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Sentinel

12-The

OSP releases
1983 report

Buckeye briefs
D~ug

sweep misses big dealers

Grand jury will review evidence

Man convicted in child's death
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A 19-year-old Columbus man was
covlcted Thursday of Involuntary manslaughter for the death Sept.
10, 19&amp;'1, of a W.month-old baby.
·
Common Pleas Judge Paul Martin convicted Cecil R. Woodrum
Jr. In a non-jury trial and also found him guUty of endangering
children, a felony,
Woodrum wUJ stay In jail until sentencing, which w!ll follow an
Investigation.
Woodrum ctalmed he accidentally bumped the head·of the child,
Justin C. Biddle, while putting the child In a crfb. A deputy coroner
testified that the child was kflled by at least one severe blow to his
bead, probably Inflicted by a hahd.
Misdemeanor charges of child endangering are pending against
Peggy J. Vencill, 25, Justin's mother. Ms. Vencill and Woodrum
lived together.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
~Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 791. In the "Pick
~~e, played Monday through Frtday, the winning number was

Weather forecast
ExtEIIded forecast

~

At the annual organizational
meeting of the Chester Township
Trustees Gary Dill was elected
president, Ralph W. Ours, vice
president and Roy ' Christy, fire
chief.
The trustees wUJ meet on the
second Tuesday of each month at
7::ll p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
The next meeting Is Tuesday, Jan.
10.
Attendlng the organizational
meeting In addition to those named
were VIctor Bahr, newly elected
trustee. Darlene Newell, newly
elected clerk and John Riebel, Sr.,
QUI-going clerk,

.
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WINTER SALT DAMAGE- A pickup lnlck Hes
crumpled under 24 toa8 of sale and lbe dump bed of a
lnlck Wednesday at 1be Columbus headquarters of

.J

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Along the River ..... ..... . B-1 -8
ClaMifleds ..... ..... ... .. .. .D-3-7
Deathii ..... ......... ... .. .. .... A-7
Editorials .. ....... .... ... .... . i\-2
Fann ....... .... ... ..... .... .. .. D-8

Sports ... .. ....... ..... .. .. ... C-1-8

state-National .. .... ......... D-1

•

tmts

to ak:ohol. DWI arrests totaled
42,335.
Of all accidents, those not using
avaDable seatbelts amounted to 97
percent.

the Franldln County Engineer office. Employees at
the site said a holst on lbe lnlck broke dwnplng the
salt and bed on the pickup. (AP Laserphoto)

v.t. 11 No. 45

240 emergency runs

Emergency runs

COAL to meet

All Meigs County emergency
units made a total of 240 runs In
December, Adrnlnlstrator Robert
~r of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Of the total, 178 were emergency
runs while 62 were transfer calls.
Altogether 100 patients were transported during the month with 96
going to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 34 to Holzer Medical Center; six
toPieasantValleyHospltaland14to
other hospitals.
All units traveled 8485.7 rnDes
during the month, an averages of
35.4 mlles per run.

Four calls were answered by local
units Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports. At5:37p.m.,Pomeroywentto
Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments for
Bertha Diehl, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
9: 02 p.m. went to Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Emma Hayman, to
Holzer Medical Center; 1:17 p.m.,
Rutland, to Langsville where a
truck haq overturned, WUUam Lee
George taken to Veterans MemorIal; Rutlandat8:33p.m. to Salem St.
for Jessamine Lyons, to Veterans
Memorial. ·

Citizens Organized Against Longwalling (COAL) will meet for a
regular monthly session at 2 p.m.
.Sunday at the Vinton Townsl!lp
Trustee buDding on County Road
43-B, off State Route 32, AppalachIan Highway.
The permit application maps for
the five year areas of Meigs Mine 1,
Meigs Mine 2 and Raccoon Mine 3
w!ll be available for viewing and all
Information COAL has collected will
be on hand.

Veterans Memorial

Meets Tuesday

Ohio weather:
. snow flurries
expected to clear
--Page A-3--

tnfintl

-

.,.,._,_andOl.tlra)'s

• Sold ook - . - . (,

-""""

•FLOTiO&gt;nqJOI!yl'nln

By lARRY EWING
'111t-sentlnel SUfi
CHESHIRE-TheGalllaCounty
Board of Mental Retardation has
returned to court In an effort to force
the board of commissioners to fund
the operations of Guiding Hand
School and Gallco Sheltered
Workshop.
Late last week, the 169 Board filed
a complaint In common pleas court
asking that a wril "/ mmdomu• be
Issued " ...cornpelllng (the commls·
slon) to apPr-opriate funds to the
ac(:(Junt of (the board) ~uU!clent to
fund Its operations; and, In particular to appropriate those montes
submitted by (the board) In Its
budget for the year 1984.''
This most recent dispute follows
nearly a year of court action, during
which a clarification has been
sought concerning the CO\IIlty' s legal
"rights and duties" In funding
programs for the mentally retarded
and developmentally disabled.
Last week's complaint came
within days of the approval by the
county of a 1984 appropriation for the
169 Board totallng$97,678.The board
had requested an appropriation of
$638,873.25.
.
The board's complaint calls the
county allocation "entirely Inadequate; "and,chargesthatas ~dlrect
result, County Auditor Ronald K.
Canaday " ...refuses to Issue any
warrants, payroll or payment of any
bills until monies become
avaDable .''

• -ll)'lt&lt;m do!J9Ied0

Sef.dOiing

~

• «Xe&amp;iil&amp;
M cl """"""""

RACINE
PlANING MILL

On second floor

NOW IN PROGRESS

•

Jury trial cancelled

MEN'S SUITS
AND SPORJ COATS

Jurors who were to report for a
jurytrialonJan.9and10areadvlsed
that the trial has been cancelled and
they need not report.

Reduced 20% to 50%

'MEN'S TOPCOATS AND
All WEATHER COATS
· Reduced 20% to 30%

MEN'S SPORT AND
DRESS SHIRTS

CLOSEOUTS

LADIES' COATS
AND JACKETS
Reduced 30%. to 40%

LADIES' LEVI
DENIMS
Values Ia $32

Sale

$2211

Reduced 20%

MOST HEMS ARE ONE-OF-A-KIND
ALL SALES FINAL-NO RETURNS

LADIES' DRESSES

MEN'S SWEATERS
CARDIGANS, PULLOVER &amp;
SLEEVELESS

REG.
'225.95
AKAI 8-TRACK
.
SALE '169.00
REG '50
00 WILDCAT
CH TAPE DECK ..................................
., ·
C
ILDREN'S PHONO/TAPE.. ...................... SALE s37 00
REG . 148.95 RAIG AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO/CASS
SALE '111.00
REG.
'174.95
REGENCY
10-CHANN
........
.
REG ssg 95 KOSS AM/FM PO
EL SCANNER ........................ SALE s131.00
. , · CHAN
RTABLE MUSIC BOX w/HEAD SET ... ,....... SALE '67.00
REG . 36 .95 . NEL MASTER POWER WING CB ANTENNA ......... SALE '27.00
REG. '51.95 CHANNEL MASTER MIRROR MOUNT CB ANTENNA .... :SALE '38.00
REG. '26.95 CHANNEL MASTER MIRROR MOUNT CB ANTENNA ..... SALE '20.00
REG. '40.75 CHANNEL MASTER MAGNETIC MOUNT CB ANTENNA
SAL-Es30 00
REG. '9.99 CAR RADIO ANTENNA
·
.........
.
REG. '29.95 CHANNEL MASTER "RA'8'8'ii"EARS;;·AMPLiFiER ......... s1:~Es;~-~
:~~· :~~g9~WILDCAT PORTABLE RECORD P~AYER ............. :::::::::SALE s59:00
. , . ·AKAI STEREO RECEIVER .............................. ;....... SALE s194.oo
REG
88 0095GEit:sCHANNEL CB .............................................. SALE '6,.00
REG. '27S
REG. '249.95 AKAI S~N AM/FM w/CASSETTE ........................... SALE '209.00
REG. '18 '00
EAKERS ............................................ SALE '187.00 pr.
REG: '16:98 :~~r J~~~k'j(""""""""""""':.......................... SALE '13.00
REG. '31.95 CB METE . C S....................:............................. SALE '12.00
REG '359 95 CRAIG A\'if"""""'"'""""""""'""""""""""'"'"SALE '23.00
REG: 156.25 SOUNDESIGN ~M~~~I~ER w/SPEAKERS ................ SALE 'ls69.00
42 ·00
REG. '54.98 CRAIG AM/FM DIGITA ORTABLE RADIO ................... SALE s41
REG. '46.95 CRAIG AM/FM DIGITAt CLOCK RADIO ..................:.. SALE , ·00
REG. '80.00 TOSHIBA AM/FI . CLOCK RADIO ...,..... :...... ~ ... SALE s35.00
REG. , • TOSHIBA AI/FI ~UARTZ CLOCK RADIO .................. SALE 60.00
49 95
REG '89
95 CRA GI
. ADIO .......................................... SALE '37.00
REG. '45.00 SOU~DE~~R:·CASSmE RECORDER ........................ SALE '67.00
. .
AM/FM LCD CLOCK RADIO ................. SALE '33.00

....

SHOP TONIGHT

·s_~;!;,~

UNTIL 8:00 ~.M.

Reduced 20%
SUBURBAN COATS
AND WINTER JACKETS

LADIES' BLOUSES

Reduced 20%
MEN'S

CORDUROY PANTS
Reduced 20%

MEN'S LEVI
FASHION JEANS

Reduced_20%

. 1 RACK ·OF
LADIES' SKIRTS
Reduced 40%

·~

MEN'S STRAIGHT LEG
LEVI DENIMS' (~NWASHED)
$1950
-. MINIS
DRESS &amp; CASUAL HATS
Reduced 20%

MIN's nowA sua

LADIES' SUITS
By Jantzen, Albee, levi .

Reduc~d

30%
1

1 RACK OF
LADIES' SLACKS
Red1,1ced 30:%

INSULATED COVERALLS
(Reg.". Long)
•

$4995
,,

!

MEN'S LON&lt;;. SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS
~educed

20%

LAPIES' LEVI
CORDUROY SLACKS .
30% . ·
.· Reduced
.

BAHR QOTHIERS · ~

.'
ol

j'

.•
-.•
••
"•
r.

i,

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••

Chamber President

James R. WI1Uamll
· sy~KELLV

'11mel Seal'nlil SUfi
GAU.IPOLIS - Gradual lmpi'OI(ement In Oallla County's economiC picture this ~ Is foreseen
by the. president ·of the Gallipolis
An!a Chamber of
Willie he agrees signs ct ra:overy
fiU1I tile recession of 198}83 are
being 5een locally, -1ames R.
Wllllams feels that the region wDI
lag six months to a year behind the
rest ct the nation.
• "I'm cauttoosly optimistic,'' wnuams noted. "But we must be

Commerce:

I
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A Multimedia Inc.

New~

aper

Instructions that will enable the agency to Issue the
Instructions to the Treasury Department freeing the
benefit s and sending them to the right bank or person.
"They did it as quickly as possible, " said Brown,
who added, " I don't recall having a problem with that
number of checks In a long time. "
The agency decided not to make any public
announcement about the mix-up. Brown acknowl·
edged the problem In response to a reporter's phone
call prompted by complaints to a newspaper from
people.in Madison and St. Clair counties In southern

3 years ago today: Gallia
County courthouse burns
a~~~~~01-y:!/:O~

of the Gallla County courthouse
was gutted by fire ~ an event
that would alter the relatively
placid course of county

illinois.
"This Involved people who changed banks ... or
representative payees," said Brown, who explained
that some benefits are paid to another party in cases
where beneficiaries are unable to handle their own
funds because of mental or physical impairments.
"In those situations what we have to do Is put a hold
on the old delivery address and create a new delivery
address on the computer tape OJI our beneficiary
records" at Social Security's headquarters outside
Baltimore, Brown said. "The hold took effect , but the
corrections did not ."

Ohio gas
customers
to share
$20million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
operators and purchasers of the
now-idle Cove Point Uquid Natural
Gas Terminal have been ordered by
the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission to return S:Jl mlllion to
natural gas conswners in Ohio.
"This Is a major victory for the
citizens of Ohio, and I have
instructed my staff to begin working
Immediately on a method of
refunding this money to Ohio
natural gas consumers," Ohio
Attorney General Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr. said Friday.
The state pad sued two subsidiarIes of Colwnbia Gas System, Inc.
and the Consolidated Natural Gas
Co. for their handling of the loss of
liquid natural gas to the plant
following an Aprtl 19lll announcement by the Algerian National Oil
and Gas Corp. that it would no longer
deliver natural gas to the Maryland
plant.
The suit alleged that between
April and December 198J, the
companies operating Cove Point
reduced the output from the plant to
a trickle instead of shutting it down.
That allowed them to continue to
recover their operating costs on the
theory that theywerestilldeliverlng
small supplies of liquid natural gas
to their transmission companies,
Celebrezze said.
'
The state claimed that violated
the Natural Gas Act and asked that
Columbia and Consolidated be
required to refund the difference
between their legal "minimal bill"
and the amount they actually
received for the eight-month period.
The FERC agreed that Cove
Point's owners received some $40
million in excess revenue from the
pipeline companies which supply
utility companies, half of which
came from Columbia Gas of Ohio
and East Ohio Gas. The utilities
were able to recover their expenses
by passing-the cost along to their
consumers.

go;:=~ and three floors of
supplement the 169 Board budget
untD the Issue Is resolved.''
In a tetter dated Jan. 3, Canaday
a new courthouse are now under
advised newly appointed 1m Board
construction, and officials are
hoping for a completion date In
Superintendent John Riffe: "Your
March.
'
Jan. 1, 1984 balance Is $992.11l and
pay-lnslntoyourfundtodaywereln
A malfunctioning furnace on
theamountof$4.325.34maklngyour
the third floor of the old
fund balance thlsday$5,318.14."
structure Ignited the building
The $97,678 approved by the
around 9:40 p.m. Jan. 8, 1981,
and within 211 minutes both .
county represents the estimated
revenue E'xpecllld to be generated
upper floors were engulfed In ·
·by the board's·~«•ofllii•A·· ~l..ll'ilb -the_(lrst ~r soon
to follow.
levy. The board will be unable to
draw, or borrow, on that amount
Gaillpolls firemen, assisted by
untU county tax books are opened
several area fire departments,
toward the end of January.
~·~~~the., blaze throughout the
frigid
t. When a grey
Theboard's19&amp;'lbudgetapprop · · morning dawned, all that was
atlon totaled $497,sxl. Of
t
left was a burned-out shell caked
amount, only thOse funds generated
with tee formed by tons of water
by the continuing levy - approximately $97,000- were contributed
poured on the fire during the
nl~~nty offices quickly reor·
through tbe auspices of the county .
The remainder was supplied by
ganlzed and moved Into tempor·
lndeflnltefundlngthroughstateand
ary facUlties, where they refederal grants.
Riffe said Friday that while the
malned untU the spring, when
board was able to meet payroll last
modular buUdlngs were erected
week, the future operations of the
for the commissioners. EMS,
school and workshop remain
probate-juvenile court and 0.0.
uncertain.
Mcln~ Park District.
"We're open now,".. Riffe said,
The health department and
"but, how long w!ll our creditors
county extension services rewaltforpayment...how tongwDiour
main In rented facilities today,
while other offices were moved
::~~ees work without being
Into the new courthouse wing
opened In 1963.
(Continued on page A3)
The remains of the burned
section were razed In April1981,
and for nearly two years, an
empty space remained as a
solemn reminder of what had
once stood In that spot.
An operating levy to build a
new courthouse was soundly
defeated In a special election In
FIRE'S FURY - At the peak ofthe January 8 fire, the waD above the
August 1981, and no action to
rear ealrance to the county courthouse plummets to the ground In a
move ahead on a new building
shower of sparks and bumblg debris.
was taken until early 1983, when
commissioners borrowed more
patient."
Ground was broken for the
ranee claim settlement on the
than $1 mUUon from three local
The reason for the relatively
new
building shortly afterward.
fire.
banks to supplement their !nsu·
·slowW recovery period locally Is the
economy's effect on two Its major
Industries, coal and fanning. While
coal mining activity has picked up In
the past year, farming Is being
effected bythestrengthofthedollar
ment rate subside to the 8.2 percent
WASHINGTON (API- Clvillan 1949, said the B11reau of Labor
on the European market affecting
level last recorded in October 1981.
Statistics.
unemployment fell to 8.2 percent In
exports.
The report said 335,000peoplefound
By
contrast.
the
jobless
rate
fell
Willlamsalsocltedthehealthcare December, culminating the best
only 0.9 percentage point Ill the year jobs In December, while the ranks of
Industry as another factor In the post-recession recovery of any year
the unemployed shrank by 2ll,OOO.
foll&lt;'wlng the 1974-75 recession.
local scene that, like coat, steel and In more than three decades, the
Those classified as "discouraged
Senior Reagan administration
government reported Frtday. Four
finance, Is undergoing changes due
workers"
- no longer counted as
mUUon Americans found work last officials trumpeted the Labor Deto the recession.
unemployed
because they have
partment
report
as
evidence
that
"We're somewhere In the lower- year, but 9.2 million still were
abandoned
the
search for jobs - ·
is
making
good
President
Reagan
to-mld.quartlle on speed In the jobless at year' send.
decreased
by
350,000,
to1.5mllllon In ·
on
his
prol'nlse
to
put
Americans
The total of people holding jobs
recovery,'' he explained. "As long
the
fourth
quarler.
to
work
as
the
nation
recovers
back
as the dollar stays so strong, fanns reached a record 102.9 rnDllon In
Adult men, the traditional family
from the prolonged business slump
December.
w!ll have a difficult time In seillng
benefited most from
breadwinners,
of1981-82.
Labor Secretary Raymond Donograin to European nations, and until
TheAFL-CIOcalled
the
report
"a
the
Improving
job market from
the high-sulfur coal problem Is van said the figures show that "the welcome sign," but said the plight of November to December, when their
Reagan
program
Is
on
target,''
but
solved, Ohio coal won't be readUy
the 9.2 mUUon jobless Americans unemployment rate fell from 7.8
marketable. I do believe this Democratic presidential front- "must be addressed.''
percent to 7.4 percent. These men
ruilller Walter Mondale said unemproblem will be solved."
over
211, who constitute the bulk of
I}Vhlte
House
spokesman
Larry
But wnuams pointed to resur- ployment Is stlll too high.
people
working In heavy manufac·
SpeakeS
said
that
"19&amp;'1
proved
to
be
Since unempk&gt;ynlellt reached a
gence In inlnlng activity as a sign of
turing,
hlid been hardest hit by the
of
promise,"
and
that
the
a
year
the recovery. Southern .Ohio Coal post-Depresilonpeakof10.7percent ou !look for " 1984 Is cause for 1981-82 recession.
Co. called back more than 1,000 of tile labor force In December 1982, optimism. Treasury Secretary DoThe civilian jobless rate for all of
· nilner8 In AprD 1983 following a tile n~te has plunged by 2'h
1983
averaged 9.6 percent, slightly
nald Regan called the latest
.. slx·milnth layoff that affected percentage points. That's the steepbelow
the 9.7 percent level of 1982.
est, one-year decline In the jobless unemployment figures ''one more
employment In the !11-colmty area.
The rate soared tn 1982, held steady
of
the
strength
of
the
signal
rate after a recession since 1950,
"A best giluge of activity Is to
at double-digit levels and then
stand on Route 7 and count the coal when the rate fell 3.7 percentage recovery.''
plunged t~ard the end of 1983. _
Last
month
saw
the
unemploy,points from a 7.9 percent peak In
(Continued on page A3)

Jobless rate decline a sign of recov

1 RACK OF

Reduced
20% .
! 5

•

LADIES' SWEATERS
Reduced 20% to 30%

A county commission memo,
dated Dec. 29, 19&amp;'1. advised Canaday " ... commissioners wUI not

Chamber chief
foresees gradual
local recovery

1/2 Price

MEN'll

who named a different person to handle their benefit s.
Brown said the problem affected beneficiaries In all
parts of the country. He noted the problem affected
only a small number of the system's 36 million
beneficiaries, although he said It Is "outrageous"
when even a single check goes awry.
The agency discovered the problem late last week
and notified Its district offlcles to expect calls from
people complaining their checks were not delivered
or their bank accounts· not credited.
Brown said It has taken a week to rewrite computer

169 Board acts to
force opening of
county coffers

• ~ L.olaft.l'me'

The Eastern Local Board of
Education w!ll hold Its organizational meeting Monday, Jan. 9, at 7
p.m.

