfonds .

49900

1

OPEN OAIL Y' A.M. · l P.M.
Jarlc.~on

AvC'nu(.&gt;

675-6971

PoiM Pl&lt;w:,.11 '

conn1e~s got 1tl
'HAPPY
B·R·R·R

DAYS

COMFORT AND VALUE

WALL RECLINERS
METAL DINffiES
All sets at closeout prices 1 ~ hpiete
swjvel set with almond or c. rome

PLAN AHEAD FOR FATHER
AND MOTHER

Combining the health Clftd
comfort
of siHping on .water
. .
with the many advantages
of siHping on a

home .
Reg . 5399.95

Now

On~

•289

00

Pontiac luffed·bo( k wall recliners .
ONLY TWO TO SELL
1 Rust .. 1 Camel

Reg . Sl6US

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s39900

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Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Beat of the bend
ByBOBHOEFUCH
'llmes-Senllnel Stall
• There's much activity at 41100
Laurel Cliff Road
- that's on the
bypass - as
opening prepara.
tlons get under·
way for the county 's newest
business
Fishers Big W)leel. Grand openfng
ceremonies are ' set for 9 a.m. on
Saturday morning, Nov. 23. Seems
. like only yesterday that the com·
pany announced it would locatP a
store here. See how time flies when
you're having fun - even when
you're not having fun.
Speaking of time, Mrs. Nmma
Goodwin wUI be observing her
birthday anniversary on Nov. 22.
Norma has probably touched the '
lives of more Meigs Countians- in
su~h lovlngways- thai anyone else
!know. I'know my math Is bad- but
I'm thlnklngit's her 94th coming up.
And ~ the annual Sacred Heart

'church bazaar will be held Thursday evening. You already know
what great meals women of the
church put out. Serving will start at
4:.Jl and there will be prizes and
' games-throughout th~ evening. By .
the way, dinners are $3.50.
Anyone Interested In some Daily
Sentinels dating back to 1945
through. 1949? Carolyn and Ivan
Powell havecomeupwltha batcha little brittle but still In good
condition. The Powells will be happy

to give them to you. You can call
949-2485.
I do want to rem !rid you that Drew
Weooter. Post 39, American Legion,
will be conducting Its annual
Veterans Day program at 11 a.m.
tomorrow In front of the rourtb:mse
In Pomeroy. Post members would
appreciate your support.
, I

·'

And don't forget the holiday
cookies which the Meigs Unit of the
Arrlerican Cancer Society has on
hand. The collector containers hOld
a pound and one-ha lf of rookies and
your donation is Sl and repres€1lts a
gift to the unit. Ca ll9921·7531 to place
an order.
Mrs. Carol Jett- while clearing
out a wide array d rules and papers
- I do that now and again - I ran
across your note. If! hadn't thanked
you ea rlier please accept my
belated thanks - )'OU encourage me
In my madness and I love 11 1

The party's over!
The parking meters which were
removed from the village lots along
the rtver a few weeks back to allow

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POIIIOY
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quarterback Matt Knizner's oneyard TD sneak and Massimo
Manca' s 17- yard field goal.
Cincinnati, 5-5,dldallltsscoringln
the second quarter. Andre Jackson
Intercepted a Shaffer pass and
retumedlt25yardsforatouchdown
and Robert Barone klcked a 25-yard
field goal.
·
Penn State grabbed a 7.0 first
quarter lead after Lance Hamllton
Intercepted a Danny McCoin pass at
the Clnclnnatl40. Seven plays later,
on a fourth and one at the three and
the Cincinnati defense looking for a
run, Shaffer fired a three- yard TD
pass to WUIIams.
Cincinnati, with Reggie Taylor
breaking loose on runs of 21, 9, 6, 5

NFL's No. 1 scoring team with 260 points- and the
main reason Is Es)ason.
The rocket-arm lefthander is the AFC's top passer
and secondonly tof'oe Montana il\.f,he €1ltire NFL. One
of Eslason's fa~orlte ·targets Is roi&gt;kle wide receiver
Eddie Brown, a former teammate of Kosar's at the
University of Miami (Fla.). Kosar this week predicted
that Brown will become the best receiver In the NFL.
Although the Bengals are weak defensively , they've
been lmprqving recently.
"The last couple of weeks. Cincinnati's defense has
really come on," noted Schottenheimer. "They've
become a lot more aggressive and are rea lly getting
after people."
This will be the 30th meeting oft he Ohio rivals. The
Bengals lead the series, 15-14. and have won the last
three games.
Both of last year's games were three·polnt affairs
decided on the final play of the day. The Bengals won
the first meeting 12-9onJim Breech's 33-yardfield goal
as time ran out and won the re-match 20-17 ona35-yard
Breech field goal in overtime.

and5yard~.marched70yardstoset

up a 25-yard field goal by Barone

that trimmed the Penn State lead to halftime lead on Shaffer's one-yard
7-3 with 13:42 left In the second TD run.
period.
Penn State then took advantageof
Midway through the second second half Cincinnati turnovers
quarter, on the flr~t play after andputthegameawaybyscoring17
Barone missed a 4!1-yard field goal points within four minutes.
attempt, Shaffer threw a short,
Arter Manca kicked a 17-yard
wobbly pass that Jackson Inter· field goal With 4: ~ lefl in the third
cepted at the Penn State 25 and quarter to boost Penn State's lead to
returned for a touchdown that gave 17-10, Taylor tumbled and Mike
Cincinnati a 1Q.7lead.
Russo recovered for the Nlttany
The !Ired-up Bearcats got another Lions at theCinclnnatiJO. Five plays
chance to do more damage just two later, Dozier ran two yards for a TD
minutes later when Brad Nothacker and a 24-lOPenn State lead wlth1: 48
Intercepted another Shaffer pass left In the third period.
and returned It 26 yards to the Penn
Just 49 seconds later, Michael
State 48. But AI McKinney's Zordich Intercepted a McCoin pass
halfback pass was lnterecpted by at the Clnc.lnnatl 11. That set up
Ray lsom In the end zone with 1: 50 Knlzner's one-yard quarterback
leftandtheNittanyLionsstormedBO · sneak for a touchdown on the first
yards In just 1:47 to take a 14-10 playoltheflnalquarter.

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"Kevln was Introduced to the NFL
about as rudely as anyone has ever
been Introduced," Mackovlc said.
"But to his credit he has steadily and
progressively Improved. He has
never backed off. He battles who
ever It Is that lines up across from
him."

. •

•.... - ,

Ross rallied frOm the Llp!Js fiasco
to Intercept six passes last season to
earn a spot on the All-Rookie team.
Ross has three Interceptions this
season, ranks third on the Chiefs In
tackles with 48 and has also
recovered one fumble.
Ross Is a better player this time
around, but so Is Lipps. He leads the
AFC In touchdowns tl$ season with
nine, having scored on eight passes
and one ~nt return . He has caught
36 passes for an AFC· leading 672
yardsandhasreturnedl5jXJntsfora
conference- leading 13.6· ya rd
average.
The play of Lipps has helped the
Steelers toashareoffirst place In the
AFC Celltral. But the flaw Is that

Pittsburgh shares the top spot with
evecyone else In the division· the
Steelers, Cincinnati Bengals, develand Browtis and Houston OUers all
have 4-5 records.
To maintain Its share of first
place, Pittsburgh will have to do
somethlngSundayltbull'tdol!l&gt;all,
season - win on the road. The
Steelers are041n games away from
Three Rivers Stadium this season. 1
But Kansas City has b st Its last
two borne games and Its last five
overall games to fall from sole
possession ct first place in the AFC
West to sole possession of last place
at 3-6.
The Chiefs wlll also be without No.
2wide receiver Heney Marshall and
four-time Pro Bowl defensive end
ArtStlllagalnsttheSteelersbecause
of Injuries. The two players were
placedonthe!njuredreservellstthls
week, Marshall with a shoulder
separation and Still with a knee
strain.

Karsatos tosses 3 first half TD passes
to pace Bucks' 35-17 win over Wildcats
By KANDY MJNKOFF
UPJ Spons Writer

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miMI.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - John
Shaffer threw a three-yard touch·
down pass and ran one yard for
another TD to , pace No. 1 and
undefeated Penn State toa31 -10wln
over Cincinnati Saturday.
Penn State, 9.0, trailed 10.7
midway through the second quarter
before reeling of! 24 consecutive
points to put the game away by the
end of the third period.
Shaffer, a native of Cincinnati,
threw a three-yard TD pass to Bob
Williams In the first quarter and
then ran one yard for another score
on the last play from scrimmage of
the first half.
Penn State's second halframpage
was highlighted by D.J. Dozier's
two-yard touchdown run, backup

needed to II!:' addressed.''
Lipps made his NFL debut
against the Chiefs In thel~season
opener and caught six passes lor 183
yards and two touchdowns. He went
on to catch 45 passes for 850 yards
and nine touchdowns to earn a spot
FCJ~iitbali;Le;~g~~e.,
1
'·' 9n ~e A)l·Roollle .t~am. He ais;o
The pass-happy Chiefs had the returned 53 wnts tor a le;~g~~echance to claim the speedster from leading 656 yards to earn a spot on
Southern Mississippi with the 21st the AFC Pro Bowl squad as the
pick In the 1984 draft but Instead return specialist.
chose offensive tackle John Alt of · · "M~t penple thought he woukl
Iowa. Lipps was taken two picks have an Immediate Impact as a
later by the Steelers.
return man," Mackovlc said. "The
"We thought ·a lot about Lipps," fact that he became an aztstanding
Kansas City coach John Markovic receiver was not a surprise- but he
said. "We knew he could be an ca me along quicker than a lot of
outstanding return man but we people thouj!ht he would."
already had J.T. (Smith ). We
Lipps ·::Ut get another shot at the
figured he would eventually be a Chiefs and cornerback Kevin Ross
good receiver. But our receiving Sunday when the Steelers visit
corpswasalreadysolldsowewould Kansas City. Ross also made his
.)lave had to trade someone who NFL debut In the 1984seasonopener
already knew our system. we and was embarrassed at right
decided we had other areas that cornerback by Lipps.

READJ, NO CONVERTER NEEDED

Model GKR&amp;e9R

the rookie's progress, he let It be known this week that
Boomer Eslason, Cincinnati's second· year quarter·
back, is enjoying the kind of year he'd like to see Kosar
have.
"Boomer Is really showlngtreniendouspolse," said
the Browns' coach. "That's reflectoo in his
touchdowns to interceptions ratio. He's 2·1 (16
touchdown passes and eight Interceptions)."
Kosar has a 1·2 ratio, with two TD tosses and four
Interceptions.
But Kosar figures Sunday may be his best chance of
the season to pile up some impressive statistics. The
Bengals are the second-worst team In the NFL In pass
defense. Plus, the Browns will have speedy wide
receiver Clarence Weathers back from an Injury.
"We've been missing the kind of speed that
. Weathers can give us," said Kosar.
Cleveland's strong suit remains Its defense.
''They're very aggressive evecywheredefensively,
but especially so In llnebacklng," noted Wyche. "Their
linebackers are not only strong, but vecy fast."
The Browns have given up the fewest points In the
AFC so far this year (132), but the Bengais are the

I Penn State beats Bearcats, 31-10

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPISpons Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) - .The
Kansas City Chiefs dlscoverro the
game-breaking abilities of Pitts·
burgh receiver Louis Lipps long
liefore the rest of the National

'

noll

II

an Important game," said Bernie Kosar, the Browns'
$1 mlllion a year rookie quarterback. "We're all tied
for first and this is a divisional game."
The Bengals are slight favorites because they've
won their last two games whUeCleveland has dropped
three straight. But Kosar Insists the Browns' spirits
aren't sagging.
"Obviously there's a lot of room for Improvement,
but we really can't complain, being tied for first," he
said. "Stlll, from a team standpoint, I think we're
expecting more out of ourselves than we've been
showing.
"I feel comfortable about coming to Cincinnati. I
thinkourmentaloutlook'sprettygood.Althoughwe've
lost three In a row, they've all been ciosegames and we
can seethatwe'rereally justastepawayfrommaklng
things go."
Whether the Bro.wns can make things go Sunday
dependS largely on Kosar. With veteran Gary
Danielson out for several more weeks because ct an
lnjucy, It's up to Kosar to give Clevel;md the kind of
passing attack they've been lacking most ct till: year.
Although Schottenhelriler Insists he's satisfied with

Pass-happy Chiefs battle Steelers today

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' By RICK VAN SI\NT
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The mass of mediocrity
known as the AFC Central division will untangle a bit
Sunday when the Cincinnati Bengals host the
Cleveland Browns In the "Battle of Ohio."
'
All four division teams (Cincinnati, Cleveland,
PittsQ\Irgh and Houston) have 4·5 recOrds and sooner
or later , something's got to give somewhere.
But right now, depending on how you hokat it,evecy
team In the division Is in first place. Or last place. Or
both.
"I prefer to say we're all in !lrst place," laughed
Browns' coach MartySchottenhelrner. "Everything Is
balanced right now, but we've got to gel ready for the
final push."
·
"We'll be playing for either first place or last place
Sunday, " noted Bengals' coach Sam Wyche. "But, the
loser Sunday certainly won't beoutoflt. There are too
many games left."
Quite a few divisional matchups also remain,
including a Cincinnati visit to Cleveland In just two
weeks.
"I can't say Sunday Is a 'must' game for us, but It Is

Now available on ·.
videocassette from

14 IT. LADIES. WM111 GOlD

14 IT. LADIES. WHITl GOlD

Bengals ·to host Browns in AFC encounter

tJr·

pre~ents the taming of
the shoe. Elegant
alligator-print
leather ... so smart for

~hnts· ttntintt Section

November 10. 1985

To,.., llack Alabaoater

,::~ S2450

14 IT. LADIES. WltiTf GOlD

MARQUISE &amp; IAGU ClUSTER. 2 ct.

The Outstanding State Entcy ·
conflict and compromise within the
award went to Becky Sostarlclt;same subject:
Competition begins at the district Andrea Maze, Mellssa Vancko and level. Winners then advance to tbe Meghan Purdy !rom .MorriSoii .•
state contest, held at Case Western School In Athens, Ohio for thelt
Reserve University In Cleveland on Junior Group Performance €1ltitled·:
May 10, Ohio's state winners will "Olympic Spirits." Their teacher .
then compete at National History was Lillian Dlnos. '
··
Day In Washington, D.C. In mld·
Several · special prizes wUl be,.
June , along with representatives d
awarded this year. Case Western
46 other states.
Reserve University wlll ofler ii ·
1n 1985, three Ohio entries at full-tuition, four-year scholarship tO
National Hlstocy Day won prizes. the best €1ltcy at the National '
Third prize In the Senior Group Contest and a half-tuition, lour-year .
Project categocy w€1lt to Marcy scholarship to the best entcy at tre·
Pearsall, Karen Sampson . and state contest in Ohio. The O)IIQ:·
Laura Koepke of Valley Forge High Council for the Social Studies Will
School in Parma Heights, Ohio. The offer a prize at the state contest
title of their project was "Clara the best entry oo Ohio historywhlcl)
Barton: Tragedy's Angel," and best uses primacy sourres.
their teacher was Gall Uttle.
This progfam Is made possible iR·
Ian Fenberg of Donnell Junior part be the Ohio Human !tieS ·
High In Findlay, Ohio won a special Council, a state-based ag€1lcy rt the
prize for the best €1ltcy in naval National Endowment for the Hq:
histocy lor his Junior lndlvldUI\1 manltles, which makes grants .tO
Project entitled "Midway: Be· ·non'JlrOfit organizations In Ohio lbr
tween Trtumph and Tragedy." His jXJbllc programs in the Humanities;·
teacher w!.s Werner Luedeker.

Richard Pryor Goes For Broke
S~ndlng Brewster's Millions.

Fine Jew~lry ·Sale
14 IT. LADilS, YELLOW GOlD

Sport

History Day competition planned

free parking have been retu~ed
ATHENS - Hlstocy Day '86
and from now on you pay.
offers Ohio students the opportunity
When they were first removed, It to creatively resmrch and romwas reported that It was on a trtal munlcate the past as conflict and or
basis. However, the POmeroy ' compromise, as part of a national
Income tax was repealed in Tues· competition.
day's election and so back came the
The Hlstocy Day (I'Ogl'am en meters. With the repeal of the tax, courages studems In grades 6-12 to
the village !Ike so many small research historical subjects relatoo
communitte. is apparently going to to a theme, develop a paper,
have to drum upevecy cent It can In project, performanre or media
other directions.
presentation, and submit the fin.
!shed product to be ju~ed by
Is It me, Mattie? Some of those professional historians.
fast food restaurants seem to be
The theme for Hlstocy Day '861s
coming up with such unappetizing "ConDicts
or Compromises il
television commercials which Hlstocy," Students are encouraged
make me anything but hungcy. Of to select an Individual, !dew, or
course, in the longrun It Is a savings. event and demonstrate how and
Keep smiling now.
why their topic was a oonfllct
and/or a compromise.
The theme Is a broad ooe;
whether the topic Is. a well-known
POMEROY -The Meigs County Individual from the student's own
Court house will be closed Monday In community, the student should
research it thoroughly, explain Its
observance of Veterans Day.
historic setting, and pay special
of
attention to the

Dan and Eloise White wUI be
observing - very quietly - their
50th wedding on Friday, Nov. 15.
Dan Is at their home on Uncoln
Terrae~ after another hout In his 19
month Illness. Eloise Is having some
· problems with her vision. Ev€11
though It's going to be a quiet
observance, I'm sure this nice
couple would appreciate a quiet
card.

DIAMOND IAUERINA RING, 1.8 ct.

November 10, 198~

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

Big Wheel opening

... ...

EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI )
Anyone who thought Ohio Slate's
offense was strictly a run-oriented
attack got a view of another
dimension Saturday.
The Buckeyes struck for lour first
half touchdowns - three on passes
by Jim Karsatos - en route to a a
35-17 Big Ten romp over Northwest·
ern on a raln-sllckened field .
The Buckeyes raised their record
to 8-1 and kept on track for a trip to
the Rose Bowl. Ohio State, 5-lln the
Big Ten, can wrap up the New
Year's Day bowl hy winning Its next
m'O games.
Karsalos, playing the first 2~
quarters, completed 16-of-20 passes
for275yards. The touchdown passes
came on a 75-yarder to Mike Lanese,
a 14- yarder to Crls Carter and a 3yarder to Ed Tag~;art as the
Buckeyes bull! a 28-0 flrst-halflead .
Ohio Stale was again playing
without AU-America running back
Keith Byars. .
"It wasn't too bad as long as they
kept the ball dey." said Karsatos,
who tied Ohio State's single-season
TD pass mark of 17 set by Art

Schlichter In 1981. "When It got real
wet, It got heavy and harder to
throw. "
Ohio State won Its 12th straight
"' The Buc k' eyes
over Northwestern.
have not lost to the WildCats since
1958 and have outscored them 252-61
In the last five meetings.
"We had seen In the!Umswecould
throw long against them," Ohio
State coach Earle Bruce said. "We
knew we would have some difficulty
runnlitg against thi!m. They've got a
good defense against the run.
"Karsatos did a good job getting
the baD to the receivers, who made
some excellent catches.
Northwestern, 3-6 and 1·5 In the
league, failed to get Its passing game
started In rainy conditions. The
Wildcats' hest drive was to start the
game, but they failed to convert 011 a
4th-and-one at Ohio S.tate's 41 .
''We~ got ·it going In the second
half," WlldcatscoachDennlsGreen
sald. "But our first-half turnovers
hurt us and ~t us In a oo!e."
After stopping Northwestern on
that fourth-down play, the Buckeyes
marched 59 yards In 13 plays,
capped by the Karsatos-to-Carter
TD with 5:54 left In the quarter.

Karsatos hit his first ftvepassesand
was 13-of-17 for205yards In the first
half.
Cornerback William White
grabbed the first of two Ohio State
Interceptions on the Wildcats' next
possession. Karsatos then hooked
'up with Lanese at Northwestern's45
and the wide receiver went the
distance.

Roman Bates had a5-yardTDrun
on a fourth-down play with 6:53 left
In the third quarter to stretch the
Buckeyes' advantage to 35~.

Northwestern avoided the shutout
when Stanley Davenport, who
gained 123 yards oo22carries, raced
13 yards for a score late in the third
quarter. John Duvlc added a32-yard
field goal after a fumble by Ohio
John Wooldrtdge added a 6- yard . State. It was the Buckeyes' first lost
TD run to cap a Iii-yard, 11-play fumble ct the season.
drive with 13:32 left In the half.
Karsatos capped the ni-st-half
Reserve Wildcat quarterback
scoring by driving the Buckeyes to Sandy Schwab connected with Tony
Northwestern's 3 before finding Coates on a 55-yard TD pass with
Taggart )lllth 15 seconds left.
1: 091eftln the game.

Marietta loses sixth
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UPI) Wittenberg's Amos White broke a
7·7 tlewlth a 1!1-yard touchdown run
at 8:06 of the fourth quarter
Saturday In the Tigers' 13-7 Ohio
Conference vlctocy over Marietta.
Chris Hayes knotted thescore7-7
for Wltt€1lberg in the !bird period on

a one-yard run.
The Pioneers, now 3-6 overall and
2-51n the league, opened thescortng
on an Evan Llpp nine-yard run In the
second quarter.
Wittenberg Is now 6-2 for all
gamesand5-21n theOAC.

Owens scores twice to pace OU victory
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - Jesse
Owens plunged for two touchdowns
and Dennjs {)w.earlngen passed for
another to lead Ohio University to a
:ii-15 Mid· American Conference
v.lctocy over Western Michigan
Saturday.
The win was the second In a row
forOU, whlchdroppedltsftntseven
and upped the Bobcats MAC record

to2-5.
OU never lraUed after Shawn
Bonner's 46-yard punt return to the
Western Michigan 24 set up the first
of C~¥ens two one-yard touchdown
runs In the first quarter.
Western; which fell to 2-6-1 overall
and 24- lin the conference, Ued the .
game at 7-7 with an S-play, ~yard
drive ln the third, capped by an

11-yard touchdown run by Joe
Glenn. The big piay of tile.drive was
a 47·yard passtrom Chris Conklin to
Paul Sorce.
The Bobcats took the lead for good
with 4:57 remaining ln the third
quarter with a 52-yard drive, with
Swearingen hitting Orvell Johns
with a 2-yartl scoring pass.
OU made It 21·7 early In the final

quarter with a 62-yarddrlve, Owens
once again scoring from the one.
Western's other touchdown came
with just 46 seconds to play and
came on a 1-yard pass from Conklin
to Dave Faverman.
Swearingen finished with 19
completions In .Jl attempts for 192
yards, while Conklin completed 19of
33 for 23l yards.

"·
LIONS ROLL- Penn Stale's D.J . Doder cuts to avoid a tackle by lhe
University of Cincinnati's Richard Rhodell (18) as Llltany Lion
quarterback Jolm Shaffer watches the Orst quarter play. The~ranked
Lions defeated the Bearcats at Riverfront Stadium, 31·10. UPI.

Mets own best
record in NL past
two years, but have
nothing to show
By MU..TON RICHMAN
UPI Senior Editor-Sports
A prescription?
Now who In the world would be
sending him one rii the mall? Doug
Slsk couldn't understand it. He
wasn't sick. His pllchlng maybe, but
not him.
The Mets' rlghl ·handed reliever
studied the letler tha 1came with the
prescription. It offered him specific
directions.
"Take one capsule of cyanide and
two Tylenol dally," his anonymous
good Samaritan Instructed S.!$k,
leavlngtheobvlousconsequences to
his Imagination.
Sisk remembers another polson
pen letter among the mountain of
hate maO he got during the last half
of 1984 and the first half of last season
when he couldn't get anybody out.
This one showed some solicitude.
About the company he was keeping
In the Mets' hull pen.
"Stay away from Roger McDowell," the letter writer ordered. "I
don't want you screwing him up.
too.' '

Slsk laughed over those letters
from his home in Tacoma, Wash ..
Wednesday. He had just come from
a remarkable and exciting expe·
rlence. He and his father were
playing catc h In his backyard. ·
What' s so ex~lt!ng about that'!
You'd be excited also If they had
done surgecy on your elbow only a
few weeks agoand If evecyt bing that
happened to Doug SiskIn the past 18
months happened to you.
The Mets ' 28-year-old sinker·
baUer came oot of the chute like a
jackrabbit at the start ct 1984. Until
mid .July, his ERA was O.!Il.Thenhe
ran lnto acaseoftendlnltlsandcou ld
hardly help at all when tile Mets
were tcylng to catch the Cubs .
His right shoulder stUI bothered
him at the beglnnlngofthisyearbut

he tried to pitch anyway and that 's
when those "I hate you, I hate you"
letters came pourtng in. The fans at
Shea Stadium got on him so loudly
and regularly, he knew what was
coming beforehand.
"OK. guys, hold your ears," he'd
warn some of the other Mets before
heading to the mound from the
hu Upen . "I was pitching lousy but I
didn 't need for the fans 1D stuff It
down my throat. I felt badly enough
as If was.! was tcylng."
lnexpllcably, Slsk 11Jrned ('Vel)'·
thing around from Aug. 23 to Sept.
12. relieving in six games without
giving up a run In 10 innings. The
fo llowing day, Sept. 13 In Montreal.
the pain In his right shou lder and
arm became almost unbearable.
Examination disclosoo hone chips
in his elbow.
They were removrn in New York
on Sept. 23, not ev&lt;'n seven weeks
ago. and the doctors originally told
him It would he any where from six to
eight months- mont hs, mind youbefore he could seriously think of
doing much pllchlng aga in.
Now you ca n understand why he's
that excllcd .over those catches he
ha s been havi ng wll h his father .
" If you would've asked me three
weeks ago, hPll, I'd havetoldyou I'd
never pitch aga in," Slsk said. "Now
I'd say by the Pnd of December. I
should be throwing pretty good.
"I'm just lobbing the ball, but jhe
swelling has gone down and I'm not
having any problem at all. I can't
be lieve It . I should be right there well
be fore the spring."
A couple of other big reasort• a lso .
are making him happy. On the 22nd :
of this month, he's marcylng Lisa ·
Michaelson and hP has gotten an :
unexpectrn wedding present al·
ready. When he got back homeatthe .
end of the season, he was Informed
his hoat, an Inboard-outboard 19· '
footer, was gone. But It was found :
and he's got it back ruw.

�'

Page-C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

By WUJ.. DUNHAM
UPI Sports Writer

10, 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Redskins hope -to unleas'h
menacing ground attac~ today
formation most of the season,
despite the saUd play of backup
George RogerS, who Is 10 years
Riggins' junior .
"My reason for doing that Is that
John Riggins has been here for five
years with me," Gibbs said . "John
Riggins has led us to a lot of big
games and won a lot of big games.
John Riggins has been very, very
much ria producer, been one of our
lt&gt;aders, and In the big ga mes,
John's bPen the guy who wou ld rise
and play great for us."
This Is not to say that Gibbs Is
down oo ROgers In any way.
"Grorge has done a great job for
us," Gibbs said. "But we're starting
the guy who has led us In the big
gamt&gt;s before."
Rogers has actually out- gained·
Rlgglns with 558 yards on 109
carries. compared to RJgglns' 053

. WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Washington Redsklns have used
old-fashioned power running, a
resurgent offensive line, a threeprongEd attack and a little bit of
1rickery In constructing the most
potent ground game In the NFL.
• The Redskins, coming off a
~-yard rushing performance last
Wfek, are averaging 179.6 yards pl'r
~me on the ground, ranking !hem
No. lin the league..
,..The heart of coach Joe Gibbs '
fl!Shing unit. to no one's surprise, Is
John Riggins, 111e 14-year veteran
~~Chose bruising running style Is
carrying him ever closer to Jim
Brown's all- time touchdown scor. ' records .
Ing
, Riggins, at 36 the oldest ball·
carrier In football, likely wUI eclipse
Brown's record of · 106 rushing
tquchdowns sometime this season.
· . .Entering Sunday's clash with
archrlval Dallas at RFK Stadium,
MIAMI I UP! t - ,Frt&gt;eman
Riggins Is just four scores short of
McNeil
figures to have a lot of
tl)l! mark. He Is also 12 bPhlnd
company
Sunday when the Miami
Brown's I'('CQm of 126 overall TDs
Dolphins host the New York Jets In
scored.
an
AFC East showdown.
. Riggins. with ll,228 yards, needs
"One
thing's for sure. we've got to
only 9 against the Cowboys to
have
a
lot
of people around him,"
:wpplant O.J . Simpson as the fourth
Miami
defensi.,.ecoordlnator
Chuck
all-time ground gainer. Walter
Studley said oft he Jet s' star running
~ayton, Brown and Franco Harris
back, who gained 173 yards rushing
the only men with more career
against
the Dolphins last month in
yi.:rtJage.
the
Meadowlands.
"I think a real
: :Gibbs has remained with Riggins
,
key
to
the
ballgame
Is if we look up
~~ · the starter out of the on~back
and are solo- tackling him, we'libe In
\
'
trouble. We've got to keep him In a
'
~crowd."
•'•
U the Dolphins don't crowd

yards In Ill' carrtes. Starting In
place of IUgg!ns, sid~Ilned with a
sore back, last Sunday against the
Atlanta Falcons, Rogers chalked up
124 yards rn the ground.
But the R&amp;R connection Is only
two-thirds of the Redskins rushing
story. ·The emergence of Keith
Grlffln, younger brother d two-tlnne
Hrisman Trophy winner Archie
Griffin, has given the Rt&gt;dsklns a
dangerous added dlmt&gt;nslqn - a
swift, pass-catcheroomlngoutofthe
~ckfield. Grlffln Is reminding mort&gt;
than a few Redsklnscoaches d Joe
Washington In his prlmt&gt;.
Griffin, a 5-foot-8, 185-pounder
who plays mostly oo third-down and
passing situations. ran for 164 yiuds
against Atlanta to spearhead the
remarkable ln- yard ground performance by the Redsklns.

...

November 10, 1985

McNeil, It wUI be a long afternoon for
Miami, 54. The Dolphins must win
Sunday to kt&gt;ep their fading playoH
hopes _allve.
·
The Jets, 23-7 winners In the Ocl.
14 mt&gt;etlng oft he two teams, are 7-2
and on top of the AFC Easl.
"We're I~ a must-win situation
going up against a team that
handled us In every department in
our Monday night game last
month," said M.Iami coach Don
Shula. "Now I~ the time to get it
togelher if we are to be In
competition foraplayo!fspol. ... The
Jet s started us on the downside and
we haven't apparently recovered
from it."

MOTOR CAR ·BROKERS

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....

