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Hannan ·Trace wins holiday to
Gallia and Meigs Countians discu88 their hopes
· B-1
'
for the
Columnist Lowell Wingett writes of resolutions,
and· their breaking-Page A-2

Inside:
Along the River .......... .R- 1-8
Clustfleds .................. D-3-7
Oealhs ......................... D-3

tmes
Vtl. 11 No. 44

high forecast
in the 20s

Ec1Jtoria18,. .................... A·2
ll'ann ......................... C-7,8
Sports ........................ C- 1-fi
State-Nallonal ............... D-1

•

c., ............

New Years Day

tnfitttl
9 Sections. 62 Pages 36 Cenb
A Multimedia Inc. N8\:ilpeper

Middleport l'llmero)· Gallipolit-Point Pleatant Sunday, January 1, 1984

Meigs County '.83: a ·b ackward glance
By BOB HOEJILICH

actually took place over the year.
Early In the year Judge John C. Bacon stepped
down 8tter many years as head of the Meigs County
Cmunon Pleas Court. The Salem Center School got
newmoblleclassroornsafteralengthybattlewlththe
Meigs Local Boaro of Education on keeping the
overcrowded school intact. TheSouthernHlghSchool

'nmeit 8 1 Mhd &amp;all
Meigs Countlans reflecting on 1983 might have the
canment, "Nothing much happened".
However, a backward glance at just some ot the
happenings In the county for 1983- some good, sOme
unfortunate, some bad- reveals !bat quite a bit

Weather Service. ( AP
Luerphoto).

By 'lbe ~IMed l're88
The numbtngooldwavewhlch has
blanketed the state for more than a
week, repeatedly sending tempera·
lures to well below zero, has kept the
state's utilities busy supplying heat,
ottlctals say.
But most ututty companies said
the record cold wave hasn't set
records for gas and elecbiclty use.

throogh with another championship year.
Residents near around WUkesvllie began lodging
complatnts against longwalling by the Southern Ohio
Coal Co. Property owners l:hargro damage to their
property was caused by the longwalling process of
mining coal.

A brighter side to coal mining and the economy took
place in AprU when some 1400workers were recalled
to their jobs with the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Meigs County, for just a few thousand dollars and a
lot of federal help, opened a landfill to take care of the
trash and rubbish beating not only many other
1Continued on page A3 i

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

Cold weather
heat wiii ·cost

Tlllk1'Y DAY WEATIIEK
FORECAST MAP - Tldlll the
~ daJ weather I~ map
for tile month of January u
predicted by the National

Basketball team·- always winners, It seems- came

Gallia County '83: a
year of controversy,
trials, charges, dams

Ohio natural gas customers
servedbyColumblaGasofOhlolnc.
consumed 16.1 billion cubic feet of
natural gas In the week epdlng Dec.
24. Eight bWloncublc feetwereused
In tjle same period last year.
.Cohunbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., which serves 25 Ohio
counties, tncludlngGalllaandMelgs
Counties, reported consumption In
the week ending Dec. 24 was 241
million kilowatt hours. It was 188
million during the same week last
year.
But Richard Hammersmith. spokesman for Ctnclnnatl Gas &amp;
ElectrJc Co.. said of power con·
surnptlol), "It's up a little bit but
nothing slgnltlcant."
CG&amp;E's gas customers also drew
tlielr highest III'I'IOIIIIt .llllll winter on"
Dec. 24, a total of B'lO,tm metric
cubic feet. . "That Is the . fourth
largest total we've ever had." ·
H8rnn)ersmlth said. The record gas
load was set Jan. 15, 1972, at 900,tm
metric cubic feet.
·.
CG&amp;E serves about 570,tm rest·
dentlal customers, Including gas
and electrtc.
Of CG&amp;E's response to the
demand so far, he said, "We really
haven't had any problems. We've
experienced some outages, but
nothing really significant."
Mike Walsh, media relations
coordinator for East Ohio Gas Co.,
said no gas-use records have been
set this month.

By KEVIN KELLY
nn-&amp;ntlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Continuing controversy over Maxine Plummer's
performance as executive director
of the tri-eounty 648 mental health
board - resulting In two criminal
charges - was the top local news
story during 19831n Gallla County.
'The first week of the new year
hadn't ended yet when a lengthy
study of Mrs. Plummer's operation
of board activities by a stateappointed community review group
was released.
• Before the year ended, a grand
jury secretly indicted Mrs.
Plummer- on Dec. 19- for theft in
office and using her position to
lnlluence a public contract. She
pleaded mt gullzy \PJJotll chari:es
three days later. A trlalrnaybe held
In March, officials said.
The review panel report, which
also studied Dr. Bernard Nlehm's
admlnlstratlonofthe.formerGallia·
Jackson-Meigs Community Mental
Health Center, criticized Mrs.
Plummer's performance as wasteful and recommended her
resignation.
Mrs. Plununer refused the
board's request to resign, and It
wasn't until five new members were
appointed to the board In summer
that action toward her dismissal
was.taken. A list of written charges
were prepared and a series of public
hearings were held Sept. 13-15. At
. the concl1J$lon of those hearings, the
board fired Mrs. Plununer.
ln the meantime, she had filed a
$12 million lawsuit against the board
and state and local 'officials,
claiming her reputation had been
damaged. That suit Is expected to be
heard In U.S. District Court inAprU .
The year also saw more action on
the pro~ construction of a neW

~uto

ljability law finds
Ohio drivers vulnerable

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Auto- and muroer, bui people do those
mobile liability Insurance has been things llllYWay," he said.
Sttnztano Sllld he does not believe
selling briskly tn advance of New
that more than 5 Percent of Ohio's
Year's Day, the effective date of a
law requiring motorists to be unlnsltred drivers will have pur·
covered'or face tough penalties after chased a policy before the deadline.
the fact of an accident or moving
However, Noreen Wills, who
citation.
heads the Columbus-based Ohio
Butsomeofficlalsandlawmakers Insurance Instltute, _sald that group
said Frklay that the lawwUI hecome has had reports aU week of brisk
~ectlve at midnight with hundreds
business from agents In various
l
of thousands of drivers still on the
parts of the state.
·
highways without coverage.or the
'The Institute had estimated
means to pay for d&lt;~JT~ages they earllerthatthenewlawwouldresult
might ca115e.
· tn abouthalfofthestate's uninsured
Rep. Michael Sttnzlano, D· drivers obtalnlng covetage.
Columbus, chairman of the House
"A lot of people will just walt Until
1nsurance Committee, said he they have to sign that statement,"
thinks 95 percent of Ohio's approxi·
Ms. Wills said, referring to a section
rnately one million uninsured ITl(). of the statute which requires, as a
torls!S will not buy coverage until rondltlon of license or registration
they have an accident and are
renewal, the signing of an affidavit
slapped with thepenaltlescontatned
attesting that the driver has
tn the bill.
Insurance or can post a bond to cover
These Include possible tines and
damages.
license suspensions · which are
Minimum Umits of coverage
absolute and do not allow j\l(lges to which drivers must have under the
law Include $12,~ for bodily Injury
grant drivlng-to-work ptl\llleges.
Stlnzlano said many !lrlyers will or death for one person, .$25,tm
not comply with the law until they· bodUy Injury or death tor one
feel thetmpactofthepenaltles. "We accident, and $7,!m for property
·have,, taws agatnsi robbing ~ da!Jiail!·
· "

lock and dam facility on the Ohio
Rlver, replacing the present facility
at Eureka.
'The project, part of an omnibus
waterwa:rs bill steaming slowly
through the congressional tread·
mill, was alternately praised as an
economic boon and solution to the
traffic-bottleneck at Gallipolis, and
criticized as a "pork-barrel" proposal supported by special Interests.
The bill has passed several
committees in the House of Representatives and is to face additional
Senate action.
Gallia County commissioners
1Continued on page A3)

EVIDENCE EXAMINED Gallipolis attorney lllpnlln King
walches as Prosecutor Joseph
Cain, In foreground, examines

evidence In the niJte.day murder
trial Charles Lee D. King was
Lee's defense counsel. 11le trial,
In which Lee was IOWJd gulJty In
the shooting death of a Ganta
County teenager, domlnaled
klcaJ news In the latter pari of
1983.

PR0.JECIS UNDERWAYTwo IJIIIIor COIIIItnJctlon projects were also local news
hlghllpts In GaiDa CowMy
durhtg the past year. CongresSional adlon 011 approval of a
omnibus · watenvays bill thai
Includes funds for a new Gatnpo.

Bs lodls and dam to replace the
old stnJdure at Eureka, above,
begall picking . up 8team 88 It
throup COIIIIIIIttee

.progl e!Jed

and eamed addltloaal IIIJIIIIOri
from govemmeat and Industry:
In March, groond was brolu!n
lor the new Palla CowMy
eoutihou8e, to be built 011 the 8lte
of the old OOUJihowle wing 11Jtted
by lire In 1881. 'Die ' CGWMy
borrowed In exce~B ot $1 mBIIon
from local bankll to IIUpplemellt
an lnlurance settlemint to build
the three-ttoey atnJdure,

Meigs coullty·ends ·fiscal year 'in the black'
By mUBu:NE aOI!:l"J.D
'l'lmel8 ·11 i' 8tla
·
POMEROY _ MeJp County ended 1983 "In the ·
-black," andubuslnealgrouncftoabaltFrldaynliht,
It ~ that tlJere will be a ll!lltt CIJTYOVl!l' of ·
·
'
$l8 tm In the C&lt;IUJily coffers
~
~ fl8cally IQIJICI 18 the
·ended was ·dllcloled In an ~ with County
CUMllllloni!r Richard Jonea. ·
JOIII!I" pve icme of the credit for lhte county's
.
.
'

:·:aa:

' solVency to ottlce holders who he said have made
every effort to hold down costs.' Hesald ,that'thetlnal
figures on ·Catryover Ul not be available tor several
~
.
·

'A$ for 1118' the coriunlsslo~ at a recent meeting
painted a bl~ financial picture. Jones commented
that It "probably will be the worst year for county
flnancei In the putlO years."
·
. He explained that the lack of any significant
Increase 1n new -construc!k!n leaves the financial

Year

---------~--·

t

.... - ··I .

· status the same as In the past few years Insofar as
more tax montes are concerned, while utilities and
other costs keep going up.
For 1984, departmental budget requests exceed
anticipated receipts by some $.m,tm, and the
commissioners at a recent meeting agreed that cuts
will have to be shared equally by all departments.
Commissioners stand unanimous on their pledge to
keep eo~~nty expenditures within the 8JTIOUnt of
Income.

.,.

Jones said commissioners expect that revenue
gotngtntothegeneralfundwtll ~Increased by$40,tm
to $45,&lt;XXl because the county will begin collecting
taxes on one unit of the hydroplant at Racine.
But' those additional tax dollars wUI be ·absorlle(t by
such things as Increased utility costs, some building
repair, salary adjustments, and about $20,tm of local
match money required for the Tuppers Plains sewage
project, he added.
(Continued on pagl' A3) .

�'·

'

' -

''

.

(

.•.

Jarioary 1, 1984

Commentary and perspective
'·

.

'lhe Sunday n""'"~ent~e"'
"Pa.. A-2
.Jclnuary 1, 1~

•

j
~======================~r===================;:==============================~l .l
•

.Larry, Lisa &amp; the .law____J_~_.J_.K_upa_·_iric_k.i

WASI:JlNGTON - The Federal the station must sell time on the In the dial-a-porn case. This section, . and sanctions might be lmpoaed.
Commuiifcations Commission is same basis to Larry Flynt. The signed Into law on Dec. 8, prohibits
The station appealed, and the ,
~m~
wrestling these days with a couple section also says that the licensee "obscene or Indecent" communica- Supreme Court more or less '
~~
of tough issues of law. One matter "shall have no power nt censorship tions by telephone to persons under atflnned the commission. It Ia hard
Ill -Court St., ·Pomeroy, Ohio
·825 Third 1\ve., Gallipolis, Ohio
Involves Larry Flynt, the hard-core over the material broadcast.''
18 years of age; the taw·gives the to tell wiuu the coun did. Justice
(614) 4.46-2342
(614) 992-2166
pornographer. The other Involves - All that is clear enough, but there FCC autlv:lrlty to make rules and Stevens wrote for a plurality, but In
Lisa, the soft-breathing voice on a Is another federal law on the books, regulations anll to punish violators. fact he wrote only for hlmaelf and
dial-a-porn line. In a land of tree this one known as Section 1464. It The FCC is now receiving sugges· lor Burger and Rehnqulat. Justices
.. ROBE RT I... WINGETT
speech, how far can these charac- forbids the use of "any obscene, !Ions, through Jan. 23, on what to do Powell and Blackmun concurred In
Publisher
ters go?
Indecent or profane language .by about Usa.
the Judgment . but for different
Take the Flynt case first. Larry means of radio communication."
These are plcklements. The last reasons. Brennan wrote a stinging
HOBART WILSON JR.
PAT· WHITEHEAD
Flyot Is best known as publisher of Flynt has made It clear that his time the Supreme Court construed dissent In which Marshall Joined.
Executive Editor'
' ·,Assistant. Pllblisher-Controijer
Hust)tjr magapne. He Is also an caqtpalgo commercials will tum Section 1464, the one having to do Stewart wrote a separate dissent In
'
..
aunounced candidate lor president the airwaves blue. He proposes to with "obscene, Indecent or pro· which Brennan, Marshall aiJii
of the United States. . Wilen the vent his political opinions In an
lane" language on the air, was In White joined. It was not the~
A ME.\IBER of The A.wx.iwed Press. Inland . Daily' Pres." :\.'\SOCia.Uon and the
"""'"""" Newspaper Publishers "-'latlon.
Cpngress adopted.Section 315 of the explosion of lour-letter words.
the Pactflca Foundation case In finest hour.
Commllnl~atlons·
A:ot
n~ariy
5()"
··
The.~!Ylllll5slon
met
a
couple
of
The Stevens opinion contained
1978.
That Involved , a 12-mlnute
. LETI'ERS OF OPINION .,.. wel&lt;omed.lhey- bo 1&lt;t&lt;o Ihan !OIIw-loa(. AD
lletters.aresubjed loedltin1 and mi,ISl be slpedwlth name. addreMandtrlephoftenumyears ago, no-one .ever dreamed weeks ago toconslderthedllemma,
monologue by satirist George some brow-knitting 1~. Iftlie
ber. No wwlped !ellet's wtJJ bo published. LeUen !llould bo In ,.,00 lasl&lt;. ~ lothat a candidate lor · the White •• -tiut :adJOIU"IIed without taking accarlin called " Filthy Words.'' A offensive aspects of Carlin's 1)'10110""'"' DOl .......,..ooe..
•
House might i-un as · the self· tlon. As·this is wrttteri,.the matter is
man who was out driving with his logue "could be traced to political
designated nominee .of a. Porno- still ·pending, btlt Flynt has the young son heard the afternoon content," said Stevens, "Firat
·' ·
resources io seek CO\II1 review or broadcast and complained to the Amendment protection might be
graphy Party.
Section 315 says, In sum, that If a whatever the FCC decides.
FCC. The commlsslop 1\'arned the required." The four dissenters
TV or radio station sell$~ to
A · brand-neW ·sectfon oi the .licensee, Station WBAI, to watch concluded that "Indecent" and
Walter Mond!lle or Ronald Reagan, . comritunlca'Uons Act will be teiied · .his step: one more such offense, "obscene" are the same things at
law. That which Ia obscene must
have prurient appeal; carlin's
monologue had no prurient appeal;
therefore the FCC had no authority
'Ibis December there isn't the usual excitement about the economy for
to ban it.
the upcoming year. The consensus forecast looks dull: More of the sam~ as
Nothing may come of the Flynt
In 1983, al\ho!!gh perhaps weakening as the year wears on.
affair,
~ough I wouldn't bank on it.
"No local explosions and rio virtuoso pertoimances In any
of .the
no
great trlck to quality for
It's
economy," says Albert Sommers, Conference Board economl§t. The
federal
matching money as a
expansion, he lotecasts, will be ''broadly distrlbuted.'' ;
presidential
candidate. Readers of
None of the usual tensions thatAmerlcansareaccustoml!!l to living witH.
Hustler, who thrive on dirty Jokes,
No b!i turning points, no roartng expansion, no record highs, no record
• · might well bacjl a fling at dirty
lows, no low ruJnbles', no big stumbles.
· politics. I! this happens, Sections
CriseS? They are there, of course. Who can forget the budget deficit, the
325 and 1464 will come Into head-q,n
trade deficit, the loans that might never be recovered from developing
colllslon.
:
nations? But, It seem.S, they are destined to be quiescent, like Mount St:
As
for
the
seductive
Usa,
my
..
,
Hclens.
.
thought
would
be
to
limit
her
;
But In spite of the wide agreement, there does remain a blg.questlon:
recorded moans and sighs to a few :
How long will the expansion continue? It is In this· area that little
post-midnight hours, and to dismiss
disagreements grow lilrger by the month. Everyone agrees that
the )Vhole dial-a-porn b\lslness as
expansions must end. But when?
trivial. But Flynt'S case Is not
A casual survey of forecasters who have dared to go out orl a limb longer
trivial. Radio and TV come directly
than a year suggests that by the second halfofl!e&gt;, at the latest, the current •
Into our homes. Candidates for
expansion should begin runnllig Into serious trouble, and that by 1986 a
public office have an undoubted
famlljar enemy In the form of Inflation should have visited again.
right to air their views. but they '
'That woold give the current recovery-expansion a longevity of24 months
have no right gratuitously to shock
or so, less than one-half the average 46-month lifespan of these seven
an unguarded audience. The superiods since the end of World War 11:
preme law of the land doesn't serve
-:-Forty-five months from 1949 to 1953.
as a shield lor political sham- and .
~
:...Thlrty-ni!Je months from 1953 to 1957.
I
that's what Flynt is proposing.
- '1\venty-four months from 1958 to 1960.
-Qne hundred five months from 1961 to 1969.
· -Thirty-six months from 197d'to 1973.
-Fifty-Eight months tram 1975 to J.91lJ.
:-Twelve months from 198l to 1981.
WASHlNGTON - Today Fidel Castro has Introduced a more his own revolution.
soners who had completed their
:The ominous figure is the latest, the 12-month recovery In J.9llJ and 1981, castro
will celebrate 25 years In
stifling, more suffocattni represMy associate Jon Lee Anderson sentences; the Increase In judicial
theslv:lrtestof all. Was It an exception? Or was It the beginning of a trend to
power- a tribute to his agility at sion. Thereisnothlngsophlstlcated, has documented Castro's abiding executions lor allegedly political
slkn1er ~ery cycles, aa 10 many ecQIIOOiiats have forecast?
however, about his 'treatment of fear of .opponents to his communist
crimes, and prolonged detention
lt is unlikely that you could fln!l anyone today who is forecasting an surviving seve"' hostile U.s.
administrations.
'
qppon&amp;ts;
It
Is
every
bit
as
as
regtme,
however
harmless
they
without charge In the custody of the
eliJlaDSion of the magnitude enjoyed In the 1960s, when problems such as
Uke
his
role
model,
Josef
Stalin,
bloody
and
unreasoning
as
.
may
be.
Uke
Stalin,
he
refuses
to
state
securtty pOllee of people
exist today weren't even ~amed of.
Castro
Is still insecure· after a
Batista's.
·
make
peace
with
the
ghosts
of
the
suspected
of political activities."
h'ooay's economies are beset by n~lved problems - problems that
quarter
of
a
century
as
top
dog
In
The
d~eence Is that Batista
past,
and
15
Instead
dragging
them
My
sources
tell me that 29
ate dealt with at best for a short period oftlme, but basically never solved. Cuba. He is as paranoid as Stalin never. ~ly claimed to be with him Into his twilight years.
Cubans
were
executed
last year for
Tile consequences of the trade deficit, the budget df!ttclt, the foreign loans '
1ft'
the
merest
suspicion
of
anything
but
what
he
was:
a
Here's
a
bill
of
particulars
that
allegedly
plotting
Castro's
death.
was
have
' been averted through delaying actions whose effectiveness gradually opposition - whether from old corrupt military dictator out to Indicts Fidel Castro before the One of them was 29-year~ld
wears out.
enrich himself and his cronies at the world:
Annando Hernandez Gonzalez - a
is for such reasons that economists and others believe that recoveries · comrades-In-arms rotting In their
prison
cells
or
from
peasant
lads
people's
expense.
But
Castro
posed
- Amnesty International sumtoddler when Castro took power. In
these days might self-destruct more quickly than those before them.
who
weren't
even
born
when
the
as
a
champion
of
liberty
woo
would
marlzed
the
grotesque
distortion
of
a
scrawled note to his family,
Maybe so. Nevertheless, 24 months of expansion isn't bad when you dictator seized power.
1ead
his
countrymen
out
of
explolta·
judicial
power
In
their
last
human
smuggled
out of priSOn before his
l$tch It against the expansion of 1~ 1981.
Few
clvtl
libertarians
regret
the
tlon;
Instead,
he
has
made
Cuba
a
rights
report
on
Cuba:
"The
execution,
Hernandez wrote:
•
overthrow. of Castro's bruial predeprison, where dissent can be as continued detention of approxl"When I die, I want the flag as my
cesser, Fulgenclo Batista. But
fatal as ever. Castrqohas betrayed mately 38 long-term political prlroof, the earth as my mother and
lor air - Uberty." . ·
1'1~

!\ Dlvlsjon of

~.

Richard Celeste says he thinks Ohio voters will be more convinced

Olllo's 1983 Income tax Increase.
:•People focused·on a tax Increase when we accomplished more In tax
rE!onn In one year than some administrations have In four," Celeste said In
arJ Interview.
He said he thinks the administration was assisted In Its defense of the tax
package because "there are built Into the law now more reforms that
bl$1eflt business and real reforms that benefit working people and senior
citizens."
Referring to various business tax credits and Increases, plus more
Ulieral exemptions for seniors and credits for married couples filing
joiJttly, the governor s3lll the fairness he Sees In the plan "will be more
eYident next spring when people get their taX refunds . : ."
l::eleste said he does not think \hat the defeat of repeal was a.referendum
·art his administration.
•
He said the voters made a tough decision, but In the end opted to go along
wlth tax reforms for education and other vital services "rather than the
uricertalnty of stepping back Into the debates of 1982 and 1981 and all of the
fiScal chaos that went with lt."
Celeste said the election "was not a bottom line on the Celeste
administration: That comes three years from now (when he will be up for
reelection).''
Meanwhtle.' state lawmakers apparently will be standing In line to
Introduce bills exempting Social Security benefits from Ohio's Income tax.
Ohio currently does not tax such benefits, but It may In the future unless
the Legislature passes remedial Iegl5ilruon.
:I'he state levy woold occur because of changes In' federal law which,take
effect Jan. 1 and make Social Security benefits taxable In some situations.
Ohio's state Income tax liability is based uix&gt;n taxpayers' f~eral adjusted
gross Income, and the !)ew tax would trlgger automatically.
The federal change says benefits are taxable If gross annual llicome
([Om all sources, Including Social Security, exceeds a limit of $25,())) for an
· llldlvldual and $32,())) for a l1!anled couple. In each Instance, the tax would
be on 50 percent of the non...SOCial Security lncomeoron50percentofSoclal
SeCurity benefits, whichever was lesser.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson. R-Renoldsburg, latest of sever;ll lawrna)cers
working on remedial legislation, said the recent hike In the state Income
taX will require many retired persons to pay more state taxes- "To now add
an.addltional burden on these same retired petsons by not taking action to
ell~ Ohio's law would be unfair," she saki·
The 1984 session of Ohio's General Assembly gets under way otflclally
next Tuesday, but not with a bang.
.
Leaders say there Is no pressing business, and that full-blown commlttee
and floor sessions are unlikely for at least two weeks'. .
.
House Speaker Vernal G. Rfffe Jr.. D-New Boston, said the lower
chamber will not have fUll noor sessions unW the week of Jan. 17. 'Senate
: plans also are uncertain at thls point.

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counties to getting the job done, but
also getting It done more economlcally. Uhfortunately,MeigsCounty
had to use the new Ute Flight
services ' provided to ' Veterans
Memorial Hospital twice In June to
transport two residents - both
seriously Injured In swimming
accident- to other area hospitals
forextenslvetreatrnent.
Complaints were lodged about
new state regulations and procedures which threatened ·to rob
counties such as Meigs of local
government moneys from the state.
However, the plan was reworkl!d to
adegreeandmoneyswererestored.
The Meigs Qlunty Alliance ·tor
Children actively lodged complaints
tliat money for children's services
was being returned to the state
unused and that services were not
belng provided. That debate also
covered a several months period
and services were Increased
through.thecooperationoltheMelgs
County commissioners and the
Meigs County Welfare Department.
A serious lire again hit the
downtown buslnesssectlonofPomeroy on Court Street, the second time
lorpartoftheflrearea. A tear-down
OrdSf was issued but at the end of
1983 the burned out, blackened
structures belonging to Amy Kingsland jones remained standing
desplteeffortsofofflclalstoclearthe
Court Street area of the eyesore.

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destruction and the most to lose.
Between them they have 20 times·
the power to bring on a nuclear
winter which will destroy mankind. '
In a recent poll, 68 percent of the
American people Indicated they
would rather light a nuclear war
than concede to the Communists.
Perhaps 68 percent of the people of
the Soviet Union. feel the same way · .
about America. In my opinion;·68
pertent of the people are damn '
fools. T.o meekly lay down their
lives because a few people In each •
country have reached a zenith In
power madness Is to believe In •
national and world suicide. Even ti ·
such an unbelievable poll is right;
there are stU! millions of us who
don't want to go along.
For us It would be murder!

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took matters· Into their own hands and he pleaded not guilty. ASept. 21 anticipated by district officials to
earlier In the year when they trlal date was dclayed when Lee begin In May.
On the educational front, salary
Initiated construction of a new, pleaded not guilty by reason of
three-story courtHouse to replace Insanity - a plea that was dropped and contract negotiations between
the county, city and vocational
the old section pf the building gutted when the trlal began Nov. 28.
by fire In 1981.
An eight-woman, tour-man jury school districts aU reached Impasse
The commissioners chose to fund found Lee guUty Dec. 9, and he was duiing the early fall.
After additional negotiations,
the project by borrowing more than sentenced to 15 year-to-life term of
$1 million from three Gallipolis lmprisorunent. The verdict has 'teachers In the county schools voted
Oct. 17 to strike, but refrained from
banks. An advance payment to two since been appealed.
of those banks was made earlier In
The county became Involved In any job action untO further bargainDecember.
controversy In the fall when It ended Ing was held. A three-year contract
The commissioners decided to · Its lease agteement wltth the firm agreement was reached Oct. '!1.
. borrow the money when local operating the Gallla-Meigs HeThe city schools ~ttled In early
October, but talks In the vocational
merchants and residents opposed a glonal A!rWrt.
proposed half-percent tnci-ease In
The finn, Foothills Aviation, had distrlct - disrupted by a controverthe t'Oiinty Income tax. The issue sought to renegotiate the agreement sial teacher recognition election the
was put on the !'loveJil'?Cr ballot and and Initiate Improvements. Claim- same month - remain stalemated
defeated by a 2-1 margin.
lng breach of contract, Foothills after 10 months of on-again,
off-again bargaining.
Local Interest was focused In sued the CO\IIIty for $16 million.
Also, - Dr. Paul C. Hayes an·December on the nine-day trial nt
Novemt:er's aenel'!ll election 5aw
Charles Lee n, the only juvenile to the defeat~ a three-tentha of a mill nounced In January that he would
be tried an adult In the hlstoty of ' renewal levy for the county health retire as president of Rio Grande
Gallla County' court proceedings. department. TheboardOfhealthhas College and Community College at
Tile Point Pleasant teenager was since laid plans to-present the levy, the end of the year. The boards of
cltarae&lt;Jwlthmurclerlntheslv:lotlng first apjrOVed by voters In 1973, on trustees oflxithcollegesselectedDr.
Clodus R. Smith, an administrator
death ofl7-year-&lt;!!d Barbara Tw'y- the June primary ballot.
.
manofEwltigtononoralxiutMarch
.Atter aeveral years of trying, the at Cleveland S.tate Unlve~lty, as
·:1), Her body was discovered In a
Gallla County Local School District Hayes' successor In August. Smith
well near her 00me Apt11 6.
' . passed by a, 19-vote margin a 4-mlll took Qtftce Oct. 1.
Only two tratflc deaths occurred
Lee was· anested later that daY ·. bOnd Issue to .buDd four new
&amp;l)dchargedwlththecrlnle.AMay2 ,elementary schools and finance In the eoonty - one In Marcl), t1ie
September - and a single
lieanng In juvenile court deter- · addiUons and Improvements to two
mined that i.A!ewruld'stand trlal·as . of Ita other elementarles. Construc- lire fatality near Cheshire was
anadultlnconunonpleascourt.
tlon on the first · buDding is recorded In Apt11.
Leewu IndiCted twoweekllalef,

.otl\ei*'tn

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grant.
The Big Bend Regatta weekend,
which had Uved lor 19 years,
underwent sudden death as the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
voted to cancel the annual event.
Danny Melton, ll, fonnerly of
Batesville, Ark., was murdered In a
traDer off Forest Run Road and
laterUndseyTaylor,Rt.l,Raclne,
was Indicted on an aggravated
murder charge;' Tuppers Plains
received a $281,())) grant lor Its
sewage development system, a step
which wUl ptedlctably open new
musing-areas.
Middleport paid homage to the
late Edward Bennett and the late
Jimmy Stewart who were Congresslana! Medal of Honor winners. A
large plaque honoring them was
dedicated In appropriate cerernonles held near village hall.
Wrapping up the year was a trlal
for Pamela Spencer, Syracuse, In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. Following the week-long trlal
-during which time Spencer was
charged with endangering children
and Involuntary fl'laJlSlaughter there was a hung jury with a retrlal
setter Jan. 23.
Ground was broken for the
$1,792,())) 46-unlt elderly and handl·
capped housing project In Pomeroy
with the project encompassing the
present children's home structure.

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lJI August, Gov. Richard Celeste
visited the Meigs Olunty Fair,
becomlngtheflrstOhiogovernorln
years to visit the local event. Politics
were forgotten - the visit was
cordial and pleasant.
The Fanners Home Admlnistratlon committed for $840,())) In loans
toMiddleportfornewbomeloansas
well as 12 self-help units. Meigs
County was allotted $336,374 In the
Jobs Training Program.
County offiUls In September
Investigated a murder-sulc1de lncl·
dent upriver In which Sandra Carter
and John Pickens Jr., lost their lives.
A $10 million lawsuit, one of the
largest ever, was filed In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Mary Jane Talbott whose husband
waskille!lbyelectrlcwlresleftdown
on ·ROute 7 following a traffic
accident the night before.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hellman
were both killed In a two vehiclecrash near their home on the Ball
Run Road and the Ohio State Patrol
Increased patrolmen working In
Meigs County because of the
upswing In highway fatalities In the
county.
The Middleport Chamber of.
Commerce staged a most Interestlng block party receiving exeellent
cooperation from town officials on
Sept. 24. Middleport continued Its
successful program with federal
funds and received a $229,!0) block

The past has shown
usthatourgoalscan
be achieved through
perserverance and
optimism. Let's strive
to make this exciting
time one of new
challenges met.

&lt;can_tlnued_tram_pag_e
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FOR SENIOR CITIZENS

Gallia Countylt-.-'8_3___

Berry's ·World

~

By The A-waled Press
For the first time In more than
twO weeks, forecasters saturday
spoke that eagerly awaited word
- warmer - and lor most of the
country It looked like 1983's deep
freeze woold end with the old
year.
But the big chill lingered
across the Midwest and the
South, with a second freeze
threatening citrus crops In
Texas, while a Pacific storm
blasted the northern Rockies
and dumped up to 20 Inches of
new snow and freezing rain on
Idaho. The death toll from some
of the coldest weather of the
century rose to 445.

In addition, the'sexaMial appral·. will cover 85 percent ¢ the the handicapped.
sal ·ol real estate Is scheduled to construction cost while the residents
Information has just been rebegin In 1984 at a total cost cil will assume the partial cost of work ceived by commissioners from the
$150,())), with a minimum of $50,())) on their Individual properties.
department of revenue sharing that
''to cpme out of general operating
Jones said 'fit through the the entire buDding must be accessifunds In 1984.
. Elderly Houslilg&lt;·.. Corporation, ble to the handicapped wltl)ln three
In. an overview of the county, · Meigs County's old chUdren 's home years or funds will be cut off from
Jones said that everything seems to will be renovated Into a useful that agency. Also, a grant lor
be "In place" Insofar as commls· purpose serving the elderly and continuation of the litter control
sioners are concerned. He said the disabled . Earlier this month, program for 1984 has been turned
. real need now is ·lor an Improved grou(ld was broken for the new down.
highway system which can only housing complex lor. senior citizens
In 1983, the county received
come with state and federal and disabled persons on Mulberry $104,&lt;XXJ In federal revenue shaling
funds.
Heights.
assistance.
Through the community block
Jones stressed the importance of
Commissioners' major emphasis
road Improvement and lamented grant program, commissioners In 1984, Jones concluded, wll! be to
that a major highway project here have directed some $00,0ll to pursue a federal grant for required
could be years away. He tied the !ownships for Improvement of courthouse work .
development of ln\lustry In the roads, fire protection and buDding
• county and the jobs It will generate repairs.
Freeze hurts peaches
directly to road Improvement and
Jones reports that after the
pledged the commissioners' con' Alliance for Children brought the
Frigid temperatures and wind
tlnued efforts In that direction.
need for additional services for
Jones cited the new landfill, a new abused children to commissioners' chills are placing this year's peach
crop In jeopoardy, but the same
sewage system scheduled for attention. new programs have been
' Tuppers Plains to open land lor put Into operation by the welfare weather Is helping protect Ohio's
winter wheat crop, farmers say.
housing and other devel.opment, the department .
John Bergman, whose Bergman
Pomeroy Health Care Center, the
The 1984 flgureof$~.024 for such
new Carleton School lor the men- services was reported by Mike Orchard east of Port Clinton isoneo(
the largest In northern Ohio, said he
tally retarded, the completed multi· Swisher, Meigs welfare director, at
has cut a few peach stems to check
purpose buDding which houses the a recent meeting.
for damage.
Senior Citizens Center, the health
Jones listed as commissioners'
"Therewasalotofbrownsoowlng :
department and mental health · greatest disappointment this past
In them , but I think I warmed them·.
tacllltles and emergency medical year the rejection of a federal grant
services as "real assets" when It request for expansion and renova- up too fast. I wooki say we've got to
have some damage with It being as
comes to InduStrial site selection . tion of the courthouse.
once a highway system has been
A portion of the money, had it been cold as It's been," he said.
Bergman has about 20 acres of
Improved.
received, would have been used to
As lor 1983's accomplishments, Install an elevator, making all three peaches among his 200-acre
Jones cited the opening of !!te new floors of the buDding accessible to orchard.
landfill at small cost to the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
taxpayers. He said that the w.ork
was done with grant funds and
assistance of the county highway
department. Such projects, Jones
said, are costing other counties
A Medicare Supplement that pays Hospital, Medical &amp;Surgiupwards of a quarter of a million
cal Plus OQCtor Office Calls: Also Presaiption Drugs.
doUars to do what was completed
here lor approxlma tely $75,(0)- all
"Major Medical Hospitalization Plan Available for Under 65."
of which was grant money with the
exception of about $5,&lt;XXJ.
RETURN TO: CLIFF MYERS
As lor the Tuppers Plains sewer
RT . 3, BOX 110
project, Jones said that with th~
ALBANY,
OHIO 46710
grant of $28LOll received from fte
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, the county will be putting
NAME
AGE_
only about $al,Oll In matching funds
Into the project.
ADDRESS----- ·- - - - - - Jones said that never has the
countyhadachancetodosomuch
PHONE

• count Y.__________
'83
Me1gs
~_c_on_tln_u_ed_fr_om_pa_ge_Al_) r;'o~rso~llt~tle~ln::::loc=a=lmo=ney~.The~gra~n='~~~-:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:~-=~~-=-=~-=-=~-=-=~-:~:::::-:-:-=~

Resolutions and deals _____Low_eu_w_ing...:::.e_u

"W'Ylt a great Ideal We'll make _, Ne~ Year's ·
resolution !JOt to m,.ke any New. Year's resolu: I
lions." r
·

Warming possible

By The AMOCialed PreM
Temperatures crept above freezing In parts of the central and
rorthern Rockies saturday, but crop-ktlllng cold hung on In the citrus
belt of Florida and In Texas' Rio Grand Valley.
A winter storm that. has battered the Northwest weakened
somewhat, but freezing rain and light snow fell over the central
Plateau and central Rockies.

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thlm ever next spring that they made the right choice In rejecting repeal of

Single digit readings stretched
from Interior New England to
·
Tennessee, Illinois and eastern
Wisconsin, but that was good
news In many are$ gripped for
two weeks by sumero cold.
Clouds and light rain ·showers
lingered · ovet southern and
central Florida.
•
More showers were expected
'later saturday lor the Pacific
Northwest, with snow and rain ·
across the ni&gt;rthern Plateau and
Great Basin. Skies were expected to be ,partly cloudy over
the Southwest and sunny over
the eastem two-thlr!IS of the
nation .
. saturday's high temperatures
S til ilO.ni1ry • • were expected to be In the teens
and 20s from Montana to the
. ·_WEATHER FORECAST - The National W~pther Service
Great Lakes and from the Ohio
forecast for Sunday predJcU rain for par1s of the Pacific Northwest. ·. VaUey Into New England; In the
The rest of the natiOn Is expected to have clear slde8 and cold
»; and 4G!; In the Southeast and
temperatllrel. (AP Laserphoto).
southern Plains; and In the 50s
and 60s across parts of Florida
and the Southwest.
.
.
Temperatures around the naMONDAY 11-IROUGH WEDNESDAY:
tion at 2 a.m. EST ranged from
A chance of snow over the state Monday and In the northeast
mlnus-3 In Concord, N.H. to 611n
sections of Ohio Tuesc)ay and Wednesday. Otherwise, fair and not as
San Diego and santaa Barbara,
cold. Lows In the teens Monday and In the 20s Tuesday and
Calif.
Wednesday. Highs In the »; Monday and 35 to 45 Tuesday and ·
Wednesday.
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The natioi\ 's weather

Castro's 25 years ________Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n.

crippled by the veto power of any
one of the five permanent
members, Britain, China, France,
the U.S.S.R. and the United States,
which makes a deal for disarmament undertheausplcesoftheU.N.
an Impossibility. In the era of the
Cold War the United Nations Is a
paper tiger. While the United States
pays a fourth of the costS to
maintain the organ~tlon, they
have no more power to enforce
decisions In the General Assembly
than does the smallest nation In
Africa or Central America. All any
natio can do is blow off steam!
So scratch the United Nations as
an agency for dealing the world free
from nuclear destruction. That
leaves It up to the two world powers
who have the greatest capacity lor

Snow

By The Aaloclated PreM
A large high pressure area over Ohio will move very slowly east
throogb Sunday and continue to provide good weather to the state.
A cold front across the Dakotas will move southeast to northern
Ohio by Sunday evening. This will bring partly cloudy skies to the
northern part of the state.
·
.
sanirday night was expected to be clear with lows near 8 In the
northwest to about 20 In the southeast. Highs New Year's Day will be
In the 20s.

...lUi MOYIE!

I know .you have 'been waiting far as I can remember, I haven't
with bated breath for my New eatenacookedtumlpslnce1915sol
Year's resolutions. Well, you can could surety get through one more
unbate and relax. As usual, most of year without them. How about
·
those wild and exciting Senior
them didn't last!
For years I have resolved on New Citizen trlps? I don't like them
Year's to quit smoking. The year either sO It will be no problem for
1983 was no exception. At midnight, me to skip them In 1984. There are .
att~r aU the New Year's festivities hundreds of resolutions I could
on television w~re aver I went to make but New Year's resolutions
bed with that warm glow that are supposed to hurt and just any
comes from the thought of screwing old, run~f-the-mlll resolution is no
the tobacco companies out of my good. They are meant to be morally
weekly contribution. I even felt up-lifting, something to stiffen your
kindly toward the Surgeon General backbone ·and make you a better
who for years has been trying to person In the eyes of your friends
scare the pants . off me with his and neighbors. So - I am making
warning oil every pack of cl· one last.resolution. It is a little late
garettes. I fell asleep with visions of but maybe I can keep It - No More
saved dollar bills dancing through Resolutions!
my head and awoke at my usual
That doesn't mean I can't make
time of 7 a.m. on New Year's Day. deals. When you make deals
In extenuation, I can only say that I Instead Df resolutloJilL you staild a
am not my surthy disposltloned, chance of getting something In tum.
optimistic self so early In the In this election year of 1~ deals
mornJngbut this particular morn- will be very fashionable. Deals and
lng I could have made Ebenezer poUtlcs go hand In hand and one
Scrooge seem merry. The day has · couldnotexistwlthouttheolher.So,
long passed _when I awake singing since this column Is mainly political
and dancing a Jig but New Year's In nature and frequently makes
morning I did manage to drag Reaganltes unhappy, let's make a
myself to the kitchen and tum on . deal. If the president will be as fair
the coffee water. Then I dragged to the poor as to the rich, If he will
myself back to the bedroom to walt stop lncll}ng us closer and closer to ,
· for the kettle to sing. I sat dejectedly nuclear annihilation and stop
on the side of the bed and It was the spending more than we can afford
most natural thing In the world for on weaponS and calling It dlifense,
me to rtiach for I! cigarette on the then I will stop the criticism. Not
night table and Ught up. I was only me but probably the hundreds
almost through with my cigarette of other.columnists, cartoonlsta and ·
before I tettlf!t,tlbel~ the" I"'OIy'.... ~-Bil•'OVI!r• Alnerlca. ·
resolution of the night before. Too What&amp;1aicouldbefalrerthanthat?
late .- · but there Ia always next
ltlstlmeforsomeboclylomakea
year? Maybe! ·
. ·
deal with · the Communists. The
As. usua1 It ialles two cups of . United Nations doeS not. have the
coffee and a couple of cigarettes In power lfnder their present structhe morning . before I am Itt ture. In .- the · General Assembly
company for man or beast so I sat small nations Uke Botswana and
on tbe side of my bed and pondered · Vanuata have, the same voting.
the problem of New Year's ~lu- strength as the .U.S. and the
dons. WhYdoweafwaysresoivelhe U.S:S.R: despite the disproportion- .
Impossible? Why .not something ate s~ of. their ,populations,
easy? For Instance, I could resolve mill~ strength and -their contrlnot to eal cooked turnips In 1984. As buttons. . The Security Council is'.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei--Page--A-3

,.---Weather: ~-------r----, 'In the black..__'____&lt;eo_ntlnu-edfro_m_page_Al~ ·
f•.:·.;) •

New Years high in 20s

sector

(;ov. Celeste confident
'Jight choice' made
on siate ballot issue

Pomeroy-Middlepolf-Gqllipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. 'va.

Extended Ohio forecast

Economy '84: -quiet
f~recasi for year

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HAVE A HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Fa

Farmers

Bai1k

Min• • o FDIC'

�,

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

:'age--A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.lcmuary 1, ,,... '

'f:l. Vq.

.The Sundoy Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

Court·clears the way ·for ·Weirton takeover ·
WEmTON, W.Va. lAP) - The
SjlleofWelrtonSteel toils workers the nation's largest employee stock
tiuyout - cleared its final hurdle
When a federal appeals court threw
out a challenge to the plan, Weirton
vice president Ca rl Vaidiserri says.
Friday's ruling by the U.S. 4th
Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va ., means the purc hase of
Weirton from Na tiona l Steel Corp., a
subsidiary of Na tional Inte rgroup,
can take place as scheduled,
Valdtserrl said. Jan. 10 has been set

as a tentative clos tng date.
"We are profoundly pleased by
the al!pealscourt decision," he said.
"We will now be _a ble to move
forwa rd rapidly 'with the em ployees' ownership plan. We look
toward to the opportunity to legally
conduct businesses as an independent employee-owned COfPOration."
ValdisetTI said the principals in
the case were notified Friday tha t
the court had upheld a ruilng that the
takeover will not force Nationa l
Steel to pay "shutdown pensions"
a nd severance benefit s. · Cou r1

officials said the official opinion wUI
not be made public until next weelt.
The 5uit that prompted Friday's
ruling was broug ht by a ha ndful of
Weirton Steel employees who
argued that the ta keover should be
considered a "shutdown" or"laylng
off" of Na tiona l employees for the
purposes of triggPring supplemental benefit s.
Those benefits include seve rance
pay a nd pensions tha t were de·
signed to protect em ployees lf the
plant closed. U.S. District J udge

Robe~

takeover hinged on those changes.
"The amendments were agreed
to by the union. What we did was
reasonable," National lawyer Carl
H. Hellerstedt told the appeals
court. "We can't afford to pay these
benefits and give up the plant as
well."
Another lawyer representing the
joint committee of National Steel
and ISU officials, Anthony PhllUps,
told the judges that "If this court
reverses (Maxwell's ruling ), the
deal will taU. The company and the
unlongobacktosquareone."