9 Sections. 58 Pages 35 Cents

Sunday, January 8, 1984

SocSec miX-up delays 80,000 checks
By CHRISroPHER CONNEU
i\M'Oclaled PreM WrMer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Social Security
Administration said ·Friday that ~.ooo beneficiaries
have not yet received their January checks because of
a mix-up In records.
James Brown, the agency's chief spokesman. said
thecbecks, which should have gone out Tuesday, may
be delivered Saturday.
The victims of the foul-up are people who notified
the agency they wantl!d to switch banks where they
get their benefits on direct deposit, or beneftclarles

Board meeting set

Admitted--Cora Webb, Racine;
Nancy Taylor, New Haven.
Discharged-Paul Schultz, Jr.,
Paul Michael, Diana Tillis, Sheille
Fox, Wald Smith, Ottle Boston,
Victoria Wise.

MiddJeport ~roy-Gallipoli.-Point PleGsant

c.,y......... 1914

Happenings around Meigs County•..

MUSIC DEPARTMENT
-

Bob Hoeflich relates a holiday season spent in
Great Britain-Page B-5

Open door 8e88ion

Trustees organize

James J, Kilpatrick discusses the U.S. withdrawal
from UNFSCO-Page A-2

show 1,487trafflcdeathswlt11Hidue

A chance of rain or snow Swlda,y. PartlY cloudy MoDda,v with a
chance of snow flwTies mlbe nortlleut. ~ fair Tue8day.llllhs
In 1be 40s SuDda,y and from the 3118 to the low 40s Moada,y and
Tue8day. Lows lhrougb the period lllOIIdy In the 208.

--g ~ -

Hearing loss:
local clinic
helps-B-1

The Gallla-Melji Poet ol tlle
Ohloo Highway Pall'()! laat mont!\
Investigated 149 accldentJ 1114
made4!11 arrests In thetwoc:ountlel.
There were no fatalities but 17
people were Injured. There were 38
DWI citations, 414warnlngsand453
motorist assistance given. ·
'
For the ye'ar, trooPers Invest!·
gated 1,211 accidents lncludlna' nine
fatalities In which ·12 people died.
Officers recorded 6, 786 arrests
Including 373for DWI. Atotalol4,L81
warnings anc! 5,(113 motorists were
assisted.
State figures from the Ohio
Department of Highway Satety ·

FREMONT, Ohio - Law enforcement officials In Clyde and
Fremont say a December drug sweep missed the area's big drug
dealers because a pollee Informant got tired.
"There can come a time when you get a multitude of ounce-and
half-ounce sellers," said Fremont Pollee Chief Richard Joseph.
"There are times when your Informant or buyer gets burnt-out, too.':
Clyde Pollee Chief John Scheer said the 3'h-month lnvestlgatlon
reached a point of diminishing returns.

CHll..LICOTIIE, Ohio - The Ross County grand jury w!ll hear
evidence Monday about the death of a newborn baby girl whose body
was found this week In a home near Clarksburg, Sherttf Thomas
Hamman says.
·
The body was found at the home of Robert Ater after his
J.S,yeat-old daughter, Sharon, had been admitted to the Ross County
Medical Center because of hemmorhagtng linked to childbirth
officials had said:
'
The Franklin County coroner was performing an autopsy on the
child, and the state bureau of Criminal Identification and
Investigation In London was analyzing evidence, Hamman said.
A preliminary autopsy report said the child was born alive and had
been -abused, Hamman said. He said the the report Included
evidence of puncture wounds.

Neighbors greet fonner captive--D-1

-V

DEPAR11NG COMMENTS

__.:. l"ressdent RAinald Reagan

lalks to rePorters on the South
Lawn of the White House Friday
shortly hefore departing for a
weekend at the presidential
mreat at Camp David, Md.
Reagan, commenting on a Labor Department report on unemployment, noted that the report
showed that four mllllon Americans have found work since the
unemployment rate hit 10.7
peroont In Declember of 1982.

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•

~nuory 8, 1984

.CommentarY and•perspective
'

.

1he Sunday Tln~~~oSentlnel
Faga A•2
January 8, 1984

I

Weather:-------------.
Snow flurries ending

-·

8y 'Ole Aeeoc!•ted PreM
A weak high pressure system will move Into OhJo durtng the day
and put an end to whatever ll¥lW fluiTies remain.
Another weather system moving toward the Great Lakes from the
Northwest will l!rtng In more snow Saturday night for northern and
eastern parts of the state. A .few flurries wUJ contlnuemmorrow In
eastern Ohio after that system moves to the east of the state.
Early Saturday high pressure extended froln Texas to Indiana.
The hlgh wUJ reach the East Coast tonight.
Low pressure was.over northern MinnesOta early Saturday and
tllere was a cold front from the low to Montana. The low wlll move to
northern Lake MlchlgiUI by early Saturday night and at that time the
cold front wUJ extend from the low to Iowa before curving northwest.
The low wUJ move to Lake Ontario Sunday morning and the 'cold
front wUJ move to the east and south of Ohlo sometime In the
morning. Another cold hlgh wlll spread over the Great Lakes by
Sunday night.

UNESCO pullout_____~J~·::.:.:m-e: : . .:sj~·..K:.:.:il:.c.;ea:.:.:. trrc:.:::.·k~:·
/1~

A Division of

~m:s~

~~

· 825 Third Ave., Ga!Upolls, Ohlo

( 614) 446-2342

ll1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

( 614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WJI..&lt;;ON JR.
· Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The t\..••iSOda&amp;ed Prcs.-4. Inland Dlllly Press A.'isoclatkm IUld the
: American Newspaper Publi~hers A.'il!IOClutlon.
lEITERS OF OPINION are wekomed. th('y should ht• la'i thM 300w~ lonl{. All
letten are subject to ed.Jtinl{ Md must be siR'Jled with nwne, address and telephone nunr
' ber. No wwlgned lf'Ut&gt;rs wiD bt&gt; published. Letters should hfo ln lfCOod taste, addn•s1dng ksues, not personalities.

Giving makes
You feel good
f:ive untU It hurts? That doesn't say It quite right.
lunerlcans give money, time and effort because they want to give,
bl¥:ause they view It as a way to preserve their society, because they
~eve In self-help and mutual obligations, because their religion~ teach
them to.
l:lghty·slx percent of Americans over age 16 are contlibutors to
c~ltles. The average annual contribution by farnllles Is about $360, and
fapulles with incomes under $2il,OOl provide one-half of all Individual
versus Institutional giving.
tven farnllles with Incomes under $5,00l, which almost certainly means
~ir needs exceed their abilities, give an average of $230 a year, helping to
swell the total of giving and volunteering to more than $100 billion a year.
~lnety percent of giving is by Individuals, with corporations and
foGndallons accounting for a mere 5 percent each.
:;orne people are inclined to disbelieve the pervasiveness of voluntary
e~rts and some are Inclined to think some of the figures might be
ellilggerated for Income tax reasons.
lresearch, however, shows a ''slippage'' btftween claims and receipts of
o~y 2 percent, says Brian O'Connell, president of the Independent Sector, a
ruttonal coalition of voluntary organlza lions, foundallons and
c&amp;pora lions.
P'Conneli, source of most of the figures used here, wants Americans to
f~l good about their voluntary performance, and so the Independent
sector and the Advertising Council have launched an upbeat ad campaign
1984.
:p•eonnell maintains the Independent sector - the third sector, lying
biitween the public and private sectors- Is extremely healthy today. Not,
hit says, that "organizations are well-to-do," but that the voluntary Impulse
IS;grow!ng.
: ~vlng Individuals In 1982 contributed $48.69 bllllon, and left another $5.45
billion In bequests. Foundations gave $3.15 bllllon, and corporations $3.1
billion. for a total of $60.39 billion.
~Plvlng, of course, Is only part of the story, and perhap~ not the larger
P!lrt- Volunteers donated 8.4 bllllon hours of time and skills, which the
i:!itUup organization estimated to be worth about $64.5 bllllon.
~':rn the past 15 years, says O'Connell, the number of .volunteer outlets has
J¢nped. with the development of 6,00l to 7,® bosplces for the terminally
Jl!: mutual help organizations for victims of diseases, conservation causes,
W!&gt;men's rights; Hispanic rights, Immigrant rights, nuclear power control.
:So many organizations and causes that O'Connell observes that "people
to;XJay are organized to deal with every conceivable human condition."

tot

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J.udge questions
pew liability law
:liamllton County Municipal Court judges are Inclined toagreewlth two
C6lumbus judges that the state's new financial responsibility law for
&lt;!l:tvers may be unconstitutional.
:IJ'wo Franklin County judges have ruled it unconstitutional arid a survey
ot: the Cincinnati judges indicates they feel the same.
·:The law went Into effect Jan.1. It requires defendants in traffic cases that
ci!rry mandatory court appearances to prove, through insurance or other
means, that they can meet personal injury liability of up to $25,&lt;XXJ and
PJX&gt;perty damage of up to $7,500.
•
·:Without such proof, the law says judges are to suspend a motorist's
diivlng rights for 90 days and confiscate vehicle registration
and license
.

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$~-

•The two judges In Columbus said Tuesday that the law. is
ul)constltutlonal because It requires them to act as agents of the state
Bilreau of Motor Vehicles, violating the separation of the branches of
glivernn\ent
•:J. Howard Sundermann, presiding judge in Hamilton County, said
'1ftere Is considerable similar sentiment" among the 14 judges In
1\tunlclpal Court In Cincinnati.
'The Hamilton County judges met last week to discuss the new law and Its
ram !fica !Ions, Sundermann said. However. none of the local judges has
ruled on It yet because Its constitutionality hasn't been questioned in their
courtrooms.
"If and when that argument comes up here, I wouldn't be surprised to
see a similar ruling," Judge Sylvia Hendon said.
For a ruling on the law's constitutionality to be accepted around Ohlo, a
case will have to be brought to the Ohio Supreme Court.
Ms. Hendon said the new law Is awkward because It allows people who
Jose their driving privileges In court to appeal the decision to the Ohlo
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, an administrative agency.
"With laws Involving all of the other administrative agencies in the state.
It Is the other way around. You appeal administrative rulings up from the
agency to the courts," she said. "This one works backwards."

Today in

hi~tory

.

Today Is Suhday, Jan. 8, the eighth day ofl984. There are 358 days left In
the year.
&lt;&gt;
Today' s highlight In hlstocy:
On J~ . 8, 1815, U.S. forces under Gen. Andrew Jackson defeated the
British In the battle of New Orleans- the closing engagement of the War of
1812.
On this date:
In 1642, the Italian astronomer Gallleo died. .
In 1918, President WoodrOw Wilson outlined hls 14 points for peace after
World War I.
In 1959, Charles de Gaulle was proclaimed the first president of France's
Fifth Republlc.
_ In 19611, a massive cold wave sent tempera)ures below zero In 35 states.
Only F)orlda and H!~W{Ill had readings above freezing.
And In 1981, President-elect Ronald Reagan said he'(! feel tree to take a
dltterent negotiating stance from President Jimmy Carter's If the ·
Amerfcan hostages In Iran were not released 1&gt;9 the time he iook office.

WASHINGTON - The Reagan
administration took a splendid step
In foreign affairs last week when It
formally advised the tlnpot tyrant
who runs UNESCO that the United
States Is getting out of the organiza·
lion. High time! We should have
withdrawn long ago.
In a 'world perplexed by truly
serious afflictions, the United Nations Education, Scientific and
Cultural Organization may seem no
more than a chigger bite on the
body politic. But the other side of
that proposition Is that, just because
we cannot cure the cancer of
nuclear arms, we need not Ignore
an Irritating Itch.
None of the components of the
United States - not even that vast
and windy arena known as the
General Assembly - has been
more Irksome than UNESCO.
Under the despotic administration
of Director General AmadouMahter M'Bow of Senegal, the
outfit long since has abandoned Its

original commitment to an lmpar·
.
The area of "communications" solidarity."
tlal exchange of "Ideas and know!· provides an example. Surely If
UNESCO's charter said, "Since •
edge" among the nations of the nations are to understand one wars begin In the minds of men, It Is :
world. Owen Harries, who served In another they must communicate In the minds of men thatthe defense :
1982-83 as Australia's representa· freely. But under M·Bow, the Idea • of peace must be .constructed. :
tive to UNESCO, has termed It p_f free communication has been From that flexible springboard, the •
"beyond question, the m06t vlru· summarily dumped. Now the Idea agency has leaped Into areas of :
lently anti·Arnertcan - and most Is to 1\llve each nation control Its arms control and disarmament r
Inefficient and wasteful - member own press. Reporters and editors that are far removed from educa. •
of the United Nations system."
·
would be licensed. Those who failed lion, science and culture.
In an essay prepared last October to write constructively of their
Everything that UNESCO :
for the Heritage Foundation, Har- governments- those who were not touches, says Ambassador Harrl!5, :
les elaborated on UNESCO's drift "responsible" - would have their tends to get politicized. In these :
Into "a consistent and mallgnant licenses revoked, so much tor rhetorical conflicts, the United ;
anti-Western bias." Chartered objectivity, truth and the free States Is always wrong and the
along with the United States In 19!15, exchange of Ideas and knowledge.
Third World Is always right.
the agency at first stuck to Its
Debates have become a game of •
In the area of. economic pollcy,
cultural and educational purposes. UNESCO consistently deprecates bear·baltlng. The object of the sporl •I
Chartered along with the United the marketplace and exists the role
has been to see how far Uncle Sam ;
Nations In 1945, the agency at first of an "economic order" Imposed by could be provoked.
,
stuck to Its cultural and educational governments. The Idea that lndlvld·
President Reag,n's notice of •
purposes. There was no great uals have human right somehow
Impending withdrawal should put a •
conflict between East and West. has yielded within UNESCO to the
damper on the tun and games. The :
But with the United Nations' rapid edoctrlne of collective rights. Thus
United States pays about one-fourth •
expansion through the creation ot the murky concept has grown that
Qf UNESCO's budget. (M'Bow has :
Third World membe~_.all-1li'at all peoples have "the light to
proposed outlays of $376 mllllon for ;
changed.
__...-1984-85, nearly a third of It to be ·
cultural Identity" and a "right of
spent on administration of hls ·
wasteful headquartgers In Parts.) '
No other Western. nations are likely
to make up for the loss of the U.S.
contributions; the Soviet Union, for
Its part, enjoys the anti·Amelican
sport but L~ notoriously Indifferent
about paying for Its U.N. amusements. The happy prospect Is that a
year hence, when our actual
secession takes 1Jlace, u~·s .
.
~
raucous and Insulting voice will
dwindle to an almost Inaudible yelp.
The president •s action sets all .
kinds of pleasant Ideas In motion. If
the United States could get out of
the International Labor Organization, -whleh we did for a whlie, and If
the United States can get oot of
UNESCO In 1985, how about .
focusing on a larger target? The .
time may not be ripe for getting the ·
United States out of the United
Nations, but we ought to think
seriously about getting the United
Nations out of the United Slates.

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tiY,JS.'

'Invent' a black._________J~a~ck~A~nd~e~rso~n
WASHINGTON - As the birth·
day of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
approaches, President Reagan's
re-electon team Is trying to figure
out a way to convince the country's
blacks that the administration Is
really dedicated to civil lights.
In their desperation the Republicans will consider any suggestion even the bizarre one offered by
Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. He has
advised the president to "Invent
new black leaders" who wUI
support administration PQlicles.
Crazy as that may sound, the Idea
was actually tried :In years ago, not
by a political party, but by the
autocratic director of Jhe FBl, J.
Edgar Hoover. He tried to "Invent"
a black leader to replace King,
whom he was determined to
destroy. Here's the strong story:
Hoover considered King a dangerous radical, a subversive Influence who would tear apart the

Death

fabric of American society If he lng bowls of homemade soup at his
weren't stopped. He detested the home In Sugar HUI, N.H., Sullivan
black leader more than he loathed still expressed wonderment that
any .;&gt;ther national figure of that ·Hoover thought he had enough .
Pra, with the possible exception of power to pick King's successor once
thE\., black leader had beep
the late Robert Kennedy.
Hoover set out to ruin King. He disgraced.
The man Hoover picked was a
Qrdered his agents to tap King's
phones, had him kept under former prosecutor and.judge who at
constant survelllance and compiled the time was with a prestigious New
a voluminous tue of gossip and York law firm. He had graduated
half-baked accusations against with honors and earnled hls law
King.
degree at Cornell, done -advance
In his delusion, Hoover was studies at Yale and gotten a
confident not only that he could master's degree In tax law at New
destroy King, but that he could even . York University.
Hoover's candidate had been a
chOOse his successor. He made hls
selection and ordered his No. 3 tough assistant district attorney
man; William Sullivan, to conduct a and a capable assistant · U.S.
secret Investigation of Hoover's attorney for the southern district of
New York. A law school professor,
candidate.
Sullivan told my associate Les he had done stints with the Labor
Whitten about his weird assign- Department and a House Judiciary
ment not long before he died In a subcommittee. Ail Important' point:
1977 hunting accident. Over steam· He had done enough civil rights

work to earn the respect at least of
moderate blacks.
Hoover, Sullivan recalled, was
"bowled over" by the happy results
ofthelnvestlgation. Rut the oldman
was canny enough not to·approach
hls choice, knowing It would taint
hlm In the eyes of civil lights
leaders.
Instead, using the same undercover techniques with which he
hoped to destroy King, Hoover
planned to use FBI contacts In and
outside the civil rights movement to .
bulld support for his candidate
without the FBI's hand showing,
Sullivan said.
.
Hoover died without ever telling .
his nominee what he had been
plotting In the man's behAlf. It was .
only when President Reagan .
named him secreta!)' of Housing
and Urban Development that Sa·
muel Riley Pierce learned of hls
peculiar "honor."

squads~,;__________:..;..W...:.::.il.:.:..:lia;;.:_:m_.:;_F_:_.B::.. .:.uc:.. .:. .k.:. :. .:ley..L.:. _Jr.