-;. By Untied Press lntemationl\l

'\" Matt Nokes ol the San Francisco
.Giants belted a triple and two singles
!and drove in three runs Frida y to
Jead tht&gt;Zull a Eagles to a 10-3vlrtory
,Rver !he Aragua Tigers at Marcay,
•Venez uela.
• · Shawon Dunston or the Chicago
t ubs contributed with a double and
;.Ingle for ZuUa, which moved Into
!rirst place wl1h the victory.
: In other ga mes, Caracas edgro
Lara 7-5, La Gualra downed
-Magallanes 8-5, San Juan blanked
~agua s 3-0. Areclbo whipped Ponce
0-5, and Santruce nipped Maya guez 2-0.
~ At Barqulslmeto, Andres Gallar;raga of the Montreal Expos hits his
ourth home run ol !hi! season to lead
he Lions over the Cardinals. First
•baseman Galarmga, _tied for the
, eague lead In homers with Berry
Bonds, ~ent 3-for-6.
· AI Caracas, Joe Orsul ak of the
:Pittsburgh Plrales continued his
~ltt!ng streak with a 2-for-5 pl'rfom"ance as the Navigators bl asted 16
~Its bu t lost the Sharks, who had six
hits.
~ In the lastthree games, Orsulak Is
~-fo r 15, boost lng his average to a
~eague-lead lng .418. Angel Escobar
went 4-for-5 for Magallanes.
; At San Juan, Puerto Rico, the
"Metros scored three runs in !he
~ond inning Io top the Crlolloos.
:Who were limited to four hits.
The Lobos beat the Leones with
pve runs in the second Inniitg. Terry

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPJ Sports Writer
Vancouver Canucks coach Tom
Watt did such a splendid job of
setting himself up for a !aU, the
Edmonton Oilers just had to oblige.
"We're not ready to be measured
for Stanley Cup rings, but we are
competitive In every game," Watt
had said prior to Friday night's
match at the Northlands Coliseum .
Sixty minutes of hockey later:
Oilers 13, Canucks 0.
Watt's own team was as responsible as the Oilers for rendering his
statement ridiculous, and the em'
barrassed roach repaid goalkeeper
Frank Caprice In kind, leaving him
In nets for tht&gt; entire debacle and 44
shots on goal.
"I guess it was not the right
strategy tonight ," said a subdued
Watt In retrospect. "Caprtceneeded
the work."
Caprice, in his second start of the
season, allowed a goal on the first
shot of the game.
"Now I know what GretzkY ft&gt;els
like," said Dave Lumley, who
scored three goals and added two
assists In the debacle. "The puck
was following me wround all night."
Ironically, Wayne GretzkY was
merely a waiter in the orgiastic
scoring spree, senllng up four
assists.
· Oilers keeper Andy Moog stopped

29 shots In the most lopsided victory
ever i:lr the defending Stanley Cup
champions, who set a club record
with 35 scoring points. The shutoul
was Moog's first since Oct.ll,l984.
He was particularly busy In the
second perlnd when the Canucks
flrt&gt;d 17 shots and had five
power-play opportunities.
Tht&gt;only ether Oiler to soore more
than once was Jart Kurri, who
notched his ninth and lOth of the
year.
Other scorers were Raimo Summanen, ·Craig MacTavis h, Merk
Messier, Glenn Anderson , Dave
Huntt&gt;r, Mike Krushelnyskl, Mark
Napier, and Lee FogoUn .
In 9ther games, Buffalo nipped St.
Louis 5-4, New Jersey edged
Pittsburgh 5-3, Toronto tted Detroit
3-3, and the Rangers whipped tbe
Jets 7-3.
Sabres 5, Blues 4
At Buffalo, N.Y., Rlc Seiling
sco.red with less than ftve minutes
remaining to lift the Sabres. Selling
was pushed In front of the net by
defenseman Jim Pavese· when he
Upped in a Dave Fenyves shot at
15:38. John Tucker's shot at 3:0:1 of
the third pl'riod tied the score.
DevOs 5, Penguins 3
At East Rutherford, N.J. Mark
Johnson's goal with 5:20 remaining
broke a3-3tie for the Devils.Johnson
beat Pittsburgh goaltender Denis
Herron from 55 feet rut for his third
goal d !hi! season. Greg Adams tied
Ihe game at 3-3atthe5:52markwith
an unassisted goal.

Bengals' Kinnebrew
questionable starter

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1984 Ford Ranger -Long bed, V-6, auto., Explorer Pkg ., local truck
1984 Ford F-150 4X4 - ·6 cyl. , 4 speed. AM/ FM, long bed , low miles
1984 Ford Bronco II -Tan. V·6, 4 speed, air , AM/ FM, new tires
1983 Datsun Truck- Diesel, 5 speed, King cab, topper, X-tra clean
1982 Chevrolet Scottsdale- Red &amp; silver, loaded, low miles
1982 GMC- V-8, automatic, long bed , local truck
1981 Ford F-100- Short bed, V-8, automalic
1977 Ford Bronco - Silver, V-8, 3 speed
1981 Dodge 1 Ton .- 4 wheel drive
1979 DodgeD 100- White, V-B, short bed stepside
1976 Chevrolet Suburban- Red &amp; tan , big V-8, air , cruise
1975 Dodge D-250- 4 door crew cab , V-8, 4 speed, good solid truck1975 F:600 Ford- Cab &amp; chassis, V-8, 4 speed , 2-speed axle
1973 Dodge Flatbed- 5 speed, 2 speed axle
1968 Chevy Dump Truck- 10' bed, 5 speed, 2 speed axle

.1

.:~

l''riday'~

1985 Chrysler Fifth Avenue - Red , ·loaded, just 9,000 miles
1985 Mercury Grand Marquis- Tan &amp; Brown, loaded &amp; sharp!
1985 Buick Riviera - Red, AM / FM Cassette. full power, Sharp!
·
1985 Buick Century Limited- 4 door, velour interior, power windows
(2) 1984 Plymouth Reliant Wagons- 1 Tan, 1 Brown
1984 Plymouth Reliant- 4 door ; tilt, cruise, AM/ FM, air
1984 Buick Regal- 4 door, tilt, cruise, AM/ FM
1984 Pontiac Bor SOLD Brougham - 4 door , power seat , power windows ,
power door locks
·
1984 Old~tnobile Cutlass Supreme_: 2 door, tilt , cruise, AM/ FM, cloth interior
1984 Dodge 600-4 door, cruise."velour interior , low miles
1984 Mercury Cougar- Blue, tilt , cruise, AM/ FM, velour interior
1.984 Olds. Delta 88 Royale - 4 door, red, tilt , cruise, power door locks ,
AM/ FM
.
1984 Volkswagen Rabbit- Maroon , outomotic, air, AM/ FM, PS , iow miles
1983 Olds. 98 Regency- Blue, loaded with extras. Sharp!
1983 Pontiac Phoenix- .4 door hatchback , oir, cruise, AM / FM, cloth interior
1982 Chevrolet CSOLD - 2 door , tilt, cruise , AM/ FM , rocol cor
1982 Mercury Marquis- 4 door, ton, tilt, cruise, local car
1982 Chevrolet Citation- V-6, 4 speed , cruise, AM/ FM cassette, local cor
1982 Chevrolet' SOLD !~ 2 dopr , 4 speed, radio, local cor
(2) 1982 Ford Granadas- 4doors, 6cyl., auto., oir , rental cars
1981 Buick Century- 4 door , white, cruise. AM / FM, cloth interior
(2) 1981 Olds Cutlass - 4 doors, 1 blue, 1 ton
.1981 Chevy Monte Carlo- V-8, oir , cruise, new .tires
1980 Pontiac Bonneville - 2 doer, V-8, power seot, power windows , local car
1980 Chevy Monte Carlo- V-8, air , X-tra cleon,local car
1980 Ford Pin·to - .2 door, outomotic , one owner
1981 Chevy Malibu- 4 door , V-6 , air
1980 Chevy I'J SOLD 4 speed, air, AM/ FM, local car
1980 Ford Granada- 4 door , V-8, air
1981tLincoln Tdwn Car- 4 door, black , loaded, nice local cor
1979 Pontiac Bonneville- blue, 2 door ' clean ' local car
1979 Ford LTD -: 4 door. green
·
1979 Chevy Caprice Classic- 4 door, black &amp; silver
1978 Chrysler Cordoba- 2 door, dove gray,local car
1978 Mercury Cougar- 2 door, silver &amp; red
19_78 Cadillac Eldorado- Yellow , looded
1978 Mercury Zephyr- 4 door, green &amp; tan , 6 cyl. , clean car
1978 Chrysler LeBaron Wagon- V-B. low miles
1978 Chevy Caprice Classic- 2 door , blue
1978 Ford Fairmont- 2door, V-8, air
1978 Pontiac Bonneville- 4 door
1978 Plymouth Fury Wagon- Blue , low miles
1978 Buick Limited- 2 door, tan
1978 LTD Wagon- White, lots of miles
1977 Dodge [SOLD - 2 door, V-8
1977 Jeep CJ5- Green , rogtop, needs work
1977 Ford LTO- 4 door, red
1977 Ford LTO- 4 door, gr,ay
1977 Ford LTO- 2 door, gray
1977 Ford LTO II - 4 door , green
.
1977 Pontiac Trans-Am- Block , t-tops , V-8, automatic, tilt, cruise
1976 Dodge Aspen Wagon - Red, V-8

~

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Blocker hit a grand slam for the
Lobos.
. Tht&gt; Ca ngrejos wiped out the
Indd ios behind the ;Itchng of Ulises
Sierra and reliever Ray Seareage.
Sierra is 0.00 In 18 1-3 Innings.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Bengals
fullback Larry Kinnebrew Is questionable for Sunday's game agalnsl
the Cleveland Browns due to a
pulled groin muscle he suffered al
Thursday's practice.
"He might be able to pl aySunday,
but it's hard to see how he oould be
100 percent," Coach Sam Wyche
said.
Kinnebrew, who missed fou r
games earlier In the season with a
broken hand, suffered the Injury
during a blocking drill. He went In
for treatment and didn't return to
practice.
"He popped It (!he mu scle )on the
very first play of the very first drUI,
and that tells me It was because he
hadn't warmed up properly,"
Wyche said. "He was just seltlng up
Io block. There was no contact or
unusual motion of any kind."
Kinnebrew, who gained a cart&gt;et·
high 128 yards last week against
Buffalo, said he didn't think the
Injury was serious.

Maple Leafs 3, Red Wings 3
At Detroit, Toronto's Tom Fergus
and · Detroit's Reed Larson each
scored a pair of thlrd-pl'rlod goals.
Fergus had given Toronto, which
hasn't won In 10 games, a 2-1 lead
when he scored a power-play goal at
1: 35 of tlli! flnal _period. Lars9n tied
the scored on his own rebound at
12:32. .

NEW YORK (UP!) -The New
York State Racing and Wagering
hoard Friday suspended the licenses of three harness hofS£'
owners who are currenlly under
Indictment in Westchester County
for unlawful gambling acllvitles.
Criminal charges against the
three horseman - Godfrey Arnold
Jr., Daniel Kramer and Richard
Vaccaro- have been flied In County
Court, Westchester County.
The charges Include "promoting
unlawful gambling and bookmak·
ing activities to the extent of
r£'Celvlng and profiting with others
from bets representing more than
$5,&lt;m and possessing gambling
records."
A hearing In the matter has been
scheduled by the Racing and
Wagering board for Nov. 12. 10:30
a.m. at the Board offices.

to :

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PARIS iUPI) - Yugoslav midfielder Sa let Susie scored In the 47th
minute Frklay to lead French ffrsi
division leader Paris-St. Germain tO
2-1 win over ninth placed Metz for lis·
19th consecutive soccer victory.
Paris-St. Germain took the lead In
the 17th minute when Susie forced
Richard Honorlne Into an own goal,
but Senegalese strtker Jules Bocande equalized two minutes later
when ht&gt; converted a cross frorrt
former Int ernational Dldit&gt;r Six. ' '
Susie scored the winning goal on a
smart one two with sUiker Doml:
nlque Rocheleau.
Paris-St. Germain retained a'
six-point lead over defending champion Bordeaux with 33 points from 19
matches. Bordeaux has 'l7 points;'
Nantes, with 25 points, travels
seventh placed Auxerre in the onlY ·
match Saturday.
··

'

AUTO TRIM
CENTER

FRONT Of SEAl

Rangers 7, Jets 3
At Winnipeg, Mark Pavelich
scored two goalsandJamesPatrick
added the game-winner at 1: 57 of the
second period to lead the Rangt&gt;rs.
Patrick's first goal of the season
broke a 3-3 tie and chased Winnipeg
startlng goaUe Brian Hayward. Dan
Bouchard finished up.
'

License suspended Wins 19th in row

REMINGTON "SPORTSMAN" 12 PUMP

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Allan l~ · Dk· L~Ion

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3

'Competitive' Oilers stun Canucks, 13-0 :~

NFL results

NATIONM, RASKETMLL A."t.~
1-:a.&lt;o~em Conkrml't'

.

:· GALLIPOLIS' Renee Halley,
:i;.7 80Phom0re forward, Is a
-lnember of l!le 1985-86 Rio
:Orande Collele Bedwomen ba&amp;
)etball aquad. As a freshman,
•Halley had an hnpresslve ftr!ll
'
according 1o Coach Dixie
:;.e~ren. 'l1le Redwomen opened
_.last I!Yenbtg.

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

Scoreboard ...

l'or·IJ.ond

Dolphins meet Jets in AFC showdown

are

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.:·

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�.·

~age-C-4-The Sunday Timet-Sentinel

November 10, 1985

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

Callejas regains title

November 10, 1985

o ',

RlMil'IJ, Italy (UP!) - Hard· bell for the seventh.
'.'Stecca's a great tighter, he's the
hitting VIctor Callejas of 'Puerto
best
In the division after me,"
RJco Friday retained his World
smiling
Callejas said after Ills
Boxing Association junior feather, weight title when his fight against second defense rl. the title he
challenger .Loris Stecca was strtppedlrorn Stecca 17 months ago.
Callejas entered the bout rtght at
stopped at the start of the seventh
the 121.6-JXlUnd weight Hmlt. Stecca
round.
Callejas laid Into his Italian rival weighed In at 121.
The victory raised Callej~
With a vicious flurry of punches In
the sixth round of the scheduled career mark to 21-1 and l8
15-round bout before a screamlllg knockouts. Stecca dropped to ~2·1.
Stecca, the son d. a Rlml.n1 plml
crowd or 4,Wl partisans In Stecca •s
hometown.
parlor owner, pranced Into the ring
The champion literally llfted playing to the rabid Italian crowd.
The Rlrnlnl faithful serenadecj
Stecca off his feet with a blazing
tbelr
hero - roe of two boxing
roundhouse left near the end d. the
Stecca
brothers - with footballsixth. A punishing series d. blows at
style cheers and booed vociferously
the bell sent the challenger bleeding from his left eye and mouth wben canejas made his entrance
Into tbe Palasport ring.
- staggerlng back to his comer.
Stecca and Callejas fought evenly
South African referee Stanley
until
the sixth, with Stecca gaining
Chrlstodoulou asked ring doctor
GiuSEppe Guastella to examine the momentum ~lor to being
Stecca after the brutal round, and fioored lor the ~ond tlme In the
tbe fight ended moments before the sixth and taldng an Eight count.

a

•
-: GAILJA ACADEMY High School's freshman tlolbllll team llnillhed
'-the ltllll campalpl with a $-2 record. One vlctoey was over fanner
-:~eape rlvallrllllion. One of the two lollse8 was to Athens. Ftnlrow, left
::to rip&amp; are Rob Cox, Mali HasserJ~N~, Scoti .Mardll. Jamie Chevalier,
.:JobaCremeus, Kevin Copley, Todd Casey 1111d Pete Alldei'!IOn.Secoad

riiili'-1:... Jasou Montgomery, Mike Me~, Chad NWIII, Newt Jones,
Brent Sheets, Brian King, Lee Combs and Jamie Pleree. Third row Coach Brack Houchens, Troy MIDer, JOe Carter, Sean llan1s, Chris
Dillon, David Walters, Charlie Young, David Hoke, Jeremy Spencer
lllld Coach Matt Bokovltz .

~ers top Nuggets, Detroit, Boston win
~ '