Maxwell, in an opinion
upheld f'rlday, ruled In September
that the employee takeover would
not l!igger those benefits .
The takeover agreement , which

was approved by an overwhelming
m ajority of the Independent Steelworkers Union membership last
September, Included a provision
amending the Natlonai-ISU contract so thecompany wouldnot have
to pay the benefits .
During arguments in the case,
lawyers for Weirton sllid that

. lllllllft
tlllltiT"

PhiWps said t)latlfthepoeltlonot
the dl.ulclent JSU memberl were

IUIIITII.

100 W. 11111·ST., POMEROY
131 PillE ST GALLIPOLIS .

a-.m
PIIITIII

WOU\4

result In - ~fonner National employees WhO
hadn't mLued a day ot work
drawing severanceandsupplemen-·
tal penslo_n beneft!J. . ·
The plalntllfs, bc?th Union and
non-unlonmernbers,contendedthat
the contractual chanaet vloh!ted
federal labor laws and Employee
Retlrement Income Securlty Act
provisions.
·
Lawyer Bany Laine said Na·
tlonallnslsted on the amendments
solely to'escape Its obUgatlon to pay

adopted, It

GALLIPOLIS I POMEROY STOR,ES! ,

LIIIT

Dllllll

I

FRESH LEAN
GROUIID CHUCK

.*1'~19

Judge delays release of Nixon papers .r.; ; ~=re~; ; ;o:SWI; ; ;w~ .-; o':estin a; ; ted
WASHINGTON lAP ) · - The
pubUcwill be forced to walt at least a
while longer to see some of the most
sensitive political documents !roll)
the administration of former Presldi!nt Richard M. Nixon.
: Government archivists were
SCheduled to begin Tuesday releasIng 1.5 million While House docu-

m ents that Nixon left behind when
he resigned In 1974.
But U.S. District Judge Thomas
Hogan has barred the General
Setvices Administration and the
Na tional Archives from making the
papers available for now. He ruled
Friday that part or the law granting
public access to the documents is
unconstitutiona l.

The government 's next move Is
unclear. Justice Depa rtment spokesman Brad Marman refused to
-comment on the possibility that
. Hogan's rulin~ wUI be appealed.
The judge's ruling also left open
the possibility that the GSA could
draw new regula ti ns, without the
need for Congress to pass a new law,
that would permit release of the

~ck of bipartisan
~on 't stop Reagan

support
foreign
policy in the Middle East

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· WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Reagan administration Is saying It
Would ltke bipartisan congressional
l;lacklng or the president's Middle
East poUcy, l!ut lack of such support
wpn 't lead to any major policy shifts.
·Congress appears to be moving
tOward a showdown with President
Reagan over whether to order U.S.
Marines home from Beirut much
~ner than the Apri11985 deadline
that Congress approvect last fall.
.DemocratsandR.epubUcansaUke
reported to be considering a
tnove to shorten the withdrawal
~adline' possibly by one year.
· :In Palm Springs, CaUf., where
f!eagan Is vacationing, White House
Spokesman Larry Speakes said the
~resident was "very strong on that,
:v ery adamant" ahout not pulling out
ihe Marines.
:::Speakes said the president "feels
:l)fs policy Is a correct one, and he
:plans to remain with It."
·: " 'Bipartisan support for the presl:oent's poUcy Is an Important signal
:td'-those with whom we are dealing In
:U!e Middle East, bOth friends and
·adversaries," Speakes said. "But 1
~n't think the president will be
~!erred In pursuit or his poUcy

are

.•,.....

·~' '

·: •House Speaker Thomas P . O'NeUI
D-Mass., has called a meeting
;~xt Tuesday of his Lebanon
•monitoring group to discuss the
;JIDpUcations of a special Pentagon
:rommtsslon's report that was
~&amp;!tarply critical of Reagan's policy
111 Lebanon, particularly hlsempha:-sts on the U.S. military role.

:fr.,

"

~r :The
monitoring group consists of
•

·14 Democrats who had voted In

~Iober - with O'Neill's approval
·:~ to authorize the Marines to stay In
·;Beirut for 18 more months, unless
~ngress changes Its mind.
;: · .The commission, composed of
;aftlve alld retired civilian and
~1l'!Uitary Pentagon officials, said .
:tliere was "an urgent need for
~reassessment of alternative means
5f&lt;! achieve U.S. objectives in

Lebanon and at the same time
reduce the risk" to the 1,!0JMarlnes
In the multinational peacekeeping
force.
Reagan Is planning to discuss the
Marines' deployment with Donald
Rurnsfeld, his special envoy to the
Middle East, on Monday, Speakes
said.
One administration official in
Palm Springs, who spoke only on
condition that he not be ldentlfled,
said Rumsfeld, who Is returning to
the Middle East soon, " may have
some diplomatic, tactical changes"

documents, and It ~ that so-called
legislative veto power that the
Supreme Court declared uoconstltutlonal In a sweeping decision last
June.
Hogan reUed upon the Supreme
Court ruUng to Invalidate a portion
of the presidential documents
disclosure law.
The judge said the constitutional
detect In the law could remedied by
adoption of new regulations by the
GSA.
The GSA had no comment on how
long It might take to adopt new
regulations.
.
The 1.5 mllllon documents at
stake in thecasearepartotsorne42
mllllon Nixon White House documentsthattheGSAhashadunderlts
controltor nearly a decade.
Ronald Ziegler, Nixon's White
House press secretary, saki, "No
one can operate at the highest levels
of government knowing that what

papers.
ButHogan 's declslonwasat least
a temporary victory tor 29 former
Nlxon administ ration oHiclals who
filed suit to block pubitcaccesstothe
papers.
In a brief order, Hogan'sald GSA
and National Archives officials may
not take "any furthe r actions
pursuant to the existing pubUc
accessregulatlonsuntll suc htlmeas
newly promulgated regulations become effective."
Hogan Is expeCted to Issue a
lengthy opinion next week to
accompany the order and Justice
Department laywers are withholding comment until they study the
opinion.
·
Nixon's former a ides fUed their
suit last October, challenging the
pubUc access provisions• or the
Presidential Recordings and Materials Presetvation Act.
The act empowers either house of

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Ohio 45631. Entered as second class

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JONES BOYS
OR
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ICE HOUSE
DRIVE THRU
r-M-arln_es_._ _ _ _ _ ___:__Co~ngress~~to!'
~'ve~to~"~a~dm~ln~ls~l'ra~t§ive
regula lions governing
release or the~ith~ey~wrt=te~will=~be~re=le:ased:~ln~1=0]~~~~~~~;~
years."
and that the administra tion would
consider some redeployment of the

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

1• I

;Ja:;"::'ua::::!ry=:1,;1:;9~84~=·= · =============P~om~e;ro~y;c-~·M~idd;;le;po~rt;=:E:;II~ipo;;;;U•::·:;Oh::.;io-=Poi;';:n;;;t;;:Piea=:sa=nt:;,;;;W;:.;;;V;a·;;;;=~======The;;Sunda;;;~=T=i;me;:s-;;S.;n;tine;;l:;;Pa:;g:;•;:;;A-:::;1·~ :~~

January 1, 1984 ·

--Local Briefs:: - - Clas~room
Car stolen, home burglarized

ro·~:!l

'

MIDDI$PORT - Fred Hoi·
hnan, Middleport mayor since
October 1974, wlll begin his third full
consecutive term In that office as of
today.
A Middleport council term which
began In 19721ed to Hoffman taldng
the mayoral seat two years later.
Vlllage constituency re-elected him
to the post In 1975, 1979, and once
again, without opposition, In
November.
Hoffman listed a number of hopes
for his ' new tetm. including the

following:
-''Tile continued cooperation of
aU vlllage ot!lclals, which has ,
resulted 1n mllllons of dollars 1n
Improvements 1n the community at
no cost to village residents. Coopera·
lion o1 village ot!lclals lias been vital
to the securlng of various grants for
capital expenditures. .
-"The continued good fortune of
having village employees who 'are
dependable, dedicated, and cooper·
alive In worklng together In provk)·
lng services to village residents.

vital to the overall Interests of the
comrnliJI(ty.
.
-"Improvement In the economY
and erf!ployment which would
benefit area businesses and
residents.
-"COntinued Improvements til
au areas of the community, both .
residential and business."
:
The swearlng-ln ceremony for :
Hot!rnan was held Frtday afternoon
and was conducted by Meigs County
c;ommon Pteas Court Judge Cha·
rles Knight.

GAU.IPOLJS- The owners of a GaWpolla home had llt!Veral
lterhl ·and their 19T7 Cluysler Cordoba stolen followlng a breaking
8lld entertna Friday. The Incident remains under lnvestlgattoo by
,the GaDia County Sheriff's Department.
.
The break-In occurred between 7: 35 p.m. and 11: 33 p.m. at lhe
n!llldence of Russ Elliot, 464 Jackson Pike.
Upon arrival at the h&lt;lme, deputies disCovered an ax tW! been used
to break side windows. The Intruders had entered the' house by
unlocklng the front door.
Car keY,• were taken from lhe kltchen and thP vehicle was parked
bt the garage. An assortment of knives were stolen from a bedroom.
Allo taken were jewelry, two watches, a stereo with speakers and
clock radio.
Another break-In Is being probed at a local residence ..,
Reported taken from the home of Charles Plymale, Raccoon
Road, were a flashlight, 12-gauge shotgun and a 100 to 200-pound calf.
The Incident occurred sometime prtor to Tuesday and was reported
Friday at 4:00p.m. The house was broken Into after two bricks were
thrown tllrough a bedroom window.
SeS

&lt;;as explosion leaves couple critical
.;HOFFMAN SWORN IN -

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, left,

W88 given his oath of office Fliday afternoon by Meigs County Common

PleaS Court Judge Charles Knight. Hoffman has served as mayor sbtce
1974.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A assistant fire chief.
The Hansons were burned over
McConnelsville couple were badly
burned when their earthen home more'than 50 percent of their bodies,
filled with natural gas and exploded, according to a 'spokeswoman at
a fire official said.
Bethesda Hospital In Zan~We.
Sheila Hanson, 20, and her They later were flown to University
Hospitals In Columbus, where staff
husband Michael. 26, apparently
assistant Blian Hanson said they
were searching for the gas leak and
may have llt cigarettes that set off " were In critical condition.
Woodward said firefighters don't
the explosion Fliday night, said
know If lhe gas leak'ed from pipes
Gary Woodward, McConnelsville

going Into the house or from a gas
well.
The explosion blew out the house's
front and started a fire. The three
earthen walls could have made the
explosion worse, Woodward said.
"It would appear as though three
of the sides were sealed up. That
would have compounded the explosion because there was no way for
gas to leak off," he said.

Short CirCU;t~ COU.

fire

·
The engine and passenger side of a car were damaged by a fire
Friday morning, possibly caused by a short circuit In the engine.
. The Gallipolis Fire Department reported the vehicle fire occurred
at 1::15 a.m. In the parldng lot of the French Quarter, Kanauga.
Owner of the car Is Raymond Thompson, Rt. l, Galllpolls.
Firemen sprayed water to extinguish flames. Ten men took one
truck to lhe

POMEROY _ A $12 million
lawsuit agalmt the Meigs Local
School District and others has been
· transferred to Meigs .County Com·
mon Pleas Court from Franklin
County.
The action was tlleQ on behalf of
Michelle Leigh Ly(lns, a minor, by
her parents, Leonard c. and Carol
Lyons, for dannages caused by
Injuries received by their daugllter
at Pomeroy Elementaey SchooL
The complaint states that on Jan.
15, 1981, Michelle Lyons, then 6, was
attending class taught by Mary
carolyn Wiley at Pomeroy
Elementary.
The action alleges that the teacher
left the classroom fora longperlodof
tlme, leaving students In the,
classroom without supervision.
Theactlonchargeslhatdurlngthe
unsupervised period, Dale Eblln
and Gary King Jr., two students In
lhe class, had an'a4ercatlon In close
proximity to the plalntltf and struck
her In the left eye with a pointed
pencil penetrating the trts, cornea.
anterior chamber and limbus,
causing loss of vitreous humor and
hemhorraglng necesslatlng surgl·
cal removal of thP graphite lead

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eye injury leads to lawsuit

~ ·~

point and wood adherent deeply rla,asanlndlvidualandprtnclpalo1 seconctca~~~eofactlonthep~ --- ..
1
Imbedded 1n the eye.
Pomeroy Elementaey; WUey, as an charge gross negligence on tile part'
As a result the plalntl1f lo6t the Individual and teacher; Tannehill, of all lhe defendants and seek
vision tl)ereln co118tltutlng perman- teacher's aide; Eblln, a minor and another S5 million on behalf o1 their
ent and Irreparable legal bllndness. his parents, Benton and Jan Eblln; daughter and $1 million for
The petition states that neither King, a minor and his parents, Mr. themselves.
•
Mary Carolyn Wiley nor an aide, and Mrs. Gary King Sr.; and
In the third cause of action the ~
Becky Tannehill, nor any nurse, Zurich -American Insurance plalntltfs demand of the defendant -~
physician or other qualltled profes· Companies.
Insurance companJes tile
slonal or lay employee provided any
The plaintiffs ask S5 mllllon for lhe mum amounts of coverage to which · ·aid to the plaintiff or secured any loss of sight and the accompanying the plalntltf would be entitled.
·
other person to do so and that her effects upon their daughter and $1
The action demands lhat a jury :
admiSsion to Holzer Medical Center million for themselves. In the tlial be held.
·
was delayed for over two hours by . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - lhe absence of respo1181ble personnet or supervisors Including, Robert
Mortis, principal, for such emer·
gency procedure and attention.
Named as defendants In lheactlon
are the Ohio State Board of
Education Including all members;
Franklin B. Walter, state superln·
tendent of Instruction; Meigs Local
Board of Education members
Robert Barton, Larry Powell,
Robert .Snowden, Anand King and
Richard Vaughan; Keith Riggs and
Carol R. Pierce, former board
members; Robert Bowen, former
Meigs County Schools Superintend·
ent; David Gleason, (prmer Meigs
Local supertntenden{ Robert Mor·
REGULAR '1.65

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolia, Ohio-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

Page-A-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

··

Two killed in
robbery try
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Pollee
say robbery may have been the
; reason that two female employees
: were found stabbed to death in a
research laboratory at Riverside
Methodist HospitaL
Police homicide Detective Sgt.
John Cherubini said the women had
been stabbed in the back Friday, but
he would not say if the weapon had
been recovered. The women's
purses had been ransacked, and
there were signs of a struggle, he
said.
"At this time, robbery appears to
be the motive, " Cherubini said.
The bodies of Patricia Matix, 30, of
Delaware, and Joyce McFadden,
33, of Dublin, were f(lund shortly
after 5 p.m. They apPeared to have
been dead two to four hours,
Cherubini said.
"We've brought extra securtty
fo~ . into the hospital and posted
them in all areas," said Erie
Chapman, hospital president, after
the slayings.
The laboratory was easily accessIble from the emergency room. A
hospital spokeswoman told tilt'
Columbus Citizen-Journal that no
special securtty measures were
taken In that area, beyond a sign
warning visitors to stay out.
The newspaper quoted an unidentified hospital security officer as
saying Riverside has had problems
with people coming through the
emergency room and "wandertng
around" in the area of the
laboratory.
The hospital is located on the city's
northwest side.

January 1, 1984

\

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ew Year's 1984

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Section~·

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Sunday

1984

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Gallia countians concerned about people, education

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hopes and wishes revealed

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ByLEEwmmoW
LEE ANN WELCH
.11Jrie8.Sentlnel.Staff

.

T)lls time each year, people
retlect upon the past and look
toward the future, and Gallla
Countians are no exception.
Future dreams and aspirations
are revealed just before New Year's
Day to friends-and family, and some
locallliures were pinned down to let
coun(y residents peek at those hopes

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Coolpleted courihouse

For two public officials, the
completion of the new courthouse
will be a dream ci&gt;me true lor 1984.
A wish from Gallla Col!lltY
Common Pleas Court Judge RIchard Roderick Is that ail office
holders will be able to move into the
new courthouse by April, the
completion date for the building.

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• • • • • • • • ' ••• t

'·
- many.dealing with the growth of
Gallla County ancj caring more for
one another .

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•••••••••••• •••••

Visiting students
meet with Rotary
MIDDLEPORT - . TwQ foreign
exchange students presented the
program Friday night when
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
met at Heath United Methodist
Church.
am Diles, formerly of Middleport ·
: andamemberoftheAthensRotary,
. introduced the two students, Patrt\l · da Constable of Cordorba, Argen\ · tina, who spoke of the rustoms and
life In her country, and Bridget
Hapelt of Somabhula, Zimbabwe,
who presented a slide show describIng life In her native land.
·
: Accompanying the students were
: members of the Athens club, James
: Brower and son, Bill, and other
~ guests were Bill Knight, Point
Pleasant club, and Gordon Amsba.ry, Gallipolis club.
, Bill Francis was In charge"of the
:program and Roger Luckeydoo,
· presldent, was In charge of the
:meeting.- Women of the church
·served dinner.

Louise Burger, clerk of courts,
whose office Is one floor below the
judge's, Is anxious to see it finished .
Rodertck says he hopes 1984 will
mark a return of prosperity for the
citizens of the county. Since he deals
with domestic relations llllltters
much of the time, hewouidliketosee
divorce cases handled more
promptly. In addition, he wants to
see foreclosure cases reduced.
Mrs. Burger says she alms to be
the best elected official, be more
patient and understanding. "I hope
there Is more peace in the world,"
she says.
Larry Rogers, youth minister of
Grace United Methodist Church in
.Gallipolis has a number of things he
would like to have realized In the
coming year, both on a national and
city leveL
Overall, Rogers - like most
Americans- would like to have the
Marines out of Lebanon, and
secondly, the United States "take
care of our own," making a major
effort lo aievlate hunger In the
nation.
"I would like to see more caring
about each other, understanding
each other," he added. That caring
should also be evident on the local
level, and Rogers would like to see
adults support the youth in theGallla
County area, not justcrtticize them.
Today's youth
and declslorw

Being a youth minlstef, Rogers
deals primarily with the school-age
crowd, a group that needs to realize
their future Is up to them. "The
. decisions they make now will affect
their future."
Rogers trtes to show Gallia
County youths that iieer pressure
can be overcome- that they do not

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Fred J . Deel, School Board President

••

a:

Meigs County survey

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Approximately 50 Meigs
County residents were surveyed
with the question, "If you had the
power to stop one pi'Qblem In
• 1984, what would It be?" Choices
of crime, war, unemployment,
disease, and hunger were given.
Here's how it turned out:
Thirty percent of those polled

Accidents injure 2
MIDDLEPORT- Two residents
were taken to Veterans Memortal
Hospital for treatment of injurtes
received in two accidents, said
.Middleport police. ,
At 1:15 a.m. SatUrday, Tammy
Thomas fell out of a car driven by
her husband, Charles Thomas on
South Third Avenue. Pollee said
Mrs. Thomas was leaning against
the door when It opened.
The car was traveling at a slow
rate of speed, he reported.
. Wllllam Glass, Middleport, was
· taken to Veterans Memorial at 5:59
: p.m. Friday for treatment of minor
· Injuries received when the car he
was driving struck a stop sign as he
attempted a tum from Hartinger ·
Parkway onto Pearl Street.

would stop war, with the same
number opting to end unemployment. Stopping hunger was a
close third, with 24 percent.
Putting an end to crime pulled 12
percent of the vote, whllethefinal
four percent would choose torure
all disease .

Larry Rogers •

t

have to do something "because
everyone does it." Today's youth
can make a decision not to drink or
drug, and the group Teen Instltiute
supports that. Currently, TI Is active
at Gallia Academy High School,
however Rogers sees the need to
take It Into the elementary schools,
somethlnghehopestoaccompiishin.
1984.
Another of the decisions Rogers
would like to see young people make
Is having a commitment to Jesus
Christ. and being serious about their
faith in Him.
If southern Ohio Is recognized
more by the state, Jim Williams,
president of the Southern Ohio
Division of the Central Trust Co.,
says it can have better economics
and more political clout Williams,
also president of the GallipoliS Area
Chamber of Commerce and serves
on the executive committee of the
Community Improvement
Corporation.
-- •'l'eace, tranquility"
· His New Year's resolution Is to
combathisvariedweaknesses. "My
aspirations locally aretoseealifeln
Gallla County for everyone ... where
there Is no hunger, no fear of being
deprived ... but peace and tranquility. I would like to see a world where
we would have to worry more about
who Is poor, Ill, old and !nflrmed rather than who has the obscenity of
who has a greater capablllty to
destroy civilization as we know it."
Another man who wants to see the
growth of Gallipolis and the
economy is Ray Bush, an 18-year
veteran of the Gallipolis Fire
Department. The battalion chief
says he hopes 19841sa tlre-safeyear.
Perhaps, the new year will compare

Richard C. Roderick, Conunon Pleas Judge

to 1!&amp; in which the number of fires list of aspirtaions for 1984.
Pollarcl Is concerned ~th the
has declined.
Fred Deel, Galla County Board of upcoming elections next year.
Education President and county4-H Those elected need to "have their
extension agent, says he hasn't hearts toward God.' '
Involvement
thought too much about his New
Greatly
concerned
with educaYear's resolution. He does say he
wants to see a smooth construction tion, he sees thegrea'testdownlallon
stari for new elementary schools in the part of parents not becoming
the county. "lhopetoseetobeableto personally involved with education
expand our program (4-H) to as - backing the authority of the .
school and supporting the students, .
many youth as possible," he says.
The Rev. Alvis Pollard, associate rather than criticizing them.
Ohio Valley Christian School has ·
pastor at First Baptist Church in
Gallipolis, has many things on his made a stead) ·ncrease in students, ·
he added. Seven years ago, the
school -located in the First Baptist
building - began with 44 siudents,and in 1984, Pollard expects to see
the enrollment top 200.
Young people need a sense of
direction in their lives and a number
· of good influences - "family,
friends and a strong Bible believing
church." Pollard hopes to be part of
meeting that need in the Gallla
County community.
His grratest hope and aspiation
for
1984 concerns the church. "M~
Rev. AM!i PoDanl
greatest aspiration for this next year
Is that this will be the year Christ
returns to rapture the Church- the
body of Christ- and toeverbewlth
Him (1Thessalonlans4:17)."
A goal for Barbara Shelton, R.N.,
nursing
supervisor and admlnlstra·
everyone ... and "a winning season
assistant
at the Gallia County
live
for the Meigs Marauder basketball
team."·
(See EDUCATION, page B-2)
Barbara Shelton
Dick Seyler, Mayor-Elect · of
Pomeroy, sums up his new year's
wishes, "It Is my hope and prayer
that the turmoils and problems of
the world lessen, and the threat of
war vanishes. Closer to home, I wfsh
that my family and friends continue
to enjoy good health. For my home
town of Pomeroy for more than 35
years, I wish that starling my new
job as mayor, I can contlibute very
much toward helpingthevlllagearid
its residents, My office will be open
to all of you. After all, it Is yours." ·
Although on this New Year's
beginning, tragedy will fill many of
the headlines, It seems sure that we
of Meigs County will continue
working together to c~ate a bright
and happy future. May your 1~ be
.the best year ever!

orld peace and prosperity on ·Meigs County minds
By JAYNE HOEFLICH
Times Sentinel Staff
, Thedawnoftheyear1984hasbeen
a much-anticipated-- and dreaded
eventsinceGeorgeOrwell'snovel
•···---··· appeared In prtDt 34 years
However, in spite of Orwell's
11 ~~~h~,p~~~ predictions, Big
I
watching you, and
lc1realtive lndM(Juallity Is flourishing.
And, insplteoftherathersadstate
our blue-green planet, a spirit of
sustains us--hope for good in
coming year. As Pam Riebel of
tct1est.er, a senior at Eastern High
lSc~hocJI, puts It, "I hope that1984 will
more happiness, peace, and
11PI'OS~Ierilty to our country."
A number of other Meigs County
citizens express their hopes for the
new year:
Since war, terrorism, and other
mllltary action Is occupying so
much- space In the media, It's no
l.su..Prise that peace Is at the top of

:Emergency runs
POMEROY - Five calls were ·
answered by local units Friday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
At 8: 56 p.m., Ponieroy went to
Ohio 143 for Clarence Spurner,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 6:57p.m. went to ·
the Royal Crown Cola plant for
Leslie Saxton, taken to Veterans.
Middleport at 1:22 a.m. Saturday
took Tammy Thomas from the
: scene of accident on South Third
: Avenue to Veterans; and at 5:59
p.m. Middleport took Wllllam Glass
from the scene of an accident on ·
Hartinger Parkway to Veterans.
Racine at 5:06 p.m. took Bob ·
: White from Deem's Restaurant-In .
: RaclnetoVeteransanilat6:23a.m., l
: Tuppers Plains went to. Success ;
' Road for Agnes Barringer, who was
' treaied but not transported.
.

everyone's list of prtorlties for 1984
wishes.
"My biggest hope lor 19841s world
peace," Bruce Fisher of Middleport
relates. Fisher Is at school at the
Cincinnati School of Mortuary
Science.
"I wish that fathersandsonsneed
never die in war," hopes Lila Mitch
of Pomeroy, · a Swlsher-Lohse
employee.
Pam Riebel affirms, "I pray that
the servlceboys in Beirut can be
returned home safely to their
families."
Another side of peace Is revealed
in the hopesofScottLucas, Veterans
Memorial Hospital administrator:
"As ! look ahead totheyear1984,my
wishes for all mankind include
peace within ourselves, as well as
theworld."
·
On the lighter side, Meigs High
English teacher Dorothy Oliver of
Pomeroy says, "Seriously, I hope

there is no warfare anywhere in
1984 .. Not so seriously, I hope that all
my Meigs juniors tum in ·A-level
research papers ... and I think one Is
about as likely as the other."
Another Issue on themlndsofarea
residents Is the economic situation.
With inflation slowed to a low single
digit, the unemployment problem Is
the focus of economic concerns.
"I would like to see the number of
unemployed people decrease," says
Pam Riebel.
Llla Mitch adds, "I hope everyone
who wants to work can find a job."
Her concern extends to · poverty
worldwide--another of her wishes Is
"that chlldren everyWhere n~er
know the pain of hunger."
Health and happiness, as well as
improved economic conditions,
complete the list of Scott Lucas'
wishes. Bruce Fisher includes
continued economic recovery, a
healthy and happy new year for

an

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~ No paper Monday
: GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis .
: DallyTrlbuneandtheDallySentlnel •
will not be published Monday to .
- allow Its employees to observe the
New Year holiday.
: Publlca!Joo 8nll regular business
: hQurlresume~y.
.. ,

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Dick Seyler, Pomeroy Mayor-elect

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Lila Mltclt

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Doro&amp;hy
OUver

�January 1, 1984

i, 1984

Janua,Y

W. Va.

Pomeroy-;-Middleport~Gallipolis,

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-84

Ohio-Point Pleasant; W. Va.

·Rue, Becker wed in Louisiana
POMEROY - The ma rriage or
-· H. Gert Rue to Capt. Randy B.
Becker was solemnized Saturday,
Oct. 22, at Aurora United Methodist
Church, New Orleans, La ., with Dr.
Byrl Moreland officiating.
. The bric;ie l.s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy L. Rue, Plentywood.
Mont ., and the groom the son or Don
Becker, Middleport, and Mrs.
Donna BUss, Mokena, Ill. Mrs.
Theresa Becker, Middleport, Is his
grandmother.
Mrs. Nancy Bauer was organist
with Mrs. l}nn O'Qulnn , soloist.
The bride's gown of ha ndkerchief
linen was handmade for her
paternal grandmother In 1900 and
featured lace Insets In the bodice,
solid and cutwork e mbroidered
daisies on the dress and petticoa ts.
Her ha t was of coral colored straw.
trimmed with a ntique ribbon, white
net and a white gladioli spray. She
carried a catalaya orchid with
greens.
Lynn Rue, sister of the bride; was
maid of honor; bridesmaids were

ELL
We Reserve The
_umit Quantitie•-

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sundiy 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., Jan. 7, 1984

Louise Burger

~ducation...

·····~- -

-- ·i •

_ : (contlnuedfromB-1)
Health Department , Is the passage
of !he .5 mill levy before voters on
May 8 to provide needed services to
reSidents.
$he joined the health department
as -a staff nurse in June 1979. Now
she helps prepare budgets, pi~
yatious cllnics, assists tbe sanitar'!U! as well as conducts general
nursing duties. Her New Year's
resolution Is to eat less and exercise
rnqre.

$} 99

U:S.D.A. C OICE .

Gallia Seniors schedule

Round Steak .....L!·•••

Meigs
aookmobile
schedule

Ground Beef...... :~·.~.l

'POMEROY - Bookmobile serVi.c e in Meigs County Is brought by
~ Meigs County Public Ubrary
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
:Tuesday, Jan. 3- Portland (post
office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls
(~·ffie's Restaurant), 3: 05-3': 50
p.m.; Racine (bank), 4:35-G:tri
p.m.; Syracuse (pool), 6:20-7:50

HOMEMADE SANDWICH .

19

iJ.m.

_Wedn~ay, Jan. 4 -

Ch@iter
(fil'e station), 2: 15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
(north side of Keno bridge), 3-3:30
l!·!Tl·; Success Road (near 39060),
~ 45-4: 15 p.m. ; Long Bottom (post
otfice), 4:25-5:10 p.m. ; Reedsville
(Reed's store), 5:W-li:20 p.m .;
l.'Uppers Plains (Lodwick's), 7:207; 59 p.m.; BaumAddition,8: 1(}.8: 40
p.m.

Sausage .............!2·...

-

3
9
Bacon.................~~.. .!

Meigs
Seniors
..
schedule

·sananas .............4iSI
BROUGHTOn'S .

to be closed,

: ~e Sehlor Nutrition Program I
Se-rves a hot meal at noon each day.
992-2161 to make a reservation
fof a meal no later than 9 a.m ., the
~ of the reservation. The followfnf m enu is planned for the week of

-~

peas, brown and serve
rdls. chocolate graham cracker
pie, •
'!'Oiuisday - Broasted chicken,
lllilhed potatoes and gravy, three•
salad, biscuit, fruit:
~day - Escalloped potatoes,
liartl and clieese, broccoli and
chts, cole slaw, !rult cup.
.• Cllofce of milk, tea, coffee
avallaJ&gt;le· dally.

,,

.,

Downtown Huntinllon
Across from Civic Center
626·7090 ,/
704 GRAND CENT.RA AYE.

STARTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 3
10:00 A.M. SHARP

I

I

I1
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1

FISH Cl0. FRIES Two
tender fish fillets,
natural cui french fries
FOR
ONLY

$1 50
1

11

~,~sc,~~~~flng Copt D's)

""

or d1scount.
(or P&lt;lrt'clpohng Copt D'sJ.

and 2 southern style hush
pupp1es.

Caetain D's

I·········
I

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a grta little ltllood place

FISH Cl0. FRIES Two
tender fish fillets,
natural cut french fries

• • • • • • • • • I CLIP THIS COUPON

1 FOR

$1 50

I ONLY
1
I Not
Offer expues 11~84
good Wlft1 onv oft1er specool

1
1

I

and 2 southern style hush
puppies.

I
II
I

"'aetaIn D's

,.

•

a erta little ltllood place
CLIP THIS COUPON • • • • • • • • • •
CUP THIS COUPON • • • • • • • • • •

[01 P&lt;lrflciiPQ.,tlng_Ccipl D's)

~ BOY'S
PACK

$2.00 OFF VALUE I
~~~~~~e~~~~c!t~~~~ ~~
.

cr~my cole sklw and

8 hush puppies. Serves4 or more.
1HRIFT PACK Includes: 8 fish fillets. natural cut ~ench tries,
creomy cole sklw and 8 hush puppies. Serves 3-4.

SORRY..... Al1 SALES ANAL!

In the
Silver Bridge
Plaza

I
1•••••••••1
I
I
II

FISH Cl0. FRIES Two
tender fish fillets,
natural cut french fries

Infant to 14

WE HAVE CRAFf SUPPUES
AND GIFf ITEMS

1I
1
1

a erta little ltllood ,._·

I ;:~~r=~ ~~~ft1er speCKJI

1
1

I

Two tender fish fillets,
natural cui french fries
and 2 southern style hush
puppies.

1 50 "aRtaiD D's

or d1scounr.

I

1
II
I

'

I FISH
8c FRIES
FOR $

1I 4 Off
GIRLS
Infant to 14

I

a ll't llttluealood place
• • • • • • • • • • CUP THIS COUPON • • • • • • • • • •

1I

Coats

I

and 2 southern style hush
pupp1es.

or discount
tor port1C1ponng Copl D sl •

1

Play Wear

I

~~~r=~~~~ther s~ool Ca~taln ' D's

II ONLY
FOR $1 50

ALL
Dresses

296-4632

Ph . 992-6992

• • • • • • • • • • CUP THIS COUPON • • • • • • • • • •

I
I

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE

Across lrd'm
Grand Central Mall
Vienna, W. Va.

Middleport, OH.

Open New Year's Day
Free cooked cabbage served Ne1•, Year's Day
with every dinner.

• • • • • • • • • • CUP THIS COUPON

MON.-THURS. &amp; SAT.
10:00 A.M. TILL 3:00P.M.
FRIDAY: 10;00 A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M.

'

'·-

FRUTH PHARMACY

..•

TWO LOCATIONS
783 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. OH. •
364 Ja-ckson Pike, Gallipois, OH .

••
•

•

EXTENDEb CHRI.STMAS HOURS
FRUTH PHARMACY OF OHIO
MIDDLEPORT &amp; GALLIPOLIS
DEC. 5 TIL DEC. 24
Monday thru at. 9 A.M. til 10 P.M.
Sun. 11 A.M. til 8 P.M.
Sat., Dec. 24, 9 A.M. til 7 P.M.

....
••
•

. SANDWI.CH MATE. IND.

•

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.•

BAN'Q~ET

ELF CUT GREEN, RED or CHILl . -

15 oz. CAN .

'

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CloSed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas .

•
•
•

.••
••

...

•

.•

•Dependable. Low Cost Prelcription ServiCe
•3 Reglltered PharmiCists
· ·
•Molt compi8te Pretcription Stock
eltitmized 'Receiptl for Insurance and Income Tax Purposes ;
I .•Y're Compound Prelcriptionl
• ·-u~. Fill All Third Party Prescriptions
e.We Mlln1eln A Complete Record of all Prescriptlona. Filled
•Free Parking

•••

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•

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· :Wednesday - Baked white fish,

c~~ed

WALLPAPER
SUPEB
MA.RKET
763 lRD AVE.

.••

•.

tl1llt a nnounce ment by 8: 30 a.m.

~ browned potato wedges,

PER SINGLE ROLL

PLUS A HOUDAY VALUE!

I

HOURS·:

¢ .
_
2 99
Downy...............!!!!·gg¢ Amer. SIJces...~ .~z~
.
j$.
$
Beans or c.orn..3
p
t
.
p
·-'
· · 1· o 1es..... ~ .•.!~~·•..41
· 1
·

FABRIC SOFENER

~PO Radio Station will make

· ~
~pple.

Prices Starting At

FEED FOR$

1I
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onerexplres11~!4

Notgoodwlth onvon&gt; 0rspec ,ol
or disccunl. .
lot porticipohng Copt. D'sl

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,

a grt little ltlfood plact
• • • • • • • • • ICUPTHISCO
Nl••••••il•l

• GOLD MEDAL ROOR

~a~b.

69¢

.r-L-VORI.TE SUGAR.
5 LB.

Bag

FQLGI;R'.S

I.NST ANl·_COFFEE

2

$}49 ·

· a.o~: ,$ 9~

Offer Expires Jan. 7, 1984

.

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'

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L::~~=.:==~=~~=:=~~===tr' ''• '''
.·

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(For 6

'

Expire8Jan. 7. 191i \

••••••

10% SENIOR 011ZENS DISCOUNT
-. ·
(60 and Ovw)
·
KIDDIE-SAY Pll()GiAM:-10% lisoouNT

.. '''

' · Limit One P8r Customer ·
Only At PO\WII'e

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's

I

~Winter Clearance Sale!
AI

STARTS TUESDAY, JAN . 3RD

.

2% MiIk......~:·!;~ ::'~·:.~.1 59

: !The center will be open dally, but
b$ route's will not be run If road
Conditions pose a safety factor. It Is
roi- the senior' citizens' concern that
w~ do not run the vans in uncertain

: :J)Iesday - Johnny marzetti,
tcli!lsed salad, cornbread, · baked

·

Huge Selections

Caatain
D's.
a greaT little seafood place.

Second Aalile/

Jvfonday, Jan. 3, the center will be
closed for the holiday. The pool
table Is open dally, as well as other
~&lt;imes, Uno, Euchre, Pitt, checkers
al}d puzzles. Quilting, lap robes, bed
~s a nd various other volunteer
ilsSignments are available each
d~ to be worked on. Physical
ILtness Is at 11:30 a.m. dally.

JW\. 3-6:

317 N. 2nd

••

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cau

Patterns. Making Room
for New.

$}99

Ir..-.-;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

1 ONLY
1
1 Not
onerexp11es
11~e4
good w1th any other spec1c 1

COUNTRY CRAFT COTTAGE

...

'!IJn.
•

~

I

Cl ,
eanng Out ·Last Year's

4464612.

.•

management from St. Mary's
University, San Antonio, Texas and
a n MA In health care adminlstra·
lion from Webster University, St .
Louis, Mo. He Is stationed at Scott
Air Force Base, JU.
In attendance at the wedding
from out -of-state were guests from
Arizona, Mississippi, Texas, Ohio,
Illinois and Montana.
They reside at 451nnsbruck Lane,
Belleville, Ill.

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj

s·ALE

•

.10onday - Center will be closed
for:the holiday.
:-Jiuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:)0 a.m. ; Chorus Practice, 1-2
p.t1).
Wednesday - Social Security
R,epresentatlve, 10 a.m.-noon;
Ph~slcal Fitness, 11:30 a. m .;
Bbigo, 1-2 p.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
::Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.itoon; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a .m.
; : Friday - Physical Fitness, 11: 30

center

GALLIPOLIS - Offices of the
0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District w1U be
closed to walk-in business on
Tuesday, Jan. 3, to allow staff to
accept 1984 phone-in reservations
for shelterhouses, located at Rae·
coon Creek County Park. To mank
you early-bird reservation, call

}19
Sausage..............~~ ..

446-9510

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====~ . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;,_ _ _ _ _..

Mdntyre office
closed for holiday

'
·$

H~MEMADE

· POMEROY - Meigs County
senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
ltelghts, Pomeroy, invites all senior
cltifens of the county to take part in
activities at the center. The center
is: open Monday through Friday
frotn 8: 30 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m .
~hedule of activities for the week
of Jan. 3-6 Is as follows:

~ather.
; ~ the

·

$

QUALITY PLUS SLICED

pork and beans, potato salad,
bread, butter, fruit pie, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger patties,
stewed tomatoes, i.,._.a beans with
corn, bread, butter, jeliowlth pears,
milk.
Friday - Spaghetti with sauce,
tossed salad, Italian bread, butter,
banana cream dessert, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.

11-noon, Advisory CouncU, 1 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 6- Staff Meeting,
~: 15-8:45 a.m.; Art Class, 1-3 p.m.;
Craft Mini-course, 1-3 p.m .; Social
Hour, 1 p.m .
•
Saturday, Jan. 7- Yoga Class.
10:30 a.m .
The Senior Nutrition Program
will serve the following menus:
Monday- Closed.
Tuesday- Turkey with dressing,
noodles, mixed vegetables, hot rou,
butter,-sliced peaches, milk.
Wednesday - Polish sausage,

.

.

· ·1 wish to thank my partners, patients and
family for their cooperation, help and
understanding during the prolonged absences from practice while I was taking
additional Cardiology training at University
Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Although my
new patients will be limited to those wirh
heart disease, it is my intention to take care of
all old patients who wish to continue with
me. Thank you.
Gene H. Abels, M.D.
Gallipolis, Ohio

c.pt. and Mn. Randy Becker

GALLIPOUS - Activities for
the week or Jan. 2-7 at tbe Senior
Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, Jan. 2- Oosed.
Tuesday, Jan.3-S.T.O.P. Class,
10: 30 a .m.; Pbyslcal Fitness, 11: 15
a.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 4 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Crown City
Mobile Unit, 1 p.m .; Card Games,
Thursday, Jan. 5- Bible Study,
1-3 p.m.

Mrs. Brenda Wold and M!'ll. Sharon
~!bert .
r---~~-------------------------------- .
Best man was Larry Gladwell of
Bedford, Ohio; Curt Wold and Tim
Wold were groomsmen.
I
The bride Is a graduate of
Monday thru Frtuy
Montana State University with a
9 AM to9 PM
Sa turday 9 AM to 5 PM
degree in microbiology and did her
Internship at Sacred Heart Medical
WA.Ll lf&lt;Ofii(.AU ' Ofll
AN AJI'I'()INI MI( Nl
Center, . Spokane, Wash. She has
been employed at Jo Ellen Smith
Memorial Hospital, New Orleans ,
and Is supervisor of the microbiolA NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN ..
1
ogy labora tory a t St . Anthony's
Hospital, Alton, Ill .
Becker has a MBA In fin ance

.

' -

,,

,

and Under) ·'

PHO...E
446·6620- 992~491
.,

25°/o OFF
ON SELECTED TOPS &amp; BLOUSES,
DRESSES, WARM SLEEPWEAR, SLIPPERS,
GLOVES, MITTENS, HATS, SCARVES

30°/o OFF
l9

ON COATS, SWEATERS,
BETTER SPORTSWEAR

· SAVE 50°/o AND MORE

l

ON ONE RACK OF SPORTSWEAR
NO LAY.AWAYS ON SALE MDSE.
ALL. SALES FINAL.

---etc. o

�,.-

Sa\e
WILDERNESS

'

'67.00 VALUE

Now

SUNDAY, JAN. 1
THRU
SATURDAY, JAN. 7

.

HIKER'S
WOMEN'S

$4"]00

.

·•

Q

Dress Shoes· ,.

WOMEN'S

ALL STYLES

ingo Boots

'

.

ITEMS

DOUBLE
COUPONS

$}5° 0 OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

ssooo
Now

Wolverine Hikers
1

70.00

VALUE

POMEROY - Emerson and
Elizabeth Well of 34828 State Route
7, Pomeroy, will obseiVe their 50th
wedding anniversary on Jan. 8 with
ail open reception at the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
Married on Jan. 12, 1934 at
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Well have
two~hlldren. Doris Snowden, Route
7, · Pomeroy, and Howard Well .

Dirty Harrj holds top box office .
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) "Sudden Impact," Clint Eastwood's
latest Dirty Harry· . outing, and
"Tenns of Endearment," a gentler
film that examines a motherdaughter relationship, emerged as
box office winners for the Christmas
weekend.
Despite winter's interference,
Disney's double bill of "Mickey
Mouse's 'Christmas Carol'" and the
re-release of "The Rescuers" fared
weD. Here are the topsevengrossing
films of the past weekend, followed

·,.:i

.1d!.

MEN'S DINGO

Route 7, Pomeroy. A daughter.
Avis. is deceased. They have two
grandchildren. Mrs. Well's mother
Is Maude Ross, a patient at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Well retired from Smith-Nelson
Motors.
Friends and relatives are Invited
to attend the open reception from 2
to~ p.m.

by the weekend's receipts, the total
receipts to date and weeks in
distribution:
1. "Sudden Impact," $6 mUllan,
UlmUllon, three weeks.
2. "Terms of Endearment, " $4.3
milllon, $26 mlllion, five weeks.
3. "Scarface," $3.5 million, $15.4
million, three weeks. '
4. "Two of a Kind, " $2.6 million,
$7.8 mil lion, two weeks.
5. "Yentl," $2.6 million, $11.8
milllon , six weeks.

f A.R E A S r

Laura Hoover
Lonnie Totten

HooverTotten

by Auditions

SIZE ZIPPER BOOT

VALUES TO 172.00

REG. 161.00

Now

OOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS ·CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

Large
Group
Women's
Fashion Boots

Mr. and Mrs. Emerson WeD

Well anniversary to be celebrated

•'·

Connies
Auditions
Hushpuppies

S4QOO

Now

Men's Dexter Side Zip Boots
1
47.00 Value Now S25° 0
·Group of Men's Dingo Pullons

$30° 0

180.00 VALUE

Now
$6}00

"Prt·
129.00

Now S4().00
'72.00 Value Now SSQ.OO
'63.00 Value

VALUE

$}5° 0

Now
FIEIDUMI

. Many
More Styles
And
Brands Reduced

No Charing or Layaways
On Sale Merchandise
STORE HOURS:
Open Monday &amp; Friday
9:30 A.M. til 8 P.M.
Tues .. Wed. , Thurs., Sat.
9:30 A.M. til 5 P.M.