It may be vain even to hope, but
thls being the season of good will, I

write these words hoping I will not
be Identified as favoring death
squads In El Salvador.
ln discussing the business of
terroriSts and death squads and
U.S. policy In general last week,
Time magazine emphasized an
intensifying U.S. consensus. It
wrote that Vice President George
Bush "was In El Salvador for just
seven of his warnings about 'these
right-wing fanatics' were stark and
powerful. 'Your cause Is being
undermined by the murderous
violence of reactionary minorities.'
he said to an_ assembly of -the
country's politicians and military
men '(that) poisons the well of
friendship between our countries.
(Do not) make the mistake of
thinking that there Is any division In
my country on thls question.' "
Now let us concede that the death
squads are composed primarily of
sadistic opportunists who, taking
cover In the civil war, pursue their
acquisitive and sanguinary Inter·
ests relatively unmoleslel! because
of the preoccupation of civil
authority with that civil war. Is It a
strategically decisive question that
they a!'ll unregulated? One on .
which plausibly hangs the queslton
whether we shoul!l aid the govern·
ment of El Salvador? ·
One's Instinctive feeling In the
matter (perhaps I should not go so
far as Mr. Bush by suggesting that
the!'ll Is "no division In my country
on the question") Is that the world
would be better off If a dozen
Salvadoran _government sharpshooters, In the middle of the night,
were to visit . the homes of the
leaders of the 'death squBcts and, In
the brisk style of Charles Bronson In

the movie "Death Wish.'' simply do
away with them. To be sure, there
would then be those who accused El
Salvador of commissioning a super
death. squad; but we would leave
that discussion to the American
Civil Liberties Union to fret over,
and go to sleep a little bit more
peacefully for the knowledge that
the country we were sending
military and economic aid to was
not co-existing peacefuly with
squads of men who go out at night
and murder missionary nuns. ·
But what one must guard against
Is the notion that our alliance with
the government of El Salvador Is a
function of Its civilized depor!rnent.
A generation ago we joined hands
with Joseph Stalin, whose entire
government one might charitably
refer to as a death squad. He would
not have welcomed any advice on
how to reform Gulag; which
advice, for the record, nobody In the
government of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt felt any compulsion to
tender.
Twenty years later, we began
telling President Diem In VIetnam
to amend hls ways sufficiently to
keep Buddhist monks from Immolating themselves In protest against •
hls politics. What we ended up with,
In due course, was the boat people.
.A half~n years ago we
decided we. had ·better begin
ruMing Iranian Internal policies,
and began Inveighing aglllnst the
(demonstratedi crueltl~ of the
•.~l'e:!leRtatlve of the Shah of Iran.
In due COUI'!Ie we g(,t the ayatollah,
· Ten days ago, the newly elected
president of Argentina lndlcled a
handful of military tlgures whom
he wUJ hold respol181ble for. the 6,(XX)
''desapareC!clos" wasted durtng
, Argentina's civil war. This grand

gesture toward a historical reconciliation between Argentina and
justice does not belle the chronological point, namely that at a time the
Argentina death squads were operating, either the government could
not, or If It could, chose not, to
Impede their activity. And now
Argentina Is being run by a
democratic government.
It would be glib to suppose that
they would' necessarily have come
alxiut If the counterrevolutionary
activities against the Montoneros
had been conducted according to
rules of warfare that nowadays
satisfy the., refined consciences of
American congressmen. Argentina
-Is In the hands of democrats, not

totalitarians. How that came to be ·
Is a subtle q1,1est1on, deserving of
subtle analysis.
We are In El Salvador because Its ·
government, for all its Impurities, Is
geopolitically a!Ued with us In the
great cosmic effort,ln the great
·cosmic effort,J,n the great cosmic
effort, however dlshi!veled, to give
freedom and democracy and de- :
cency a chance against the commu•.
nlst monolith . To suggest that u.s:
support should be contingent on El
Salvador's regulation of Its grisly ..
death squads Is, simply, to miss the .
point; and to Invite to pliiii!'CY 1n:
the formulation of foreign policy
considerations that are, simply,.
extrinsic to strategic U.S. concerns ...

...

.'

Luerphoto).

Extended OJtio forecast
MONDAY TiiROUGH WEDNESDAY :
Fair on Monday. Rain changing to snow and turning colder
Tuesday. Parity cloudy Wednesday with a chance of flurries
northeast. Highs In the :Kls r.,onday, the :ns and low 40s Tuesday and
the 20!i to low :Kls Wednesday. Lows 10-:ln early Monday In the 20!i
Tuesday and $-15 Wednesday.

D_ems seek convention delegates
By DALE LEACH
Aooocl11ed PreM Wrtler
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Ohio
Democrats plan a statewide cam·
palgn to tell party members how
they can become delegates to the
1984 Democratic National Convention, but warn there are some
changes In store.
Party Chairman James Ruvolo
told a news conference Friday that
state Democratic officials will meet
with candidates' committees, local
party leaders and labor groups in
the coming weeks to explain
changes In the 1984 delegate
selection plan that could catch some
potential delegates by surprise.
A major change, Ruvolo said, Is
this year's requirement that potential delegates tue forms declaring
their Intentions by Jan. 31. The
forms are to be flied with the state
coordinators for the candidate the
delegate supports.
"You cannot just show up at the
caucus Feb. 9 and expect to be a
candidate," Ruvolo said.
Of the state's 175 delegates to the
convention, 105 wtll"'lt' elected at
caucuses In Ohio's 21 congressional

districts. Thirty-five wlll be elected
at -large~ on the results of the

May 8 primacy, and another 35 wUJ
Include party officials at the state
and local levels.

Chamber chief.. L..-_(_Co_ntln_u_ed_fro_m_pa_g_e

AI_)

trucks," WUllams said .. "Also, for
the first time In months, I saw an

AEP boat active on the river."
Increased mining business has
been caused In part by .a higher
demand for power, said WUJ!ams,
president of Central Trust Co.'s
Gallipolis bank.
Although unemployment In Gall Ia
County rose nearly a full percent ln
December. Wllllams said that
doesn't Indicate a trend, calling the
jobless Increase "a general aberration," he said.
Williams advised that In hls own
organization, economic activity Is
gauged on a quarterly rather than
monthly Indicators.
While proposed construction of
the new Gallipolis Locks and Dam Is
seen as a positive economic factor,
Williams repeated hls concerns that
11\e project's beginnings won't be
labor-Intensive.
"The dam wUJ be a factor, If

Congress releases the money," he
said. "The construction period wlll
show an · lntlux of --new people In
general In the area looking for
housing. But remember, It 's only
temporal)', with most of the time
spent moving earth, at first. I
wouldn't hang my hat on the
construction period of that dam."
The county Issued Industrial
revenue bonds In September for
construction of a slate product plant,
to be erected near the Kyger Creek
power plant. The plant, to be
operaled. by H .B. Reed lie Co.,
Highland, Ind. , Is expected to
employ around a dozen people.
"It's going ln. but I don't know
what kind of tlmetabte they're on,"
Wllllams noted. "We're delighted to
have them, and although It will be
semi-automated and won't draw on
labor, but ltwUJaddtaxdollarstothe
county."

ATTENTION
All Residents of Gallia,
Meigs &amp; Mason Counties
THE ALL NEW OHIO VALLEY PHONE BOOK IS NOW
BEING DELIVERED "FREE OF CHARGE" THROUGHOUT YOUR
COUNTY. THIS PHONE BOOK IS FREE TO ALL (EVEN THOSE
WITHOUT PHONE SERVICE). IT CONTAINS YELLOW PAGE ADVERTISING FROM ALL THREE COUNTIES-AND WHITE PAGE TELEPHONE
NUMBERS DIVIDED INTO THREE SECTIONS, YOUR NUMBER WILL
BE LISTED IN THE BOOK ACCORDING TO WHICH COUNTY YOU LIVE
IN. THE EDGE OF THE WHITE PAGES ARE TABLED FOR EASY REFERENCE.

.. __________

169 Board

..____

Riffe described the current financial condition of the agency as· 'very
dltflcult...we're surviving on a
day·to-day b.lSis."
"A number of our grants are
based on services rendered)" Riffe
continued, "we can' t get the grant
untU the service Is performed ...we
&lt;i!m't perform the service without a
base of funds.' '

(Continued from page All

upon the board of county commissioners a mandatory duty to levy
taxes and make approplia tlons
sufficient to enable the county board
of mental retardation and deVelopmental dlsabUitles to perform Its
functions and duties as provided In
the ~ .. (ORC) .
In that June court action, the 169
Board asked for a ruling declaring
the county has a legal obligation to
fund Its programs.
"The mandatory duties Imposed
upon the county commissioners.''
Burkhart wrote In hls decision,
"requires funds and financing
sufflclent...to provide the services
WASHINGTON (AP) ...,. Rep.
"I thought I would take a shot at mandated by the Deparlrnent of
Douglas Applegate, D-Ohlo, says he trying to bring It down to the coal Mental Retardation and Developdid hls best In trying to persuade a regions," Applegate said. "That's mental Disabilities In so far as such
rongresslonal subcommittee to where the problem Is That's where funds are available."
51;hedule an acid rain field hearing In the economic effects are going to be , In mid-November, reacting to a
request by the county to reopen the
the heart of Ohlo coal country.
felt.
question,
Burkhart refused to re· The next hearing Is scheduled for
Acid rain has been blamed for
hear
the
case.
Jan. 191n Cleveland. Applegate had killing fish In hundreds Qf lakes and
The county commission has
a,sked that ltbeheldlnSt.Clalrsvllle. streams In the northeastern United
States and eastern Canada. Many maintained that the judge's ruling
scientists point the finger at was "contradictory and vague" and ,
Lottery winning
sulfur-dioxide emissions from coal- failed to specify the county's exact
numbers: 772, 4974
burning power plants In the Mldw· obligation In the funding of such
est, but opponents of acid rain programs.
· CLEVEJAN.D (AP) - The C?ntrolleglslatlon say It could result
wiMlng number drawn Friday ·,
In skyrocketing ·electric rates and
nl&amp;bt In lhe Ohio Lottery's dally lost
jobs In the coal fields .
game, "The Number," was 772.
Several
acid rain contro meaIn the "Pick 4" game, · Played .
sures
are
pending In the House
Monday through Friday; the 'win·
Energy
and
CommerceConimlttee.
nlng numbe~ was 4974.
"Something has to be done," he
added, "we are asking the county to
tulflll their obllgatlon ... to abide by
the law."
Ruling on a Junf.' 1983 action
brought by the board against the
county, Judge George F. Burkhart
wrote In hls October 1983 decision:
" ... (the Ohio Revised Code) ... places

.. .

Acid rain hearing
set for Cleveland

IF YOU DO NOT RECEIVE YOUR FREE COPY OF THIS BOOK BY
JANUARY 20TH PLEASE CALL:
IN MEIGS COUNTY
IN GALLIA COUNTY
992-7760
446 -3041 OR 446 "0088 AND IN MASON COUNTY, W. VA.
675-6256, 8 A.M.-3 P.M.
THESE NUMBERS ARE INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO OBTAIN ONE.

CHAMPION
DIRECTORIES, INC.
122 WOODLAWN. BOX 22
,
NORWALK, OHIO 44867 - (419) 668-12110

·ca .

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a•••••••••
· 0'S 1I FISH 1c' FRIES
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a •reat little sealood plaee II ~e~~!e.
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"He's probably ranting and raving about· the
liberal press right now, wherever he Is!"

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Good at locattono

lloted

Gallipolis ,.Only

· 900 Second Ave.

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FI.SH 8c FRIES

$1 ·so

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Two tender1ish lit'iels,
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natural cut french fries
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and 2_ southern style hush
pupp1es.
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Two tender fish fillets.
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FISH Be FRIES

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FISH ·8c FRIES natural
Two tender fish fillets,
11
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j, yout order doel not
preMnt thlo coupon to I
tnedrlverlorl2.ooo" 1
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One coupon per pizza.

.arrfve within 30 mlnut-.

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FOR
ONLY
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PHON,E 446-4040
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11 A.M. 'TIL 3 P.M. ONLY

II 30 .m· In uta
I1 gU&amp;r&amp;nt 88

1-22-84 _•

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$499
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COUPON
Twotenderllshflllets.
natural cut french fries
and2.soulhernstylehush

1

,., ANY 2 ITEM SMALL PIZZA
AND 2 PEPSI
.

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25% OFF

By The Aaloctated PreM
Temperatures dipped to freezing over the lower Great Lakes and
upper Ohlo Valley Saturday, reaching well below zero across lower
Michigan. Rain was scattered over much of Maine, changing to
snowshowers across central New England and extending across
New York Into northern Pennsylvania. Light rain continued over the
northern half of the Pacific Coast and Into northern Nevada.
Almost a third of an Inch of rain fell In Seattle. Rain could help
break up the Ice jams on rtvers In Washington, and flood -warnings
due to the Ice jams remained In effect on the Methow, the
Slmllkameen and the Okanogan rivers.
The National Weather Service reported that the first lightning of
1984 on the Atlantic Coast occured at New Bern, N.C. during the early
morning.
Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged from ·8
below zero ln Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., to 68 In Key West, Fla.

LUNCH-·sPECIAL

••
I

1928 JEWELRY

The nation's weather

WEA111ER FORECAST - The National Weather Service
forecut for Sunday predlca rain for the PacUic Northwest with
Duntea foreculed for Moalana, pam of Wyoming and South
Dakota. Rain Ill also foreceeted for parta of coutaJ Texas. ( AP

Berry's World

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Nahonat Wcathc' !--.1·t v1u ·
NOAA. U S DL1 &gt;1 ul ConuHt•lt .l '

....,.

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The Sunday n.......Sentinei-Page A-3

PometOy-Middleport:-Gallipolls, a,1o Point Pleasant, W. Va.

$1 50

I

Use these coupons one at a time o~ an at once.
Either way You'll get four delicious m,eals fot ,only $6.00

1 FOR
•
1 ONLY
..~;';:!·ii&gt;eotol
01' diiCOUI'It '
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and 2 southern style hush
puppies.

Ca~tala
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lot potltctpotlng Copt. D'ij.

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Times-Sentinel

1914

Ohio-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

Utility ,warns stockholders·
of Zimmer plant's cost
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Day·
ton Power &amp; Light Co. is telllng
shareholders It can't estimate how
expensive It wUl be to finish the
Zimmer nuclear power plant, but
that the final cost may be "slgnlfl·
cantly higher" than Cincinnati Gas
· &amp; Electric's projection.
"Studies by DP&amp;L's consultants
suggest that the CG&amp;E schedule for
completion Is optimistic and therelore that the total cost Is likely to be
significantly higher than the new
. CG&amp;E estimate," DP&amp;L officials
said In a Nov. 10 report to its
shareholders.
CG&amp;E's est imate, provided by
Bechtel Power Corp., Is a final price
of$3.1 million for the Moscow, Ohio,
nuclear plant, with a completion
date In 1986. 'J'he.Dayton utility owns
· 31.5 percent of the project.
. CG&amp;E President William Dickhoner· has maintained that the
:J3echtel estimate would prove
correct. However. he conceded the
Cost of borrowing funds for comple: lion would be higher because of
· l9wered bonding rates for the

utilities.
"Until ail options are evaluated, II
(DP&amp;L) Is unable to estimate when
Zimmer will be placed In service or
the final completion cost of the
station.'' the DP&amp;L report said.
The optlonDP&amp;Lofflclalsseemto
favor is converting Zimmer into a
gas-burning facUlty, with possible
conversion to coal later. DP&amp;L
President Peter Forster said
DP&amp;L's studies have shown the
conversion could be done for about
$35o million and would take about 28
months. The cost of finishing
Zimmer as a nuclear plant would be
about $1.5 billion, according to
Bechtel's cost study.
DP&amp;L officials denied reports
that theutllltybelleves that completIng Zimmer as a nuclear plant could
be delayed until as Ia te as 1~ and
that the cost could climb to $5.3
billion.
"We have not made any new
estimate of the probable cost of
Zimmer," said DP&amp;L treasurer
Allan Hlll. " We are not In a position
to do that."

- A Michigan decision to stop a
utWty company from burning
high-sulfUr coal dug out of the
Sunnyhlll Mine here has left county
otflclals hoping that a 600-acre
industrial park wUI help save Perry
County's economy.
Engineer T. Charles Wilson says
the park will be located on
strll&gt;-mlned land donated by Sunnyhill's owners, the Peabody Coal Co.
Announcement of the park was
made Thursday night during a
meeting of city and county leaders
with state otflclals.
The Sunny hill Mine is threatened
with closing because its biggest
customer, Consumers Power Co. of
Jackson, Mlcli., has been ordered by
the state of Michigan to stop burning

Sunny hill's high-sulfur coal by Dec.

31.
Wilson and other Perry County
leaders stressed that the Industrial
park was- on tap before the
threatened mine closing.
Wilson said the county Is looking
for small Industries and is offering
them low-priced natural gas, access
to rall facWties about 1,(XX)feet north
of the Industrial park, good roads
with an Interstate highway about 15
lnlles to the north and a readily
available, eager work force.
The Industrial park's first res!·
dent Is expected to be the Ohio
National Guard, which Is Interested
In 110 acres for a new armory
combining separate armories at
New Lexington and Zanesville. The
armory would 6e buUt In 1985 at the

Judge on trial January 18
·. TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - U.S.
::District Judge Nicholas Wallnski
::will appear In Toledo Municipal
· .Court Jan. 18 to answer a charge of
·drlving under the Influence of
:alcohol.
;; Watlnski declined comment Fri: day about his arrest, which came
·'Thursday evening following a
:. three-car accident on a main
:. thoroughfare near downtown.
· · Asked whether he would request a
:: jury trial, he said, "I don't know. I
:: haven't thought thatfar ahead yet."
:' A pollee report said results of the
· breathalyzertest taken byWallnski
: showed a reading of 0.271 percent
: alcohol level In the blood. Under
:. Ohio law, an alcohol blood level of
· ·0.10 constitutes a presumption of
:: Intoxication.
. Watlnski, 63, was nominated for
· the federal bench in Toledo by
:, President Richard Nixon on Oct. 8,
:: 1970. At the time, Wallnski was a
:. Lucas County Common Pleas Court
· judge.
: Watlnski's car hit the rear of a car
: In front of 11, which pushed that car
: Into another car, according to the

pollee report.
There were no injuries from the
accident, pollee said. Wallnski
struck his head on the windshield of
his· car but required no treatment,
pollee said.
Lt. William Kolinski of the Toledo
pollee said Watlnski was cited for
drlvlng under the Influence and
failure to assure safe, clear distance. Watinski was released to a
federal marshal, who took him
home.
Wallnski also served as a Toledo
Municipal Court judge and was an
assistant city law director and
assigned as police prosecutor In the

1950s.

The possibility. of delays In
Bechtel's schedule Is the reason
DP&amp;L officials warned shareholders that Zimmer costs might
climb above the $3.1 billion level.
"You look at the Bechtel timetable and you see that there is a whole
list of assumptions - assumptions
that certain things wUI happen by
certain dates," Hill said. "U those
things don't happen, there wlU be
delays, and all we are saying Is that
delays are going to be costly."
How much the possible delays
would add to the final cost of
Zlmmer would depend on the nature
o!_the delays, Hill said.
"Nobody has a crystal ball good
enough-to be able to tell how much
that would be, other than to say It
would be costly," Hlll said.
CG&amp;E, DP&amp;L and the •third
Zimmer partner, Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co., are
holding meetings to discuss the
Zimmer project. Theoptlonsopento
the utilities, as one !lnanclal analyst
put it, are"TheThreeC's-Cancel,
Convert or Complete."

HALF
HAM

BONELESS .

SUPERIOR'S 12 oz.

WIENERS

$169

SUPERIOR'S
REG. OR THICK

BACON

LB.

}2 9

NEW TREATMENT - Dr. W. King Engel answers reporters
.....,_ during a preM conference Friday momlng In Los Angeles
where II wu
that a new treatment for amyotrophic lateral
~ "Lou Gebrlg'a dllleaae" could be on the market In two to three
yean. Dr. l!'.qel lUted that tbe drug called thyrotropin-releasing
honnoDe helpB reduce the symptoms of the dl.sease and Is not a cure for

99¢

-•need

$}49

New drug eases pain
from Gehrig's disease

... S52 .80

SINGLE COPV
PRICE
35 Cent s

No susc rlption s by mall permit ted In

available.

380Z.

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The Sunday Tlmes -Senl\n('l will not
bf&gt; responslblf:' for advance pay ment s

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only
One :v£&gt;ar . ......................... $20 .80
Six month s ....................... 10.40
Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln"lde Ohio
52 Weeks ... .......... ....... ...... $51.48
26 Woeks .....
.. .... $27.30
13 Weeks ..
.. .................. $14 .04

Rales Outside Ohio
52 Weeks .
.. .............. $56 .16
26 Weeks ............................. $29 .64
13 Weeks .. .........
.. ..... $15 .21

4 BYPIECETHE

$] 99

59¢
2/79¢

8-16
BTLS.

NAPKINS

LUCK'S
BEANS

24 oz.