:• · ByJJM LUTI'RELL
~
tlPISpona Wrler
:: Byron Scott defrosted just In tbne
!f cool til the Denver Nuggets.
[• Scott, who has scorEd just 13
~lntsln Ills last two games, pourEd
1!1 29 Friday nlght,lncludlngl51n the
lrstperlodon12-of-14shootlngtrom
!he floor, to lead the Los Angeles
l:.akers to a 128-99 victory over the
Nuggets, the NBA's only unbeaten
~i~~~!:!ll~~~~~game.
!elt
the game even
~cO.tm-t.!d." Scott said. "I took war·

~~~t~mo~reserlouslyandtookshots

&gt;:

I would get In the game. I
.-\II'" mostof'em-andtheywent

oot miss Wltll 7: 42
In the third quarter. He
play In the lolirth.
taking a 64-51 halftime lead,
period behind a relentless
led by MagiC Johnson.
scorEd ~ polilts and dished

to spark a 16-6 surge
halt, giving
11).57 lead.
Johnson llnlshed the period with
t:;t:2 polntswlllle Scott smred 14 as Los
Mgetes outsoored the Nuggets37·18
Increased the advantage to !Ol-

said. "Wecameoutd.theblocksand
wanted to make It a 34 minute
game. It (the lead) could've eltber
gone to~ points or 6.
"Basically, we got It to :nand It
was curs all the way."
The triumph g;~ve the Lakers a 6-1
recordwhlletheNuggetsfellforthe
first ttme after opening the season
with six victories.
Johnson finished with 19ID1nts, 12
assists and 10 rebounds. Alex
English led Denver wltl) 22 points.
Elsewhere, &amp;ston ripped Pliomix 125-101, San Antonio stopped
Phlladelphla107·95,Detroltdumped
Washington 117-110, Portland held
off Seattle 92-l!S and Golden State
drubbed Atlanta Jll.ll9.
Spun 111'7. 'lien 111
At Phlladelphla, Mike Mitchell
and Steve Johnson scored 24 points
each to lead San Antonio. Mitchell
had 12 points In thet!Udquarterand
Johnson five as the Spurs ~ an
87-78Iead f6llowing aM-54 halftbne
tie. Chartes Barkley had 26 points to
lead the 76ers. SedaJe Threatt added
18.
I'Wtmlll7, BulleU no
At Landover, Md., Islah Thomas
smred 25 points, Including 14 In the
third quarter, to send Washington to
Its fifth stralgbt bss. Washington,
which began the season with two
road vktorles, fell to 2-5. Detroit
cltmbed to 6-2. Jeff Ruland paced
Washington with 22 points.
e

At &amp;ston, Larry Bird scored W
first-hall points, Including nine
durlng a :18-5 flrst'(jllarter run, to
lead &amp;ston to Its fifth straight
victory. The Suns l!ll to ~6. Ro.bert
Parish finished with a game-high 25
points. Bird added 24 and Dennis
Johnson 17. Larry Nance paced the
SW1s with 21.
Blae-s IJI'l, Sonlcs Ill
At Portland, Ore., rookie Terry
Porter scored nine points In the
fourth quarter and Klkl Vande-

'

weghe fired In 28 to p-ope! Portland
to Its fifth straight triumph. 'Il:tm
Chambers Jed Seattle with 23.
Wanion 180, Hawks ll9
At Oakland, Calif., Purvis Short
sool'Ed a game-high 26 points and
J.B: Carron added 22 to lead Golden
State. Atter leading 1'6·56 at the half,
the Warrtors, who hadslxpayersln
double figures; broke the g;~meopen
In th~ third quarter by soorlng on
11-ol-13 possessions whlle moving In
front, !fi- Tl.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The·
$;lXJ,Wl Masters, the world's pre·
mler Indoor tennis event, begins
Jan. 14-191!9&gt;.
The tournament brings together
the top 16 singles players and eight
doubles teams based on total point
accumulation from performance In
the yearly Grand Prix.
A=rdlng to a tournament spokesman there wlll he no byes for any
player and for the first time, seeds
wlll be placed according to world

Volleyball standings
0 .0. MciNTYRE PARK DISTRJcr
VOLLEYBALL LEAGUE
S&amp;an41np u ell October'S, lla:li
A LEAGUE

Team
WL
•Lucky Lucy Amusements ......u 3
•Jewels :........: ......................... 9 5
•Last Cbanct" Carry-Out .......... 8 6
Mcllooakl's ............................. 6 9
•Jaymar Coal.. .. ....... .. ... ,......... 5 9
Pony's ..................................... lll
~&amp;~me

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.612
.511
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to finish due to time

Safings Days
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GROUP OF MIN'S

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ranking, rather than bonus pool
standing as was done before.
Tickets for the Nabisco- sponsored tournament are now on sale.

Browning honored

YAWU TO 124.00 ·

!

NEW YORK (UPI) - Clnclnna·
tl'sTom Browning and Milwaukee's
· Ted Higuera, both pitchers, were
today named the Sports Award
Rookies .of the Year In their
respective leagues.
The award, sponsored by Sea·
gram, Is based- on a computer
ranking. Browning finished the
season with a 59.73 rating after
posting a 21J.9 record with a· 3.55
ERA.
Higuera notched a 15-8 record
with a 3.00 ERA for a 59.62 rating.

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ftAM
W L P OP
)$outhwestem .......... 8 2 171 102
.pannan Trace ......... 6 4 2ll 132
,Symmes Valley ....... 5 5 189 181
North GaJDa ............ 5 5 00 151
'l;outhern .. :::... " ...... 5 5 11.'1178
Eastern ... ......... .:.. ..4 6 183 178
l:Jak Hlll ........ ... ......'3 7 ~ 218
.,J&lt;yger Creek ..... .... .. 0 10 33 312

8 P.M.
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•Team
SVACOnly
WLPOP
Southern ..... ... ......... 5 0 100 41
Southwestern ........... 3 2 93 52
Hannan Trace .......... 3 2 103 75
Eastern ................... 2 3 84 74
North GaiDa ....... ... ... 2 3 99 82
Kyger Creek ............ 0 5 ~ 175

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WILLIAMSTOWN - WOllam· Wahama failed 1o put the ball in the
SEE
stown blocked a punt, an extra point end zone after sustaining long tim&amp;tcy, and a game winning !leldgoal consumingdriveswhichstalleddeep
attempt all 1ft the !Ina! !our minutes In their opponents territory. The
•
• VS.
of action here Friday night to Jlfst a locals were Inside the Yellow Jacket
21J.13 upset victory over tbe visiting 30 yard line on four separate ocWahama White Falcons.
casions and inside their opponents 10
Asparse crowd saw the Wlderdog twice more only to come away
13.00 P~R PERSON/SS.OO PER COUPlE
Yellow
the come
from ,..~emp~ty~-ha~nd~ed~.~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
behind Jackets
win onpost
a chllly
autumn
evening to conclude their season
with a U slate whlle the locals ·
dropped their third stralglit
encounter to fB)l to 7~.
White Falcon senior running back
Todd Gress scored both WHS toucbdowns to unofficially become the
state's hl8h school scoring leader
· with 134 points on 22 louchdOWlll and
one two point conversion. The 5'7"
160 pound bslfback also went over
the 1000 yard rushing mark on a four
yard run with f:21 remaining In the
third quarter to beoome the bend
area team's first 110)-yard ground
gainer In 19 seasons at Wahama. ·
Although the local grldders
captured the game's final sta~cs
It was the play of the Yellow Jackets
defense that produced the winning
·rally. Wahamaled In first doWIIS!.j..
8; yards ni8hlng 181-75; yarda
All-CLIMATE
ANTIFREEZE!
, passing 211-180; passing comCOOLANT
pletlons IN; and oflenalve playa 78MOtOIOIL
f6. The White Falcons dtdn't conunlt
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of play.
As In their prevtoua two setbaclta

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By Qaarl«o:

Feb. 1, 1986
On Any Model Automobile -

AND NOW THE GOOD NEWS.
lt' s possible to absolutely stop '
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.,...........
...... ,..·..

Alumni Party

•'

AT

!'OINT PLEASANT
7 14 7 6 31
PARKER.SBURG
0 6 14 0 aJ
PP-Klnnalrd ~run !Rhodes fdd&lt;l
PP- Ilordman 2 run !Rhodes ~ck l
PS-Lifton !run lklck laDed)
PP-1100001 15 run lllilodel kid&lt; I
·PS-Crook 28 pass Interception retum (run
laDed I
PP-C. Sl~ Ill pass for m Rhodes
IRllodes klckl
PS-Markle 1 run (Markl(&gt; pass trom
Uttonl
PP-Mftchell 8 run (kick !ailed I

No Payment Until

•

/

field, Cam., the brother ct t~ro-tln]8
Indianapolis 500 winner Rldr
Mears:

FOR OSU ALUMNI AND GUESTS

Wahama loses finale

Starting Friday, Nov. 1st
The C&amp;S Bank Announces

.•••
THE BAD NEWS FIRST. Mobile
home roofs are prone to leakage
in rainy w,ather. This can mtke
your life miserable. And roof
coating every year is aggravating
Inc! expensive. This . probably
isn't newa to youl

1 310 93·
1 357 123
3 204 1.22
5 258 197
5 2lll 202
6 111 2W
6 145 272
7 188 241
9 73 268
10 71 374

Meigs .............. ...... 9
Belpre .......... .......... 7
Nelsonville-York ...... 5
Trimble .. ... ..... ....... 5
Ylnton County ........ .4
Alexander ............. .4
Wellston ................. 3
l"ederal Hocking .... .. 1
)'.llller ... ....... .......... 0
TVCOnly
Team
WLPOP
Warren Local. .......... 9 0 296 72
tdelgs ......................8 1 340 123
Belp~ ..................... .7 2 191 101
NelsonvUie-York ........5 4 252 175
Trimble ................ ... 5 4 261 .181
Alexander ...... ........ ..4 5 145 249
Vinton County ...........3 6 103 214
Wellston .... ............ ... 3 6 188 ?l1l
federal Hocking ..... .. 1 8 73 262
..................... o 9 n 346

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War~nLocal. ..... .... 9

8. 6 FINANCING ON

Md. (VPI).

up 40 on live tries, and Rl&gt;odes had .
li oo eight.
Rhodes lilt two cl. SI!VEII passes for
75 yards, lncludlrig the big pay kl
Simpkins. Mitchell also had two
pass Interceptions. .Rhodes also
threw an ln~ceptlon.
Markle led South with 116 yards
on 16 carries, 108 of It In the second
hall.

race, a gruetlngtestexpected to last
nearly 40 hours.
The field for the 822-rnlle race
Includes Roger Mears of Bakers-

ALL GAME'~

EXPIRES NOV. 30th

CJIJ!EI,V GUARDED - Detrol's 181ah 'lbomas (ri«bt) Is cloeely
by Wasbllllloo's Perry MCII!IIn Friday night's NBA: oorae.t at

halftime, then South came battling
back. Ron Crook got tt started by
Intercepting a Rhodes pass and
returning It :m yard!! tlr six points.
Then, after Sbnpldns' bomb;South
drove for -a touchdovm With lle
Markle crashing over !rom the 1.
Markle also took a pass /rom Bcyoo
Litton lor the 2-point oonverslon.
Trailing :18-W, South got the
football back oo a Jlfnl late In the
fourth period at Its own 4-yardllne.
Two plays later, however, Simpkins strtpped the football ilrm
Utton, and the Big Blacks were In
scorlng position at the Patrlots'lO.
That set up Mitchell's scoring run.
Klmialrd led the Big Blacks'
rushing attack with 97 yard!! on 1~.
carries, and Bordman ad~ sA
yards on 18 rushes. Mitchell picked

ENSENADA, Mexico . (UPI) More than lrodrlvers and motorcycle drivers left at dawn Friday for
the slart
the Baja 1tro off-road

...:: .

-

TVC standin@s

GOODNEWS
'

(Final RefllllarSe-)

~

•

Popangelov,
Bulgaria's
lntema·
tlonal slalom skier,
Thursday
fell I
and suffered a spleen Injury whlle
training. on the Hlntertuxer
Gletscher slope In the Tyrolean
region.

.

$VAC standings

S12''

OPE!~! MONDAY NIGHTS TIL

Skier injured .

::Totals

YAUES TO $26.00

11~.00

VIENNA, Austria (UPI)-Petar . ._ _ _ _.,

B LEAGUE

ALL GAMES
·TEAM
W L P OP
, Logan ....... ...............9 1 277 127
:-Ironton .... .. .............. 8 2 249 fiT
• Pt. PIMsant ............. .8 2 255 125
~Gallipolis ................. 8 2 236 !6
~Ripley ..................... 7 3 153 82
:'Marietta ................... 4 6 133 191
;.Rock HUI ..... ..... ........3 7 109 159
••Jackson .................. 3 7 53 232
:'Athens ....... ..............3 7 110 166
·-Portsmouth .. ........... 3 7 00 189
•Coal Grove ............... 2 7 115 161
:
SEOALOnly
;:Team
W L P OP
':Gallipolis ........ ......... 4 0 125 lJ
: Logan .......... ......... .. a 18152
i -Marietta .. ..... ........... 2 2 52 93
l.Athens ... ............. .. .. 1 3 ~ 52
&lt;:Jackson .. .... ............ 0 4 6 fi7
10 10 314 314
:•November 8 resuls:
~Pt. Pleasant 31 Parkersb.irg South

!

Umll .

Team
~ w L
Over The Hill Gang .... ............ 11 1
Htncr~l Surgical Clinic ........... 9 3
Village Quick Shop ............., .... 9 6
Fruth Pharmacy ........ ............. 9 6
Put On Shop ............................ ~ 10
Sport About.. ........................... 4 II
Rio Mini Mart ......................... 1 11

:sEO standings

No"emher

•

Tennis event begins January 14

•cenotes one

PARKERSBURG - Point Pleasant Is going to the state Class MA
playoffs with an 8-2 record.
Coach Steve Saffords's Big
Blacks jumped rut to a 14.0 lead,
!hen held off Parkersrurg South for
a 31·~ Pioneer Cooferenoe victory
here Friday night that nailed &lt;bwn
one of the top eight spots In theMA
race.
The Big Blacks are expecting to
draw either Stonewall Jackson or
George Washington, which ever
winds up second In the final ratings.
Five different Point Pleasant
players hit the scoring oolurnn Olarlle Kinnaird oo a 57-yard run,
Ryan Bordman on a 2-yard run to
rap an Ill-yard drive, Mike Rhodes
m a 15-yarder, Cliff Simpkins on a
68-yard pass !rom Rhodes and
Darrell Mitchell ro a S.yard run.
, _, _ The Bl&amp; Blacks took a 21-6 lead at

'·

Celtlcs 125, SIIIIS 101

More than 200 in Baja road rae~

Big Blacks win eighth game,
clinch spot in state playoffs

'·'

The Sunday Times-Santinei- Page-C_-6

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

P!IOllCTI TO -20' IElOW

liMIT 2

SILVER BRIDGE· PLAZA-PH. 446·9335 -

69~,

�November 10; 1985

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

Page-C-6 The Sunday limes-Sentinel

Wildlife notes...

GALUPOLIS - Have yoo ever
taken a trophy animal 1D a
taxidermist and come away dlsap!llinted that t.. couldn't ell with
your m:&gt;unt what you wanted him
to? It has happened to many a
hunter through tt.. years.
Several weeks ago I talked with
full-time taxidermist Jerry Coleman of Gallipolis about field care
and home care ft trophy animals .
Jerry has nearly fourteen years of
experience and rt.fers these guideline for trophy care.
"The !list thing rot to do Is cut tt..
throat of an animal you wish to
mount. Also, never cut a hole In an
animals ear to place your tag.
These are touchy areas and cuts
made here wtll likely show !rom
now on. Some cuts can be sewn and
hidden by tt.. taxidermist but It Is
best not to put them tt..re to begin
with.
When bringing your animal !rom
the woods It Is best to alternate sides
If dragging. Dragging an animal on
one side tears away aU tt.. guard
hairs and . a taxidermist cannot
correct this problem. It Is evm
better If tt.. animal can be carTied
out or lrans!llrted on some type ct.
all-terrain veh icle or ot her
conveyance.
Alter you have checked In yoor
deer and taken all yoor pictures It Is
best to hang the animal by Its teet
and case skln It toward tt.. head.
1rake the head and entire hide to tt..

In 1915, all Walnut schools gathered for exhibitions

New Jersey may ·liave inside track - Ueberroth

Field care and home
care of trophy animals
taxidermist and you have several
mounting variations !llSS(ble. If you
are doubtful of your skinning
abuttles, take the whole animal,
after checking, to the taxidermist
and let hlm Skin It out for yoo.
At home It Is best to keep your
trophies away from heat sources.
This dries and cracks tt.. paint
around tt.. eyes and rose. To keeP
your trophy looking sharp use a
damp cloth weekly and wipe your
tro!)hy In the direction the hair lies. ·
A feather duster Is best for
dusting the delicate area around the
eyes. A drop of linseed all can be
used to brighten and moistUrize the
area behind tt.. eyes.
· If the painted areas on your
trophy need touched up after years
of hanging on the wall it Is best to let
a taxidermist do lt. He has all the
right materials and tt.. know·how
to touch up your trophy corTectly.
Any animal you have that has
been tanned can be remounted. H
the hlde has been dry-(reserved It
cannot be remountlli. A taxidermist can usually provide a cape If
you have a great pair ct. antlers you
might wlsll to tum Into a head
mount.
It Is a good Idea to check rut and
rompare taxidermists work. When
romparlng, check more than just
price. Agood taxlde!TDist should be
more than wUUng to siK&gt;w yoo hls
workandglveyousomereferenoes.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Baseball
C&lt;mmissloner Peter Ueberroth,
saylngchangescouldcomeasearly
as next season, Indicated that New
Jersey may have the Inside track oo
landing a new or relocated major
leagueteam.
"Expansion or re-location could
come as early as next year. It might

the C9mmlssloner said. "That got
peopletosltupandpayattentlon."
The New Jersey Sports and .
Exposition Authority, the driving
Ioree behind the highly successful
Meadowlands S!llrlscomplex, guaranteed the owner of a hoped-for
New Jersey franchise two mUUon
paid admlsslons !or each of tt.. first

five seasons.
Fifteen of the existing 26 major
league teams drew fewer than 2
mUUon fans to tt..lr parks In tt..1985
season.
The New Jersey authority also
promised to buUd a baseball
stadium at a slte to be determined,
spokesman Jon Hanson said. The

By JI\MES SANDS
(Special Correspondent)

authority was considering sites In
Bergen, Hudson and Essex
counties.
The committee plans to meet
again before the winter rr:tln~~
December. At thOSe mee gs
plan to make a report to the full
oMlershlp on each ol the 13
presentations.

C AD Mu S Seventy years
ago there were 11
schools just In
Walnut Town·
ship: Boggs, Cad·
mus, Crossroads,
Olive, Low Gap,
,Mudsock, White Hollow, . f lag
, Springs, Myers Hollow, Bethesda
~ and Null. At least twice a year all
the schools of ·. the township ga·
thered together once 1n the ta ll on
· ·SChool ex hibition ~ay and once 1n
'the spring on •!leld day.
: During : the 1910s most of the
:, school exhibit Ions and field days ln
Wainut Township were held at the
• Olive Methodist Episcopal Church.
, This church was organized around
· 1860 by the Rev. John Wiseman to

~:~:~:~~::~~:ir: ri;;;;;;;;;s~;_;F;•;E;;;;~~,;A~~L~;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';.~,~;;~k;;~o~;.~,;v;;;;;;;,

Baseball meetings)," Ueberroth
sald alter the major leagues' Long.
Range Planning Committee finished two days of meetings Friday
with 13 communities that hope to
· attract a major league team.
It appearstheblgwlnnerwasNew
Jersey. Without naming the New
Jersey proposal directly, Ueberroth
said the owners were very Impressed by one presentation that
offered financial guarantees.
"One group got into projection of
revenue, guaranteeing substantial
revenue and a"endance better than

.
i~, ..;.

,. ,· ~,

.

ne ee

-

.

.

.

'

PHONE 4'6-6225
1885 nm• aw.
GALUPOUS, OHIO

nine to 13; eight students who were
aged 14 to 16 and 14 who ranged
from 17 to 21 years of age. It took
some persons untO their 21st
birthday to get throUgh the eighth
grade due to poor roads and work
on the farm, which kept students
away for some time.
'
In 1919 the average size of all of
11\e Walnut schools was 31 down
from an average-of 38in 1915. Some
oftheolderchlldren were beginning
to go to high schools In other ,
townships and in gener~
population of Walnut Towns !Up
declined greatly ln this period.
THE l9L'i school exhibition was
opened at Olive Church at 10 a.m.
by H.S. Drummond, the president '
of the Township Teachers Assoclallon. The morning was spent
discussing: " The Teaching of
Arlthmetlc".Jed by J .S. Clark;" The
Teaching of Reading" led by J.G.

a copy of the newspaper account ct
the Walnut Field Day held In 1917 at
Olive Church. The opening exercises were co-nducted by the Rev .
Mr. Brewer. Then came the
speaking contest with Bessie
Cooper, Edna Oyse, Clarice How·
ard and Helen Cue carrying off the
prizes. The Rev. Mr. Ewing then '
gave a talkwhlch the news account
says was highly appreciated. " On
account of the length of · the
speaking contest the Rev. Mr.
Ewing was compelled to make his
talk brief."
After dinner lhe students and
teachers gat)lered on Wiseman's
nearby farm to compete In these
events: 50yarddash,220 yarddash,
100 yard dash, and the potato race.
There were events for girls and
hoys who were also divided by age.
In 1917 Crossroads school took first
place In the field day meet.

We observe that In the 1920s the
half mile run, shot pill, 50 yard
dash, baseball throw, broad jump
and various relavs were added. Not
only dta me twOnshlps have field
days but there was a county wide
field day held each year too.
WE HAVE a photo copy of the
1922 Gallla County Field Day and It
shows Allison of Cadmus winning
the discus, javelin and shot put.
Thorne of Rio Grande was second In
the shot put. Swain of Mercerville
.won the broad jump and Wiseman
of Cadmus took honors ln the high
jump.
It Is Interesting to note that the
headflnes In the newspaper In 1916
belonged not t.o the athletic winners
but the one who won the county
spelling contest, Leonard Bush.
Ernest Wiseman was second and
Cora Loucks third.

_,

"

OLIVE UNlfED Methodist Church, located near Cadmus, was
organl2etl In 1800 with the present edifice put up In 1871. Among the ·•
founders of Olive Churoh were the Drummonds, .Joneses, Mc&gt;Carleys,
Bargers, and Wlsemans. Rev. John"Wlsemansetupthe churd•,andRev. ''
Andrew Wiseman was the first pastor.lnthe 1910s,schoolmeetlngswere ·
held at Olive.

~o'c-M~*~~&amp;~A~~~
lass known as the McCarley class Languages" by ··~Th~ngof
Bertha Neal. Miss f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==================~~~
:was formed and the pastor of the

, Patriot clrcqit regularly stopped at
" the McCarley &amp; hool to lead
worship.
. The fir st and present church was
.'erected in 1871 on ground given by
,John Jones and Thomas Bostick
'.'Z'_hO al~ wllh these families early
members, Thomas Drummond,
Logan Barger, Robert Barger,
_Charles Jones, Frank McCarley,
and Washington McCarley, where
ln 188) Olive became a part of tt..'
Waterloo circuit, and It has . re-'
malned there through most of Its
'history.
Township that met In 1919 at Olive
Church for their exhibitions and
field days, the largest school had 55
students over eight grades and the
smallest had.18 students. Cadmus,
Mudsock and Null school had twice
as many boys as girls.
The Mudsock school had only one
student ages six to
; 13

"

N•e• Something
. Electrical? West Virginia
Electri' has it ..

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

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

November 10, 1985

- -~lli1

YOU CAN HAVE THIS HOUSE ON YOUR LOT
FOR A REMARKABLE LOW PRICE OF 525,000
WE HAVE OTHER HOMES AVAILABLE
STARTING AT 122.000 AND UP.

FOR INFORMATION CALL

ONLY 2 LEFI
AT THIS PRICE

614-698-6189

River
Front
Honda
SANTA'S LITTLE HELPERS

Neal's theme was that teachers
needed to s~d less time Instructlng on technical grammar and
more time on romposltlon.
· At noon a basket dinner was
shared, followed by the various
exhibits made by all 11 township
schools, with prizes awarded to the
best one.
In the afternoon Professor &amp;arberry of Rio Grande College
addressed the group on the practlcability of the consolldatlon of
schools. Afterwards the Rev. J.B.
Massie led the discussion of the pros
and cons of Profesoor &amp;arberry's
comments.
Next came an address by
Superintendent Lutz, followed by
readings from the various schools,
music by the Cadmus school and
the presentation of the award of
merit for 1915 to Mudsock school.
FIELD DAYS were held both )n
the spring and the fall and we have

i

n•

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s0°/o I

SAVE UP TO

''

~11r

ALL SEASON

P235175Rl5
3019.50Rl5
3hl0.50Rl5
33•12.50R15
9.50R16.5
33•12.50Rl6.5

29.95

42.95
)t,K 39.95
41.95 46.95

MI S

-

64.95
69 .95
74 .95
89.95

74.95
79.95

89.95

-

-

-

79.95

6 Ply Rating

OVER 7 50 TO C..OOSE FROM •

·...

$145000 . $51500
..

,

•

New Shipment of Apparel Including Youth Sizes
•

LAY •AWAY NOW F_OR CHRISTMAS

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AT SANTA'S HEADQUARTERS
433 PIKE ST.
GALliPOliS,OHIO

NEXT TO
BOB'S ELECTRONICS

l

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HOURS 9-7 MON.-SAT.
PH. 446-2240

•

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TheranalitesT·
Newly applied ski boot technology gives these
boots lightweight comfort that is rugged, waterproof
and flexible .

G·Metric Radial

PERFORMANCE
RADIALS

1 55 5~ 1 ;!

Store Hrs.:
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 til 8
. Tues., Wed. Jhur.
&amp; Sat til 5·

8 lacl.w ~l l

PI$5180RI3

NO1r1tJe needed

B1ac ~~~~~~

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SAVE I0%0FFIPR.
Our big sale starts with
annual percentage rates (APR)
on installment loans that are as
good, if not better, than
anybody's.
But that's riot gcxxl enough.
So we've knocked 10% off
our APR.
But wait, there's more.

BONUS! TANDY.1000
AND MONITOR
Get a Color Monitor
at No Charge When
You Buy a Tandy 1000

As.~Wnc a 12%* APR. Here's

how filii
Mmu•vSnlr• rmttld uxwk.

lt ttt·
1.2 0. \ nnual l t•n.I:~·nt;l~t·
Ill
-1 2
10.8

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.

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\l unt. . l! l'',.,ll!
\I' \\

I,\

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\ linn ... n.-,., ..

1:"'"' .II 'II
1• l rm f "' '',

10.3%
1111 11 1om

CARGO COIL SPRINGS

Rflar springs for hsndHng heavy
load I, prolecdng tires and shocks.
and to stop bofto.Wng ou1. Ideal
for cars with trailer hl1ch11. For
most U. S. cars.
_
per palr
1

Save•29995
25-1000
2~1021

$

99

iMtallod

WIPER BLADE INSERTS

Htghwoy dirt and -thor llrooh
can make it herd 10 . . . . d drive.
And hot oun con moko wiper btadoo
old In o hurry: Wo'll lriotoll now

Reg. Separate
ttems1298.95

blade ln~erts while you welt.

. .i'includes DeskMate®Software with
Six Applications on One Disk
• Compatible with the IBM® PCChoose from Thousands of Programs
• CM-4 Color Monitor Displays
sox 25 Text and 320 x 200 Graphics

S3.25im':~

Attenllan Ill JIIISS Owllef
If you put a Tandy 1000 into service before
Dec. 31, 1985, you may be eligible for a business deduction, depreciation, or Investment
credit. Consult your tax advisor for more
details.

4-WHEEL nRE ROTAnON

Tires rotated In thl proper H·

Doing Business In Central Ohlo since 1982

Ftnenelng Av•lllble

,-----'----1

II!MITM ,_,.,_ Bull""' Mochinoa Corp.

TOYOTA
c.;
Slife Industrial Trucks
24M McGIIIIIold, Colulllbul, Ohio 43207 • (814) 487·2500

.,

,,

'•

..... ,..

•

FORKUFT

quon.,.. Each tire chocked for

unusual weer, end il)ftetkm pres·
a~r11 cMcktd end corrected.

I.UBf, 01. CHANGE &amp; FilER

Lubricate chilli•. d rtln oil tnd refill
with up to ffvt qutrtt of n.w motor oil,
.net lnttlll new oil flh.,. Special dfeltl
oil end filter typ .. mey ruuh In tllltrl
chlrg81.

s11.9 5ln::,~d

HEAVY DUTY MONROE
SHOCK ABSORBERS

duty lhocltt provklt more wont·
lng ere• th8n tltnderd thodl.t, r•uhlng
In be1t., control end ku;:rHt.t ttlbillty
at hlghwey IIP•dt •
H11~

$19.9 5 ,.~::~._d

JIIANSMISSION MAINTENANCE

Replace tr.ntmllllon fluid, P• g111Ut
and fllttr on vthlc:lw 110 ..utJpld. Ser-

Yict no1 l'llillble for Hondt or Mlrctdll Btnl.

$

WHEEL BEARING RE-PACK

hwplf&lt;lt end repack front wheel bear:
ings. intttll new front
lit, and
re10rqYe to speciflc:etiont. Parts tnd•d ·
dltkJntl ,.,.,ic• ••tre, If need ed .

i'"""' ..

S27.00
RADIATOR PROTECnON

OrWn end mi" the rldlltor endcoolingsv ttem 'htl:h up to 2 gelktnt of coolem / ant ~
ftelz:e. Prelltlre tut Jylln. Inspect wa·
ter pump1, hOtel, belli, tighten al connac-

Uono.

S16.95
DISC BRAKE SERVICE

New front d61c pa, twpKk lront whttl·
blllingl. I'IIUriiCt front rotors, convtn·
donel , • •wtte.~ ..,..idel. Pricll VlfY for
fr&lt;&gt;nl·wf1ool ddvo. II _ , motollc &lt;foe

podo ...

-"""·odd

114.

$59.95

r.tlNROE GAS STRUT CARTRIDGES
lntt•Htd on you r veh icfe lo lmp royo h &amp;n·

dUng Wid reduce road nolu, Smoo lhet
out bumps. l lm1ted life time Wllrranty .
Flu mo11 lmpons or OOf11)11Ct cars C11 ll
tor api)OJntment.

$99 9 S

Pr . lnotallod

GUARANTfED WHEEl

AUGNME~T

0

Frank ly wetMnk It's the ben a lig n me nt
1round . WARRANT ED FO R 90 DAYS

or 4 .000 MILES . wh ichever co l"nnls
flr11 . we will lntpect all 4 tires . corr&amp;c t
tlr p r ltiSUf fl , 111 front C.!llll lr , umber

tnd toe to pro per a lignment. Inspec t
IUap.nalon. Ptrtl e•tra if ne uded .

$19 95
0

MOST

CA~S

SPECIAL SERVICE PRICES
END NOVEMBER 16th

�Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 10, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point J,Jieasant, W.Va.

,.

Meigs County agent's

'Aggie bond' program
helping new fartners
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - State
officials say their "aggte bond"
programs art" helping new farmers
go Into business and they hope
Congress will preserve the tax
exemption for bonds during tax
reform.
"We feel it Is a worthwhile
program,'· said Ron Bailey of the
Illinois Fa r m Development
Authority.
Bailey said his conversations with
congressmen and staff workers
during a three-day meeting offarm
development authority leaders indicated support for the programs,
which use tax-exempt lxinds to
provide low-Interest loans to
farmers. Leaders said most of the
loans are for relatively small
amounts.
Seventeen states have the bond
programs In )!lhlch low· Interest
financing Is made available through
the sale of tax-exempt bonds. In all,