75.00 VALUE

1

Now

$59°0

POMERY - Mr. and Mrs.
WendeD Hoover J r., 37964 Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Totten . 22!ll
McCament Road, Walhonding, an·
noun~ the engagement and approaching marriage of their child·
ren, Laura Ellen and LonniK Ray.
f.n April 14 wedding date has
been set.
MisS Hoover, agraduateof Meigs
HJah School and Ohio State Unlver·
slty, Is employed by East Knox
Local Schools as band and choral
dliector.
Totten. a graduate of East Knox
High School and the Agricultural
Technical Institute of the Ohio State
Uilverslty, Is employed by Knox
Cdmmunity Hospital.

EVERYTHING IN STORE ON .SALE

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S

THURS., JAN. 5, 1984

_,

GAlliPOl/1 , DlfiD

•

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

EX'TRA
LEAN

Chuck

Chuck

GROUND

Roast

Steak

CHUCK

Budget
P/easer
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

SUPERIOR

BOB EVANS

8

Polish

Roast

Sausage

USDA OtOICE BONELESS

SUPERIOR

STEW BEEF

FRANKIES

12 oz.

PKG.

SUPERIOR

,. ~\ ~
""" ~ ul.\
\ , t¥

Exotlcondolrotdoblodlnif19
the Orl""'ot trodltlon.
Somple OIX Contonese and

··•&lt;.\~ In

At-1.~

'-

a Taste of the Orient

C.\\U1

~

McndalnculsJoes.ptepcnd

,. '""" .,&lt;H&lt;

CARRY OUT

~

~anroneu

~

Chow Mein

COMI'LITI DINNIR MINU
OIIINTAL DICOI

RESERVATIONS
'IIDAY I

,

UTI.IIDAY
11:10 U .
JlliO:IO , ,I .

•

Ashley

.BLANKETS
Practical Size 72"x90"

BEDSPREADS

~~·r:99

1

.

-"

"For we know in part, and we prophesy in part. But when that
which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away"
(1 Cor. 13:9,10).
"Part" is from the Greek "ek meros, " which has reference to "a
part, portion, of the whole, each in his own part." "Perfect" is of neuter
gender, having no reference to a person . It is from the Greek "teleios "
which means "having reached its end, finished, the complete revelati~n
of God's will apd ways." It is used of things compiR.te, perfect, referring
to the compiR.te revelatio'll of God's will and ways.
Paul is making a comparison between that which is "in part," the
incompiR.te revealed word, and that which is "perfect," tlte complete
revealed word. The miracuknu gift• of the Holy Spirit constituted the
part or the portion of the whole. Each gift was a part, for no gift alone
would have been sufficient to reveal and confirm God's will to man. It
took the working of every gift or part in bringing all to the perfect or
complete revealed word. It was to this time Paul refers when he said
"F&amp;r we know in part, and we prophesy in part" (1 Cor. 13:9). H~
alludes to this par! as being like unto childhood ')1 Cor. 13:9), or looking
through a glass darkly (1 Cor. 13:12). As a child has partial knowledge,
so did they in this early age have partial lcrlowledge through 1pfritv&amp;
gifts. As they looked through a glals darkly, they could not behold the
complete mystery but only the portions that were made known to them
through spirit!U!l gifts.
James uses the same figure of speech, glals and perfect (James ··
1:22·25). The word is the gospel mirror through which we may look and ·
see our spiritual condition and behold the knowledlfe of God. James
refers to the glals (mirror), the word or gospel, as 'the perfect law of
liberty. " It is perfect when it is complete, having reached its end in
revealing all of God's will. The .Q/als is the same word to which Paul
alludes to this part as being like unto childlwod (1 Cor. 13:9), or looking ,
parts, but when the whole revelation of God's will was made known
the glass was complete, finililed and polished, so that we would ~iv~
the /ii.U knowled~e of God's will.
,
'!'he "perfect ' is the revealed and c01ifirmed word of God, referring
to the complete reve/atio'll of God's will and 'ways, the non-miraculous
aile. (This IS the age in which we live today.) The "part" was during the
t1me when things appeared as riddles, were somewhat obscure, and
not made clear, referring- to the incomplete revelation, the miroculoul
age. When the revelatum of God was made complete, whole, and
perfect, there was no further need for the parts, and they were done
away!The ''perfect" does not refer to Christ nor HiB second coming!

Chatham
FITTED MATTRESS PADS
Regular '15. to '33.

REGULAR

99 FULL

129.99
137.99

THERMAL WEAVE

QUEEN
KING

~:::99

White, Natural, Slate Blue

$9

99

139.99

•NO IRO" •PRE·SHRUK
•lACHINE WASHABLE
•ROUNDED toaNERS

Dacron Pillows
RED LABEL HOLLOFIL 808
Reaular '6.00
Stendud Size
Only

Kitchen Accessories

2for

$9

$} 25 each

Your Choice $}} 99

TERRY DISH ClOTHS

NAPKINS 11.79 each

Assorted Colors

49¢

99
90"
Round
60"x84"

$1.49 PKG. OF 3

Oblonp &amp; Ovals

luxury Bath Decor Accessories

ant Backs, Machine ~ash, Tumble Dry.

Thick-N-Thirsty ·

REGULAR SALE
12.00
$1_59

Tumblers

.
FA_
SHION COLORS
MATCH FIELDCREST TOWELS

MARTEX .

by Creative

100% Dacron Polyestir Pile, Skid Resist-

Tissue Boxes

BATH TOWEL SETS

$3.19
$5,59
'7. 99

Soup Dispensors · $4.00'
7.00

1

Weste Baskets · 110.00

Wash Cloths
Rea. 12.75 ·

Hand Towels

!: ~RS $5991---------.f
~-rou_ rls~ $1()99

Bulovlllo Road • P.O. Box 308
G~LLIPOLIS, OHIO 46131

-•

114 00

· ·s1699

lundly Evening
WoraNp 8:00

'li.OO :

:~~~:~~~:RCHASE

Rea. '5.50

·

Bath Towels Rea. '7.99

$499

TUB MATS '.

EIJht Beautiful Colors Tha\
-llatchOur Bath Ai:cesso,les.

Chtmols .. Vtrilll,
Enattsh Rost,
Orlenttl Garden

$499

each

Dish .Towels

60~'.xU)2"

,

1M 8/blt "

.STORE HOURS MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:00A.M. untill 8:00 P.M·.
SUNDAYS 1;00 P.M; untill 6:00 P.M.

D..fy·WJE"

'""' ""f'A·
: - . : - 11 . .. ~.i'~

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Fred White of NelghborhOQd Rd.,
Galllpolls, announce the engage·
ment and forthcoming marriage of
thl!lrdaughter, Brenda, to David P.
Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
ThomasTumeroiRomney, W.Va.,
former residents of VInton.
.An Aug. 31 wedding Is planned.
Miss White Is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and Ohio
Valley College In Parkersburg,
W.Va. She Is employed by Drs.
Cannan and Smith In Gallipolis. ·
Turner Is a graduate of North
Gallla High School and attends Rio
Grande College. He Is employed by
Boll Evans Farms, Inc.

Stone Case
Mrs. Doris C.
Stone of Upper Arlington announ·
ces the engagement of her daugh·
ter, Sandra Kay, to Geoffrey V.
Case, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
case of Upper Arlington.
.
The wedding will take place
March 3 at Covenant Presbyterian
Church.
'
.Miss Stone Is a graduateotupper
ArUngton"High School and of Ohio
State University. She Is employed
In the headquarters of The Limited

s,ores.

, Case, , a graduate of . Upper ·
Arlington, received his law degree
tiOm The Ohio State University
College of Law, He Is In practice
with the firm or Murphey, Young
and Smith of Columbus.
M1s8 Stone Is the niece o! Mr. ·and
~. Don Reee and Jolul Paul Stone
11 GalllpoUs.

..

Bananas

s

RED or GOLDEN

3LB.

DELICIOUS APPLIES BAG .

89¢

Budget
Pleaser

!~ CITY, Mo. (AP) - A
m!lllon project Is underway
here' td· constnact a churning

q.s

•.
l,lrotoot "F'\II'Y or the NUe't
rift course wiD be the largest
addition to the Worlds otFun theme
· llnu.ernent park since the park

'Ifhe

ush

U.S. NO. 1

Head

Maine

Lettuce

Potatoes 10 LB. BAG

WASHINGTON STATE
I

ANJOU PEARS

JACK
RABBIT

Beans
RED KIDNEY 16 OZ
PINTO
cA•' .
CHILl HOT
n
GT. NORTHERN

Pinto
Be·a ns

6~99¢

}79

YELLOW COOKING

ONIONS

Armour
4LB.

$}2

~===BA=G==l

rLASTIC
GALLON

149

Butter
SMOOTH 18 oz.
OR CRUNCHY JAR

BOX

.'

6.5 oz.

STAR-KIST

CAN

TUNA

69¢

HEINZ

KETCHUP
BlUE BONNET

fUCH'S FR9ZEN

DOUGH

so oz. $119 ' ·MARGARINE
BAG
.

'MORTON

hite

Frozen
·Dinners
· 5 VARIETIES
'11 oz.

5 LB. ~
BAG

.

...
' '

.

240Z.

BTL

4 STICK
POUND

99¢
59¢

VIVA

.PAPER TOWELS

JUMBO
ROLL

SKINNER 'S

12 OZ.
PKG.

EGG NOODLES

79¢
69¢

r

artha
Flour
PURPOS·E..

12 OZ. CAl

JIF
Peanut

AL CREST
HOMOGENIZED VITAMIN ~D
MILK GALLON PLASTIC

1% MILK

Treet

Budget
. Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pteaser
Special

~lnlm Therapldslssla~to .

'

Iceberg

Pleaser
Special

'. '
Water
. fun. '

. ; . often tn 1981.
•

"4i

Ripe

~tte-waterrapldl,

Aedlo
" Matn~frorn

'•

Golden ·

GALLIPOUS -

HARRINGBONE

Oblqs &amp; 011111

FIELDCREST LUSTRE RUGS

each

Assorted Colors

VALUES TO 124.00

, Your Choice

Oven 'Mitts

TERRY DISH TOWELS

50% Cotton 50% Polyester

CRUSHED GOOSE FEATHER PILLOWS
Standard 113.99
Kine '15.99

TERRY CLOTH

99¢

COUNTESS

Mother Goose

WhiteTurner

SALE

135.00
147.00
152.00

Table Cloths

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

- - - · -,

$8

Twin, Full, Queen, King

(For Free BibiR. Correspondence Course Wn'te ... )

•

FRANKS

POUND $!69
PKG.

David Turner

100% Cotton Made in U.S.A.

ROSE, GPLD, BLUE, COFFEE, P~STACHIO,
VANILLA. CAFE Al LAIT.

THE PERFECT IN FIRST CORINTHIANS 13:9,10
WiUio.m!J. Kughn

•.

KAHN'S BEEF-n-CHEDDAR

~~·c. $!59

Brenda While

Chatham ·

FINE-WEAVE

A Message Fr..,. The BibiR. ...

Sunday Momlnfl
81.,._ Study 8 :30
W•efllp 10:30

WIENERS

Qlj

r &lt;&gt;"s
~

DAil.Y

446-7227

89¢

KAHN'S REG. OR JUMBO

•••&lt;&gt;rI ,C

/if'

boi ....,.

OPIN 7 DAYS A WIIK

LB.

·if in

celtent chef. Alst(VOttons.

Oriental
favorites

$157

LB.
¢ Sausage ROLL
REG. HOT OR SAGE

POUND$}99
PKG.

CHUNK BOLOGNA

446·1923
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

e!IEDHM YOUR MANUFACTURERS MONEY~
SAVING COUPONS AT JOHNSON'S AND RECEIVE ..__ _ _ _ _ij,i
DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU PURCHASE THE
~PECIFIED ITEM. ONE COUPON PER ITEM. NO
EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED. DOUBLE RE·
DEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY 10 "FREE
MERCHANDISF', COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER
49' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH REFUNDS WHEN
VALLEY BELL
DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE EXCEEDS PRICE OF
ITEM. CIGARETTES ANO CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS
PREMIUM
ARE EXCWOED BY LAW. TO INSURE PROOUCTJO
QUALITY
ALL OUR CUSTOMERS. WE ARE LIMITING OOR
"DOUBLE COUPON' OFFER TO ONE JAR OF
Ice
INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE CAN OF GROUND
COFFEE PER SHOPPING FAMILY. DOUBLE
COUPON OFFER GOOD THURSDAY,
Cream

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
SJ&gt;ecial

I ....IIJ:.·I ish

Chinese
Restaurant -4"
" CHI, SUNNY MA"

Ill mlllliiiiD.

..

N0 DO
U8LE
·
COUPONS 0N
E0
ADVE RTJ S

As thiS New Year comes In for a smooth
1and1ng, we hope 1t's'f1lled with future
health wealth and much happiness for you
and 'your loved ones Please accept our
s1ncerest grat1tude for your loyal patronage

'

mSTYLES

Men's

~PR~IC~ES~Ei!F~~VE~~;

Engagements

Kraft
Orange

64 oz.

$

..

.

ice===J=uG===;;:.
•

.

�, .

•
Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohi~Point PleaiCiflt, W.Va.

1984

HMC computer

~arpe announcecl-~

t

GALLIPOUS - Selected trdm some partS o! the Middle and Far Key Punch OperatOr in · ·Data
more than 400 entries submitted In " East. Computing Instruments l;le- Proceulng and hal been theni I
Holzer Medical Center's "Name
gllJl With the "Abacus," derlv\1CI since.
the Computer" contest, the winning trom the word abax.
,
Presen~ Ms. Wlllon with~~
name Is ABAX, a Greek word
Submittlngthewlnnlngentryw-.a SI50 c~h prtie was Emil-C. Jariko, :
which means calculating tabk!,''Bnd
Sharon L. Wilson, !rom the Data Vice 'Prellllent tor Fiscal Serv!Cft, ~
considered appropriate today In .' Prf?Cesslng Department. Ms. WUCriteria tor Judilng the entries •
r e t e r e n c e . t o co m p 11 t 1n g
son has heen with HMC since Included three points: •the entry ;
Instruments.
October 1965, when she became an ., must be a single word; It must be a ,
The word originated more than
Insurance Clerk In the Business meanJngtuJ word; It must relate ·to :
5,&lt;XXl years ago and Is still used 1n
Oftlce.
In July 1972, she became a · computers, but be-unusual.
,• •
.
• •

1

.

t s~\.~s
t

COMPUTER NAME WINNER - Sharon L.
Wilson, lett, accepts a ca.h prize !rom Emil Janko,
vice-president lor fiscal services at Holzer Medical
Center. Ms. Wilson gave the new computer system at

Rober a new name - ABAX - !rom the Greek,
meaning calculating table. Ms. Wilson's entry was
chosen !rom over 400 submitted, IUld she also had the
second place name. She Is a Key Punch Operator In
Data Processing.
= .

Stiffer stomachs for lawmakers

I:

LONDON (AP) - British lawmakers have a reputation for their
stlff upper lips, but at least one
member of the House of Commons
would like to see his colleagues have
ttrrner stomachs as well.
Conservative legislator Charles
Irving says he's going to put more
health food on the menu at the House
of Commons to en&amp; urage lawmakers to shed weight.
"I think it's important to give the
members a chance to eat more
carefully," said Irving, who is in

charge of the catering.
Irving said Wednesday he plans to
introduce more salads, vegetarian
dishes, omelettes, fresh fruit and
low-&lt;:alorle beverages and serve
less of what the British call stodge~
heavy, filling food like suet pudding
with treacle.
'
The fattest man In the House,
406-pound Liberal Cyril Smith, who
has proclaimed In the past that he
likes himself as he Is, nevertheless
said Irving had an "excellent Idea."

--

-

~

.

--,:

SALES

After Christmas

l

5.4LE

t:
f

Sales

t 20o/o To 70o/o Off All Winter Merchandise
t
,
t·
L:Cit~N.
t t-""
I.
f
'

~t-\.

l

c,t-"t,C,

No G.
Oft

~~

-

-

)'~w Gfs

•

~)'s

-

336 Second Ave., Gallipolis

--~ ·

.: C4endar

Laurel Clltt Road. The meeting
Is ~ to the public.

SUNDAY
. GALLIPOLIS - The Crown
City Travelers Qua~. Crum,
w.Va. wW appear at the King's
. Qlapel &lt;;burch Sunday at 7 p.m.
. 'GALLIPOLIS .,.. Mt. Zion
·Baptist Church will feature the
Unroe Family In services Sun!!aY. 7 p.m. The public Is Invited.

..

• GALLIPOLIS - Don Bock
will be at FaUll Valley Christian
l;lnion Church In Sunday mornIng services.

RACINE - ' Racine Chapter
134. Onjer ot Eastern Star, will
.meet at 7: lJ p.m. Monday at the
Masonic Temple. All dues must
be paid by this January meeting.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
Order o! the Eastern Star,
~ hold a meeting Monday at
;qie Masonic Temple, 7: lJ p.m.
;All dues are payable by the
• anuacy meeting.

f34,

--

Beat of the Bend

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter 186, .Order ot the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7: 45
p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Ottlcers are to
wear their chapter dresses.

-

MONDAY

Happenings
Lodge to meet
POMEROY - David W. Fox
will be speaker when Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, meets at 7
p.m. Wednesday. Refreshments
will be served.

Distria meet
MIDDLEPORT - The 25th
District, Order ot the Eastern"

records.'"

to !he
Who knows?
rrlay be contagblsandwe'll
spir~ gOing.

January Clearance

7~Venue
· - residents In Pome-

. ust have felt quite encour-

NOW IN PROGRESS!

agl!ll seyeraJ days durtng the past

WE WILL BE .CLOSED .
MONDAY, JANUARY
2ND FOR THE NEW
YEAR HOLIDAY

•

OPEN TUESDAy I JANUARY 3RD
REGULAR BUSINESS HOURS 9:30-5:00 '

carry the refurbishing ott .

even

Ill Easy-to-clean 30" range
II Removable trim rings/
~ns l!ll Lift-off oven door
1!11 Full-width storage
drawer.

st11-tor
Christmas?
I. think
a
P5lCholoelcal
ltle6SIIge
from Its
relatives who wish I would grow up. No
wilY. Perhaps, we should go back to
~ shirts and ties.
·woold yod' care to guess the
favorite Cl\rlstmas present Lowell
~. Middleport, received this
year? C'mon, guess. It Is an
autographed picture o! Woody
Hayes and Lowell Is delighted. His
sod, Steve, an'anged It all. Nolv It
YO\!'ve ever seen a Woody Hayes
Lowell ·ls II.

NOW_!

,

Incidentally, did yoo notice the
gorgeous big wreaths In the Interior
ot The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. this holiday season?
I thought they were new- looked
great. However, Ted Reed tells me .
they were old but were attractively
redecomlell this year through the
ettorts ot Charles Swisher who
knew someone who had the talent to

•
when workers ot the Rand R
~eo.,cievetand,wereonthe
Bernice Ann Durst toond that she
stl'Efit ~g aut possible repair has many trlends over the holiday
WIKk for a sUp which developed ·season. She received cards, a
~ago. The village Is attempt· number o! them containing gUts o!
InC to get federal funding tor repair money--one as much asSI!O. Bernice
ot , the problem. ~ street was Ann, a deserving person, Is so
ckitled tor the drilling processes and pleased and thanldul.
that could have been a relief to
resldeilts ot the avenue which Is
Due to the weather conditions and
q(llte narrow and normally heavily other circumstances, most o! the
'
traveLed.
.
candidates taking otttces In Janu•
ary have taken their oaths·ot ottlce
{won't ask yoo what yoo got lor without fanfare-or the presence o!
Christmas. I "tlgger" you'll tell It The Sentinel cameras. Latest were
YQU want me to know. .
. Bruce Reed as a Pomeroy councU
I don't actually understand the member, and Chester K_nlgllt, a
d!rls~ processes. I mean !or40 member o! the Pomeroy Board o!
years I ve worn the same size shirt Publlc Attatrs. They were given
but would you believe that I
~lved three shlrts~all the wrong

VALUE PACKED
30" QUALITY
RANGE

·s319

oorter,
~

Star, scho!&gt;l ot tnstnictlon will be
held Jan. 6 and dinner reserva.
lions with paymen\ •are to be
made with Emma. K. • Qat·
WOt(hy, High St., Middleport, or
by calling, 992-3503.

·--

~ty for almost five years, got his

s~ ot ~lis fiom residents
cqqr,plal-nlng: about the Icy roads the

NOTICE

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Meeting changed ·

GALLIPOLIS - The 0. 0 .
Mcintyre Park District, In coordination with local professional
photographer Tom Grube, will
offer a six-week Baste Photography Class dealing with camera knowledge, tips on picture
taking, rums and other topics.
Classes will be held In the
Gallla County Probate Courtroom trom 7 to 9 p.m. on the
dates o! Jan. 17, 24, Feb. 2, 7, 14,
21.
Fee tor the class will be S25
with a minimum o! 12 participants. Kodak pamphlets, books,
and slide shows will be made
available thro\Jghout the course.
Since there are a limited
number ot spots available, the
Park District encourages preregistration. For more lntormatlon and to p~reglster, contact
the park District ottlce at
446-4612, extension 56.

-CUBE
STEAK

~~-LL

$199

~

~ROAST

$189

~...._

.

\--t-+

1-+-:-+-+--i-t

r.;:::==================J1
Our professional stylists
will recommend the
H(~US Conditioner
formulated to bring your
hair to life!

GALLERY ..
HAIR
ARTS

with

N€!US

LB.

$}49
59
LB. $2

SUPERIOR

BOILED HAM
CHUNK
BOLOGNA

LB.

All

MEAT
SUPERIOR

$129
LB.

FRANKIES
12 Oz.
Pkg.

QOROX
BLEACH

WITH WATER

STAR-KIST

$1 29
$1 0
ck_

PINTO 4 Lb.
BEANS 8a&amp;
HEINZ
KETCHUP 24
.r

CRISCO ~~-

¢

$2 5 9-

GAL
JUG

RC COLA, RC 100
DIET RITE COLA

JIF Smooth or Crunchy

$1 4 9
lUsH BEANS
3 I$

:~~~~RT 18 IlL
NAVY, KIDNEY,
PINTO, GREAT
NORTHERN,
CHIU HOT

8-16 Oz.
Btls.

.

Plus Deposit

TIDE
DETERGENT

tt 8 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-3233

Genuine NEXxUS Products are sold only in professional hair stylina salons.

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

50z.2/79(
39
24 Oz. $1

8

$1 .~. 8.,
'

'PAPER ·
TOWELS

COFFEE ,

Sunday, 10 A.M. Til 7_P.M.

Single
Roll

HYLAND HY -PRO

Washer M~el WL

MIN

RE-OPEN MONDAY, JAN- ·
UARY 2 AT' 9 A.M. AND WILL
RESUME NORMAL HOURS.

Model.
RE969
'

NOW .YOU CAN SAVE

\

HOURS JN OUR PR~-PRINTED INSERT
IN tODAY'S PAPER WERE INCORRE~T.
WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY .iNCONVENI·. ENCE THIS MAY HAVE' CAUSED •. ·

.

CHEESE
SUBSTITUTE

'

\

MAINE

POTATOES

$149LB.
'

.•.

•

.

•

' ,,

'I

•

FISHER CHEDAMATE
'
CHEDDAR

\

SAVE ON·SLACKS·, BLOUSES,
. COATS. DRESSES, ETC.

614-992 ..2181
·WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

25 ,Lb.

4 Roll

ALL GRINDS

25°/o
. ·To 40°/o
STOREWIDE!
.

'lOG

$599w·

'

.

89¢

BY THE PIECE

JUMBO

MAXWELL HOUSE

NEW-YEAR'S DAY

$}39

LB.

BACON

OPEN
BtG C~P~CtTY W~~~~R
o M~tcKtMG o~.....,oLB1250B
•
W3QOOB DIY"

$109

~K ~OPS LB. $129.
PRE-SUCED ·

SHOULD%¥ ROAST

LB.

~~:0 LB. $139

--+---+-+ HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD

planned more of an "event" ..... however, the event was on the
morning ot all ot the tee so the
ceremonies were cancelled out and
done lntormally later.

Let's be serious! I sincerely wish
you a wonderful, prosperous,
healthy 1984 Just !Wed to the brtm
with big smiles.

LB.

~~ ~~UNO BEEF

their oaths by reltrlng Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews. We had

Louise Gllrnore has a treasured
autographed paper !rom Pete
Rose, one ot the many baseball
players Louise has admired over
the years.
The autograph reads: ''To
Louise, My Good Wishes; Pete
Rose." The autograph Is on a
newspaper sheet tram The Dally
Sentinel. The feature article was on
baseball cards and carried a
picture o! Louise, certainly one ot
the most ardent baseball tans
breathing. A friend o! Rose was
here deer hunting on a Long Bottom
!arm and lett the · autographed
newspaper !rom Rose tor Louise.
Incidentally, I still maintain the
Cincinnati Reds should observe a
"Louise Gilmore Night" -never
have they had such a tan!

$229

. .i/11!_ RUMP

PORK CHOPS
LB .

$159

SIRLOIN
TIP ROAST

·CENTER CUT

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE WILL BE

,,

EVANS
SAUSAGE

'

Photogrtphy
·classes set

t)emard Gilkey who was supertn-

te~t of the Meigs County State
Hlfh\vay Department In Meigs

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY

STORE HOURS:
:JRIU1r1.-Thur.. 9 am til 10 pm
Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

Year ends on a sparkle
was often mentioned by the Maintenance Engineer and was also
supported by district work

STOP BY AND
TAKE ADVANTAGE
OF OUR

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-11-7

.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Commissioner will not
meet In regular session Tuesday. Their regular weekly meetIng will be held 10:l) a.m. on
Friday. .

TIJESDAY

POMEROY - The Pomeroy .
Area Chamber o! Commerce
will meet at noon Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn . .

•
:: SALISBURY .'IWP - SaJis.
• Township Trustees will
llwY
l1leet Monday at 1 p.m. at the
;home . ot ,Clerk Wanda Eblin,
•

pOMEROY
LANDMARK .

GALLIPOLIS - DAR will
meet Monday, 1:ll p.m., at the
home ot Dr. Edna Gettles, 6(1!
First Ave. Guest speaker will ·be
Steve Oiehl, local Navy
recruiter.

POMEROY - Melgs""County
Jaycee Wo~ wUI meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the Jaycee
headquarters In Pomeroy.

, GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
Don .Bock will be In services
Sunday morning at Faith Valley
Christian Union Church.

.

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Vo.

0

•

8 Oz.

67"'
"'

$3 99
99(
89(

COOKING

BANANAS

ONIONS
•· 3 LBS.

·69¢

29~ LB.

•

II

•

·.

�..
•

'

JariU'arv 1, , .

.

Page B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy"'7'"Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio::-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

R TLANDI FIIRNI TIIRF CO.
JANUARY . CL'EARANCE'
'

.

Big .Play could decide outcome

•

SCOTI'SDALE,Arlz. (Ai&gt;) -The
big play, botl1 sides agree, could
settle the outcome of Ohio State' a
game with Pittsburgh Monday In
the 13th Fiesta Bowl, now a sellout.
The last of the 5,1m tickets were
purchased Friday, assurtng a fuU
boule .of 70,1m In Sun Devil Stadium
for the nationally televised game
(l:llp.m. EST, NBC) .
The 14th-11i11Ri!il Buckeyes, ·s.3,
and the No:tsPanthers,S-2-1, are no
strangers to the big play this season.
· Both have won with it and both
have been burned by it.
Ohio State accounted for touchdowns of ll-plus yards in seven of its
11 games. However, In the Buckeyes' three losses, Iowa, Illtnots and

(

INVENTORY
MUST
BE
REDUCED!
NOTHING IS BEING HELD BACK, PRI&lt;;ES HAVE NEVER BEEN LOWER. SEE W_
HA t
YdU WANT. FIND THE GRATE BOYS, ASK ABOUT THEIR ROCK _BOTTOM PRICES
AND THEY KNOW. YOU WILL BE PLI:ASED···ENOUGH TO TAKE HOME WHAT YqtJ
WANT. .
STOREWIDE SALE- SAVE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

...

-~

OUR LARlit~ I ~Alt . tillil:it~ I PHit.;t HtUUt.; II UN

ATLANTA (AP) -F1oridaState
Bobby Bowden called Friday's 28-3

-Longhorn victory
would put 'heat'
on Cornhuskers

BIG ROLLS OF
CARPET AT
·RUTLAND FURNITURE
HAS BEEN REDUCED
. . EVEN MORE .
STOP IN AND SAVE! .
Gold Seal Congoleum

HEAVY SHINYL VINYL

1
/2 ·PRICE
$299 SQ.. YD.

STOP IN AND SEE RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
LARGE SUPPLY OF COFFEE . AND END
TABLES WITH PRICES SLASHED FOR THIS
JANUARY CLEARANCE.

REG. '5.99 FOR .

The
1st, 5th, lOth, 15th, 20th
25th, 30th, 35th, 40th
45th .And 50th Custoniers ·
Will Receive A

FREE-GIFT
SUCH AS ·LAMPS, PICTURES,
.MIRRORS, FOOT STOOLS
AND HALL TREES.

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)- New
Green Bay Packer Coach FoiTest
Gregg continued to fill out his
coaching sta,ff Friday, adding Hank .
BuDough as defensive coordinator,
Dick Modzelewski as defensive Une
coach and Bob Sc;hnelker as
offensive coordinator.
. BuUough and Modzelewski both
served in thesametiostsonGregg's

1
REGULAR $400. TO $600

A SET

REDUCED 30°/o ..ro 50°/o

TWIN

· '3~90 SIT.

TWIN, FULL.ANP
QUEEN SI~E .

.

'19995'' .

~ PRICE .
PUU

2·PRICE

staff at Cincinnati before Gregg
decided last week to give up tl)at
coaching job to take over• as head
¢0ach at Green Bay, succee4ing
Bart Starr who was fired Dec.19.
Gregg said Thursday that George
Sefcik, a member of his Bengals
roaching stat.f, would be the
Packers' new offensive backfield
coach.

Ill

1499.95

SET

S24995

Vr PRICE

Ill

QUHN
'599•• SIT

Vt fllCE

I

-'29915
'

'

•

IIJ &gt;

. CINCINNATI (AP) -Sam Wyche,saY. he agonized oVer his decision
before Ol!llng to get out of a live-year football coachln&amp; contract at Indiana
University and taking the job as head coach of the Cincinnati Bengals. .
"I don't knQwwhen was the last time I cried, but I cried over this," he told
reporters Friday. "It was hard for me." ·. · ··
.
·
Wyche1.,respondlng to sp'ecWatton that he wW be a puppet coach under
Bl!ngals General Manaaer Paul Brown, · said he will make· his own
dec"tons, but'will consult.with Brown. ...
.
Wyche, 311, the younaeat head coach in the Natklnal Football League,
played under Brown as a Benp1l backup quarterback frool1968 to 1970.
Brown h1ted Wyche on Wednelday to ~ Forrest Greg, who
reetped last week to tJecane coach of the Green Bay Packers.
. "I certabllY have taken advlce,"and I wW continue to do ao trorn people
who knOW what they're dolna.'' w.yche told 1eptrters In his malden news
\ · C!llileience as Benpli coach.
·
.
·
"Don't kid younelves. Sam's his own man,'', Brown sald.
.
Brown, In 8IIIIOUilCIDa Wyche's·hlrlnl Wednelday, said the new ~ch
wOuld be tree to choole hla 0W11 aaslltanta. Bu!r Brown alao anmunced Who
three ct Wycbe'a ••anti wDl be - aB holdovers fiUn Greg's ltd.
Bruwlllllld Frldly tbat Wycbe bad . . . tile IIIIX1IInl (II the telepiDie
tlytq to ftl1 out hla uiiiWit 001""1Da ranb.
·
''Nobod.Y'• bald !111*11. He pldlillll OWII," Brown said.
. 'lbiii8W COICb, llllal by AJ1!PQIIel wlletller be telt It~ to prove
.
'

-

!" (

•

I

••

Peach Bowl victory over North
CaroUna a "great win" but stW not
enough to erase the Seminoles'
debacle against arch-rival F1or!da.
· F1oridaStatesophomorequarterback Err Thomas, making his first
collegiate start, Ignited. the victory
by tossing a pair of fltst-qW!rl.er
touchdown passes tO Weegle
ThomP.SOO and running for another
score.
''This was a great win for us, but
there's no way we could have
redeerrled ourselves frool that
Florida game (a~141oss in the final
regular season game)," said
Bowden.
"It did help, though, to do it today
on national television. Those people
out there watching.the game don't
remember that F1orlda game like
we do. They don't hate the Gators
like we do," he said.
A disappointed North CaroUna
Coach Dick Crum said he was not
surprised by Florida State's defense, which had allowed 311 points
durtng the regular season.
"They have outstanding personnel. They've had some Injuries and
that hurt them, I know," he said.
"ln the first hall, we just
self-destructed. In the second half,
we had opportunities, but we dldn 't
take advantage of them," he said.
MeanwhUe, the Peach Bowl,
which had been In danger of losing
its NCAA certification for 1984
because of lagging ticket sales,
. anndunced Friday its quota had
·been reached.

.

m- Florida State's Wegle 1bompson (18)

Friday'sPeachBowllnAtlanta.Trylngtobreakupthe
pulsdowuapassfromquarierbackEric'Itoomasgood pass for North Carolina was Steve Hendrickson (5).
for 15~ and atouchdowndurlnglbeflrstquarterof

FSU

Orange Bowl to• decide collegiat_e champ
The Hurricanes see those stgns,

MIAMI (AP) -

Despite . hog
parties and
visits to the horse and dog racing
tracksarrangedbytheOrangeBowl
Commlttee to keep their minds off
Monday night's football game, the
Miami and Nebraska football
players are anxious to get on with it.
"I'm ready to play now," said
Irving Fryar, the top-ranked Cornhuskers' All-America wingback.
"It's somethll\g I can't control.
There are nights that I'm in my
room and I just can't sleep.
"This Is the game everybody has
been waiting for, and when you're
Involved In It, you can't help but
count the hours."
The Nebraska team came to town
Dec. 23, hoping to adjust to SOuth
Florida'sheat. Theydldn'texpectto
be ·ready to play so soon the No. 5
Hurricanes for the national ..
championship.
''The anticipation keeps IncreasIng every day," said offensive tackle
Scott Rartdon. "Then we see those
'Miami beat Nebraska' signs. We
laugh at them, but It also gets us
more Intense."

roasts, ocean cruls!!5,

too. WhUe the Miami Dolphins also
have an Important National Football League playoff game this
weekend, lt'stheOrangeBowlthat's
on Miamians' minds.
Even though the Hurricanes are
playing a "home" game- the Big
Eight champion, Nebraska, hosts
the annual classic, but Miami plays
aU of Its home games In the Orange
Bowl ·- It's nothing like the five
other Urnes they pla}'l!d here this
'
.
season.
It's Chrtstmas break, so the
players aren't In class. Rather than
Uvtng In their dormitories, they,'re
staying at the posh downtown Omnl
lnternattonal Hotel. The players are
asking questions, not just ab$0tblng
verbal abuse from the coaches after
making a mistake.
Quarterback Bernie Kosar has his
own daily press conference. Even
redshlrt Melvin Bratton Is being
wrttten up - he's playing Huskers
quarterback Tlirner GUI for the
scout team. '
The only normal thing for Miami
players Is that they're practicing at

the usual place on campus. Bu teven
the workouts show the strain.·
There's been a fight every day.
Blocl!.ers are following pass plays 25
yardsdownfield. The backsrun40to
50 yards In non-contact drills.
"You can see everyone pushilig

and trying to do better," said punter
Rick Tuten. "I can see tt when
they;re out there hitting. The
blockers are ~g way ahead of
the receivers on passing plays. That
shows me we're putting out more
than before."

Bengal coac~ will make o,wn decisions

.

,

DALLAS (AP) - The second- have a great defense," Gray said.
''The same thing can be said about
ranked Texas Longhorns feel a
victory IMlr Georgia on Jan. 21n .t he 'us, so I guess you can say we are
42nd Cotton Bowl Classic might put slmllar.''
The Longhorns are seven-point
enoogh pressure on Nebraska to
cause the Cornhuskers to lose their favorites over Georgia, which had a
grip (II No. 1.
9-1-1 season. Its only loss came at the
"No one says Nebraska Is hands rt Auburn.
definitely going to win In the Orange
BowL" said Texas Ail-American
TexasdefeatedAuburnlntheftrst
defensive back Jerry Gray. "Mlaqll game of the Longhorns' season and
Is a good team. If we win that puts swept unbeaten through the remain·
the pressure on Nebraska."
ing 10 gll!lli!S.
The Cotton Bowl kickoff Is 12: ll
"I would compare Georgia to
p.m. CST and Nebraska meets SMU," Gray said. "They have good
Miami In a night game In the Orange quarterbacking and an excellent
Bowl.
,
defense Uke SMU.''
Gray said, "Wefeelthatweareln
Texas has played Georgia three
an Ideal spot. We are No. 2 but times, Including an Orange Bowl
putttngpressureonNo.l."
game, and never lost to the
Gray said the Longhorns have Bulldogs.
been under the gun for 11 weeks
Forecast for game day was dry
during the regular season and wtll witli terptieraiures In the 40s or low
be relaxed against the Bulldogs.
50s.
''Teamshavebeengunnlngforus
Lineman Tony Degrate said the
aU year," he said. "If we beat Longhorns hlld to be cateful of the
Georgia we wm feel in oor heart we ~ Blllldogs.
are No.1."
"An upset could happetfto Ull')ust
HesaldtheLonghornswWalmost Uke Alabama beating SMU In the
be looking into a mirror when they Sun Bowl," DeGratesaid. "Georgia
play the Bulldogs.
has proved It can win without
"'They've been sputtering along Herschel Walker. They play very
on offense, just winning, and they well together as a team."

Ex-Bengal coaches join Gregg

·sAVE
BIG
.

ON SEALY
p·osTUREPEDIC
'
BEDDING

is won."

•
great VICtory

·.'

OFFER GOOD WHILE
. SUPPLY LASTS

four receivers, flanker Cedric
Anderson, tatlback Keith Byars,
split end Thad Jemison and tight~
John Frank, who gain 14.2 yards or
more on every catch.
Anderson Is the biggest threat
with his 21l.3-yard average. Frank
ranks as the school'ssecondaU-tlme
receiver with catches.
"Their offense scares yoo,"
Pittsburgh Head Coach Foge Fazio
said of the offense that Is averaging
422 total yards. thtrd'best among the
nation's majors this season.
StU!, Fazio hints t)le outcome may
not rest on the home runs. "We've
got a good matchup in the Unes," he
_said. "That maybewherethegame

Bowden says
Peach Bowl

SAVE up·TO $600 ON THE
.PURCHASE OF ANY BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM OR DINING ROOM·SUITE
AT RUTLAND FURNITURE.

(A) Coffee and · (D) Gun Cabinet
2 End Tables (E) Sealy Box Spring
And Mattress
(B) Roll Top Desk
(C) Curio

and yet they have the size to be
phsylcal with you."
Tucker said the Buckeyes must
make Pittsburgh work for everything It gets and, "We've got to get
some tutrx)Vers.''
Pittsburgh quarterllack John
CongemJ has throw for 1,599 yards
and 14 touchdowns. His key recelv·
ers, spUt end BUI Wallace and
flatlker Dwight' CoUins, average 17
and 13.8 yards per catch,
respectively.
Ohio State, always reknowned for
its running, may have even more
big-play threats.
Quarterback Mike . Tomczak
threw for 1, 716 yards and 12
touchdowns this faU . He can pass to

•

AND LOWEST PRICES THIS YEAR

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY DINING ROOM,
LIVING ROOM. OR BEDROOM SUITE, RECEIVE
FREE ACHOICE·OF THE FOLLOWING:

Michigan au used the big play to
whip the pre-season Big Ten
favorite.
Plttsburglf had 30=plus yard
scores In stx of Its contests, but
watched Maryland and Penn State
unwind long bombs.
.Maryland handed the P~tthers
one of their defeats and the Nlttany
Lions played Pittsburgh to a 24-24
standstill In the last game.
Bob Tucker, Ohio State's defensive coordinator, viewed aU 11 of
Pittsburgh's games on fUm and
said, "They go for the home run,
they go downtown. If they get Inside
the 50, they Uke to sUng the baU Into
the end zone.
' 'They hit you with the big plays

·~

th8t he ivoUldn't be a puppet coach under Brown, drew laughs when he
quipped, "WeU, what should I ·~Y now, Paul?''
.
Wyche ·declined, as have the Bengals, to disclose any terms of his
contract with the club.
He just completed one season of a live-year contract as Ilea~ football
coach at lndlana University, where his Hooslers finished 3-8 last season
befol'e university officials released him ihls week to take the Bengals.Job.
He prevkiusly served four years 115 quarterback coach for the San
FrancJsco 49ers under Coach BUI Walsh·and play~ nine years as an NFL
baclaip quarterback.
,.
,
. .
Asked If he will feel pressure to win as a rookie NFL head coach, Wyche
said, "If yoo're prepared, the pressure Is minimized. We'U be prepared for
every game."
.
•
.
Wyche said he wW miss Indiana University, despite having spent just
one aeason there. .
~
"If I hurt people by leaving there, I'm sorry. But this Is a dream that aU
coaches have,'' he saki. "I love Indiana University. I gave them everything
I had .whUe I was there, The people that released me from that contract are
jUBt exactly what IncllBna represents, and that's class."
Wyche said he halll'tbad eDOUih time to evaluate the Bengals' personnel
to comment on wblcll areas nel!d lmprovln&amp;. But he rated the team, which
ftnW!ed 7-9 with the NFL'• No. 1 averal1 defenle, as bellli IOUIId.
"It' a a good attuatlon. We'U try to ImproVe !II what,M" have,'' he said.

•

NEW BENGAIB (X)ACH- Newly appolilted ~ Benpls bead
foadldl OOMli!Sim Wydleapolrewlth~a*IUverfrontSIIdlumln
CID+t H Bfllpl OWJIIll' Paul Bropwn Ill l!l!aled a* left. (AP

·hief1b*l).

·

;.

�•

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

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

·Wahama stops Eagles, wins

Weber .000; Sco1t 'l'riMMII 000. ,......
1,...,
'
'
W,ut.UI,\ (• - ROll Jftdlol'U.O.)t: lloyd
Nortllt!&gt;P 11-4'14• Donnie v~
Matt Do....,.
IIIII ~ Wt;
llrtan Fielder 1.0.2; Tocld Gr.l 0.2-2:
Bamltz ~ PhU1lp ~· 11114: llk!hle
Clartc l)oo, Mllce Wolfe 000. 'hllll · - •
f:utem .... ,......................... &amp; 14' 13 s-«1
Nahama ............................ lB 4 15

By Gary Clark
to a slim !lye point lead
going into the final quarter coach
Lewis Hall's Wahama White
Falcons exploded' for 31 fourth
period points .to defe,at the Eastern
Eagles 68-40 in the finals of the
Wahama High School New Year's
Classic holiday basketball tournament Friday night.
A large turnout watched the bend
area team build an early 13 point
lead only to have the Eagles storm
back Into contention during second
and third period action.
Wirt County claimed •the consolation game·and third place in the
four team tournament field by
knocking off Hannan by a 48-26
score .
Wahama opened the chall'·
pionship tilt by jumping out in front
from the openin~ tlp with A fast
break oriented offensive attack.
Boyd Northrop, Ron Bradley and
BiD Clendenin controlled the boards
to help the White Falcons to an
early lead. WHS scored 12 unanswered points during one stretch to
take an 1S.S advantage after eight
minutes.
Eastern had trouble finding the
Glln~in~

••

:·,.
•

•:'•

.. ~

,'••'

•••

. ..