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK GAL.

~~~ER y, GAL
PREGO

99¢

or~

JAR

·CORN .
CHIP·S

'

INSTANT COFFEE

.

· 10

ORANGE
DRINK

59

oz. $' 99

at..

Sister Dolores · Kreshak, 57,
Naon, was on her way to Parma to
hetp~foraslckrelatlvewhenthe

APPLES

POTATOES

3 LB.
~AG

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69¢

20 LB.

,·

,,

DAILY

~(lnfonUII

LUNCHEON

CholO

SPEQALS

COMI'liTI DINNEI MENU
OIIINTAL DICOI
OPEN 7 DAY$ A WIIK

.-------------.,--...,...-!

rFURNITURE
GALLERIES

Mein

RESERVATIONS
fiiDU
. &amp;

U.TIIID.U

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WINTER SALE
'

ON ALL CUSTOM

Annt\

'(IS)'

DRIVERS EDUCATio••11
CLASSES
START JANUARY 16
5 P.M. UL 7 P.M.

WIN DOW TREATMENTS

.S·AVE 20°/o

..
GAUl · LIS
PHONE 446-0699

•DRAPERIES
•SHEERS
•FANCY TREATMENTS

•WOVEN WOODS
•VEROSOL St-tADES
•LEVOLOR BUNDS

•PADDED CORNICES
•WOOD BUNDS
•VERTICAL BUNDS

;.,:...:...:~S;A;_;LE:-E;N;D~S;_;FE;,B,::. .;15;.T;.H,...-_:A~LL~P;R;IC;E~S;.:I~N~C;LU~D~E~P;;;R;;;O;;;F;;;E:-;;S:;;S;;IO;;;NuA~LiitN.;;So;T;;;A'iiLLAi"i\-iT1ifo\iiN~I\
Any treatment you have seen or can imagine
Tope's has the means. ideas and installation
professionals.

The staff at Tope's will help you with
every decision you need to make to
have the most practical and beautiful
windows you can imagine! Tope's will

measunt, help you select from hundreds
and hundreds of fabric choices, install
the Traverse Rods and Drapery then
professionally steam them to elegant
perfection.

ASK ABOUT OUR NEW
ENERGY EFFICIENT
THERMAL LININGS!

ELEGANT SHEERS

KINGSBURY HOMES
1100 E.

Main St.
PH.

REDUCED

Pomeroy
992-7034

or

20 /0

QjFOR THIS
SALE

l
:

Beautiful. Elegant, Sheer
Drapery

992-6248

HAVE APIZZA AND ~EER PARTY
AT THE MEIGS INN BAR
AND LOUNGE

CUSTOM OR IN -STOCK

REDUCED

ORDER AN ORIGINAL PIZZI1 SHACK PIZZA (EAT.JN OR OUT.)
4 P.M. TO 12 MIDNIGHT ·

F.URNITURE
GAlLERIES

MEI.GS.-I'NN ,AN~- p:liZA. SHACK
1261aln St.

1

.: 992-3629

992.·6674
,,

.Pomero·

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BEDSPREADS

ENJOY BIG SCRE!N TV 'OR DANCE
TO.THE JUKE BOX

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Aeservotlons

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$289
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z .......
IIIIIO.t.' TliiiU
TliUISO.t

b\1 our ex-

(AT NO EXTRA CHARGE )

OPEN 'EVERY EVENING

BAG

CARRY OUT

ct'lef.

·}1~.
.. ~~~~~~

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LETTUCE

Oriental
favorites

HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 8;30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Sunda~ 1_
: 00 to 5:30 p.m .

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MA'INE ·

Ambulance Service
8 A.M. til 12 Midnight
24 Hour Service
Saturday &amp; Sunday

ro yovr otder

F.H.A. V.A. and CONVENTIONAL FINANCING
Low Down Payment-Low Monthly Payments
ON SECTIONAL or MODULAR HOMES
IF YOU QUALIFY-NO DOWN PAYMENT

a

:)'pickup trUck apparently did not see
. 'J!q!dansld's car untO jUst before the
,•Impact. He tried to stop but his truck
~&lt;~!lid on the wet pavement Into the

.I

ROME '&amp; WINESAP

FREE

~n OJislnes. prepaed

cellent

LARGE SELECTION OF USED HOMES AVAILABLE
(FREE blocks and delivery)

:r Otflclals said the driver of the

~
··:j

FRESH CRISP

•

NOW OFFERING

1:/Jt 'ra/J
'&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;s

tN

y. ~'l. ~c.

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

!dent occulTed Thursday night.
stopped to .assist Glenn Bog)~
ki,18, whose car had staUed.
Richfield pollee and Summit
·,;County coroner's Investigator
:~r Riggins said Sister Dolores
:~as _at ~ rear of the car, helping
· ~push It to the side of the
·~. when she was struck by

~

JAR

In

MONTHLY PAYMENTS UNTIL
MARCH ON ANY NEW OR USED HOME!

••
l RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - A
;.iRoman CathoUc nun who stopped to

•

Get a Taste of the Orient
Exot1c and olfordoble dining
IJ lfi&lt;&gt;r.
~~~\~
the Ot1.ntol trodiUon.
\M~ \\~~~ Scwr9• Ccrtonese and

Gallia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad

NO

'I

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GALLIPOLIS - Not guilty pleas
11 :)0 .ll.
,u.tou
Til lUG , ,I .
~
446-7227
wereenteredinGaWpolisMunlclpal
Court Friday to charges filed
against aRt. 2, Patriot couple.
1-----------L-'--------------------~
Pleading innocent to criminal
damaging and assault were Ricky
D. Lambert, and Teresa L. Lambert , charged with possession of
marijuana and disorderly condUC\.
Both have been scheduled to

AT KINGSBURY HOMES

~~

L=====================~

~

:Nun killed while
, assisting motorist

'

¢

49'¢

.,';

.~..;.~.

s

MAXWELL_HOUSE

under were
suspension,
while
costs
suspended
on !me
a lefta nd
of
center citation.
Also for DWI, Diane M. France,
28, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was fined $300,
sentenced to three days In jail gfven
a 61klay license suspension and 18
months probation.
Because of their guilty pleas to
earlier DWI charges, charges of
reckless opemtlon against Barbara
L. Abels, 26, 47 H? lllday Heights,
and failure to control for John Rees,
33, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, were dismissed.

r~s~pe;ak~m~o;re;e;as~il~
Y;·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;~~~~~~~;;~
·

;!Jacob Javtts. R·N.Y., also suffers

,

$139

who previously
guUty
DWI.
Margery Fpleaded
. Syrus, 41,
Rt. to
2,
Bidwell pleaded no contesi to
reckies~ operation reduced from
DWI. She was fined $100.
Continued for Douglas 0 . Clonch
Jr., Gallipolis, was a charge of
disorderly conduct and twocountsof
domestic violence.
Fined Thursday were Shirley
Stephens, 19, 335 Jackson Pike, $10,
speeding and $12 expired regtstratton and Terry H. MJUer, 20, Rt. 2,
Patriot, $25, failure to controL

term stde effects include shivering
and sllghtly elevated blood pressure, he said . . · ·
Engel said his latest findings
showed that the benefits of TRH
lastedforuptothreedayslnmanyof
22 experimental patients and for up
to 12 days In some, helping them
Improve muscle strength, reduce
spasticity and brea!l\e. move and

killed actor David
.':•' Americans,
Ntven last July. Former U.S. Sen.

.~ckuptruck.

8 oz.

oz.

•:the motor neurons - muscle·;acttvatlng nerve cells- and causes
:;progressive paralysis and usually
,'death within two to three years.

froad..

79¢

WAGNER REG. OR LOW CALORIE

•·

Plus
Deposit

MAYONNAISE

- F-RilOS

"

:;great New York Yankees first

:•baseman who died of it. It attacks

·

SPAGHETTI
SAUCE m, oz.

loglst, saki Friday.

Known technlcaliy as amyotro'•phlC lateral sclerosis, orALS, the
·~ has been named for the

HELLMANN'S

.¢
COFFEE RICH 39

lB.

·'

· ' help a stranded motorist was struck
, and killed by a pickup truck as she
! help push the stalled auto off the

RICH NON-DAIRY
FROZEN 16 oz.

KIDDIE-SAV PROGRAM-10% DISCOUNT '
(For 6 and Under)

E

$}6 9

VALLEY BELL

'

$269'

¢

LB.
ROLL

CRISCO
OIL 48 oz.

' . 32

LJI.

BOUNTY
TOWELS

MORTON HOUSE

STEW

-

·j The disorder,
said
:•affitcts
about which
15,(XX) Engel
to 30,000

MIX OR MATCH

BEEF

SUPERIOR'S

HONEY
LOAF

An

from the disease and received
experimental treatment from Endiscomfort of Lou Gehrig's disease gel last August.
foraslongas12dayscouldbewldely . At a news conference, Engel said
used within three years to treat the It Is "entirely possible" that the
fatal netVe disorder, which afflicts experl!nental drug - thyrotropinup to ll,(XX) Americans, a re- releasinghormone,orTRH-could
searcher says.
be available In two to three years for
1be drug ''would deftnltely lm· people with Lou Gehrig's disease
prove the,- quallty of life" of victims ljnd perhapsothernerveand muscle
q~ the disease, although It cannot
disorders.
nerve damage or prevllllt
But he cautioned that more study
!mate death, W. King E~t.''4 lsneededtoruleoutthe~slbilltyof
erslty of Southern Callfomta long-term damage. Known short·

$269

oz.$}3 9

NORTHERN DECORATED
140 CT.

LOS ANGELES (AP)

COKE
TAB, SPRITE
DIET COKE

WITH DISH CLOTH

towns wherf' hom£&gt; carrlf'r serv ice- Is

$}89

expel bnattal drug that eases the

PEPPER
LOAF LB.

appear at Jan. 16 pretrials.
In traffic cases, Albert L. Grady, Hicksville. forfeited $128 bond for
In other action, John H. Burke, 30, Leon, W.Va., forfeited $40 bond expired opera lor's license; J;Wbert
address unknown, was fined $12, for Improper lane usage; David R.
E . Gritfith, 21. Rl . 2. Galllpollf. was
received a suspended 30-day jail Holley, 39, Rt. 3, Gaillpolls, forfeited
fined $12 for unsafe vehicle; Resa L.
sentence and one year probation for $40 bond for assured clear distance;
McWhorter, 2'2, Eureka Star Route,·
disorderly after warning. Gerald E . Donna L. Thomas, ~. Eureka Star
was fined $12 for failure 10 control.
Campbell, address unknown, alSo Route, forfeited $40 bond for left of
Forfeiting hand for spet'&lt;.ting were
charged with dlso derly after warn· center.
Peggy J . DeWt"('se, 25, Florence·,
lng, wasflne&lt;l .t&gt; '. !!ivenasuspended
Allen W. Jones, 30, 2116Chatham
S.C., $40; Garrl~ .J . Sirek, 40, Rt . 2.
30-day jall 5e"'t •r ~ and one year Ave., forfeited $50 bond for overWheelersburg, $42; KPV!n B. Kelly,
probation.
length; Ricky B. Whitaker, 24,
35, Chrlsliansburg, Va., $43.
Cases dismissed at request of the r:::;:::=:::::::::::::;:;;::;:::;~;:::;;;;;::;;::;:;:;:;;::;;:::;::;::;;:::;::;::;::;=,
complaining witnesses we re
against Jenny L. Singleton, Rt. 2,
Vinton, assault, and Brian Mink, Rt.
2, Bldweil, resisting arrest.
James L. Roberts, 19, 122 Second
Ave. , charged with speeding,
pleaded not guilty a nd was contlnued until Jan. 19 for a hearing,
while a DWI charge against Joseph
D. Clevenger, 21, Rio Grande, was
continued untU Jan . ~Charged with DWI, Leonard J .
Maynard, 24, Houston Heights,
Texas, was fined f!OO. sentenced to
10 days In jail, gfven a 12}-day
driver's license suspension and 18 1
months probation.
'
Maynard was also fined $50, gfven
a suspended six-month jail sentence
and 18 months probatio~ fordrivlng

Bond was forfeited for Cecil W.
Wise, 50, Rt . 1, Crown City, $40,
failure to display valid registration.
Bond forfeited for speeding was
for E . Thomas Halloran, 50,
CentervUle, Joe N. Spears, 46, Lima,
$38, Eugene Wilson, 40, Winston
Salem, N.C. , Ul, Robert G. Cross,
50, Eaton, Ind., $41, John W. Casto,
38, Point Pleasant, $42 and Forrest
Vftltoe, 29, Jacksonville, Fla., $43.

II. (AP I •mphoto ).

SUPERIOR'S

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DETERGENT

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One Yeoar ....

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On£' Month ......

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GALLIPOLIS Two ·men
charged with receiving stolen
property In connection with a Dec.
16, 1983 residential 'break-in had
their cases continued In Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Cases scheduled for Jan. 12 were
for John E McGuire 22 Rt. 1.
Crown City, ~dRlchardS. Daniels,
20, Eureka Star Route. The pair are
allegedly Involved 1n thetheftoftwo
shotguns taken from the residence
of Johnny Caldwell, Ohio218.
Cases continued for DWI were for
Tommy E. Dixon, 43, 243 Jackson
Pike, and Michael G. Eastman,~.
Jackson. Dixon, who has two prior
convlctlonsforDWihadhlsbondset
at $500. Eastman, on a third
conviction, received $1,500 boll(l.
Pleading no contest to hit a nd skip
and a second offfense of DWI was
John Rees, 33, Rt. 3, Gallfpolls. He
received 10 days In GaUla County
Jail, a
fine, 12}-day llcen~
suspension and 18 months probation
for the DWI charge and $25 fine and
18 months probation for the hit a nd
skip.
A charge of driving left of center
was dismissed Wednesday against
Debra D. Johnson, 27, Gallipolis,

s:ro

$ 59

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FRESH LEAN

CHUCK
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M£&gt;mber: Th&lt;' Assoc iated PrPss In la nd Dall y Press Assoclallon a nd the
American N('wspaper Publishers Associa tion, Na ti onal Advertlsinfit Re·
prE&gt;sentatl ve, Branham ... 1717 West
Nin&lt;' Mile Road. Suite 204 . Detroit.
Mic higan . 48075 .

11 A.M. til 8 P.M.

PHONE

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TAVERN

cond class postagf' paid at Ga llipoli s,
Ohio 45631 . Entt&gt;red as second class
mailing m a11 Pr at Pomeroy, Ohio,
Post Office.

SUNDAY

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Stolen property cases set for Jan. 12 hearing

We 11-M Tile Right to Umh QuentliiMI

LOIN END

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaiant, W. 'va.

~.ii-?iiiiiPI.rl...a•~• O~od Th;u ;Jen. 1~. 1.8.8 4

earliest, Wilson said.
"All this Is going to take time. I
ha~e no Illusions. It's an uphill
battle," Wilson said.
Terry Van Offeren, a supervisor
from the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' Division of •
Reclamation, said state and federal
governments would pay for getting ·
the land ready for use by the newly
formed Perry County Industrtal
Development Corp. Reclamation
could begin by this fall, he said.

made by ca rrl&lt;'r s.

Wallnski was admitted to the bar
In 1951 and appointed to the Toledo
law department two years later.
Willard Johnson, presldellt of the
Toledo Bar Association, said It
would be unfair to comment on
Wallnski' s case.
"I think we just have to walt to see
what the courts have to say,"
Johnson said. "PeOple can be
rightfully charged and wrongfully
charged."

Ja!"'G'Y I, 1984

STORE HOURS;
Mon.·Thur.. 9 am til 10 pm
Fri.-S.t.9 am til 10 PM
CLOSED SUNDAYS I

County hopes park can replace mine
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)

\

•FINE FURNITURE
•CUSTOM DRAPERY
•CARPET
•INTERIOR DESIGN

CORNER SECOND and GRAPE IN GALLIPOLIS

•

30o/o

FREE PARKING
FREE DELIVERY
HOURS: 9:00-5:00 Daily
(Incl. Thursday)
9:00-8:00 Monday
and Friday Evenings

446-0332

'I

·.

�·~

.....

r •

~

January 8, 1984 ·

Page-A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Reclamatio~ proj~ct mee~ planiled

Thieves
disable
vehicle

• CLOSED - The F1owers Baking Co. closed Its
baked goods sales depot on Filth Ave. In Middleport
Saturday. The closing affects seven sales people, a
mechanic and a shipping clerk. However, the
company has offered the employes positions at
locations In Parkersburg, W.Va., or Ashland, Ky. The
Thrift Shop, also loc;ated on Filth Ave., wW remain In
operation and Richard Noland, oompany president,

said that service tO the county wW remain the same
even though location points for distribution are being
changed. The business was once the Covert Baking
Co., which thrived In the 1930s not only as a bakery but
as a location for Ice and meats. It later was operated
by tbe Ohio Vatiey Baking Co. No baking has been
done In the large atructure, however, for some 15
years.

Three deaths make gruesome
safety point at rail crossing
'!PLEDO, Ohio (AP) -A "I~ both occupants were thrown from
week" in which three~were the car, pollee said.
Killed were Michael Douglas, 45,
kill~ by illegally driving around
and
Carrie Boose, 30, both of Toledo.
downed rallroad crossing gates
Earller
Thursday. University of
ShO!Iid make a gruesome point of
Toledo
freshman
Leann Gebke, 19,
saf~ty, law enforcement officials
died when her car was struck by a
say.
'nvo separate accidents at rail Conrail train at a crossing in South
Toledo.
c~slngs Thursday In Toledo
Lay said driver error Is invariably
claimed three lives. Another
the
cause of raU-car accidents.
woman was critically injured last
"They
know (the gate) means to
Friday when she drove her car
stop,
so
why
do they run It? It's not
around the gates at a rail crossing.
something
that's
there all the time.
"¥ ou can only hope something
It'stheresaying, 'Hey, guy, beware,
Ilks this wlll make people think a
there's a train coming.' "
llttll! more.'· Toledo pollee Capt. Ben
Capt. George Metter of the
Cooley said Friday. "It certainly
was'll tragic week."
Two of the incidents occurred at
one:crosslng, but officials said there
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -The man
is no single crossingcausingspectal
whose Bengal tiger fatally mauled
problems.
Iii all cases, thegatesandwarntng his 2-year-old son has reclaimed the
tlgllts were working properly, body of the-240-pound tiger ,officials
said.
authorities said.
The tiger had been frozen and
Last Friday night in Fremont,
stored
by the Summit County
t.hrE!e teen-agers were critically
office since Dec. 9, when It
coroner's
Injured when they passed cars
was
kllled
by a Copley Township
stopped at the gate, drove around
the.barrler and struck an oncoming policeman shortly after It mauled
Lorenzo Pearson's .son. Jason
tralh.
"You could almost say this is Studebaker.
The animal, had been living In
frequent ," said Sgl. Don Lay of the
Toledo ppst of the State Highway Pearson's home in Copley.
The federal Fish and Wildlife
Pa!r&lt;Jl. "We're just seeing the
Division
notified the coroner's office
traagic results of It this week."
this
week
that the division did not
"-The most recent victims were
intend
to
confiscate the tiger
recOrded Thursday night when an
carcass,
said
coroner'sll\vestigator
·auto pulled around crossing gates in
Douglas
Jenney.
Toledo and was struck by the a
southbound, five-car Amtrak passenger 1rain from Detroit.
The car was dragged 204 feet and 1

Reclaims Bengal

Fremont pollee said the crossing
gate accident last Friday was a
rarity.
Pollee are still investigating that
mlsilllp and have been unable to talk
to the driver of the car, who is still
hospitalized in Toledo.
"I can't recall anyone else going
around the crossing," he said. "I
would say It was either Impatience
or stupidity."
Both pollee and state troopers say
they enforce the law regarding
illegal crossings, but catching
violators can be dangerous.
"It means our officers have to be
sitting on the other side of the track
waiting for these people. I don't
think It would be wise to chase
someone over a crossing just to cite
them," Cooley said.
MaryLynne Cappelletti of the
Ohio Department of Transporta·
lion. said gate crossings can cost up
to $250,(XXJ and are installed only
where the public needs additional
protection from trains.
"But such crossings are only safe
If thepubllcobserves the warnings,••
she said.

lnfonned him th&amp;,t handicapped
parking signa needed to be placed at

polling booths on elec:tlon day.
According to the tdiu-d,lt ls_a.state
law that handicapped Blans be
placed at polling booths.
Commlsstoners wW hold their
organlzatlonsl rneeUng Monday,
Jan. 9, at 3 p.m .
The Meip County Trustees Wll1
hold their 'organizational meeting
Monday, Jan. 9, at 7 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center.
CollllTII¥iollers are preparing ihe
annual appropriations and · wW
present their budget Tuesday.

morning.