they are behind 3,358loans totaling
$ll6 million. Illinois has the largest
operation with more than $84 mllllon
In loans.

c.

Paying more
than you need
to lor car
insurance?

A

tAKING-cHARGE . . . . TAKING -CHARGE . . . . TAKING-cHARGE

I

TAKING CHARGE . . . .

Local

'ij!fmes- i'entiaatl

From the-ashes, a new Gallia courthouse
-

GALLIPOLIS- Saturday's dedication of the new Gallla County culminated the end of nearly
five years of effort as the rounty commission worked to flnanre and then construct the facUlty.
The January 8, 1981 gutting of the 101 year-old wing of the Gallla County Courthouse was the
third time In county history the structure was the victim ci fire.
The county has had four previous courthouses- the rornerstone for the first was laid May 2,
18(lland was built, over a period of 15 years, in the q?nterofthe public square. The building served
numerous purposes- both governmental and nod-governmental -throughout the early l.lms;
and , was eventually razed.
The other three courthouses - and the new public bOJilding- were constructed on Locust St.,
between First and Second Avenues, In 1847,1800and 1879.
.
The wing destroyed In 1981 was first occupied In 1879. It was builtin place of a buDding which
burned to the ground In 1877.
That structure, Ironically, was built to replace the rourtrouse which bOJmed In 1858. In both
previous cases, arson was the cause and convictions were made.
The 1858 fire destroyed what .was Gallla Coonty's s~ond courthouse, which had been
constructedadecadeearller.
· 1
The building that burned on Jan. 8, 1981, was buUt for-a total oostci$40,000; and was occupied on
June 1,1879. The structure was expanded in 1901, With a 15-footi!ddltlonforthe auditor's office. In
1936, offices were made in the basement. The court rouse annex was added in 1962.
On Jan. 8, the main courthouse that served the counlyfor101years was destroyed by flreduetoa
defective heater on the second Hoor. Coo rthouse records and documents were recovered through
the efforts of courthouse employees and the Zaleski ClvUlan Conservation Corps.
County offices were temporarily relocated In the former Gallla County Library and leased
otncespacewtthln the City. In the summer of 1981,remporarymodularofflceswerelocatedon the
courthouse lawn and parking area while pfanntng and design d a new building was prepared by
the Marietta firm ofEesly, Lee, Vargo and Cassady.
The official groundbreaklng for the new Gallla County Courthouse took place lon March 14,1983.
Custom .Facllltles and Riedel Brothers were awarded the general oontract for the construction.
Occupancy of the new facility by county offices began In October, 1984. The building was
originally accepted by the county commission on Nov. 2, 1984. Exterior landscaping and
renovation of the visitors parklrig lot werecompleted In 1985,1n time for the Nov. 9dedlcatlonoflhe
new building.
Guided tours of the facility continue today between 2 and 4 p.m.

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e ream o f e .ro "

The Newest Cars Around

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Jim Mink Chevrolet- Oldsmobile Announces

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.
eight Inches deep; crocus, grape ·
hYacinth and snowdrop, 3 to 4 .
inches deep; bluebells, anemone
and snowflake, 4 to 6 Inches deep.

creases the need for more frequent snowdrop.
checking ol. the soU pH. Gardeners
The general rule for planting
applying large am:lunts o1. wood depth Is three times the relghl a the
_A picullure
POME,R OY- WOOD ASHE'l ~ ashes should sample and test their bulb - tulips and daffodils six to
Wood stoves and firEplaces haVe soU every two years to monitor soli
been getting their first workout of pH. Adding wood ashes to sliils has
the season recently. More use of a minimum effect oo the soD's
wood as fuel for rome healing physical condition. · Weathered
means that wood asres are being wood ash ' has practically no
produced. One way to dispose of fertWztng or Umtng value. For
wood ashes from ihe ftreplace or more lnformatlon on the effect of
stove Is to scatter them over the using wood ashes on gardens, call
garden soU. We get several calls the extension dtl$e at 002-6696.
about this each year as wood·
PLAN NOW FOR SPRING burning season begins. What Is the For flowers that bloom In tiP
ultimate effect of wood ashes on spring, get the bulbs In the ground ·
sou•
NOW. Gardeners must not (l)ly
Reliable Information on use of think ahead but work ahead It
wood ashes in gardens Is Hmlta:l. tullps, daffodils and their many
However, reputable reterenres teD ""rousins" are to add color to the
Ask a neighbor, then call me.
us that tiP makeup of wood Is spring garden.
variable. Composition of wood
Hardy bulbs are a delight to an
ashes depends not only on the type amateur gardener. They require
of the original wood but also oo row very little care and. once planta:l
well the wood burned, any leaching grace the landscape year after
CAROLLSNOWDEN
that has taken place by exposure to year. What may surprise you wben
Cl7 Seeond Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh . .
the elements, and tiP degree to you go to bOJy bulbs Is the many
Phone 441·4210
which the ashes may have been kinds available- not justthe many
Home 441·4511
mlxed with Impurities.
varieties ol. a single type like tulips,
Wood asres will add a minimum bOJt also the less well-knowti bOJlbs
""" ,
amount of phosphate and pot;ISh to such as snowflake, glory-d-theState Farm Murual
soils. However, the major ccintrtbOJ· snow, squill, bluebells, anemi&gt;ne or
Aulomol&gt;itlnlurlnceCompony
lion of wood ashes Is In the form ci windflower, winter aconite, ·and
Home Otfice: Bloomington. tlinois
calcium carbonate, which in·
By Jobll
Rice
C.nty Extenslo~ /\gent,

"Because of the program. we
bave people fanning woo ttrerwise
could not own farm land," ~d
James Rubingh oft he Colorado Ag
!Rvelopment Autmrtty.
A spokesman tor Iowa's program
satd Its lower cost tlnanclng
provides a boost for new f~rs
during a rough time In agriculture.
Bailey more than ill percent of the
borrowers In Illinois sald they rould
not have made a purchase wltmut
aid from the program.
Aggie bonds and other smallIssue Industrial revenue bonds are
scheduled under federal law to go
out of existence at the end ci 19S6.
The House Ways and Means
Committee last Oct. 25 voted to
allow tax exemption for aggte bonds
and other small-Issue bonds.
Wltmut aggle bonds, said Tony
Logan, the head d Ohio's ag bond
program, "you could make a case
there would be a credit gap." Young
farmers, Logan sald, cannot make a
pront It they have to pay J3 percent
Interest but are In a .much better
position Hthe loan carrtes 8 perrent
Interest

Extension
notes .•..
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'

Priced Right for the BIG SALE

$

":n
)
::J

~allipolij

MARCH, 1981 -

The walls of
the 101-year old oourthouse
destroyed in Jwtuary are razed
as the county prepares to seal
and winterize the walls of the
connecting annex. While there
•lwd been some dl&lt;icu!lllon of
: IIUempllnJ to save the walls of
lite old oourthouse, architects
advised the surviving brick
walls were unsafe and beyood
repair.

"m

=»

aIll

I

\'fl. tf. IolL I

IJaUn Uttihnne

G•llipolil. Oh io Frid1w. J1nv1rv f , lfll

, ... li... ltlll"l

Silver with black accent paint.
terior. tilt cruise, AM-FM
wheels with premium radial
cared for. Don't miss this one.

Black custom instenio, custom .
tires. Very well
New S-10trade.

1983 BUICK REGAL, 2 DR.

A real sleeper. Medium blue with contrasting
vinyl landau . top and 60/40 seating. Tilt.
cruise, chrome styled wheels and only 26,690
miles. New Monte Carlo trade.
.

A M~~ .....ll 1M. Ntwl!lt'!

Fire .destroys 1·01-year~old
wing of Gallia courthouse
Estimate damage
at $1 million;
seven injured

.

1982 PONTIAC TRANS AM

I Sfc.l,..,l, 1t il"tH 1tCMII

1981 VOLKSWAGEN PICKUP

=""'

lii_;;.;::o
.. _
_
Coul1l&gt;o!loe
- ..

Elaht~•~ht flrefl(litfn frtm five aru departments blllkd the cit)' a ..orst tlrt Jn three yean .
Seven penont-iDcllldlna 1ll G1WpoUs firemen-were 111jw-ed ......"11 .........

wtllle........,..

lllll.lll•mlt.rlnotrlaw.
Bini wulllktn IG Holler Medel I
CenUr tt II ; 10 p.m. .,..... hi wu
traltd and rtiMir!d.
City f1f'tlltfft MM'\'111 Olin,
W•)'llt IEWOtt, Mcty '!Jhlr lllld
~ W1llace ~ ll"t*d for
II!MIIItllllllllltlon•tlht teeM.
Twudtrtnflahten -.ttNtat
for injllrill M HIMitr Meckal Cftlter. Jiln II Widen. II, klnMt t'OIIIl~

~
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Priced right. Only 16.945 miles. tilt wheel.
AM-FM stereo, rallye wheels and 60/40 seat.
Extra nice inside and out.

Locally owned and lady driven. Auto. ti'ansmiuion,
power steering. AM-FM transmission, power
stearing, AM-FM radio, custom vinyl trim. Only
33,361 actual miles. Don't miu this buy today.

1982 TOYOTA CELICA GT

Truly the nicest around. Medium blue exterior with
custom cloth interior. Only 47.249 low miles, air
cond .. 5 speed, electric and roof . New Chevrolet
trade.

llhfrit1 , •• ~ •t t:m a.m.
-.!til I eeMulkin d lilt rif:ht
[(XJftTHOll&amp;£ !IVMN~ - SIMnlJIIIH tWI phlll•1• I.U.N 'nil;r
•11f11Pl. llle r..t ef.., r.alllll c-IJ re~rtlowlf u\ft 11 aUtr fliT
( wtk.i 1k H'ftl.l!5,a lllircl Ollan..IIM Ill }ftl ol4! l lnf!Urt. Tlll! Wan.
wllk~ tl llri*"~ .. ~~a.-. .tartrtl la tW _....,_ I•~· wu n-porlttlall:fl , .. . .... ........,, a..trr t911!nl ~ "" ..llllr"" l._tLIJIIIII,

"

..... _
_
tbe two top

""bulldinl·
'lbe fire calllfdan elllmlledfl million damage.

...

Gar}" s-. JIMIII.~ proll.tlon rA·
tim. ltKwrecl ltcleratl- of tilt
rl&amp;fllltand and rilhl Uunb u lw rr.-.
('l!ld open I dclor in the illlrNnc
I1UI.Idml
tt illlll aft

1982 CHEV. CAVALIER, 4 Dr.

sady.

l7 LARRY I!WING
Ft,.st&amp;ttedlht 101-,...r j j d - wblt! ollht GaU~ CoontJI

A very rare model. 4 speed, "custom topper.
Diesel engine, locally owned, new showroom
trade.
..

1984 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

MAY, 1983 - Footers are ·
poured in preparation lor construction of the new Gallla
County Courthouse. Tile offtclal
ground breaking for !be buDding .
took place on March 14, 1983.
Custnm FacUlties Wid Riedel
Brothers were awarded the
general contrad lor construction. The courthouse was designed by the Marlelta nrm of
Eesley. Lee. Vargo and Cas-

I"*PINMII.~

., Cffifr ....... , .....

IU.Grll*aM. ~ .,...,_..
~

...

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!km,..-

,.. _ _ _ _

•

.. IMGaw,.tkdiJ........,_.IU.fll .. jllllilt...,..,........,_...~,
Pltr.l.
~
.,fin, ..
eiWIII Wtt Clllllplllt ,.__,

• ow. ....,.

1..-m. "' .... .,_,... n:l
tl'laitd. Rill Pttric:k. il. .....
mil1ecllt IU~ a.m. and truted ,,..

abrPionl !II lhr f&lt;nflnd, lllld a
lamltlon of lhl 11ft eyebt"ft. He

1?11 flrt ... fltlt ~ ., •
r.ortr fftldent ol :11111 Stc'OIId Avl_
1tUOp.m.
llll roof d Lilt flull"'/11 trlptecl

nam. ohort.IJ after the l .. nn
.... -me~.

irU

tJMIIIII•tt N&lt;O•o.~U~M...
tel"eewed I

Lilt ell)'. Thl! tuct etUM

.....

hadiOII_,~u•..,.l

finmtll .nad ~ the
nenlrc to coot.a 1n the lll1u lo the
top two noon d llle old tectlo!l: and

... r'ftfMfd ttll :4111.11\.

Thursday's courthouse blaze
third in history of county
lrltEl'TNULU
Thl! IUlllllll !II thf 101 )Hrr-old
-.ifll 1111 thr Gill II CIU1tt· ~hoo.H
llVIdiJNIIII•astlle!JijrciUil'ltln
toWit)' lllllO!l ~ 51.rud~" ••• thr

Vldlnulflrt.
otn~Pifll I ~ 1m .
piiK."f d the tuldm11
whirl! bumrd t othe (ntlllllll~ 1m

Tht

wu

•

Gallla County Seal

t

!

ll'in~ .

flrtt

~It 1n

GalUa County Seal

This structwrt , 1101\JCIIt)' , wu
blaltttorflll-1'- cu•rt""""" whdi

• '-" bumrd In l&amp;sa. I ~ both cues.
ttn011 WU the Ubit J lld C'!IIWU'IIIlnl

woereii'IIM.
AcoordlllfiiC COI"IY'MIIIGtltiVf II'

Ucla wnntn by 81m Bndllut )' ltld
publiltll!d in tM Galll'"i1 0..11)"
Trillwte dw'irljl thr d ty'1 .e~UI«'rt­
ltMIII 111 IMO, \he UM f11t
dnlay..t wNol •.u Galloa'IIP!'Md

1982 CHEV. CELEBRITY 4 DR.

This CS model is silver outside with dark blue vinyl
roof and matching interior. Equipped with tilt,
cruise, AM-FM cassette and much more. New Olds
trade.

We've
Got
The
Deals

1985 CHEV. CAVALIER, 2 DR.
Just traded this week. Auto. trans.• power steering, AM-FM stereo and 13,231 ow miles. Save on ·
this one now.

COIIrlhowt, whlcll hRd btrn c.nllnlcttd l te•nttO )fllr'SUIIItr.
A. C\oork ancj Robert

1985 OLDS•.98 REGENCY, 4 DR.
Classic black with beautiful burgundy interior.
New 86 Regency trade. All the options you would
expect plus 15,832 low miles.

Shop .
1.913 CHEV. CAMARO Z-28

This is the one you have been waiting for. Only 9,041 low
miles on lhia beauty. Tilt, cruise, AM -FM ca111etta.
Sterling Charcoal interior with medium gray custom
seating. New Chevy trade.

&amp; Compare
At Your
Hometown
Dealer

Chevrolet- Olds·rhobile Inc.
1616 EASTERN AVE.,.GALLIPOLIS
. . . TAKING CHARGE..., TAKING CHARGE,., TAKING-cHARGE . . . . .
I

FEBRUARY, 1984 - Scaffolding surrounds tile_ new buDding as
contractors complete brick laying and exterior trlin work. 1be new

446-3672
TAKING CHARGE

courthouae 1s built to he IIOIHlOmbu.ltlble, wllh a steel frame and concrete
, noors. The exterior oil he shllclure Is ci stllld molded brick and features_a
• mansard roof. The buOdlnl bas a·steel frame and concrete floors.
•

j
1
•

OOUR1110U!E '85- Special feawres ol the new building Include the
maln foyer planter for Interior landscaping, a third noor skyllght, the round
Coounon PleasCouttroom Wid a drive-in window at the rearoflhe hulldlng.•
1be four-Mory buDding Is a pseudo-French Renalsswlce ooslgn and slml)ar • .
to lhe former courthouse erected In 1879.

�Page-0-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 10, 1986

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

Nov(lmber 10. 1985

U.S. to excavate ·crash site,in MIA search
WASHINGTON i UP!) - A B- 52 bomber on a run
over North VIetnam In Det'ember 1972 crashed Into a
rice paddy 9 miles north of Hanoi, where splinters of
the wreckage still poke thrOugh the water.
Thirteen years later, a U.S. search team may drain
the paddy In Its quest for the remains of some of the
six crew members who are thought to have gone down
with the warplane, the Pentagon announced Friday.
The excavation wUI mark the first time Vietnam
has permitted the United States to search for
AmeriCan servicemen missing In action on Vietnamese soU.
An 11-man U.S. team will begin digging thrOugh the
wreckage with 10 Vietnamese workers Nov. 18,
assistant Defense Secretary Rl~ha~ Armlta11e said.

The effort could take 10 to 12 days.
Another team surveyed the site

hi July

and the
excavation, Including the flights, wUI cost an
estimated $150,001, he said.
The paddy Is In the Hanoi-Haiphong corridor where
several of the 17 B-52s that Pentagon officials say
were lost over North VIetnam crashed during the
Vietnam War, which ended In 19'15.
· Armitage also announced an agreement with Laos
to dig out multiple crash areas In that neighboring
country, which permitted the excavation ct an AC-130
gunship a1 Pakse In February. The remains of 13
AmeriCans were found.
"We hoPf' this excavation will prove to bet he first of
many efforts which lead to the tuUest possible

_:Italian government
assailed for PLO
diplomatic support

:!Jidependence."

CRAXI REACTS - Italian Prime MIDIBter Belt!llo Craxl reacts
during his speech to the Senate Friday. The 51-year oltl Sod•k leader
addreMed the Senate In a speech tblt preceded a vllal conftdence vote to
decide whetherCraxl'sllve-party coalition would be conllnned Ill olllce.
UPI

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) -Four
of six kldaapped Americans In
Lebanon- who said their physical
condition was deteriorating asked President Reagan to negotiate their release· from Moslem
kidnappers, but the White House
turned down their plea.
The appealswere contained In
handwritten letters In a package
tossed from a speeding car Friday a
day after a telephone caller said the
hostages had been executed.
The package was thrOwn In front
&lt;t the west Beirut offices of the
Associated Press.
In the letters, the four said their
physical and mental health were
deteriorating and that they had been
told U.S. Eml!as~ ol!lclal William
BuckJI'y, one of two missing
Americans, had been kUied.
Four letters, dated Friday, were
signed by AP correspondent Terry
Anderson, Martin Jenco, a Roman
Catholic priest, AmeriCan University Hospital administrator David
Jacobsen, and AU dean Thomas
Sutherland.
"We do not negotiate with
terrorists," While House spokesman Larry Speakes said. "The
president's policy has not and wUI
not change.
"We remind the kidnappers that
we hold themlirmly responsible for
their well being and call on them to
r!'Iease the hostages forthWith,''
Spl'akes said.
State Department spokesman
Bl'rnard Kalb said the Associated
Press "believes the letters are
genuine, but he said "we have not
seen them and cannot verity eltlter
that they are genuine or when they
Wl're wrttten."
The package also Included a note
denying a serlesol claims Thursday
by anonymous callers that the
hostages had been killed.
"We are appealing to you for
action.' ' said the letter to Reagan In
Anderson's handwriting. "We have
readandheardoverthepastmonths

AmeriCans and the United States hopes for thefr ·
repatriation In the "near future." Another U.S.- ·
VIetnamese technical meeting on the Issue, the flft)l
this year, Is to be held In Hanoi Wednesday.
At the same time, Armitage said, the remains of .
another five U.S. servicemen have been identified.
They were among 26 remains turned over the Unltl'!l
States In August, the biggest turnover to date.
Among the newly ldentHied remains was that of
NaV); Lt. j.g. Richard C. Sather of Pomona, Calif.,
who Armitage said was theflrsiU.S. serviceman shot :
down over North Vietnam. .He was flying a •
propeller-driven A-1 Skyrnlder and was lost Aug. 5,
19&amp;1.

:as

';:::;:::::::::::::;::::::::::;:::::::~===-1
•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Alight earthquake, the latest in a series,
struck the Hebgen Lake area &lt;t Montana early Saturday, the u.s:
Geological Survey said.
The tremor was recorded at a preliminary magnitude of 4.9 on the
Richter scale, according to USGS earthquake monitors In Golden.
Colo.
The'earthquake ocurred at 4: ;l8 a.m. MST and was reported felt In
the West Yellowstone area In Montana at the west edge of
Yellowstone National Park.
The series of earthquakes In the Hegben Lake area began.Oct. 19
with a magnitude 4.1tremor.llls the same area where a magnitude
7.1 earthquake In 1959 kiUed 28 people and caused extensive damage.

JIM BILL'S
SINCE 1933

guests are said to Include Nell
Diamond, John Travolta and CUnt
Eastwood.
Charles, 36, and Diana. 24, trailed
by rumcrs they may be expecting
lhelr third child, wUI spend three
days hobnobbing with celebrities In
the capital and then go to Palm
Beach, Fla ., for a polo match .and
gala bash.
The royal couple are to return
home to the Buckingham Palace
Wednesday aboard the Queen's
Flight.
The trip foUows a 15-day tour of
Australia and a 18-hour rest stop
Friday In Hawaii.
Speculation Diana may be pregnant suriaced Friday when a
reporter for the Sydney Daily
Mirror said Prince Charles was
asked by a burly construction
worker In Australia, "You gonna
have more kids? "

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
·• DEPARTMENT Of
, ,, TR4NSPORTAnON
C-o. Ohio
Octobof 26, 1986
' . Contnct- Laget
. Copy No. 811 - 10~
UNIT PRICE
CONTRIICT
· Sooted poopolllo wil bo
II tho ofllco of the
Director of the Ohio Deportment of TrllllpOrtation, ColUmbus, Ohio. ...tit 10:00
-~M.. Ohio Standard nme,
Tyoodoy. Novambor 19,
1985. lor 1111)ro..,.,to in:
Golia County, Ohio, on
-~io~i,__.. 81810
Roulll

.,.....ad

Court affirms libel case dismissal
RICHMOND, Va . (UP!) -The possible revelation of "sensitive
m.Uitary secrets" has precluded a scientist from trying to prove

varies.

-lormo. lor qJollficltion

P18SIBORt3
P20:i70At3

F e• Chicken
or
Roast Beef
Dinner .

f&gt;t85175Rt4
Pt95175Rt4

P20fJ75Rt4
P205175Rt5
P215175Rt5
P225175R15

Reg. saue
Pt95175R15

.
REG.
6650

SALE

10.74
72.21
76.It

39.B8
39.B8

80.62
84.44
87.42
91.62

42.88
44.88
47.88
51.88
57.88

$440

• steel-belted au
season radial

3eeo69

5

P195175RI5

446•2362

ked Staa
Dinner··

$440
.1'1'

RUTLAND
TIRE SALES

, Main St., llutland, Oh.

PH. 742-3088
II you don't 111 your size, call us~·;

Open

RIO TIRE
EXCHANGE

204 . Ntll'th Atwood
llio Grande, Oh.

1-6 Mon.-Sat.; Fri. I PH. 245-5131

*SOGINSUHT CRIIJIT

z

... .. -P'i'Pieiiiiailt' ....

Rio Grande, Ohio , will re ceive blda for the.~nJtruc ­
tion af rest room facilities at
ceived at the Mayor's Office
in 11ld VIllage by proapBc -

tivo blddoro. Bido lol ooid
project will bo opened November 18,1986, at 7:00 P.
M. in the Mayor's Office

Nov. 3, 10

&amp; Vicinity

CARD OF THANKS .
The Cromlish Family wish
to elqlress their appreciation to evti)'One who have
been so kind dUting the
death of our loved ones.
We wish to !haM Gallia
County alll Pl. PleaSint
Medical Services for their
~uick response and the
-$heriff's Dept. We would
·also like to thank Rev. Lela ill Allman and Rev.
George Jones. for their
consoling words. the pallbearwrs alll Fred and
Joan Wood. We want ·to
thali Jim alii Cathy Sisson alll John Bom for
their beautiful sonp. A
special thank·you to everyone for their prayers and
to those lt11o sent food,
flowers and canis.
The family of: Roger
Cromlish, Roger Lee
Cromlish , Jr. and David
Brian Cromlisb.

11

An nou ncem en Is
-:3:-A:--nn_o_u_n_c_e_m_e_n-:t-s~

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
Insured . ruaoneble rates.

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
Heartfelt thanks to all the
men and women who
helped us when we had
our car accident on Rt.
160 Sunday, Oct. 20th.
Lawrence &amp; Jean Theiss

4

Giveaway

Puppitl Collie-German She ·

manreu.

Used full

aize

7 year old

fem.~le

pekinese, 'h

dog . 11:1
chlhauahue .

Beller with odultJ. Good
ho~oo dog. 814-992-1939.

Garage Sale. Mon . 9am to 4
pm. 2901 Anniston Dr. Pt .
Pluunt . 2 t'l pewriters,
toys, etc .

sincere thanks to all our
lriellfs. neighbors and
relativas lor their many
acts of sympathy d•ing
011' time of sorrow alii

loss. your

thcqhtl~­

ness is deeply ap-

precialld.

W1nted : Women to live in to
cere for
ladv In

ol
Call1han

The Garretson family .
wishes to express their·
deef,est gratitude to those
· who gave comfort dQring
·the recent loss of their son~
PFC Lewis B. Garretson.

11

Help Wanted

nok»giat, weekdays. Send
resume or apply CO Medical
Plaze. 20 3 J1ckaon Pike,

Golllpolla. Oh 45831 .

Poaitlons Openings . The
Gallie-Meigs Community
Actton Agency, Job Training

AVON Start up leo o6.00, Partnership program (JTPIII
neke 46% for Chrittmaa.

has temporary opening• ;
Cierk ·rtcepttonitt; Tempor·

Electricians needed. Top
pay. Send ,..,me to P.O.

111 JTPII Office lor o Clark-

Call 814-448-3388.

ory pooltion oxillln Gollipo-

Box 487. Pt. Ple11ant. WV
26660.
Positions

Openings. The

Qaltlo-Meigo Community

Action Agency, Job Tr1ining

firm, antique. liquidation
ulea. Licensed Ohio and

"cellont telephone Jklllo

requtred. Work proce11ing

Jkillo on edded ptuo. May

lead to permanent poaitkm
fvr right person. Send cover
Mltter and reaume to the

Gotllo-Molga CAA JTPA
l'tofl'lm, Bo• 272. Cheohiro. Ohio 46620 or coli,
preferred. 811 required. Abll- 614·992-6629 Of814-3a7-

Wool Virginia. 304-7736786 Of 304-773·6430.

provide • good honw P'tiM

coli 814-448-1119 or 814448-0844.
LOST: White Englioh Setter,
1 . brown eer, no collar.
Gallipolis area. Reward. Call

Wo

buy

purebred puppklo.

Docktor Pet Center. North·
land Mell, Columbua, Ohio.

In Memoriam

In to•i•l 011mory of our
moth11, Audri)'G . Hoill)'. who
loll us NonmbJ1 10. 19n.
Softly the leev• Gl memory
fill,

Otntly we u•th•r end tr••·
...... them alt.
Unt"n. unhe1rd. the It •I·

neer,

Still lovtd, 11111 ml111d .,d
11111 .o'Very deer.
lo'linlly rllll .. blnd

fir thil·
,dron ],.p ond Judy, and thllr
1
fl!flllts.
In lovin1 memory of

our son,
Donald "Burd"
Miller, ·

who pmed away 6
• years 110 November

10, 1979.

Gone but never
loraotten.
Sadly missed by mother
and father, Lewis and
Ruby, alll relatiws.

••rv.

Gotllo -Molgo CIIA JTPA
Ptogram. Bo• 272. Cheahlro, Ohio 48820 or coli,
814-992-N29 or 814-31177342 for more

inform~~tlon .

ting moot. 814-992-8338
oft. 2 p.m.
Wanted used weshera, dry·
••· refrlgeretora, ranges,
tweepers, \NOrtc:ing or not .

Coil 304-171-7744.

"• wo buy tho boll, pay top
doHoro. Sell whet you don't
wtnt. Got CIISH lor polntlngo, dollo, jewelry end
pottery. 1-304-343-t867
collect. Write B. Price, 1158
tCanowho Blvd Elot. Cho·
rlooton, W. Va. 25t311 .

par 100. Guaran-

teed P•vmant. No Expe·
rience. No S1lea. Detllls
send self · lddressed

111111)ed envelope: Eton VItel -71 6 341 B EntorpriH
Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL 33482 .

11

Help Wanted

''

SALES

· ESTNIJSIEII M:COON1S

Plt01ant. W. Yo. 28510. -

Earn free Chrittmea gifts. by

having a Merri M•c home or
Cltalog pany ._ 100 per cent,
guaranteed hne of glhs,
toys, home decor items. Cell·

•18,040-f69,230 yoor.
Now hiring. Coli 805-8871000 EAt . R-9806 for cur- 304-876-8768 lor dotolto.
rent federal list.

Opening• availabte for dam·
onstr1tora, no inveatment .

To sell Avon . Call Marilyn

Weaver, 304-882-2846.

L.edy to live in with elderly
ledy. room and board with
smell salary . 304· 676 ·

2623.

R N' 1 applications now being,
accepted for par1 · time em -

ployment. Call Plauont Val-Jay Hospital , Personnel

De ·~

panment, 304-676-4340,.
••t. 308 .

.

THE BEST
HOUSECLEANER
ISA/
WANT AD
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SANDYVILlE, W. VA.

TRUCKS &amp; TRAILERS
FARM EQUIPMENT
MISCELLANEOUS
1UIIN OVEII SUIIPWS EQUIPMENT INTO CASH!
AUCnONEEI: Edwin Winttr,
lc. #334-86

Phone (304) 273·3700 or (304) 273-2611
f~

Locallnttlilew Can

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

Ftom Gallipolis, take Route 141 , turn left onto
Route 775, turn right onto Patriot Cadmus Road.
Watch for signs .
Looking for merchandise? Try the Patriot Auction
Barn! We have all types of new and used merchan·
dise - appliances, furniture , antiques and collectors items. Something for everyone!

@&gt;~~

o;,.~

Help Wanted

Jobs .

Sel11 clerk and cashier p1ri
time 1or new Chriatiln Re·
cord Shop. Send resume to"
Box P·&amp;. Point Pluunt,
Reglatw. 200 Main St. Point

SAT., NOV. 16-9 A.M.
CONSIGNMENT SALE
M'CAULEY TRACTOR SALES

OPPORTUNITY

N-

ZEPMFQ.CO.
11

Government

Help Wanted

AUCTION

1nd ev:::~~:::~· ~•ftemoons
with referen·

kelt Berber Shop, 2nd. live.
Middleport. Oh. 814-992·
3471.

Wantlld: Band aew for cut·

•eoo.oo

Avo .. Room 18, Goltlpotlo,
Ohio. Aok lor monogOf ,

and ollvor. Wrlto -M.D.
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio Maturo dependable lody to
46789 Of call 814·992- care for inftnt and toeldltr in
7760.
our home . Must be 1 non·

STANDING TIMBER. At
Tromm. Colt: 114-7422328 .

A uem bly World

E11y

Auiatent Man~ger Train".
We have 3 openlnga for
llflliJrtllive, meturelndlvldu·
Ito who qualify tD troln 11
atllttlnt managert. Oppor-

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beda, Iron,

gold , Jitver
coins, ring&amp;, }ewelry; sttrllng
ware, old coins. large cur·
rency. Top pricea. Ed . Bur·

ompioyOf.

employer.

tunity to oarn U50-f300

Buying dolly

Cloaing dill for application
il November 22. 1986. EOE

Cloolng dole lor oppllcotion
~ Novombor 22 , 1986. EOE

w•k. M1jor company. No
experience. Prefer our own
methods . C1r 1 mu11 . Apply
In parson ot 417 Socond

wood. cupboards, c:hairl.
baskett, dithts.
stone jlrs. antiquu. gold

7342 for more information. ·

vorying okill tovolo ond bock-

grounds. Ability to prtMnt
Mlf well to employ11r1 neceaMust have reli1ble
trantportltion . Send cov..tener end reatune to the

Call 814-217-0718.

chest&amp;;

2

ipantaueklng work or training . Must 6e •b.. to com·
munk:1t1 well toclientawtth

R N or LPN needed as
indepenl contractor to do
mobile insurance er:emson 1

receptionist. Typing end

h11 two positions opening•:
Aaeument Counnlor: MA
il'l to deliver ln·houae ••·
unment program to JTPA
penlclpanta. Must have effective group-Individual
&lt;Xtunaellng skill&amp;. DuUII wHI
include teatng and inierprt·
union. Couru work In tilt·
ing techniques 1nd counNI·
ing requk'ed. Counulor: BA

11

Help Wanted

port thne booloGatllo County
.,... F...... houn. E.O .E..
Raopond to P.O: 'Box '370.
Dunbor, WVA 25084 .

•
Ono oortifiod Modlcol Toch-

RICK PEARSON IIUCTIO- required . llbitlty to woill
NEER SERVICE . Ellote. olfoctlvety whh JTPAportic-

Own.er or tomeone, who win

WIYI

The Familx
James

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

One lomole tabby killen, 1
grey and white molt, phone 9 Wanted To Buy
304-676-3798.
We pay cuh lor toto modol
Groat Dono . 304-67&amp;- ciMn used mra.
7340.
Jim Mink Chev.-Otdo Inc.