',. !' ,

"

'

Wah am a's Roo Bradley scores two of his 24 poluts dm-lug Friday
:algbt action agaiDSt Eastern. Bradley was the touruameut's leading
:scorer with 38 poluts aud au All·ToiD'D8D1eut selection. At rlgbt, team·
-mate Boyd Northrop, who scored U poluts In the contest, moves lu for
:tbe reboUDd.
(Photo by Gary Clark)
..... ..

.
••

Frye'sMBECUP
.~asket sinks Marauders, 55-54

toumame~~~

By KEITH
doubling Meigs, 36-18. they were Jed
ROCK SPRINGS - Warren's
by 6-3 Bob Knight wlth 12. Ja~·
Bret Frye sank a 17 foot jumper for
Carpenter, who was limited by a
the game-winning basket wlth 1: 02
staunt Warren man-to-mandj!fenS&lt;'
lett as his Warrior teammates · to only four points, led Meigs wltl
nipped Meigs' hard-luck Maraud.
five caroms.
ers 5}54 here Friday in TVC acllon
Warren goes to7·2 overall and 6meigs had taken a 54-!Y.l lead wtth
l/lslde TVC.play. Meigs Is 2-6 both
1:50 remaining; but a missed one
overalllincj In ·the TVC.
and one and three lurnovers on lis
Following Chancey In scorln~t
four possessions spelled disaster for
was Nick Riggs with 15 despite
the Marauders.
playing nearly the entire contest on
The Warriors missed four free
a very sore ankle. Rick Wise added
lhrows, Including lhe fronl end of
seven.
one and ones lhree limes, In th&lt;•
Frye's 17 topped the Warriors
final 20 seconds lo give the
while Knight chipped In wlth 16.
MaraUllers a lasl gasp.
· Sophomore Lee Powell had one of
Meigs had a three on one fast
his better games with five points
break wlth 13 seconds left , but
and three rebounds coming off the
dribble off the ball·handler's foot
bench.
went out of bounds.
The Marauders, losers of six
Meigs' Mike Chancey, who led
games In a row by a mere 19 points,
the Marauders wttb 18 points, threw
shot a respectable 20 of 43 from the
field for 47 percent and sank 14 of 25
up a desperallon 40 footer that
bounced off the rim as the buzzer
tree throws for 56 percent. Warren
went off.
made 21 of 56 for 38 perceht from the
The taU and physical Warriors, field and 13 of 24 from the charity
winners of seven ln a row, won It In · stripe for 54 percent. Meigs had 16
turnovers compared to Warren's
the rebounding department by
19. There were 51 personal

.,,.Ill;
Jell:

.,,_10;

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

ill-

'

'•

Put it in

'~:

a

the hands
of a
professi"!!!:::_:::s

called, 26 against Warren and 25
against Meigs.
ReteMiee Lole Second
The Meigs Marauder reserves
fell out of a tie for first place In tl;le
TVC race with a 48-36 lose ·to
Warren:s reserves.
The game was much closer than
the final score Indicated as Coach
Mlck Childs' crew narrowed the
count to 37-34 with two and a half
minute!! to go.
The little Warriors made their
free throws pay off In the Iaffer
stages as Meigs fouled anempllng
to gain possession as well as stop
the clock.
Chrl~ Shank paced the little
Marauders with nine points while
Shawn Baker added eight and
Parker Long six. Brian Rauch was
the game's only double-digit scorer
with 19 In leading Warren .
Meigs feU to 6-2 while Warren
went to 7-1.
The Marauders of Coach Greg
Drummer travel to Wellston next
Friday to battle the Rockets while
Coach Dan Settles, the former
football and baslket·,

Prep cage results
C1e. Coutnwood

F'ric~Q' 8 Re..t.I&amp;B

ar

AkrOn Cent-Hower 54, Wadsworl h 52

C\e. Kennedy 59, Shaker Hts. ~
C\e. Lincoln-West 49, Oe. Cmltal Cath.

Akron·Flre&amp;tone 62, Walsh Jesuit49
Allen E. 77, Cory·Rawsoo 52

•

.

Alllllll&lt;r a;, N. CantOO Yi
Anna 18, SidnEoy Lehman fli
Ashtatl.tla m, Ashtab.ila StJolll 53

,. .
Ashtabula Edjj:ewood 64, PatnesvUit&gt;
• ' RJversldiP ..,
Ashta!Jula Harbor 00, Conneaut 38

•

Athens 56, Martetta 42
Barbl&gt;rlon 79. Tol. OeVUblss 63
Bay in. Euclid 61
Beawr Eastern :19. Piketon 42

,

•

~

Bryan 61. Napokoon 44
Eldeye TraU 72. Lakeland 46

ll
Day. Tempi&lt;' 18. Ports. Christian 46

Canton GlenOak 64. MaS"&gt;Uion Perry ~
Canton ~ th 00, L.oulsvUit" M
Canton '1'lmken 50, New Ptiiladelpt\la 41
• • Canlon Trinity 61. Indian Valley N. 48
• . Cantlnal 00, GarTensvtlle 62
•; • • Carrolltm 74. Uniontown LakE" 62
• • • Cedarvtl.le ~. Spring. Northwestern 57
•. · Chagrtn Falls fil , Chardon 47
• • • OillUcolhe F'la(cet 70, Poru. NotrE'
:· '08me64
.•. Cln. Moeller &amp;a, Pltt.sburih tPa.l Nor·
•• . win tl
•: • ~. O&amp;k Hllls 79. Hamlltoo 64
• • ' Cln. PurceU-Marian 57, Forest Park 50
• • Cln. ROfll'l' Bacoh 44, MUford ;e

an. Sycamcn er. en. St.xavier m

;•

Cle. Orang£' ~. Twinsburg t9
Col. Academy 76, Fairbanks e1
Col. Be«hcroft 62. Col. ~havm Ill
Col. DeSa1es 66, Johutown 3J
Col. East 62, Col. Wehrle ~
Col. Han ley~. Grandview 54
Col. SI.O.arlf:o5 54, Col. Centennial 53

Col. South Ill, Newark ~
Col. Wanerson Tl , Granville 58
Col. Y/hetstOI"'(&gt; 74, Hamllton Badin Ill
Cmrocton 70, Buckeyl' S. of1
Day. Belmont 58. Stmey 54
Day. JeffE"rsm Tl. De.y. Stebbins 65.. CYJ'
Day. Meado\l.'daJe 54, Trotwood Madison

BedfQI'd 0\ant"' 70. Tol. Central Cath.
111, ar
BeUefontalne 56, Marysville 46
•·
8eUewt' m. Margart'na 53
.,.
Belpre fil, VInton County 62
::

m. Lorain Southview &amp;a.

Ooylest&lt;M'n 00. W.

Salefn

Northwestern

Ill
Dublin !II, Benjamtn Logan 61

E. Cantm 67, Claymont 43
E. Qeo.oeland Shaw 76, Cle. E. Tech 74
Federal Hocking 74, MIIJ« M
Fort Loramie 46. New Knoxville 44
Franklin Monroe 49, An:am~m 47
Freder1ctnown 70, E. Knox 68. OT
Gahanna 48. Upper Arlb\gtm f1
Ga.Wpolls fll~ McDennon 'HW 61
Greenan 64, Beavert'l"f'Ek.62. CYJ'
Hannan 'n'act&gt; 61, N. Calia 53

66. Libefty Center 40
Ironton 55, Lawrence CclJnty, Ky. 53

Holgate

Jacksm 61. MlanU 1'race 58

Kalida 59, St.Hmry

..

~1

Kentoo 81, Elgin 19
Kettrring Aller 59, Kettering FairmOnt

Kyger Creek m, Patrlol sw 42
LancastE'r ~. WatJdns Memortal 42
WUmlngton 57, E . Clinton 55
Frederidncwn 10, E. Knox Ql, CYJ'
Col. A&lt;aden\Y '/6, Falrtlanks 67
D.lbUn fB. BenJamin l.og111 61
. Col. Hanley :!6, GrancMew 54
RJver Val. 53. Spu1a Htatttand .0, Of
MI. Vernon 62, Col. Franklin HIS. li
Col. Sl.~ " · Col. Centennial "
Col. East 62. Col. WE'hrle ~
Cot South II}, Newark ~
Col. Dt5ak!s 66. Jotmtown 3J
Col. Wa tterson 11, Granville 58
Zanes. Ra1ecrans ~7. Licking Val. 49
Gahanna 48, Upper Artlngtm 47
Canton GlenOak 64, MaSiillon Pt&gt;ny :'tl
Canton South Ill. L.oulsvUie M
MassiUon JackJon 66, Marlington H
E. Cantoo il. Claymont t3
CaJTOllton 74, UniOntcwn LakE" 62
Minerva 76. '1\dearawas Val. e1
MassWon 1\alaw M, Sandy Val. ~1. OT
Canton Trinity 61, Indian Valley N. 48
Holgate 66. Liberty Cfnter 40
Wynlonllll, BucytuS 61
SanduskY St.Mary ~ 73, Maru. StPeter

W.\IIREN (55) - Bu!cher 2-1·5; Frye
:1-7·17; Knight ~16; PhWIJlfl 2.().4 ; Skogland
1M; Hull{nan ().(HI; lt!il'am 1.0.2; Ja"""""'
~ Mitchell l)oo, Smith 2-:1-9. ToUolo
ZJ.IJI.J5.
MEIGil IN) - RIW 6-3-15; Wile Z.l-7;
Evans 1.0.2; Chancey 82-18; Crpenu.r 1·2-4;
Powell11·3-5; F'lsher 0+1 ; Kennedy 1.0.2.
Tolaiii0-14-64.

BJ quanen:

Warren .. ..
Melill ........ ..

.. ..... 6 19 6 :u-511
.. .........IJ 15 12 14-54
~~eoerv

..

W.\IIREN 1481 - Rauch 7·5-19; PaiiJlO!'
I·H Lamberl 4.Q.8; Johnson 3-1 -7; Alkire
3.(1&lt;;; CUrry 1.0.2; Lyoch 1.0.2. ToUolo !U-48.
MEIGS (31) - i..onj! 3.(1&lt;;; Baker 3-HI;
Houdashelli'AHJ; Kennedy 1-2-4; Shank4·1·9;

Warth 1.0.2; Rollinson 3-1-7; Harruon O.Q.O.
Totall 11-4-18.
8Jquao1en:·
Warren:! ID 10 15-48
Ml'lgs 11lllllllllllllllllll 8 14 4 10-36

Wake Forest rips

'

Rollin.s College

DETERMJNED LOOK- Melp' Jay Evans makes move on burllae
during Friday's TVC game against Wamu local. The Marauders ..
suffered another hearillreaJdn« lo88, 55-64. ProYidlng del- Ill thlll
Dave Harris action shot Is the Warriors' Bret Frye. Frye had the
wlmt1ng basket.

WINfER PARK, Fla. (AP) Forward Kenny Green poured In a
career·high 32 points and center
Anthony Teachey added 15 as No. 10
Wake Forest rolled to a 112-74
victory over Rolllns on Friday night
ln college basketball .
Wake Forest, which had five
players In double figures, raced to a
51·:.i halftime lead and outscored
Rolllns 61·38 In the second halt to
stretch)ts record to!l-0.
The Deacons hit 64.7per;:{'nt from
the floor compared to 31.1 for
Rolllns.
Green, whose hometown of Eus·
Us, Fla., Is about :ll miles from
Winter Park, hit 13 of 17 from the
floor while Teachey grabbed off a
game-high 11 relx)unds as the
Deacons outrebounded Rollins 4931.

', Y'"'

COl!'PANY ,.I.NC.

the 'IVC tlriler, 55-64. Trailing the

DRmBLES UP Fl.OOR - lUck Wile (11) brlnp the
bd up Door ahead of four Wamu Local Wanton
ctumg Frkl~Qo's le811Je code8t at LaiTy R. MOITIIon

Mat"Raren.a 53

5andu&gt;"" 66. Mohawk &lt;8
l..wdonville 54, Col. Reedy 43
Upper

Barberton 79, Tol. ~VUblsl 6.l
Bedrord Chane! 70. Tol. Central Caih.
111. ar

play 111'1! Warrea'aJbn illp'am (24), steve SmJjiJ (34)
aad Bob KDipt (40). At ext&gt;eme rlpt rear Is the
M.Vauden· Mille Olancey ( 15).

·,

1982 FORD F-700

DUMP TRUCK
Single axle, 370 Y·8 engine, S speed trans., W·2 speed axle, power
steering, air brakes, 177" wheel base. This truck Is In top shape with
only 41,000 miles!

Call For More Details

·GERNIE'S

9)

~ Qi,

ball great, hosts his team against
league-leading Trimble.
Box score:

Heating &amp;Cool.ing
•Commercial
•Residential
CALL 446-3217

Motor Car Brokers
446-6592
G~lll POllS. OH 10
1 Mile North Of Holzer Hospital On State Rt. 160 North

AN.
.,l•

..."'..

IRA

....•.
·~

....

PER CASE
OR
12-QUART
PURCHASE

(Individual Retirement Account)
Ms. Sharon Antle
llo. Gordon Baker
llr. Gary Bane
llo. lliko Boll
llo. Dean Brownell
llr. Jim Burns
llr. Bon Campbell
llr. Dale Chatterton
llr; Lince ·cliHood,
·work·Study Coordinator
lis. Sholly Corbin
llr. Garland Davis
llo. Jack Oofazio.
,.
Marshall University
llr. Bob Oonnally "
Mr. Dave Dotson
Ms. Julio Oraaoo
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bob Evans
Mr. Stan Evans
Ms. Rosie Gills
llr. &amp; Mrs. Tom Grube
Mr. Fred Hastwtll
llr. Torry Howk, Game Protector
Rev. Frank Hayes
llr. Carl HoHman
llr. Gone Honcho!, Cooper Hollow
lis. Kim Jefferson
Mrs. Rubv Jenkins

llo. &amp; llrs. R. William Jenkins
lis. Carolyn Jones
llr. Jim Kerr, Soils Scientist
lis. linda Krasner
llr. &amp; llrs. Bart llcGuiro
llr. &amp;llrs. Charles llcKoan
Or. Dan Notter
llr. Kim Nyt
Coach Jim Osborne, Gallia Acodomy
llr. Tom Osboono
lis. Julio Rorch
llr. llrry Roaors
llr. Wayne Rose
llr. Randy Sanders
llr. &amp;llrs. Groa Shrader
llr. &amp;!Irs. Dick Simpson
Mr. ·&amp;llrs. Randle Simpson
Mr. &amp;llrs. Dave Smith
llr. Keith Sorrell
llr. Jim Sploto, Game Protector
llr. llark Stouffer
lis. Ruth Top
llo. Ken Tomlinson, Game Protector
llr. &amp; llrs. Rlchord Thiel
llr. Gary Vollrath. Service Fooester
llr. &amp;llrs .. Goorao Woodward, Sr.
llr. &amp;llrs. Tom Woodward
.

.A

.·
:: OOM 8tandinss

.·,.

'

O.O.Mcllllyre Park Dlollld
Wom.'a VIIeyet· ' 1
Mcflloceo-•
~
W. LPd.
Luolry Lucy,Amusernent .......... :.. il2 3 .911
Dllienllled Muqement ............. 29 6 .828
Moti1a Conolnoctlon .... " " .. .......... 27 . 8 •Til .
Ji);nlr Cool .............. .. ., ........... 27 ' 8 .Til
Spttt Valley Ates ...................:.. 23 13 .638
0Ytt T11o HW Ga., .. ......... ......... 22 II .611
l'lllllel ........................... '..........J) 16 .MIS
9polt Allaut ...... ......................... !&amp; 21 ' .fl6
................... :..... ............. 13 23 .361
':

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.
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
=

...................................... 11

z ..m

l'lllnMCY ........................ 10 •

r

Bill

m

.8:11 .222
8IIIJical Clllll&lt; ................7 :1
'I .................................&amp; 11 .188

'*

Alcove
American Lo,ion-llfayette Post No. 27
Athens Bottlon&amp; Company
Baldwin's tine Guns
Bornodlno's
Bosurd llomorial library
Carolyn's
Central Trust Company
Clark's J-lry Store
Commorclal &amp; Savinp Bank
. ·
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture ,
C.- City lllnin&amp;-U.II.W.A. local 82150
Oopartm111t of Youth So.vlces
Emplro Furniture
Farm Bur11u
fldoralllnd Bank '
fronch City Campers &amp; Hikers
Fronch City Florist
Fronc~ City llross
Fruth Phlr1111cy '
Galli• Acldlmtr111ch Club·
Gllfll AcldiiiJ c-.. Adwitor llldi 1'-11
Galllo Coullly All IIIII WoHoro IMcut
Galll1 County 1M! C0111illlttH ·
Galll4 CCNollly lor.Scollll
Galllo Coullly Coolurvlll011 Club
Galllo Coullly EIIHSion Simco
..
Glllll Coallly 4-H Cl1lll I F.f.A.'s
Galll1 C01nty Girl Scouts
1111111 Coanty liNd Sill!
Galllo Coullly Hlltorlcll Society
Galll1 Coullly LIICII kllools
811111 Coanty Slllrlfl's Dt111imMI
1111111 ~ .Woll-Stldy Pr...lllllil-lltiD C.U.
1111111 Solrl Wlllr c-tlall Dlltrlct
IIIIIIPOIIt Ani C"-lltr of eo.lllllfpolls Cllrlsll•• Scllool.
IIIIHpalil CIIJ lcHoll
·
11110,.,. IIIIIJ ,......
.
lllln,.,. Dlulle'..tll C...

==

l-'
,...... ..._
,...... 1 -

•

_
... . . ....
..... .

Gallipolis Voult Company
Hannan fraco Rinky Oink
Jenkins Concoeto
Jividln's Farm Equipment
Johnson's Supor1111rktt
lions .Club of Rio Grandt
llock'i Auto Store
llad River llountoin Ski Resotl
• i
lltPonald's Rostourant
llodorn Woodm111 of Amorlca
Motor Parts C~nopany
My Sister's Closet
.
19th Special Forces GroupCompany B - 2nd Bottollon
North Gallil, SouthWtstorn, Honnon Troce
K
Crill 1 Galli 1 A ·•·
o·o.W~ullllor
.c...noy Binds
Ohio Dlpaltllllllt of Notural Rosovrm
Ohio Grltll Tllu111b
·
Ohld Hlstoricol Socllly
Ohio Plrb I bcmtlon ASiocilllon
Olllo V.IIIJ ...,
·
Olllo V.IIIJ Cllrtltilll School ,
Ohio V.IIIJ loodlond
P.A.W.S. Cl1lll of 1111111 AcldiiiiY,
Soal.._.lfll I •
C-..
P.J.'s ,....~
•YIIr ,...
Plr lllr 011 .
.
I
PJ•I 111¥1• J-ln
hddlot:o P111try
Pic-he'of IIIII!POIIs
Praduction Credit
llr's hllllllll
ltd.
Soli Ca
loll Sllvicl
Spatt Moll of llltlpalls

~~

...

Prestone

R~g .

Torque
Starter
Batteries
Reg. 77.88 72 month with exch

3.99

Fram·For most domestic cars
AC·For mosl domestic or import

cars

$5.88

Starters or
Alternators
w/rebu ll d. exch . for most

.

...... .,_,

llllllt'a ._,..., Polll Ton

'

•silver Bridae Plaza ·

•oenotn "Tellerlficl' Location

Zl1ldl Mil Cnu 111111 c.r.

lr.!D ... •• .......

"

otlor mlg'a· rtblll
2• 99 bJodll
11ch rtllllo polr
50C

stOO OFF

The Commercial • (avlftgs 8ank

25 Court St.

24.88 wlrebui la . exch Htgh
torque starters !C)( most
Chryslers and some Fiords

28.88 a11erna1ors wlrebuild.

exch. lor mos t domest ic cars lor

lnlegral and Motorola excepl
h ig~ amp HD un its.

· $.75 Conoumoo' Chock

Buy 5 quarts of Valvollne and get aS.75 check

and get a $1 .80 che,ck.
·
To rectlve rour consumer chock. Whtch is a two-party check gOOd for cash at the store from whiCh the

Anco

.

Sealed B8am or Wiper Blades or.
· Snow
Blides .
Halogen
Sale price 3.49 blades ea. relllls
490 7" let
. Scrlper .
~lgh~ .
Rag. 89C
•

of Gallipolis

Sw~~Wf... IIIIIAI

domest tc cars·excep t Integ re i
and Motoro la

This offer Is good .for the 7 day period of
January 1 thru January 7
. Buv 12 quarts of Valvohne o.· a case of Valvoline

'

TOI(a Fllllillll...,.,..
WJ.UI. I I.Y.P.C. 1N1o

Remanufactured

--------------.
---Valvoline Refund Coupon
- atiO ConluiMI' Check

cars· Bani

s.mc.=

8 guage 16 11 . Reg . 18.95 "945

One 12-Quart Case of Valvoline

purchase o Valvqline was m•:te. complete this coupon and send it with

.,

15.88
Cobra Booster Cables

19.88

Check one olthe following de!IS and get a check back from Valvo~tne :

S Bank

Booster Cables

Reg . 4.88 BC1 08P

Manufacturer's Rebate

This offer is good for the 7 day period of
January 1 thru January 7

Fram or AC Oil
Filters
Reg. 3.44&amp;3.95 Limit 2

Promo

$7.68
-1.80

One 12-Quart Case of Valvoline

See Us Today for. Details!
'

AI! battenes wi th exch. for most cars and light trucks

69.88

Flush
'N' Fill Kits
Reg. 3.49
'
·2•88 Prestone
Anti-Freeze T&amp;stiii'S

1.99

N
D

39.88
60 Month Reg. 44.88

--

(Substantial Penalty for Early withdrawal)
•

A

34.88

50 Month Reg. 37.88

'

*Cuts your current Taxes
*Builds Retirement Sav1ngs

Sprint Valley

1.88

790 10" Ice Scraper
Reg. 1.08

proof -ol · purc~ase

to: '

Yolvollna Cotltumat Check Refund, P.O. Box1092 Maple Pla1n. Minnesota 55393
Prool·ol·purchaso includes:(AI ccinsumer sales receipt dated within the 14:day periOd ol coupon oiler.
Circtotho prlcl(ll d~Valvotl no prOducts purchased;(8) For S.75chock. cutlhe word "Valvotine"lrom lhe
toont oltwo cans. For a $1.80 chock. cut the word "Valvoline' lrom the lront ollour cans or cut the bar graph
IUPC Code) lrorn lhoi!Oftom ofcaJt,
Aafund roquosll mual Ill mad• on this coupon and ma_y not be mechanically reproduced. Only one
Conoumor Cl\oclt rafund per lamll~ or strHIIddresa. Only one relund per envelope. Ollar void where
prohlbllld, taxld or othorwlaOIOSiricted by law. Plllse allow Bwseks lor deliveiy ol your Consumer Checi&lt;.
llalund coupon muat Ill mailed by Aprll15, 1114.
•
.
Nama (print cloorlyl----------- . . . , - - - - - - - - - - . . . , - ~drHs--~---------------------------------------------

City
Stall
Zip--....::.--------"Aetlll Storo Name
·City
State _ _ __
(Aaquirld)
,
•Qu8llllecl Vatvatlna 1'11rt Nurnlllrl (Pait numball are on lha lid ol-" Valvollno producta):
074, 117, 177, tH, 141, 135. 147, 153, IIIII, 115, 171.211,223. 221. 13&amp;, 241,341.347,'517, 523, 52Q

78.95

New
Radiators
wlexch. tor GM, Ford, Chi:VSitars,

AMC. light trucks and Import
From 7.50 . Heater Control

· Valves

•
Reg. tror. . 10.50
From 22.95 Blower Motors
·· w/exch.

36.88
Rlmlnufectured
Carburetors
1 881:
47.88 2 BBL
72.88 4 QBL

All ~rba wlrebulld. exch.

,..·s.so Jet Carb Kits ·

Member: F.D.IC.

•'

•

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.N
D

Businesses. Industries &amp; Clu.bs

40 mont h

of Valvoline 10W30

From The

.

25.88
Maintenance Free Batteries

•

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Page-C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 1', 1984

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

'!'Hannan Trace captures Holiday Tournainen~
.
.

VINTON - Coach Mike Jenkins'
Hannan Trace Wildcats reigned
Saturday as championships of the
Thtrd Annual Gailia Cou'nty Holiday
Tournament following Friday
night's 61-53 victory over North
Gailia.
The Wildcats used a balanced
scoring attack to down the host
Pirates, who finished second for the
third straight year. Kyger Creek
dumped Southwestern, 65-42 to
capture the consolation game.
Following the Wildcat victory,
trophies were presented to the Ali
Tournament team. The Wildcats'
Rob Bnunfieid, whO contributed 1.1
points in the win over North Gallia
• • and 20 the previous night in a 41-34
trtumph over Kyger Creek was
chosen as the tournament's Most
Valuable Player. Others honored
were tearrunate Jeff Barnes; Anthony Blackburn and Eric Penick of
North Gallia; Robert (Yogi 1 Myers
of Kyger Creek and Roger Wells of
Southwestern.
Hannan Trace received the first
place trophy, North Gailia took the
second place trophy and Kyger
Creek won the tournament ball.
Championship game
Hannan Trace jumped Into a
quick 7-0 lead before North Gailia's
Eric Penick connected for two
enroute to Its tournament championship victory. At the end of the
first period, the Wllcats held a 16-10
' lead as Billy Swain led the way with
six points. Wayne Diddle had four
for North Gallia7
The Pirates got back into the
,_ contest midway through the second
period tralling at one time by just
two points before Hannan Trace put
on a surge which saw the Wildcats
take a 34-25 lead at the half. Jeff
Barnes and Brumfield lead the
winners that quarterwithfivepoints
apiece. Oeke Barnes and Alien

Ball~y had

four points each. · ·
Thurman Holliday, Tim Smith
and Anthony Blackburn paced the
Pirates with four points each. .
North Gallla was ab)e to cut the
lead to 34 -3~ with 5: 31left in the third
period, which was the closest the
Pirates got the rest of the contest.
Barnes, Swain, Batley and Brumfield continued their hot shooting as
the Wildcats led 50-39 going into the
final period.
·
Jeff Barnes led the Wildcats with
15 points; Swain· had l4; Bailey, 12
and Brumfield, 11. Blackburn and
Penick had 12 points each for North
Gallla.
According to the charts, Hannan
Trace sank 20 of 43 field goat
attempts for 46 percent and 21 of 29
foul attempts. North Gallia hit 25 of
45 from the field and oneof four at the
charity stripes. HT collected 27
rebounds with Barnes grabbing 12
and Swain, eight.
The victory gives Hannan Trace a
1-1 season record white NG dropped
to 2-6.
Hannan Trace goes to Fairland
Tuesday white North Gallla hosts
Southern Friday.
Consolation game
Kyger Creek also used a balanced
scoring attack to defeat Southwestem, 65-42 in the tournament's
consolation game Friday night.
The Bobcats of Coach Keith
Carter overcame some sloppy floor
play to take a 20-17 advantage at the
ha:lf. Their offense begari clicking in
the latter stages of the thtrd canto
and finished strong with 28 pOints in
the fourth stanza.
Coach Lloyd Myers' Highlanders
jumped into a 12-10 lead in the first
period behind the shooting of Roger
Wells. Kyger Creek came back ·to
forge a:head in the second period
when Brent Love canned two
baskets and Robert Myers had four

'

points.
The Bobcats added 17points in the
third period, six by Dave Martin,
four by J .D. Bradbury and three by
Steve Waugh. Wells led SWHS with
five points, while Randy Layton and
StPve Pelfrey had four points each.
Kyger Creek pulled away in a
hot-shooting fourth period led by
Myers' eight points. Martin and
Bradbury had six each while Waugh
and Mat11n provided two baskets
apiece. We Us and Layton continued
to lead SW with four and six points
respectively.
Myet·s finished with 18 points;
Martin had 16, Love, 14, and
Bradbury canned 10.
We Us had 13 points for Southwestem while Layton added 12.
Kyger Creek hit 29 of 54 floor
a ttempts and seven of 16'foul shots.
Southwestern sank four of 10 free
throw attempts. The Bobcats had 33
rebounds with Love getting 12. KC
committed 17 turnovers, 11 in the
fu'st half.
The victory gave Kyger Creek a
5-3 season record while Southwestem Is now 2-7.
The Bobcats host Crosslanes
Tuesday and travel to Hannan
Trace Friday. Southwestern goes to
Eastern Friday.
KYGER CREEK (§) - Waugh J.J.7:
Martin 6-0-16: Love 1&gt;2-14; Bradbury 4-2-10:
Myers ·2-18. Tolalo 19-H5.
SOtri'IIWESTERN (U) M Meeks HJ:
Wells :&gt;3-13; Layton 6-0-12: PeUn&gt;y ~:
Bailey 2-1}4 and H a~ lop 2-1}4. Tolalo ~ ­
Byqlllllten:
Kyger Creek .................... 10 10 17 ~
Southwestern . . .

. ... 12 5 13 12-42

HANNAN TRACE (61)- J . Barnes :&gt;S-t5;
D. Barnes 1-4-0: Brumfield 3-:i-11 ; Swain
1&gt;2-14: A. Bailey :i-2-12: Stitt 0-1-1 and P.
Bailey 0-2-2. Tolalo 20-%1-61.
NORTII GALIJA (13)- Blackburn 6-0-12:
W. Diddle ~: Lee 2-1}4; Penick 6-0-12:
Glassburn 1..0.2; Smith 4.{).8; Hawks 2-04 and
Holliday 2-1-5. Tolalo 28-1-M.
Byqwu1en:
Hannan Trace .......... .......... 16 18 16 11~1
North Gallla ...................... 10 15 14 14-53

of the opening period.
An interception by Florida linebacker Mark Korff at his 23-yard
line stalled lin Iowa drive on the
Hawkeyes' next possession. But

Raymond's conversion made ltl4.J.
Nichol added a 31-yard field goal
four minutes inlo the third periOd,
six plays after cornerback Devon
Mitchell Intercepted a pass by
Torn~lchol's32-yardfleldgoalafter
Florida's Wayne Peace at the
an 88-yard march made It 7-3 with Gators' 48 and returned it to the 29.
5:45 rernalnlng in the first half.
But he missed a 40-yard attempt
Nichol
wentfromfleldgoal to late in the quarter and the giune
touchdown - but the touchdown ended as the lowest scoring Gator
was Flortda's. Nichol, back to punt . Bowl since Maryland defeated
from his end zone, bobbled Joel Florida 1J.O eight years ago.
~berg's slightly high bUt~-- A riCird Gator Bo\YI crowd of
catchablesnap.Ithltthegroundand 81,293 turned. out in 35-degree
roiled between the legs of Iowa's
weathertoseeFIOridaboostltsbowl
Norm Granger before Drew, a
recordto7-8. Iowalostforonlythe
reseiVe linebacker, pounced on It
second time In five bowl games. ·
with 1: Ill left in the half. Bobby

They are, from left, Robbie Bnanfleld ( a111o most
valuable player) and Jeff Barnes, both HT; Robert
Myers, Kyger Creek; Roger Wells, Southwestern;
and Eric Penick and ADtho113 Blackburn, both NG.

TVC results

-·

Three acres with a nicely constructed
concrete· block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one bath, 12xl5 living ·room
and 24x24 family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel oil furnace with facilities for woodburn'er. 12x15 block
storage building, 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country setting, Y2
ml'le east of Chester, Ohl'o.

2-2~:

Morris ~22; Monison 1.0.2; Dupler
5-11-10; Ferris 244: Koons 6-0-12. Tolalo

Byqlllllten:
Ateltllnder .. .. .................... 22 13 15 12-62

Trimble ................ ........... .. 14

~

16 16--66

Re8ei!Ves - Trtmble 66, Alexander 40.