He said a representative of the
company selling the signs will meet
with him.
Roberta sulmlted advertising
bids for a front end loader and roller
for the county highway.
Commissioners, after looking

GAlliPOLIS - The theft of
Small parts and hoses trom a 1978
Plymouth owned by Janey WUt, Rt.
1, Point Pleasant, was reported to
.city pollee here Friday.
Wllt reported she had parked her
car in theK-Martparktnglotatnoon
and discovered the missing ltemS'I!t
9p.m.
The thief disabled the car and It
had to be towed from the scene,
officers said.
Pollee cited Herbert G. Slone, 50,
Kanauga, for reckless operation;
Stephen Wroblewski, 31, 818 First
Ave., failure to display valid
registration; and Roger A. Watson,
35, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, speeding.
Gallipolis firemen were called to
Par-Mar Oil Co., 1528EasternAve.,
at 8:52 p.m. Friday when gasoline
spilled from a holding tank. One
truck andJ2 men responded to the
call. No Ignition was reported and
flremen cleaned the spill.
Man hwi In wredl
Meanwhile, a Rio Grande man
was treated and released from
Holzer Medical Center for injuries
received in a one-car accident on
U.S. 35 early Saturday.
Dean L. Rees, 'll, was treated for
head cuts and bruises, an HMC
spokesperson said.
Rees was eastbound at 12: ~a.m.,
four-tenthsofamUewestofOhto588
when his vehtcle reportedly
left and struck an embankment,
severely damaging the vehicle. He
was taken to HMC by emergency
medical service personnel, according to the Gallla-Melgs post of the
state highway patrol.
In another accident' investigated
by the..patrol, David B. Chapman,
46, Rt. 2, Crown City, was cited for
asso.red clear distance.
The patrol said Chapman was
eastbound on Sladen-Mercervllle
'!Dad at 3: 35 p.m. Friday when he
was unabletostoplll time and struck
a Jeep being towe&lt;j by Jackie D.
Angell, 21. Eureka Star Route.
Angell had stopped the vehicle at
the intersection with County Road 8
at the time of the crash, the patrol
said.

Area death s

over the bldi, Voted tQadvertlsetor a
new front end loader and one \Ieee! . ,
roller compactor as per apeclflca·
U0118 for the county blihWay:
Roberta told, the conunluloners
that the Board of Electlolll has

near WMPO Radio'.
Roberts also reported a drainage
ditch needs cleantna, and If It Is
cleaned, Farley iuallelted the
county maintain the dltcli after It Is
cleaned.
.
Farley, It was reported, wW also
look at GooseCreekotrSR681belore
meeting with Roberta.
Roberta also reported,that a road
signs have ~ placed at Forest
Run and Morning Star . and em·
ployes were in the processofplactng
a sign at Eagle Ridge Friday

POMEROY - Meigs County
Engineer Phil Roberta Informed
commissioners Friday morn1ng
. that Mitch Farly of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
wW meet with Roberts on Jan. 17
concerning reclamation of Bone
Hollow Road.
Farley has Informed Roberts that
possibly funds may be available to
do the necessary work.
The road is located in Bradbury

._,

Gamet Blum

brother; Ivan of Marietta; three
sisters, Thelma Balames and May
Otto, both of Detroit, Mich., and
Lucy Barringer of Reedsville; 11
grandchildren, 11 great ·
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
She was' also preceded in death by
her first husband, Drell D. Blue, and
by two brothers and a sister.
Funeral services wW be held at 1
p.m. Monday in Coolvllle United
Melhndist Church, with the Rev.
Eric Starr officiating. Burial will be
in Wetherby Cemetery, Coolville.
Friends may call at White Funeral
Home, Coolville, after 1 p.m. today.

GAlliPOLIS - Word has been
received of the death of Garnet
Blum, 73, who died Dec. 24, 1983 in
Pinecrest Care Center.
·Funeral services were held at St.
Matthew Lutheran Church, Logan,
on Dec. 'll.
Born July 17, 1910 in Ashville, she
was the daughter of !he late Edward
and Lulu Hampson Cook.
•
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Lloyd Blum and a son
Jimmy.

'

She Is survived by a daughter,
Mrs. John (Carol) Jackson of
Gallipolis, and five grandchildren.
Funeral . JUTangements were
handled by Heinleln-Brown Funeral
Home, Logan.

The "real" radio
lets you listen to life.
The Bearcare 151
Scanner gives you all
the excitement of live
police action, fire
emergencies and other
2-way communications
-plus the most popular
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Keyboard entry lets
you "punch in' 10
frequencies at once from
the eight most popular
public ser.v~ce bands.
And our patented Track

Tuning peaks every
transmission for
optimum reception.
Features includeSelective Scan Delay,
Direct Channel Access,
Lockouts and more.
Much more. For much
less.

GLENWOOD, W.Va. -An Ashton woman was kllled In'.. a
. single-vehicle accident at 4:45 p.m.
l;rlday in Glenwood, according to
the Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
Marte Margaret Deal, 68, Ashton,
was pronollnced dead at Pleasant
Valley Hospital by Mason County
Medical Examiner John M. Grubb,
M.D. The victim was transported to

the hospital by Valley Rescue
Squad.
Detalis of the accident, which
occurred on Route 2 approximately
1'h mlles from the Cabell-Mason
counw line, are sketchy.
Assisting at the scene was the
Valley Volunteer Fire Department.
In Putnam County, two men.

Gallia's first
baby of 1984
is a girl

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

GAlliPOLIS - Pallbearers for
the funeral of Carroll H. Burnette
Sr., 82, Rt. 2, Patriot, set for 1 p.m .
today in Wlllts Funeral Home, are
Wlllard Grate, Glen Grate, Ray·
mond Bays, Larry Lloyd, James
Boster and Charles Richards.
Bw1al will In Patriot Methodist
Church Cemetery.

Open Daily 10-9;
Sunday 1-6 .

The Saving Place"'

GAU.IPOLIS - Ruth Stowers
Timmons, 69, Rt. 2, Bidwell, died
early Saturday at her'resldence.
Born July 10, 1914, in Mason
County, daughter of the late Manna
Stowers, who died In 1976, and Cora
Huffman Stowers, who survives at
Rt. 2, Bidwell, she was a member of
French City Baptist Church.
Surviving is a brother. LloydofRt.
4. Galllpolis.
Funeral services wlll be held at
1:30p.m. Tuesday in WllllsFuneral
Home, with the Rev.JosephGodwln
officiating. Burial will be in VInton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at
the funeral home fium 2--4 and 7-9
p.m. Monday.
·

'·•

.

grandchtldren.

,Funeral services wW be at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at Moore's Chapel United
Methodist Church. Burial will
follOw In Moore's Chapel Cemetery.
F)'lends may call at the Crow·
Huaaell Funeral Home after 2 p.m.
Monday . .

Man eligible for
parole in 20 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio· (AP) . James Ferrari9 of Mansfield, who
was sentenced Friday to life in
pdsonforklllingtwoColumbusmen
last month. wlll beeltgtbleforparole
in~ years.
The sentence by a three-judge

' B. Dunfee
Lula

LOWIST PIICE EVIR
Reg. 1259.00

151 only $16900

slonals seek to Identify and treat
health problems among expectant
mothers who cannot afford conventional medical services.
Largest of the grants was$102,984
to the Ohio State University
Research Foundation.

Kmort•
Sole Price
Less Factory
Rebate
Your Net Cost Aner
factory Rebale

, &lt;X&gt;QLV1LLE- Lula BeDe !)upt*!, 83, Coolvtlle, died Friday night
II) camden-Clark Hospital, Parlaersburg, W.Va., following an
eKtended lllness.
. Born lnMelpCounty,daughterof panel spared the 34-year-old Ferltle late Samuel H. and Sophia . raratrornthedeatppenalty.Hehad
BendleDeeter,shewasamemberof asked the judges for mercy after
&amp;lolvllle United Methodist Church. pleading guilty Thursday in the
:: Surviving are her husband, Ray shotgun slaytngs of Edward Hanna
and Fred Lemmens, both 34, in
H. Dunfee; a son, A.V. (Jack) Blue H a n n a ' s Wort h In g ton
W.Va. ; a daughter, condominium.
Dunkirk. Ohio; a

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Upper Rom. 7 .
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PH. 446-4517

~

LeVIS

Treadway was killed shortly
before midnight when the car he
was driving collided with a tractortraUer on U.S. 35 in Fraziers

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

ASHTON - Marte M. Deal, 68.
Ashton, was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital Friday
after a single-car accident in
Glenwoqd.
Born Aug. 'll, 1915 in Mason
County, she was the daughter of the
late John and Jessie Booth Mayes.
She was a member of Moore's
Chapel United Melhndist Church at
Ashton.
Mrs. Deal was preceded in death
by hlir husband, Wallace "Joe"
Deal who died In 1966, one dauchter.
two sisters and one brother.
Surviving are three &lt;laughters,
Mrs. Sadie Coleman, Ashton; Mrs.
Sue Potf, Gallipolis Ferry, and Mrs.
Kay -Corbin, Grove City; one son,
Leonard Deal, Point Pleasant;
three brothers. Ray and Homer
Mayes,' Glenw,ood. and Johnny
Mayes, Ashton; one sister, Mrs.
s,tty Brown, Gallipolis Ferry; 12
grandchildren and six great·

Our Storewide Oearance Starts FtidGy Morning at 9 A.M.

,.'

Bottoni. Harrison said. The deputy
said the acctden t occurred as .
Treadway was passing another
truck .
A passenger In Treadway's carJeffrey D. McCa rty, 17, of Apple
Grove - was taken to Putnam
General and then transferred to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington,
where he was In stable condition, a
nursing su'pervtsor said.
The driver of the truck, Henry
·Arnold, age and hometown unavatl·
able, received minor Injuries,
Harrison said.

induding an 18-year-old Pliny
youth, were kllled when their
vehicles collided with trucks In
separate accidents, authorities reported today.
County Sheriff's Deputy R. E.
Harrison Identified the victims of
Friday night's accidents as Carl E.
Treadway Jr.. 18, of Pliny and
Richard A. Moses, 40, of Hurricane.

Cora D. Emrick

l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;;;:~;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;.

LOGAN. Ohio (AP) - The
murder trial of Dale Johnston,
accused in the dismemberment
kllllngs of his stepdaughter and her
fiance. has been continued so
attorneys can get the deposition of a
forensic anthropologist.
· Hocking County Common Pleas
Judge James Stilwell said Friday
that the trial wlll begin at 9 a.m.
Wednesday rather than Monday, 11s
originally scheduled.
Or. Louise Robbins, a forensic
an!hropologlst from Raleigh,' N.C.,
was scheduled tobeawltnessforthe
prOsecution. However, she wll1
undergo cancer surgery on Thursday and cannot attend the trial.
Rather than grant anextenslon1.111tll
she could testify, Stilwell recommended attorneys travel to North
Carolina to obtain a deposition.
Prosecutor Chris Veldt and deferise attorney Tom Tyack wlll take
tlte deposition Monday afternoon.
:.Johnston, of New Plymouth, is
cliarged wlth.aggravated murder in
thE! October 1982 deaths of his
stepdaugpter, Annette Cooper Johnston, 18, and her boyfriend, Todd
scflul~. 19, b()th of Logan. The case
Is to be heard by a three-judge panel.
:1'be couple disappeared Oct. 4,
and their torsos were-found 10days
Jafor in the Hocking River. Other
OOdy parts were disCovered Oct. 16
buried lri a nearby comfleld.

Page-A-7

Marie M. Deal

weni

Deposition
delays Logan
murder trial·

Time~oSentinel

Three killed on West Virginia highways

Can-oU Burnette Sr.

$508,000 allocated for prenatal care
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Grants totaling more than m,(XXJ
for seven regional prenatal care
programs have been announced by
the office of Gov. Richard Celeste. ·
The regional projects include
outreach programs in which profes-

TM Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, Ohio Point Pleaaant, W. Va.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohi-Point Pleaaant, W. Va.

$4ouiReg.

6.97
21·pc. Sock•t Set

w· and J(" drive sock·

et set, metal case.

99 4

$ 5 Sole Price

§]

Softsoap
7.5 oz. soap in dispenser. SAVE. ,

Each

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, Thermal Shirt, Pants
Heavyweight cotton
. Wool Knit Hat ...... $2

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Oh.._Polnt Plea~ant, W. Va. ·

8, 1984

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M1lton Roosh

•••

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Roush joins
Teaford firm
POMEROY - MU!on E. Roush,
-Syracuse, who has more than 30
years of se~Vice with the Farmers
Home Administration, has been
named an associate salesman with
the Teaford Realty Co.
Roush seJVed as director of the
-Farmers Home Administration
·before his retirement inAugust198l.
He was instrumental in getting
water systems in Tuppers Plains
and the L.eadtngCreek ConseJVancy
District and was involved in
'financial transactions through FHA
;tor several multi-famlly housing
·units in Meigs County as well as in
;the other 15counties he served in this
'part of the state. He was active in
housing, particularly those on
·farms, during his long years of
service with the Farmers Home
·AdmlnJstratton.
Since his retirement, Roush has
·been active part time in the
construction business owned by his
son, Greg Roush.
Roush and his wife, Sara, and
their second son, Randy, 15, a
,sophomore at Southern High School
;reside on Dusky St. in Syracuse. Mr.
·and Mrs. Roush also have a
:&lt;Jaughter, Sandra, Columbus.
Roush is a member of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Rock Springs Grange, belongs to the
,Masonic Lodge and to a non'denomtnation church.
: In his new position, Roush w11l be.
:working out of the Teaford offices
:which are on East Second Street in
Pomeroy.

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SPEECII'l'IIEBAPY- Hearing 1oM ans speech lmpedlmeat
often go together. Carolyn
llelues, center, coordloaie!l tile
lree cJinlcs In Meigs County, and
looks on here as Karen Kftmey, ,
a graduate 8ludeot !rom Oblo
Unlverdy In speech paihology.
worlls with one of the younpters
who regUial'\y takes advanta«e
of the PJ'OII'lllll· Hearing problems are not restricted to tile
aging mao or womlln, and many ·
..,_,~...., tldngll can resull In a hearing .
1oM. ' 'Diere are a number of
sips tbat you may have a
hearing problem, and some may
be subtle.

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Whfn hearing loss strikes, this·local clinic helps
By CIIAJU.ENE HOEFUCII
'l'bnellt ...... lltd
POMEROY- Does YlJUI' fat!'llly complain that the TV Is too loud?
,Oq..~ people always aeem to mumble?
.
09 YW hear people talldni but you can't understand what ~

Marriage licenses
. GAU.lPOLlS - The following.
eouples llied for marriage licenses
this past week in Gallia County
Probate Court.
Bernnard R. Kingsley, 36, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, teacher, and Susan Tucker,
25, Rt. 2, Bidwell, trainer.
Joseph R. Bennett, 30, Point
•-Fleasant, psychiatric aide, and
Barbara S. Morris, 42,1811 Chestnut
St., homemaker.
Alfred B. McAllister, 19, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, National Guard, and
Deborah L. Cook, 21, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, unemployed.
Glenn E. Lawson,18, Rt. 2, Vinton, ·
unemployed, and CarolS. Glbbs,18,
30 Nell Ave. , unemployed.
David R. Pearson, 36, Point
Pleasant, unemployed, and Rosalle
Hare, 33, Point Pleasant, housewife.
James M. Coe, 18, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
carpenter, and Etaine K. Riggs,18,
Rt. 1, Bidwell, unemployed.

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Then Perhaps you have a hearing loss.

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Does your child Ignore yllu when you call him?

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Does he sit close to the TV or turn up the volume?
Does he have tr.ouble tollowtng directions at home or in school?
He could have a hNrtng problem:
·

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ThoR are ttJe obvious signa to look for, according to Wlltlam W.
Wallance, M.A., Ohio University' audlolo!IY supervisor for the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Speech and Hearing Cllnlcs held every
Thursday night at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Localsuperv!Jor of the cUnlc Is Carolyn Heines, therapist.
The cllnlc offers tree hfartng tests to people of all ages on
Thursday evenings by appointment, explained Mrs. Heines, who
noted that the testing is done by graduate audlololllsts and cltnlclans
supervlsecJ by a state certUied audlologbt from Ohio university. 'I

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The tests are 'Clone with portable audiometers and a middle ear
tester brought down from the university. This way the cltnlclans are
able to tell whether there is a hearing loss, what kind It Is, and
whether the individual should be scbeduled for therapy or referred to
a doctor.
The testing can lilso make a person aware of any changes in their
hearing that might require further testing at some time.
Wallance noted that there are two major types of hearing loss, the
mnst comnnon of which is found in the ear canal or behtnd the ear
drum.
This, he said, ts a conductive hearing loSs and can be me)ISured by
a hearing test and treated by a doctor. Common causes of conductive
hearing losses are colds, sore throats, earaches, upper respiratory
Infections, too much wax, or objects in the ear canal, holes in the
eardi'um, or hereditary diseases.
The second type of bearing loss he described involves the neJVes
for hearing in the inner ear.
Typical problems with a ne~Ve loss are ringing or noises in the
ears, loss of balance, dizziness and trouble understanding people
when they talk.
Nerve losses can be measured by a hearing test and should be
confirmed through examination blf a doctor. Common cause of a

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Emergency runs
POMEROY - Five calls were
answered by local emergency units
Friday the Meigs County Medical
service reported.
At 9:59 a.m. Rutland went to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Bobby Barrett,
taken toO'Bleness Hospital Athens;
10:32 a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy
Health Care Center for Jenny
Carmen, to Veterans Memorial;
U: 17 a.m. Syracuse to Cherry and
Third for May Manley, to Veterans
Memorial; 12: W a.m. Rutland to
Langsville for Dorothy Barrett, to
Holzer Medical Center; 4: 26 p.m .
Syracuse to Minersville for Tom
Weston, taken to Veterans
Memorial.

Veterans Memorial

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ll&gt;

Alan Bearhs, 23, Pomeroy, and
Anne Marie Boscaccl, 18, Shade.

·Meers Monday
; RACINE- Racine VlliageCoun.

'ell wUI·II')l'et Monday at 7 p.m. at

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ADMlSSIONS···Altsa Findley,
Syracuse; Mayme Manning, Racine~ Thomas Weston, Racine;
Norma Parker, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES.--Veima Siders,
Lowell MpNid&lt;le, Adrian Roberts,
Jeffrey McKinney, Vidta Gtrolarnl
Helen Wlltiams, Jesse.swan,-Do~
Hyselt .

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nerve hearing loss, Wallance said, are exposure to noises at work or
play, diseases, heredity or accidents.
Mrs. Heines coordinates the speech and healing cltnlc. She notes
that residents of aU ages, children to senior citizens, are eligible for
the free service.
'
All testing, however, Is handled by appointment made through
Mrs. Heines at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Once the hearing
evaluation is completed; the individual may be referred to a doctor, If
therapy Is indicated, then it can be carried out through the cltnlc at no
charge.
,,
The speech and hearing cltnlcs are held from 5 to 9 p.m. every
Thursday with Mrs. Heines working with the therapists and
audiologists from Ohio University.
As explained by Mrs. Hines, hearing loss and speech im:~ent
many times go together. The cllnlc, financed through
nty
budget and the Ohio Department of Health, offers a fult range of..;:::,
therapy.
.
Approximately 50 Meigs Countians are currently enrolled tn the .
clinic programs of speech and hearing therapy.

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Ohio Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

•• 1914 .