BHI Gone Johnoon
814·448-3872
6 Lost and Fo~nd
WANTED TO BUY uaed
WOOd •
COli h1111r1 .
FOUND Young Germon SWAIN'S F,URNITURE, 3rd.
Shopord ml• molt dog in the • Oliva St. Galllpollo. Coli
vicinity of Burlchal1 Line. 814-448,3169.

814-441-0287.

CARD OF THANKS
We wish to eJqJress o•

11

Help Wanted

•

Partnerohlp progrom (JTPAI

614-992-7764.

Call 304-678-2336.

38.88

PlUS OVER 10 REGUlAR llEMS

very large Garman
SWEEPER and AWing mo- FOUND
Shopherd
ml•. molt. very
Plano and opeclfleotiono ore chinl repair, parts, and
Jackson erea. Call
on file In the Deportment of I&lt;Jpplioa.
Pick up ond flendly.
T,. "-"""" ond tho ollic:o of delivery, Davia Vecuum 614-388-9746.
the Oiotrict Deputy Director. Cleaner, one half mile up
Loot: malt Hual&lt;y. oliverThe Direclor - • tho Gaorg11 CrMk Rd. Call gray with blue eves. Loat in
right tD rojoct .,Y end ol 11«11 614-446-0294.
Carpenter area. Call 614 WARREN J.SMITH
698-7282
. Reword .
DIRECTOR ·Racine Gun Shoot tpon oored by Racine Gun Club.
Nov. 3.10
Every Sunday, beginning at FOUND brown and black
1:00 p.m. Factory Choko12 male Coon hound, collar
mlulng, Flttrock area , 304guage ahotguns.
676-1888.
Public Notice
No hunting on tho proparty I~==:;:;:=::;:::===
of Frank and Heton Eberob· I'?
ADVERTISEMENT
ac:h or Tom llutheraon.
Yard Sale
FOR BIOS
Violatotl will bo prooacuted. 1 ----~---Notice Ia hereby given that
tho Mayor of tho Vlllogo of

to&lt; opening bldlln .......

1 Card of Thanks

[ III JI III'/1111' 111
St:rv tl:t:s

6 lost and Found

I

pherd. 8- wookl old. -See:
locoted In the Village of Rio Bob McCormick Rd. Orlvo 8
Gn~nde.
woy up hilt booldo legion,
c:enillod
Donald L. Walker, Rouah Residence .

at lUll tan doy prlof tD tho dlto
'181

3 Announcements

OhloR_C_.

pay-

~~grn:ow$2788
•Responsive
handling
~~ • Blackwalls

Public Notice
--~~----------J
with Chept• 6626

tho Rio Gronde Pork in oaid
Viltoge. Said bido may be re-

than fifty thou- dol Iori, "'.
bond lor t.. peroant ol hll 11«1,
to tho Diroctor.
Bidden mull opply. on tho

AlL SEASON
SI""111"1"''ErTEI.BE1JED RADIAL

SIZE

SilVER IRIOGE PlAZA
lUNCH 11·3:30
DINNER 3:30·1 P.M.

Public Notice

lchock c.- cuhior'ochock ,.,.,
t.mount equal to fiv1 pen:ent
o1 hil bid. but n ro _,t mora

•ExceUenl

OVER 10 REGUlAR lltMS

RAJNEESHPURAM , Ore. (UP!) -A beaming Bhagwan Shree
Rajneesh, free on $.'ro,IOO cash hall after 12 days In custody and
ordered to stay In Oregon, headed for a 'welcome celebration at his
commune In one of his 93 Rolls Royces.
About 3,100 disciples living on the onetiml' ca ttle ranch danced In
the streets and laughed with joy at the news of Rajnresh's Impending
return home to Rajnreshpuram, his central Oregon religious center.
The bearded and shackled sect leader pleaded Innocent Friday to
charges of Immigration fraud and walked out of the Multnomah
County Justice Center at nightfall after hlsattornPys gave the court a
$500,1XXJ cashier's check.
'He smiled at a cheering crowd and sllpj)fd Into a maroon Rolls
Royce llmoslne that took him first to a hotel his sect owns In
downtown Portland, and then headed 160 miles east to the rommune.
The guru was forcl'd to travel by car because U.S. District Court
Judge Edward Leavy banned him from flying as part of the
condlt Ions for his release and told him to remain In Oregon. The
judge al!\0 ordered hi followers to move a large Convair aircraft
capable of trans-oceanic flights away from tht' commune landing
strip.

I

to file with hil 11«1 •

jj1

Guru gets out of jailt

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

,Projact and Work Length 98,781 f1lot ... 18.33 mlloo.
"Tho dlllloollor col11)totion
of tllil wodc Jhal be II IIIII
In tho blddlng propooet."
Eoc:h bidder ohoN bo roquirod

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE
!SALES:
Bearings
: ;Industrial V·Bolts
Pump Seals
: :Lawn Mower V-Belts
Capacitors
' :automotin V·Beltt
Brushes
:Electric Motors
Couplings
:Fan Blades
Pulleys
:Fuses
I
:;
Regulators
: :ELECTRICAL REPAIRS:
: ·Electric Motors
Battery Chargers
Small Welders
; :Water Pumps
Motor Controls
Aireaton
I AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
Starters
Alternators
•
Troubleshoot Wiring _
Generators (Tractor I,

HIGHLAND LAKE. Ala. (UP!) -Law officers In five Southern
states kept a night watch early Saturday for two convicts who
kidnapped a former mayor and a town clerk at knlfepolnt and drove
away from an unsupervised work crew.
Alabama law enforcement agencies Issued bulletins to Florida,
Georgia, Tennessee and Mississippi hours after the Inmates escaped
Friday In the clerk's car. But state trooper Gene . Smau said
Investigators had no clues about where the convicts took the
hostages.
"They're still out there and we're going to keep looking," Small
said. "But we've got no reason to believe they're still In the county,
and by rooming they would have had time to get to Washington,
D.C."
SmaJI said manpower was reduced after midnight when
temperatures dropped Into the 30s In the hills of north-central
Alabama. but the search remained focused In a rural area 35 miles
northeast of Birmingham.
He said the search would be strengthened again Saturday with
helicopters.
"We can't leave any stone untumed," said Blount County Chief
Deputy Larry Staton. "We think I hey probably put as much ground
between them and that place as possible. We are checking all back
roads, dirt roads and logging roads."
Inmates Timothy Mark Townsend. 25, arid Newburn Ray Wilson,

'by
concrete.
Plvement Width -

.t'S
, ..\.lo SMORGASBORD

LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - The leader of the Jewish Defense
League has challenged the FBI to "put up or shut up" ln Its disclosure
that a terrorist bombing that killed an Arab lobbyist In California has
been attributed to the group.
Lane Bonner ol the FBI In Washington said Friday the bombing at
the office of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Commlttee,ln
Santa Ana, has been ~ttributed to the radical organization, but that
• the terrorist act was stUI under Investigation.
There have been no arrests In the explosion that killed Alex Odeh,
the regional director of the committee.
"The Oct. 11 bombing that kWed the director of the
AmeriCan-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee has been classified
by the FBI as a terrorist bombing and has been altrtbuted to the
JDL," Bonner said. '
JDL leader lrv Rubin denied the group was Involved In the fatal
attack.
"These people (the FBI) are 'iQ Incompetent and pathetic. If they
had one bit of evidence they'd make an arrest," Rubin said. "They
should either put up or shut up Instead ol slandering the JDL. My
theory Is that they (Arabs ) wanted a martyr and blew this poor guy
away. It's beyond belief what the FBI has said."
Odeh, 41, was killed when he opened the door of his office and a
powerful bomb rigged to his door exploded. He died two hours later.
Odeh's brother, Sam! Odeh, 35, of Orange, a member of the
Arab-American group, said he and the ocganliatlon have always
blamed the JDL for the bombing.

Lawmen hunt for convicts

'ond

the laceration .... "
"My opinion 1and the consensus of
the American group primarily
handling the situation 1 was that
during this period he was (l'esented
with Issues such as his parents'
welfare (and even probably their
lives). adverse personal consequen·
ces, patriotism and bonding to his
fellow shipmates and other com- .
rades," the report said.

JDL leader challenges FBI

Royal couple begins
four-day U.S. tour _
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Britain's Prince Charles and Princess
Diana began a four-day U.S. lour
Saturday to see the "delights of
Washington" and to bolster ties with
the Crown's former rebeiUous
colony.
The royal couple from the British
Empire arrived at 8:44a.m. EST at
Andrews Air Force Base aboard an
Australian Air Force jet and
travelled to the White House for tea
with President and Nancy Reagan.
Charles wore a dark suit and the
princess a bright red suit with
matching red pUipbox hat and
shoes. They were greeted on a sunny
morning by several thousand onlookers and British Embassy
personnel.
Tonight, they attend a black- de
affair attheWhlteHouse, the first of
three planned for their Washington
visit. At the
Diana, the8:1

Times-Sentinei -Page~D-3

Penthouse Magazine libeled him by claiming he offered to sell
bomb-toting dolphins to foreign governments.
.The 4th U.S. Circuit Court o1 Appeals Friday upheld a ruling by the
U.S. District Couf,!ln BaltimorP to dismiss the libel case brought by
scientist James Fitzgerald.
The Navy, which requested the dismissal, had argued mllltary
secrets would be madP public If the libel case went to trial, originally
scheduled for December 1983.
"Because there was simply no way this particular cas!' could be
tried without compromising sensitive mllltary secrets. WI' conclude
the district court did not err In ruling that the case must be
dismissed," the court said.
Fitzgerald sued Penthouse over a June 1977 article, "The
Pentagon's Deadly Pets," which said he "made overtures. possibly
with CIA and Navy knowledge, to sell dolphin torpedoes or
'open-ocean weapon' systems to Mexico, Peru, Colombia. Chile,
Argentina and BrazU."
The allegedly libelous portion of the article continued, " .. .
Fitzgerald wanted to make some fast bucks on the side by turning
small countries Into 'Instant naval powers.' The Pentagon couldn't
possibly object for fear of exposing Its whole operation."

37, were on a lour-man road gang working around Highland Lake
Friday when they puUed a knife on former mayor Frank Lucas, 45,
and town clerk Harriet Cornelius, 38, Corrections Department
spokeswoman Debbie Herbert said.
The St. Oafr prison was rocked by an ll-h6ur riot AprU 151n which
200 Inmates took 22 prtson guards and workers hostage. Eighteen
conviCts were Indicted In the Incident and will stand trial In the
spring.

Light 'quake hits Montana

of your refusal to negotiate with our and . a confidential letter to the
captors and your ratlonale.for II. We archbishop ri Canterbury, who has
understand It but do not agree.
offered to mediate for their release.
"You negotiated over the hos:
The Islamic Jihad terrorist grQup.
tages irom the TWA plane and such which has claimed to be lpldlng the
negotiations have been held repeat- four Americans hostage, has de·
edly and successfully by other mandedReaganpressureKuwaitto
countries .. . You, and they, did so release 17 of Its comrades lmpri,
bl'cause you believed that saving the soned for bombings against U.S .•
lives of Innocent hostages shoul!l.be French and Kuwaiti targets In
the primary goal," said t!F 'letter.
December 1983.
"We are asking .for the same
There was no mention of missing
consideration. There Is no American Ubrarlan Peter Kilburn ;
alternative.
whose relatives have been told by
"Mr. Reagan, we thank you for U.S. officials he Is being held by a
the efforts you have made·through dlflerent group. Also missing waS:
these long months but your 'quiet Buckley, the political ctflcer at the:
diplomacy' Is not (underlined) U.S. Embassy.
working. We know of your distaste
"We are told WUUam Buckley Is
for bargaining with terrorists.
dead," the letter to Reagan said.
The letter ended with the words,
The Islamic Jihad said Oct. 4 It
"May God be with you."
had killed Buckley and produ~­
The bundle also contained letters unclear photographs d what It sal~
from each hostage to their families was his corpse.

Soviets put squeeze on sailor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The conceived bid for political asylum.
Soviet sailor who stirred an lnternaAfter the Immigration and Natu·
!tonal debate by fieelng his ship In rallzatlon Service questioned the
AmeriCan waters slashed his left seaman, he was returned totheshlp
wrist In a bout of depression after he . _by the border patrol.
was n.&gt;turned to the freighter, a U.S.
But U.S. officials demanded a
psychiatric report confirmed.
second Interview with Medvld after
The report by an Air Force reports circulated that . he was
psychiatrist, released by thl' State seeking to defect.
Department Friday, concluded the
By the time Medvld was taken rtf
Russian seaman, Mlroslav Medvkl, the ship four days later by U.S.
jumped ship for "the gl11ter and Ihe officials for exhaustive Interviews
gusto." but changed his mind affer and tes1s. however, he genuinely
• Intense Soviet pressure. Including wanted 10 go home and was "as
: clruggtngs and presumed threats competent basically as any Soviet
I against his parents.
citizen" to make such a decision, the
1 • It described the seaman as "very report said.
: afraid of the consequences" of his
But that di'Cision, the psychatrlst
; decision, "very much trapped In a said, was made after three days "In
! corner" and"ratherguUtyathavlng the hands" of the Soviets on board
; jeopardized hls parents' safety."
the 100,(1X).ton vessel, where super• The psychiatrist, who conducted tors put the squeeze on the young
' lenfithy Interviews with Medvid and man.
a Soviet doctor who said he drugged
The psychiatrist also said Medvld
. the sailor, tlescrlled the young man "sustained a laceration to his !E-ft
a "ratherimmature25-year-old" wrist" and that the Soviet doctor
: who Impulsively jumpro off the who accompanied Medvld to his
· Marshal Konev Into the Mlsslsslpl Interviews with U.S. officials told
; River twice Oct. 24 In an Ill- him that Medvld "himself Inflicted

The .Sunday

r-----National briefs:-------------___,

Reagan rejects plea from
kidnapped American hostages

ROME (UPii - Prime Minister
· Bettlno Craxl's newly resun-ected
:nve-party coalition government
·which won a crucial vote ct
confidence In the Senate, faced
diplomatic problems with Israel
~a use of his splrlted defense oft he
~Palestlnl' Liberation Organization.
: ·eraxt, Italy's first Socialist prime
·minister, !;cored a resounding
:victory Friday as the Senate gave
1tlm a conlldence ·liote despite his
's~h realflrmlng the PLO's right
•to: use armed struggle In Its conntct
;with Israel.
· ')srael's ambassador to Rome
:ti1ed to deliver a note protesting
:eraxl'srernarks on the PLObut the
;p~ minister's outce refused to
;ac!cept It on the grounds Craxl had
bf:en misquoted In the complaint.
: •The voll' ended a three-week long
'government crisis over Craxl's
·h4ndilng olthe Italian luxury Uner
~chUie Lauro hijacking.
: PLO chairman Yasser Arafat' lri a message from PLO headquar·
ters In Tunis - thanked Craxl for
~ slipport for "justiCe and the right ct
: tlil' liberation ol coionlzed people .. .
' tl! guarantee their Uberty, their
•
·sovereignty
and their
: 'Arafat Thursday bowed to an
,Egyptian demand and rmounced
, "aU acts ct terrorism." but affirmed
' the PLO's right of armed struggle
against Israeli occupation.
Israeli otflclals said they did not
believe Arafat's pledge.
"I would not advise anyone. even
In EuroPf'. to rely on his promise."
said Israeli Foreign Minister Yltzhak Shamlr In an apparent reference to the Craxl government.
"What do they tell us?" Shamir
asked, rt'lerrlng to the PW leader;shlp. "That they wUI not hijack any
more Italian ships? That they wUI
not murdl'r old people from the
U.S.?"
Shamlr's remarks referred to the
hijacking of the Achille Lauro and
the allegl'd murder of Leon KUnghdll'r. 91, a wheelchair-bound American Jew.

accountlng.of missing U.S. servicemen," Armitage
told a news conference.
"The Lao have agreed In principle to another
excavation, of possibly more than one site, during the
upcoming dry season" from November thrOugh
AprU, he said. "We're discussing specHic arrangements with the Lao and expect In the near future to be
announcing final agreement."
Of the total 2.441 American serviCemen Bsted as
mls'slng In action In Indochina during the war, 556 of
them were In Laos. The breakdown of the others:
1,007 In South Vlelnam, '100 In North VIetnam. 82 In
Cambodia and six In China. They Include 42 ctvUians.
Separately, Armitage said Vietnam has located the
remains of another seven people thought to be

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

~ lniiJsn•s

tlMini.OH
· i216126H767

!111'1 ~ !""*"" M/f

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
Door Prizes Given Weekly
Consignments accepted !rom 1:00-5:00 p.m. on
Saturday.
Have something for you want to sell? Contact Matlin
Wedemeyer, Auctioneer. Arrangements lor pickup
service available.
Barn and Auctioneer available for Public Auctions
on contract. Contract includes hauling and transporting all merchandise.
Resident and Business Auction Service also
available.

R.N.'s

MED.·SURG.• FULL-TIME AND PART-TIME
3 P.M:·11:30 P.M.-11 P.M.-7:30A.M.
PEDIATRICS, FULL· TIME AND PART-TIME
· . 11 P,M.·7:30 A.M.
CRITICAL CARE, FULL-TIME AND PART-TIME
7 P.M.-7:30A.M.
Pleaaa C1ll:
Sharon CaNer
MERCY HOSPITAL
Portlmouth, Ohio
614·363·213

Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctioneer

614/245-5152 - 614/388-8249
i'

.,

.-

..
..

�•

(

Nov.~ber10,

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.
· 11

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

41

'he in for room and board

:ond o monthly wage. 304·
-675-t840.

2 bedroom port furnlthod,

I

'

Situations
Wanted

~W•nted .

•

I

..

l

Pl j

Someone to 1t1y

nights &amp; live-in

~can

keep

~·l

-day job oloowhoro). Coli
' 814-448·3419 .

•
r
•

Vacancy for the elderly In
. our home Trained 1nd flf.

I

•

t•n v•r~ '"perktnce. Call
814-992·7314.
~urting care 1n prtvete
..ftome Room for two pa-

dtave vacency for elderty in

nice

location . reasonable

rent. Call 304-BB2-3722 or
882·2798.
Attractive 4 bedroom home

near High School end Hoopl·
tol. 2'1J botho. Iorge fomily
room

two

kitchen•

1360.00 monthly. Coll304·
876-4340. ••tonolon 36B,
weekdays between 8 a.m.

end 5 p.m.
2 br. houu. garage, 177
Pork Dr. 1200 month. Coli
Mro. Lanham 304· 175·
4692.
•
3 bedroom brick ranch, full

frenc•• required, 304-895·
3961 .

"Well,· Doc, will I be able to
lift a glass, so I can do that
beer.commercial?"

,..., homo. Room. board llo
•leundry. Roaoonoblo . 614· ~;:::;:;:::::::;~~::::1-;~~~::::;:::~::::1192"8022'
l·31 Homes for Sale
33
Farms for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mobile homoo available
Nov. 1. Folloro Mobile
Homo Pork. Coli 814·446·
1602

.General II commercial
•d•nlng 11rvices for the

Government homes from

Farm for sale or rent .

2 bdr. 14x60 oil electric

•hohdoy otooon. Spoclol
" ''"tor Senior Citizono No
;jobtoobigoromall. Ailwork

11. IU - repo~) . Aloo dolin· McCumber Rd. Rutlond.
quont tox property. Call Coll814·992· 2724
805·887·1000 ext. GH·

trailer, nice wood burner in
livingroom. on private lot.

Idona to your aatllfaction .
~II tho Dual Bulloro 11
•814-992-3723 oft, 4 p.m.

: 18 Wanted to Do

10189 for information.

1 - - - - - - - --

unce of city schools.

139,900. Call
038B.

;
...Nelaon's Hardwood floor

1- - - - - - - - -

•

.

Loan

J40ME DWNERS-Roflnonco
10 low fixed roto. Uee -ity
for ony purpoH. Loader
'Mortgogo Co., 614· 592·
3 0&amp;1 .
Profe11ional
Services

•

;PIANO TUNING ANO RE·
-PAIR, bock to ochool dlt·
-counts, free ••timate1,

'Word's Koyboord. 304-675·
:i&amp;OO or 675·3824.

-31

Home a for Sale ·

...Y owner, Muat Mil-moved

)I bdr. ranch, one car garage,

-lldng dillo'"'o from North
-Goillo High School. Reduced
)o •29,900. Csll 814-388·
~11.

]liter Crown City, Ohio. 4 A.
-M· l . with I room new
..dillon, well inaulated.
]wed• some minor fiftllh
..worll • a roomo of old psrt

- · romodtlod with Iorge
'top oround porch. Largo

:eo.31 concrete block struc·

•.ture, pr1ge with concrete
""'oor I upttlirs &amp; soma
~thor

out bulldlngo. BNull·
of Ohio River, olong

""'
view
••· Rt. 7, rural water with 2
lor•llo

ovo ilob Ia, ookln g

lf3&amp;,000
-1584.

Coli 814·256·

•
.3 bdr. coder ohlngo hOmo on

~

ocro wooded lot, 2 full
'IN!tho, brlokfost bor, totol
;.lectric, bud&lt; woodiiUJning

oetovt, ICIHI1ed porch, near
.1'~ Brande. borftra Tycoon
iJ-~!&lt;t

properly. Mull ooll
rek&gt;Citing, 135,000. Coli
'ot14-245-9210.

:1
.ere with houM, 2 bdr .,
"fUral water. eeptic tank.
']!loblto homo hookup,
;.t 12,500. Cell 814·3BB·
..8!8.
Oovern~nt Ho~s hom
~11. iU repair) . Aloo dolln·

oquont tox property. Csll
'105·187·1000 Ext. GH Jt806 for lnformotlon.

1' rooms and blith In Pome-

roy . Close · to 1ohool',
d'lurchtt end downtown.

'Option to buy ojolnlng Iorge
:ooncroto block bUIIdi'\8 whh
~onty of off otroot porklng.
-tlock building hoi boon I
IJiodY $hop, repair gorogo ond
tnowawarthouN. Call814·

1892-2039 for

oppoi~tmont .

)I bd.room home. Full ball·
h nt, garage. newly remo·

'*lad. Rockoprlngo oroo.
J14-992-297B.

rt llory. 9 roomo with 2
~tht. located on corner of

.,-th &amp; Polmer In Middleport.
,Whhln walking dlotonce of
:.chool ond ohopplng. 814~98 ·8817 oft. 6 p.m
'
:'Irick ranch

for

ule In

:fuppers Plolno. Extro nlct 3
ltMI .rooms. 1 Y.ll baths, ger-

:1111, full booemont, level lot,
poow choln link fence. Fl·
~nclng ovolloblo to quail·
iflod buyer. Prlct reduced for
1mmldloto oolo. Low 40'o.
l:oll 814 -423· 4159 for
""thor deloilo &amp; osk for Mr.
~allttt.

..Or rent. 2 1torv 6 room and
:'bath in M11on t large lot

:;20&lt;28 block gorogo, wood
;~nd goo hoot, 304·773·
&lt;1401 '

35 lots &amp; Acreage
6 acres good frontage . rural

wotor, 83,500. Call 814·
448-4190.
--------90 ft.x 300 ft. lot in Racine
whh 2B It x44 ft. booomont
and floor. alec. hook up,
eeptlc tank. water. Call

814-247·3B61 .
Renla ls

Torroce mobile homo pork.
Coll614-446·0254.

12•60 2 bdr. on Clerk
Chapel Rd. Large private lot.

Coll614-448·3897 or 814·
245-&amp;223.
2 bdrm .. partially furnlohod
mobile home for rent in Rio
Grande. Carpet, natural gas
end storm windows. Call

814-246-9457 altar 8PM or
814-446-4733, B-5PM.

within walking distance of

ochoolo. $360. mo. Coli
814·446·4061 .

1186 mo plut deposit. Call
814-448-0143.

Nicely furnished mobile
home, eff. apt., central air
and heat In city, adult• only.

Coil 814-448·033B.
Redecorotod opt., 2 bdr ..
1160 to 1250. Coli 304·
878-5104 or 304-876·
63B6 or 304· 876·789B.
Lorge 2 bdr. opt., 2 both,
fully carpeted, rofrlg. llo
llovo. 11 Court St.. 1326
mo .. rtf. llo dop. Coil 61 4·
448-4926.

Upllolrs unfumlohed opt ..
2 bedrooms. extended livin- carpeted, oil utHitln paid, no
groom. step-up kitchen. i:hildr-. no peto. Cell
1230 mo. 1100 dopooit. 814-446-1637.
314 3rd. St. Konouge . Col
Furnlohld opt. 2 bdr .. 131'tl
614-448-7473.
4th, Golllpollo, •195 water
For rent 2 bdr. mobile home. paid. Coli 448-4418 after
Coli 814-379-2435.
7PM.
3 bodnoom mobile homo. No
polo, drunko, or dopa. 1 ch~d
accepted 3'h mile south
Middlepon, R-7. Call 614·
387-0811 '

Furnithod 3 roomo &amp; both,
clean, no peu, adutta, ref. &amp;
dopooit. Coli 614 -4461619.

2 bedroom lergelivingroom,
3 bedroom, expando, wood· lolge kitchen, oil oloctrlc,
12X60, 2 bdr. Iorge LR,
refrlg., dishwasher. counter· ron, no pota. Coll614·446· burner. garage, fenced yard, completely furnlohod, nowly
garden. fruit trees. Oepo1tt redecorated. t2215 per
top range wtth built in oven, 2223
and r-'trencoo. Call 814· month pluo dep. Rot ..
now corpet llo wollpopor In
odulll, 468 2nd. Avo. Call
bath , new und•rplnning. 2 bdr .. unfrunlohod hn•u- ' 1 949·3031 .
14800. Colll14·441·3417 with gorogo. Ref. &amp; Dop. - - - - - - - - - 614-446-22 36 or 11 :4-448·
; .... ,
required . Coli 614-448- 3 bedroom, completely fur· 2681 .
afttr 15pm.
nlohod. No polo. Call 614·
98B8
Largo opt, between Ook Hill
949-2263.
MUST SELL IMME a. Thurmon . Coli &amp;14-246·
DIATELYII 1973 BARON Homes for rent: Very com·
CROWN .. EXCELLENT fomfonoblo, 3 bdr , 2 botho. 2 bedroom trailer, l&amp;x12, 9316.
CONDITION, f7,000. CALL family room. 2 car garage. 14 Burdette Addn anytime.
614·448·8577 or 614-448· Euy to hoot. 3 bdr , family Coli 304·676·8372.
New officloncy opt. Call
room with woodburner. gar2906.
814-448-0390.
ego . 4 bdr .. 3 botho, 2fomlly 2 bedroom all alec. 8135.00
1989 Vindolo 12x80 on room, 2 firepiJctl, prtvecy. plus utllltlao. 304-876· 2 bedroom opt. utility room,
rented lot New electric 3 bdr. brick with -2 flroplo - 40BB.
wetor furnlohed. Mitchell
fumoco, AC. outbuUdlng, cel, ftmlty room, garage. 4
Rd. Coli 614-446-1910 or
low utllltiea, exc. cond . Call bdr., 2 baths. family room. 2 Mobile home for rent, 2 814-379-2248.
fireplaces, walking distance bedroom, Crab Creek Road,
814·24&amp;-9536 otter ~PM .
to town 2 bdr . fireplece. 8145.00 month. 304-&amp;76· 2 bedroom apartmenta.
1979 Windoor 14x70 3 bdr.. full buemont, gsrogo. 3 2219. County water.
New Haven, WVe Newty
2 boths. CA. ell electric, bdr. , 1 car garage. country
remodeled. In town . 114·
ex1ras insulation . carpeted, atmosphere. easy to heat.
992-7481 .
microwave. Call 614·379' Rtfancea a.. deposit re · 44
Apartment
quired. Witeman Reel Et1:ate
2417 or 814·379-2641 .
Furnished Apartment for
for Rant
Agency. Call 814 -448 rent, no children . Available
197B Bayview 14x70, 6 3844.
oftor Oct.3. Coli 614-992·
rooms and beth, total elect6 rooms &amp;: bath. Located 2749.
ric. wlndowalrcond ., 'h acrt 3 bdr carpeted. netural gel, Crown City. Newly doco·
ground. 17x22 outbuilding. 'h mi. out of city on At. 141 , rated, electric stove • refrig
2 bd.room furnished Apt.
8225 mo. Coli 814-448- No poto Call 614·268· 81-4-,92-8434 or 304-BB2·
Coii814-446-1426.
2034.
2688.
1222
1973 Now Moon 12•66,
part. furnished, wood · Free rent (pay own utilities)
burner, ceiling tan. AC . to feed and lobk after canle.
underpinning , porch . 4 roomollo both, off Rt. 1eo
18, 800 . Coli 814 -448 - botwoon Floyd Citric llo glon
Summit, tint house on r----------~-----1
9290.
Fredrick Rd off Glen Sum------------~--'
32 acres 3 bdrma. nice mit. Interview• Sunday, Call
condition. county water, oil 614 -279·8769.
hod, on Rt. 7. In Eureka.
3 bedroom house for rent
Coll814·446·2205.
and 1Ox&amp;O mobile home
14x70 Fesrival 3 bdr . 2 614 -949·2424.
bath, all carpeted, air, all
electric. large porch, likt Home on N Front St. In
Mlddlepon. 1250. month
now. Coli 814-446-3486
plus utlli1ies. Reference and
Repollttsedl.- 77 Bendix deposit · requ~red. No pets.
14x70 throe bedroom. f158 Phone 814·742 ·2306 or
per mo. 74 Governor 2 614-742-3171 '
bedroom t162 per mo. 81
Patriot 14x68 throe bed- For rant with option to buy.
room 1195 por mo. 1600 2 bd.room homo In Rtcino
down. tlkt over payment1. with large lot on dead end
Mid Ohio Flnenclol Sorvlco otreet "'II electric. fully
1-800·B21·0752 or 1814- lnoulotod. city wotor llo
772·1220).
oowor, fully carpeted. end
cable hook - up . 146 .00
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: wook. Pluo utilltloo or will
ln1ured, rt11onable ratel, Hll on land contract. lease,
Coli 304-676-2336
reforancoo &amp; dopooit requirod Coli 614·423·B267
1971 Vondlllt houootroilor. or 614-949-2946 for •P·
BO"x14", good condition, polntment . Available
'h acre ground. good out Nov. ht.
building. 304-46B·1617.
ln Mlddlopon 3 bedroom.
1972. 12•86 Schulll, mo- loundry room. fsmlly room.
bile home wh:h 7x1 1 ••- completely Cllrpeted. car·
pando. wood burner. air port. Limit, two children.
cond. wuhor &amp; dryer. oil Coll814·992·7863.
appliance•. living room au·
•Heats to 3,000 Sq. Ft.
lte. 2 porch and underpen - Mlddlopon-2 bd room, lot.
nlng, 17,000.00, 304-882· floor duple• . Yard. 1200.
Free Standing or
pluo dopooit. 814·9 92·
2B86.
As
Fireplace
ln11rt
7177 aft. 8 p.m.
New 19B6 Shonnon. 14•70
•Glass Ooor
with 7x24 oxpondo, 3 bod· 2 bd.room, 1'11 both homo
• Air Tighl Ash Pan
room, 2 fuU bathl, cathedral on PMasant ridge in Pomecelllng, microwave, dl1 · roy. t2&amp;0. per month plus
hWIIhtr. wa•her· drver. llv· utlliti11. Reference and deplng room tulte, dining room olit required. No pets. 814·
oulto. central olr, 2 oun 949-26411 .
decko, vinyl undorpannlng,
opoclsl ordorld with 8 Inch Efficiency cottego, 156.00
wollo. Coli 304·175:8373. wook, utilities paid, phone
304-175· 3100 or 875 1971 Flamingo. 12•66, 3 11809.
bedroom•. AC. refrigerator,
stove. exc cond. deck plu1 For rent with option to buy.
other footurn . 614·448· 4 bedroom, 2 cor goroge.
WORTH A TRIP FROM ANYWHERE
built In kitchen. Iorge lot,
08B4.
!BRING YOUR PICKUP!
rent 1216 .00, 1100.00
1972, 12•66 Schultz mo- depoolt. Solo price
bile home, exc. cond. Mull $26,000.00. or on ion~
- to opprocloto. 86,000. contr.ct with down PlY·
mH11 below Galllpollt on At. 7
Cell oftor 6:30 p.m. 304· mont. Now Hoven, coli 304·
OPIN
DAILY
12 TO 7 P SUN. 12 TO S P.M.
87t·ti972 . · .
.B2·.288B.
For rent house, 3 rooms end
bath, unfurnished, no child·

1- - - - - - - - -

50% MORE HEAT FROM
EVERY LOG.
.
SAVE ONE-THIRD OF
EVERY LOAD.
BURNS WOOD 01 COAL

•use

1----_;____ _

44

for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
On Rt. 21B, 8 mlleo from APARTMENTS !Equal
town. Coli 614-268-1393. Houolng Opportunity)
monthly rent storts 11 1119
2 bdr. 1 mile from Hospital,
1 bedroom and 1204 for
washer-dryer, water 9 trash 2 bedroom, dopolit 1200,
poid, 1200 rent end depoolt. locotod neor Spring Volley