L~~~' ~:~1,.;3-l~:~n..
17

n::2

~~~\~~5~':1 ~ ' Mcaoud t.o- '
~Bo~~~~~K ~~&amp;,,;;1d ~u~~

Grandy 5-11-tO; Kline 8-3- 19 ' Savage 1.0.2:
Martin t-0-2: Day 2-2-6. Tolalo 27-11&gt;10.
By quaners:

Wel~lon
Net.-York ..

J!eoerv.. -

VJNTONI~2UNTYM

Bo(6211 lde-R4ade19klnwt&gt;1.-131;
Hammon
~ : . &amp;4-16;
en L. rBollender
.. : orne
dorf
8-3-19: Doderlll
O-i-1:Alomon 10-0-2. Tolalo 28-11)42.

ae~.:~~,

949 2 21 0

N-Y won, scon&gt; unavailable.

0-2-2: Holder 5-11-10; Lockhart 5-11-10; McDermitt
H 5: \Yll~man
8-2-18:5-11-10;
Miller
6-0-12.
BELPRE
&lt;671 -Logue
Simmons
Tolalo 31-H'I.

~

15 12 :lJ
VInton County ............... ...... 14 14 12 22-62
Re&amp;entet -

Home. Natl"onal· Bank

....... .14
151310
. ........ ......
.............
18"22 18-56
16-10

............
uu....u ...
~

· Ohio UnlvenKy Hockey Gune
· GAWPOUS- The 0 .0 . Mcln.tyre Park Dtstrtct ls scheduling a
·. ; gt'O!IP trtp for Gallia County
: residents to Bird Arena, Athens,
•.' home of . the Ohio' University
; : Bobcats for the Ohio University vs.
; · Ohlo State University hockey game
:: on Saturday, Jan. 14.
•. Game time ls 7: ~ p.m. Those
: : interested In making the trtp should
:• meet at the park district office
: locaied at the Intersection of First
.; : Avenue and Locust Street in
:. Galllpolls by 6 p.m.
: Transportation will be by car
· · caravan.
,
: . Entry fee is $2 for adults, $1 for
; students, and 50 cents for children
: - under 12.
·, For more information and to
: . pre-register, contact the Park
; District office at 446-4612, extension
·. 56.

..:;.~.

HOME OffiCE· • lOCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS

•16" -2,." Guide Ban available
•Automatic and manual chain 0111119
e,Dlsplacement3.55c'u.ln. (57 ..cccJ
•CIIromod chain
•Full'radlus handle bar
•Heevyduty

'To our. good
friends, greetings
and appreciation
for your support
and confidence.

..••

RIDENOU_R

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.

SUPPLY
MJ-UII

Pomeroy, OH.

Chester, Ollie

~r;;~~;;;;;;~~~-~~§;;;;;;;~~;;~f.~~~;;;;;;~~;~~~~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE 1984 DQG LICENSE
GO ON SALE DEC. 1st

NO

MONTHLY PAYMENTS, UNTIL
MARCH ON ANY NEW OR USED HOME!

Vinton County 52. Belpre 50.

Federal Hocklrig 74. Miller 54. No statistics
availablE'.

Male 14.00

FREE - Skirting, steps, blocks and delivety, with any
NEW Mobile or Sectional!

Spayed Female $4.00

Female $4.00

I

\

HOURS: Man.-s.t. 8:30 a.m. 10 6:30 p.m.
Sunday 1 :00 10 6:30 p.m.
.

.,.,

KINGSBURY HOMES
1100 E. Main St.

..
PH. 992-703_
4 or 992-6248

'

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(

Pomeroy

'

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Address ......... :.................................... :........ ;............,.. .......................................................... :........ .
.~

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:Aae

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COLOR

White

Gr1y' T1n

Brown

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Ronlld II. ClllldiJ, 61!111 Countr-Audltor '
0

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Moore 1-1·3;

Fldugh,-.r 2-i)-4 , Rice 1-0-2:

Lashbrock 1-0-2. I. RIN" 2 1 ~ Tala~~ 11--4-!t.

S&lt;:on: by '""'"'""'
(;autpolls
.\ onh\1.·~1

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4 10 14.....-43
4 7 7-26

Buckeye Building &amp; Loan
Ohio Valley Bank
Central Trust
C &amp; S Bank

Gallipolis Savings .&amp; Loan

2'71.t·.
rebate

50 MONlli REG. 34.89 SALE 31.

34@.l.
rtbale

REG. 45 .89 SALE 39.

LYNX

40MONTH
REG. 32.89
50 MONTH ,
REG. 39 .89

60MONTH
REG. 46.89

c

2888
3488
4188

FLUID

59C

99t

,.

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis

admittedly needing
:~pitching help, saytheyareoutofthe
~ sWeW5takes to sign knuc)#eballer
~ Phli Nlekro, the . major leagues'
~ oldest player. • .
uwe gave him two alternativeS,
both for a ·substantial amout of
mon.ey for 1984, and he called !Jack
late this afternoon and said wewere
;oo lODger in the running, .. ~iub vice
I,·president Jim Toomey said Friday. ·
~ ..WI! ' i:uiderstand they're dealing
" With some other clubs, but we don't
11 knoiv who they are... ·
.
in 20 seasons, Niekro has a career
recOrd of 268-200 with the Atlanta
!
·~ Braves.
.

~

('ri'TSBURGH (AP) - The
!{
Pirates haY!! dropped
:. oot' of ·the lJi!ldlng for free agent
~; ~er G9(ll1e ~e. the team's
, maJ!8iel' sald.
.0: .. We're oot of It " Chuck Tanner
t• told The P)t~ Press on
~~ 1bUraclay. ·we've Just decided togo
~- Iii 8IIOther dln!ctlon."
:~ ,That ~m~ld , leave Atlanta, To:: ronto Uld Sill Qleao In the running
, . for Goasage, 32, a fonner Yankee.

.

.

~

. Out of sweepstakes

!: Pittsburgh

,

•'''''! """ ..•'"""'"'"••·•""'"'
•
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''''"'I ,,,,,. .. ,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,.,,.,,.,,,.,,.,,.,
••
,

ATIIENS (:Mil -Carl Malhony ~: Brtan
Blld&lt;le 6-0-12: Chris Gerig 1&gt;2·14; Blll
Flnnearty 3-3-9: Leon Allen S-3-13: Chris
Leonard 0-1 -1; J.rt Dean 0-1 -1. Tolalo r:!-1&amp;4i.
MAIUE'ITA (U) - Kyp RDss 7 ~ · 16: Ja)
Heiss 1-2-4: Mllce Barnes 2-1}4; Andy
Mcintosh 1.().2; J('ft SrtuUstall 2-0-4: Jeff
NPVille0-7-7: Todd Hlnesl-3-5. TOI&amp;Io lf-14-4.
8coft by quar1en:
Athens ............................ 10 14 14 18-56
Marietta .. . .. .. .. . .. . ..... .. . .. .. 12 11 7 12-42
~ ICOt'r. Alhms 41. Mar1ena :n.

NOtn'HM'EST '8 ' !26 ) -

Shannr&gt;t

,~

~ ~ Goose'slist

Yellow: Lone · Short: . Known: P1id:.

•,,,.,,.,,.,.;,,..,,.,,..,,-G-,. ••oo •• ••• t•""'"" ' Y'''''' ' ''''•''"'""Y''''""'''"l~ ' .. '''''""'tooooooO ooo .. oooo"''''l''"'""""'foooooooo :

•

MARIETTA -Athens broke out
of a 26-26 third quarter deadlock
Friday night to post a 56-42
non-league victory over the host
Marietta Tigers.
Marietta, winless In seven outings, held a 12-10 first quarter lead,
tied ihe game at 26-aU, and !hen
closed to 32-30 in the third period
before finally succumbing to the
Bulldogs.

To&lt;Ut 15-11-4.1.

.- ..

'·

H1ir! . If! . !

• .•

...22 22 19 17-8!
.. .......... 9 l1 17 24-fil

BAnERY
BOOSTER

CABLES
•I 0 GA COPPER

~

Township ............... :......................... ,.......... :..., ...............................;.................. :............................ ..
~

F.H.A. V.A. and CONVENTIONAL.FfNANCING
Low Down Payment-Low Monthly Payments
ON SECTIONAL or MODULAR HOMES
IF VOU QUALIF.Y-NO DOWN PAYMENT

,.'

Owners Name ...................... ,............................................................................... ,..... :...................... .

LARGE SELECTION OF USED HOMES AVAILABLE
(FREE blocks·and defivery)·

Gallipolis ... .
Nort hwest .. .. .

Harrtson 4-l-U;

ECardinals,

Kennel License $20.00

•

Shelterhouse Reservations
·: · GALLIPOUS - GaiUa County
• residents are reminded to contact
: . the offices of the 0.0. Mcintyre
: · Park District beginning Tuesday,
.• ; Jan. 3, to reseiVe dates for shelters
~ during the 1984 recreation 5eason.
;: Park . Distrtct st~ will receive
; phone-In reservations from 8 a.m.
,• to 4 p.m, Residents should call
,,•• .:....-...u,
"" "''" extensIon 56 ,
'

1.

DEADLfNE FOR PURCHASE OF 1984 DOll LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH: TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) PENALTY IF Ll·
CENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USETHIS HANDY APPLICATION BLANKAND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE NOW. FEU ARE FOUR DOLLARS ($4.001 FOR EACH DOG.
MALE OR FEMALE. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $5.00).
.

Lamar to~ Toledo
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Kenneth
Perkins made three free throws in
the last 22 seconds Friday night to
help Lamar stave off a furious
Toledo comeback and clli'inn the
championship coUege basketball
game In the Blade-Glass City •
Classic,81-78.
·
In )he consolation gam~. freshman Kevin Houston hlt a 15-foot
jump shot with lwo seconds iett to
give Army a 52-50 triumph aver
Eastern Michigan.
Freshman Kevin' Houston hlt a
15-~t jump shot with iwo seConds '
leftFrldaynlghttogiveArn1ya52-50
triumph over Eastern Michigan ln
the consolation coUI!I(e bBsJcetbalt
game of . the Blade-Glass City
Classlc.
.
Eastern Michigan, 3-5, ha(! built a ·
43-l') edge with 8: 42 remaining, but
Anny, 6.3, ran ott a :J3.3stretch to go
up48-46.

HOIIEUTE SUPER XL

Tolalo U.IJ.It.
~ by quarien:

~

BLUE IMPS 1431 -

Alldnson 4·2·10: r.rant 2.{1~ ; Slont&gt; 1-4-6; Strait
2.{1-4 ; Ov.-·rn..\ 2 · 1 ·~. Call (}.().0; Woodru m 1·1·3:
Saund£-rs 0--0--Q- BrrM·n OM: Wllroxon ().()-().

The following Gallipolis Fioancial Institutions
will be closed Monday, January 2nd in observance of
the New Year's Holiday.

Youth Soccer Program
GALLIPOUS - The countywide
Youth Soccer Program jointly
sponsored by the 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Park Dtstrtct and the Gallipolis
Parks and Recreation Department
is entering its fourth season of play.
. Important dates to remember for
·this year's program are:
: Feb. 14 - Registration forms
distributed to schools.
· Feb. 14 - Coaches' organiza.tiona! meeting.
•
: Feb. 24 - Registration deadline.
· March 13 - Practice starts.
March ·31 to May 19 - League·
'dates.

~

Fr.u,,m.ll L1 j ,. /u 1/lfJII{''

- Ellcessor ~ I 7;
9-3-21; Carty 3- J.7: w.otle 2-1·5:
Dressel 2-0-4; Duncan J..l-9: Can er 5-2-12;
Bailie 4·3·11 : Garlx&gt;r 0-().(); feUur(' 0--0--0;
Lllllt&gt;john 1.().2: Pasquale 1.().2: Splet(' 0--0--0:
Tope IHHJ. Tolalo IS-lUI.
NOR'J1IWEIIT (tl) - RDgers 4-:i-IJ; Ponn
:&gt;2·12: Cofkoy 1-:&gt;7; Hudson 6-0-12: Jewell
4.0.3; Ealon 3-1·7: Ros&lt; 1.0.2: Moon&gt; IHHJ.
G.u.LIPOIJS iiWI

IJ&lt;or~doll

10 points.
The Imps led 19-12 at halftime,
and 29-19 going Into the final period.
Box score:

Blue Dev\11 Trtumpb
Coach Jack Payton's GAHS
resetves jumped off to a 15-8 first
period lead, then went on to defeat
the Little Mohawks, 43-26.
The Imps upped their mark to6-2.
Northwest dropped to 54 on the
year.
. Gary Harrison led the Imps'
attack with 11 points. J eff Atkinson
added 10 and Todd Slone six. Brock
Shannat led the losers' attack with

OOM Park
District news

Plus Unique Fraternal Benefits

Blliqkt
a..d.JillfJpq
NW}Vm

Al\'rlf'' AT KINGSBURY HOMES 'Y.,,"!'~"'"i-,,_
"·, •..,i.1&lt;1..,.,.
{j.
~q,
~~

· (Photos by Kevin Kelly).

Modern Woodmen Life Insurance

-A_

REAL ESTATE

ALEXANDER (62) - Bobo 1&gt;1-13; Gu&lt;hrte

Ja26: J.rters IHHJ: Faries 5-11-10: Bennet&lt;
5-1-11: C.n;ey IM. TolaloTRIMBLE (II. - Gatchel 4-2-10; Hooper

au-.

r--;::====================:::;-

SXt Chain Saw
TOURNAMENT ALL-TEAM - Selection of
all-team players from the GaOia County Holiday
Tournament was made at the· close of Friday's
Hannan Trace-North GaDJa championship game.

: · THE CHAMPIONS -llamlan4l'race teammates cut down one of the
nels In the North Gallla l)'tn Friday nigh&amp; after wiMing the Gallla
County Holiday Tournament bout with NG, 61-M. From left, Jeff .
Bobble 8nDnfleld and 'Alan Bailey support lUck Randolph.

soon

.

rebounds. The Blue Devils hit 33 of
58 field goal attempts for 57 percent.
GAHS was 14ofl8atthefou1Unefor
77 percent. The Blue Devils had 11
turnovers.
Bob Rogers led the Mohawks'
attack with 13 points. Brent Penn
and Jim Hudson scored 12 each for
the losers.
Northwest hit 24 of 49 field goal
attempts for 49 percent. The lads of
Coach Harold Rose were 13 of 18 at
the foul line for 72 percent.
Northwest had 25 rebounds, eight
by Rogers, and 21 turnovep.
Gallipolis travels to LOgan Frtday for a Southeastern Ohio league
contest . Northwest plays Wheelersburg at home Friday In a !ie&gt;uthern
Ohio Conference match.
Box score:

Bulldogs dump Tigers

Florida captures Gator B~wl

lOgames,
woundLong,
up9-3.the NCAA's
Iowa's Chuck
No. 2-ranked passer and ringleader
of thenatlon'sth!rd best offense, was
intercepted four times after throwing only eight interceptions in 236
passes au season.
The Gators turned the first
interception, one of two thefts by
free safety Tony Lilly, into their
87-yard touchdown drive. Anderson
started it with a 47-yal'd burst and
finished It by taking a pltchout for
the final yard and a 7-0 lead at 14:20

•

McDERMOTT - Gallla
Academy High School's bench
people got plenty of playing time
here Friday night as Coach Jim
Osborne's visiting Gallipolis Blue
Devils defeated the Northwest
Mohawk s, 80-61, In a nonconference basketball contest.
Blue Devil substltut!'S scored .'IS
points as GAHS Improved Its
season mark 10 6-2. .Northwest
dropped to 4-5 on the year.
· The Mohawks led only twice In
the 32-mlnute contest, 3-1 and 4-3.
Gallipolis raced to a 22-9 !Irs!
period lead. The Blue Devils led
44-20 during the halftime lntermls·
slon, and 63-37 going Into the final
stanza .
Gallia's biggest lead was 29
points, 74-45, with 4:31 left In the .
contest.
All 14 Blue Devils dr!'Ssed saw
action.
Todd Bergdoit paced GAHS with
21 poinls. Kev Carter added 12,
Brett Bostic 11, Tom Duncan nine,
Chris Ellcessor and Kev Carty
seven each and Steve Wolfe five.
Carty, playing a little over half
the game, pickedoffUofGallia 's27

IN THE BOX - Sotdhweltem's Rocer Well, left, ooneoltllaa pme of &amp;be .GaiBa County JlaldaJI
looks for an out asKycerCreekplayeraDaveMartln 1'ourotmeat Friday. HJcbiN!der tMnmltel lelf
(23) and Steve Waugh box him In c1urtn1 . the Meek Uld Steve Pelfrey are In the backp-ound.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Neal Anderson's one-yard touchdownruncappedan87-yarddrivein
the first quarter and Doug Drew
recoveredafumbledsnapbylowa's
punter for a second-period score as
No. 11 Florida held on to defeat the
lOth-ranked Hawkeyes lH in a
chllly Gator Bowl Friday night:
The victory enabled Florida to
equal the school record ot nine
victorieS in a season, accomplished
four times previously. 'fl¥! Gators'
9-2-lmarklstheirbesUince1900and
may have assUred Flortda the first
TopTenfinlshinitsfootbaUhlstocy.
The Hawkeyes, who were bidding
to become the firstlowa team to win

he Sunday Time.-Sentinei-Page-C.S

Gallia ·Academy defeats Northwest, 80-61

•

'

~

'

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

-·

~

•12 FT .'

•TAHGt.f ~OOF
•BE PREPARED
Wt1'14 ONE SET
FOREAOICAR

599

WtfiD$HIElD
·~
·3•
ICE.

·.. 59~

Silver Bridge Plaza - Phone ~9335

.

'
'·

Bill Kelley
Manager

MON:-FRI. 8-8;
~AT. 8-6; SUN. 9-5

�.
Jar1ua1rv 1, 1

. I

January 1; 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasa.nt, W. Va.

:&gt;age-C-6-- The Sunday Times-Sentinel •

•

Tornadoes win 'battle· of .unbeatens', 62-57
dllng perfOJmance. He also paced
the Tornado attack with 2.'\ points.
Balance was again a factor In
Southern's win as the Tornad'i"'s
lone "big man", Dennis Teaford
powered In 15 points from the Inside
route. while Wade Connolly
sparkled from the floor with eleven
key markers.
South!'astern had a triple threat
as 6-foot-1 sharpshooter Doug Hlce
paved the waywlth 16polnts,6-foot-5
center Pat Grtffith notchE'd 14
points. and long range shooter
11 points for
Junior Skaggs
the Panthers.
Southeastern grabbed the openIng tip and notched the first score of
the game on a swishing jumper by
6-2 forward Skaggs with 7:25
showing on the clock. Connolly cut
that lead In half with a free throw
and 1'eaford cleared the lane on
turnaround jumper off the glass for
a ~2 SHS lead . Center Pat Griffith
pulled down one of many lofty
passes from guard Tracy Murray,
then banked It o!!

BY SCOIT D. WOLFE

RICHMOND ALE - In a battle of
the unbeatens, Southern's Torna·
does charged tO' a 62-57 victory over
the Ross-Southeastern Panthers,
staking claims to the top seat of
So)lthern Ohio Class "A" basketball·
ranklngs here Friday nlght . Always
an excitingly well-played basket ball
contest, this annual meeting was no
dl!!erent as both clubs entered the
bout with perfect records SOuthern 6-0and Southeastern 8-0ful'!llng the fire for 32 minutes of
all-&lt;&gt;ut warfare.
The vlctory boosts the Tornadoes
ot:Coach Carl Wolfe to a perfect 7-0
fn!ll'k over tough competition which
should secure additional votes for
the state ranklngs which come out
nf!ld week. Southeastern. favored to
~with Its distinct size advantage.
drops to 8-1.
&amp;uthern's 'quarterback' Rod
LO;tlefleld dazzled the Southeastern
girts with an awesome ballhan-

another Panther scOre 10 regain the
lead at 4-3.
An enticing battle of three more
lead changes and typlcill sport ,.
manlike play made an Interesting
first quarter with t~e hosts on top at
Its conclusion 14:' :1.
·
Early In th ' ·' ·rond round
Southern lntln li·.a •• ~ Southeast·
E!rn's Inside sh en.;tl'•, going directly
Inside to Teaford for a 15-14 Tornado
lead. After a missed Panther shot
Littlefield pulled on his victmy
stripes and took command . of
Southern's offensive attack, driving
the lane for a 17-14 SHS advantage.
Griffith kept his contingent close
with a bucket just seconds later,
however. the remainder of the first
half became the "Littlefield show".
Littlefield rounded out the period
with 10 additional second period
points and elusive floor game.

t:

•

Teaford and Kevin Curfman
rounded out Southern scoring that
n&gt;erlod, while a tenacious Tomadoe
defense caged the ·Panthers !or a
J0.23 haltttml! lead.
Second half
Opening the second halt, ·uttle,
field put his club up by nine before
Griffith grabbed the lob pass over
the SHSde!ense for an Inside score,
32-25. While the Panthers worked on
seallng of! Uttl!leld, senior speeds· ,
ter Connolly picked up the slack with
.two consecutive perimeter jumpers
and outstanding defensive play to
widen Southern's lead. A steal by
Connolly put the fast break In gear
with Teaford cashing In on the
profits and a 38-25 SHS lead.
The rest o! the perlod produced an
even pace, with SHS In control of the
tempo, holding the lead at 4~35
when the buzzer sounded.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Exlenllon A&amp;ent
Gallla Couaty
Apiculture and CNRD
GAWPOLIS- I want to lnvlte
all farm famUies and agri-business
tlrms IJ1 the trl-county and tri-state
area to our second annual Risk,
Management-Farm Marketing
SchoQI. This series of six evening
meetings gets underway Jan . 3 and
runs through Feb. 14. 1~ . All
meetings wm be held at tile
Production Credit Association
Building, Upper River Rd ., Rt. 7,
GaUipolls. Meetlngtlme ls7:30p.m.
each evening.
Extension Agents are asklid to
help farmers with marketings and
reducing risk, plus financial management and this series of meetings
Is deslgnfld to do that. For example,
the meeting on computers will show
how they can be used as a. financial
management tool, as well as a
marketing tool.
Farm credit has been a part o!
agriculture for along, longtime and
all Indications are that It will
continue. to be so In the future. This
calls for a good working relationship between the farmer, his lender

The "real" radio
.lets you listeri to life.
Tuning peaks every
transmission for
optimum reception.
Features includeSelective Scan Delay,
Direct Channel Access,
Lockouts and more.
Much more. For much
less.

and In some cases, his broker. Close on F~b. 14. our guest speakers wUI
communication Is called tor In be Marton Weaver, Wyandot
making financial and marketing County. Ohio Farmer, Hay ProdeCisions.
ducer- Lime and Fertilizer Dealer
Some farmers will find that use of and Gus R. Douglass, Commisthe Futures Market and Agrtcultu· . stoner of Agriculture, West VIrginia
ral Commodity Options ; will . be Department of Agriculture.
beneficial tools to them, as they
Each family and/or firm Is
n:take marketing decisions.
· lnvlted to pay a $17.50 registration .
One of the sessions wUI deal with tee (covers all who attend from that
Reducing Risk through Crop'lnsuranee. And the final Sl}'iSion deals
with expanding or ( developing
either new or different products for
sale at your !arm. In this case the
JACKSON - VInce Wolford hit a
commodity wUl be hay. Many
farmers already sell hay at the field goal and a pair of tree throws
In the final 29 seconds Friday night
!arm and this meeting Is designed
to 11ft the Jackson lronmen to their
to stimulate your thinking' about the
prospect o! ex panding your first victory o! the season, -61·58,
business.
over Miami Trace.
Although tile lronmen had led the
The main speaker for most ott he
programs will be Dean Baldwin, entire second hal! they saw the
Panthers shave an 11 point lead,
Ohio State University Extension
Economist In Marketing. Other 39·28, In the third quarter down to
speakers wUI be Jim Dayton, Ohio 57-561n the flnal47 seconds of play.
Wolford canned a fielder at the 29
Agrlcult u~al Computer In!orma·
tlon Servlces, Inc .• Washington second mark for a 59·56 lead, but
Miami Trace's Travls Anderson
Court House, Linda Miller, Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation, Lan· goaled with 2D seconds lett.
At the nine second mark Wolford
caster, Ohio and for the Hay
converted
two tree throws to Ice the
Production and Marketing Meeting

dru.ANoo. Fla. -

Jimmy Fos-

alrollna to a 64-51 win over Stetson
on;~ Frlday In the championship
grufte of ,the Florida Citrus Classic
co~ basketball tournament.
Clnclnnatl beat Central Florida
6~ In the consolation game to take
thitd place In the tournament.
Harold Martin tallied 14 for the
G;!inecocks and Mike Brittain hit
for; 12 as South Carolina upped Its
~i-d to 6-2. Martin earned
ali·1PUI1nanlent honors.

ONLY

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EXCISE TAX HAS BEEN REMOVED
PRICES INCLUDED

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PLUS TAX

NOW ·

TRUCK (Reg. Tread)

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MIAMI TRACE (Ill) - David Hall H7:
Shawn Frazier 3~ : Chlp Will 2.1J.4: Frank
RA!Islnger 12-3-17: Travis Anderson :1-2·12:
Brett Pettit 1.().2. Tolalo 54-511.
JACK.SON (II) -Joey Wyanl J.H: Joo
Clay 5-1-17: Pat Slovens 8-1-17: Vince Wo~ord
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STOCK #324002

first victory of the seaso~ ·for the
Ironmen, now 1-7.
Jackson was led by J.on Clay and
Pat Stevens with n points each
whllethepanthers (2·5) were paced
by Frank Reisinger's 'n markers,
The box score:

1/4"- $6 24

·'•

Rog. '259.00

• SPEECH &amp; LANGUAGE EVALUATIONS
• SPEECH &amp; LANGUAGE THERAPY

1984 COUGAR

•7'4" Oanex Powder Painted' Steel Spun
Aluminum Dish
•Janeil BCR-200 Receiver (with cord type remote)
•Amplica 110° LNA
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Es__s..._.s....
TEii i i iEL............--~----t2

SPEECH &amp; HEARING
DIVISION

Mike Reddick and Gary Mtms
each scored 14 points for Stetson .
while Glynn Myrick added 10.
Reddick and Myrick each earned
all-tournament honors. The loss
drops Stetson to 7-3.
South Carolina took the lead
1\'ldway In the opening half and beld
of! numerous Stetson charges
during the game before Icing the
tournament crown In a flurry of
charity shots In the closing minutes.
TheHattersclosedwlthlnlpolnton3
occasions before the Gamecocks
moved out for good.

j.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii

SELLING -OUR INVENTORY AT .DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES. EVERYTHING
MUST GO. THE CONSTRUCTION DIVISION OF CARTER &amp; EVANS WILL STILL BE
D AT 417 SECO D AVENUE.

~ Woodlund Centers, Inc.

tei;~red 19 points and garnered
Mv,P honors In leading South

family or firm for the entire school
- or $3.50 per Individual meeting
attended) to help defray expenses
for out-of-rounty speaker travel
expense.
We'll have plenty of good refreshments at each meeting, so plan now
·to attend. It you have questions,
please call me at'614446-7001.

I ronmen captures first victory

BASKEI' - Southeastem's

uc·post victories

Buy classifiet!s

WE_ARE CLOSING THE BUILDING SUPPLY DlVISION OF OUR BUSINESS AND ARE

Southeastern. Southern kept Its unbeaten record Intact with a &amp;-5'7 wtn.

&lt;;amecocks,

The Sunday

,

HAULS DOWN REBOUND - Southerit's Wade Connolly-corne. down
with a rebooncl clurlng Friday's noiHlooference victory over RGII8 of

Dresbach (42) goes In lor his
basket of the eveftlng aga,tnst Southem Friday' night In this SooU
action photo. Southern's Darin Roush (31) provides a tight
ctifEusewhlle Dennis Teaford (52) waits lor therebooncl. Southern won
ltie annual big battle, 62-5'7.

.

W.Va .

Series of farm m~keting Jrieetin~ will begin Jan. 3

Southeastern wasted no ttme In line !or 74 percent and SE 5o! 7 tor
staging a comeback In the finale, 71.4percent.Southemwontllebattle
cutting three points from the of the boards 28-21led by Teaford's
Tornado lead In the !lrst 2D seconds 10 and Utlletleld's 8. Hlce and
of the perlod. Despite .a Connolly Grlftlth badland 5 respectively for
lay-up Southeastern eyed a vlctory Southeastern.
Southern had 14 tumqvers, 7 .
and unveiled a tantallzingwne-trap
.
steals,
3assls!s, arrd was whistled tor
press that forced two straight SHS
turnovers and put the hosts back In 11 fouls. SE had 11 turnovers, 7
steals, and 15 fouls.
collt!!IISioJI ·
Witn 4: 58 left In the game
After traUing 10-9 at the half.
Southeastern had all the momen- Coach Howle caldwell's Uttle Whirltum, erasing Southern •s 13 point winds stor:med up another vlctory to
lead and tylngthescore at47-47.
remain undefeated a11.0 by posting
Coach Carl Wolfe regrouped hJs a J6.34 triumph. Mark Jarrell ted the
forces, slowing the pace and giving winners with 11 points, Kelley
hJs point guard Littlefield the sole Grueser had 6, and Jay Bostick 5.
responslbWty o! breaking the SE Dean Cartee led Ross with 8 points.
press, which he did In line style. By
Southern plays at Wahama, now
the 1: 32 mark SHS regained a 55-49 4.0, In another undefeated battle'on
lead on buckets by It big three; Tuesday.
·
Uttl~ld, Teaford, and Connolly.
SOIJI1IEASTERN 110116 (51) - Alley
Rod ended the game hitting 4 of 5 at t-2-4: Hire ~16: DrEibach 1.().2: SkaiurJ
Grtlllth 7.().14: Hutchinson ~ and
the line, while Curfman canned both :1-1-11:
Yat.. ~. Tocalolf+l'l.
ends of a 'txmus forthe62-57trlumph.
SOlJTIIEIIN (I%) - CUrrman 2·2-6: Roush
Teaford 7-J.U: Littlefield IIJ.:I-2:1:
Both teams had a strong night ().3.3:
Connolly 4-J-11, and Schultz 1.().2. ToUIIo
!rom the floor, Southern hitting 24 o!
M-1B)'qu&amp;nerl:
45 !or 53 percent and SE 26 o! 56 !or
...................... 14 9 12 14-!17
46.4 percent. SHS hit 14 of 19 at the Southeastern
Southern '"""""'"'" .......... 13 17 13 17-62

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Ohio-Point Pleasant,

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Agriculture and our community

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Gallipolis

446..4464

SALE
STARTS
JAN. 3

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Plea~a.nt, W. Va.

Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sen~nel
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/Elks organized in 1889 in old Shober huildlng
~here

SANDS

By JAMES
to the Lupton
they
Special Col'l'l!lpondent
would l)e ·located unW 1927 when
GALLIPOLIS - It wa.s at the they purchaaed tJ1e Davii.Shuler
beginning of the new
1n 1889 buUdlng In the 400 block of Second.
that thi! Gallipolis
of Elks The Elks Building burned to the
number 107 was
81'QUnd In 19!58 and It was In 1960that
Shober .building
the present Elks edltlee was put up
(now houses Dol·
by Contractor Paul Watson. The
Elks' front was remodeled earlier.
Jar General). We
note that at the
this year.
end of that first
TWO OF THE significant events
meeting a song
from Elk history In the Old French
which has come
· City were: the appearance In 1906
to be connected
at the lodg41 of Warren G. Harding
was sung: "Auld Lang Syne."
to give the memorial address; and
Included in the festivities on the_fact that from lim to 1907 0. 0.
January 16, 1889 (that first official Mcintyre was a member of the
meeting) wek dancing at Aleshire lodge. We note that throughout Its
Hall; a sumptuous banquet that history December and January
Included saddlerock oysters, tur· have been particularly busy times
key, ham, leg of mutton, and for the lodge - what with the
pickled beef tongue; lots of memortal service In December and
speeches; toasts; the Italian Or· the Installation of officers In
chestra of Huntington concert; and January. At the turn of the century
an Initiation In the park that Gallipolis had a number of clubs
Involved a goat. The flrsf'exalted
active at the beginning of the new
ruler was S. A. Dunbar with E. w. year. Such clubs as Tuxedos,
Nash. J . S. BlackaUer. and H. R.
Romans, Buckeyes, Merry Hearts,
Bradbury serving as knights. From and the Skidoos hal(e long ~lnce
1889 to 1894 the Elks Club met In the passed away.

BUILT IN 1960 by Contractor
Watson was the present Elks
buDding. Tbls structure replaced the threHtory Elks lodge that bumed
In 1958, having served as a home to the Elks since 192'7. The Galllpolls
Lodge dUed to Jan. 16, 1889, with S.A. DUnbar as the 11rst exahed ruler.
Warren G. Harding gave the memorial address for the GaiUpolls Elks In
1906.

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Dwry

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By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Tuck Butter·
field recently found an old copy of
the Gallipolis Tribune dated April
20, 1923. It had eight pages, with an
editorial page set entirely on
two-column measure except for
Madge Clark's Bidwell-Porter
news In the lower rtght hand corner.
There was only one advertisement
on the editorial !iage: Frick Co.,
Salisbury, N. C., promoting and
illustrating a thresher. · ·.

'Gallipolis Is misspelled wllh too
many "l's"- $1forthreemonths$4
per year."

alional

~ the •

"whelllh\! cow Jumped
mQOI).'' The J11411tl were aall:td to ..
pUll the •trtna on tllelr dynamite .
and with a baJ11 the tope came ctf, ;
txllOIIng a party hat.
•
Later In the feetlvltlelsomeofthe
town's soctal'elite Imitated famout;
~ana as the tudlence tried to :
guess. Directly the' party moved ·
from the large lodge room a~ ;
the street totheParkcerttralwhere :
after midnight supper waalle.!Ved. ·
'Fiten It was back to the lodge to~ :
more dancing, which Included the ·
cake ~alk.
·
AS ONE READS through the ·
menusoftbeseNewYear'spartles, :
we notice almost an' obblessloJI:
with pickled tongue - beef tongu" :
that Is; though some hurn&amp;JI ·
THE GALUPOIJS Tribune re- tonguesalsog~plckledthrougllthe ;
porter noJed however that General evening's activities.
.
Joe left no Ice cream on his plate
As to the present Elks' building, ·
when ~ came time for that part of Moore's Auto was the first OCCU· ·
the evening's festivities.
• pants of the first floor storeroom, .
Right before the midnight hoitr moving there In October 1961 and '
the master of ceremonies passed rC'Ialnlng Into tbi19'l011 when
out cardboard sticks of dynamite were replaced ~Super DoiiJr. .
and asked the question: "When was
James !laada' add.- II Box II, ,
beef the highest?" The answer was
ClarlulbiiJ'I, Ohio 41115.
ONEPARTYheldonNewYear'a
Eve by the Buckeyes lasted trom
9: 30 p.m. ·until 5 a.m. The ara'ild
march began the festivities and
after some time of dancing, SQme
games were played.
. On the first llllrne persons had to
answerqilestions like "What tree Is
best suited for cold weather?" The
answer was a fir tree.
On the second round persons had
to say an original poem.
The best poem came from
General Joe Mulllneux:
"A great many Ice cream take
But as for me It gives me stQlllach
ache
I preferring something stronger
Which stays with me longer."

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TIIEN AS NOW, the Tribune was
six columns wide and eight pages.
There was an Inside display
advertisement, three colurtins by 10
: !itches. It read, "Subscribe for the
; Gallipolis Weekly Tribune! $1.50 a
· year. Then a line, a simple black
· horizontal line. Next came "Gallll·
-polls Dally Tribune" - note that

'83: · Lebanon, economy top news stories
.

am

remaining.

From all of us at

By Gall Robinson

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1616 EASTERN AVE., GAUIPOLIS, OH.
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The year 1983 ended with the sound of cash
registers ringing up booming holiday sales. To
merchants and .shoppers, the throngs browsing and
buying were yet another sign that the economy had
bounded back. Infiatlon was low whlle unemployment
levels were finally beginning to drop.
But events overseas cast a pa11 over the economic
developments on the home front. The news from
Lebanon, where U.S. troops were supposed to be
keeping peace, was grtm. As the year ended, there
seemed little hope for an end to the confilct between
the country's many rival factions and the United
States was becoming Increasingly Involved In the
conflict.
Here are the top 10 news stories of 1983.
Fighting conUnues In Lebanon as U.S. Involvement Increues. More than 200 Americans were killed
In Lebanon this year as, for the first time, Americans
and Arabs shot at one another.
On Oct. 23, a truck loaded with TNT smashed Into
the Marine barracks at the Beirut airport, killing 241
Marines and sailors. A similar attack on a Fren9h
barracks killed 58. The bombs and similar terrorist
attacks were thought to be the work of Moslems with
ties to Iran.
· U.S. troops were sent to Lebanon following the
1982 Christian massacres of Palestinians al two
. refugee camps In Israeli-occupied Lebanon. They ere
part of a multinational peace-keeping force Intended
to aid the government of Christian President Amln
Gemayel.
U.S. economy stages a strong recovery. The
recovery, which began In late 1982, picked up steam In
1983, ending the recession. By October 1983. the
federal gove.nt's monthly Index of leading
economic Indicators had risen for 14 straight months.
In October, the Labor Department released figures
showing that productivity had
inoreln the past
four quarters than In any other slmtlar period since
1976.
By the fall, the yearly infiatlon rate was around
five percent. Unemployment, which In January had
been 10.8 percent. had fallen to 8.2 percent by
November .
Some economists and administration critics .
however, charged that the recovery could be
short-Uved because of the federal deficit, which Is
expected to remain at around $200 billion for the rest
of the decade.
The recovery didn't help everyone. Black
unemployment In November was still 17.3 percent.
although that was a drop from previous months, when
It had been above 20 Pl!rcent. And In August , the

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SPORTS TOOK UP part of one
column on the front page of the
Apr1120, 1923, Tribune, with a small J.M.KerrbuUdlngortheAieshlre r~~~;G;G~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;&lt;;&lt;;&lt;;&lt;~~~~~~:
three-line headline: "High school Hall. In that latter year they llJOVed
made enviable record during bas·
ketball season." Listed are 11
regular-season cage fracases, all
but one of which the Blue Devils
won; the one loss was 1!&gt;23 to
LOUDONVILLE, N.Y. (AP) Parkersburg, second game of the
John Devereaux pumped In 23
season, later avenged 29-21 In the
points and pulled&gt; down nine
seventh melee on the hardwood _rebounds to lead..Ohlo University to
with Parkersburg the victim.
the championship of · the Siena
Invitational Basketball Tourna·
GALLIPOUS WON ~our games ment with a 69-56 win over the host
In the Athens tournament starting
Indians Friday night.
with 6().9 over Hamden. In the .
In the consolation game, Dart·
Columbus tournament, Gallipolis mouth routed Manhattan 61-46.
beat Frankfort 1!&gt;8 and Archbold
What better time ·
Rick Scarberry and VIc Alex·
12·11, but the Blue Devils lost J.8.7 to
andereach~red10polntsfor0hlo,
than now to thank
Bellepoint.
now &amp;-3. Doug Poetzsch led Siena,
all of you for your
4-4; with 18 points and Erjc Banks
FOR TilE BLUE Devils Corn led
loyal support.
had16.
the scorers with 152, and
Siena took a 4.0 lead early In the
O'Brien had 96, Art PhiUJps a!, game, but Ohio tied the contest and
Swisher 48, Gomer PhUIIps 30,
never trailed Ohio which held
Blaine 26, Paul O'Brien 22, John \ 28-25 lead at h~. opened up Its. biggest lead, 61·50, with 1:59
Halliday 6, and Joe Merrt")an 3.

Individual,
Family,
Marital &amp; Child

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MARity: RESCUED - Rescuers prepare to lower a United
Slates Marine on a stretcbet'
tlown to safety below alter he
was trapped In the wreckage of
the Marine command post In
Beirut, Lebanon· which was
blown up by terrorists In October
1983. (AI' Laserphoto).

CHEVROLET·
OLDSMOBILE, hie.

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~mtinei Section ID)

Bobcats capture
Siena Invitational

Masthead at the top left of Page 4
Is illustrated with a line drawing of
a toga-clad tribune addressing an
audience. It reads that W. G. Slbl~y
was the editor; Its cost $1.50 a year
- eight months for $1 and four
: months for 50 cents. It also reads
: that all subscriptions must be paid
: In advance.

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WATT RESIGNS - Interior Secretary James
Watt reads a copy of his resl~ Ietterlhathesent
to President Reagan In October 11183. Walt made the
aunouncement to a smaD group ·of repcriers and
p!IOOlgraphers In a meadow on the Ba'rrak Ranch In
~ Yfte!', CaW. IDs·wife Leilani stands'at his side.
&lt; (AP ·Laaerphoto).

.

Top admtnlstratlon environmental otflclala
Census Bueau said that15 percent of Americans were
resign amid controversy. During the winter, scan~
living In poverty, the highest such percentage since
hit the Environmental Protection Agency. The furor
1965.
The Soviet UniO'n shoots down a clvlllan airliner, 1nvolved access to documents, cleanup of toxic waste
dumps and confilcts of Interest and alleged favoritism ·
ldlllng 289 people. On Sept. 1, Korean Air Lines flight
007, en route to Seoul, strayed over Soviet airspace of corporate polluters by the agency.
Ortgtnally, the controversy centered on Rita
and was shot down by the Soviet Union. The plane
crashed Into the Sea of Japan, kUling everyone Lavelle, who headed the cleanup program. She was
aboard, Including Rep. Larry McDonald, D-Ga ., charged with perjuring herself before Congress and
favortng her former employer In a toxic cleanup case.
chairman of the John Birch Society.
The plane was off course for a few hours and was In February her appointment was "terminated" and
near a highly sensitive Soviet military Installation. she was Ia ter convicted.
By March, a number of top officials, including
The Soviets never apologized for the attack and
charges that the plane was on an Intelligence mission. administrator Anne M. Burford, had also been forced
On Sept. 28 •• a statement by Soviet leader Yurt from their jobs. William Ruc.kelshaus, a former EPA
Andropov blamed the United States for the lossofllfe . admtnlstrator, replaced her.
Interior Secretary James Watt, perhaps the most
Most of the world reacted with revulsion to the
Soviet attack. The sanctions Imposed on the Russians controversial member of the Reagan Cabinet,
resigned Oct. 9. He could not survive the furor that
were, however, fairly mlld.
U.S. -Soviet relations become Icier as U.S. deploys ensuE:&lt;~ "after he boasted o! a commission, "I have _a
woman, a black, two Jews and a cripple." Watt was
missiles In Europe. The United States began
deploying 572 medium-range Pershing and Cruise replaced by national security adviser William Clark.
Sally Ride becomes the first U.S. woman tn
missiles In Western Europe after voters In West
Germany and England elected governments which space. On June 18, the space shuttle Challenger, with
physicist Sally Ride aboard, blasted off, making Ms.
support the deployment.
In October, U.S. cruise missiles began arriving In Ride the first Amertcan woman in space. The other
four members of the crew were men . The shuttle
England':'
• This, and the shooting down of the Korean landed June 24 after a near-perfect mission.
On Aug. 30, another Challenger night took the
alrllner by the Russians, led to a deterioration In
U.S.-Sovlet relations. On Nov. 23, after the West ' first black American, Air Force Lt. Col. Guion S.
German parilament reaffirmed Its support for the Burford into space. He was also a member of a
deployment of missiles, the Soviets walked out of five-person crew. The successful mission ended Sept.
negotiations with the United States on reducing
medium-range missiles. The Russians also sus·
pended START (Strategic Arms Reduction Talks ).
On Dec. 15, talks on troop levels in central Europe
were also suspended, bringing all arms negotiations ""''i".'-"'.='.11
to a half.
U.S. troops Invade Grenada. On Oct. 25, 1,900U.S.
troops, along with a small force from six Caribbean
nations, Invaded the Cartbbean country of Grenada.
Prtor to the Invasion, Marxist Prime Minister
Maurice Bishop was overthrown and killed by
hardllne Marxi.,;ts.
Reagan said the United States landed ' on the
island at the request of other Caribbean nations to
"restore order and democracy'' and to protect the
lives of 1,100 Americans.
The 1,900 Americans encountered resistance
from Cubans and, according to the pentagon, 18
Americans were killed. The United States said It
killed some 59 opponents.
HERE TO CHEER - Astronaut Sally Ride .
Most Cuban resistance ended after a few days
on her feDow astronauts al Kennedy Space ·
cheers
and the last American combat troops withdrew In
Center In Florida while Space Shuttle 8 prepares for
December.
launching In August 1983. (AI' Laserphoto).

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.CRUISE MISSILE
Demonstrators cower •
as police water cannons splash. •
water during their November : ~
1983 protest against plllllited . :
deployment of new cruise mJs..• •
sBes and Pershing 0 In Bonn, ~
West Genp:my whlle the West
GermM parliament ~tages the
. first day of a two-day debate on
. the N.A.T.O. twJn.traek dec!- ,
slon. (AP Laserphoto ).
TORS -

ChMolet-Oidsmobile Inc.

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Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

1984

BusiAess

·1!imes- ientinet

Jackson holds meeiing with
captured U.S. ·Navy pilot

Section

By TERRI A. ANDER80N
A"'CC1ted PJo. Writer
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)- The

Rev. Jeue Jackson met today with

....

captive U.S. Navy airman RobertO.

Goodman Jr., whosaldhewasbelng

Howard Strode,
right, a new
director for
Federal Land
Bank-Association
of Gall-ipolis,
talks with
Louisville
President R.C.
Schlader during
a recent new
FLBA directors'
orientation session.
The meeting
focused on ·the
role of FLBA
directors within
the farm credit
system.

·.

Area deaths
•
&lt;;larence B. Clary

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First quarter report reveals
~AYTON- Robbins and Myers
returned to profitability for Its 1984
l!scal first quarter and expects to
refl)aln profitable for the year as a
whole, said Fred G. Wall, president
anci chief executive officer.
For the fiscal 1984 first quarter
ended Nov. 30, Robbins and Myers

had net Income of ID4,&lt;XXJ or five
cents per share on sales of $37.6
million, compared with a loss of$1.5
million or 63 cents per share on
sales of $37.7 million for the
comparable peFiod a year ago.
Wall said the improvement In
results was primarily due to an

.---Business Briefs:-Best names division president
RICHMOND, Va. - Best Products Co. nametl Robert E.R. ·
Huntley executive vice president of Best and chief operating officer
of the company's catalog showroom division.
Huntley takes over In those positions Jan. 2.
A member of Best's board of directors since 1972, the 54-year-old
Huntley Is the first president of the catalog showroom division, which
was created last year during corporaterestructuflng. Best'currently
operates 197 showrooms In 'll states.
Huntley also serves on the board ofalrectors of Philip Morris Inc.;
Centel Corp.; Piedmont Aviation; and Shenandoah Life Insurance
Corp. He Is a practicing attorney, a professer of law and served as
dean of Washington &amp; Lee University Law School.

aggressive corporatewide program
of expense control and downsizing
of organization and facUlties which
resulted In a substantial ln)pl'Qvement In margins.
"Our break-even points have
been reduced significantly, our
inventories are down over 50
percept from a year ago, and our
Interest costs are down substantially," Wall said.
He •said the company's backlogs
totaled $45.3 million which Is abut
equal with one year ago, but up
substantially from the fourth quarter of 1983. Orders, he noted, are
also up In all divisions, compared to

profitability~

last quarter.
Wall said the more 1avorable
results were due to an across-theboard Improvement ·In all of the
company's operating divisions.
He cautioned, however, that the
ex.tent of the return to profitability
for fiscal 1984 would depend on the
continued recovery In the general
E!conomy and its ,.effect on the
company's markets.
He noted that although the
company's Industrial divisions
were showing encouraging .pro·
gress, they were "still lagging the
general economy, which Is typical

of businesses driven by capital
spending."
. Commenting on the company's
Comfort Conditioning Dlv(slon,
Wall said that the Huntercelllngfan
brand was showing considerable ·
strength, asn" refiected by the
addition of several major mass
merchandisers and stronger than anticipated off-seasen orders. He
added that the outlook for 1984
would depend upon retail sales
during the traditionally heavy
selling season.
Wall . said that although the
company was recovering from a
two-year period of adverse results,

Best releases third quaner

RICHMOND, Va. - Best Products Co. Inc., the nation·~ largest
catalog showroom retailer, announced earnings and sales for the
third quarter of fiscal 1983 ended
.Oct. 29.
Earnings for the third quarter
were· $2.8 million, or 15 cents per
share, versus a loss of $1.2 million or
RIO GRANDE - Three Rio Grande College and Community
11 cents per share as reported by
College administrators recently attended the annual conference of
Best for the same period last year.
the Cotincll for the Advancement and Support of Education in
There were 18,070,&lt;XXJ average
Chicago.
·
commot\ shares outstanding for the
They were Clodus R. Smith, president; Scott D. Miller. director of
quarter this year and ll,729,lXXJ
college relations and alumni affairs; and Glenn R. Enslen,
average common shares outstand·
development officer.
ing for the same period last year.
Smith and Miller were on the program for the evenI. Smith served
Based upon the acquisitions of
as a panel reactor for the government relations u·act, while Miller
Basco In July 1982 ..and Modern
was on the committee for career development.
Merchandising In October of the
same year, the 1982 third quarter
sales and earnings reporied by Best
!
Include Basco for the fall quarter
GALLIPOLIS - Purchases of $10,899 In U.S. savings bonds were
and Modern for the month of
credited to Gallla County for October, reports C. Leon Saunders,
October.
county savings bond chairman.
On Nov. 10, the company de. Total sales credited to the county through October are $120,036.
clared a three-for-two stock spilt on
: : Statewide sales of savings bonds totaled $14,737,718 for October.
all common shares outstanding
Qhlo sales through October amounted to $184,121,661, a 19 percent .
Dec. 1. Based upon a post-spilt total
·Increase over the comparable period of 1!&amp;1.
.
of 27,105,lXXJ average common
shares outstanding for the quarter
and 17,594,lXXJ average · common
shares outstanding for the same
· RIO GRANDE - A course In Income tax preparation Is being
period last year, earnings for the
offered through the adult education department of Buckeye Hills
quarter were 10 -cents per s'hare
Career Center.
versus . 11 lost of seven cents per
The course wlU begin Jan. 10 and wlU meet twice weekly on
share for the·same period last year.
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6:30-9:30 p.m. at BHCC.
Net sales for the third quarter
For further Information, contact the adult education office at
were
$474.8 mllllon, an lncrea,w of
245-5336, extension 252 from 2-10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and
46.4 percent above the sales of$324.4
8 a.m.-4 p.m. Friday.
million for the same period last
year. This also represents a 12.4
percent Increase above the sales of
a11ailabl~
$422.4 million If Best, Basco and
Modern had been combined for the
CINCINNATI- Taxpayel's Interested In year-round tax lips and
full quarter lllst year. .
thorough Income tax can obtain a free copy of IRS Publication 910,
For the first nine months of fiscal
''Taxpayers' Guide to IRS Information, Assistance and
· 1983, tile company reported net ·
Publlcations."
· earnings of $1,7 mliJlon, or 10 cents
·The pamphlet Is avallable In IRS' Columbus service area by
earnings·per share, compared to a
calling~• .
net loss of $3.2 111,1111on, or 31 cents
The publication Includes descriptions of 'IRS services to help
I08t per share for the nine mdnth
taxpayers prepare their retupJs or receive assistance with their
period last year. There were
returns. It also resolves questioJis on. bill$, letters and notices from
17,286,lXXJ
average cominon shares
IRS and contains Information on accounts and status of expected
outstanding for the nine months this
refunds, •
I
year (prior to the stock spilt) and
The publication Includes the phone nwnber of TeleTax, the·
10,371,lXXl
average comm6n shares
recorded telephone tax .Information service, and IRS toll-free
telephone lines.
··
0111Btand!Jig for the same~ last
year. _1
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Administrators attend conference

Based upon a post-spilt total of
25,929,&lt;XXJ average common shres
outstanding for the nine months and
15,557,&lt;XXJ average common shares
outstanding for the same period last
year, earnings for the nine months
were seven cents per share versus a

It had maintained it Improved its .
share of market In virtually all Its '
Industrial product lines. He noted
too that the company would
continue to "stringently control
expenses" se that Improvements In
sales would be "carried through to
the bottom line."
Robbins and Myers Is a diversified industrial and consumer goOds
manufacturing ·company with
plants In the United States and "
Canada. The ocmpany's product
lines Include ceiling fans, electric
motors and controols, and Industrial pumps.

e~ings

..

loss of 20 cents per share lor the ' Modern from the dates of acqulsl·
same period last year.
tlon. This represents an Increase of .,
For the first nine months of fiscal
6.4 percent above the sales of
1983, sales were $1,236.4 million, an
$1,162.2 million If Best, Basco and
Increase of 58.9 percent above the
Modern had been combined for the
sales of $778.3 million reported by
entire nine months last year.
Best and Including Basco and

-·- -----"" .. ---

Michael Wamer

Edward Evllllll

.

'

Michael Warner haS completed tbe Certified Insurance
Counselor Life. and Health lnstltute held recently In .Columbus. The ~Y Insurance instltute was one of five offered
annually at Columbus by the
Professional Insurance Agents
Assoctatlon, covering all major
areas of lllsurance and agency

managenent.

, After the ~I campi~
!kin~ all five Institutes, Wal'ner
will be.awarded the Certificated
Insurance · ~nselor deslgna1lon by the Society of Cet tlfled
Insurance CounselOrs.
GALLIPOLIS . Edward
Evans has }olned the staff of ·
Leadingham Real Estate, 450
Second Ave. · .
Evans, a graduate of Gallla

.

..

captivity, the lieutenant . said:
"They're pretty good. I've got a
pretty good·&amp;lzed room. I've got my
own bed. I've got three meals a day .
-more than I can eat."
Goodman, Jackson and others in a
delegation of visitors stood briefly In
a crlcle, held hands and said two
prayers ..Goodman a~s&lt;;vwas pres·
en ted with a Bible anaa Koran, the
Moslem holy book, signed by all
members of the delega tlon.
He was examined lor a lew
minutes by Jackscn'sprivat.ephysi·
clan, Who pronounced hlril in good
health .
Asked If was happy to see
Jackscn, Goodman replied: "Yes.
He's respected over here. Some
Important people came to see me
about a week ago. They always
mentioned Rev. Jacksen and hJs
visit." Jackson visited Syria In 1979.

.

'·

NEW SERVICE- Jesse J. Saunders, seated at
left, became the llrst brokerage customer this past
week at Ohio Valley Bank. Looking on 11ft! C. Leon
Saunders, seated at right, Richard D. Scott and Delsle
J. Burgess, all ol whom are registered representatives lor the bank's brokerage services. Leon

Shrader cited
for perjury

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- John
Shrader, who failed with a lawsuit to
collect hJs slain wlfe'sllfe Insurance
proceeds after a key witness
recanted testimony favorable to
Shrader, has been Indicted on
perjury and bribery charges.
The Franklin County grand jury
on Friday charged Shrader with
OBERLIN , Ohio (AP) - Four
four counts of perjury and one count pairs of married doctors live within
of bribery.
...
a few blocks of each other In Obetlln,
An arrest warrant was Issued and doctors say they're part of a
shortly afler the grand jury handed nationwide trend as more women
up the Indictment. The charges are becoming physicians and marstem from Shrader' sso-called ''civil rying other doctors.
Nationally, there are at least 8,lXXJ
murder trial" this summer.
Shrader's wife, Jean, 25, was to 10.~ doctor couples, compared
found strallj1led to dea)h in a with, only a handful 10 years ago,
downtown COlumbus parking gar· said Dr. David Nash, who with his
age on Oct. 21, 1981.
doctor wife, Essie, founded Dual
When he failed to receive about Doctor Families two years ago in
$118,lXXltn benefltsandlnterest from Thorrofare, N.J .
hJs dead wife's Insurance policy, the
Nash said hisestlmatesare based
35-year-old Shrader sued.
on the fact that for the past four or
Mrs. Shrader~ parents. Dale and five years, 30 percent to35percent of
Leah Wolford of Ashland, Ohlo, , all medical students have been
counters!Jed. The Wolfor¢; con· . women, and between one-hall and
tended that Shrader shouldn 't
receive the money because he kliled
their dau~:hter.
POMEROY - Filed Friday in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
was a suit for $:!l,&lt;XXJ by Eva Marte
GALLIPOLIS - Three drivers
were cited by the Gailla-Meigs post against
Dailey Enterprises
Inc., Racine,
Property Protection
Co.,
of the Ohio Highway Patrol Friday Charleston, W.Va.
for assured clear distance.
The plaintiff operated the SteamCharged were Peter K. Georgo- boat Inn at Racine and purchased a
poulos, 18, Gary, Ind.; Elizabeth H. lire extinguisher system from the
Brockway, 36, Gallipolis; and defendants that was Installed In the
Steven A. Likens, 21, Point Pleasantc area of the stove and deep fryer.
The patrol said Georgopoulos was
The device was supposed to stop
northbound on Ohio 160 and struck any potential fire In that area. the
Brockway's car in the rear. Brock- plaintiff alleges.
way was stopped In traffic at the
The plaintiff chargeS that the
tlmeoftheaccldent , which occurred equipment falled to operate propat 12:35p.m.
erly and.Qn Jan. l5, 1982, a fire began
In a separate accident report, the in the kitchen area where the deep
patrol said Brockway's vehicle fryer was located and its contents
struCk another in the rear while were de!ltroyed.
north on the state highway. Driver of
The plaintiff char~s that failure
tne struck vehi,le was Kevin W. of the system to work allowed the
Eastman,l7, Galfipolls:
fire to spread. The plaintiff asks the
The accident alse occurred at amount and demands a jury Oial be
12: 35 p.m. AU vehicles sustained held.
I&gt;
Ught damage.
The patrol said Likens failed to
stop on Ohio 7causing hJs car to hit a
pickup ahead. Driver of the pickup,
GALLIPOLIS - The following
~rrie L. Barry,.24, Thutman, was couples filed lor marriage licenses
stopped to make a left tum onto Fifth ·this past week In Gallia Couitfy
Avenue In Kanauga.
Probate Court.
Likens' vehic1e received moderKenneth E. Turley, 39, Rt. 2.
atedamageandBarry's,ltght. in the Gaillpolls, boiler maker, and Con·
12: 10 p.m. accident.
stance Rankin Bailey, 34, Crown
After hitting an embankment on City, bookkeeper.
Scipio Township Road 4 Friday, a
Nelson E. Brown. 41, 425 Green
car was moderately damaged.
Terrace Drive, heavy equiiJ.ment
The driver, Iva L. McAfee, 21. Rt. operator, and Delma F. Angell, 47,
1, Albany, was eastbound when she 425 Green Terrace Drive, clerk.
lost control of the vehicle on ice. The
James C. Dovenbarger·, 42, Rt. 2,
vehicle then went off the road and Bidwell. engineer. and Hallena F.
struck the embankment .
Wheeler. 39, Rt. 2. Bidwell,
The accident occurred at 5:50 unemployed.
p.m.
Nicky J. Weaver. 32, New Haven,
coal miner, and Virginia M. Spears,
24, Rt. 1, Bidwell. unemployed.

Saunders, vice president and manager of the discount
brokerage operation, said the bank has a newlylnslalled electronic quotation servuce utilizing a
Bunker Ramo Telequore m ~nninal. This btfonnatlon terminal, providing up-to-the-minute market
infonnatlon on a televlsion·like screen, has access to
major stock exchanges.

New medical trend: doctors
•

•

marry, move mto community
at the Oberlin Clinic.
Saxbe specializes in general ~
thoracic surgery at the clinic.
"Because of the time pressures
once you get into medical school,
you don't really meet any mep other
than other doctors, " Dr. Newman
said. "I think that's why se many
women doctors have doctor
husbands ."
Dr. Newman said she and Saxbe
feel no sense of rivalry.

two-thirds of a 11 women doctors
marry other doctors.
Dr. Georgia Newman and Dr.
Wijllam "Bart" Saxbe of Oberlin
rrul.rrled after meeting during their
residencies at Peter Bent Brigham
Hospital in Boston.
"There are at least three other
doctor couples living just within a
couple of blocks of us," said Dr.
Newman, who practices . internal
medicine and hematology-oncology

Auto theft probed

Suit filed

Drivers cited

GALLIPOLIS - City pollee are investigating the theft of a 1m ·
Pontiac Grand Prix reported stolen near the Comrnerlcal &amp; Savings
Bank branch in the Silver Bridge Plaza Friday.
The vehicle belongs to Charles E. Massie, Bidwell. Pollee were
notified by Terry Massie, Rt. 1, Bidwell, at 12::rl a.m. Saturday that
he found the vehicle missing at midnight.
The theft occurred between 5:15p.m. and midnight.
Cited Friday were Willard B. Leach, 54, Point Pleasant, DWI and
left of center; Glenn E. Lawsen, 18, Rt. 2, Vinton, disobeying a traffic
control device; and Connie E . Carleton, 29, Pomeroy, speeding.

r-=======================
As we look towards 1984. may
wP sre lhP lu lidlm•·nt of pPace.
pros,,crr ly and co nlmued progress
lor al l mankm ri Ou r hearlfpfl than ks
lo you . kmd
10

lr~rnd &gt;.

lor your confidence

us May cacl1 day brrn g us I he con lmued
good fort une o ll1r"li,~o u ilS patrons '

' .

File for marriage

GALLIPOLIS - Donald Barry
Thomas, 56, Rt. 1, Cheshire, died ·at
7:35a.m. Saturday a this residence,
pOMEROY - Mrs. C.A. Hwnhaving been In failing health for the
.,-2), the former Dorothy Kuntz of
past year.
PorM119Y· died at Palatka, F1a.
·Born April 26,19'll, In Huntington,
She
borntnPomeroyln1913,a
daughter · the late Mr. and Mrs. H. · W.Va., sen of the late Aaron and
Laura Tate Thomas, he was a 1944
H. Kuntz.
was a graduate ·of
Cheshire High School graduate,
Pomeroy HI
hool.
received his bachelor's degree from
Surviving
r husband; a
Missouri Valley College In 1950 and
sister, Mrs. O.M. (M Ella) Fogle
hJs master's degree from Ohio
of Hermosa Beach, Calif.; a
University In 1952.
brother, Bill of California; and two
He was a sp(oech and hearing
cousjns In Pomeroy.
therapist In the Quincy, Ill., school
system and ran a general Insurance
agency IIi Quincy from 1960-73, and
Willard Laude,nnllt
opened an Indianapolis Life InsuAdmitted- Audrey Well, Shade;
MASON- Funeral services were
ranee agency In Gallipolis In 1973.
Howard Slsk, Mason; Robert White,
held at 10:30 a.m. loday In
HewasamemberofLlttleKyger Racine; Jessie Swan, Pomeroy;
FOglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
Congregational Christian Church Ethel Moore, Letart.
Wllli!td R. Laudermllt, 53,
and the Gallia-Melgs-Mascn UnDischarged - Ruth Swariwout,
MEAT PACKING iO.
Mason, wbOdied Friday In Pleasant derwrltersAsscclatlon. He taught In Gladys Moore, Charles Russell,
'
.
Valley Hospital.
the LUTC classes piVgram.
Troy- Ohlinger, Kenneth Lawsen,
The Rev. Bennie Stevens offtHe married Lillian Church, who Floy(I 'Cieland.
NOW OPEN FOR
elated, .and ~ was In Stone
survives, on Aug. 3, 1947, at
Olurch Cemetery, Elm Grove, · Gaillpolls.
BUSINESS
.va.
Alsc surviving are two daughters,
CALL FQR APPOINTMENT
~o
Born May-27, 19ll, at Pomeroy,
BarbaraThomasandMrs.Michael
aon •of the late Walter and Leatha
(Cynthia) Langona, both· of Rt. l.
BEEF, PORK, LAMB, ETC.
MIDDLE;i&gt;ORT - Middleport
Smlih LaudermUt, be fN&amp;S a coal Cheshire; a son, Richard of New
Masonic
Lodge
363,
F&amp;AM,
wUI
ininer and member o!Unlted Mine York City; three grandchildren;
We slaughter, Cut, Wrap and
two sisters, Grace and Ruth meet at 7: ll p.m. Tuesday.
WorkersCIAmerlcaDi8trlct17.
Qui~k Freeze. Cut by Expert
There will be a Fellowcrafl Club
SWV1v1ng are his wlfe,DarleneJ.
Thomas, both ofRioGrande;'lllld a
Meat Cutters. Check our .
LP.udermllt; toursons;GatYE.and 'brother,JohnotAppleGrove,W.Va. meeting In the temple basement at
prices for Freezer Beef or
RayA,,bothofEirnGrove,TerryL. -'~slstersalsoprecededhlmln 6: 30 p.m. Refreshments will be
served.
Pork before you buy.
.
of Triadelphia, w.va.; and Willard
ft"-·0·
W
Va
...
_
Memorial
services
will
be
held
at
R. Jr. ofv
· """'3 rove, . .; uu= .
daugllters. Sharon L., Carol M. and 2: 30 p.m. Jan. 8 In Uttle Kyger
BecJcy A. Laudermllt, alldMason;
Congregation Church, with the Rev.
3 Miles from Holzer Hospital
tour slsl.i!rs, Velma YoungotMason. William Newman officiating. Burial
On Rt. 160-Turn on Kerr·
Betty Imboden of MJnersvllle,
wlU be In the family cemetery.
Harrisburg Rd.
POMEROY Mrs. Roger
J'rn0&amp;8Ie WDaon of Darwin, and · There will be no cal)lng hours.
Maxine tee of Pomeroy; tour
Funeral arrilngements are by Jeffers Is confined to the Holzer ·
PH. 446-7457
Center. Cards may
brotberS,
of Wheeling, .....Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Medical
toroom324.
.· , be sent ,__ _ _ _ _ _ __.
W,Va., Walter of Y~, Holj'le·

Veterans Memorial

I ncome tax guide

\'

Wllliam Miller

GALLIPOLIS ...- William Bart
Miller, 63, Rt.l, Patriot, died Friday
at his residence, having been In
falling health for the past three
years.
Borri June 16, 19:!&gt;, at Dunlap,
Kan., sen of the late Reeves and
Carrie Seve~ Miller, he retired
from employment with the Gallla
County Local Schools In April 1983
after 30 years' service. He was a
World War II Army veteran and
member of VFW Post 4464 and
Waterloo Grange.
He married Mildred Jackscn,
who survives, on May 22, 1943, at
Gaillpolls.
Alscsurvlvlng areflvedaughters,
Dottle Stepp of ArgUiite, Ky., Sally
Cauley and Donna Miller, both of
Patriot, Kathy Roth of Willow Wood,
and Sheila Miller, at horne; three
sons, Wayne of Patriot, Mike of
VInton, and Jeff of Waterloo; three
sisters, Joncie Miller of Americus,
Kan., Hazel Duncan of Emporia,
Kan., and Nellie Myers of Langs·
ville; two brothers, Carl of Ameri·
cus, and Arthur of Garden City,
Kan.; and nine grandchildren .
He was also preceded In death by a
brother, Feals, and a sister, Edna
Eichenberger.
Funeral services will be helil at 2
p.m. Tuesday In McDaniels Crossroads Church; with the Rev. Ernest
Baker otflctatlng. Burial will be In
Jackson Cemetery, MudsocFlaggspr!ngs Road. Friends may
Watson
R. Davis
;
caU at WUIIs Funeral Home from 5-9
p.m. Monday.
GALLIPOLIS - Watson Roy
The body will be taken to the
Davis, 83, Kanauga, died at 8 a.m.
one hour prior to the service.
church
Saturday In Pleasant Valley .
Military graveside rites wlU be
Hospital.
Born July 12,1900, In Clay County, conducted by VFW Post 4464.
Pallbearers will be Gene Walker,
W.Va., be was the sen of the late
Lawrence
Shepherd, Walter Pope,
Enoch and Eliza Jane Davis.
Kenneth
Myers,
Henry Myers and
Funeral arrangements will be
Robert
PoweU.
announced later by Miller's Home
for Funerals.

Doro~y Hummel

. Income tax preparation class slated

I

GALLIPOLIS - Clarence B.
Clary, Tl, Rt. 2, Crown City, died
Friday In Holzer Medical Center.
Born Feb. 2, 1906, at Crown City,
son of the late Marlon J .- and Eva
CaldwellCiary,bewasanemployee
of American Car and Founday In
Huntlngtoli, W.Va., for 34 years, an
Ohio Township trustee for several
years and member of the Hannan
Trace Local Board ot Education for
several years.
He married Nellie Watson, who
survives, on Feb. 23, 1929, In
HunUngton.
Surviving are three daughters,
Norma Jean Brannen of Gallipolis,
Mn. Jack (Betty) Miller of Rt. 1,
Crown City, and Shirley WUllarns of
Eureka Star Route; four sons,
Homer of Plnevll1e, N.C., James
(Jim) ofRt. 2,-CrownCI!y,Bobbyof
Crown City and Eddlepf Rodney;
two sisters, Mrs. Golden ·(Gertie)
Watson of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Lowen (Garnet) Sanders of Rt. 1,
Crown City; two brothers, Leslie of
Wln:.?r Haven, Fla., andFioydofRt.
1, Crown City; 24 grandchtldren, 13
great-grandchildren and two
stepgrandchtldren.
He was also preceded In death by
two sisters and a grandscn.
Funeral services wlU be held at 1
p.m. Monday In Mercerville Baptist
Church, with the Rev. James
Lusher and the Rev. John Jeffrey
offtdattng. Burial wlU be In Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mercervllle.
Friends may call at Willis Funeral
Homefrom2-4and7-9p.m. today.
Grandsons wlll serve as
pallbearers.

Harold of Mason and Paul E. of
Middleport; nine grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Hewasalsoprecededlndeathbya
brother, Louie.

Donald B. Thomas

Bond purchases reported

-'.

well treated by his Syrian captors.
Goodman, who has been a
prisoner of the Syrians since they
shot his plane down over Lebanon
Dec. 4, said the only thing he
needeed was "a plane ticket horne."
Goodman met for aboUt an hour
with Jackson, who Is here seeking
the airman's release, at the heiidquarters of the Syrian army's
political unit. Reporters also attended the meeting.
There was no Indication whether
the heavily guarded•compound In
central Damascus was where he Is
nonnally held or whether he was
brought there for the ~tlng .
Goodman refused to say.
Jackson, who Is seeking the
Democ;ratlc presidential nomina-

•

tlon, said earlier that hll meeUni
today with Syria' a foi'eliJl mlnllter
waa "fruitful" andthathewasmore
hopeful than before of obtaining
Goodman's release.
Jackson met privately with
Foreign Mlnlster Abdui-Hailm
Khaddam for two hours. He sald
afterward that the Syrians Indicated
they feared freeing the airman
might be "an Inducement and
encouragement" u( . more u.s.
reconnaissance flights over Syrian·
held territory In Lebanon.
Jackson had planned to meet
President Hafez Assad later today,
but the meeting apparently was
postponed.
Goodman appeared ·cheerful and
In good health. His only obvious
Injury was a bruised hand that he
said was the result of ejecting from
the jet before It crashed, and what he
said was a shoulder dislocation that
Is healing.
Asked about the conditions of ht•

'

,

I

I

Academy High School, has
owned and operated businesses
In Gallipolis and Ironton tor the.
past 15 year~. •
He has completed required
courses In real estate, real estate
practices and principles, real
estate ~w; finance and appral.
sal at Rio Grande ·college and
Canmunlty CoUege. Evans
passed his examination·as a real
estate salesman In 'NOvember
and has been licensed.
··
He has been an active Mason
· for t)le past 16 years, I'!!Ceivbig
state masonic honorary, Knight
of York Cross of Honor Degree. '
Hewasalsodlst~dei)utylnthe

...
'"
·•
,I• •

~··

•"

,.;,

.,... .
''•w
J;!.:

.•.

Royal Arch Mason .fo~:. four
years and Is a 321id degree · ,..
Masoilln the Valley of Columbus
Scqttisll Rite and a member Of
Aladdin Temple, Columbus. '
•

..
..

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

BARR'S

tor

w

Lodge

meet

"

CAROLINA ·LUMBER
AND

SUPPL.Y COMPANY

Corifmed

I

James

.

il

.

675-1160

'

'312 Sixth Street

Point Pleasant, W. Va.
••

.

•

..

�.:·. ·:

....

.

•

•
~omeroy-Middleport--'Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-[)..4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

. 1984

January 1, 1984

Home•
for Sale

'•

'

35 Acreo, Y, milo fr~m
Mobile Homo Moving, Ll· hoopltol. Form land or devol·
consed and lnaured, Free opmont, level. t37,500 .
Ettlmotea 1100. per .hook- Coli 448-0803 .
up minimum. Phona 304- 1- - - - - -- - - 1178·2711 or 1178-288e .
Ya acre lot on MltchoU Rd.

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

USED MOBILE HOME .
PIJONE 304-1178-2711 .

·..::..·:........
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11-TN.hfwllll

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11 ............

11

leading anack comPany TRI - STATE MOQILE
looking for aoloaperoon to HOMES . USED - CARS.
toke over dlatrlbutorahlp In TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS.
immediate erea. Muat have CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
own truck or eble to pur· 448-7572 .

-

...... 111.,............,.,

.._ca,wv

c..,•••• .....

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+ sAf1QQJ1QIA1Vfill

·1

4

Giveaway

To a good home tan long hair
male cat , very friendly . Call

Card of Thanks

446-3211 or 446 -1422.

Our thanks to each of you for
your act• of kindness and
word I of comfort during this
pest year . Best wishes for
the New Year ... Norman
Grueser Family .

· SWEEPER and sewing me. chine repair, parts, and
Pi ck up and
: supplie1.
· delivery, Davis Vacuum
· Cleaner, one half mile up

Cell

· · Balloons for Christmas, Get
Well. Anniversarys , Birth. days parties. Call Balloons &amp;

Co .. 446-43113
~ Gun

shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
· p.m . Factory choked guns

- only.
~ Vacancy : Julia ' s Personal
- Care Home . Formerly
- Mercer Canvalesence
: Home. 18 veers experience.

. Clifton, W.V. 304-773• 6873.
. ,.
-lc • Riverview Personal Care
· Home now ha• a vacancy for

-- o elderly person . 304-773: &amp;882.
· Harper's Adult Care Home
: hal a vacancy for another
..- reeident, elderly person, cell

. 304-676-1293.

· Clogging classes for ba sic
line dances 8e Appalachian

· circle. Sign up Jan: 4th, 6-8.
~ Henderson

Comm . Bldg.
Henderson. W.V. Instructor
· Gery William s . Public
Invited.

.2

In Memoriam

rabbit. 614-985-4134.
3 pups Dashund &amp; Terrier
mixed. 7 weeks old. 2310
Monroe Ave. Pt . .Pl. 304-

6

God knows how much we
miss him
He counts the tears we
shed
And whispers that he is
only sleeping
Our loved one is not dead.
We did not know the pain
he had
Or hear his linal sigh
We only know he has
passed away
Without a last good-bye.
God gave us strength to
face it
Courage to bear the blow
But what il meant to lose
him
No one will ever know.
"Very Sad ly Missed"
P~rents.

Oores and Mildred Arnold

Wanted To Buy

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins , large cur·
rency . Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kett Berber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

Middleport, oh . 614-9923476 .

Raw Fur Buyer. Beef&amp;: Deer
Hides-Ginseng, Happing
Supplies. George Buckley,
Rt. 2. Athens, Oh . Phone

614-684-4761 . 1-9 Daily.

.........

12

Situations
. Wanted

LOST 6 yr. old brown . white 11
Collie. Clay Chapel Rd.
childrens pet. Call614 -256- 1- - -- - - - - - 9392 or 614 - 2~6 - 1317 .
R E W A R o·.
Lo st i n
Glenwood -Asht on area. Tan
and white mal e Collie.

Challenging Position ·
Diverse Reapon sibilities.
Assistant Director for Pro·
Weighs about 80 lb. gram. Private, non -profit.
Answers Yukon . An.y infor· comprehensive family planmation will appreciate. 304·. ning agency, serving 8 Sou·
676 -2606 or 304 -576 - theast Ohio counties. B.S.
2328.
degree and health back·

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg ., Camden St .

614-367-7101 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, An tique &amp; liquidation sales.
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVa. 304-773 -5786 or
304-773-9185 .

Auction e\lery Fri. night at
the Hartford Communit-y
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise 9\lery week .
Consicmen.~• of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304-275·

\

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash f or late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture, 446-3159, 3rd . &amp;

Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh .
Standing timer, will pay top
prices for red &amp; white oak.

Call 614-388-9906 after 5.
or anytim e we ekends.

Wanted to buy . New, used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti ·
oneering service. Call Osboy

A. Martin 614-992-6370.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
Furniture, gold, silver dol·
Iars, wood ice boxes, stone
jars, antiques/ etc . Complete
households . Write M . D .

Miller, At. 4, Pomeroy, Oh
46769 or 614 -992-7760.

Cash for old books .No texts
books. Also old letters. dia·
ries.Ohio River&amp; old Histori·
cal materiels.Hock· Hockir)g

books. Box 114 Athens,O hio 46701 or phone 614693-8915.

Help Wanted

LITTER CONTROL
PROGRAM MANAGER
Gailia County is seeking a qualified person to man·
age and supervise the program development of a
grant from the Ohio Department of Natural Re·
sources. Office of litter Control.
Qualifications: High School education or equivalent.
knowledge of grantsmanship, supervisory, experience. bookkeeping, public relations. the ability to be
self-motivated and have a valid driver's license.
Responsibilities: Supervising clean-up work crews.
public relations, education co-ordination, budget management, assist in granl writing, progress reporting, ·
fund raising and promoting litter awareness.
·-ol .
Please send letters of application with complete re·
sume i ncluding the names and addresses of three
references to:
J

Gallia County Board of Commissioners
locust ·street
·

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

6,000 clients . Athens -

based. Car required . Some
evenings and weekend

work. $16.000 plus benefits . Send resume. name two
professional references . Kay
Atkins, Executive Director ..
Planrled Parenthood of Sou·

3402 .

23

876-6370 .

quirod. Call 614-246-'6666
afternoons or evenings.

Office clerk for a nline·
industrial slles co. Some
experience prefferd involving: inventory, cerdex ays·
tam. typing , general office
reporta. end telephone sale•
duties. Send resume to· Box
102 in care of Gallipolis

dlocl&gt;unto to Senior Cltlzona, thing In tip-top condition.
Churchoa &amp; achoola. Word' a R11dy to llvoln. For Inform•·
Koyboord, 304-876-3B24. tlon coli 814-992-7034 or
814-992-5284.

coo. Coli 304-876-3908.

ATTENTION-II thoro ouch 1
thing 11 1 cloulcl In mobile
homH? When you view thl1
Holly Porfl we•think you will
for
ogroo thoro io. A 1989
12x86 Holly Porfl whh 2
4 bdr. ronch homo, lorgo LR. bedroom•. 6 x 10 tip-out In
full boaomont, with gorogo, living room. Completely 111
wood llurnor lncll(dod. city up In nice parfl. Include• 40

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co . hai offered
service• for fire inaurance
coverage in Galli• County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and peraonal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needa. Con·

school a, 2 miles from town.

occupy. There isn't 1 cleaner

lot. Urge b11ement. car-

area. Just like brand new.
You mutt see to appre-

Information coli 814-9927034 or 814-992-8284.

Ranch on 6 acrett beautiful

General Hauling end Tra1h
removal Service. Reliable

aotting with 1111 plnoo

around the houM. Specious
livingroom which overlooka

and dopondoblo. Coli 4483169 between 9 and 6.

tho pond. 4 bedroom•. utility- room end kitchen hoo o 1-=-:-~:---:-:--:--:::-­
built-in ronge. AIIUmo pay- 64 Misc. Merchandise

light dozer work S. lend•·
caping . Kotelic landscap·

menta with 1 email dow.-

ing . Call 446-3100.

payment. t68.900 . Call
448-31711.

Cleaning houaes. offices.
etc . Fee negotiable. Call

1- - - - - - - - - -

3 BR, new brick homo. lond
contract. 448-0722 .

anytime, 614-266-1134.

Babysittin'g in my home, any

Owner Mull Soli Homol

ahilt. Call 446-7761.

floor pion, Middleport. Call
814-992-8941 .
3

bedroom

ranch

atyled

home. Coli 448-0109 otter
6:30.

21

1---------3 bedroom home, 2Y2 yeara
old. aJJum·able 8'12 pet. loan

or priced lo 60'o. 304-8768713 morning•.

1-:=========e

Stripping, 1775 Tho Exchongo, Suitt 600. Atlanta,
Contact Vital Signs at 614- GA 30339 .
992 -6749 or 614-992 - 1 ------~----------Cigerotto or VIDEO Diatrlb3100.

Lead Guitarist wanted for
hea\"f metal rock band.

992·2181
ALL

Real Estate General

823,500. or will rent for
$240 mo. 304-855-3934.

I

ON

Boum addition, 3 bedroomo,
2'12 botha. A.C.. fomllv room
with flreploco. 2 ocrtl.
887,500. No down pey-

school &amp; awlmmlng pool. 3

3 Announcements

our succe11ful Centera near·
eat you . Total coat :
or write for more info: U.S.

month. Send resume : Box
P.30, in care Pt. Pleeaent
Register, 200 Main St. Pt.
Pl. WV .

1

BONDED 1teff to

a11i1t you in aettlng up your

own part or full time bull·
non. From $3,960 to

$5,000
CASH LOAN
No credit or employment

.:m
~

-

)

'R.en'Yf-

dlsh'washer, centrel air, un·

tllllble, rtlt in pasture; good
fen~•. 7 room remodeled
houae, 2 car metal garage. 2

dorponnlng, thr11 bod ·
rooma. 1Y, both1, oxcollont
condition, 115,500. Coli
304-875-8048 oftor II p.m.

borna . 2 outbulldlngo ,
10,870 lb. yoorly tobacco
boat. Coll814-258-1922 .
70 ac·rea1woven wire fence .

1500 lb. tobocco boll. barn
end epprox. 20,000 ft .
timber. Coll814-268-1922.

M. L "Bud" McGhee, Broker
Charyl Lemley,
Meics County Assoc .
Phone 742-3171

36

35 ocroaot Rodney on W.T.
Wotaon Rd . Owner financ Ing ovolltble. Coll448-8221

MMR 535- Stalely 2 story colonial home, Tolal electric, in excel·
lent condition. Formal dining room has bUIH·m chma .and a sunny
window seal Full basement has woodburner and outside entrance.
Two car healed garage. Nestled in Maples 111 Mulberry Avenue 1n
Pomeroy. Alking $55.000.00.

From The

Calhouns·

1-702-733-9074

after

An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Aation Employer

..

e weekdays.

heat.

ezoo. month pluo

deposit .

Reference•

re ·

qulrod . 814 -949 - 2660
evenlnga .
Two atory house. 4 bdr ..

e260 per mo . $260 dep. 1 bedroom gareg•. apart·
req. Call 446-4222. 9:30- ment. *200. month plu a
6:00.
utllltloo. et 00. dopooit required . Available Jan . 1 .
Duplex, 8260 plu s utilities .

Avoll. now, 2 bdr .. LR. now
remod . kit ., &amp; bath. Large
fenced yard, new carpet,

1984. 814 -992 -8271
2 bedroom house. garage,
unfurnl1hed . Salem St . Ru -

668 3rd . Avo .. Gallipollo. tland . et60. month . 614Call 446 -2467 or 446 - 742 -2378 .
0332 .
6 br, 3 fulll baths, must have
ex. ref erence~ . Call 614·

42 Mobile Homes

294 -8637 . In Gollipollo

for Rent

Modern 3 bdr hou se clo1e to
town , 1 '1! acre1 , city
1Chool1, rural water t260
mo. I, 00 1ecurity. Call

12x.60 2 bdr. modern fur ·
niahed trailer , convenient

Syracuae. f260 per month 1 room eeo week for 1
pluo utllltleo; Depoolt re- peroon. 870 week for 2
peraona. 1 room with water·
qulrod. Call 992-2669 .
bed $30 o 'night. Call 446 Two bedroom...ftlobile home 2601
1.2x80.near Pomeroy 1nd

Mlddloport area . 614-9925B68.
Two bedroom mobile home
12x80,near Pomerov end

Apt ..

. --...;

:.•..

Utilities partially furni1hed .·
··· ··• · 3 bdr. house for sele

Attic Apartment , furniahed .
e176 utilitiea pd . Men only .

Realtor.

992-2272 .

Shore both. 919 2nd Avo ..
Galllpolla. 448-4418 after 7

Two· bedroom mobile hom,,
complete ly furnilhed .
washer and dryer. air -cond .•
carpeted. Adults on ly, Ma·

p.m.

aon, W. Va .. 304-773-6761
or 773 -9620.

REAL 'EST ATE

676-7308 .

Owner Must Sell! Fireplecel
Include• tome furniture! In-

Nicly furnished modern mo·
bile home. in city. 1 or 2

1- - - - - - - - - -

odulto only. Call 446-0338 . Smell furn . house 1 or 2
altults only, no peu. Cell

446-0338 .
furniohod. Call 446-4292 . 1- - - - - - - - - 2 bdr . mobile home partially

Mobile Home for Rent;
adults onlv. fully furnished .

Furnished apts. 1·4 rm . &amp;
bath up. Clean. no petl,
adultl only. Ref. req . Cell

Call446-4110 .

446-1619 .

446-4206
Bonnie Stutes, Realtor

5 bedroom Geor1ian Colonial Brick - entry hall w/ beauti lul open stairway, den. 2\\ baths, Chandler kitchen
w/oodlts ol1or1eous cherry cabinets &amp; new appliances.
htral1r1e livin1 room w/ wood burnin&amp; fireplace. formal
d,in.inr w/bu)lt-in c~ina hutch. full basement w/ llreplace
l1n1shld allies, 2 car llfl&amp;e. beautiful finished natural
wood floors &amp; woodwork throuahout
BONUS: Attached 7 room office w/1\ bath - seller linancinl could be considered.

We Wish You A
Prosperous Year In 1984

Phone 513-

or 446-8223

EAFORD
VIRGIL B. SR . RUlTDI

216

r . 2nd Sf.

PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LIKE Sm1NG. Excellent
buy 11 $45,900. - Owners have been transferred
and are anxious lo SIJII fh;..t f\ brick and Ira me
ranch with 3 e,~ -Q-vu 1, lR with we
'fireplace, nice car-iT """""out. attached garage
and I acre pine-studded lot. Possible blended
mortgage for qualified buyers.

FARM - 52 acres. free gas,
beautiful in-ground pool, sunken living room, massive stone
fireplace. tall for details. .
POMEROY - What a wonderful gift lor the family. Abeautiful new
home. SOme owner ~·--[Oiti'IO make that possiiM
Contemporary round hoPIU!;.t~,. uTwOOdand more or less. Call
for more/detaib on lh~ special one. Designed for a very special
family. Priced in the 50s.

CHESHIRE ~ I\\ story lrame offe~ 4 BR~ bath,
living room, kitl:hen, carpet. front and rear porches
and an attached garage. Assumable loan al 9\\%.
Th~ outstanding. nearly
nevi home is sure to "'"" nt off~ 2\\ balhs, 4
·eRs. ~rge livi~ ..Q-\.-ukrtchen with range,
double oven, d.-iT .. '" vrr, carpeting. fireplace,
central air, attached double garage. Located
minutes'from lown in Centenary.

LOOK NO FUIITHER! -

CERAMi~ &amp; THINGS

THIS ONE HAS IT All! Exceptional home near
town features 2 family rooms, one wilh large stone
fireplace and patio doo~. other has a bar, 3 BRs,
dream kitchen has cook top, microwave, eye level
oven, IN/, disp. and range, .1~~4 living room.
·ainette. carpeting and 2 car garage.

Point Ple.unt, W.Ve.

):IQURS:

-Monday&amp; T~Y -::?: 30-4 : 00&amp;6; 30-9:00 .
Wed~y. Thursday&amp; Frlday9:301114:30
saturday . 9:3o'to2:00p.m.

814-992 -7787 .

TWIN RIVERS TOWER . COUNTRY MOBIILE Homo

Rl\lerslde Aptl . Middleport .
Special ratea for Senior
Citizen•. • 130. Equal Hou• ·
ing Opp o rtuni ties . 614 ·

Apartm ent• now available to
elderly &amp; di•~tbled w1th an
income of less than
012.300 Ronti"ll lot 30
percent of edju1ted ir,come ·

992 · 7479

One bedroom partialty fur ·
ni1hed. all utilities paid

For lease. Chevron Station.
Mason area Good locatkln

992-7721.
New one bedroom apart·
ment• in Middleport . "Fur·
nished and unfurnished .

614-992 -5304 .-

:·
RODNEY - HOME AND. BUSINEss QR RENTAL- Completely ,
refinished older 2 story. l-arge bui!fing. Cify schools: Make us an
.c&amp;r. Owner anxious lo sell Has moved from the area.
• '
· 1911 KINGSl£Y IIOBILE HOllE with 7x'J~'Uldo living room
wb ~~formal dining. """~· ~ • . " ili'appltances, :l
bedrooms.IIUndr.:· •
• -\J": • tub, 2sliciwe!s. TOIII
. rf(e covered patio. Pria!d

Ibelow 1)181'ket on., ~18,500. utra mce • exc;etlent condnoo. .
.

'

.NEW umNG - Modem 3 bedroom home, 2 baths, nice kill: hen
formal ivina room, dining family rooll\ TotJIIiving space 1,920 sq:
ft. llrp carport and aoovered patio with carpet and slidln&amp; doors
elf patio.I.Dts ~ lnirrors. Storajle tllildin&amp; 1.590 ac~ more or 1-.
In city school district Immediate ~sion.
·

.

'

.S ACRES OF VACANT'LAND -- More or less. Approx. 903 lb.
tObac6J base' quola. Water available.
'
REAL ESTATE SALESIWI &amp; SALES lADIES NEEDED!

Parh , Route 33. North of
Pomeroy Large lot•. Call

49

.Phone 304-675-6679 .

304-675 -7112 .

For Lease

304 675 ·2982 ahor 6pm .

1 new Apartment in Middle·
port. Single occupancy only .
No petl. Utilitie• furnished .

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes.
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 12 acres with stable. rail
fences, swimming pool. garage·
wort&lt;ahop. Immediate possession.

E. M•irll./0~11:.1..1
POMEROY.O.

992· 22St

Phone

1-(614)·992· 3325
IN TOWN - On 124 Natural gas lurnace. bath. c11y
water, lg. lot. lg. krtchen and 4
bedrooms. $3.006 down

MODERN - 6 rm. ranch wrth
full basemenL 2 baths, carpeting and carport on 2 acres
Only $3,500 down.
96.5 ACRES - Me1gs schools.
free gas, furnace. 2 mce
fireplaces, bank bam and
monerals. $4,500 down.
FIXED RATES OF
INTEREST

Housing
Headquarters

NEW LISTING - Chester Qua1nt country charm' Thos 3
bedroom home has many
leatures such as hardwoo:l
floors. full basement gas heat
Insulated. screened sunporch.
separate trader hookup, plus
unusual rustle decor. 2 car
garage, approXImat~y 2''
acres, storage bUildmg, assu·
mabie loan. $36.21Xl
MIDDLEPORT - Beaubful
home for Children. woo:lburn·
mg fireplace and lurnace for
cheaper heating btl~. garage.
basement fam1~ room. all 1n
great condrt10n Must be seen
$49.000.
IN THE COUNTRY - Starter
home for the ~nmng famdy .
Two or three bedrooms w1th
everylhmg carpeted. A full
basement tolinker 1n. aquarter
acre ol land to call your own.
$21.500.
CHESTER -Five acres to g~ve
you plenty of elbow room.
Remodeled larm house has 3
bedrooms. new k1tchen. new
bath. $27.600.
SYRACUSE - A 3 bedroom
ll)odular home on a beau~ful
lot N1ce rear deck wrth siKJ1ng
doors to dlnmg area. Storage
bUI Idm~ $36.500

AW

.

PRICE REDUCED.TO $56,9001 - Excellent cattle
Iarin. 132 acres·m/1, mostly clean hill pasture, good
fences. I\\ story home, 5rm~ and bath,large barn.
lob. base, frorits on 3 roads in Walnut Twp.

•
•
.
•
•

.\Mode~ranch

•
•
•

YOU'll BE DELIGHTED - W1lh lh1s4 BR ranch 1n
vinton area. Also has 2 balhs. galley kitchen w1th
eye level oven. range and OW. 12x24 fam1~ room.
living room. dinette. and a 12xl5 master BR.
Includes a sundeck, unattached garage and ul11ity
building, woodburning sloYe. Level lo rolling lawn
w1th above ground pool.

~

$19.500 - Will put you 1n '";~ BR home~n the
counlry. Kitchen
0 l-uig., was~er and
dryer, living r01 - - .. ..Uodburner. and
carpeting.

S

MAKE US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE MOVED

TO FLORIDA- And would like lheir home sold th~

\ n:'lialtl. carpel,
. age located 1n
r first tome tome

GREENFIELD TOWNS~oo
. 5.5 acres m/1,
nicely remodeled. s-O-l-One. 1 rms . bath.
basemen~ 4 fire~
.. "'"' and lobacco base.
Asking $38,900.

Fond regards to
you and your
family in this time '
of togetherness and
good cheer! Thanks
Sl
for your faith in us
and for helping us make 1983
one of our best years ever.

mooth. like new spirt level ~ localed on Oebby
PRICED REDUCED TO $55,9001 - OWNER WILL . Drive and offers approx. 3,000 sq. It of living area
ANANCE. This lovely I storv kn~ · ~as a 15x21 LR,. plus 2 car garage and one of the area's nicest pools.
formal dini~x·~-Q-l-tl•ished in knotty Over $100,000.
pine, 2 fire
·fL-iT
••• , ,dt screened 1n
rear porch, garage and large lot 300 It deep. This
l)ome is vacant and needs ID be sold before the 1st OWNERS TRANSFERRED - PRICE AEDUCEDI
~the year.
• .
--lovely brick ranch w~h ·,- nedrooms. dining .
room,livln~ room. \s-o-..-vkfast bar, DW &amp;
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - , 62xSo all steel d~p., fam1ly room,
.. . ,.•.,, 3 baths, cent
conslrUCtion with fireproof insulation. Overhead 'air, double garage, woodburner, on nice level
tnme. Has office and bathS. formerly uSed for boat parcel.
sales end repair.Located'across from Silver Bridge
Plaza with access lo the Ohio River. Potential
unimited.,
GREEN TOWNSHIP- GRAIIAM SCHOOL ROAD
~ 12 acres m/ 1, approx. 720 It level road
GUYAN TDWNSIUP
nffill,located south lrontage, rural .water available, excellent for
~ MerteMIIe.
tillable, balance building or "!obile homes. Call for more
woods, lob. base: ... ~ .m netp finance.
information.

-,\"a .
S..u-a.-U

GOOD LIVING FOR SALE- 78\\ acres m/ 1. lovely
brick and frame ranch d ~plays 2 baths, 2 BRs.
· 16x24 krtchen with washer. dryer. double oven
range, refrig., OW large livong room. artifrc1al
fireplace Master bedroom 1s 16x18. Cellartouse.
shed and 30x50 barn. 44 acres ol pasture woth
spring and pond. Located m Ch · Twp.
PRICE REDUCED TO S27.9(Yl
wilh 3 ~Rs. liv11s 0 l
electric 88 heat. - - •
Rodney Village II. t,cenent buy
owner!

COULONl ASK FOR A BmER LOCATION! Handsome Victorian home offers 3 BRs. 117 baths.
laundry room. living room. lami~ room. carport.
unattached garage, 16x321enced pool. K1chen has
range, refri&amp;, INI and d~p. Nat gas heat and alum.
sidinJ Located at the edge ol town. Call for an
al)tlOintmenl

i·" ~'nned.

46 Space for Rent

448-4416 otter 7 p.m.

Beautifully landscaped. Splendid wMe brick home
exhibits approx. 3100 sq. It of living area wilh 3 or
4 BR. 3 baths, 20x4ll lamily room. dining room.
beautiful carpet, krtchen offers IJN. d~posal,
microwave and trash compactor. intercom. air
conditionin&amp; 2 car garage, 10120 utility building,
dedc and 20x4ll pool.
,

TORCH- OSBORNE UN£3 BR home, carport, trailer hookup on back of lol for mobile
homes. 'Good reolal investment
property. $17.,000

Dlllly Afternoon Workshops

1 bed room Apt. 1196. mo. home•. hou 1e1 Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis 614 -448 8221.

Including utilit in Equal
hou1ing opportunity . Con ·
tact Village Manor Apts .

JackiQn Pike, Gallipolis .

WILL BE YOUR PROUOfST POSSESSION!

· electric, ci!OU.I

Call 446 -0766 .

RESTORED Colomal tome srtuated 1n downtown
. bedrms .. library, lamtly room. formal d1mng rm., 2\\ .
New Orleans type courtyard. 3 w.b !~replaces. Call for more .
infnrm~hnn
"
NEW LISTING - 4 bedrm home Situate&lt;) along old Rl 7. Lower e
River Rd. Galhpol1s C1ty School D~L City water. good location lore
children and adul15. fi replace Pnce $37.500.00. Call for .
appointment
_ '
...MODERN 3 BEDRM. HOME ~tuated along Kathy Dr. Pleasanl.
Valley SD. near Holzer HosptlaL Carpeted. modified for woorl · ·
burner Attached garage. Pnce $50.000 00
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrm. ranch home. ~tuated near NorthGalli a.·
School mce lot fac~s Rl 16E_ ~~~~3750000" _ . · -- _
2 BEDRM. COTTAGE Sttualed along V1nlon Ave Nat gas hea~ • •
I '? ·baths. SIX rooms. fam1iy room. 2 car garage. Pnce • ·
$32.00000
•
COLONIAL DUTCH . 2 or 3 bedrm . 2 full baihs. convemently •
located across lrom new court house Lg. livmg rm. w/ w.b.
!~replace. lg. k!chen and lormal domng rm Call. for •
appOintment $82.000.00.
•

e
•

TUPPERS PlAINS - 2 or 3
Bl! home. basement garage, 2
~orage buildin~ Move-in condition, on I acre landscaped
ground. Call June 989-2410.

SIGN UP FOR CLASSES THAT
WILL BE &amp;GINNING JAN. flh ,
EVENI.NG CLASSES
. MONDAY.,...TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY 6:30p.m.
1119:®p.m.
·
MORf:IING CLASSES
TUE;SDAY-WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY9:30
ton NOOn
CLASSES LIMITED TO IS

For rent Sreeping Rooms
and light house keeping
ro om1 . Park Central Hotel.

Apartm ents . 304 -676 ·
6648 .

•
•
•

TUES. JAN. 3rd

Furnished Rooms

APARTM ENT S. mobile

NEW YEArS SPECIAl -Owner has reduced this stately bi-14b1
'-IMI·-II
~~~ sale. If you are interested in bu~ng a nice home
N PRICE. look at this home. 4 bedrooms, 2\\ baths, formal
IMnt d1111n~ room. Modem kitchen. large rec. room 2 car garage,
dedc off dimng and kitchen area. lots ~ plants and shrubs. Use of
dubhouse, basketball court and swimmiflg pool. K- Creel!
sChool district
, ...