· BP.at of the Bend

Candace Ingels, Stephen Cummins wed in Hamilton ceremony
MIDDLEPORT - Candace
Somerville Ingels and Stephen
Leslie Cummlna exchanged wed·
dlngvowslnacandlellghtceremony
at the Lindenwald United Methodist
Church 41t HamUton on Nov. 5.-The·
Rev. Edwin Beck officiated at the
double-t1ng ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George H. Ingels of New
Haven, and the groom Is the son of
Mr. ad Mrs. Earl L. Cummins,
Fairfield.
Organist for the wedding was
Mrs. Helen Riedel and her selec·
lions Included "A Time •'or Us,"
''The Wedding Song," and "The
Lord's Prayer."
The altar .was decorated with a
unity candle, an arrangement of
pink, white and burgundy !Jowers
with three pink candles. The

The bride wore a m11tchlng JuUet
C\IP of Venlse lace and seed pearls.
The chapel length 1ra1n was finished
with a wide rutfle of chantilly lace
and satin bows. For something old
the bride wore pearls belonging to
the groom's mother. Her cascade
bouquet was of pink and white aUk
roses with baby's breath and long
streamersotburgundyandwhite.
Maid of honor was Diane Ingels,
SlSter·ln·laW of the bride. Brides·
maid was Stephanie Foley, sister of
the groom. They wore long bur·
"''"dy
.,-· gowns of qutana with satin
trimmed bodices, and carried
bouquets of sUk flowers of pink and
burgundy. Venessa Foley, niece of
the groom, was the Dower girl and
carried a small basket of silk

lighted
the candles
represent·
motherstwoofofthe
bride and
groom
lng .the Individual lines of their
chUdren, while the center candle
was lighted by the bride and groom
In a ceremony of unity of the two
lines Into one.
Given In marriage by her parents,
thebrldewasescortedtothealtarby
her father. Thebrlde'sdresswasof
chantilly lace with a Queen Anne
neckline edged In Venlse lace and
baby doU ruffled yoke. The bishop
sleeves .were trimmed with chan· ...
tilly and Venlse lace and satin
ribbon. Pearl buttons were used
down the back ~thegownandon the

Tom Foley, brother·In·laW of the
fiowers.
groom, was the beJ;t man. Grooms·
man was Jason Ingels, brother of
the bride. Ushers were David
BeighleandYorklngels.Themenln
the wedding party wore grey
tuxedos with burgundy accessories
and white 'camatlon boutonnieres.
The groom jVOreagreytuxedowlth
agreyandwhitestrlpedascot,anda
pink boutonniere.
Areceptlonwasheldlnthechurch
fellowship hall. Theflve-tleredcake
was decorated In burgundy and
dusty pink rosebuds with a lighted
fountain topped bydoublestalrways

extending to eaeh side. The cake
was togped with bells and a
mlnlature ~ alld
Pauia SornervUie of Point Plea·
sant, cousin ~the brlcie, rertstered
thegueSts.
•..
The bride Is a lf&amp;duate of
Wahama High School and West
VIrginia Career College. She Is
employed at Rotlen Jeweler's,

fttted cuffs.

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POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. r ; : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; i
Herman Roberts of Route 4,
Pomeroy, announce the marriage
Come Join• In The Fun
, . of their daughter, Linda Jaye, to
And Excitement Of
Mark Alan Harrison, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Harrison of Cheshire.
Beginning
The wedding took place Dec. 24 at
the home of the Rev. Robert Miller
of the Laurel CUff Ftee Methodist
Church.
The bride Is a student at Meigs
High School.
Harrison Is employed at the
Gallipolis Food Co.
The couple reside at Route 4,
Cake,
&amp;
Shop
Pomeroy.
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

TOLE &amp; DECORATIYE

PAINTING ·:··
AT

DJ's

J

'

Candy Craft

New Years
ba-bY£Of
couple again

..,-

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Mr. and Mrs. Mark Han1son

People in the newr---.
paternity suit dismissed
.BERLIN (AP) - Venerable rock singer Paul McCartney says It
"a pity" he had to go through a court case to prove he's not the
1., J••u"'' of a West German woman.
Judge lngrld Kuhia on Friday threw out a suit by Erika Huebers,
claims her 21-year-old daughter, Bettina, Is the offspnng of an
· ··•-•- she had with McCartney In his pre-Beatie days, when he was
obscure musician.
The 42-year-old McCartney was vacationing In the West Indies
•·. um"" the decision carne down.
His agent, Bernard DohertY, said he spoke to him by telephone and
I&gt;Etuot'ea McCartney as saying, "I'm happy and relieved It's all over. I
the right all along. It'sa pity I have togo to such lengths
prove lt. I'm 'just glad It's aU over."
Bettina's mother vowi!d to appeal, saying she had "concrete
l ; lndl&lt;:ati&lt;&gt;ns" that a blood sample that showed McCartney wasn't the
. father did not, In fact, come from him.
.',.

.

ATHOL, Mass. (AP) -

roosting spot for the stork on New
Year's Day, with two newborns
couple'shomeseemstobeafavorlte
since 198ldeclaredthereglon'sflrst
arrivals of the year.
Steven Paul Belanger Jr. was the
famUy's latest winner In the Mt.
Grace Region First Baby Contest,
weighing In at 8 pounds at 8:43a.m.
on New Year's Day at Franklin
Medical Center In Greenfield.
Steven Jr.'s older brother Scott
had six more ounces on him when he
entered the world at 10:21 a.m. on
Jan. 1, 1981. at the same hospital;
said the Athol Dally News, sponsor
of the 50-year-old contest.
The parents, Steven Belanger,27,
and his 22-year-old wife, Nancy, of
Orange, met the year before Scott
was born - on New Year's Eve.

~.fBI director says he may resign

A

IIOR~~~~~~~~N PHONE

Open llonday thru Friday .
9 A.ll. til 6 P.ll.

newyear. HDDt,

While In London, they stayed at
you can't,. 1oee
the Sa~ Hotel, attended playa at
them all . .
the Sa~ Theetre, shopped at
· The new year
. Harroda (DOW ~t could be daJI&amp;ier·
brourh t, of
ous), vlllted Weatmlnlster Abby,
count, the prtrrll!l
BuckJnibam Palace, Windsor CaJ.
11ea1011, Jan. 3-5, and Game Protec· tie, Tower of London and Madame
tor Keltl) Wood report.l that Melgl Tuualid's W&amp;X MUII!IUII.
COOnty was third Ill the dlltrlct In
· They retumed borne to St Loull

p.m.; Han1aonville (Church), 4: z.
5:!!1; New Lima Road (one mile ·
south of Fort Melp), 5: lS-6 p.m.;
Rutland (Depot St.), 6:40-8:10p.m.
Wednelday, Jan. U- ntppen
Plains (Lodwick's), 7:25-7:Mp.m.;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8: 1~ 40 p.m.

deer taken by hllllten 1111n1 mUZillll
loaden, CI'OII bowa or Jonr bowl. ·
There IWre 99 chedu!d Ill here with
95 having been ialreu Ill Melp
County with prlmjtlve weapons 1aat
year. 'eec!lng D!Jtt1ct 4 thll year
was Washington Ccunty with 110
deer checked Ill and second W8l
.Co8bocton Ccunty with 100. 1be
entire 1\111 deer 1ea1011, ~ coune,
· also ended on Jan. 5.
·

•-•- ··

'

---

I'm told that Rlcl!ard ~.
IUperintendent ~ the Eastern
I,.oca1 School District, II dolni well
following a triple heart bypass at
tile Cleveland CUnlc. A resident of
Reedsville, he has not been able to
return to his dutlel yet but Is
1llllkln&amp; . IBtlsfactory progress. I
think he mtaht be able to teU you
about divine guidance as a result of
his experience with his heart
problem.

DOWITO'IIIIAUIPOUI

CHECK OUR
Save on Women's Dress Heels
Women's Sport Shoes
Women's Dress Boots

If the Tuppers Plains Emergmcy

•

Squad members appear happy to
you, there's a reason.

Women's Dingo 'Boots

They received a gift of $.liO from
the Buriingbam Camp ol the
Modern Woodmen ~ America.
Each year the Woodmen do
numerous worthwhUe helpfUl
projects--good tor them. ·

SAVE .20-300/o to SOO/o Off Ret. Price
Children's Cowboy Boots 25% Off
Women's Handbags 200A» Off
Save oo Men's Dress &amp; Casual Shoes
Men's Hikers 30 to 40% Off
Men's Side Zipper Boots

Dr. and Mrs. K. Wayne Ratts, the

Sat.

STORE HOURS:
lion .. &amp;Fri. til 8

Tues., Wed., Tbur.
&amp;
til SP.II.

a:

' protein. Cheese Is also a good
I$0Urceofproteln.
. Both of you haVfl missed a ·
' tundamental .pOint ..:.. , lean meat
(lln't fattening. A whole pound !Jf
' lean I"'OIIId •leak with all thevlslble

PEPSI COLA
8 ~6T~l $129

-Sen. Edward·M. Kennedy
his 93-year-old mother, Rose Kennedy, was feeling "very
"'"'••lv" as she left St. Mary's Hospital and hopes to see her friends
~hu1rch on Sunday.

$675

25%•50%0FF:~~~
'
'
·select fall • .
·
wlnferfabrlcs .

101 ht Ave.,

'Unadvertised specials. Extra Special

Bargain labrlcs and clearance merchan·
dise mav be reduced greater lhan 25% oft
orlg. price. !his 25% oft sale does nol apply
10 these llems.

NEWYEAR~.... ~

'.

Simplicity
PAnERNS .

$10FF· ~

..SimpllcHv ·

( It Is normal tor mothen to ~ant
' llielr. cblldren to be plump but It Is

,6164

VIDEO CASSETTE RENTALS
1. "Raiders of the Lost Ark"
(Paramount)
2."Rlsky Business" (Geffen·
Warner)

Susan R. Zirkel, Daniel Dodson
wed in Racine cerem'ony Nov. 12

Eileen Sklvlngton, 477 West
Broadway, Granville, Ohio OJ23
needs some help trom you.
She Is attemptlng to .locate
genealogical material on the descendents ~ Jeremiah RJggs who,
she reports, was the first settler In
the Pageville area of Meigs County.
She also would like lnfonnatlon on
her great·grandmother, Rosanna
Stout Lynch who Is believed to be In
Meigs County In ~ with
relatives.
U you can help Mrs. Sklvlngton
would you please get In touch with
.
her.?

POMEROY - Susan R. Zirkle
and Daniel M. Dodson, were united
In marriage In a cmiiJieHght
ce~emony at the Pentealstal As·
sembly, Racine, on Saturday, Nov.
12.
The Rev. William Hoback offl·
elated at the wedding performed
before heart-shaped candelabra
with other side candelabra. Candles
were used In all the windows.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Zirkle, Pomeroy,
and the gorcm Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Dodson, Middleport.
Rhonda Zirkle, sister of the bride,
was maid of honor and Mrs. Tracey
O'Dell was the bridesmaid. Jim
Hubbard was best man, and Bryan
Zirkle and Brent Zirkle, cousins of
the bride, wereheushers.Sonlaand
Tonia Ash registered the guests.

I'U be expecting smiles galore In
'84.

with a cold and sore throat.
BEAR READER- It Is called
aero-otitis media or barotitis media
and It Is caused by the changes In
\)arometlc pressure dutlng fllght.
· ' With a cold, the opening of the
tube In the throat that connects to
the middle ear may be obstructed.
So you can't change the pressure In
the middle ear chamber during
take-off and landing. Not being able
to equallze the air pressure oit both
Sides of the eardrum can cause
mechanical Injury.

3." Biue Thunder " (RCA Columbia)
4."Superman III" (Warner)
5."Natlonal Lampoon's Vaca·
lion" (Warner)
6."Fiashdance" (Paramount)
7.' Twillght· Zone-The Movie"

'

DIAMOND SETS ~·.
From Sl95 to sggs

bestmanandushersworetuxedosof
(Warner)
grey with boutonnleresofbu rgundy
S."Gandhl" (RCA-Columbia )
roses and greenery·
9."Making of Michael Jackson's
A.[ecelltlon was held In the social Thriller" (Vestron)
424 Second Ave.
Glllipolir
room of the church. The bride's
.''The Dark Crystal" (Thorn·
10
table featured a three-tiered foun·
taln cake topped with a miniature ..EMl
__l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
bride and groom beneath a crystal
snifter. Stairways extended from
From The Bihle ...
the side of the tiered cake to side
THE HOLY SPIRIT TODAY
cake with mauve and burgundy
William B. K"ff/&amp;11
fioweJ:S. Alsoservedwasachocolate
The
Scriptures
have
proven
beyond a doubt and in a way
two tiered groom's cake.
cannot be plainer that Jesus did not promise the baptism of tbe
Assisting at the reception were
Spirit to the 120; that the 120 did not receive the baptism of tbe
. Lee Codney, Candy Tobin, Crestlyn
Spirit; that the 120 were not the spokesmen on the day of Pent~.&amp;;· I
H111, and Barbara Van Meter.
only
the apostles (Jno. 14:16,17,26; 16:7,13; Aets ~ :•.l•.t.:.~ll:
The couple resides at 123 Peacock
that
there
are only two oeeurrences of the baptism of the HoiJ st*itl
Ave., Pomeroy.
which were administered by the Lord and not the apostles (Aetl&lt;::l•Uit
The groom Is emploYed at the
10:44·48). This is the wlwk and ab1olute tnt/&amp;, and you C&amp;llliOt -•i l
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
'otherwise by the Scripture•!
The bride Is employed with the
We do not need the baptism of th.e Holy Spirit today to reveal
Meigs County Welfare Department.
inspired word, nor the miraculo1u gift• today to c&amp;ll/imt the inl)lirelt1

Tawney Jewelers

rr=========;l

Garnets
The regal red of Garnet offers
true natural beauty at afforda·
ble prices. Especiallly for those
born in January.
Discover the wonderful world of
colored stones. Many other col·
ored stones available.

word.

'

mow:1

!.-God has revealed unto us everything we need to
concerning life and godli-n£u through the knowledge of His word,
cording as his divine power hath given UtUO IU aU tflmg1 tr::=~~ ~­
unto life and godli-n£11, through the knowledge of him that
us to glory and virtue" (2 Pet. 1:3) . This .knowledge b
revealed in "the te•ti111011y of our Lord," '1/&amp;e goopel accardiag to
power of God" by which we are called, and through which life
imrrwrtality are brought to light through the goopel" (2 Tim. 1:8-10).
2.-We are called by the goope~ "Whereunto he called you by our
gospe~ to the obtaining ofthe glory of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2 Thea.
2: 14). We are called into the mar1Je!Oiu light of God, "But ye are a
chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peeuiilr
people; that ye should shew forth the praises of him who bath oaiW
you out of darkness into his maroe!Oiu ligllt" (1 Pet. 2:9).
;
3. -The Scripture• """ di!Jimly iflqJired and profitable for doctrille,
reproof, cOITectiofl, and illltruction, "AU •criJ&gt;hlre is given II)'
impirati&lt;m of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for rerfroo/. for.
coTTectiofl, for imtructi&lt;m in righteousness: That the man of God may
be perfect , throughly furnished unto all good works" (2 Tim. 3:16,17). '
4.-The goopelis the certified goope~ having been given by tbe HoJr
Spirit, "But I certify you, brethren, that the go1pe~ which wu ·
preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of ma,&amp;, •
neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Chriat" (Gal. ·
1:11 ,12).
When Jerusalem was destroyed, the miraculo1u age came to
end, for the word or goopel was Completely revealed. Mirocle1
c&lt;m/irm the ~poken word are 110 ltmger ~~eeded for the pe1'fect word Ia.
now recorded in the goopel writing• of the New Testament. It is by tbe~
preaching of sound doctrine, we fii'Ot!e aU tiling• (Rm. 12:2; Epb.
5:10,17; 1 Thess. 5:21) .

(For Free Bible CorresfJOf!dence Course Write ... )

Chapel Hill Church of Christ '
Buloville Rood • P.O. Box 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 46831
Sunct.y Momlng
Bibte $tudy 8 :30
Wonhlp 10:30

CATHY JO &amp; B~ENDA

PERMS ............................ S17.50, '20.00, S30.00
Shampoo, Style C
. ut &amp; Blow Dry ................ '8.50
We Are·Not Just A Beauty Shop, We Are A Gallery of Complete Hair Arts.

..-

Sunct.y E~Nnv
Wonhip 1 :00

• • • I dtt
E~MRinl

·-

.

7:00

" M ........ ~

the ......
Dolly·WJIIt
11 :H A.M.

Jewelers
404 Second Avenue
446·1647
Gallipolis, Ohio

•.

" The Church with the Me111ge"

glad

_.

'

------------------------------: $5.0FFDELUXESALONWAVE -1'
I
I

SILVER. BRIDGE PLAZA

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

.,. ~

~ , she Wolle. up with a aore
•tlu'olt and lltUfty liNd. When abe
I ap1ved ill London lllle had Y!'lY bad
0
· · ' IIJ'IIChal•.sbe Milt to the doctor
1IIIII 11le rave her acme anUbjotlcl,
.o......
an 'ached .......,
10 bad llht ~pe~~t an .
, ~·-

·Silver Brldp
Plua
' ·.
Golllpollo, Oht. ·•
' 4:a6-3353

:,l*: time Ill tile·-

. '

Wlllll .... ,ot ~ .., doctor
, iald·,... ~ DMr ~..floWD
'f

.)

.

'

.

.

.

'-'

. .. . :

-~ lean,
~r:;
r: ~:~
¥:0U·'Ll·
. NEVER/
BU:Y . APPLIANCES AS .LOW P~ICED AGAIN
not tat. And I am
I won't
.
.
..
·! ~~=mor:r·=~.
WASHER.$ - DRYERS ~ FREEZERS - REFRIGERATORS
·:;_:,:a:~o:-u:=
SWEEP~RS .-WATER SOFTENERS- TELEVISIONS

'

Haln:uc nullndudt'd.

tion" (Warner)

•lel!ll 75 cents With a long, stamped, .

$2' OFF. SILUIPOO
.
.A SET
with a copy of t_hls ad. Oller explresl/ 21/84

RoiJil

1

,self·addressed envelopeforlttome,

'

t

10. "National Lampoon's Vaca-

~m rI ~~~.;~~;.;.;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~========;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, .

:ll'ealtiiY Is often)Jiwha\)'011 do In the
··llltche!l. I am sendbJl. you_.The

Cheer up. A new hairstyle will help.
Let us show you bow

:

(Warner)

CLUSTER
1/• CARAT ~;~;,
S219
'12 CARAT ~;~u S379
1 CARAT t095 S79«
:1

:~~£-~: HOTPOINT and GENERAL·ELECTRIC
RANCE
SALE
:~ ~=r;~~L~:r:E! · A·PPLI~NCE CLEA
- . ..
· :r:~~=~~ov=..
,-.o
. ~ ~- ·~·
· u· ES ·oNE
-.MORE WEEK
I ,' I- .N

'lt. &amp; Dtp.

ICE HOUSE
DRIVE THRU

")'O ,,n;oc,.,. PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)

6."Supermanlll" (Warner )
7. " Blue Thunder " (RCA·
Columbia)
8."Pink F1oyd The Wall" (MGM·
UA)
9."Twilight Zone-·The Movie"

;alorieS.
It lli hOw yOu' cook many
removed
'contains on1y

.:fat

Pepsi Cola 2 liter $}09

cUs

In time to spend Chrlstn!aa with
their three children who were home
from Coi,Iege. ~ II the
daua:hter of the late Otha and Lois
Clrcre, who resided In Racine.
And another liOte about the
family. AChrlltmu tioral an'8J1ill'
.Jr¥!11t was preaented to the East
Unden United Methodllt Church In
Colurnliua as a memorial the the
lai! Otha and Lois Circle, by their
claUihter,EvelynCircle. The p-etty
arraJ181!1111!1t was given to a slllt·ln
by the pastor, Michael BeU, after It
had been ilaed to decorate tile altar
for church service and the chUd·
ren's Christmas program.

A program of music was pres·
ented by Miss Kathy Baker, pianist,
DEARDR.LAMB-Mymother·
andMrs. SallyGioeckner,vocallst,
In·law seems to think her 1101118 too
Included In her selections, "Sunrise
Sklnnyandneedstoeatmoremeat.
Sunset," "You Took My Heart by
He 11 6 teet tall and weighs 160
Surprise," and "The Lord's
'J,iounds: H~ Is not aldnny at aU tnlt
Prayer."
she. II overwel&amp;ht. She says you
Glvenlllmarriagebyherparents,
da
thebrldewasescorledtothealtarby
need to t
t tl 'ttwl
1!11 mea
ce !l Y
her father. She was attired In a floor
along with
bread.a eas
I don't think meat 1s aU that
length gown of white lace fashioned
Important 10 we IOII'Iettmes Include
with a Queen Anne neckline, and a
It only once a day. I do 111e beilns,
ruflled hemline which extended to
·"-and frelb .-.blel u I'
fonn a chapel train.
;~ to ~--~11).
Her headpiece was a wreath of
: ~myaelfbeeallleidon'teat
white orchids and baby's breath
Then, you can Uterally suck from which ten a fingertip veU;She
." lot ~ tneet, whY do·I only get sick
r da the
?
Infectious material Into the middle carried a cascade of burgundy roses
:~ ~ :"tb.t she doesn't ear from air pressure cbanges. andwhlteorchids.
think I feed him wen and br'lngs That Is why doctors recommend
The mother of the bride wore an
'meatovereverytlmetheyvlsltus.I
that you avoid air travel when you Oft·whitelacegownoverrose,wltha
have a cold, or problems with corsage of mauve mums.
,plan to show her your answer.
allergic rhinitis (hay fever).,
The groom, father of the bride,
. &gt; DEAR READER- There are a . - - - - - - -.....:::;;..--.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-i
·:tot of people who eat no meat at all
&gt;and many Of them are much
·~althler by statistics than the
keneraJ public. Hciwever,lean meat
Is .a good food and a good source of
proteiD. 'rhe fat In meat Is not
beDellclal un1e11s you want or need
exceu calories.
Your husband needs 56 grams of
protein .a day. · An etaht-ounce
portion, ra,w weight of till! edible
; portion 9f11Y, of red meat, chicken
IN AND MEET OUR STYLISTS
! 9r fish lflll provide about !Kl lt'ams
By L a - Lamb, M.D.