Coll814-448·1354.
Plozo end Foodlond, pool
end Coble TV ovalloblo.
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer on office hours 11 pooolblo 10
Old 160 near Porter, private om to4pmand7pmto9pm
'at, marrted couple no kid or Mondsy-Frldey, Coli 814·
palo. 1200 mo. f1 00 dop. 446 - 2746 or leave
water paid. Coli 814·388· m&amp;IIIQt.
9060 .

2 bdr. furnished, near town,

41 Houses for Rent
-------4 bdr. house in country,
1979 Bayview 14X70. 1250 mo .. pluo 8260 dep.
7X24 oxpendo, 3bdr, 1'11 Coli 814-446·4664.
both, firoploct, CA. under·
pinning, 2 porches, free lot Modern 4 bdr oplit laval,
option 8 mo only Coli fireplace, Jsy Dr., 1400 mo.
Coll814-448 -3919 ove'o or
114-387-7401.
448-0021 .
For Hlo or rent with option - - - - - - - - 10 buy: Elcons. 3 bdr. 11'. 3 bdr. 2 flroplocto, 3 baths,
bath. ex. cond., owner fi·
nanced . Located In Green

:23

====-

240, Mt. Union Road, Pliny.

814-448- ,W~.=V='·=2=6~1~6=B~.

~oondlng . finlohing. repair Houoa. 3 bdr. 11'. both, FR.
.:wort. fr• eltimates. Call fenced yard, lg. lot, hardl1114·26.8·1642.
wood ftooro &amp; Clrpot. lira·
place in LA , copper plumb·
lng, noturot g11 furnoco.
window AC, city wotor, city
Fi ll.tnw l
ochoolo 842.000. Coll614448-7108 oftor 5,pm
;21
8usine11
~
Opportunity
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
•.
I NOTICE I
:rHE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
oi.ISHING CO. recommondo NEW AND USED MOBILE
'thlt you do buaineu whh HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
7-ple you know. ond NOT lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
-110 •nd money thnough tho 4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
;;n.H until you have invtlt•· RT 36. PHONE 614·446·
'Wiod tho -ring.
7274
:22 Money to

601h acres. 4 bedroom farm

houoo, bom. pond. tractor
By Owner: 6 rmo, 2 botho. 1 n d o q u i p mont .
garage . fireplace . u;c . $48,000 00. Only those inneighborhood. walking dla· terested. 0 . Freeman, Box

. ...
I-,,.,--------44 Apartment

51 Household Goods

51 Household Gooda •

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu end cholror.icedfrom
1288 to 1895. obleo, 180
and up to 1126. Hido·o·
bodo,1390. ond up to
1660 .. .... bldl 1146,
Roclinoro, 1225. to 137&amp;.,
Lampo from 12B. to 1126.
pc. dinoneo from 1109., to
436. 7 pc. 1189 end up

'Volley ~umituro, now &amp; "
uood. Lorge oectlon of "'al·
hy furniture. 1216 Eutem
Avo .. Golllpollo.
'

Apartment
for Rent

drauer, It bed, metal office

Stone Woodo Apertmonto.
Senior Cltlzono and mobility
Imp elrod unito. 1100 Po-ll
St., Mlddlopon, Ohio. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Farmers Home Administra-

tion. Monoged by Anhur
Howard Winer and Auoc.

P.O.Box 1007, Morlotto.
Ohio 46760. 1-61 4-373·
1111 •
In Mlddlopon-1 bd.room
Apt. Utllhloolnc., 1220. per
month, piuo dapooh. 614992-7177 oft. 6 p.m.

County Appllonce, Inc .
Good uood oppllancoo and
TV toto. Open BAM to &amp;PM.
Mon thrc Sot. 814-416·
1699, 127 3rd Avo. Galli·
polio. OH.

APARTMENTS, mobllo
homes. houaes. Pt. Pleasant

ond Gollipollo. 814-448·
8221 .
2 bf oponmonto In Honder·
eon. 304-875-1972.
Nice 1 and 2 br apartments

downtown 304-676 -221B
• B-11

Largo 2 bedroom opt, down·
town Point Pleasant. 304·
895-3460. -

Whirlpool automatic washer

No.1 ohape. Priced on In·
opoction. 614·992· 73B8.

LARGE AIRY CALFORNIA BRICK RANCH
3 bedrooms. 21fz ceramic baths. lg.living room, ·
dining room, family room, new kitchen, patio
with gas grill.
REFERENCES NECESSARY AND
ONE MONTH RENTAL DEPOSIT REQUIRED
Rent Rtductd From $510 to $500 With Deposit
I Year Minimum 1..•

446-2206 or 446·2734

For rent Sleeping Room•
room1. Park Central Hotel.

Coli 614·448·0768.
48 Spll!=e for Rent

OON'T LET THIS ONE GET AWAY- 3 BR ranch on 1.2acres
m/ 1, wrth lois of pine trees . This torre has LR with fireplace,.
kitchen, balfl, carpe1rng, 2 car garage w1lh openers, elec BB.
heat plu s a new heal flllf!l , new 12xZI covered rear deck and a 12116 utility bldg Call lor an appomtmenl.
••

•
48 Space for Rant

Real Eatate General

•

~

SUBJECT - Retlil !pace
located al42 Court Strttt,
Llfa~ett1 IIIII. Gallipolis,
Olllo. Squari footap of
I , 157 setlin&amp; space and
227 square feet of stora11
space on the ucond floor
of lht Llfay11tt IIIII.
Call 614-4-46·7653

9:30 'til 8:00

Monday thiU Saturday

Cotl814·448-3169.

TEAFORD

fD :

Real Estate · -~- '
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

•

1-16141-99~·332~

--··-

'

.:

MINI·FARM - 8 acres, 3
BRs, full basemen!, furnace,
drnmg, small barn, trees &amp;
qu~l. •

:
•

•
:

•

FOR RENT - FOR SALE
OR FOR LEASE

WITH OPTION TO BUY•••
COMPLETELY REMODELED HOME
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ove~ooking Ohio
River at 300 W. ~ain Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
.

COAl MINERS- Atlraclive , "
4 BR, modern lrame home •
hrgh on a hill 5 acres near. '
Sa~m Center on hard road .
A real country ·v1ew.

.

SOUTH
• 94
.AK 9862

...

·+9 4 3 2

REDUCED -Cook &amp; bake
units, gas furnace birch
kllchen, all rms. carpeted
excepl bath. Full basement"
Walk lo hospital.

Weot

Norlll

Eost

I.

I+

2 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

· Pass

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1Oth
1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
CALL 614·837·8820 OR
992·3841 FOR INFORMATION
Reel Eatate General

WANT TO BU IL01 - Vacanl
lol on top of L1ncoin Hill
overlookrng the Oh•o R1ver
Besl v~ew n Pomeroy
·
RUTLAND - Here's oneyQU
can afford. Has modern
k1lchen wrlh drmng, carpet·
mg, storm Windows &amp; caF
port. Only 121 ,500

Declarer came to his hand with the
diamond ace, cashed the ace of hearts
and led a club. He hoped that he could
successfully ruff his last club with the
heart jack and get rid of hiS spade on a
good diamond. No such luck East
overruffed and cashed the spade ace.
and declarer was down one.

Rofrigorotor. reduced t125 .
Coli 6l4-448 -7923

Gra•n fed Holatein steers~ 50
cents lb on foot , $1.17
hanging weight. 1976 Mercury Marquis, $1 ,000.00 ,

Oelu~ weight bench . '·g
~

Bovs site 8 Lee jeans &amp;
Ladies Dingo boots, size 6 .

For Sele:freezer beef . *2 46

.mower, 900d cond .. $60 .

3T girl1 Winter Weather

•Collll14-448·2208 or 614·
;448-2734 oftor 8PM

Tomar onow ouh, toddler
owing. 304-876 -8806.

•Hoopitol bod In good cond . 6 1 v•r old 8 ft. spun alumn
'lni:hoo ionjllr then regular Ntellite dish. Orakt rereiver
hod 1300. Coli 814·448· and rotor, wHI set pole and
lnotoll, ft .&amp;Oo.oo. 1 yoor
180B.
.... cookworo Call 614·
4+1-6588.
Mid November Special. 600
lb. protein blocko, 167.60.
Gue&lt;oygiovoo99 conllpolr.
6 in. ltOVe pipe 11 .76 I
oection. Found only at Bod·
wall Cooh Food Store, 614·
38B·9&amp;B8.
Largo bond uw. Iorge mukl

ousing
Headquarters

SURPLUS. regular ormy camouflage, denim clothing,
bOOI:I, packs. ICCIIIOrkt•.
Camouflege Insulated cove-

HOUSE OVERFlOWING?

3334

ClYII 11m n._

Usad, 8 ft gerage doors
840 .00 e1ch . Hoover spin

dry woohor 1150.00. Office
detkt molal 8100.00 ooch .

1- - - - - ·25. cu.ft . chelt treater. 1 Kenmore sewing mach1ne,
'baby bod. drop leaf moho·
d
8 ft., cabinet model. oaa everygl ny table •~tends tohe
&amp; thing like new Fedders
· Maytag wrtnger was r
1160 btu air cond , 304·
tub. bedroom tuite com·
32 8 6
plato, 30 " nollowoybod. Call
814-448-0836 or 814·446·
1214.
W111to olngle canopy bod

complete. Double bed,
couch. &amp; choir. Atori 2800.
1

Now io tho time to buy 19B5
Wheel Horoo 12 HP tractor
with 42 " mower. o6oontlllly
newll Muot 1111. Coli 814448-8039.

_4_8_·__ _ _ _ _ _ __
_4
1
30.08 automotlc rifle with
ocopo. 304-876-3876.

1- - - - - - - - -1
KingWoodbumerstove . Cal

614-446-23 23 ·

Building Materials
Block . brick. sewer pipes,
windows , lintels, etc.
Claude Wmters. Rio Grande,

0 . Coli 614 -246 -5121 .

Key Lump, Ohio Lump , Ohio
Stoker. Yard or delivery,
cement blocks and building

motorial.

Gollipollo Block

Co.. Pine St .. Gallipolis,

Ohio Cell 814 -418 -2783.

4 BEDROOMS- 4 ACRES - Secluded, roomy
ranch ho me 1n mrnt condrtron 2 oolhs , lovely hv·
rng room. formal dmrn g area Woodburner, range.
refngerator, washer and dr yer rnclude d 2 rural
water laps Barn w1lh horse slall, garage With
workshop Owner wrll ac cept mobrle home or valu ·
abies lor down paymen l
' 970

601
E . Ma•n

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - lliddleport - One story house
wrth 3 bedrooms, I \\ baths,
carport, range, ref , washer,
dryer and f a.n.g heat Ask·
1ng $34 ,900.00
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- ApproK 5 acres wrth a
lwo bedroom home ~ a
great neighborhood. Close lo
Pomeroy Eiemenlary , lamr ly
room . deck, mce back yard
$30.1100 00
CHESTER - A neat four
bedroom home wrth lull ba·
sement. hardwood floors,
sunny dmrng room. Good
condrlron Only $26,500 00
WNG BOTTOM - Neat lhree
bedroom fa!ldi, on approK. I
acre, famrly room, garden
area. OWNER WANTS OFFER'
CHESTER - ApproK . 10
acres vacant ~nd Burklrng or
tra~ler site w!h waler and
electriC available. Owner w~·
l~g to fmam:e. SUi)O 00
ATTENTION HOUSE BUY·
ERS! Tho owne• has ~ven us
2 monthsto selllho Ill merna
good nerghborhood. and has
roouced the pr~e to help 1\ilh
the sale 3·4 bedrooms. close
to schools In good oond rt~n
Now $25,500 00.
'
FORECLOSURE - Th~ home
belong; loa le.xl11grnslrlutoo
and they want asale' Neetl repair but rs located oo a good
~reel ~ Midd ~port i 1'1 slories and alarge garage Call for
a showm&amp; $17,000.00

ISN'T IT
-look whal we have Aplan ·
latron home on the Ohro Rrver Beaut1lul acreage
mclud1ng rive~ frontage. 3 acres m/ 1. II rooms. 3
baths, 2 large porches overlookrngI he rrver Bel·
ler thrnk fast $36.000.
#982
NEW LISTING - COZY FIREPLACE -localed 2
mrles off Georges Creek lhrs ho100 offers large
wooded lot. 2 car unattached ga rage; carpellng,
dm rng area large lr vrng room . w1th a cozy new lr·
replace Musl see to en;oy Prrced $42.500
#1044
3 ACRES ready lor mob1ie home Septrc, crty wa
ter, nalural gas al ready m talled localed on Sl
Rt 141 close to lhe corporalron lrmrl s ol lown
Owner wrll consrder lrnancrn g lo qualified
purchaser
#939
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - $49 . ~0 buyslhrs
attracllve 3 bedroom cedar bl·level thai features a
large lam1iy fOOm, 2 balhs. mce krtchen. garage .
plu s detached workshop All srlualal oo over I
acre. Possrble loan assu mptron
#964
SMALL FARM - 2 story modem larm h0 1ne, pcluresqu esetl rn g Barn , to bacco lllse and 17 acres
· of clean land rn grass and all alia seedrng 3 acre
wooded lol. Thrs 1s mce Make us an oiler
#975
"THE COUNTRY UFE " - Charolais Hrlls £stale.
Only mrnutes from crly Cedar srded ranch rn ex·
quiSrte condrtron 3 spac1ou sbedrooms. equrpped
eat-in k1tchen. formal dmm g, lam1ly room w1lh fl·
replace. entrance foyer ANached 2 car garage
wrth eleclrrc eye Almosl 3 ac re la ndscaped lawn
Ffult trees
#1005
111.500 - Well kepi and tota lly remodeled 2
bedroom , mobrle home near Raccoon Creek In·
elude s all lurnllure. newer furn ace large patm Yi
acre shaded yard

#934

Jean Trussell 949-2661)
Dotli! Turner 992· 5692
Jo H1ll 985-4466

COULD THIS BE THE HOME FOR YOU- I I rol
hng partrally wooded acres are rncluded wrth lhr~
4 bedroom. l 'h balfi home Basem ent 20 x40
barn Wrlhrn 3 mrles of lown C11y schoo ls
#967
OWNERS MUST LEAVE AREA an d areo ll er~nglh o
1~ story home 4 bedrooms. spacrou s maste r
bedroom. lormal drmng, krlchen, bath . ulrlrty AP
prox. ~ ac•e lawn Good garden area l oca ted al
Sl Rt 160 Pnced to sell al $34 , ~ 0
.
#1000

Am

AUTUMN SPLENDOR - 6 acres sun ound lh1s
beaulrlul bnck chaleau Marn level has complete
k1lchen. livrng roo m. drmng area wrlh fireplace. 2
bedrooms. balh Top level has master bedroom.
bath. balcony f ull drvid ed basemen!
#1023

Henry E. Cliland , Jr.

992·6191

~

I£AliOR

Raal Estate General

50 per cent offl Flaohlng
orrow ligno 1269111 Lighted,

SEE THI SONE! - Vou'll lovellusneal2 bedroom
ranch w1lh la rge i1vrng room wrlh lr replace AI
tached garage. carporl. lull basement. central arr
condil 1onrng, 2 baths . nrce lot and home IS mmrnl
condrtlon I 'A mrles fr om town
#lOIS
80 ACRES MORE OR LESS -Good far m home
Localed on Hannan Trace Rd 3 bed roo ms, ~rge
counlry krlchen wrlh l1replace. Cellar pump
house. snack bal . f1shmg lake, campgrounds. to·
IJOcco base an d mrneral nghts
#996

non-arrow t247. Unlighted

8199. (Free lettorol) See
ioCiily. Umitod quantity.
Hurryl 11800) 423·1083.
Remington Model 4, 30B,
Monte Corto otock wkh 3x9
variable power lyman

Scopo.t&amp;Dq.Coll814·992·
2086.

'

460 John O..ro Dour ond
Rl5 Ditch Witch Trencher.
Call 814'894·7842 or 614·
894·6006.

' Mixed hardwood tlobo, I 12.
per bundle, contMnlng ap.~ax. HI ton, fob. Ohio
"-'let Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
""". 814-182·6481.

NATURE PAINTS A MASTRPIECE nght oots1de
your wmdow. A scemc ~ acre wooded yard bord ·
enng on Raccoon Creek An atl raciiVe custom
bur it bnck and cedar ranch wrth acozy hr eplace,
fam rly room . drnmg room and 2 car garage N1ce
wrap -around deck and creek lront w1th boal oock
$55.000

304-676-9704

Coli 814'446·3861.

NOTHING VENTURED, .
NOTHING GAINED. , ,
s.. Murphy, Mllton•A-h ,_

8600.00. 304· 676· 7229
anvtime .

Collohon'o Uood Tire Shop . Remington electdc typewri·
Over 1,000 tir11. sizes 12, tor t&amp;O .OO. Uood 3 It oolid
13,14, 16. 16,16.6 Bmil11 entrance doou •e&amp;.00
out At. 21B. Coll614-268· each. Chelt of drawers
11261 .
t60.00 . Rod Dovel point
ohokor 1175.00 . 2 5 cu foot
For oolo wotorbod Coil refrigerator 150 00 . 304·
614·245·6693.
676 -2406

•

2

Htltn, Virgil IIIII lroco IIIIo;.

mote control TV, push button channel selector

Ple111nt area . 304 -676 -

VERY NICE - 3 BR ranch ·
lull basement With family
rm . lg. woodburn1ng slove
lrreplace, lots of storage
lull baths, dbi. garage &amp;
2.47 acres

NICE BEGINNERS HOllE - $22,0001 - 3 BR r1nch
kitchen, livin&amp; room, b1th, naturtlps heat citY schools:
Clll for 1n 1ppolatmtnt.

and toblo, 81.600.00 orlgl·
nolly paid $4,000.00. 1 veer
old Zenith floor modol ro·

on air: 350 Hondo bike. Independence Rood-Old Rt.
Pons GMC drums, hubt &amp; ·21 . Fri. Sot. Sun, 1.00· 7:00
PM. F- delivery Poont
mloc. Co11814·379·2328

YOU CAN have thiS Clle lor
just $10,000.00 Foor rms
balh, dnlled well &amp;full ba se:
menl on II acre

CHOOSE YOUR PAYMENT PLAN
•NO MONEY DOWN
•90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
•NO PAYMENT nL FEIIUAIY
•SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CASH

old 6 pc. Ballttt wedge·
wood blue 10fa, love INt.
cha~r. octagonal table and

drill pre11er. 7 ft. metal
lathe, 73 Trans Star lntama -' rollo UO., kldo comouflage
tionol fullocrow, 40 It flot 9 all 1ize1. Sam Somerdte,
ft. eprood. 3B ft . flat 3 oxleo East-Ravenswood. junctktn

ClASSRDADS t J

ESTATE SETILEMENT - AVAILABLE NOW! Pnce reduced $3.1100 below app raised value A
quahly 2 bedroom modern· home, clean. full s1ze
fasemenl. hvrn g room, drnrng room, ~!chen, great
gront porch . enc losed back porch , garage and
yard located 1055 Second Ave. Call one ol our
Cenlury 21 realtors today to make a barga1n Cl1
th 1s home. $39.500
#962

DON'T
1n pr1ced
at only $45 1100 Atlraci!Ve 3 bedroom. vmyl i11d
bnck ranch ;ust mmutes fro mtown and hosp1tal
A newer deluKe kllchen or1d d1ning area , 2 oolhs,
newer carpet. lul llrnlshed oosemenl wrlh fam 1iy
and reo room s, 2 hreplaces, nat gas central arr.
aod 2 ca r garage Won't la st long atlhrs pme lm·
med rale possess ron
#1012

55 Building Supplies

lb. lido of Herford beef.
Grain fattened for 8 weaks.
f irewood-cutup slabs, 1 Cut on d wrapped $1 .26 lb
,truck iood $100. 2· 11BO. 304-773-6131
·Pickup load, you haul $16
•HEAP occeptod Call 614· 081 range. dehumidifier.
kero.-ne heeter. Call 614 ·
245-5804.
992-2754
Houu coal. Lump 6 stoker.
ZinnCooiCo. Call814·448· For Sole:9.76x16 .6 rims,
1408.
lugs &amp; contort. *200. 814·
949-2990
Firewood 135 PU · load, 1- - - - - - - - shredded bark $26 PU load. TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS,
hlrdy ovorgreen ohrubo 110. hot dip robluoing, olltypooof
JondiCiping &amp; trimming 2 gunomith WOrk, htii•IVicO,
mi. N. of Silver Bridge, 304-876·4831
:upper At. 7, Ohio. Cell 1 - - - - - - - - &lt;614-446-4830.
Sorlouo obout loolng
wolght1 Contoct Glorio
,Gioin flld ·frlozor boot. Csll Grato. Rt. 2, Box 282.
-1114-44'8-0780.
Lotort, WV. 26263 304BB2-3152.
-!'r&gt;r oole Bon Frs,.lin wood
-...r llfto now. Call 814· Lump houM coal, deliver ony
'248-88911
omount, 304-675· 7397 or
" '
8711-1247

20 pc. 1teinle11 steel water·

SerVICe~

~ ~::;=;=.=::::===
00. Coli 614·

lifts II stand up bar a. several

weighto . •so
742-3074

~•• Olle11ng CENG UARO'" In Sura nce

Opening lead. • Q

Antique Seller kitchen ceblneta. Orginal fin•sh Call

BARGAIN - Smail2 BR one
II frame in Middleport
Small lot, storm w1n dows &amp;
en cfosed porch

SEASON
SALE'

446-661 0.,./,

54 Misc. Merchandise

•
•
:
•

RUSTIC HILLS - 6 rill&lt; •
ranch, liv1ng rm. abou1 22' ,
lg. Wilh frreplace unrt for
woodburnrng lois of cirpelrng, utihly rm. modem
k11. garage &amp; lg. ~t.
.

SOUTHERN- HILLS R.E., INC.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

54 Misc. Merchandise

..

I

OPEN HOUSE
P

• J 10 7 5

:.Votem, odds &amp; ondo furni · your hunting nooda. 0 llo J
•turo. Coll814·256·6413.
Sovomoro Mort, M11on. W.
Vo. 25280. 304· 773·6222.
:22 ln . till propelled lawn 1 - - - - - - - - -

M mho nil; sr.

1199·1599, Iampo, oloo

t9 8 2
+ AQ6

Judy DeWitt - Realtor - 388·81 55
J Merrill Carter- Realtor- 379·2 184
Becky Lane- Realtor - 446-0458
J im Cochran-Realtor- 446· 7881
Virgima Smith - Realtor - 388-8826
Phyllis loveday- Rea ltor- 446 -2230

'Q 5

:wheel trailer , pop-up full line of Armv Surplus.
~er. no top, make ex. Mens and chlldrens camou·
-udlhy troller, draft boor floge, oil li1e1. Sea uuo for

814-992-7479.

buying coal &amp; wood stoves.

• 6 54 3

IIIIo now, dlnono oot, 2 ARMY SURPLUS! We hove

Pomeroy. large lots. Call

bedroom auhes. renges,
wringer welhert. &amp; shott.
New Uvingroom ' aultes

EAST
.A 10852

:w.rm Morninu wood burner 1--------~

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Routt 33, North of

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
82 Olivo St., Gotlipollo. Now
llo uood wood·coolotovn. 6
pc wood LR .. n. 1399,
bunk bodo 1199, ontron
rocllnoro $99, new &amp; uood

WEST
+QJ6
.10 3

b--------

Mobile home lot. 12'x60' or
omollor. 876 wotor paid. 4th
&amp; Noll, Gallipolis. Coil 448·
441&amp; oftor BPM.

ll·t-U

Antiques

'54 Misc. Merchandise

ond light houH keeping

51 Household Goods

Somehow or other, North-South
!topped at three hearts, mostly be·
.cause North discounted his king of
ipades as being of little value. That
was a good decision. In fact, with the
defense functiomng at the highest lev·
el, even three hearts was too h1gh
When the opening lead of the queen
gf spades was not covered by dummy's
king, East played the deuce. That was
-a most discouraging card. Nonnaily it
would seem OK to play on another
spade, but West was m a "keep your
partner h~ppy" kind of mood. H East
did not want spades contmued, West
would oblige bim. Accordingly he
switched to the club jack, covered by
the king and ace. East cashed the club
queen and wondered whether he
should take the spade ace. He dec1ded
not to, believing that West had started
with'more than two spades. (With only
two spades, West might have continued the su1t.) East therefore played a
third round of clubs, which was ruffed
in dummy. Note now the unfortunate
character of declarer's distribution
That lone ace of diamonds had become
a Uability.

VGC. 614 -992·3429 .

.,

When you're selling your home
it pays to work with Ntunber 1.

• K73
. J 74
.KQJ 107
+K8

.

Moving 1920's era Gas
Pump, original. 17'x20'
hand· hawn log cabin; oak
roll·top deok (80 in j; rope
)lad, cupboord . 814-245944B.

With Option To Buy

NORTH

· By James Joeoby

614·448-3803.

Raal Estate General

B. &amp; D. Troller Pork, troller
Iota for rent, 304-578·
2644.

.Top-notch
·defense

wood furnace. Brick lined

FOR RENT OR LEASE

Furnished Rooms

:::"'::o:;:v::;em~be~r~1~0~,;:;1~98~5S:~~~~~~=:===~Pomero~~~yiM:idd~le~po=rt~G:a:lli:p~o:lis~.~O~h:io;~P~o:in~t~Pt~ea;sa;nit.~w:·~V~a~.~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~Th:e~S~u~nd:a~y~Ti~Jme~s-Sentinei-Page-D-5

53

27 in. Wllllomoon coolllo or

for Rent

PRE·

OLDe TIME HEATING CO.

electric range coppertone ..

dookl. 3 mlloo out Bulovliio f176 . Coll614·448·3738. •
Rd. Open 9omto6pm, Mon.
thru Sot .
20.B cu .ft. froozor, choll .
814-448-0322
type, Rh..m modol. Cell
814·446-3112 oftor8PM.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wolhoro, dryor~, refrlgoro· Country otyle oak furnllufll.
toro, rongeo. Skoggo Ap· hand crafted and flnlohod,
plionceo, Upper River Rd. antique reproductions. Paul
booido Stone Crell Motel. Conkel, Rt . 7. Tuppen ~
Plains.
·
814-446-7398.

3 bd.room A,pt. for rent In
Syrocuoo. 814-992· 7189
oft. 5 p.m.

45

:10 in electJ;ic range white .
165, 30 ln. electric rengo
horvoat gold I 95, 30 in .

llkt new 1126. 38 ln.
Wood table wtth lix chairs electric range white f96.
12B6 to 1746. Dalk 1110 Whirlpool woohor·dryor ott ·
up to 1225. Hutcheo, $660. 1190, GE wuhor ovoco~o :
Bunk bod complete with groon 1160, Kenmore dryer
manreaaea. t276 . and up to 195, Speed Quoon dry or .
1396. Baby bldo, 1110. 196, Kelvinotor dryer 185, •
Mattre1111 or box tprlngt, Glboon rofrlgorotor whitt
full or twin . 163 .. firm. 173. 196, Glboon rofrelgorator
and IB3 . Quoon oeto, $226. white I root free 1150, refrig- •
4 dr. chollt, 849. 5 dr. orotor tide by lido white
cheoto. 169. Bed fromoo. 1195 Kelvlnotor ovocodo •
120 and $25., 10 gun· Gun groan 1126, portotoblo
cobineto. 1360. Goo "' dither wether $96, omoll
electric rongu 1376. Baby wuhor·dryor 1190, Kenmonreooeo, 12611o 136, bod more goo dryer 195, freezer
fromoo 120, 126, • 830, upright whitt 1B cu.fl.
king fromo 160. Good oelec· 1160 Skoggo Applionce.
tion of bedroom euitea, Upper River Rd ., Golllpolio,
rockers. metal Cllbinett. 814 -448-739B.
hoodboordo 138 &amp; up to
165.
E·Z Credit Mollohan Furnl· ,
ture, Rt. 7 North of GallipoUsed Fumiture · - Bedroom llo. Coll614-446- 7444 .
aulte, 1 set of tablet,

buament and garage, re-

j~~~~~~gg9;_ month. Coli
' Will boby.olt in my homo,
beside Eollorn High School.
Anytime Call 614-986·
•3907.

KIT 'N' CARLVLE

4 roomt for rent in Syracuse.
Ohio. Call 814·992·3981.

•.Needed lady houookeoporto

:12

Houses for Rent

1985 ·

'

THE PRICE ON THIS HOME IN CENTENARY HAS BEEN REDUCED - Home features 3 BRs, I ll balhs, e~urpped
krtchen, central air, naturall!ilS hea~ covered patiO. unal·
laohed garage Call for an appomlmenl.

I CKIURN REALTY -- 446·0008-

LET THE RENTALINCOIIE from oneol theselwo 2
bedroom mobrle homes pay fort he other. 12'•60'
Arlington and 12'•65' Ulopra Both fully fur·
niShed . S11ualed on one acre lol. Rural water
K!ger Creek School Dis1nct ~need to sell at
9,000.
#966

FAMILY ORIENTED HOME - $6UIO - Excel·
lent setl1ng 4\\ acres brrck and cedar lrr-level
home 4 bedrooms, 3 baths l ovely counlry
kitchen , fam1iy room w1th firep lace Plenly of
room to ra 1se a fam ily
#965

PRICE DROPPEO TO $39.900 - Owner anx~us
to sell this I ll story 2 or 3 bedroom holl'li rn good
condrt1on Family room , lireplace. basemen I. 2 car
garage and mce tree lined I ~ acre yard l ocated
rn Green Grade School area
.1009
NEW LISTING - UNMATCHED VIEW - One of
the loveliest panoramrc vrews of Ihe rrver can be
seen from lhe 2 9 acre park·lrke setlmg lhat
co mes wrlh thrs quality spilt-foyer home 3 bed
rooms, 2'h balhs. attraclrve oak lloors (so me
carpeted). oak lrrm, lamrly oom . 2 WB fireplaces.
cenlral arr. 2 car garage, assumable mi g 5~ m1ie
soulh on .RI. 7. $69.900
#1042
COMMERCIAL LISTING - FORMERLY ROBIE
TRUCK &amp; TIRE - E•cellent locatmn al l he corner
of Sl Rt 35 and Old Rl 35 2 11 acres wrlh
40'K80'Kl5 ' melal burld rng. 3 phase eleclrr c, two
13\1' overhead doors, 10'xl5' offrce. 20'x40'
mezzamne. 2 rest rooms. large gravel baseparkmg
lot $107 ,000. Equrpment and mvenlory can be
purchased separalely.

#971

NEW LISTING - FOR THE BARGAIN HUNTER!
- $25.400 wrll buy th o 14 'K70', 1980. 2 bed·
foom, 2 bath mobrle home plu s 12'x60' 2 BRmo·
brle home. Bolh mobrle homes are underpm noo.
-have slorage burldrngs Srtu aled oo large lot
Rural waler. Own ers wrll sell mobrle homes sepa·
raleiy .
#IOJO-mJI
PRICE REDUCED AGAIN - 145 acre general
larm wrth a hrslory of success 3 barns, tobacco
base, lois of pasture and trllable land large 2
slory house, good dnlled well water syslem. Some
mach rnery rncluded $58,000. Possrble frnancmg

mo

EDGE OF TOWN - 4 bedroom modern home .
good condrlron. lu ll basement. ce nlral ar r. gasFA
heat. crly sewer, low ma~nt e nan ce. low utr hlres
65 of an acre lol Markel prrce $33,000
#984
LOOKING FOR A OEAL1 - 35 h by 35 h automo
lrve reparr and parnl garage Drv rded 12 h. h1gh
door oo on e s ~ e. se ptrc syslem, r01al water Gra
veled parkrng area , large lol Sl Rt 35 area lrsted
by $21.700.00

CALL FOR A PRIVATE SHOWING - 62 acres,
limed , lert1hzed. grass lrelds Almost all sur·
rounded by government loresl 1978 modular.
12' d~ameler TV diSc F1ee gas well, spnng devel·
opment. modern barn , stables App roK . m1ie from
marn road Secluded

W!l43

NEW LISTINil.- 3\\ acres more/less. ~ Green
lown shrp al Green-Saunders Rd Natural sprrng,
waler tap.
~1043

NEW LISTING - 10 acres surroond lh rs 2 slory
barrie wrth see nrc vrew of woods Home has 3bed ·
rooms, balh, eat·rn kilchen. lor mal dmrng room ,
hvrn groom, den Small barn , 2 car ga~age , garden
area Local ed at Pomeroy
NI020
IN TOWN LOCATION -You have Io see the 1ns1de
10 apprec~ate lhrs 2 bedroom home, all mce soe
•ooms. beaut iful ca rpet lhrouil!oot. spoliess
clean Beautrlul In -ground poo l Wilh prrvacy
fence landscaped l ake a look You'll be 1m·
pressed

.1004

COMMERCIAL LISTING - EKce llenl locatron oo
Sl. Rl. 7 with easy access lo U S Rl 35 by pass
and West Vrrgrma with high traffic llow 15 yr od
20'K80' block bUIIdrng has been domg business
as I ruck stop for ye~rs , with nat gas heat, central
a~r , large aerob iC septic and drrlled well (public
water awa~lable) . Priced at $90,000 wrth eQUIP·
ment $85,000 w1lhout

,!142

RENTAL PROPERTY - localed at lower Rt 7
near Clay School 2 bedrooms, bath. hvmg room,
kitchen , al um s1drng, carpel. washer and dryer
hookup Rural waler Lol approx \\ am.

nu

COMMERCIAL LAND -6 54 acres. mor e or less
Sl RT 35 Crty wa ler and sewer avariable Super
localron
#917
ON DEENIE DRIVE - Th 1s IS an attractrve bnck
ranch located ;usl oil Rl. 35 Includes 3 bed·
rooms. I 1'1 baths, equpped lui ch en, lull d1vi:led
basement, electriC heat. 2 ca1 garage, cenlralarr
Very mce landscaped ya1 d Good lamrly nerghbor·
hood $55 ,000 .
N937

$32 ,000 - Remodelal 2 s1o1y 3 bedroom home
near Clay school off St Rl 7 New carpet. l1re
~ace, large screenOO JXHCh , large i&lt;ltchen, gar
age Over ~ acre yard
#9SS
CEDAR AND BRICK RANCH - $49.1100 Only 4
years old and looks like brand new 3 bedrooms,
pantry and oak cabmets rn k1lchen. l 1h balhs. al·
!ached garage Appro• I acre lawn Con crete
drr ve, slorage burld rng, garden area Alllhe extras
you cou ld want Call - we have I he detarls
' 8BS

COMMERCIAL GARAGE -lar ge melal burldrng
wrlh 1200 sq , h and concrelelloo1 Buridrng ha s
been slale approved. l ol srze 55 by 110. sec ond
lol op110nal Included rn sale IS a 1968 lnlerna
tlonal wrecker lruck and a 1975 lion wrec ker
tru ck l ocaled w1lh 1n the crly il mols
#1017

OWNERS ANXIOUS TO SELL - Prrced al only
$32.500 A modern 3 bed room ran eli local a! on
an exira lot at Georges Creek Rd Includes a large
krlchen, electrrc heat. garage. All rn IJlod cond r·
11on
•
#1028 .
&lt;;ENTURY 21 WANTS TO SHOW YOU THIS HOME!
- l ois of space oulside and 1n 3 bedrooms. 2
bath , famrly room, IO!mal lrvflg and dmrng roo m
Country eat -in ~Ieben Plus a full basemen! Ev
ery roo m is spac1oos. Situated on 3 acres mo re or
less of lovely level land C11y schools.
#1032

VINTON - LOTS - Nrce 100' lots ilr $3 .500
each . Owner wrll land con tracl Rural waler avarla
ble. 13 mrles from Holzer
,960

DON'T OVERLOOK THIS HOME - $49 500 The
outside 1s gorgeous. bul you will absol;tely love
lhe m1enor. Beaut1lully decorated , everytning
looks new. EKcellenl kilchen wrth alllatesl ronve·
mences Thrs 3 bedroom, 2 balh l'ome has also
been prolessronally landscaped. All ala price yoo
can afford
#1002

HUNTER'S HEAVEN -54 acres of land located m
Hunlrngton Tw p. 42 acres wooded and 12 acres
boltom land Pnced to sell at $16,000.
'
#988
1:) 1985('.entury 21 Real Estate Corporation as uusLee lor the NAF.
®and~- tradomarksoiC.ntury 21 Real Estate Corporl!ron Equal Houslns Opportunity Iii
EA OfFICE IS DEPENDENTLY oWNED AND OPEIIATED.

s

OWNERS HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE ol lh1s
ranch style home 3 bedrooms, famrly roo m wrth