423-5050

PresentToWin

Coll446-2216 . ·

45

Apartment for Rent

614-992 -3190 .

ABOUT 5 ACRES - 5 rm.
home, bath, automatic heat
larm pond in Southern schools.

For Sale By Owner
Phone 446-8221

ONE Of THE FINEST HOMES IN GALLIA COUNlY
PRIME LOCATION

Furnished 3 room1. with
private bath . Ref. preffered .

44

Furniohod Apt., 1 BR. $236.
utllititl pd . Adulto. 243

OFFER WELCOMED - Asking
$17,000 for th~ 8 rm. older
home. Hasbath. gas FA lurnace
and '4 acre in Pomeroy.$1.500
down.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom mobile home
8175 . per month . Deposit .
located Jerrico Rd . 304-

STUT

CASSIDY REALTY

No Purchase Necessary, Need Not Be

mo .

MARVELOUS BRICK VENEER
- This 3 bedroom home ~ for
you. Has 2 mce fireplaces, 2
garages, 2 stones. full basement and landscaped lot lor
$125.000.'

..

3 Announcements

$129

Mobile home for rent . Coun·
try location . Add on room
with wood burner. 614·

MMR 537 - A just right starter home. l bedroom rallCh. t&lt;UI
ela:tric. Has atlached garage. Th~ home is in excellent conlitior)
and has a maintenance free oulside. Nice level yart1 Located 1n
Rutland. Selb for $36,500.00.
•

M.J.'s

326 Mil In St.-..1

2 BR

on lond contract. 875-5104
or 875-5388. Corol Yoegor

448-9266 .

$160 month pluo utllltiea.
Dopoolt $160. No poll. No
Sunday cello . 814 -949 2801 .

bdr. opt . Call 446-0390.

Middleport area . 814-9926868 .

location, Upper River Rd . !- : - : - - - : - - - - - - dopoalt roq . Call 614 -446 - 44
Apartment
8668 .
for Rent

credible Low Prlcol Middleport . Call 614-992-8941 .

1

$2,550.00 DOWN - Remodeled 3 bedroom home. Nice
bath, gas lurnace. basement
min1 garden near stores.

GRAND OPENING

_

Kieron, Clay, Micki &amp; Ron .

Houses for Rent

location, acro11 from pool in

MMR 536 - Cottage on river. Neat and dean and furnished, too!
Lot is 125'1200'. Located above Antiquity. Only $7,000.00.

Stop ,By And Re&amp;ister For Free Gifts!