~thls~~a:u'~~~~r!~

Plus

5. "Making of Michael Jackson's
Thriller" (Vestron)

How important is meat?

These Are Just a Few of Our Many Bargain.$

1

Warner)

Health, Dr. lAmb

~~~~~Sa~t~da~9;t;·l~4;.~~~~~iii~~~!~~~~·~~~~~
ur Y

January Special ·
on Diamonds

-.eon.

bani In then-

SALE

Pepsi Cola

Kennedys leave the hospital

FOR

I hope&amp;llQd

RY

•r

•• LOS ANGELES (AP)- Publicly acknowledging for the first time
.,,
;,that he might resign four years before his 10-year term expires, FBI
.!J:&gt;Irector William F. Webster says he never thought of himself as "a
;.ateer government employee."
•~ Webster, 59, who Is given large credit for rebuUdlng the bureau
;~er the domestic spying scandals of the 1970s, marks the end of his
~sixth year In office Feb. 23.
j ~ "I am approaching a 60th birthday, which tends to have some
'~eanlng In the professional as wen as the business marketplace,"
:webster said In an Interview published Friday In The Los Angeles
'Thnes.
·:.&gt;INebster has previously turned aside public questions about his
" ""'"""'by saying he was taklng his job one day at a time.
·~rm under no pressure to leave, and It would be quite a wrench to
. so." Webster said. " But I think I've convinced myself that I'm not
~pensable "

One

CLASSES TO START
FEB. 2 AT 6:30 P.M.

By'lbe~Pl"ellll

The foUowlng are the most
popular vkleo cassettes fortheweek . . - - - - - - - -- ending January 14 as they appear In
'
next week's Issue of Billboard
magazine.
VIDEO CASSETTE SALES
1. "Raiders of the Lost Ark"
(Paramount)
2."Jane Fonda's Workout" (Karl
VIdeo)
3."Fiashdance" (Paramount)
4."Rlsky Business" (Geffen·

former Rol!!rnary Circle ol Racine,
of St. LoulS, Mo., haVe J;'etumed
home .from a fantaltlc trip to
London, England, r:Nf!r the oo,t~~ay

forYQUinthll

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

Lynda Roberts, Mark Harrison
wed in Laurel Cliff ceremony

t

aroom

Times-Sentinel Paga .8 3

The

.Top vides sdlers
named for week

'\

,. A.holiday in Britain

Columbus.
.
The
rmuated trom .
Fairfield HJ8b School' alld wm
lflduate trom OhiO State UnJver·
ally In the sprinl. .
The coupla-l'l!lldelln Columbul.
The ~·· parenta bolted •
reheerlal diDIIer at Dante~• ~tau·
rant andan~bouleat•home
toiiowtna the weddln&amp; teceptkln.

Meigs Bookmobile ~et
POMEROY _ Bookmobile achedule In Meigs County·ts broulht by
the Meigll County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobtle schedule for Mon·
d\IY· Jan. 9 - Burlington (County
MobUe Home Park), 3: 3.'1-4: !!I

Ohio Point Plea10nt, W. Va •

1984

:~ '

. .. •

. •

f

.

, I

•

......
..
•

;' .
I

••
....•

�~

.......

~

....

•"
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The Svnday Times-Sentlnei- Page-B-5 •

Ohio-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

I, 1914

' FAC photo
• •
competltton
deadline nears
We ReS8fVe The Right
Umlt Quantities.

GALLIPOLIS - The French Art
Colony annual photography com pelitton, " Interpretive Lans '84" is
scheduled for display during the
month of February. Deadline for
entries is Saturday, Jan . 21 .
E ntry forms can be obtained
from the French Art Colony,
located at 530 First Avenueor P .J.'s
Inc., downtown Gallipolis. Hours
for accepting entries will be
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 5
p.m . at the Frenc h Art Colony on
,
J an. 21.
Judging wUl be conducted by a

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., Jan. 14, 1984

.
Kathy Pooler
BWDyer

~ooler

- Dyer
.enagagement
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Efllerson Pooler, Pomeroy, a nnounce the engageme nt and . a pproaching marriage of their da ughter, Kathy, to Bill Dye r, son of Mrs.
Maxine Dyer, Bidwell and the late
Wjllie Dyer .
)'Mss Pooler, a 1981 gradua te of
Eastern High School is employed as
a secretary at the Western Reserve
Telephone Co. at Coolville. A 1981
graduate or Meigs High School, her
fiance is employed at the Rutland
~partment Store.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

KAHN'S

Bologna ~E~.~~~E!F

KA~N'S

· RACINE -

Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p .m. at village hall.
POMEROY~ Special meet-

Ing of Pomeroy Chapter

~.

Royal Arch Masons Monday at 7
p.m. Work in the royal arch

CHICKEN

: GALLIPOLIS - A Right to
Life luncheon wUl be held at the
Down Under Restaurant at .1
on Jan. 9 for area ministers
and their wives. Wray Bryant,
:;md Stephanie Varga, executive
director of the Ohio Right to Life,
· WUl be guest speakers. The
movie "The Slippery Slope" will
be shown at 7: 30 p.m. at the
buckeye building, Third ·
:Avenue.

p.m.

huaband, a biologist with the

MarshiJeJd experimental farm.

)fer column was not only popular
wJth Sentinel readers, but was
certainly an educational · feature
with lots cllnforrtllltlon oo nutrition,
home canning and processing, and
t1pJ oo easy meal preparation. And
the special pi'OIIl'ams she planned

$

19
Beef ........~· 2

M!re always tnnov111ive
ll&amp;btenlng as well as tun.

-She was so personabie ...... and

hflptul whenever.

•In the past It's always been a long
di-awn-&lt;lUt process, so it would
seem the county can look toiWard to
WJ!eks or months without this
~ble program and service.

Potatoes ...... ~o.L~-~~G

7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
7:30 p.m . Tuesday in the social
room of the Middleport Fire
Station.

K~AFT PARKA.Y .

.

$

149
$

.

Marganne ...... 1!..•2/

WEDNESDAY

$}59.
.lk
.
.
(. ....... ~ ... .
M
TowelsJu~~-~69¢
2%
Paper
.

.

MUELLER'S ELBO MACARONI 0

f$1

Spaghetti :.. ~.~~ .·

set

· POr.tEROY Rev. Hazel
Live, pastor or, the Full Gospel
Temple, Uttle Hocklng, will
pall at the Thursday night
of the Po11~oy Chapter, Wllmen'sAgloi:YFeliOwshlp.

ineetbla'

'

.

GOLD MEI)AL FLOUR .
5LB. BAG

6·94

STOKELY
CATSUP
.
"
14 oz.-~-

ons.

3/$·.

.

many years.
Mrs. Mills was employed for 26
years as a dental assistant for Dr.
Clyde lngles. They have operated
Ailee's Ceramics for the past 16
years. Both are members of the
Middleport F irst Baptist Church
and have participated in various
civic affairs for m any years.
Mr. and Mrs. Mills have three
children. AdrieMe Munns, Lynch·
burg, Va., Rae Gwiazdowsky,
Middleport and J a mes Mills, Poway, Cali!. They have nine
grandchildren.
Friends and rela tives are Invited
to a ttend the open reception
between the hours o! 2 to 5 p.m.

It'§ nice to see Ann Barrett
around again.
Ann returned to her job at the
Senior Citizens Center this week
•
afler many weeks of health prob'It's been so long .... but finally
now evecythlng seems to be "go" . lems. She gave birth to a daughter.
for~ to begin oo the new . underwent several major surgeries
senior ctttz.eos housing complex on and after weeks In the hospital and
several more recuperating, now
M~Helghts.
Weather pennltting, big equip- says she's feeling fine.
By the way, Susan Oliver, also a n
ment should be on the site come
employee at the Senior Citizens
Monday morning.
.'Meanwhile, the Meigs County Center, is coming along fine
following surgery. Susan became Ul
Unit of the American Cancer
on Christmas Eve and was immediately hospitalized. Think what
lha t must have done to their holiday
BARTLESVD..LE. Okla. (AP) activities!
Ojl reseves are often confirmed in
the laboratory by chemical analysis
A party is being planned at the
o#.rock sarriples, according to Ben Salvation
Army to honor two of the
~II.
faithful members, Edith Spencer
:Powell, a senior research geolo- who is 82 today, and Major Glenna
gist for Phillips Petroleum, says a
Rummel (retired) who will ben on
sophlstlcatted tnstrwnent called the Thursday. Our best wishes to these
Sc:anntng electron microscope is Christian women whose concern
uied to analayze the rocks. He says
always seems to be for others.
tlje Instrument makes quantitative
measurements on rocks as small as
one-mUifonlhs' of a meter In
~-orl·lOth thethlcknessof

Rockreadmg

lr=======:: :; ; ; ;

selection of three jurors representtng the fine arts a nd commercial
arts fields .
The jurors will select works In
both black and white a nd color
photography in amateur a nd professional categories. An added
ca tegory or special darkroom
effects will also be a mong the
awa rds.
Works selected for display will be
shown in the gaUeries throughout
the month of February.
Ali entries must be properly
fra mes or matted a nd securely
wired for hanging. All works must
be covered with glass or plexl-giass
and have a protective backing.
Photograph!. not meeting these
requirements wUl be disqualified
from judging.
Shipped work wUI be returned to
the artist providing adequate postage has been included. Up to three
works may be entered for a n entry
fee of $5. For furt her information on
these guidelines or entry forms a nd
labels, contact the F AC at (614)
446-3834.

ROBIN HOOD
BOOTS

$2995

Grey
Black

Taupe

300 Second .. Gallipolis

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

MARY ANN'S
LUNCH ROOM
CORNER OF 2nd &amp; COAL
MIDDLEPORT

NbW SERVING
DINNER SPECIALS
EVERY DAY
ALSO A COMPLETE
SANDWICH MENU.

FREE DELIVERY TO
LOCAL BUSINESSES.
KITCHEN OPEN
10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
CALL US WITH
YOUR ORDER TODAY

992-9903
r--------~-.e:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
I

Monday thru Friday
9 AMto9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to S PM

ACROSS
.- THE
,...r R,. ...r
~ • tt

offices in the former children's .
home building which wiU become a
part of the complex.
Ahout the children's home, it has
been accepted for registry with the
National Register of Historical
Places and will be retained arch!·
tecturaUy. We're told that the big
beautifUl stal!way in the center of
the building extending from the
bottom to the top floors will remain
intact.
And for your information the
Meigs Cancer unit .will have offices
in the Pomeroy Masonic Temple
once they have been renovated for
that purpose. Until then, the unit is
" in storage" but Teresa CoUins at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
Delores Frank at her home are
available to handle the group's
business.
The Meigs County Board of
, Education expects to open its
offices anyday in the newly renovated office space on the second
floor of Pomeroy vlllage hall, Main
Street.

WIU.. If~ 0J1 C.Ai..l I (WI
,... Al'f'OtN , . . ""'

'

.•

448-9510

A N£W Dlfi£CTION lfll HAIR DESIGN"

•
Coats

Sweaters
Sportswear

30o/o off

Rev. and Mrs. John Hersman

Hersmans mark 60th anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. and Mrs.
John Hersma n celebrated their

Fmdmgwater

60th wedding anniversary Dec. 26
a t the Ohio Valley Bank.
The party was given by their
three sons - John Jr. and wife
Eva; Eugene and wif~ Erama; and
J ames and wife Mae; daughter
Dorothy Dodrill and Darrell a nd
their 11 grandchUd~n and 17
grea t-gra ndchildren.
Hersman is pastor of the Morga n
Cente r Wesleyan Church.

ALL OTHER MERCHANDISE
SAVINGS FROM

25 TO 50°/o

WORTHINGTON , Ohio (AP ) "Some people believe you can find
water by voodoo techniques," says
David Nielson of the National Water
.
Well Association, but "they don't
•
reallze how sophisticated a science
waterexplora tionhasbecome."
.....----------_J--------------------~.
He named three new techniques
:
used by modem well dr!Uers.
One uses electrical resistance tc
determine the depth a t which wa ter
lies and also measures how much
water there is.
A . second locates water by
detecting temperature changes at
the surface of the earth.

---etc. o .
•

January Semi-Annual Clearance Sale
GROUP OF

BLAZERS

PLASTIC GAL

1/2 OFF

.

.

.

DINNER TR~~T .

eot.RleS ........

5
•·

'· 8 oz.

~~-

· STARKIST
. . TUNA
.

MIDDLEPORT - The 50th
wedding a Mive rsary of Mr. a nd
Mrs. David Russell Mills, Middleport, wUl be observed with an open
reception at the Middleport F irst
Baptist Church, Palme r Street,
Sunday, J an. 15.
Russell (Bruz) Mills a nd the
former Ailee Louise Grim were
married on June 12, 1934 In
Greenup, Ky. by Rev. wnnam
Cooper, Methodist minister. They
have resided in Middleport ail their
lives.
Mills was employed for 34 years
a t the Covert-Holsum Baking Co.
and for 10 years a t Ralston-Purina,
Wellston. He has been active in the
Middleport Fire Department for

llw

I~ '$-I·'..·..

·.

are

~Speaker

1

BROUGHTON'S

BO

; Rtm..AND - Dances will be
}leld every Saturday night at the
~ Denison Post 467, American
).eglon, Rutland.
• 'Ole dances are open to the
~bile and featUre a band, snack
)lar. and refreshment stand.
Donations at the door
$150 a
iJerson until Feb. 1 and $2 a
iJerson after Feb. 1.

.

IQOD.

at

dances

and en-

A replacement? We hope so, and

; RACINE - Racine Lodge 461

~gion

column, "What's
COoldn'?"
'Dale lett her

WIJdlJte Division at the New

U.S. NO.1 WHITE

.
~ Happenings

IJ'!ISS Dale Stoll's

more time with her young son and

TIJESDAY

· POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter ~ Royal Arch Masons
Will meet Wednesday at 7:30
p.m . along with Bosworth Coun·
f il 46 Royal and Select Masters.

Board of Education have vacated

December so that she can spend

· POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter !ll, Royal Arch Masons,
~ meet at 7 p.m. Monday at
the temple with work in the
Royal, Arch Degree. Refresh·
inents wUl be served.

~&amp;AM will meet Tuesday

Society and · the Meigs County

'l'lmell Sen¢!nel SlaJf
POMEROY- Hey, I dOn't know
about you, but I

Meigs County

Fryer Parts • • • • • • • • 5·9¢ ..

~go'

By CHARLENE HOEIFICII

position as home

LB.

Stew

I

economist for the

//

.

ried on Jan. 15, 1949. Besides their
daughter, Mary, they have a son,
BeMy Upton, also of Silver Ridge,
and a daughter, Betty Chaffee,
deceased. Mr. a nd Mrs. Upton have
four grandchildren.
Friends and relatives are invited
to attend the open reception
between the hours of 2 a nd 4 p.m.

Cpmmunity Corner

CRISPY SERVE

~-

MIXED

POMEROY - Frank and Iva '·
Upton, ml1 Silver Ridge, Will
observe their 35th wedding anniver·
sary on Sunday, Jan. 15, with a n
open reception at the home of their
daughter and son-ln·law, Ronnie
and Mary Robinson, also of Silver
Ridge.
Mr. and Mrs. Upton were mar-

senior housing a

Breasts ........... ~8~
BONELESS

~-

Sl

69

·Sliced Bacon;:~~· 99¢

MONDAY

pantry.

l:·.p::·

••

MERCERVILLE The
Snaders Quartet will sing at
Mercerville Baptist Church,
Sunday, 7 p.m.

.:

.

KAHN'S SLICED

SUNDAY

Mills anniversary celebrated

Uptons to note 35th anniversary

59
. Wieners~~:~u.·~.....~ $}

Calendar

HEATH- The United Methodist Women of Heath Church will
meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m.
Elizabeth Mourning will give
df\VQtlons, and Nan Moore will
have the program. A prayer and
self~nial offering will be taken
and members are also reminded
to take canned goods tor the food

Mr. and Mrs. David Russell M1lloi

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Upton

•

6~5
oz. ·.
CAN ·.

6'9¢'
·

.

:T'IPE DETERGE:NT ,'J :
'

' Off.-

Jill. 14, 1884

Model.5528

Model521

·

SAVE 20°/o . ON

ALL SINGER
PRODUCTS

·200/o OFF
ALL 60" WOOL
'
.
. AND WOOL BLENDS
20°io. OFF ALL 60" POLYESTER BLENDS

I
j

~~1 o_z. $_s·-9g·,_. ... ;~

Limit One Per CUIIOmer
. QoOd Only At Pow.ll'a

The Barclay

wilh built-in buttonholer

,

•

Free-Arm Machine

/,

'

WE SERVICI ALL MAKES OF MACHINE
·'

~OD... N

WOODMI!N
01' AM.AICA
.

;
~

,..,.,.,. £1/1 1111•.......

•

•

o I!OCtc 1.i.ncl. IllinOIS

WE SHARPEN SOSSORS

THE FABRIC SHOP

SWEATERS
&amp; VESTS

5%

•

•

OFF

COATS &amp;
JACKETS

25o/o

••

.I
I

•'

OFF

115 W. 2nd

.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992·2284
. '
.

Servlnllltl and Gillie Couatlis

~

I

�·1984

Lamaze
classes
scheduled

PRICES EFFECTIVE . •

POMEROY - The prenatal
program personnel' of the Meigs
County -Department of Health is
interested in providing Lamaze
instruction in prepared childbirth in
the county.
In these classes, participants
learn methods of breathing, relax·
ing and gain an understanding of
what is happening so that labor arid
birth are not as painful or
In order to bring in an instructor
for the clas'ses, the health department needs to determine the
interest across the county.
Pregnant women are asked to
advtse the department if they are
interested in Lamaz,e classes, would
they be able to attend classes on a
week night for six consecutive
weeks and to indicate if they would
be willing to pay for classes if they
cost $75 or $Ill for the six-week period
indicating also if they could make
- partial payment or no payment. ·
This information is to be mailed to I ·
the Meigs County Health Department, Prenatal Program; P .O. Box '
631, Mulberry Heightts, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769.

seary. ·

.. SUNDAY, JAN. 8 · .:
THRU
.
SA·TURDAY,' JAN. 14

GALLIPOUS - The following
classes are being offered during the
winter quarter at The French Art
Colony. Enrollment deadline for
these courses is Jan. 13.
Basic Painting, Tuesday, 3 p.m.
to 5 p.m., six weeks, $18.
Advanced Painting, Thursday, 7
p.m. to 8: 30 p.m., eight weeks, $35.
Youth Drawing I, (ages eight
through 11) Saturday, 10 a.m . to
11:30 a.m., eight weeks, SW.
Youth Drawing II, (ages 12
through 15), Saturday, 11:30a.m. to
1 p.m., eight weekS, $25.
Basic Watercolor, Tuesday, 7
p.m. to 8:30p.m., eight _weeks, $35.
Youth Ceramics, Saturday, 10
a.m. to 11: 30 a .m ., eight weeks, $25.
Adult Ceramics, Saturday, noon
.to 2 p.m., eight weeks, $35.
Additional materials charge.
Art History- Survey, Thursday,
7:30p.m. to8: 30p.m., 10weeks,$00.
Individual Voice, .individually
scheduled, $6 per 30 minutesand $12
per hour.
, Guitar, • individually scheduled,
weeknight, one-half hour sessions,
eiglft weeks, $45.