burlt·rn bookshelves, equipped kitcllen , natural
gas heat, large well marnlarned lawn Crty school
system Only mrnutes hom town.
NIOOl

ISN'T IT PREnY - l ook what we have A planla
tron home on the Ohro Rrver Beaulrlul acreage rn·
eluding rrver hontage 3 acres mi l I I rooms, 3
balhs, 21arge porch es . O'leriookmgI he rrver Bet·
ter lhrnk lasl. $36 ,000
#982

COUNTRY SETTING - Charm en hances lhrs
beaulrlully well decora ied ~ level formallrvmg
room, large lamrly room wrlh woodburner, 3 bed·
rooms, very mce krtch en, palm off drnrn~ area. 2
balhs, l 'h car garage, heat puffll , cenlral au &lt;lld
"""Y more exlras Close lo ho sprlal and crty
schools

W983

SMALL FARM - OWNER TRANSFERRING Anxrous for QUiCk sale 40 acres wrth a beautilul
colonral style home 9 rooms. 2 baths , 4 bed·
rooms, 2 barns, machmery shed. Partially
wooded pasture, loba cco base Good water, bul
county water tap Paid lof Sl Rt Please ca ll for the
partrculars.'
MIMI

Put Nwnber 1to work for you:·

.,

�November 10, 1985

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

t
Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.
66 Building Supplies
81octl, brick. manor and
m11onry auppties. Mountein

Stoto Block, Rt. 33, New
Haven, W. Vo . 304·882·

~222 .

66

Pets for Sale

lriarpetch

Kennels

61

Farm Equipment

New Hollond 354 grlndor
mixer. Uoed vory lttlt. Exc
o:&gt;nd. 304-273· 4218.
Aliio Cholmen 7030 dlooel
form troctor, 130 hp, '-"'d
oond, H.OOO.OO. Sodors
Equipment, Hondoroon, W.
Vo. 304·876· 7421 .

All-

71

71

Auto• for Sale

&amp; L1ve s tu r. ~
61

Fe.rm Equipment

CROSS a. SONS
U.S. 35 West, Jocklon,
Ohio. 814·2B6·6451.
M1111y Fergu10n, New

Holland-, Buoh Hog Saleo &amp;
Service. Over 40 used ·
Crectort tO chOOI8 from l

71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH pold for '80
model .,d newer used cera.

Smith Buick-Pontiac. 191 1
Eootern Avo.. Goliipollo. Coli
614·448·2282.
1979 Rabbit. 1976
LTD. Coil otter 6PM.
3B8-B823.

complete line at new &amp;

used equipment. lalrgest

Mloction in S.E. Ohio.
Spocio110" discount on all
umN Nov. 16.

Used 450 John Deere dozer
8o R85 Ditch Witch
Trencher. Coli 814 -894·
7842 or 814·894·6006.
4x4 !rector. 1600. Call
1114-388-8246.
John Duro 4020 tractor.
Good rubber. EC. 614·949·
2437.
Bent Livestock Trailers. Hur-

ricono. WV. 304-757·8844
or 767·8399.
Equipm.nt for Gravety Treetor, Rotmy plow. 5 point
culttyator, Sutky and reel
typo mower 30 Inch oloo
SNrl automatic console

tllmldlflsr. phone 304·876·
4210 .

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
SPUT LEVB. HOUSE w~h 3
IJec!IOOiil$, 2~ bM!Is,
d111n1 room, livina rootnllld
111111 llatlliott room. ~
cllld on 8 ~e~•. I.MJI fn;
pond. Racint ••.
3 BE DROOl lOBI LE HOlE
on 3 lot~ in Sy11cuse.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corner lot in Syr.
CUSI.

HOME NATIONAL

BANK

Autos for Sale

71

11

Autos for Sale

ADDISON TWP. - Approx 7 miles ~om
Gallipolis. 39 ~ acres more or less. Fronls
111 township road. All woods and brush.
$8,900.
.
QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL- 3 or 4 BR
brick home offers a 20x40 family room. 3
baths, kitchen with OW, displ., microwave
and trash compactor, dining room , inter·
com system, central air, 2car garage, deck
and a 20x40 pool. Over $100,000. Call for
apointment today.
APPROXIMATELY 3 MILES FROM ROD·
IIEY - 4'o acres m/ 1, all tillable. Older
home has been remodeled, 3 BRs LR
krtchen, bath. gas and wood stove. carpet:
rng. county water and small pond.
RACCOON CREEK HOMESITE - Offers
swimming, boating and lishing. lot size is
iOOx600 and has electric, watl!f tap and
se ptoc tank. Call for more delails.
YOU'll LIKE LIVING HERE- 3 BR ranch
jusl minutes from town on Rt. 141. Other
features include kitchen w/range, refrig .,
OW, d;spl .. and oven. LR with fireplace
bath. full basement, deck, fenced
backyard. gas heat. central air city school
dislrict.
'
BRAN!rftEW OUPLEX- Great inveslrrenl
lor the buyer. located oo Graham School
· Rd. Each unil offers 2 BRs, living room
b'th, kitchen with stove, refrig., DW an d
' d1spl., laundry, large carport, central air
• and storage area.
. GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 acres m/ 1,approx. 40 acres toil able, tobacco IBrn, drive·
lhru shed, metal cattle barn. At~Hox . ·~
acre lake on property.
_-

MEIGS COUNTY LISiiNGS

742·2421.
•

speed

rear for

p11rt1.

1982 Kawaski street bike.

8600, ••c. cond. Call 614·
446-3684.

with lots of extras. S 1,950.

Call 614-388-8711 .

75

~ - ··----

....

fireplac11, privecy. 3 bdr.

brick

Motorcycles

Boats and
Motors for Sale

77 Ford pickup, tharp, must

Hit 75 Ford pickup ec.
54,000 miles. Sharp. 304·
675·5281 .

·--

949·3087 alt. 6 p.rn .

74

II

I ()

lent ruMing cond. Cell614·

16 II. Ba" boat. 50 HP.

1400.00. 304·675·3190.

360 cu .in. onglno &amp; 400
outo. tJono. from 1979
Chevy Suburbon 1400. Call
614·448·2206 or 814·448·
2734 alter 8PM.
gorogo. Easy to hoot, 3 bdr.,
t.mily room w~h woodburner, g~rege. 4 bdr., 3
botho, 2 femHy room, 2

one leiter 10 each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Many extru. New tires and

Evinrude, Tennessee trailer

King cab,

~THAT SCIIAMBLEO WORO GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

shocks. body good. Excol·

1982 Chevy Silverado. 3f-

with

ID\"t

~~ •

197B Chevy 4 WD. FWB.

ton 4•4. 6.2 diesel. EC.
4 spd :. atandard with over- 46,500 miles. 614·949·
drive. V-6, 50,000 wer· 2437.
ronly. Coll ·814-446-0061 .
1960 Ford dump truck. with
\976 Chevy Silverado 1 ton, 4 speed tranami11ion and 2

1976 Ford 'A ton truck. 390

2 flroplocoo,

2 . boths, t.111Hy room, 2

~~N~Af tx j

t
J KJ )

tLIMSAD'

Answerhere: A (

"
John boat for sale. Call

w~h

family room, garage. 4 bdr .•

fireplace•. walking dl.tance
to town . 2 bdr.. liroplaca,

11·'1

lull bosemont, goroga. 3

WHAT Hl5 WIFE

bdr., 1 car garage, countrv
atmosphere. ••v to heat.
Rafance• &amp;: · depoalt re-

HAt7 A 5TEAtr!"
JO&amp;TI'ii:YINIS
'TO KEEl" HIM AT.
Now arrange the circled letters to
torm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by tne above canoon.

2 TO 5 TODAY

OUT WHERE Til REST BEGINS .... Overlookin1 hills and val·

leys on a beaut~ul roliin1J2 acre mini farm, only minutes
from c~ limits. This freshly decorated 3 bedroom home
fea111res full blsem~nt, modem kitchlll,lwo baths. andfam·
lly room. Several other buiidinp and fishinKPond. See it 10DAYl $75.000. On Bulaviile Road two miles from Rt. 160.
watch for OPEN HOUSE SIGNS.

3 bdr. carpeted, naturel pa,

V. mi. out of city on Rt. 141,
e225 mo. Coli 614·448·
2034 .
.

~

Chevy motor, 400 T.H .

Answer: It's sometimes a crime to catch fish here,

·bul mora often lhls-A MIRAC•E

614 -266·6417.

OPEN HOUSE

quired. Wloomon Reel Eotota
Agency. Call 814-448·
3844.
i- --------

XI XI X]( XI ) ------------Newly rebuilt 307 CIO

• . j Jumbles: TOXIN BLOOM REVERE LAUNCH

,es1eruay s

LIVESTOCK BONANZA - Second to none. 380
acres m/ 1, 100 ac. crop, 150 ac. pasture, 130 ac.
woods and misc .. 6500' road lronlage, «100' m/ 1
of new fence. Excellent hilllop v1ew from present
home. Could easily be divoded in three or more
smaller un its. Total asking pr~ce for entire unit
$294,000.
#335

,

MMR 567-PRIC! R!OOCEOII .:_ Executive slone ranch.Situated :

o~ .almost 5 a~res with l l,.; acr_
elake. 3 spacious bedrooms, lormal ...
donong room wrth see-through loreplace . 1~ baths, laundry, lull base·

menl and 2 car garage. We've roluced lhis ooe $10 000 Now
$120,000. Shown by appl.
·
MMR 570- PIIICE REDUCED!! 125 acrelarm. 31Edroom frame
home. 2barns. equippped sheds and gas .,doil r~ghts.Call lor more :
onio. REDUCED TO $58.900.
•

EST AlE - 446-7699

McGUIRE REALTY COMPANY, INC.
1402 4th
. wv

1ranam11110n
· ·
11
10 rebuilt.

304-676-685B.

IIMR 557 - Extra good buy! IDcalol in Middleporl oo 100'x 100' ;
lol. .Lovely 2 story, 3bedroom home, dining room, library and large
.

•

•

MMR 572 -You'll love the country setting of I his oder 2 story •
home. Located on New lima ~ - l bedrooms. full bas011enl. sunny '
enclosed porch. Garage.Silualed on I acre.Call now won'llasllong.
Asking $26,000 bul will consider oiler'
·
MMR 574 - One iloor pian, 2 bedroom home, dining rpom. de· ',
tache&lt;! jarage. Nice lol. Located in Middleport.Excellent condition. ·
Askong 27.500
•

, For Meigs Co. Listings
Call: Cheryl Lemley - 742·31 H

'

..__......;.;.:.~:.......:...:.:..:.:.:..:__.J.

IB

MOBILE HOME ON 3.5 ACRES- 3 BR home in·
ciudes i ~ balh, kitchen appliances, washer and
dryer, woodburner and lurnilure. 'Large garden
space. Hannan Trace sch ools. Only $16,000.

REAL ESTATE

EXCEPTIONALLY well decorated in Early Ameri· .
cau charm, J.4 bedrooms. beautifullivilg roo m
room woth foreplace and fantastic view of the river .
Nice shady lawn ru ns to he river !fish or have a
boat dock in your own front yard/. In town loca·
lo on, very quoet and peaceful surroundings.
$75,800.
#103

utility. Owner wants to seU now ~ we have rOOuced te price lo •

4 BR HOME FOR EXPANDING FAMILY- large
15x24' LR with lirepalce. l2xll' FR. Step-saving
kitchen, OR woth paloo doors and ~rt walls fin·
ished in weathered barn sid ing. Refin~hed large
bath, new carpel and vanity Oarge mirror).Cherry
wood cabinels. Shop building 20x24' ceiled and
concrete lloor. 18x35' machine shed and 2 other
structures. All on almosl 2 ac. of fertile lan d for
garden. pets and livestock. Centrallocaloon lo Oak
H1il, Jackson, Rio Grande and Gallipolis. Pr~ced lo
sell at $39,800.
#337

REALTOR"

VACANT lAND - 400 BLOCK OF SECONP
AVENUE - 55'xl23. 23' -Excellent location for
doctors, lawyers, Indian chiefs, rich man, poor
man, beggarman thief, pharmacy, stock brokers
or an Arabian shiek. Ne~llo gas company office:
#129

MIIR 571- 2 ~ acres wolh 5bedooom home.Nice corner location. •
Cioselo Rulland B011enlary School. Po iced lo sol al ONLY $16,000. •

$30,000.

SINCE 1943

#211

REALTOR

LOOKING FOR A HOMESITE1 - Here's 7 acres
that include small woods, creek. excellent road
fronlage and plenty of flal land lor your new
home. Good location just off Rl. 141 past Cente·
nary $!0,500' That' s cheap'
#237

-446-3644

· NEW LISTING -"OWNER TRANSFERRED" ANractive br~ck ranch . City school district double
lot in excellent neighborhood. Well arr~nged 3
bedrooms with i ~ baths, fireplace handsome
kitchen, dining area, palio, utility roo~. large stor·
age room and 2 car garage Th is horne is in ' ~od
condition - minimum maintenance and low fu~
blls. Not many like it on Ieday's market. $65,000.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING in downtown business
diStrict. Super locatoon onGallipolis. 44 fl. frontage
includes 2 new store fronts. One sde extensively
remodeled . Loads and loads of storage space in
rear. Full basement and two other floors for add i·
lienal storage. Newer ga s furnace. Across lrom
public parking lot

Ike Wiseman - 446-3796
B. J. Hairston- 446-4240
Clyde B. Walker - 245·5276
David E. Wiseman- 446·9555

Mil~• Villose- Lot• afflower~, daru&amp;1, lnrse pine trfe1, plu• a very well
des&amp;gned home. Feature&amp; a formal living room, family room, 3·4 be.d·
r~o',"ll• H! bath&amp;, complele kitchen w! di•hwa.ther, .dove &amp; refrigerato·r.
Fanllh~d ba1emenr w! corpet , 2 oor gnrage and •eparate wood shop, a
large coveri!d back porch, ,go&amp; heal. Wtuhini(IDn Elementary.

OWNER WILL FINANct WITH $5,000 OOWN. I love the house. location, and price. 3 BR,
' bath, large living room, large eat-in ~tchen,
dining area and full basement large lot in SPring
Valley. Priced to sell at $55,000.
#300

Rio Gr~n~ A reo - 9a~ rel, more or le11, .l BR 2 .• lory home. ~ellor, Atorbualdanr. new ~hedjor coule or hor•eo~. New fence •. Fruit trees. City
!chools. Priced in 50 1.
a~e

Arrention Newlyweds - Home completely furnished . New microwave,•

TO MICHIGAN -Must sell Ihis
brick home immediately. Very
locailion in Green Schools, this home offers
comfortable family room w&lt;lh wood burner, eat-on
kitchen, living room and i car garage. large well
cared for yard . Quiet neighborhood . Priced to sell
al $49.900.
#219

NEW LISTING! - Bi·level on large flat lot. Very
nice .home includes 3 BRs, i full and 2 half baths.
large fR with woodburning fireplace. l 'h car {llr·
age. Newer carpet throughout roost of house.
Super mce covered porch and ~tio for family
fun . Located oul Rt 160. $55,000.
#207

remol~ control color TV. deep freeze and bed1, IJOjao, Iampo. end roble
and dmin~ ond lou of orlw!r rhing1. 4 bedroomo. 2 borho, LR, dining,

modern k•lchen. Nice fenced bock yard. Pocko,e deol only UO.OOO.

COIIIERCIAL BLDG. - PERRY TWP.NEAR CORA - _6.000 SQ . ft. steel bldg ..
odeallor anyone on the trucking, drilling or
monong busoness. Owner may consider
leasong or fonancong. Call for more informa ·
to on.

ATTENTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL IN·
COlE OF $415 PER MO. - ASKING
PRICE $29.900!- 1.5 acres m/1, 5rooms
and bath home. i2x65 mobile home and
mobole home pad. Call for more details to·
day.

17 ~CRES. m/ 1, approx. 6 miles north of
Holzer Hospital and approx. 'A mile off Rt.
160. Flat land.

LOTS OF FRONTAGE ON RT. 160 NEAR
NGHS - Tobacco base, 2 BR home, 3
ponds, excellent investment 321 acres
m/1.
•
•

VACANT FARMlAND- Morgan Twp. 84
acres more or less, level and rolling land.
Approx. 33 acres lollable. remainder
woods.

JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR
- In· town conveniences. extra nice lot 4
BRs. large kitchen, lR, OR, bath, large
front porch and small screened back
porch, gas heal, unattached one car garage. Call for an appointment

GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 35 acres in/1
~rosily tillable. 3 miles north of Rodney:
Sprong, well and county water. fenced and
cross fenced , tobacco base. Very nice 3 or ·
4 bedroom ranch slyle home with kitchen.
LR. bath. breezeway, woodburning fire·
place. Call for an appointment.

CENTRALLY LOCATED- GREEN TWP. _
22. ii Ac . m/ 1with frontage on SfRt. 141
and Neoghborhood Rd. Also ad join s San·
dm Holl Sutxlivision. Owner fonancing
avaolable. Cll for more details.

COMMERCIAL.- RESIDENTIAL - IN·
DUSTRIAL - 50 acres, more or less. va·
cant land ideal lor investmenl ()(any type
development Road frontage on U. S. 35
and M1tchell Rd.

NEW USTING- Near North Galli a HSTro·level home oilers 3 BRs LR bath
24•20 family room, carpeting, electric
heat, noce deck. aHached garage. Call for
• an appoontmenl.
•

CLOSE TO TOWN - Nice one story home
featurong kolchen. LR. family room , dining
room. lull basement, carpeting, gas heal,
coty water, 2 car unaHached block garage.

·200 ACRES Mil, FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Approx. 65 acres tillable and
135 acres woods. Comfortable two story
home offers 4 BRs, bath. kitchen, living
room, lamoly room, two lireplaces, barn, 2
large screened porches. Lovely qu oet set·

COMMERCIAL _BUILDING - 62x81J all
steel con structoon wilh fireproof insula·
lion , has overhead crane, office and baths.
.Formerly used for boal sales and repair
Located across from Silver Bridge Plazi
woth access to the {))io River. Potenlial un·
l1m1led.

NORTH GALLIA ESTATES - Morgan Twp
100~300 lot. A.sking $3.~0. Owner wili
conSider flnancong.

tOpper, U699. John's Auto 1983 D·50 tJuck. t3500.
Salao, Buloville Ad, Gallipo· 614·742·2461 .
lis. Ohio.

\!:!}

14.83 ~ere• More or l..eu - Green Twp. Lorge J-4 bedroom home. Excel·
v~ew and lnrorion. PRICED REDUCED - in 70'•·

Velma Nicinsky, Anociate
Phone 742-Jl92

ONE OF THIS AREA'S BETTER FARIS101 acres, m/1, lots of fertile bottom land,
pond, new fences. large barn. modern 3
BR home, 2 baths. Call lor more informa·
to on.

"t,980 Dataun. auto, radio,

1}\I~N't

~

Real Estate General

Auto Parts
8&amp; ·Acce880ries

len!

M:REAGE - !il acres on
State Route 143. $22,!00.00.

103 ACRES Mil. SPRINGFIELD'TWP ...:
Appro•. 96 A. tillable, older home h;s 5
BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, county water
40x60 pole bldg., 40x60 tobacco barn va:
roous other outbuildings.
'

1985 Chov. C-10 pickup
Plymouth TC347,000 !4WD)
black .with charcoal
mol11, 4tpd. 19B2 Dodge Int
..
Silverado,
AC, PS, PB.
0"1nl 2 dr., 5B,OOO mil01. auto. sliding rear
windcaw
1985 Ptymouth Tourismo, cr~ile , 'AM ·FM tape, electrk
2.2, 5 lpd., 4.000 miles. wrndows and door lociJa
Cali 614-379-2726.
bod liner. V-B. aux. goo tonk:
new t16.000 asking
$11 ,800. Call 614·446 ·
72 Trucks for Sale
9364.

1$79 dodge 4 WD. % ton
PU, good cond . Call 614·
446-2323.

76

NEW _LISTING - 19 77 M~dular home, J b.&gt;dronm•.living room, for·
mol dmm,g room , F.R.• 2 full botlu, modern kitchen wlside-b,··•ide re·
fr;_,erotor. 2 oven.•. dithwa•her &amp; diJJXMal. Built-in china Mbinet. A
rente~ lot. Could bf.' m011ed. Ulw 20'•·
,

THREE ACRES . - wilh
beautilui all cedar, four bed·
room home. Full basement,
approx. 5,000 sq. ~ - Call for
details.

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or
less located south of Mercerville. Approx.
20 A. llllable. Balance woods tobacco
base. Owner will help finance. '

air, new paint, good

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

#117

FARI - Three bedroom
brick-veneer home with free
gas, situated on 153 acres.
Several barns. Call lor ap·
point men!.

BRING YOUR HAIMER &amp; NAILS! - H\
slory home located at 62 Lincoln needs
wme work. Full basement, c1ty water, city
schools. $13.000.
·

t~ans,

torao, $1,500. Coli 614·
446-2300.

1~80

engine . Good cond . 614-

JBf.ofJO ..:.: Tara Ertater - Pool and ciuhho11re pri~ile~:er

RUTlAND - Three bed·
room .. ooe floor plan, all
eleclroc home, with full ba·
semen!. In-ground swim·
ming pool. Call today, owner
anxooos to sell.

RESIDENTIAL - COIIIERCIAL - OR
BOTH! :- Very nice bnck hofl'j! located at
225 Thord ·Ave. has had excellent care and
offers 1424 sq. ~. of living area wilh alull
partially fin ished basement. A~o features
acarport. workshop and a 28x38 concrele
block commercial type bldg. with 3 bays
formerly used as an automotive repaor
shop. Call for more information.

boot oft.r. Coli 614·246·
9167.

16,000. Call 614-446·
2107 or 614-245-5600.

COMPLETE AUCTION SER~ICE

&gt;' ·
~-"'

YOU CAN OWN A LITTLE BIT OF COUNTRY
- 5 acres m/1, on St Rt 141. Nice one
story home has a family room with YollOd ·
burner, full basement, heat pUf111, cent
air, cistern , well and county water. Green
school. Call for an appointment.

goqd, many extras, e750 or

73

BMR 452 - NE.W LISTING- Owner llilling to linanre lor qualiiied buyer
lhos 3BR house olf 141. Nice-clean oooro wrth 18'x40' alxlve ground pod.
Call lor details. f'nced at $28,000.

sidong (no upkeep). nat. gas forced air fum ace, city water,
large block garage, up· to 4 cars, nice heated large green·
house. All of thos plus apples, pears, cherries, plurll'i, andn
peach trees. In Gallipolis and Green Twp. Be the first lo see
all of lhiS.
H644

RE~L

Trucks for Sale

d~aiis.

lor

8 room home, up to 4 llldrooms, if needed, white vinyl

lfADINGHAM

72

1974 Chevy Subur~n 9 1976 Ford F-100 otendord
pusenger wagon, runs

dually

•

BMR 448- hrellent oooortunilv 1o l oov alivabo home at lhe rlihlllfi;~ •
Thts ts a very dean home ready lor a new owner. The ~JO! is rigtll
$13,500.
BMR 5SO - NE.W USIINC - 142 acres mil 01 Peny Twp. Nice
remodeled oome includes 3 BRs. 1oolhs. l&amp; otcheo oith dining area. Call

3.2 ACRES WITHIN \\ IILE OF GALLIPOLIS
A_ls~

Autos for Sale

8&amp; Ford Ranger 4•4. PS. PB,

~:~n~~~~~/=~~V:~\)~ ,:mil; r~":!"'~r.:~:"m :..

B~i~k Home - Entry hoU adjacent formal LR, bow window. Formal.
dtna~g room wl wa~n• coating &amp; beoutifu11 wall lex, Modern kitchen,
famtly ~om, w.b. ftreplace and patiQ door&amp;, back poeio. 4 bedrooms, 2
full &amp; ~ bntlu. FiniJhed bau•ment w/ rec. roonl. 2 cor garage. 2land1 cape.';' lot&amp;. lmmqculare cared for cu11orn bu ilr home. City 8 chools.
Ponrble loan assumption!
.

NEW LISTING - COUNTRY
LIVING - Four bedroom
ranch home with free gas
situated on 48 acres md
Pro.ate location off Rt 7
Asking $49,000.00.
·

1982 Toyota otatlon wagon. ·
PS. PB, ou1o, exc con'd,;
13,400.00. 304·895 '
3422 .
•

an appoonlmenl tooay.

446-4206

Geo. S. Hobstetter, Brokl!f

1975 VW Bootie now tiroo',
body good ohlpe. Coli 81 4: '
446· 7879 alter &amp;PM.
· '

BMR 441-IIWNER ANXious,ret~- 3 BR ranchS!uatedon 2.35 :

STUTES
REAL ESTATE.
. BONNIE STUTES, BROKER

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

'I

.. .

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

,,

BMR 451 - NE.W US'\ING - 3BR home on large kll indudes I&amp; living
room Wllh wb fireplac~ ~ining room. 2baths{&lt;JOe includes sel·in tub ~usa
separate shower). Yoo must see lhis ooe inode' Priced al $42.900.

OWNER WANTS
TO SELL

rooms. 2 batlts, gas
fon:ed air furnace, vinyl
sidint. Clean, ready to
move into. Priced to
sell. Call446·2396 after
6 P.M.

Autos for Sale' ·

71

Broker-Auctioneer
Call 446-0552 Anytime ;
•
Beth Null 245·9507
Steve McGhN
446-1255

Real Estate General

House at 1068 2nd Ave.
Modem kitchen .. 3 bed·

Autos for Sale

1984 Ply. Grand Fury. 4 dr.. 19n Ford LTD . 4 door. VB.
B cyl., 4 bbl.. all extru. body in good cond. , ., 396.
14500. Aloo 19BO Chryoior 614·949·2589.
.
LeBaron. 2 dr., 11BOO.
1981 ChlvrolotCopric Clll·
814· 742-2461 .
lie, low miloogo, AT. AC,
1985 Pontiac Floro loaded, AM-FM tope, Cruioe. 304·
under werr•nty . Mu1t 1ell. 875·8595 or 875-6440.
Call 814-992·582B

83 Oklo Cutiou 36,000
mlieo, t5,795. B2 Chovetto
air f2,295. 81 Chovatto MUST saL. 19B1 Comoro,
305. V-8. 4-sp., blUe motel·
1983 Pontiac Porilionno outo olr *1.998. 81 Citotloh lie, Cragera. Exc. Cond.
•1.
38
5.
B1
Ford
Escout
mint cond, low mlleoge,
.4800. 614·448·8574 Of·
loodod. Call814·367·7225 *1.495. 80 Codlllac· El Do· ter 6 p.m.
rod.o
t5,895.
79
Old
BB
S.
oltor6PM.
anytime. '
wogon 48,000 milao,
t2,595. 78 Cougor XR7 83 Trono Am fully loldod.
1983
f891. 7B Plymouth Horizon 22,000 mllu . coot 1983 Oodge Charger
dit161
e1e.ooo. will toko •9.800. Sholby, bklo oilvor, 6 opood.
t895. 7B Dotoun 8495, n
AC, AM·FM otoroo, 29.000
Oldo Cutl111 f29 6. BO mull ooll. 304·675·5B7Q.
mllao, t6 .200.00 . 304·
Chevy von t2,600. 77
Chevy Silverado PU t1,995. Moving: 198B More. Cou· 8B2·22B6.
gor, X·R7, orlginol cond.
1978 Plymouth Voiiont
moko oft.r; 1978 Chov 77 lincoln Continentol. exc .
Scomp. 2 dr .. redia. Mull B a. D Motors. 4 miles N. · Mollbu
Wogan loco· ohopo, 14500. Coil 304·
- to opprocisto. Coil 61 4· HolzorHoopitalonHwy 160. nomlcaiJStotion
11.800.00. 814· 875·11464 or 882·2442.
814·448· 7322.
246-9898.
245-944B.
1980 Chevotto. 4 dr .. AM·
FM coAOtto, t2,000 nogoti· 1974 Suburbon high mJ .
Real Estate General
oble. Coli 614·448·8049 loago, ovory option, good
OliO&lt; 5PM.
cond, runs exc.. 81 .600.
Coll614·266·1528.
1973 Pontile Venture body
exc .. new paint. PS. PB, air, 1974 Chevy lmpal8. 4 dr..
350 motor. Coli 814·258· 350 on gino, 47,000 act.
1922.
miloo, PS. PB. AC. good core
•1.500. 1974PU•. nowtono.
1977 Grand Prix, exc . good tlroo, now broku. good
cond .. PS, PB, good tlroo. tronoportatlon. Call 614·
AM-FM rodio, tilt whool. 246·6559.
Coll814·448·1387.

Real Estate General

p1rt1 for ca1h utes only.

71

1983 Ford Folrmont, 4 dr.
outomotJc, o~ . po, pb,
t4,300. 304·878·11429 .••

Clli1rence Selel

19116 Cougor, f12,988
poyoff, or may orrongo take
"""' poymonto. Owner loid·
off. Coli 814·258·8034.

l!rood grooming. Gordon
Setter feiNIIe obodionco 63.
Livestock
"olnod. EngliohCockorSpo·
niels. 388-9790.
Soiling lomlly oickno10. Aog •.
Proaonwynd Cottory K~n­ Ouonor horoo gentle , Poll·
ool. CFA Hlmoloyon, Poroion moo moro foiled Moy 88
..d Siomo11 kittens. AKC .'280. Coll814·379•2144.
Chow puppies. Coli 446·
3844 otter 7PM.
Horoo omoll vory gentle boy
color. Coil 614·245-8149.
toddy Beoro .. AKC Reg.
Chow Chow puppies. Coli Anguo.bull4 yuro old, very
IJ14·256· \271 .
gentle. Coli 814·245·9143
ofter 5.
~KC malo Englioh Springer,
wented for stud ~ervice
7 yr. old App. 'golding.
wook of Novombor 10.Litt.; exceUent riding hor11. Cell
choice. Coil 814·36B·9904. 814·446· 7040 oftor &amp;.
814·992·300B.
tKC Reg. Toy Poodles. Call
_,.14·446·8889.
Purebred Vork1hire Borel, 7
WMko old, 126.00 ooch.
Roglltorod Boeglao for 1110. 304-678-3634.
Coli 814·992-7883 altar
6:00p.m.
1983 Dodgo Colt 4 dr..
Pigs. 304-878·2197.
34,000 miloo, 4x2 tJono.
Dort&lt; .Brindol Pitt Bull podi· 12 pigo f20 . each. Aice'o Colll14·448-7414.
greed and regiltered with Pig Farm. 10 Mila Rd. 2
JIDBA, 1100.00. 6 montho miles oil At. 82 . 304 -458- 1979 Muotong, 11,960.
Col1814·388·9858.
old, Mro. Dolbort Floro. Sr.. 1683.
304·875- 7227.
1979 Buick Rogel limited.
power MJn-roof. windows,
64 Hay &amp; Grain
. .tl, AM-F M CIUitte, ex- ·
57
Musical
collent cond. t3,100. Coli
Instruments
614·448-0804.
Mixed gr111 hay for 11le.
Call 614-949-2237.
19n Ford Muotong noedo
AtBrunicordi'o ..... Noropoo- 1--------- wortc on body end engine
..- piano gimmicks.Juot Hoy for Olio. Good quollty. V-6. ou1omatic. good tlroo:
honen pl•no v1luea. We are Never wet. Wayne Aou1h.
t600. Coli 814·448·7141.
never under aoktl Brunicardi B11hln Rd.. Recine. Call
Muoic Inc. Corner 3rd . . &amp; 61.4·949·2287.
.
19.B4 Ronoult Encouro
Coun St.• Golllpolis, Ohio.
loaded, 5 opd.. lllghwoy
Firot quolltv mixed hoy. mlleogo,
ar•t cond. Book
Soxophono olto ox. cond. Lorgo boloo. Coil 814·949· voluo with
all odjuotmonto
King
lnstrumonto.
Call
614·
3059
oft. 4 p.m.
245·6149.
, _ _ _ _;___ __..;_ t4,900. Coot now f9.BOO.
Soe weokondo. Firm price
t4,000. Coli 814·448·
Wurlib:er Studio pi1no. exc.
Transport~II0/1
2846.
cond. Call 61 4·36B-9790.

f .1r111 Supp /1 1;s

Autos for Sale

71

November 10, 1

tong.

1

ADDISON TWP.- Possom Trot Rd.- 93
acres m/1, all woods. Old barn on property
$21.~0.
.
WHITE HOLLOW ROAD- WALNUT TWP
- 23 A. mil, all pasture, 2 story home has
3 BRs, bath, LR, k1lchen, full basement
well waler, SW schoql district.
'

./

~ Situate( on a 2.3 a:re I with alovely ~ew of
the
this 2800 sq ~. home offers plenty of pri·
vacy. The home has 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3 full ce ·
ramie tiled baths, equpped kotchen, 2 fireplaces.
2 family room ~. large finished basement !includes
i5x24 lamoly room/. 3 zone h/ w heal, 2 car car·
port, plus much more. Woll sell addilional42 acres
with oa k. walnut, cherry and ash . Hoo se and 2.3
ac. priced al $59.000
H401

$8,000- II ACRES- CHESHIRETWP
- Vacant land. Seplic tank oo property:
Call lor more ;nformalion.

1 NiCE MODRN HOME IN COUNTRY - ·2 yr. ~d . 3
: BR home on ll 'hac., l mileoff U.S. 35 near Doxol
' plant. 1,750 sq . ~- ol well insulated livllg space.
Andersen lhermo win dows. Nice kitchen. 2481b.
lobacco base. $50.000. In a hurry to se ll.
#126
•

. 1984 NASHUA MOBILE HOME . l4x70 - All electric woth cenlral aor. 2 BR. extra large bath.
Located in Quail Creek Park. Immediate posses·
: sion. Priced al $15.500.
H305

RAINY DAYS Will NO
DOWN- You'll enjoy the opportunity to stay
side and cook all day mI his fu lly equipped , beau·
tiful kotchen on Ihis l 'h yr . ~d tr i-levellto me Also
leatures large L·sha ped family room w/corner fi·
replace, 31arge BRs. and 2 full baths. Everyt,hing
on im ma culate condol1on. Sunny days aren I w
bad either wolh Ihe large 1.2 acre tree studd ed
yard. Green Twp. on ly 3miles from town. Give us a
call because there's more.
#241

CLOSE IN WITH COUNTRY SETTING - If you
want the peace and quiet.ollivong "out" but able
lo ·'zip" into town within 6-8 minutes, lh~ is the
home lor you. This 3BR. I 'h bath, spl it level is on a
paved road close to lhe hospital with almost i
acre of land. Proced r~ght at $58,500.
#407

CLOSE TO TOWN -Remodeled t'h story
offers 4 BRs; full basement. gas 1/a heat and wood
slove. New roof and new siding. l2x 16 wood
deck. $24,900.

~332

A SPECIAL HOME ON 1ST AVENUE - Your
dream olliving on i st Avenue and having the rover
at yoo r back door can now come Irue. We have the
privilege of offering you this extra -ordinary oppor·
tunity. The view from the library and living room
of thisturn of the century home will provide you
with many hours of quiet peaceful en1oyment.ln·
eludes a large living room wilh woodburninglire·
place. A formal entrance with center hall, formal
dinng, kitchen and bath on l si floor with 4 bed·
rooms, a study or hobby room and bath on lhe
2nd lloor. There os a_partial basement and 2 car
garage. You mu sl actually get out and seethis one
to appreciate il. Has one of Ihe largest useable
backyards along Ihe river on 1s1 Avenue. You may
decide lo buy ol on the spot since there is no more
like il in this town. There is no sign in the yard so ONE OF THE NICEST PlACES TO START- Faor·
field Acres- Green Townsh ip- Great little star·
Hi DOEN LIICATION- WHAT ANiCE SURPRISE! please call lor more information.
ler horne just the right size for the small family . 3
JIIIO
-You'll enjoy coming home to this very clean 3
BRs, l bath with shower, atlractive eal-in kitchen,
BR home evverytime. You might appreciate the COOL SHADED LEVEL lAWN Q
·
•
• uai1 ly older living room and i car garage. Nice fiat lot with