New ·Year

Lata &amp; Acreage

41

Nice 2 bedroom house near
Eastern School dietrlct .

'671i-2976

Happy:

Farms for Sale

1 10 acre term. 40 sere•

rri21.

needed. 24 hr. service.

860 .00 . Wintton -Sa lem-

Koolo. 1-800-241 -2268.

33

1981 14x70. Shultz limited
mobile home, mlcrowove,

()nru~ .

utorahipa. Routes aveilable.
Tru1tworthy middle aged We provide money for exsingle lady to live in with . panaion. all locetlone, train·

eldarly ladies . $1,000 ing &amp;

M~GHEE

"'"''''

4 bedroom home in Eestern
dlatrict. Full b81ement, gBI

814-992-8B48 .

3or4roomunfurnlahedapt.

Pomeroy
Landmark

bedroom situated on one~
third ecre lot. Price reduced

Cigarette Distributorahip. ment, owner will carry at no
Instant cash flow! We are a interest for 6 years. Loan
Bonded national firm ex· a11umption posalblo. 814pending into th8 area. If you 9B6-4387.
are seeking a secure; busi· 1 - - - - - - - - --..,.,J
ne11 opportuinflc. We pro· For tale by owner. Four
vide all retail location• and bedroom home in M11on,
all necessary training. Full or W.Va . Setting on extra large
Part time. Investment from lot for more information call

Apply at the Pomeroy $32,600.00 'Bonded' Coli
Toll Frae: f8001 241-2289
Library.

1978 14x70 troll or, 3 bodroom. 2 botho,lorgo kitchen,
., 0.000. 304-773-11023 .

AT

Hotpoint Appliances
General Electric TV's
Hoover Sweepers

Located in Syracuse -Near

to •end mon8y through the
mail until you have investi·
gated the offering.

sive training couroe It one of

1----------

Year-End
Clearance Sale

Your Galnl Our Loss! One

Baby1itter needed in my
home in Middleport .

Library· Assistant wanted
pert time. 13 hours a week .

clotld. All of thla lor
I 12.900. Flnonclng ovollo·
ble. Low down peyment and

houae eway from River on
Hendereon St., Hendereon,
WV . Phono number In yord.

low monthly paymente. For

furaished equipment, cham·
icals. aupplles, and an ax ten·

~ud·

olty achool. Coll448-3933.

Furn is hed . nice mobile

44

Apartment
for Rent

home. 3 bodroomo. All utilltloo pold. adulu only. no
oloctric-contral olr . Good 1-P•_t_•_·C
_•_l_
l 4_4_8_·_3_4_3_7_.- -

or well kept home In the

port. Only $14,900. Lilt

in this area. Our expert staff
has meny yeara of expe·
rience and hat aet up resto-

dable transportation re-

448-3933 .

Houae for rent for •1 00.

month . Yard , 2 wood

44

for Rent

a

3 bdr .. Both . Eot·ln kitchen .
Dlningroom. Corpot. Lorge

Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

quired.-'992-6028 .

a.

3 bdr. houoe. 1'!J bath, Rt. 7.
Choahlre. 1200 mo. Coli
814-448-9788 8AM -4PM .

42 Mobile Homes

plotoly akirted end r01dy to

Horry Pitchford, ogent.
Phone 446-1427.

\ICI

Mondoy-Fridoy, 7:16AM to ration centers throughout
5:46PM . 850 week. Depen- the U.S. end Europa. We

dlahwalhlr. ' woodburner,
drapee, atero, refrlg .,
stove, other extres. Cloae to
town on rented lot. Call

Houses for Rent

foot patio furniahlngs, even
w11her and dryer, com·

Coli 448-0278.

$2,000 . 00 . Winaton - 304-773-9147.
Solom-Koolo. 1-800-241- 1 - - - - - - - - - 4 bedroom houae with one
2288.
plu1 ocre 11 Mt. Alto, W.Vo.
Stripping Furniture S. Metal. Priced on inapectlon. 304Instant cash flow I First time 895-38.40.

Daily Tribuna, 826 Third

waeher and dryer. Every·

prlcee·regular tunlnge-

House cleaning any type
Point Pleaaant and vicinity.
Reasonable rates. Referen·

Business
Opportunity
AVON Pay your Christme1
bills, make money 2 ways. 1- - - - - - - - - Call 448-3368.
I NOTICE I
Local lady wanted to care for THE OHIO VALLEY PUBeldory lady port time. Coli LISHING CO. recommend•
after 6, 446-4637 or 446- that you do bu1ine11 with
poopla you know. ond NOT
2158 .

Responsible baby1itter
needed in my Rio Grande
home 2 or 3 mornings 1
week for infant and preschooler. References re ·

Profe11lonal
Services

bodrooma. lorga luxury both
with gordon tub. Price of
112.600. ln~ludoa metal
PIANO TUNING Lower building • patio cover. atepa.

Anvil bend Ia now booking
pertiea •and dances. 304·

Court~ ~~~~~~~~~~~

thoaat
Ohio.
8 North
Street,
Athen
s. Ohio
45701 . Deadline: 1-20-84.
EOE-AA .

room with wooden bow
window. a circular kitchen
with Iota of ublneta. 2

Men or woman . Cell 887·

ground; minimum 2 years I '-..,,-W-a_n_t_e-d"t---,:-- 0 00
supervisorv experience . 1 8

Demonstrated management
ability in services delivery.
Energetic person with
proven initiative. communi c ation skills, ability to
analyze-utilize date as man·
agement tool. Clo1e cooper·
ative work with Director.
Demonstrated personnel
skill1. Supervise 7 site1. peid
and volunteer steff serving

1975 12x80 toto I electric.
HI botho, Sponlah atylo. 2
bedroom 17,000. Coli 814388·9837 or 448·4204.

~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Will cere for the elderly in my
home. lots of reference•.

13

Lost and Found

3069.

"In Memory"
In Memory of Henry Guy
Arnold, who departed
from us one year ago
January 1. 1983.
"Gone but not forgotten"
In a graveyard 9afely sleeping
Where the flowers gently
wave
Lies the one we love so
dearly
But whom we could not
save

11

Free to good home. Rex

675-7475 .

3 Announcements

: Goorgoo Creek Rd .
446-0294.

Free kittens. Call446-4999 .
- - - - - - - - -lc -

9

Fully corpotod, olr cond ..

NEW AND USED MOBILE 1980 14x70 Fairmont Boyof Golllpollo Dolly Tribune. HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL· view. 2 bdr .. 1 bath, den,
825 3rd. Avo .. Golllpolla. Oh lTV MOBILE HOME SALES. portlolly turn.. auper nlcol
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS. Coii448-10HI otter 5PM .
46831. /
RT 35 . PHONE 446·7274.
/
1977 12x80 mobile homo. 2
bdr .. furnlahod. good cond ..
22 )oney to Loan
ATTENTION-Doyounooclto 87,500 . Coli 814-258 move Into 1 nice mobile 8818.
home without tho h11ll1 of 1- - - - - - - - - HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'h% purchaae or Froodom · 14x70 deluxe
oet-up.onWe
1979
roflnenco, 11 'I•% odjuatoblo model
tlothove
In tho 1Country
rate. Leeder Mortgage, Mobile Hom' Porfl. Thl1
At hone, 1-800-341 -8664
homo hoo 1 front dining

~:::1:=:·.:=-:..~~-·:::::::::t.::

...-..

for Sale

chaae one. Send complete
reaume to Box 112, In cere

u, •• u-•• · · 111111..,....,.... ·~······ "·•

U ... NihoiUI!II

for Sale

for Sale

4'

burnera. In Pomeroy area.

furnlahed ,

11.4811.00. 1889 CHAM PI'ON, 80x1 2 two bedroom.
11,8811.00. 1873 DOU GLAS. lllx1 4 three bodrooma, t7.285.00. 1872
ELCONA double wldo ,
SHARP, thrH bodroomo,
two botho only 112.900.00
dollvorod. Other uoed hom eo
on diiPily. Mull ooll ovor
atockod. D. end W. Homoo.
ot foot -cit 'Shodl• Bridge,
Phone 304-11711-4424 .

-- - 32 Mobile Homea

32 Mobile Home•

32 Mobile Homes

Bu1lne11
Opportunity

mi. from hosp., rurallweter,

1870 llCONA. 85x12. two
bedroom

=~~ -

36 Lots &amp; Acreage

Tile Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-()..5

W. Va.

Ohio-Point

ENJOY THE FRUITS OF COUNTRY LIVING'
Short d~tance to town '" " o 'age ol Northup.
Rolling lawn wrth s-O-l- :herry and pear
trees. grape arl:xlr
.. "'""bs. Lovely Cape
Cod home leatures 1\? stones ol cozy liv1ng, wood
dec~ fireplace. qu1et neighborhood. Assumable
loan at 9\\%.

YOU'LL ENJOY LIVING HERE! - lovely brick
ranch offers 3 BRs, 1II balhs. krtchen w/ rangeand
d~p., family room and living room. Carpeting and
hardwood lloo~. cent air, gas heat KC school
district
d

THIS MAY BE JUST THE ONE' - l ovely ranch
nestled on a level to rolling parcel w1th woorled
backyard and covered patio. Also displays2 baths.
3 BRs. galley krtchen. l-shaped liv1ng room and
dining room. family room with patio doors and
central air. Only minutes lo town.

..

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Great INVESTMENT for
the buyerl Located on Graham School Rd. Each
unrt offers 2 BRs, bath. living room. krtchen
w/ stove, refri~. OW and disp.. laundry, large
carport. cent air and storage arl!a.

PRICE REDUCED TO $35.900! -Owner says sell
this moth, 3 BR ranroh..
\)k front features a
nice family roans- -~ 'or WB stove, LR.
large krtchen, laL .. , , "" and large back porch.
localed on Bula~lle Rd.

BRING YOUR HAMM£R • ""LS - And go kl
work on lhis unfiS 0-l-tlar Rodney. Has a
tun basement ano • .. "'"'" ol roHing to level
land. Price has been reduced to $34.000.

i'

t'·

FHA-VA SPECIAL - 0
'n•m, maintenance
COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL "- Th~ nine
1ree
home. IVettS..O- -u paymenu. (FHA
room lwo story home features two beths. dining
·····~·-... ~·· $ . .. """"I· Located in Rodney
room. k~chen with new cabinets, dishwasher,
carpeting, fireplace, full basemenL gas heaL block .
3 car garage, vinyl siding. level lot with highway
lronlage on Upper Rl 7.
BEAUTY IN THE WOODS - Attractive bi-level ~
nestled on a 1.21 acre rolling tract in the Kyger
Creek School D~trict. Features are 3 BRs, bath.LR.
k~chen and di.ning area, range, washer, dryer, nice
carpet and WB stove' 9\?'llloan can be assumed
with approx. $11,000 down.

•
•

2 ACRES. more or less. wolh 3 Bedrms.. family rm.. artached •
garage Pnvacy w1th m·grounu pool Ne;;r c1ty limrts. •

•• $59.000.00
•
NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm home 1n Eureka. near Galhpol5 •

e
•

dam. Be

read~ tor

constr ucti0/1 boom L!Ve In or rent.

$22.000 DO

.

•

•• QUALITY BRICK HOME Situated on approx 2 acres. wtlhm crty ••
ol Galhpohs Solid cherry woodwork and panel. 3 WB.
hreplaces. lull basement (hmshed). constructed dunng late •
•
40's. Arnemlles too nume/OUSto liSt. Call Ken Morgan.

e

ll
•
•

I

4 BEORMS .. 8 RM. HOME Situated along Gart1eld Ave A •
convement place lo l1ve Overlooks the beauttlul OhiO R1ver. .
fnce $30.00000
•

·: 10·UNIT MOTEL wtlh house and approx 8 "res F1shong pond
socked w1lh l5h Relax and enjoy hie while makong a hvm~'
•
•

151 ACRE FARM near Vmton Has 3 bedrm. house. I&amp;
equ1pment shed. bottom land. pasiUie and some wooded area. •
Pnce reduced to $86.000 00
•

•
•
•

3 BEDRM. HOME. lam1iy rm . ada pled lor wb heater. •
In-ground pool. lg carport. lenced·ln ya1d. Mad1son Ave Pnce •
$46.900.00
•

•
•

INVESTMENT PROPERTYII 2 apa~tment home w1th 2 bedrms
each. Located w1lh1n 2 blocks hom schools. Plenty parktn~ ••
good locat~n. $65.000 OQ.

:

COMMERCIAl PROPERTY - Approx 4.000 sq tt . localed 1n •
downlown Galhpol~ . Can be leased 01 purchased. Across from •
crty parking lot
•

•
:
•
•

COMMERCIAL · PROPERTY - Art1ve restaurant busoness •
located on corner lot m1\anauga. Purchase and get 1mmed~ate •
"Cash Flow" owner may finance some lo quahhed purchaser
Call for lliore mlormatlon.
•

.PRICE REDUCED - 2 bedrm. mobole home srtuted alon1.
• Bidwell-Rodney Rd. 85'x208'1o~ fenced m. several fruit trees. Pnce e
.$14.00000
.
•
• REMODELED STORE BUILDING wrth apartment upstair~. l ocated.
.• near Cadmus along Rl 141. County water. FA furnace. 'h acre.•
$20.000.00.
•
j:j'i.COMMIERCIAL PROPERTY - Approx. 7,000 sq. It ~tuated on e
corner lot along 2nd Ave., Gallipol~. Lg. parking area arrunde
• buildin&amp; Can be purchased or leased. Call for more 1nformabon.•
111,}
l

,,,

~

H·· ,, .. ~ lm
t Sl

{, llq&gt;t

•• •• ••
I

l·:t• 1•hn

,

~
._

�:rtf

~~

... ., . •

•

I" . •

... J ~-

•

•

'

6~ ~

Judy T1ylor Grooming. C11/
814·187.7220. '

a ·AKC

llitllltiNd milt
Cooklt' openftlo· blonde I
y11. old, rid I y11.. good
blood 1/no, good temper•·
ment. lxoel/lnt for bl'lld·
lng. C1/l 441·137~ .lft11
1:30PM.

20 cu .ft . Friga,dalrt tide by

aide. Call 446-2177 .

G .E. matched washer / dryer
pair . Whirlpool heavy duty
washer . Other washers and
dryers $75 each . Call 614·

256 ·1207.

•

LAYNt' S FUHNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker . otto m an. 3 tables . !ex tra heavy
by Frontier) , $685 . Sofa .
chair and lovesea t. $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

$285. to $895 . Tables, $45

and up to $ 125. Hide-abed s,$ 440 . and up to
$525 ., Recliners , $175. to

S375 .. Lamps from S28 . to
$75 .5

pc . dinettes from

S99 .. to 435 . 7 pc . $189
and up . Wood table with six

chairs $425 to $745 . Desk
$110 up to $225 . H~tches,
$550 . and up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $260. and
up to &amp;395 . Batw beds,
$110 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin . $58.,
firm , &amp;68 . and $78 . Queen
sets, $195 . 4 dr. chests,

$42 . 5 dr. chests. $54. Bed
frames, S20.and S26 .. 10

\

gun - Gun cabinets , $360.
Gas or electric ranges $376.
Baby mattresses, $25 &amp;

$36, bad frames $20, $26,

&amp; $30. king frame $60.
Good selection of bedroom
suites . cedar chests.
rockers . metal cabinets .
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -· bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dryers, refrigerators and TV's. 3 miles

out Bulaviiie Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru fri., 9am

to 6pm, Sat.
446-0'322

U11d Wither, dryer, 1tove1,
refrigerator, 30 day war-

1 Y2 HP air compressor on 80 ranty. One Baldwin organ,
keyboard . J&amp;~awn
gallon tank $350. Call 446- double
Shop. 314 .Main
t.
0499 after 5, 446-7616 .
Pleasant.
Nice. clean living room sofa ,
2 chairs , pecan tables and
lamp. Call 446 -9627.
Antiqu es, oak furniture reproduction, misc. items. Use
our Christmas layaway plan .
Conkels. Tuppers Plains .
Carpet Special 25 rolls of
heavy commerical for"$3 .95

sq .yd . 992-6206.

Carpet Special 26 rolls of
heavy commerical for S3.96

Spin washers. gas &amp; electric
dryers, auto washers, gas &amp;
electric ranges, refrigera "
tors, TV sets.

~reezer 12 cu . ft . chasttype,

like new; electric typewriter .

Call altar 6 p.. m. 304-6763461 '

S

&amp; W Mod 66, 367, Mod
4B, 22 mag . Offer over

$265. Highchair, play pen
$26 . 304-675-4589.

yrJUlT tJ
I CADILP±

I I

Used maple dining room
table with extra leatand five
maple chairs . $60 . 304 -

r )

Print answer here:

Rid m1/1 D1uaohund. C1il
114-387-0811.

A C:AIII:EFUL.I)RlVI~ IS
'THE 6UY WHO HA6
J'UST 5EEN THE CA~
IN FRONIOF HIM
GcTiHIS.
Now anonge tho ctn:lod 10110&lt;1 to
fonn the surpriae 8lllwer, u tug·

gestod by tho -

.,._,,

screen

281f2 x 32 .

$66 .

$200. Topper single shot,

Model 68, 12 gauge. $60.
614-992-7668 .

Building materials
block, brick. sewer pipes.
windows, lintel's, etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,

56

Pets for Sale

56

Pets for Sale

sian and Siameae kittens .

Cali 446-3844 after 6.

cilltlee. Engllah Cocker Spa-

niol puppies. Colll14-3889790.

&amp; Son . Catto446-7786.

ADD-ON Woodburning furnace .._ auto. controls , water
heater included. Never used.

$690. Ph . 614-266-1216.
Limestone delivered. S1 0 a

ton . Caii614-256-1427.
Firewood

delivered .

$35

pickup load. 10 loads $300.
Call 614-256-1427.
1979 Honda XR 76. Call
614-246-5096.
Firewood cut up slabs S16

pickup load. Cali 614-2466~04 .

1 almost new digital scale.

Call 614-256-6880.

CARE home ~ in excelcondition: Has 3 bed·
rooms, master bedroom very
large, I ~ baths, fully carpeted,
patio and carport. cO&lt;;ated on a
large level lot on Rt. 160. Priced
spl~-level

very reasonaple.

#2499
FIRST LISTING -Watch the
Ohio R~er flow by from the
porch of this nice 3 bedhome, exterior has vinyl
beautiful carpel
in Addison.
#2399
!50 ACRE FARM- Has barn,
I tot~acco base, timber and large
pond Good location.
110021

Call441·0512 Anytllllt · '
ltth Null 245·1507

an~

;IIIR 442 - ·OWN£1 lAYS REDUCEI1974 ShiM~ mol*l lloml
!12x65l. Tip Out Includes 3 BRa. new c.roel. awnln1 &amp; l)lllo,
iitualld on! acre m~ Washer &amp;dryer Included. City schools. Was ·
$20,000, now $17,900. Call for detlib! ·

20. haed mootly Ch1rolola
cattle, 880 baloa h1y, lo·
c ,~,~~ d

Kenmore auto. washer and

1 x6 . 1 x8, length available, 8

in.

BMR 443 - NEW USTING -FIRST TIME ON MARKEn 81·11'111
located just minutes from lown on Debby Or. lntludes LR, eat-In
kitchen with dishwasher &amp; disposal, dining room joins kitchen. 3
BRs, I bath plus 2 half baths. Family room In basement I ctr pr-' .
•ee. Heat pump. $99 mo. budget City school dist CIH for an appointment ·

daytime.

Plia t26. Ton Milo Rood. 2
mi. off Rt. 12. first hou11
pa;t Y1ugtr Church . Alcoa.
Butl cahlaa. Call 304-1784a08.

BIIR 426- OWNER SAYS SEU- ~has an assumable loan with
only 9\1% interest We at'e talking about a very clean, 3 811 home
situated on niQ! flat lot in a family oriented neighborhood REDUCED! $3,000 down and assume loan!

6~

Ground ear corn 111.50 par

BMR 438 - BUILDING SITE - Approx. 2 acres in Mei~ Co.
overloo~ng the Ohio River with public water and recently buid
car I!Brage. Owner anxious lo sell. Gall for detaib.

100. Bring own conteintr.

30!4-8711-3308. No Sundoy
Nlll,

18113 Ford Golaxia, body
Hay, orchord graaa. •1 .75 good 1h1pe, no motor 1300.
ond 12.00.Jiole. 304-875- Coil anytime 304-678-1208
or 458-1727.
5081.

BMR 436 - EXCEUENT STARTER HOME with 2 BR~ LR, OR,
nice kitchen, utility and new bathroom Carpetd throughout
· Screened patio, carport L!rge lot Call for appointment

~.

71

BM~ 440 -:- 2 STORY FRAME home for only $10,500. Rent~ or
tn it Either way the value ~ there. Call now for appointment

TO/' CASH pold for latt
modol u11d cars. Smith
8ulck-Pontloc. 1911 Eaat·
ern Ave .. Oalllpolla. 44112282 .

hve

Mixed seasoned firewood.

HILLCREST KENNELS
$20 . pickup load. Yo~&gt; haul. Barding all breeds. Selling
614-742-3045.
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Stud

Service. Call 446-7795 .

•
OWNER SAYS SEU -This nice home i1 Middleport
has been drastically roouced from $42,500 to
$32,000. living room, formal dining room, bath, 2 BR,
full basement. I car garage, alum. siding ,
1#476
MOVE YOUR FAMILY into this neat and attractive
home before winter. 3 bedroom ranch, 2 baths, eat-in
kitchen, living room. family room with woodburner in
basement 2 car I!Brage, vinyl si:fing All this on a I acre
lot

#462

.-

#460

53 ~CRES HOMESTEAD -:- Located at the edge of
Gal/ia and Jackson counties. Acreage is almost all
til/abl~ Older 4 bedroom country home. Barn. Tobacco
base. Road frontage. Take a 1oo1t loday.
·
#450

~

IN GALLIPOLIS - WALK TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
Pnce reduced for quick sale, $29,900. 6 rooms, 3 BR, full
basem'ent. nice large front porch. No upkeep. Nice large shade
trees. low taxes. Home you should be check on.
·
#530
ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses' See the fenced·in pasture with 4 acres more or less
including a lhree bedroom home, just a few miles from Gallipol~.
Excellent land for farming as well as new home construction. Large
barn plus lwo storage buildings, pond stocked with catfis~ bass
and bluegills, large concrete drive. Call for a showing and be
surpnsed
#437
WHAT ADEAL! $27,000
Come see for yoursell. Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer.
dishwashr, refrigerator. woodburner. and all like new. Storage
building and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools.
#552
FRESH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Move righl in ltiis fully furnished Mobile Home wrth approx. 7acres
of beautiful woodland. Perlect for retirement Call for information.
#583

UTTLE HOUSE QlllltE PRAIRIE - No, but ever so
cute. Rustic siding piUS'hice size kitt~n. dining room,
large bath, 2 bedrooms, /Mng room with open ceiling
beams, upstairs balcony. 2.60 acres. Lor.ated in Kyger
Creelt school district.
• 1#453

..-.
....
,.

BUSUIESs OPPOIIUIIITY- Produce
tor a new owner. Located Sl Rt.
equipment. inventory, ~rge walk-in cooler, plus more.
Call br more details.
·#490

-.·-

-:

·.·.

.-:I .-

Will SACIIFICE - 3 BR. I ~ baths. 1670 sq. ft. close to
• town. FR wbfp. LR, llinng area. lots ~ stlnll!. Make Offer.

LARGE VACANT LOT- Perry Township. County water
and electric available. Level lot Hard road.
11465
/

1 c.ir garage, 2 acres. LR. FR. wbfp. Asling $59,000.
.•• BEST BUY IN !0W11 - Reduced to $55,000. 2 stnry iM
attic. Office or stop space. basement. remodeled.
I •:• urique
1
2~ baths. FR. 2 kitchens. LR. 4 BRs. den. sewing room.
ON RIV£R - Edge
4 BR. 2 baths. 2
basement exc. decor. DR. LR.
kitthen. 2 car
I1,•;: lullPRIVACY
$89200.
HillS - Bricll ranch. Qualily oonsl, 3 BR. 2
baths, FR. wblp, LR, DR. 2 car garage, 1780 sq. fl. PI 11M.
I1:;·;:• CHAICUIS
~~ $87,500.
.
:· 2SlURY Ofl 4TH AVE. - 31£ BR. ps heat. CA. 18x36
1•: Buclt ~"'~ DR, celar. $49,900. , .
1:;.: VINTOfl
ST. - Convenient 2 BR. I bat~ gas heJI. hartlwml
llocn. I car
$43.000.
'
I .:; BRI~. RANCH
WITH FU118ASEI!ENT - 31£ BR. I ~ balll~
·~ 2~

HURRY TODAY and lake a loott at this fa.~ horne. 3
bedroom ranch with 'family room. livine room, eaHn
kitchen, bath, utility. ln·ground swimming pool 2
st!l'age buildin~. 2 level lots. Call for an appointment
today. $39,900.

11478

1979 D~V: MOBILE HOME -In excellent condition.
Very nice kitchen with refrigerator, range. buik-in
microwave oven, 2 bedrooms. lg bath, living room,
famtly room. Bee. heat. cent air conditioning.

136 ACRE DAIRY FARM. P&lt;oduction until
this spring Step-down n\il~~g parlor, barns, sheds, 2
silos, 5. ponds Tob. base. '1680 sq. ft modular home
wrth 3 BR, 2 full baths, krtchen wilh eye-/e'lel double
ovens and d~hwasher, fireplace. For more information
give us a call.
•
#412
POMEROY - 2 story frame house on I acre lot l
bedrooms, bath, living room, 2car garage. Priced in the
teens.
#441

6.95 ACRES VACANT LAND OFF RT. 35
Rofling land - Beside Ofd U.S. Highway 35. In an area that ~
develo~ng fast Rl 35, short distance west of Gallipolis. Get ~ now.
NW

USE YOUR IMAGINATION - Building site, 2\1 acres
ckEe to Rio Grande. 28x48'basement shell just waiting
to be fin~hed. Call for more detaib.

·
8 ACRES
Wrthin 10 minute drive 1o downtown Gallipolis. City School System.
Has hookup for mobile home. Gallia Rural Water, electric and septic
tan~ Night light on pole, 200 It frontage on Graham Schoof Rd.
Timber. Building sites. C&lt;J!I now.

LAND. MOBILE HOME. NEW GARAGE -12x60, 1971
Shutt with 12x28 add-on. 3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen,
dining room, ~ving room, nice cover~ screened in
patio. New 2 car garage, storage building Slluated on
1.6 acres. Locatoo State Rl218.

•.

11486

WEEKEND RETREAT - Fleetwood 2 bedroom mobile
home on a wooded lot Utility bldg on concrete.
Screenhouse 16 ft. by 20 fl. cement floor. Su~
condition. Strong drilled well. County water available.
Tycoon L!k~ $12,900.
·

JACKSON COUNTY - 105 acre farm. 2 story, older
home, 3 bedrooms, ~. kitthen with buift~n ringe
and oven, dishwasher, iving room. Barns. celar and
celar house.
·

#449
~

#401

VACANT LAND- Ohio Township- 20 acres, woods,
pasture. ·Approx. 2 level acres, tobacco &amp;fOUnd. Home

site.

'

11463
!ACRE LOT - Mostly flat and locited at Route 141.
· Green 'Towns hip. Rural water available. •
. I

' IKI

• 32

+96

+t o713

SOUTH

••

'A74

IA10864
+A K8 l
Vulnerable: Both

,.

Dealer: South
Wttt
Norlb Ea11

Sout

Pass

1•

Pus

2+

Pw
Pus
Pass

3t

Pau
Pall
Pan

4 NT
6t

s+
Pau

Opening lead: '3
By Oaweld Jocoby
oDd Jamn J1coby
The best we can say about
North's jump to tllree diamonds was that it..was New
Year's J!:ve and he had been
mixing his bridge wltb varl-

outbldgs.,
~Ide. Make

1~!

304-895-3802.

FUil. BAlDI ENT - 3 BR, hw 11oon. 2 wblp, gas heal "
garaee, I balh. Hanersvile. $44,!KXl.

..

('

SHOEST.IIIG RIOGE - 21t BR. I\1 blths."""""' klan. ~~
basement lru~ trees. Wbfp. $42.000.
V.A. UlAN ASSUMPTION _ Mil Creek Rd. 3 BR bricll and
·
211%
down ment $39 900
hari\e. I bath, I£ kit, 1 ' . low
PlY
· ·
37 "· FAIIII - Otio Twp. t)ler house. tobacco base.
t, limber. Only $29,900.
AFIWIIE '-Off 21 s. 3BR. 1~ balh, tp, &amp;00&lt;1 wll,., enet&amp;Y
efficient $31,000.

I

·.,' OVERLOOKING GAlliPOliS _ Alpine ~. 4 BR. kllled
"""'· LR. lanlaslic '" C.A., Hedgewootf Dr. Askllg
FR. ~·•
N"'
i! $64,500.

~!

TRADE IN TRAIUR- 3 BR, I bath, pd lot Loan

1~: ~. ~$13.900.

•\

PRICE REDUCED - AHOME OF DtSTIIICTiofl·-" A
f11usl see ID appreciate. 3 bedrooms, I\1 baths, fotmil.
dining. family · rapm, equipped kitchen, 2 firiGtacti
Llrte landsCaped lawn, partially fenc6d. · StoiagB·
buidin~ Excellent location. Call for an appWitment
today!
1#411

SlURY IIOI!E- Oft Nel;lbittwl Rd. 3.51C. Good
.IV.·~' OlDEI2
~. 3 BR, I
LR, FR. Porcll. $33.000. .
balh,

·~: N~ KITcHEN AMilfiATH- Close mKmlrt 3BR. I bllh.

~I

"""

!

~:·

gas hell. I car ll!flll. ~ l'rlttdJtt. $39.900.
.'
• ' $Z7 000 BUYS ALOT- 2say house in Pt1ri111. 3BR, bllh.

I&amp; kit. wftJp. Idly tOOIIl. I&amp; lot Vinyl ~&amp;
RtO. ....D£:_, 2 ~
· 3 ,.BR.
· · rb.th. 2 ...:.....~-c:lly·
...~
: ; PI IVIillbll, ~
nit:e ~o~. ~um , ,

'

• ,&lt;

11483

.

.c...,

""'"'

1
:: lnll!!lll.._
Iii.
~

..

.. -

R. G. Mayound Son. Dioael
Service and mejor overhauls. Experienced in all
types. dieael and gasoline
engli"ret. lndultrial or auto,
hydreufic and electrill Mrvice. Located at Maaon Co .
lndu1trlal Park. Point Plee -

sant. 304-676-7422.

82

o I
1

~-

IWIY or eomethlng moved?

ELLIOTT CO.

We'll do it . Coli 4411-3169
bet-en 9 and 6.

lennox Heatin&amp; &amp; Air ConditioninJ. All Types insulation .
Electncal Wirint.
Call 446-851 5
or 446-0445 tit

Water hauling, Fast Service.

low rates. Cali 614-2561743.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim U.nier, 304-6767397.

SHEET METAl WORK
We make cust~ duct
work. We Repair Furnaces and Heat Pumps.
GAlli A
REFRIGERATION CO.
614-446-4066

Dump truck for hire. Will
haul coel Of' limeltone. 304 -

Plumbing
8t Heating

675-3190.

Good-1 Exc•veting, batementa, footers, driveways,

-tic tanka. landscaping.
Call anytime 446-4537.

I
L.
I 1_o_w_M_r._ _ _ _ _ __
I J .A.R. Cqnatructlon Co .
I Rutland
Drains. All kinds of Ditching .
, Oh , 614-742 James

Wettr

1
I
I
I

4WII£UI-Edaerii~DR.lR.FR.stoneext,2~

ballls,2Cirllfiii.RlHAslq~OO(L

4 U HOllE Will AC.- 8mi. off Rt 7on 211). 20x40 bsml.
LR. w~ FR. hatdwood Roors. picturesque setting w/pines.
$69,900.
.

$99,000.

'

kt

on~

YflUIS

100111

~iding

001n iD

i14clten,

patiO.

11ltlnt

~an

~ng

~~

SOLD 10/14/83

I
I
I
I
I
I
CHAROI.IAS HillS -Very attractive 2
home situaled
on aaes oil Rl 160. This fine home offer&gt; 4 bedrooms,
deluxe kitchen, formal &lt;lning
lamily room with
I
and Book stove. 2~ balhs. lui basement 2 car garage pus
lfu40 Pfl!ll and exceptional iandscapin£
1
I
SOLD 1218183
I
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - $500. 12~% interest 2 BR home I
wrth lots of cllarm. 2 car garage, chim11ey for woodburn,..
$24,700.
I
SOLD 12/27/83
COl'l2 BR HOUSE IN TOWTI ....: Wllh living room, dinng I
room, eal&lt;n kitchen, bafll. Conl'l!llience ol town can be you~ I
forr,500.
SOLD 12/23/83
II
IN THE HEART OF TOWW - Serlice station and ~ lot for sale I
at lhe corner of 2nd and Pina Excellent opporturity for
$69,!KXl PRIC£ RfDUCTlOfl - Was $169,000. NIYN
$100,000. You .save $69,000. Beautiful Ptllynes~an home
nestled in 3.8 ac. line woods tNetloo~ng bass filled ~lte just 2
miles ~om Rl 35. 3 bedloom home wilh tNer 5,000 sq. ll2
entire wills of glass opening onto sundecl&lt; and patio. A~
room wilh atrium llclutles )Oar round flowers and trees. 2~
baths, lots of rustom made buift-ins and 2wals rA shelving in
ilrary. Molh" wiM apjllll'll! of iitchen wilh evetytt;ng and
kids wil insist on Dad finishin~ indoor pool. Owner 1110\/ed out
ol slate aoo must sel.
stcwy

3~

l1lOtt\

fileplace

lxlsines1 Hiih traffic counl $45,000.

1

CALL us .TODAYJ'.
pH 0 NE
.

.

.

·

44 6•·3643

latAVE.-RMMew.AIInewMrin&amp;piumbin&amp;'-'&amp;rool.
inlarior detorlled. 3 BR. 2\1 balhs. DR. FR. LR Nice lots.

•

· 27illllllll
BULAVILL£RD.-Brickaootramesplllevei.3BR,2bath~
10 ur* mobile i'1Jme par~ DR. Fr, Lr, 2 car

REALTOR

0011nlry

NEW BRICK RANCH IN ROOfiEY- 1750 sq. It, loads of
extra~ wiJfp. 24126 oultlldi.. 3 ballts. buill by owner. tluye~

VIEW OVER 141 - QuiltY oonstructed bricl&lt;. lull basement,
3 BR,/J ltildle!l. I\! ~ 2ml from mwn, 2car garage, 2.3
. ac. insullll!d. 2 wbfp. Asltina $69.500. Mfllrade.

I
I

praless.LDcated

less.

IICIIS,
..,..
_ $29.ooo.
..

115ACII£FAIII-Toblcalblse.52crop,50past~n.fll0d
1900 sq. fl neo1t n1deanled 4 BR home.

""
·

Deviaon.

Lines.

Jr.