1 3 acre lol and country surroundings themost or
country atmosphere. $44,900.
maybe the well planned layout of 2000 plussq: ft. home remodeled on good taste. 7rooms on all. Well
H206
of living space will appeal to you mosl. Only six on,su lated wolh new wondows. partoal basement,
years old and still like lhe day it was buill. It In· _ih bath. Excellent garden area, 2 stora~e build·
eludes 2 full balhs. kitch en large enough lor 3 ~~~j ~ garage . 15 moles from Gallopolos Proced
cooks, large lamily room lpresenliy unfonoshed.
' ·
#308 SMALL IIA"UFACTURING WAREHOUSE bul owner will complete to your sal~faciiOn at
ll,OOO sq. H: located in the crty. 1900 H. finished
cost of malerials). dining room and 2 car garage. MINI FARM - 10 acres of open land qualrty office space, restrooms,lounge. sprinkler system.
lor.ated m Green Townshop, 1h mole fromRt. 141. h
20 50
'ld ' A 1 ·
s
concre.te floor, good rool, 3 indoor
Owner disgusted it hasn't sold. Will help finance. ome, x . storage buo ong. II ocaled on. t. heavyweight
and
4
outdoor
loadmg docks. Bargain priced al
On I ask ng $59 000 10'11 assumable mortgage Rt. 279,3 m11es east of Oak Hol l. WoU dovide seUong
Y 1
•$4l OOO)
l ac ., more or less. and home. leavong 9 acres of $198,000. When we say bargain, we mean bar·
Fogure ot out for yoursell at $10.00 a square
!balance approx.
· ·
11 ~n 3 good grass land and excellent hiiUop. New home gaon.
foot
!which
is way, way too cheap) ot would be
TWO RCRES OFlAN 0 along wilh 4 yr. ~d modern location. All priced at $4 5•000
$390.000. You'll never find 39,000 SQ . ~ . ollhis
home. Partoal basement with wood stove. 3 BR.
N346 quality anywhere for $198.000.
extra nice kitchen !lots of slorage space). front
and side porch (cone., lloor). patio. Two storage NEW~Y REMODELED HOME sotuated on 3 city lots
buildings. Clay grade school. cily high schooi.Just has 3 BRs. new bath and large eat-in kitch en. New LET US SHOW YOU A GREAT HOllE - In APtr·
can'l be beat for the price of $36.~0.
ca rpet, new roof and new ~do ng. Gas t/a heat, feet LoCition - This award winning floor pian
off6rs 4 bedrooms, large family room, kitchen.
20x30 garage/barn. $29.9(]0.
f212 large living room withlois of glass, fireplace, and a
wrap-around deck. 3 full baths, carpeting throu·
ghoul. formal entrance and dining. basement with
rec. room, palio doors. central air conditioning
and 2 car garage. Perfect setting on a 1.55 ac. lot
with good view 1ots of grass and nice shrubbery. A
perlect home 1or any ~~e family.

0

I•.

••
•e
•

•
•

e•

DUTCH COLONIAL HDIIE - 2 or 3 bedroom, conveniently located across from ne~ courthouse. WBFP, cent.
AC, part fm1shed basement. Noce garage wilh parking in
rear.
NEW LiSTiNG.:.. Commerciallollocaled althe corner of ••
Second _Ave. and Sycamore Sl. Good localion for most
any busoness.

t

ACREAGE:

•

e

~ ~Ffs ~to dt'i d GaQopoi5.....

••

. $ 2150000
30 ACRES L ow Eureka.. ..... .............. ........... 13 SoO ·oo •
' 4 ACRES: L~::; ~:~:; ~d ..... ....... ... ... llO'.ooooo •
8 ACRES, 21our am! I ~d"io. . ,................... !ij,OOO.OO •
16 ACRES Rt 554 n:; ~- City .. .............6,1Xn00 ea.
C eshtre ................... lO,OOO.OO
3 BEDRM 1-KJME w/ 6 a:res, &lt;'nliVl\ School Rd ....... $.Jo.IXXJ

e

.· .

1
RENT- Two 2bedroom apls. Overlooking Gallipolis I
e• ·FO~1 Course.
From $175.00 per monlh.
1
•

•
•

SEILING YOUR REAL ESTATE II BIG BU!INm
• • •
. CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SAL£SPER.ioN • ·,
( ,,1! \\I•HH l Rt
l} l

I

II •,

I (' 1

.1l t v

I

J ol

1 4 b ln l, ;,

l n1
I 'I' .\t

· OWNER TELLS BROKER TO SELL IMMEDIATELY!
- For $59,500 rts the buy of Ihe year. 4 BRs
brick and frame with 2 baths. Colonial dining
room , nice big eal·in kolchen and huge lamoly
room , 2 fireplaces and ;ust4 blocksfro mschools.
II you don'llike the price. make us an dler.
~128

/

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - HAS RE·
DUCEO THE PRICE BY SID 000- 132 9
acres m/1, in Walnut Twp., i ~ story ho~
has 3BRs. bath, 42•94 barn, large tobacco
base. Call for an appOintment.

FRIENDLY RIDGE ROAD - 25~ A. m/1,
approx. 5 acres tillable, 9(]0 lb. tob. base.
Older 2story home has LR, kitchen, dining
room, bath. Barn on property.

THIS
said 1would last
lifetimes and after 36 years,
i slilllook and feel asgood as new. The best qual·
ily of evverything- real wood paneling, 2 stone
foreplaces, concrete foundation walls. lifetime
roof. copper gutlers. I llgure n would cost
$125,000 to rebuild me. My pres.,t owner has
been transferred and desires' a quick sale. 3 or 4
bedrooms, den, lamily room. formal dining, 2
bat~s. 2 car garage and full basement. $72,!il0.
Jlll4

ms

1104

Colonial
just waiting for the right lamily lo
mowe in. Many lamimlies in lhe last 140 years
have enjoyed good times in this one. Three large
bedrooms, very attracti ve old lome lireplace, eat·
in ~tchen , large lamily room. 2'h baths and base·
men I. Besl of alf is the big shady lawn. in cludes 2
extra lots. Price reduced from $106,000 lo
$78.000.

NEW LiSTING - GET YOUR MONEY'S WORTH
with this very aNraclove and spacious 2 story
home. Decorated in excellent tasle and in "move
in" condition, this 3 BR beauty oilers morelhan
most: large comfortable fam ily room with stone fi·
replace, sunken formal living room, lormal doning
room, lormal enlrance. beautiful oa k stiarcase. 2
full baths, plu s exira half bath on laundry room.
large 211 car garage. All on a beaulofully lands·
caped FLAT i ac. lol. Only 2moleshom Spr~ng Val·
ley. $89,900
.
#203

OWNER IS TAKING A LOSS - Owns 2 homes- mu st sell one. Your chan ce lo buy agood older
2 story. i 3 car garage and exira iol Cornee lol has
good frontage on the main hi ghway whoch makes
this a good commercial site. $39.900
#127
A VERY PLEASANT HOMEY PLACE TO LIVE NEW LiSTING - Peaceful seHon g overlookon g
rover. large 4 BR ranch wolh lormal entran ce .
large LR plusden, Or. 3 bedroomsand 2 balhson
mam tloor. Den on eludes solid wood panelong an d
woodburning loreplace Upslaors ha s on e large
bedroom and a huge floored aNoc lor ~orage . 2
car garage includes a large workshop area . All on
abeautoful i 1h ac. seHingallhe edge oil own oveo ·
looking the river.
#100
141 AC. M/L OF SOUTHERN OHIO HILLS &amp; VAL·
LEY AREA - Over ~ mile of Raccoon Creek Iron·
t1ge w~h very scenic bank areas. Good road fron·
tage with several hilltop localiOn slo buold.Count~
water available. Young walnullree planllng with
many now 5" in diameter. 100 ac. oltomber in all.
Let us show you lhis listin g. Askong $55,000.

#334

�76

Auto Parts

81

&amp; Acca sao ria.s

Home
Improvements

Old otyiO Chevy Ralleys,
304-875-6858.

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

St:rvlct:s

81;

Home
Improvements

81

B. &amp; 0. Home Improve·

menlo, vinyl siding. olumn
liding. continuout gutter,

tered in

roam additions, soffit and

Ohio. All WOfk

guaranteed. Call 304-273- replacement windowo, 304·
2811 . Ravenswood. W. Vo·. 676-2844.

1..:.......:..----:-Servk:e. Carpentry , Remodeling,

HousecallsonRCA.Ouazar, Room Addition, All building
GE . Specielin9 In Zenith.

. repairs. Cement II Block

Call 304-576-2398 or 614446-2454.

work. Free Estimate. 304676 -4322.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump

Tree trimming end removal.
Insured. free aatimatBI,
reasonable r1te1, 304·676·

removal . Call 304-676 ·
1331 .
RINGLES 'S SERVICE. ex-

Unconditional lifetime gua-

rMt•· Local refer.,ces

furniahad. Free estimates.

C11ll cclloct1 ·814·237·
0488. doy or night. Rogers
....ment w.t.rproofing .
D.end M. Contractors. Vinyl
.idino. replacement windows. insulating, roofing,
new end remodeling, con -

82

83

Plumbing

Excavating

Business Services

&amp; Heating

Inside:

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourdt and Pine

. Golllpolla. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or
614· 446-4477

86

By the Bead ••••••••••••• Page 5
·C1i•4f!eds ,; ...... Pages6, 7,- 8•.

General Hauling

.

1----....,----

Colralca-n' .............'.Pap I

JIM'S PLUMBING Ito HEAT- Jomoo Boys Water Sorvico.
lNG. At . 1, llox 366, Galli· . llloo poola filled. Coli 814·
polio. Coll614-367·0678.
218· 1141 or 814-448·
1175 or 814-448·7911 .

83

Deatlli ...~ ............... Page 10

cian, mason, painter, roof·
Hncluding hot ur

applicotion) 304-675-2088
or 675-7368 .

Edliotiai ..................P&amp;~e2

4" Sewer .~ ........... $3.70
4'' Ell ................... $1.00

Sport&amp; .............. Pages 3, 4, 6

1" 160# Water ...... 19•

Excavating

EYE IHE
WANT ADS
FOR GREAT BUYS

Get your carpet in ship 1hlpe
with Captain Steamer, furniture cleaning-water demege

ing

1" Gas Pipe ............. 11'

"F'" Dtll~~tg"

•

PH. 304-295-7845
Mineral Wells, W. Va.

Residential Windows •
Awning, 20 Pet. off on
insulated replacement win·
dow, vinyl and steel aiding.
405 Main St. downtown Pt.

2010.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump sales and service.

Pla81ont. 304-675-5262.

J.A.R . Conllruction Co ..
Rutland. Oh . 814-742 2903. Basementa, Footers.
Concrete work. Backhoe' 1,
Diner &amp;. Ditcher. Dump

•

Limt~tone. tand, gl"a'lo"el,
house coal. 1 ton &amp; up.

304-895 -3802

Probe odor
complaint in
Racine area

814-367-7750.

Fred 's Bldg. 'nd Remodel-

J.and l. lnste)lation. RoofIng, vinylsidintl. storm doors
end windows. Free esti-

ing, basements, porches,
roofing, siding, painting,
leveling trailers, satisfstion
guaranteed, 304 - 773 ·

Real Estate General

Dump truck. hauling aer-

vice, 304-676-3190.

87

91T6 .

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Avo., Goilipolla.
814·448-7833 or814·448·
1833.

Real Estate General

•

R I M Furniture M•nufac-

1urlng, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. Coli 814·28814'70, call Eve. 614·446·
343B . Old .&amp; now
Uphollored.

PIIU IIDUUD TO $SS.OOO

OWNER MOVING TO FARM- Excellently located 3BR brick
ranch in Mills Village. Oiher leatures include LR, FR,
equpped kitchen. 2\\ baths, full basement, l0•20 cowered
patio, wery nice flat fenced back yard . Make an ~pomtment
lo see lhis one today.

Ferguson'•

, Health Department and EPA landfill.
respresentatlves have been In
Also, m tons of slag was hauled
Racine concerning a complaint of from Foote Mineral to be used lor
odor from the sewer district chip and seal work on the cemetary
manhole along I:tt.' 12!1. It was road and other vUlage streets Rizer
reported at last week's regular reported.
meeting ot Racine VUiage Cooncll
Thorllef Bentz met wtth council
that I!Je representatives were In and volunteered to help work oo the
contact with a memberd.thesewer drain along Rt.124 from the corner
board and Jndfcated they would to near Bentz's Shirt Shop. CouncU
continue to monitor the problem.
accepted his offer.
Council approved the Board of
Council decided to watt untO atter
Public Affairs recommendatiOn to the first of the year to Install a
notexerclaetheoptlons to purchase telephone at the Shrine Club
property near the aerator building.
buUdlng.
Councilman · Carroll Teofored,
It was also reported that permits
who represented the vUiage at lhl' to cut up free wood on the Shriner's
recent public hearing lor county Park property are available from
Community Development Block the village clerk. The park was
Grant funding, reported the vU- recently deeded to the village.
!age's application lor funds has won
In other matters, council com·
!lrstroundapprovalfromthecounty mended tlie young peopole of the
commissiOn.
community for good behavior
Alfred Lyons, town marshall, during Halloween. No major Inc!-·
reported he had six arrests (five dents or vandalism were reported .
speeding and , one for pas51ng a
Also, council reminded residents
school bus), collected $31lln booos. l that this week's trash collection wUI
lnvestlgated four accidents, had :It ., bedelayedadaybecausethecounty
calls, answered 10 complaints and rAndflllls closed for Veterans Day.
traveled439mllesdurlngthemonth
CoucU recessed untD 7 p.m.
1 ,. • Meao:\ay, NOI/tmber....I,'O!It Q(Qc1obl!l:, , .
•
;
- - Sttfi!I' Corinnlssloner Glen Rizer lngwDI be held attheShrlner' sPark
reported that during October he bulldlngandresldentsarelnvltedto
hauled 17load.!t dtrash to the county attend.

Uphollttry,

304-87&amp;-6472.

SUNDAY PUZZL.ER
~l~=~~you're trying to co1m111'&lt;&gt;1Tise

eluded location while ttill being
enough to walk
to town . This immaculate 3-5 bltdroom home isoneof
1 kind. Very spacious floor plan also allows 3 full
.. th1, family room with woodbumer insert, large liv·
ing room with fireplace, formal dinina. 2 car garage

ACROSS

ond lorve dock ovoriooking 5 acres of privocv lwoodo).

Your wife will lowe it and your kids couldn 't have a better piiCI to grow up . And after all, isn 't that what
m1kes you happy1 Give u1a call . Owner will consider
any

offer. 169,900 .

WHY SEnLE FOR TELLING THE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?
Ask Yourself litis Question-Then Lnt With Us

Wistrnon Real Estate Aaencv - 446-3644
Real Estate General

•Willis T. Leadingham. Realtor. Ph. Home 446-9539

Canaday Realty .
.446-3636c.A~

PH. OFFICE 4411-7699

NEW ON THE' MARKET
Ideal home for family. 7rms.
. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs, modern kitchen . Nice landscaped lot. Countv water and
sewer. City school district.
Call tor more mlormat1on.
Nice home.
#630

8£AUTIFUl RANCH HOME- 3 B£0ROOMS. 2BATHS,FORMAL DINING. EQUIPPED KITCHEN, FIREPLACE IN LIVING
ROOM, FUll BASEMENT. AITACHED 2 CAR GARAGE WITH
AMPU: STORAGE. 5ACES. FRONTAGE ON NEW RT. 160 AND
OLD 160 AND CLARK CHAPEL ROAD.

BRICK HOME- 25 ACRES
In Country. 7 moms, 4 bedmoms, 2 aths. heat puffll.
Sieel doors, double glass roll
windows. country ~tchen
with lots and lois ol cabinets.
Full asement-fin~hed . Out·
side buildilgs: one 811'118',
one 8'112'. one 9'xl2'. 18 assorted lru~ trees. Many other
features. SEe it now. tJtly
$59,910.
#642

COUNTRY STYL£ HOME
In very good condition. Corner lot, appro•. I ~ acres level
land. Metal barn, 45'•45', 8 room home. 3llldrooms. 2 bath, rooms, appro•. 1750 9:J. ft. ollivi'lg space. mod. kitchen. fi .
· replace. basement. tural water system. Family type home
close to grade school. Phone now lor appointment.

11633

BRICK RANCH ON 16 ACRES $98.000 :... 4 OR 5 BED·
ROOMS FAMILY ROOM OFFICE OR DEN. 2 COf&lt;t'lfTE
KITCHENS, NICE BARN. SUITABLE FOR HJRSES VERY
NICE!! SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.

3.2 ACRES WITHIN 'h MILE OF GAlliPOliS
Also 8 room home. up to 4 bedrooms. il needed, white vinyl
s1ding (no upkeep), nat. gas forced air furnace, city water,
large block garage, up lo 4 cars. nice heated large green house. All of lh1s plus apples. pears. chenies. plums. and
peach trees. In Gallipolis and Green Twp. Be the lirst to see
all ol this.

SOMEONE . WANTS YOUR. HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL US!!

CADMUS- VERY PRETIY RECENTLY REMODELED RANCH .
HAS BEAUTIFUL CARPET, EAT·IN KITCHEN. FUll BASE·
MENT. GREAT BUY AT $32.000.

DOWN
1 Having a flat
breastbone
2 Assumed name
3 Agreeable
4 Dawn goddess
5 Sforzando: abbr.
6 Fastens
7 Spoken
8 Equality
9 Bone
10 Recollect
11 Perverse laney
12 That man
13 Imitated
14 Earn
15 Wild ass of india
16 Possessive
pronoun

t7 Steamship: abbr.
21 Buccaneers
22 The "Cotlon
State"
23 Location
25 Valle
27 Group of persons
28 Put on one's
guard
30 Difficult
31 Cure
33 Gave up
35 vessel
36 Depend on
37 Roman garments
39 Bone of body
41 Conduct
42 Lifeless
44 Buckels
47 Paper measure
48 Baker's producls
49 Tubes
50 South American
animal

54 Chastise
55 Force
56 Aromas
59 Dorman!
60 Fish limbs
61 Tellurium symbol
63 Transaclion
66 Earth goddess
67 Belonging to me
68 Bitterly scornful

70
71
72
73

Lassos
Persian hal
Fruit drink
Communion
plates
75 Walked
unsteadily
77 Betore
78 Nahoor sheep
80 Mud
83 Erase: printing
88 Tract of waste
land
88 Cove
89 Want
90 Railroad : abbr.
91 Mother
94 Vapor
96 Babylonian deity
98 Bother
99 Pretentious
homes
100 Raise
102 Burning coal
104 Holm oak
105 Overlook an
opportunity
106 Ingredient
107 Render insane
109 Rent
111 Asphall and Iron.
e.g.
112 Winter vehicle
113 Detest
116 Convene
118 French tor female
friend
119 Uni1s of Italian

FOOl'BAU HONOREE! - MetniN!os · at Soutbl!nl'a SVAC
CJtamplon football team 'rooelved !pi w ·lioaan tltutng Sat!trda,y's
· · . _ , _ banque(: Plelured are!IEIIIonJlmtnJ' Wolle, SeanGn.....,r,
Healh 1011, Brian Freeman, Mickey 1\adler, Eric Thoren;
Baek-Kelley Grue!er, ScoU Wlcldlae, Jay ProOllt, .Jeff Connolly,

SOU'DfERN CHEERLEADERS - Tltele, glrl!J lned the ttldeiiiM;&amp;
·ll1rotllhollt the l'!l'llild CIIIIJIIIIIp, eheerln11: Southem'• Tornadoes to
live COIIIIOOUIIve leape vlctorlra. Sealed left to rlll:ltl are Kbn Adams,

Veterans
pay tribute
to others

GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
Spring Valley Subdiw~ion . Two latge lots, each lot is 101.8 by
111.2 c1ty water. city sewer, and natural gas are available.
Special this week. Call now.
'
'456
,
LUXURIOUS
County estate with 3 Indiana stone fireplace. including one
1n a master surte. 4 BR total. 2\\ baths, 112 acres more or
less. Just short d~tance lrom Gallipolis. This wstom built log
home features nea~y 3700 9:J . ft. of beaullfully deco!ated
and well planned living. Stunning living and dining area wrth
beauliful hardwood lloors. The lovely kitchen is lully
equipped and designed for convenience. Central heating
and air. Attached g.~rage. Includes 5 room caretaker hK"fo

@1985 United Feature Syndlcale

i

Shuler, Rear - Advisor Sandra Baer, Tracie Beegle, J11 Ne-_e, Kellf
. Rizer, Jl!sijea Evllll8, 1111d Monica HW. Ab8eotl WM Aitpe ~1!11. IIIIer
was honored
alle!llor member of the !qlllld.

·

as

brvtlle Marks, 37, a resident of
Sclpkl Township Rd. 5· (HIU Rd.) .
~ar Camtiter, apparently commilled suicide late Suli:lay or early ·.
.Moll!iay · according to .the ·Meigs
.County Shefiff's Deparlment.
Marks' 11-year old daughter
found h1m hanging In the family
garage about 6:45 a.m. this
morning.
DeputY Kenny Kleln ;of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department, received a call about 7 a.m. from Joe
Marks, a brotherrlthevlctlm. Klein

arrived at the scene about 7:22a.m·.:
According to Klein, members
the vlctbn'. .s family said he left their·
trailer late last night alter threatenIng to commit suicide. No one In the:
iamlly.was sure ottheexact time he-:
left the home.
Klein did not know the approxi-:
mate time of death.
.
Coroner James Conde arrtved a~
the scene about 8:10a.m.
·'
The body was removed to ari
Athens funeral home.

ot:

'

~

Board releases
longwaU results

.\

-

. I

~

.....

By United Pres8lntemallonal

Drilled w'ell with electric puffll. Paneled walls. carpeting and
fino. Hurry. Priced $26,!100.
#635

m
LIJ

Connolly, Most Improved; and Sean Gn.eser, 110 Peroent Award.

Rochelle Davlll, Carrtlaa IIBI; Aln!U Cardone, Usa Pope, and Dina

42 ACRES IN COUNTRY

AUDRY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
IARY FlOYD. REALTOR, 446· 3383
25 LOCUST STREET. GAlliPOliS. OHIO ,...,.,.

OfleM\&gt;e Unernan; Kelley; Gruet~er, Belt Defensive llaek;
Wlcldlne, Belt Defeasive Uneman; Bolo, Best Offenslv~ Baek;

currency

122 Ambassador
124 City in Germany
125 Doom
126 Evades
128 Storms
130 Dance step
131 Fracas
132 Church official
135 Saucy
137 Shopping area
138 Poker stake
140 Tille of respecl
142 Crowd
143 Frozen wafer
144 Behold!
145 Diphthong
147 Prefix: with
148 Similarly

5 rooms remodeled home, one lloor, bath, tront porch.

49 ACRES- JUST OUTSIDE CITI- BEAUTIFUL WOODS. SOME
TillABlE lAND COMFOflTABLE, 3 BEDROOM HJME. PERFECT
RETREATl $65.00J. BUY WITH $15,000 DOWN PAYMENT. BALANCI AT 10% FOR 20 vtARS.
PRECIOUS ACREAGE ON RT. 35 NEAR ~TATE HIGHWAY PATROL STATION 1.6 ACRES, SUIT ABLE FOR RESIDENTIAL OR
COMMERCIAL PRESENTLY HAS I STORY FRAME HOME
WITH FUll BASEMENl. GARillE,IN GOOD CONDITION. ASK·
lNG $69,00Q. OWNER Will CONSIDER LOWER OFFER 1 ·

*

Clt.-le Bolo,~ Welle, Eric~. ~d Wendell aa.-IL Jbn Wolle
" wu

•

Carpenter area
man found dead

11622

DON'T OVERLOOK THIS - BEST BUY IN GALLI ACOUNTY'
AN OUTSTANDING VALUE. THIS CUSTOM TOP QUALITY
RANCH IS· PRICED BELOW MARKET TO SELL QUICKLY' 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, OAK CABINETS, RANGE. REFRIGERA
TOR, SNACM B~R IN KITCHrn, BEAUTIFUL CUSTOMDRAPES
BY TUPE'S. FULLY CARPETO FIVE ACRES. CITY SCHOOL SY·
SEM. $54,0DO.

I•

150 Arlslocratic
151 Prophets

OWNER FINANCING -HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Make us an ofler. 8 room home in the Heatley Addition to
Bidwell. 4 bedrooms. built·in cabinels. dbl. s/sink, shingle
rool. wood or coal healer. apple trees. ~ de porch. rural water
syslem. Call us now.

LAWN. CONVENIENT lOCATION NEAR CITY.
THIS IS THE MOST CONVENIENT IDeATION IN THE CiTY!
NEAR CHURCHES, SCHOOLS, DOWNTOWN SHOPPING.
APPEALING 4 BEDROOM. 2 ~ BATH HOW£ HAS FOR.MAl DIN ING ROOM. EQUIPPED KITCHEN. $48.500.

·.r..•:-z-

ruler

Partners
Dropsy
Sainte: abbr.
Crimson
Master
Summit
Emerald Isle
90 Buys back
92 Oolong
93 Woody planls
95 Scoff
97 Spanish pot
98 Freight agent:
abbr.
99 Hebrew letler
101 Related on
mother's side
103 Meadow
104 Arrow poison
105 Pondered
108 Everyone
110 Dammed up
112 Skidded
113 BelOnging to lhat
man
114 French article
115 Dregs
117 Nun's outfit
118 Fish sauce
119 Young girl
120 Teutonic deify
121 Be of use
123 Males
124 Wall Street
market: colloq .
125 Sulls
126 Wine cup
1?.7 Wheel on
turnlture piece
129 Remunerated
131 Female horse
132 Level
133 Summer: Fr.
134 Opening
136 Lineage
137 Apportion
138 In conformity with
139 Compass point
140 Rescue
141 Pallor
142 Masculine
143 Write
144 True to lhe fact
146 School: Fr.
148 Performed
149 Son of
Agamemnon

m9

$43.000- BRICK AND FRAME RANCH . HAS PRETTY PICTURE WINDOW. 3BEDROOMS, ATTACHED GARAGE. FENCED

\:J

nickname

41 Learning
42 Transaction
43 Jump
45 One oorne
46 Tantalum symbol
47 Peruse
48 Prison
compartment
49 Royal
51 Sesame Street
character
52 Printer's measure
53 Dine
54 Cry of donkey
55 Minor ilems
57 Expire
58 Dinner course
60 Quarrel
61 Stalemate
62 Shuts noisily
64 Revised: abbr.
65 Early morning
66 Female
67 Repairs
69 Besmirch
71 Obese
73 Punlshmenl lor
crlmo
74 Former Russian

76
79
81
82
84
85
87

FREE NATURAL GAS- 140 ACRES
Appro• . 10 miles from Gallipolis - lots of Raccoon Creek
frontage - approx. 00 acres tillable and tobacco lllse. Nice
40'160' barn. 6 rooms. 3 BR home with lree natural gas to
heal your home in w1nter and cook your food. lots ollruit
trees. Nice country seHin g. See lhis me.

$15,0

~

1 Rants
6 Deep sleep
11 Goatlike antelope
18 Reserved ,
19 Expunge
20 Feels regret for
21 Courtyards
23 District in
Germany
24 Chief Executive
011.
26 Pitching slats.
27 Calcium symbol
29 Poem by Homer
30 Mound
31 Stop
32 Excavate
33 Mountain pass
34 Stool pigeons:
slang
35 Cudgels
36 Widow
38 Cylindrical
40 White House

1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 Conti
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, 'O.hio, Monday•. November 11, 1985

Vol.36, No.145
Copyrip!ltod 1988

trucka. &amp; water-gal·aewer·
electrical linea .

•

at y .......,enttne

work, 304-676-2295.

Starks Tree and Lawn Service, landscaping. 304-576 -

cme. Coli 304-773-5131 .

...-tn. Coll814·992-2772.

November 10. 1916

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

7121 .

perienced carpenter, electri-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Home
Improvements

Pump sales. service. Regis-

RON 'S Television

19n Prowlor. 20ft. Too
meny oxtrooto lilt. EC. Call
114'·949·3087 oft. 6 p.m.

.

Pomeroy-

Times-Sentinel

••

Veterans Day celebrations departed from tradtt iOn this year paying trtbute not only to those who
served In the U.S. armed forces, but
to women who held down the
homefront and to the South Vietnamese who fought with U.S. troops.
A Vietnam veteran near Seattle
began the 27th day of a fast caiUng
attentiOn to U.S. servicemen stU!
missing In VIetnam. Gino Casan·
ova, 34, has vowed togowlthoutfood
lor 61days, while living lna7footby7
loot "tiger C!llle·"
•
Veterans Day parades were to be
held, across the natiOn from the San
FranciscO Bay area to New York's
~hAvenue.
.
Some 400 Air Force R&lt;YfC units
around the world were toparttclpa1e
In 11 simultaneous U.S. nag-raising
'
ceremony .
In Washington, VIrginia Gov.
C'lt!lrles RDbb was to be the lteymte
speaker at ceremonies at the
VIetnam Veterans MemOJ'Ial,
where the names of !18,022 serylce~wiD died In battle soon will be
joined by !he names of 96 servicemen kUied. In battle-related
accidents.
'
President Reagan was sdteduled
to lay a wreath at the Tomb d. the
Unknown Soldier In Arlington
National Cemetary near.
. Was'fl"glon.
•

OOACIIES AND GUEST - PldU~ wlh Coach
B1J lfen8ler, left, and Darrell Dugan, rl~ Is .,nner
llalland Hlsb School pill mentor Jbn Vennarl, who
BerVed u bono~ pea&amp; opetlker at Soutltera'o pill
~ 011 !WurtlaJ. Verumart, fonner Coach at the
l'ear, COidled Illl«&lt;lllatRullandwherebeullllzedthe ,

llnll:le will MJCC eia1u11y. Dupn dh Yl!llnllrl'a help
IBped Bill 11etut1er Implement the Gftftl8e at
Southern. Veotlllll'l !ltreiletl lhe lmportlmoe of
education, dltlclpUne, and resped as 'Jif"IM'ee Ill a
ltudent-llthleCe.

users. .

Candidate Rhodes has good memory
By LEE LEONARD
In goverrunent can do.
, UPI~Reporler
"We losi every ·otrlce In the
COLUNBUS (UPI) - James A. Statehouse," Rhodes lamented In
Rhodes, Republican candidate for recalling the Crottemcandal which
gOvernor, Is In the right PartY- he 'befell Republicans In 1970. "They
has a ~ uke an elephant.
called us crooked! They said we
In exhorjlng an estimated 3,tm were cheating! "
supporters saturday to join him In a
And so Rhodes, WID announced
"crusade"tounseattheDemocratlc otflctally thai he wt11 seek the
admlnlltratk&gt;n of Gov. Richard F. • Republican IIUbernatorlal nornlnaCA!leste next year, the 76-year old , tlon nextyear,ID'gedRepubllcansto
four-term fonner goveroor reached do likewise to Celeste, WIDm IE said
bock 15 years to
what scandal !Eadll an "administration that acts

shcJr

A hearing held before the Ohio
'Reclamatlon Board of Review In
December, January and February
a5 a result of an appeal by ctitzens
Organized Agrunst Longwalllng has
been decided at!lrrnlng the DivisiOn
of Reclamation's approval d a coal
mining and reclamatkln pennlt to
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs No. 2mine.
In the "conclustonsoflaw" section
of a decisiOn handed down by the
boaiV cl review, the board not only
found that the pennlt application
was adequately prepared, but that
the propoeed mining operation has
been designed to prevent material
damage to the 'hydrologl~ balance.
and that Southern Ohio Coal has
adequately provided for the protec·
tlon of the tights of present water

like theY have a stolen credtt.card."
Busloads of noisy suppor lets
came to Scioto Downs harness
racetrack from all over the state,
braving a steady downpouf to dine
on baked beans, bratwurslandcole .
slaw at $100 a penon. They pumped
an estimated $400,tm Into the
Rhodes campalgn colters.
·
"This wt11 not be just another
etectkln," bellowed Rhodes, who
has been governor 16 vears. longer
than anyone 111 AmeriCan history.
'

''Tile Board, after careful consideration of till! irilonnatlon con~lned
In thepennlt application and In light
of the testimony of several experts
at the hearing, believes the hydrologic determlnatkln to be npt only
legally ·sufficient, but highly accurate as well,' • the declskln states.

Because longwall mining allows
lor planned subsidence lnapredlcta·
ble, Ulll!onnandcontrolled manner.
the lxlard found that uSing a mining
technology with those aspects Is an
eHectlve means of preventing
material dam'V to the tzydrologlc

balance.

"When the potential effects of
Southern Ohio .Coal's underground
mining activities are considered
against the backdrop of the entire
hydrologic balance oft he mine area,
It Is clear 1o this Board that the
adverse lmpacl of the company's
mining will be Insignificant," the
decision states.
Also, "the Board believes thatthe
use rl the longwall mining method
assures a great ~ee of protectiOn
to water users. as this fonn of
mining allows for a strong water
f!lllacemenl program. This Is •
because the a!lendant subsklencc
will occur Immediately after the
mining, whlln there exists an actlve
mining company with a dear
obligatiOn to replace affected water
suwlies."
Southern Ohio Coal'.s water replacement Includes the following ·
aspects as stated In the decision:
"Onoelthasbeendetennlnedthata ·
supply has been affected, the ·
comjiany promised ·to: I. provide
temporary water supplies while a
pennanent alternative source Is ·
sought or remedial measures are·
taken; 2. seek an alternative source ·.
on a case-by-case basts: based upon·
negotiations as to tiE type o1
supplies to be Installed, and 3. give
first consideration tO the develop- ··
inent d on-site sources."
v

•

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