Footera ,

~~~290~3·~~~~~~~~==~~~

IKE IISEI~ BROKER 446-3796
JIM COCHR1111. ASSOC. 446-7111
CLYDE I" •r'l. a••oc 245-5276
.......... ......
.
8. J. HAIISTOI..~,
ASSOC. 446-4240 I
DAVID E. IISE•AII; ASSOC. 446-3716

I

I
1.

=·
..1
..;.~-~---15,000.~-~---1!1!11----·-..•••••~-..;--

:-•vMUY-3kinciltll!,2~. bolhs.LR.-DR.
den. FR. bar, illIliaci!* Itt Allq $93,WlO. . .

replacement

windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Alumtnum &amp; vinyl
siding
H0111met Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home owninga
Aluminum utility

Soloa &amp; Service Shorpen
Sciuora . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy. 992-2284 .

mataa. 304-876-2295 .

wit11

l'rdllclion. Askins J89.900.

.

N~rPrlme

HJVice. Authorized Singer

furniture cleaning. fr.. ••ti-

lracl ol

167 N:. FARM - Off 325. Gas M!ll. tobacco base. 27 ac.
crop. 50 pasture. ~ hams. $85.000.

oillhe

wbfp,

T

Bill's

piece custom fit your hom• - 86
General Hauling
Guaronteld. Advanced Guitor, (Day 814-592-4066.1
buildings
!night 814-898-8206.1
JONES BOYS WATER SEA·
"1 Miller Drive
VICE . Coil 814-387-7471
446-2642
GET your corpet SHIP
fJiiiiiiiliiF;ireifle;iE;is~ti;imiialltei:sl.-l
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN or 814-367-0691 .
STEAMER. Wotar removal. Need eomethlng heuled
RUSS AND MAX

II
SOLD 11/.2'3/83
I
WHEN THE HIGHWAY IS COI!PLEJID ....Ihis 17 acre
I
IMd wil be
wlleie U. S 35 wil•nterchange I
Roulf 160. New isling -llonl hesitate
SOLO 12/23/83
I
5 BEDROOII BRICK RANCH - on a 3 acre wooded
I
Provi&lt;l!s lhe peaceluiness rA lhe
bul still
5 m1ies
from ll&gt;wniOwn.Over 2.000 sq. It rllivingspacecM be
I
to enpy. lJrge iving
with wootfbumng lltNe,.farll!
family room 11 basemen! wilh attractive fireplace and
I
carpeled
Spacious eat&lt;n
2M baths, 2
heat pumps for efficient heating and ooolin&amp; ulilily
I
Buyers Proieclion
warrants oomponenls lor alun year. 3
patios. beautilul wooded lot witl1 pond and
circular I
driveway. Owner in a;am- asking $68,000- wil oonsider

91\ ACR£5 - I mile ~om !Own. 2 BR house, lull basement
gas lurnace, 2 car garage. kit, LR $49,900.
COLOfiiAL II-LEVEL - Close to sltoppinj, 3 BR. nicely
deooraled,
2 Wbfp, I~ baltls, 2200 'SQ. It, FR.. DR. LR. heal.
pum~ $69.900.

It
LOG CABIN - Nice 3 BR. lui hasmt. I~ balh, beamed
10 ac. Uva
land. $35,000.
I . ceiings.

r

~f:. ~PIIOVEMENTS

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One

GRAND VIEW - 25 acres oil Rl 141. 31' Br. 2batns, 1750
FR. LR wblp, eqUip. lute. .(slong $89,500.

BUY£11$ PROTECTION PIAN - On lhis 3 BR house wrth lui
basement Close lo lawn. t balh, back porch, ;, atoc
$29900
· ·
W£ HAVE ACRES &amp; ACRES OF VACA/ff lAND. lOTS ANO
FAlliS - Rio Grande. Centenary, Mil Creek Rd., Portsmouth
Rd. Jacltson Pike. Cheshire Twp. Give usa call. We'l help you
find whit you are bolting b .

2nd J,VE. - Eal&lt;n kitchen, LR. Dining area, paOO, util rm,
wblp. off street parkin' $41,500.'

4011 ..

SEWING M1chine repairs,
Water Wells . Commerclel
end Domestic. Teat holes.
Pumpt Selee end Service.

SQ. it.

eal·in

It ; REI!OOnED 2 SlURY - 4 BR. 2 bath, hardwood floors. 18

tI

#421

balh~

15 l!ll£ VIEW- 3 BR bricll ranch in Rlllney, 2 balh~ LR.
DR. FR. ..tfp, 2car gar., swimming pool, large fenced ~l ext.
oonsl Buyers Protection. Asking $89.!KXl.
•
MORGAN'S RAIDERS pro'lided lunds lor this hislorical house
in Willlesyille. Arest tl'lfl. Needs ,...,. fix in' Orig. woodwork
refinished. Marble lire;Uce. $28.000.
'

pool.

7 ACRES ·- ClOse to iro Graiide. Several feet of
frontage on Slate Rt. 325. Rural water ,available. No
tes!Jictions. City schools.

2 haH

SPRING VALUY - , Fuii 'basemenllol ,;ew, 3 BR. pool,
privacy, I~ bath~ 2wblp, as.ume loan, outbid,, 2750 SQ. ft.
Asking $67,000.
·
'

~~,

SIIAU FAIII- Modern 4bi!droom honie with partial
basement Ave;Jge barn, approx. 8 acres pasture land
and tobacco base. Will consider mobile ftome ~ a
trade-ln.
.
·
11464

balh~

palio, gas HW heat. I car 11rage, 1car carpal
11•:. FP,Rl 7enclosed Aslling
$69,!KXl.

it1 COZ'I
3 BR HOllE 011 RIVER - ~ lol.
~. LR.
wbfp, hw !loon, basml \WI
offer.
: NEIGHBOIIHOOO RO. -;- 3BR,nice kil, lull basnt. I~ hal~
1 wbfp, pd finanan' $47,000.

Aeriel

SO~UTION

=·~=FR.wbtp, 2cargaragePoss.Mott

11;. ac. wbfp, 2 car garage. As~ng $61.000.

guerenteed.

;;;;;;;;;;d

2 ST~ BRICK - 4 BR, 2 full

North.

work

truck rontol . 1114-4411 -

'

Business
Services

Electrical

8&amp; Refrigeration
Pooqu1lo Electric Co. oil
ph•- of oloctrlc work. all

Page- 0.7

87
Upholstery
CARTER'S PLUMBING
BELL
AND
HEATING
CONTRACTING
76
Auto Parta
r;;;;;;;;;:..;;;;~;.;;:;.;......;;;....;.;.j~==~=====-1
Cor. Fourth and Pine •
Gallipolis Oh .
8&amp; Acceaaories
--------B1
Home
Phono 446-3888 or 446TRISTATE
Aiilypes of conslruction and
o.-- M
4477
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
remodeli~&amp;- roofint piumbint
C·-·• undo 4 apd. trona,
lmprovem,ents
1183 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis. and heatma.
1parta.
873 4x4
• up
Chovy
truck
Chevy Luv with
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT- 446-7893 or 446-1833 .
NO JOB TOO SMALL
Jeep front ulo &amp; 16-38.6- 81
Home
F &amp; KTree Trimming, stump lNG . Fomerly Dewitt' a I-:========:JL\.;;;;;;;;4~4~6~-~4goog2k.
18 muddor on 10 ln. rima.
Improvements
removal. Call675-1331 .
Plumbing. Call 614-367- 1~· •-mbly. Call 6140676.
38S-8184.
Marcum Roofing • Spout·
PLASTERING . Now and ing. , 30 yaara experience.
Billy Leo's Tlroa and Battery repair commerciel and rni· specializing in built up roof. 83 Excavating
-3_8_8_-9_8_6_7_.- Selee. New end uaed U;-aa, dontial. free eatlmotoa. Call _c_•_ll_6_1_4_
also. tiro ropelra. 1103 Jef- 814-256-1182.
Appliance Service all r1111kea DOZER WORK By Ted
feraon Ave. Point PleaNnt.
&amp; models refrlgertors , Henne, ponds, ditches.
304-175-5405.
waahers, dryera, rang11. baaamenta. etc. Call 446S Television Service. compactors, dishwasher•. 4907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Cor p1rt1 for 11io. 302 RON'
2-borrtll Ford motor. Runs. Speclolizing In Zenith end microwevea . Heating &amp; Trlntportltio'n .
•1 00 firm. 448-81103 days. Motorola. Ouaz1r. end Cooling, Shoat Metol Work.
Altar I p.m. 304-676- houao calla. Coli 676-2398 Gallia Refrigeration Co . C1t 216 hoe, dozers, crane,
or 446-2454.
614-446-1066.
loodera. dump truck . Call
7412 .
814 -446-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM .
Real Eltete General

PEACEFUL- Oft 141. 31' BR. 2 batns, I~ FR kitchen, DR. 2
car garal'!. 1750 l)lus sq. fl. palio OOin 1.3 ac 201&lt;20
ootbldg. As!;ng $61.!KXl.

gara~

#390

LOW DOWN PAYMENT. OWNER FINANCING
Are you looking for a 2 bedroom home overlooking the Ohio River
wilh little maintenance. Beginner home or retirement home. We
have it
#260
MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY .
Located on OhiO . Rl ~near Ga/OfX!I~. Walk-in cooler, display·
cabinets, three rental mobile homes - income now $660.00 per
mo. Could be 6 room brick front home plus 2'rooms for business whatever you have in mind. Aowei shop, small grocery store,
carry-out. etc. Los of uses. Phone for appointment to see. live in
part - bu~ness in other part Rent mobile homes: Great.
Opportumtyl
#580

t ./IQ I00 6
• . . 12

+ K3 2

JUST RIGHT- H)'OU wanl in lhe country 2 BR. 12 ac. gas
heat. cty schools. $29,!KXl. ·

pool

3 BEDROOM IIODERN HOME - Buin-in kitchen wrth
refrigerator, stove, range hood, deep freezer. L!rge
living room and family room with woodburner. Drilled
well w~h pump. Garage and other outbuildings. Old
Route 35, Thurman area. $34,000.
COMMERCIAL ACREAGE - 7 acres. Corner of old Rt
35 and new Rl 35 at Rodney. Springfield and Green
Township. County water, 11 inch line, natural gas and
electric are available. Alternative financing possible.
'
#425

'Q 10 6 3

COZ'I 2 BR HOUSE - On NeighblrtiOOII Rd. As.uma~e
rnorlgjee. Low tjown paymenl WBFP. $26.300.

wbfp

jllt1ial basement

4 ACRES OF NICE LAND to build on. Nice homes in the
area. Very good location. Wrthin 3 mile$ of Gallipolis.
Buy all and use for building lots or build your own
special home.
#468

''~CATION CAMP BY BLUE lAKE
Owner finacin&amp; sundeck. rural water. septic system, electric. Buy it
wrth cam~ng trailer or without concrete pad. Great Fishin~ Buy
and move right in.
#584

ollllwn.
knolly pine

gara~ As~ng

1#4n

Iii .

EAST

EXTRA NICE - Mobile home on I acre. Close lo Bidwell. 2
BR. 2 bath~ DR. Exparm, wblp keeps whole trailer warm.
$26,500.

lui

COME TO THE COUNTRY and get away from rt all. 3
bedroom ranch. 117 acres. Woodburner. Storage
building Only $21,500.

PRICE REDUCED - &amp;rind New , HOflll. - 3
Bedrooms, I \1 baths, I~ living 'room, kitchen wrth
dining area in one end, formal entry, extra wide
hallway. Utility room. Anderson windows. lot size
approx. 100 It x 120 fl Priced in the 40's.

WEST

IIINI FAIIII OUT m - 23 ac. 2outjjdjs. Assumable matt
3 BR. I bath, I car garage. HaooymM's larm. $35.000.
EXCWEIIT LOCAnOII FOR BUSINESS - On Rl 7by KFC &amp;
Pizza Hut Oppor1unily is !here fo1 you. $37,500.

I:~ IIOOERII&amp;aiCK TRI-UVEl- Country iYin&amp; 3BR.I~ bath.

~rge

11456

• QJ 97
+QJ 2

ISEMAN ,REAL ESTATE
AGENCY

·-..·-

good carpet, nalural gas

LANO CONTRACT- Lovely family home.
bedrooms, I \1 baths, living room, formal dining.lwo car
atta~hed garage. Well landscaped. Patio, wallis, hedge.
Lot approx. 261'xl27'. 6 miles from Gallipolis. Green
Township.
1#473

'KJ

------------------~~----~1

LOOK AT ALL YOU GET FOR $28,000 - 3 bedroom
kitchen, very nice living room,
heat all new windows. front
porch, recently buift I!Brage, 40x 150 lot Located in city
schooldistrict
·

IJ-11-U

Each office independently owned and operated .

COUNTRY ATMOSP~ERE- Take a look at this nice
home. 3 bedrooms. large kitchen, Nth, utility room.
garage. area for workshop, I ~ acn.;, chain link dog
pen. City school district Priced in the 30s.
#413
home. main bath,

NORTH
+J114

84

Home
Improvements

RINGLE'S SERVICE axperiancad roofing, Including
hot tar appllcetlon, carpentor, electrician, moaon. Cell
304·1175-2088 or 675 4810.

out beveraaea .UIOCiated
wltll Ule change of yean.
Soutll wu allo In 1n ooU·
millie mOOd. On a lOber aay
he mllbt blve contented
hlmulf wltll a three-heart
a!Am try and Ull:n a mere
flve-damond ,c11i, but lhll
hand ml&amp;hl weU be hil lui
cblnce to bid a a!Am In ltU
so tllere he wu, fiyln&amp; at Ule
speed ol110t1ntl.
Eut wu oot In eny new
year mood; otber'wlae be
rnlrbl bave doubled to uk
lor a spade lead, but Eut
didn't like the location of hil
king of diamonds. Allo Eut
had been holdln&amp; bad cards
all yeu and didn't WAI!t to
wind up loaln&amp; a redoubled
sam. Eut's peutmilm wu
well founded.
Soutll looked over dummy
and, wltll the encoura&amp;ement of the wine •that bid
been now inC freely, said,
"Partner, you drlnlr. and
your queens and jacks look
like aces and klnp. ~u. aU
iJ oot lost and we may erid
tbe year blppUy."
Then South rose witll
dummy's king .of hearts, led
Ule queen of dlamoodl and
let It ride alter Eut had
ducked, so tlle year endt'd
with gOOd cbeer for North
andSoutll.
(HEWSPAPEIII!Im!RPitlSI!...,..t

ELECTRONIC REALT~
· ASSOCIATES

GREEN ACRES - Don't overlook opportunity 1o see
lh5 well cared for ranch. 3 bedrooms, ~rge /W:hen
and dining area, living room, bath. Garage. Natural gas
heat. central air. low budget Chain link fenced back
lawn. Priced inthe ~
·
#491

NICE COUNTRY HOME
IN CITY
AND 2 ACRES
3 bedrooms, storm doors and
:7~~28~sq~.~ft. living
space plus- 2 windows. 6 room ranch style·
Full basement
wilh no ~pkeep vinyl siding
. Front porch 15 fl
Nat gas furnace. Nice modem
32 It car garage 32 fl by k~chen. Price only $29,900.
ft. all under one roof. 2acres
#590
more or less. 400 It frontage by
216 It deep, all useable. New
NEW BRICK
home not completely finished .
APPROX. I YEAR OLD
Has a garden bath lub - its . White oock frOnt, 6 roojlls, 3
own water system (drilled we!Q. bedrooms 2 baths nice modern
Buck stove heater, plus electric step-saver kitthen. Electric
heating system. Has about heat pump wrth A.C. Two car
everything you would want garag~ Nice landscaped shady
Priced al $59,900. Phone now• back yard. Beautiful hom~ you
#5!1 must see th~ on~
#58!

'83 goes out with a slam

All you need
to know in
Real Estate~

.·
4 BEDROOII RANCH - I \1 baths, shower, roodem
kitchen, divided basement. landscaped yard. Cheshire
area. Priced right - low 40s.

18111 GMC 30 poa11ngor
but 481 ; 4 apd. good cond ..
I 1 500. Coli 441-2831.
1 877 dodgo van. Fully corp-

81

ftJ!'!:;~~--~

·.

.... .

18118 Chevy 1 ton truck;
PI S, booator br1ko. 12 ft.
stool bed. 350 1utomatlc.
11800. C1il 1114-388·
8303.

18_83 Charcoli grll'f Ford
atopaldo 'II ton PU. ve. I ft.
bed. outo .. rodlo. aun roof.
vinyl co-ld bod, .,... tiro.
ahorp, priced to 1111. John' a
Auto Soloa. Buiovlllo Rd ..
1981 VW Rabbit ax. cond. Gamrn•. Ohio. can 44147S .
Coli 4411· 1265.

EACI! Offici 'II tliiDIIi!INDINlT 0 - ! 0 AND OP!IIATID. ' ..
o IIC c.iihlr)l 11 RHI btoto Corportloa u t...tootor ti!O NAJ'O alld TM-trlldomarla ..
n ~ l:ttolt CarpntiOII Eqaal Houtar ~~ ..•

. . '·-

1883 Chtv. 810 oxt. cab
plcltup, Tohoo oqulp. pkg ..
V-1. 1ir, po- 11-lng,
AM-FM Clll. tape, llldlng
roar window. 2 tono paint. 4
we. 4 apd .. 17,000 mi ..
1xc. cond. C11i 441-8314.

75 Mercury Bobcot w1gon
loadod 1750. 81 Honda
200. 3 wlteelar 1825. Call
388-8806 1fter 5, or anytime weokanda.

- 1111111. ..... 31W155
J. 11tnt11 cnr....... m-2114
Wy IIIII. Allll , . 441-Gt51
C1t11r ""- Alllll'!tt, J7N741

'

.- -

Autoa for Sale

BRIDGE

· Truck• for Sale

&amp; · cuatomed . 318,two
18711 Comoro allvor with rod ted
berrell , auto,eun-roof,verY
Interior. automatic, a-c. pa.
pb, om 8 trock 11200. thlrp. Cli1114-992-3187 .
304-178-4181 '
1873 Dodge ven, 1 Boar
hog, 2 IOWI, 16 pigs.
304-1175-5081 '
72 Trucka for Sale

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

·

in. gas I~===~=====
coppertone range. $100. 156
614-742 -2352 .
Pets for Sale

puppies :

Hay 8&amp; Grein

~2

Autoa for S8le

11178 AM Gromlln atondard 1874 V. ton Pick-up. UDO.
llhlft, rood condition, 'liloo. 814-ll48-21Dl .
~~::~~Z~~· for plokup. Cell I·A-T_T..,..-E-N_T_IO_N..:..,._-C_O_L_L_E_C ·
TOII8: 1883 Ford pick-up.
1880 Z-28; bllok • allvar. IIOth Annlvaraiir,l 1Edltlon .
Excollant runnln\condltlon.
T•to p, tw. 4 apd., ••· pw. pi, •soo
114 882 188
rd,am/fm caaa .. ha~dar and
·
·
•
·
air ahocka. Now tlraa. C1il 1-~------114.367.0407.
1881 4x4 Toyoll truck.
81,000 miifl. C1il 8141871 Ponti•• Cllallna: air. ,8
_ 8_:a_-_2_a_e_1._ _ _ __
orulaa, tilt, 11. oond ., ono- ,.
871 Ford 'I• ton truck
owner. 11900. Coil 441- 1
11200. 1972-318 Dodge
8080.
on,lna • 100. 304 -876 1873 Volkaw1gon atotlon ,40
__o_._______
wagon. Modo! 412. Runt 1' 1 878 Ford Courier autogood . UOO . 814 -882 - milia with topper. 45.000
7158.
miles . Exc.Cond . 13,000.
1871 VW Super Bootlo. Exc. 304-1175-8740.
condition, •1 .150.00. 114- 1----- - - - 4411-8014 or 448-1387.
73 Vena 8&amp; 4 W.O.
1955 DoSota , oxcolltnt
condition. 1860. 304-895- 77 Scout V-8, luto, runl
good. Caiill14-379-2576.
31811.

1983 Hond• prtludo. 1881
Honda pi'lluda. both cars
lo1dod. WI" conolder trado.
Clltl14·317-7488 .

8100. 30

Doberman

G rend o;

•

dryer. $300 . Kenmore foot through 14 foot . Hogg
washer and dryer. $125.30 &amp; Zuspan, 304-773'6564
coppertone electric

RI o

11,280.00. 304-178-4114
or 904-727-2148.

BMR 389 - OWNER SAYS SEU TODAY! Your family will enjoy
lhe roominess of th~ house. lnclues 4 BR~ 2 baths.LR. OR. built~n
kitchen. 'Situaled on ~rge oorner lot Close tD town in city school
district (Green Elem.). Call ID see this one!

Pipe c1ttla croaalnga 4 'x14 ·
long. 304-87&amp;-5088.

clover. 114-742-21211.

71

1887 Chyaler convertible
now paint•.runt porfact. Call
1114'-%411-,278.
•

#485

.

Fo~ aalo-10 l1ying hens. Also
hi¥. Orchord IIIII, 11f1lflt

heater . $16 . 614 -992 - 1 - - - - - - -- LUMBER - Rough cut. oak.
6846.
poplar. 2x4, 2x6, 2xB. 1x4,

Antiques

Limestone, Sand, Gravel .
Delivered in Mason. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards

"R,tal~

Coi1814-387·7418.

shop, $1 ,696. Call 1-614B86-731 1.

3169·.

6245 .

MCGHEE

llveatock

.fl .FOWl, will calf In Spring.

. lroklr·AuctlonHr

24hx32tt. garage or work-

Kerosene heater, used. like
new. $]6. Also usttd electric

$36 , wash stands $34,

KnaUff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12''· 22' ' stocked
in yard . HEAP vender .
prompt delivery. 614 -256-

'

-

For sajll.-25 in. color T.V. A-1 0 . Call 614-246-6121 .
condition . S100. 614-949- 1---- - - - - Why weit? Build your own
2994.

maple rockers $59, 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149, 5
piece dinette set $99. used
bedroom suites. refrigerators , ranges. chest , dressers.
wringer washers. TV's. dryers, &amp; shoes. Call 446-

54 Misc. Merchandise

... ·
.... .
-...-.... -_-......

Cattery-

$399, bunk beds complete

Sunday calls . 614-9492801 .

lnatrumenta

Brlorpllch Kanntla ProfaaKennels . AKC Chow pap- aionol All-breed grooming.
pies, CFA Himalayan, Per- Indoor-outdoor bolrdlng foDragonwynd

with bunkies $199. 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
$199. antron recliners $99.
· other recliners $80. maple
dinette sets S179, box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $1 00 set regular-firm
S120, maple dinette chairs

Oid coins -Indian head pennies. Wheat and etc. No

white m1lo Colli• wolgho
obout 80 lb. Anaworo Yukon. Any lnf. lpprtcllto.
304-571-2108 or 304-878·
2328 .

(AnawyiMondaY)

62 Olive St., Gallipolie. New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living ioom
suite with 6 inch flat arms

Old Colt rifie-1B87. 22
caliber pump. $160 . No
Sunday calls. 614-9492B01 . $160.
- - - - - - - 2-ic-

REWARD. Lolt In Olenwood Ashton eraa, ..n and

D [ I l XI l ]

840. Quality craftsmanship .

Woodburnar for sale. $300. l -3~0=4=-6=7=6=-8=1=3=5=.====
Call 614-992-3B30.
I,
GUNS-Winchester 5 shot. 55 Building Supplies
Model 1200. 12 gauge.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

53

Milo 12 wlc. old Sl1moao
kltton; U8. C1/l 448-4230.

,_6_7_6_-1_6_9_8_._ _:__ __
Yeslerday 5 I Jumbles HENCE UNITY JUNKET SHAKEN
sq .yd . 992-6206 . 614-992- ,.
36" Annie doll with com - L....---~-A-ns_w_•_r-~-n-th_•_P•-n.,d-o-ln_g_a_lo•n-g.••.n.le•n-c•_-_T_H_E_IN_K....j Electric Guitar with Amp.
6173.
plata wardrobe $100. Cab- r
Uko now. •us. 814-8492801. No Sundoy calla.
New brass and glall fife- bage design papers $22 . -

range.

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, 446-1699 .

1- - - - - - - - -

I I ( J

'&lt;lutJ,'
V

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-

Pom&lt;~roy-Middleport-Gallipolis, 10hio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

)ai!uary 1, 1?84

'

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

t Suppose

6 Cubic meter
11 Targets

16 Shave
21
22
23
24

Headdress
Mistake
Vegetable
Numbers
game
25 Conta(ner
26 Giver of

giH

28 Famed

30 Footless
32 Symbol for
tantalum
33 Guido's low

note
34 Decay
35 Condensed
moisture
36 Light rain
37 Uncouth
person
38 Crimson

40 Chief artery
42 Encountered
43 South Seas
island
44 Impairs
45 Be ill
47 Eagles·
nests
49 Male voice
50 Opening
51 Visitor
54 Hire
55 Submerge
56 Prayer book
59 Hasten
60 Springtime
62 Is present

64 Ciasslly

65 " Show Me
State: abbr.
66 Paid notice
67 Quid: slang
69 Spanish
pots
70 Ringlet

71 Hint
72 Stitch

74 Danger
76 Antlered
animal
77 Astata
78 Young girl

79 Certain

newspaper
articles
82 Clandestine
84 Tropical
fruit: pl.
85 Specks
86 BelabOr
88 Painful
89 Observe
90Small
factOf'les
92 B- 1. for
example
9-4 Unearthed
first
98 Hauls
99 Scene of
first miracle
100 Title ol
respect
102 Walt on
103 Capuchin
monkey
104 Possessive
pronoun
105 Workman

106 Showy

flower
108 Diocese

135 Press for
payment
138 Coat of
arm: abbr.

139 Jot
140 Emerge
viCtorious

t4tMerry
142 Negatlv&lt;t

143 Symbol lor
Iridium

144 "The

Mormon
State"
145 Hindu
queen
14 7 Apportions
149 Spanish for
" river "
150 Din
152 Suppress
154 Crown

t 56 ~egiects

158 Go In
159 Hoarfrost :

pl.

160 Collect
161 Rent

DOWN

1 Happen

t09 Earth
goddess

2 Talk Idly
3 Eiectrltied

110 Note ol

particle
4 Compass
point
5Goal
6 Spanish Iitie
7 Certain race
horse
8 Transgress
9 Artificial
language
10 Sea eagle
11 Choral
composition
12 Again
13 Free of
14 Knockout:
abbr.
15 Bivalve
mollusks
16 Narrow
opening
17 Brick -carrying device
18Latln
conjunction
19 Essence
20 Highways

scale
111 Flying
creature

112 Liberty

114 Shade tree
1161n music,
high
117 Slumbers
119 Hold on
property

120 Bad
122 Fluid
dressings

124 Existed

125 Storage
boxes
126 Seesaw
128 Prefix: three
129 At what
time?
131 Uninterest ing person
132 Tramp:
slang
133 Roman
official

27 Spanish tor

" gold "
29 Poems
31 Greek letter

36 Olsgulsa

37 Headgear:

pl.

39 Sma11 valley
40 Turkish flag
41 Region
42 Courage
43 Prohibits
44 Spar
46 Negative
prefix
48 PreposiUon
49 Offers
SO Female
51 Pursue
52 Helped

53 Speed

contestants
55 Reptiles
56 Philippine
Moslem
57 Entertain
58 Clayey
earth
61 Mr.
Andropov
63 House
additions
64 Garment
68 Precious
stone
70 Brie and
Edam

71 Obliges

73 Printing
term
74 Vessels
75 South
American
animal
77 Species ol
iris
78 Tardy
80 Covers
81 Underwater
vessel:
colloq .
83 Food !I sh
84 Pigeon
87 Abate
89 Stories
90 Mixes
91 Lodge
92 Musical
organization

93 Ceremony
95 Algonquian
Indian
96 King of
birds

97 Food

programs
99 Vehicles
101 Buy back
105 Joints
106 War god
107 Wander
11 1 legume
112 Keen
11 3 Smail
amount
115 Partner
116 Tart
118 Pitcher
119 Unit ol
Italian
currency
121 Book keeper 's
records
123 Chaldean
city
125 Fuss
126 Melody
127 Lassos
129 Complain
130 Wading bird
131 Neckplece
132 Climbing
plants
134 Caustic
substance
136 Single
items
137 Loop
139 Roman road
140 Walk in
water
144 Employ
145 Border
146 Greek letter

147 Cry ot goat
148 The sun
1491nlet
151 Kind of
type:
abbr .

153 Chinese
distance
measure
155 Negative
prefix
157 Coroner:
abbr .

�•
' .

Sunday Times-Sentlhel

''

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

e

.

operation .

Kidney
CINCINNATI-(AP)- An 8-yearold Dayton boy was having trouble
breathing-after a kidney transplant,
but doctors said the operation went
smoothly otherwise.
•'
It wUI be some time before doctors
know whether the transplant Is
' successful for second-grader Ml·
chael Sparks, who was listed In
critical but stable condition after the
surgery Friday.
"lie's on a respirator," said
Marian Knight, spokeswoman at
Children's Hospital. "The (transplant) went fine, but he developed
some breathing difficulties after
surgery."
The·· boy underwent about four
hours of surgery late Thursday and
early Friday to try to overcome an
Incurable kidney disease.
Authorities had to conduct a
frantic search for the boy and his
family when the kidney became
available earlier ln the week. The
family . was toea ted ln Tennessee
OWNER- Jerry Ead• and son, Shawn, holdingllie ___lirought to Ute Eads newslaughterhousetocatedonthe
after authorities contacted Dayton
cleaning hose, are In the restraining area for animals White Hill !Wad, near Rutland.
radio and television stations In
efforts to flnd them.
"We (Children's Hospital) are
very experienced with kidney
transplants," Ms. Knight sald.
"Things are going as expected,
except
for the respiratory
Rl.J'TIAND - A new service of Eads, is done in a fiberglass cutting room where lt ls processed
complications."
business dealing with the slaughter material located In Mississippi and and wrapped for the customet.
The boy had developed fluid In his
of livestock has been opened near picked up there for the local project. Daniels, who has been a retail
Ruttand.
lungs,
a post-operative developThe interior material lends Itself to butcher for 15 years, does the meat
ment
known
as pulmonary edema.
A 32-by-24 concrete block build- easy cleaning. '
cutting.
Ms.
Knight
said
the condition ls not
Ing, designed for the new business,
The building and the entire
The structure has a receiving
unconunon, but wasn't expected In
has been built by Jerry Eads of area for the animals brought live to operation had to be put together to
Rutland, and he has leased the · the location . There ls a restrainer to pass Inspection and approval by the Michael's case.
The functioning quality of Ml·
building to Jerry McDaniels and to hold the animals for the' necessary Ohio Department of Agriculture.
one of his sons, Todd Eads, who are killing. There are special drain Future plans call for the building on chael's new kidney was stU!
operating the business.
unknown late Friday, officials sald.
areas wlth holding tanks for waste of another room so that after the
Extensive-tests were performed to
The building is located on the and waste is picked up by a firm meat ls cut and wrapped, lt can be
ensure Michael's body wouldn't
White HUI Road, off New Llrna twice weekly and ls used for frozen for pickup by the customer.
Road, near Rutland .
Charges by the new business are automatically reject the new
commercial purposes.
kidney.
made
by the pound and the firm not
After an anlmalls butchered it is
The transplant has a 60 percent
The Interior of the building, which halved and moved Into a J.f-by-12 only handles livestock Including
success rate, according to Dr.
was constructed through the help of foot cooling area and from there, swine, sheep and cattle but also will
Bryson Waldo of the hospital's
Rutland area friends and neighbors after some five days, It Is taken to a handle deer.
nephrology department. It was the
164th such operatiort at the hospital
since 1965.
The case drew publlc attention
after Children's Hospital was
GALLIPOLIS - A couple facing Eastman, 43, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $40; $39.
alerted Wednesday that a kidney
multiple charges are scheduled to Glen D. Messler, 30, Scioto Furnace
Marshall K. Whitacre, 46, Spring·
that might be compatible with
appear In Gallipolis Municipal $40; David L. Short, 19, Jackson, $40: field, $39; Michael J. Kennedy, 28,
Michael had been removed from the
Court Wednesday to enter pleas.
Remo J. Rocchi, 62, 102 Mabelene Romulus, Mlch., $40; Donald S.
body of a donor who had just dled.
Ricky D. Lambert, Rt. 2, Patriot, Drive, $41; Ruth E. Starr, 47, Melvan, 25, Rt. 1, Bidwell, $40;
It took 10 hours to locate the
Is charged bycltypollcewith assault Westerville, $41; Paul E. Van Sharon M. Harris, :rl, Rt. 3, Bidwell,
Sparks family , which was visiting
and criminal damaging, and Teresa Meter, 54, Rutland, $41; James C. $41; Louie A. Cables, 32, Rt. 1,
Michael's grandmother In La
L. Lambert, Rt. 2, Patriot, was cited Tuckett, 51, Sterling Heights, Mich. , Cheshire, $43; Stephen M. Bruno, 24,
Follette, Tenn. The family then had
for possession of marijuana and $42; Lori A. Llnkfleld, 21, Rt. 4, Columbus,$44; BarbaraM.Kearns,
to fight bad road conditions and
disorderly conduct.
Chesapeake, $45; Thomas J. Groll, 41, Branchland, W.Va., $46; David
drive 4'h hours to Cincinnati.
Ricky Lambert was placed on 21, Cincinnati, $47.
R. Thomas, :r7, Middleport, $46.
Doctors said the transplant had to
$1,8.ll bond Friday.Teresa Lambert
was placed on $500 ' recognizance
GALLIPOLIS - Fine and costs
bond.
on an Improper tum charge against
A DWI charge against Ronald E. David L. Graves, 28, Mineral, Ind.,
Morris, 33, Bidwell, was dismissed were suspended Thursday In municat pretrial, as was a no operator's ipal court.
license citation against Linda K.
Pete Alderlgi, 19, Rt. 4, Galllpctlls,'~j
Langhorne, :rl, Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
was fined $12, received a suspended
Richard A. Mount, 48, Rt. 1, six-month jail sentence and six
Bidwell, pleaded not guilty to failure months probation for no OPerator's
to obey a traffic control device. A license, and was also fined $13 for
trial has been set for Jan. 18. Gordon speeding.
K. Amsbary, 39, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, ·. Forfeiting $114.40 bond for overpleaded not guilty to speeding and weight load was Terry I.. Morris,
wUialsofacetrial Jan.l8. Patrick L. Oak Hill, while Randall K. McKenMahaffey, Rt. 1, Ewlngion, was zie, 46, Rt. 3, Oak Hlll, forfeited$62.&amp;!
continued until Friday for a charge bond for the same charge.
of Improper handling a firearm In a
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
motor vehicle. .
Russell E. Burcham, 62, Patriot
Forfeiting $45 bond for disorderly Star Route, $38; Patricia Hiser :rT
conduct was Brian Mink, 24, Rt. 2, Gahanna, $38; Eugene K. Legg: 25:
Here's to you and your family this New
Bidwell.
Dunbar, W.Va., $38; Leonard E.
In traffic cases, Donald J. Frye, 31, ~anauga, $39; Glenn D.
Year ... wishing you health, happiness
Lambert, 'II, Rt. 2, Wellston, Matthews,1!,37, Columbus, $39;
·
and
the best of everything!
·
forfeited $186.92 bond for overweight Grover :· Sheets, 29, Crown City,
load; Ivan R. Mayo, 47, Ht. 2,
Bidwell, forfeited $40 bond for
Improper backing; J erald R. Haffelt, 48, Eureka Star Route, forieited
$40 bond for assured clear distance;
Kent R. Ireland, 19, RU. Gallipolis,
forfelted$40 bond for failure to yield.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Ricky D. Rife, 27, Crab Orchard,
W.Va.; $38; Richard P. Pence, 30,
Princeton, W.Va., $39; Antonio G.
CLOSED MONDAY JAN. 2
Sola, 50, Rodney, $39; -Robert H.

be performed within 48 hours of the

organ becoming available.

rr;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;iiii;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;:;;:;;:;::;;;:;~

M.D~. INC,
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL··:

JOHN A. WA.DE,

SeePage 12

Office _Hours by Appointment Only

he

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

·· ,4.

Seasons Best

THANKS FOR SHOPPING
IN OUR STORE

Copyrighted 1984

We are m ak.Jng an effort to locatr

MPrcedes mad, so he took out and

passed him at about 12IJ miles per

LEVOLOir.
READY MADE
BLIND
,.

REDECORATE TODAY
AND SAVE!
• One inch aluminum slats
• Wand tilt control
• Easy to install and shorten
• All hardware lncl.uded
• In the most popular colors:
Cotton White and Alabaster
(

HOW TO MEASURE

OUTSIO£ WIDTH

)

INSIDE WIDTH

II installing Inside w indO'IIIrame.
measure. wldlh and lenglh.
11inslaillng outside w•ndaw trome.
add desired 0\19flap. such as molding
widlt\. ta inSide widlh 11there Is no
molding. recommended overlop

...X

~

"'
~

1s 1Y2• per s1de

42" Len hs
ize
23x42
24x42
25x42
26x42
29x42
3h42
35x42
36x42
5h42
52x42
59x42
60x42
7h42
72x42
73x42

Retail
Pr
23.99
23.99
25.99
27.99
27.99
27.99
29.99
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51. 9~

.,

Gallipolie, OH.

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Syria today freed U.S. airman Robert b. was killed In the rald, which was In retaliation for attacks on U.S.
Goodman Jr., a month after his Navy attack jet was sbotdownavercentral reconnaissance nights.
Giant peace step
Lebanon and five days after the·Rev. Jesse Jackson arrived here to appeal
Jackson called the agreement toreleasethealrman "a giant step toward
for his release.
Goodman was brought to the S¥J1an Foreign Ministry shortly before peace." He said it was "built upon President (Hafez) Assad'swllllngness to
noon lnaclvlllan carand,ashewent upthesteps, told reporters: "I'm very put Lt. Goodman's predicament In the humanitarian category."
Goodman arrived at the Foreign Ministry shortly before noon in a
happy."
civilian
car, accompanied only by two men ln clvlllan clothes. As he went
He and Jackson emerged together moments later, raised their hands In
up
the
steps,
he told reporters only: "I'm very happy."
the V-for-victory sign, then were driven In a llmoslne to the Sberaton Hotel
Goodman
and Jackson emerged together moment later, raised their
where Jackson, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination,
hands In the Vfor-vlctory sign, then got Into a black limousine and drove to
has been staying.
·
.
"We are delighted to announce our prayers have been answered •." the bote! wbere Jackson has been staying.
Goodman,
of
VIrginia
Beach,
Va.,
was
navigator-bombardier
on a A-6E
Jackson told reporters earlier after a meeting wi~ Foreign Minister
.Intruder jet that was sbot down Dec. 4 during the only American air strike
Abdui·Hallm !&lt;haddam.
The Syrian Foreign Mlnlstry Issued a statement saying lt was releasing against Syrian anti-aircraft positions ln Lebanon. The plane's pilot was
Goodman as a step to "facUitate the withdrawal of American troops from killed In the raid, which was In retaliation for attacks on U.S.
reconnaissance nights.
Lebanon.''
The Syrtap statement today cautioned that Syrian forces wUI continue to
The statement said Syria "hopes that the U.S. government wUI take
"confront
very firmly all provocative and aggressive acts that It may be
measures to end Its military Involvement ln Lebanon, such Involvement
subject
to."
#
which has contributed pain and suffering to Lebanon, to the area, and to
Jackson called the agreement toreleasethealrrnan "a giant step toward
American people ... "
The Pentagon In Washington said a U.S. mUitary plane was dispatched peace." He said It was "built upon President (Hafez) Assad'swUilngness to
to bring Goodman home. Jackson sald he also would be on the Olght, and put Lt. Goodman's predicament ln the humanitarian category."
Jackson met with Assad for 90 minutes Monday 10 miles south of
that lt would probably stop en route to the United States so·Goodman could
Damascus
at vUia where Assad ls recovering from a heart aliment
"go through the necessary medical examination and the necessary
attributed to exhaustion.
debriefing" before arriving horne.
. . . ...
"It was a good meeting," Jackson sald afterwards. He had been greeted
At a news conference at the Sheraton Hotel, Goodman said
first thing
warmly
by Assad, who embraced the American clvll rights leader.
he planned to do upon arriving ln the United States was "hug y wife."
"I
think
It's fantastic," sald Marilyn Goodman, the airman's nnother,
Goodman said he learned he was being releasoo ogly_rntnut before lt
at
her home In the Douglaston, Queens, section of New York
awakened
OCCUlTed. "I was told I would be released on several'other occas ns," but
Clty.
"Oh
God,
It's unbelievable."
had waited In vain until this Ume, he sald.
feel
great.
Absolutely great," said the airman's father, 0. Goodman
"I
Goodman, 'II, of VIrginia Beach, Va., was navigator-bomba er on a
A-6E Intruder jet that was sbot down Dec. 4 during the only Amkk'an air Sr., 50, of York, Pa., ~Air Force officer who ls now an executive for
ent firm .
strike against Syrian anti-aircraft positions ln Lebanon. The
e's pilot a food pi'OQe5Slng eq

Re~gan

72"

64" Lengths
Salt
Price

:m

19.99
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3h72
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59l72
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7h72

LESS

.. -..-...\-

.,.,_hell-.

WALLPAPER SUPER MARKET
704 Grand Centr1l Ave.
Across From
Grand Centrtl IIIII
Vienna, W. Va.

625-7090

fiii~•• IPI(IAIII PIIICIDI
25" COLOR CONSOLE

12" B&amp;W
ONLY

$6900

ONLY$499

.614-992-2181
· ~E WILL NOT

BE UNDERSOLD
I
.
J

'

ONLY

$26100

SAVE $95.00

SAVE $150

SAVE $26.00

10' ~. COLOR PORT ABLE

POMEROY LANDMARK

.
.
Jtck W. Ctrsey, Mar.
•
Qrive • little tnd ~ t lot.,-Free delivery with minimum order within 75 milts
Yts, wt serv1ce what we sell. ·We ore your·Joctl Hotpolnt Dttltr
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill closed tt 5·00 p M
·
Servin&amp; Meias. Gtlllt tnd M11011 Couniles. · ·
·

West Virginian~ hurt,
cited after accide~t
A West VIrginia man was
transferred from Veteran'sMemorlal'Hospltat.to St. Joseph's Hospital
In Parkersburg, W.va. for an Injury
. suffered ln a 6: 50 p.in. accident ln
Chester Township Saturday.
According to :vMH ml!dlcal
llOCQrds, Uoyd H. Smith, 43, Mineral
· Wells, recelvedabacklnjurywhllea
paSserlger In his plokilp truck,
Kenneth E. Rockhold, 40, ~s­
vi1le, was treated· and releaSed at
VMH for a shoulder liljuiY.
Tbe Meigs County EMS trans·
portec(l .theril from thll 9ci!ne of the
~t, the Galll8·Meli&amp; Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol reported.
Smith was !IISo cited for DWI.
Accordlng~o troopers, Smith was
·heidlnifeaston0hlo248whenhelost
~cililavehlcle. Thepickllpran
off thi road, strlldn&amp; a .tree. The
vehicle waa heavily ciiJnqed.

Recetvtna minot ln)urlel, but not

'·

Sims also said Reagan appreciated thee!fortsofallwhornadethe
release possible, and saw Jackson 's
effort from the start as a "humanitarian effort." He said the government was beginning to make
arrangements for Goodmman's
return.
In today's meeting, Reagan was
to receive a report on Rumsfeld 's
recent trips to the Middle East .
In the wake of explosions, sniper
fire and artUiery attacks ihat kUiesl
more than 260 servicemen In Beirut
last year, Reagan is facing a
Congress Increasingly hostile about
the use of the troops ln the Middle
East and looking for ways to scale
back the 18-month limit it put on
their mission.
House Speaker Thomas P.O'Neill
Jr., D-Mass., hascalledameetlngof
hij; Lebanon monitoring group to
dlkuss the Implications of a special
Pentagon conunlsslon's report that
was sharply critical of Reagan's
policy In Lebanon, particularly the
mllltary role.
The monitoring group consists of

14 Democrats who had voted In

October - with O'NeUI's approval
- to authorize the Marines to stay In
Beirut for 18 more months, unless
Congress changes Its mind.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said aboard Air Force One
as Reagan returned to Washington
from theNewYear'svacatlonlnLos
Angeles and Palm Springs that the
Rumsfeld meeting was unlikely to
result In any decisions.
He said that Reagan had already
been given a Rumsfeld report
"presenting some new Ideas which
the president wlll take under
advisement." He would not say
what they Included, but added that
they did "not necessarily" Involve
redeployment of the forces.
Of the l,!nl Marines assigned to
Lebanese duty · as part of a
four-nation peacekeeping force,
1,350 Marines have been stationed
near the Beirut International Air·
port, co nsidered particularly ·
vulnerable as a result of its low-lying
position within range of Moslem
gunners.

Evidence may give police, break in case

296-4632

.

LEAVE TOGETHER - Rev. Jesse Jackson. left, and Lt. Robert
Goodman prepare to leave after the anoounoernent that Goodman wUI
be allowed to leave Syria after being beld there as a hostage since late
November. Jackson was Instrumental bt geUing Goodnuin released. At
rear Is U.S. Ambas8ador Robert Paganelli. (AP Laserphoto).

urges Syria to work for peace

redeploying u.s. Marines In Lebanon. Goodman's plane was shot
down during a Dec. 4 air strike
against Syrian outposts In Lebanon.
Reagan's statement was read by
Bob Sims, a deputy, White House
press secretary who said Reagan
was "notlfled piromply thls nnornlng" about the Syrian announcement ln a conference call with
National Security Council staff
members, White House. Chief of
Staff James A. Baker III and State
Departn)ent officials.
Last week, White House officials
sought to put as much 'dlst81)ce as
possible between the administration
and Jackson's efforts because, Sims
over.''
sald,
the president believed that
The president continued: "We
"any
chance
of Jackson's succeed·
hope that the Syrian government
lng
would
be
because he was not
wUI contlllue to work for peace In
·Lebanon so that all foreign forces- officially representing the president
Syrian, Israeli and the MNF -can and not an emissary of the U.S.
come borne and allow that country government."
Jackson had been In Syria since
to be united, independent, and
Friday
trying to win Goodman's
sovereign once more."
release.
Reagan planned to meet today
Sims sald ~'agan had been
with his Middle East envoy, Donald
"praying
for Goodman's release."
Rumsfeld, about a Pentagon plan on

$3.00 Rebate diNCIIy 11om LeWIIOII UmH u.oo'
hold on bltndl purchated 11om 12/26113through 2/21114. LOok tqr
Rebate/ Coupon at

7613rd Ave. .
Downtown Huntmgton
Across from Civic Center

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Reagan said today that he ls.
"delighted" the Syrians released
captured airman Robert 0. Good·
man Jr. and the president called on
the Syrian government to work for
peace In Lebanon.
"All Americans must be pleased
that the government of Syria has
told our ambassador that they have
agreed to release Lt. Goodman as a
result oftheeffortsofthe Rev.Jesse
Jackson," Reagan sald In a
statement.
"We are delighted that this brave
young man will soon be united wlth
his family and that his ordeal Is

23.99
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24.99
26.9t
27.99
27.99
21.99
39.99
41.99
43.99

'{··""·

hour.

Smith Buick-rontiac, Inc.·
.1911 Eastern Ave

•

su~ MEETING- Presidential candidate, Rev. Jei!Be
J~ left, and Syrian Prealdent HazezAasad are aiiiiiiiDesfollowktg
theiiiiiiOimcemeaUhatU.S.AinnanRobertGoodmanwouldbereleued
followmg a moath'sconllnemellt bt Syria. (AP Lllllerphoto).

This really took the man In the .
Eldorado by surprise and when he
arrived In Columbus, he drove up to
the first Buick Skyhawk dealer and
asked the Skyhawk dealer to trade In
his new Eldora'doConvertlble!orone
of those brand new Buick Skyhawks.
Although the dealer wasn't exactly
too surprised, as business had been
very good that week, hedid think It a
little odd and asked the man why?
The customer replied, "On my
way into town on that nat s.tretch, 1
was going aboul as last as I could
and a Mercedes went by me going to
beat !he deviL That didn't partl~u­
larly bother me, but right on his taU
was a Sky hawk who was going just
as fast, but so clam mad at the
Mercedes, he was blowln' hts hom
and even blinking his' lights trying to
get the fellow to move over so he
could pass hint"
•

l S.Ction1 , 1'2 Poge1
'20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewtpOper

Syria frees U.S. ' atrman

SMITH SEEKS
SKYHAWK OWNER
the owner of the Buick Skyhmyk
mentioned in the following report.
It seems that a Sky hawk bearing a
West VIrginia license plate, ran oul
of gasoline about oW miles from
Columbus, and finally a long, low
Mercedes stopped to ask him if he
could help. He fortunately had a tow
rod In his car and agreed to tow him
Into Columbus.
Before starting up, bowever, he
advised the fellow In the Skyhawk
thal..he was Inclined to do a lot of
speedlng, and although he would try
to keep It down, he suggested that the
fellow In the Skyhawk blow his horn
If he was going too last. Or even blink
his lights, as maybe he couldn't hear
the hom.
So they ambled along at a pretty
good rate and pretty soon an
ttdorado Converllble passed them
both going about 95 miles per hour.
This made the fellow In the

enttne

Pomeroy-Middlej,ort, Ohio, Tuesday, January 3, 1984

Voi.32,No.114

Pleas ·s cheduled on four charg~s

:w;

aily

I

•

•

Livestock slaughterhouse ·opened

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

County Agent's Col. Page 8

Stories on Pages, 3,4, 11

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

\

•

growmg program

needing treatment ln separate
accidents New Year's Day were.
Dennis W. Durst, 21., Reedsville and
Elwood Meyers, 18, Rt. l ,

ReedsvWe .

Durst was driving east on Ohio681
ln Ollve Township when he lost
control of his car at a curve. The
vehicle went off the road and struc!t
a fence. . 'lite highway patrol
reported Durst stated he swerved
his car to avoid another vehicle.
Hls car received moderate dam·
age In the 4 a.m. accident.
Meyers was a pas!~e~Ji8r ln a car
operated by Stephen A. White, 17,

He would not desert~ what · probably committed by a panicked
detectives found In the hospital lab, thief.
"I think the perSon panicked,"
but sald lt was not the ~eapon used
poiFce
Sgt . John Cherubini said.
In the slayings. He sald the weapon
''This
ls
definitely not a normal type
apparently was some sort of knife.
of
robbery."
Casto sald detectives plaitned
Pollee say the body of Riverside
more Interviews of hospital
employee
Joyce McFadden, 33, of
employees.
"We'll Interview anyone that we Dublin, was found In a small office
can determine was at the scene any connected to the laboratory In which
the body of Patricia Matix, ll, of
time near the murders," he sald.
Delaware,
Ohio, was found.
Poll~'e say they slaytogs at
Both
women
were wearing whlte
Riverside Hospital on Friday were

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Pollee
say evidence found In a hospital
laboratory where two women were
slain could give them a break In the
case.
"We have some physical evidence
and lf we can link that to any one
lndlvldual, we'll have the case
made," pollee Lt. Ralph Casto sald
Monday.
He sald the evidence was being
examined In the pollee depart·
ment's crime laboratory.

Israeli warplanes hit P~lestinian bases
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Dlvebomblng Israell warplanes ·
struck atPalestlnlan guerrUia bases
ln the Syrtan-controlled Let&gt;anese
central mountains today. The
Israeli command said the jets
scored "accurate hits."

In I&gt;amaScus, meanwhile, Syrian
otflclals
· treed U.s. Navy airman
R.eedsvWe.
White was traveling west on Ohio Robert 0. Goodman Jr. after a
681 when he lost control of his month's captMty ln l,'e5ponse to an
vehicle. ~car Went off the road, appeal by the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
struck an ernbanlanent, then con- . A Syrian official statement said
Unued until It Welltotfthe left side of Goodman's reJeasewasJntended to
encourage a withdrawal of U.s.
the road and bit a renee.
. 1be car .sustained moderata ton:es In Lebanon. Goodman was
captured when his attack jet was
~In the 3 a'.m. lncldent.

shot down while on a raid on
Syiian-held positions In central
Lebanon Dec. 4.
An Israell mliltary conununlque
said Its jets struck at positions
occupied by forces of guerrUia chief
Col. saed Mousa, a le~er of the
revolt against the leadership of
Palestine Liberation Organization
chairman Yasser Arafat.
The Tel Aviv conununlque sald
the planes returned safely after
attacking targets ln Bhamdoun,
located ln Syrlan-controlled terrlto!L._on the Beirut-DamascUS
Highway.
1
Today' s air strikes tollow a recent

I\

'

l
"

lab coats and slacks. Cherubini said
there was no sign of sexual assault.
He said money was taken from their
purses but their credit cards were
left behind.
Pollee say the women had been
bound and gagged and that they
hadn't found anyone who heard
screams or sounds of a struggle
from the lab.
The lab is off a corridor linking the
emergency room with the main
lobby of the hospital.

...

escalation of guerrilla attacks
agali\St Israeli troops In south
Lebanon. Last month, Israel
launched four air attacks aganst
guerrlVa targets ln Syrian·
controlled sectors of Lebanon.
The Voice of Lebanon, a Beirut
radio station controlled by the
rtghtlst Christian Phalange Party,
sald four Israeli Kftrs backed by
eight fighters staged bombing and
strafing runs that set several targets
ablaze, Including a Bhamdoun hotel
used as headquarters of the Palest!·
nlan guerrillas and an ammunition
- dump.

But a spokesman for the Dmse
Progressive Socialist Party, whose
forces control most towns In the
central mountains, dented the
five-story Shepherd Hotel was hit.
He alsodenled radio reports that the
hotel had become a headquarters
for Mousa since the Israeli army
withdrew from central Lebanon
Sept. 4.
The spokesman, who declined to
be Identified, sald the hotel was
~rvlng as a Druse hospital. He said
the Israell jets hlt at Palestinian
bases around, but not tn,
Bhamdoun.

?

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