Banjo I, Tuesday, 7p.m. to9p.m.,
10 weeks. $45.
Bari)a.ll, Wednesday, 7 p.m. to 9
p.m., 10 weeks, $45.
Beginning Ballet, Saturday, 1:30
p.m. to 2:30p.m., elghi weeks, $:fi.
The following three classes are
now in the planning processes. For
further information or enrollment
to these classes as well as the above
scheduled classes, contact FAC at
(614) 446-3834, Tuesday thj'ough
Saturday, 10 a.m. 5 5 p.m.:
Calligraphy, Adult Drawing and
Painted Ceramic Design.

lOO Wi 1111 ST., PO ROY
13l 'PilE ST. GALLIPOLIS

NO DOUBLE
COUPONS ON .

A

DOUBLE
COUPONS

D

PlloES • • MUll, .1111111 I
Till SI~IY, .lllltliY 11

Crisco
Shorten in

l&gt;OUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC- _
TURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

CDUHTRY STORES

SAVE DOUBLE $'$

AT

JOHNSO~'S

THURSDAY, JAN. 12
~:.

Budget
Pleaser
Special

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

FAC winter
classes set

-GALLIPOLIS I POMEROY STORES!

Tavern
Ham

Budget
PleaseiSpecUJ

Builget
Pleaser
Special

USDA CHOICE

Pick-Of-The
Chicken

Rib
ef
Steak

WHOLE
HAM

HILLSHIRE
FARMS

-oked Sausage $--~
- 8·
9·
.

ltal. Sausage ·
Polska Kielbasa

LB.

'SUNDAY

Sliced
Bacon

PKG.

CHUNK BOLOGNA

SUPERIOR

SKINNED &amp; DEVEINED

SAUSAGE

FREE

BEEF N CHf:DDJUI

$ 39

Ground
Chuck

BOILED HAM

FRANKIES

BOLOGNA

LB.99

-.. -

CALIFORNIA.

IREEI BEAlS
oz. PORI I BEAlS .
~s RED IIIlEY BEAlS
:i' 6 oz. SLICED BEETS
••·'
::_16 oz. IOLDEI CORI
'

BROCCOLI

•

Budget _

'

Pleo.er
Special .

U. S. NO. 1

GOLDEN

Head
Lettuce

RipeBana-nas

ALL-PURPOSE

White

,l

Budget i .
P[fasert:
Special
·sHURFI.NE
,
YELLOW, WHITE,
DEVIL'S _FOOD

Cake
Mix

,. _,_
11
It

'

CRUI SnLE OR WHOLE IERIEL

Cream

,,•.

PANCAKE SYRUP
11
IZ

::

4f

Tomato
Soup 10¥4 oz.·
CAN

~

~FiNE CUT

Green •.

Bean$ ,
ctr 1EARLY

.

JQNE .

. . t6 Ol

ROYAL

'

MILK.
·

MARGARINE 4 STICK
POUND

SHURFtNE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL
'

CA

fROZEN _.

P.ot ,Pies·

~~ $

:z*1

ESIIIO

49

HElD I SHOULDER

FUDGE·B.RS .

----------" SHAMPOO

$

$.

,

'

2i99¢
R

9

BROUGHTOII

PEP.TO BISMOL

IILLH

BUnERMILK

DEODORANT

68

.... . ... ..

'....":...-~

... ,,

,

~;.Z

11

Til

NORWICH
HEAD I CHEST

clJs

ll
Ll....

$244

GOLDEN RIPE . ,.

.

SUPER SELECT

· CUCUMBERS.
YOUR' CHOICE .·
-

· MORTON ·.

TOMATO SAUCE

SUPREME

lUIS

•

HO~IDOG 2/99~.

OR BARBECUE

-.;,$ ·~~--8.

SHUR~RESH ~.AlTERS

SHURFINE
....

SIURFIIE

•.·.

G'ALLON PL4STIC

·

IZ

o •

.;R~;;: Milk.

CAN

s ucoH

It

.CAN
Budget ,
Pl.ler
Sp«ial

-

IZ

SIURFIIE

PINEAPPLE

CIISIU

41

12
- IZ

TOMATO PASTE

FOR

Style , 1&amp; oz.

pudger ·

'

oz.

ll

JUICE

YOUR CHOICE

SHURFINE
WH. KERNEL or

p,
.
' ~r . -

CAMPBELL'S

:, 6

· Budget
Pleaser
Special

I'•

,"

:-:16 ~z. APPLE SAUCE
..

After
bagpipes,
then what?

,,

..

BEEF liVER
:16 oz.

ICEBERG·

SLICED

8 Oz.

BEEF SHORT RIBS

•l

PORK STEAK

$2.05

AND GET

EXTRA
LEAN
POUND

CUBED.

CLUB BOLOGNA
FOR

·,

$28

16 OZ. PKG.

SUPERIOR

gg¢.

COTTAGE CHEESE

. Ll

Budget
Pleaser
Special

SUPERIOR
DART BRAND

SLICED 1oc LB
EXTRA

WE WELCIIE SPECIAL OilERS
UW...ISMI-IJH
PO.RIY 112-1311

2 LEGS, 2 THIGHTS
2 BEASTS

SUPERIOR STORE' SLICED

120Z.

PICNICS

HAWTHORN
MELLODY.

' 12-5

USDA CHOICE

SUPERIOR

STORE
HOURS:

· 9 TO 9
DAILY

·s CHOICE PIECES

Budget
Pleaset
Special

Budget \
Pleaser
Special

I

WE WELCOME FOOD STAMPS

SUPERIOR
SMOKED

BANANAS

Pill
OR

WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT

4 $1

ROME BEAUTY
OR

RED DELICIOUS

·APPLES
3LBS

77t •

�.,
•

Page-S-8-The SunCiay Times-Sentinel

Registration
~scheduled

at Marshall
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Regular registration for Marshall Unl·
verslty's Spring Semester will be
conducted from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on
Monday, Jan. 16, In Memorial
Student Center. according to Registrar Robert H. Eddins.
The Spring Semester will begin
on Monday. Jan. 16, with those
classes meeting at 4 p.m. or after.
Walk-In registration and schedule adjustments will be processed
weekdays In the Registrar's Office.
Old Main lB. through Friday, Jan.
13. Beginnlng Monday. Jan. 9, the
office will be open Monday through
Th\lrsday from 8 a.m. to 6:30p.m.
and from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on
Friday, Jan. 13.
Course schedules. which contain
specific registration details, are
available In the Registrar's Office,
Old Main 106. All fees must be paid
at the time of registration.
On Monday, Jan. 16, entry Into
the registration area will be by an
alphabetical system based on the
student's last name. The schedule Is
as follows: 8 a.m., B; 9 a.m., C; 10
a.m., D-E-F-G; 11 a.m., H-1-J-K-L;
Noon, M; 1 p.m., N-0-P-Q-R; 2
p.m., S; 3 p.m., T-U-V; '4 p.m.,
W-X·Y-Z; 5 p.m. A, and 6 to8p.m.,
open.
Students may register at their
scheduled time or any time thereafter. MU student ID cards will be
necessary for registration.
Schedules may not be adjusted
during regular registration, but will
be processed during late reglstra·
tlon on Wednesday a nd Thursday,
Jan. 18-19, as outlined In the course
schedule.

Pomeroy-Middleport

At wit's end

-·
•

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

January 8, 1984;

What w}ll antiques be in 2040~

By ERMA BOMBECK
My husband and I have always
loved antiques. We will buy any·
thing that Is 10 years older than we
are.
Actually, our ·romance bios·
somed at an antique show when we
looked at one another over a little
wooden box with a cutting blade
and ultered those three little words,
"What Is It?"

Technology being what It Is, I
"What did they use It for?"
couldn't help but speculate about .
"The way l: understand u, you
the antique-lovers of the future. I could talk on this while you cut your
can just . see a couple poking grass, washed -your car, played
through an armory full ofmemora· tennis or worked In your garage."
billa In 2040.
"Why would you want to do
"What Is It?" asks Ingrid, picking that?" asks Ingrid.
up two pieces of plastic connected
"To keep up," says Max. "Look
by a string.
at this. Do you know what It Is?"
"It's a cordless phone," says ~grid picks up a bracelet with a
Max.
-"' II openlgg In 11. ''I haven't the

:

foggiest," she says.
Ingrid and Max browse throug~.
"It's a small TV set!'
portable computers that yoU:
"I thought they were bigger."
propped up In front of you as Ya.t
"No, this was .for when you were traveled on an atrplane,pr rei~
driving to work o~ taldng a bath or at the beach. They examine 1M
sitting at a ballgaml! and wanted to, cordless toothbrushes and IIIII(
see another game that was being ashtrays that made · ~moki!;
played somewhere else."
disappear.
'"
"Why would they want to do
Finally, Max becomes lntr1~
that?" asks Ingrid.
with a pair of headphones that
"To keep up," say~ ~alf.
make him look like a man fro

. .
.

: :

.

RU TLANDI FUR NITUR E CO.
JANU1lRY CLEARANCE
INVENTORY
MUST -BE REDUCED!
NOTHINGJS BEING HELD BACK, PRICES HAVE NEVER BEEN LOWER. S.EE WHAT
YOU WANT. FIN()JHE GRATE BOYS, ASK .ABOUT THEIR ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
AND THEY KNOW YOU WILL BE PLEASED ENOUGH TO TAKE HOME WHAT YOU
WANT.
STORI:WIDE SALE ~ SAVE ·IN EVERY DEPARTMENT \

OUR LARGEST SALE. BIGGEST PRICE REDUCTION
ANO LOWEST PRICES THIS YEAR

(Reaganism'
topic at _OU
ATHENS '- Dr. Zillah Elsen
stein, Morton VIsiting Professor In
Polltl.cal Science at Ohio Unlverslty, will deliver a public lecture on
"Reaganism, Femlnlsm and the
Gender Gap," Thursday, jan.12, at
8 p.m. In Irvine Auditorium.
A professor of politics at Ithaca
College since !973 and a 1968 cum
laude graduate of Ohio University,
Eisenstein has authored two books,
"The Radical Future of Liberal
Feminism" and "Capitalist Palrtarchy and the Case for Socl8llst
Feminism," as well as a dozen
articles covering feminist Ideology
and public policy Issues affecting
wbmen.
·
She received both her master's
and doctoral degrees at the University of Massachusetts and her
academic honors Include the Amer."
lean Council of Learned Societies
Fellowship, the Woodrow Wilson
· [!lssertatlon Fellowship and a
. National Science Foundation
Grant.
The Morton VIsiting Professorships are und~rwrltten by a fund
establlshed .by the Iate Dr. Robert
Morton.
·

.

'

•
}

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

.

quick. Then, when the oolse
subsides, I'll come to and start
Lf&gt;S ANGELES (AP) -Some- talking. By that time they're a little
times It seems as though the one docile, some of them are kind of
lncongrurus element on the Los dozing. I have a guy In back with a
Angeles Raiders Is the coach, machine gun In case something
low-keyed Tom Flores.
happens, and I have a guy on the
While the Raiders have for years · other side with a whip. Eve_ntually.
endured - or fostered - the Image they'll pay attention and '' 'come
of uncontrollable renegades, their around. They'll get out -of their
coach Is theverymodelofdecorum.
four-point stance and sit up In their
Flores, unllke his laundry bag of a chairs and they'll listen. Sometimes
predecessor, John Madden, doesn't you have to grunt a Jlttle bit because
raise his voice, doesn't wave his fist.
some of them don't understand
Someonewondered,astheAmerl· exactly what you're trying to say,
can Conference championship how you're trying to communlcate.
game against Coach Chuck Knox Then, eventually, you say, 'OK, let's
and the Seattle SeahawkS ap- go, on two,' andwebreakandgetout
proached, how the Raiders reacted of there - and usually we have to
to Flores behind c!Oied doors,
repair the door all the time because
whether they were as coachable as they forget to open ll
other teams.
"Old I answer your question?"
F1ores never cracked a smile.
Completely. It was as good an
example of the contrast between
"When we have a general Flores and his counterpart. U any
meeting," he said, "the flrstthlng I coach owns the patent on the "game
do Is open the door and throw In some face," It Is Knox, all business from
raw meat, then close the door real one game's final gun to the next

AP SportA Writer

APSpo1111Wrtter

STOP IN AND SEE RUTlAND FURNITURE'S
LARGE SUPPLY OF COFFEE AND END
TABLES WITH PRICES SlASHED FOR THIS
JANUARY. CLEARANC[

one's kickoff.
When asked on Saturday night for
some examples of the Seahawks'
lighter moments, Knox, his jaw set
as always, his eyes as steely, replied
unsmlllngly: I'We like to hlp, hlp,
hooray In the locker room after we
win, get excited about 11. We like to
have fun and In football the fun Is
winning."
U there has been anything for
Flores to worry about, It has been
the pro&gt;pect of an overconfident
team, particularly with so many
fans already looking forward to a
Raiders-Washington Redsklns Super Bowl.
Including Seattle In his comments, he said: "Any team that gets
this far In the playoffs has earned II.
No one has backed In ... Once you're
In the playoffs, anything can happen
because It's a very short season.
"I know what It's like to be a wUd
card and go all the way, so I have
total respect for Seattle and what
they're doing, what they've done so
far."

The Redsklns, defending Super
Bowl champions, own a 10-garne
winning streak and a ieague best
15-2 record after their 51-7 declma·
tlon of the Los Angeles Rams last
Sunday.
The49ers,l0-polnt Wlden:logs, are
11-6, Including a 24-23 scare In the
playoff semifinals with the Detroit
• Lions.
"I think anybody thatdoesn'tglve
San Francisco a chance,.well that's
ridiculous," Gibbs said. "I don't

think we should be considered
(Invincible) andldon'tthlnkweare.
That kind of talk does nothing but
help them. I wish we were being put
In a dltterent light. There have been
people that have been better than us
this year, two different times."

publicity on behalf of the Redsklns
but our team has been through the
same type ot thing before," said
Walsh, woo guided the then lightlyregarded 49ers to a Super Bowl
victory over Cincinnati In 1981.
"This Is a better team than theone
In 'SL I just can't guarantee at what
Asked If he'd rather be the Jevelwewlllplay,"Walshsald.
underdog, the position they held on
Thelsmann. winner of the Assothetrtltledrlvelastyear,Gibbssald, ctated Press Most Valuable Player
"Yes. I think I would be."
Award, completed more than 60
Forty-Niner Coach Bill Walsh percentofhispasseswhllethrowlng
said talk of the Redsklns' greatness 29 touchdowns and 111nterceptlons.
~ not unfounded. "It's justified. It's
"He's the guy that makes us tick
on offense,'' said Gibbs.
a great team with a great record."
"We have yet to play our best
Rlgglnsrushedfor1,347yardsand
game this year, and we will have to a league-record 24 touchdowns
be at our best to be In the contest during the regular season. Against
against the Redsklns," Walsh theRams,hescoredthreetlmesand
became the first back In league
added.
The Redsklns rode the passing of history to rush for over 100 yards In
Joe Thelsmann and runnlng of John five straight playoff games when he
Riggins to roll up a National gained 119 yards on 25 carries.
Football League record 541 points
Gibbs, AP'sCoachoftheYearthe
during the regular season. Overall, . past two years, Is 31-11 as a head
the team has won :ll of Its last 33 coach In three years with the
games.
Redsklns. The only NFC team he
"A team might be awed by the has not beaten Is the49ers.

Gold Seal Congoleum

'HEAVY·SHINYL VINYL .

1/2 PRICE
S2 99 SQ. YD.

The
1st, 5th, lOth, 15th, 20th
25th; 30th, 35th, 40th
45th And 50th Cu$tomers
Will Receive A ·

FREE GIFT
SUCH AS LAMPS, PICTURES,
MIRRORS, FOOT STOOLS
. AND HALL TR~ES.
~-

.

LIKE FATHER LIKE SON - .Dave Bulz,
defensive lineman for the Waalslnstoa R !' liM,
loob Ill his 10ft Dave dwinl a Up.t workout SMurday
at RedildM Park outalde Waalslngton. 'l1!e RedllldM

GOING FOR TWO - North Carolina's Sam
Perkins (41) tries to shoot over North Carolina State
center CozeJI McQueen (45) during Saturday's

Reynolds Coliseum In Raleigh. North Carolina won,
81 to 10 to remain unbeaten In 10 stal1ll this winter. ( AP U&amp;erphoto).

Top-ranked North Carolina
drubs NC State for lOth win
RALEIGH. N.C. i APl - Sam
Perkins scored 16 of his game-high
22 points In the second half as
top-ranked North Carolina coasted
to Its lOth victory, 81-00, over North
Carollna State In an Atlantic Coasi
Conference basketball game
Saturday.
The toss dropped 12th-ranked
North Carolina State's record to 10-4
and 0-2 In ACC play. It was the
undefeated Tar Heels' ACC opener.
All-American Michael Jordan

and freshman Kenny Smith each
added 18 points, and the Tar Heels
pulled away in the second half after
leading 34-31 at intermission.
After North Carotlna State's
Lorenzo Charles hit on a drive to pull
the Wolfpack within 34-33at the start
of the second half, Perkins, a
6-foot-10senlor, led North Carolina's
15-2 spree which gave the Tar Heels
a 49-35 advantage with 14:06toplay.
Perkins scored seven In the run.

The defending NCAA champion
Wolfpack wasn't through yet. Ernle
Myers' jumper cut the Tar Heels'
lead to 5:&gt;47 with 9:49 remaining.
But that was the closest N.C. State
could come. The Tar Heels then
went on a 144 spUrt, capped by
Perkins' three-point play, giving
them a 69-51 advantage.
Charles. the Wolfpack's leading
scorer. had 20 points Terry Gannon,
hitting on long-range jumpers,
added 14. and Myers had 10.

Kentucky, Louisville triumph

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Melvin Turpin poured In a seasonhigh 35 points and anchored
Kentucky's awesome front court to
,, lead the No. 2 Wildcats to a 96-!ll
victory over No.9 Louisiana State In
a Southeastern Conference basketball game.
Kentucky, 10-0, never trailed and
buUt a 25-10 lead in the first 10
minutes as Turpin scored 12 points.
The 6-foot-11 senior center had 25
points in the openlng half as
Kentucky raced to a 43-33 lead.
Sophomore forward Kenny
Walker chipped In with a seasonhigh 22 points and Jim Master.
returning from a one-game suspension, added 13 as Kentucky pushed
its conference record to 2-0.
· · Turpin hit 10 of 11 shots from the
field In the first half and grabbed
nlne rebounds. He also got the
WUdcats off to a quick second half
when he hit his first three shots.
LSU, 8-2, cut Kentucky's lead to
eight points several times in the
are preparln1 for a National Football title game
second half - the last time at 64-56
apiDit the San Francl8co 49ers Sunday at RFK
on
Derrick Taylor's basket wlth9: 19
stadhun. (AP Luerphoto).
to play. However, Kentucky ran off
slx straight points to again build a
comfortable lead.
Taylor led LSU with 21 points.

15-round bout slated Jan. 14

Atlantic Coast ODermce basketball game at

Leonard Mitchell added 13 and
Jerry Reynolds 12 as LSU fell to 2-1
in the conference.
l..ooiwWe 51, ClnclnDatl37
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sophomore forward Billy Thompson hit a
team-high 12 points as Louisville
overcame sloppy play to beat the
Unlverslty of anclnnati 51-37 Saturday In a Metro Conference baskethall game at Riverfront Coliseum.
Neither team mustered much
offense In the first half, which ended
with Louisville ahead 20-16. Louisville turned the ball over seven times
in the first half and shot 42 percent
from the floor. while Cincinnati
connected on just slx of 24 first-half
tries for 25 percent.
Junior Guard Milt Wagner added
10 points for Louisville. which won
its first Metro game of the season
and Improved to 8-4 overall .
Cincinnati, led by Mark Dorris' 14
points. fell to 2·11 and 0-3 In the
conference.
Louisville stretched a lead to four
points at the half as Cincinnati hit a
cold spell and didn't score for the last
four minutes before the break.
Louisville slowly added to the lead
throughout the second half, Scoring
slx unanswered points for a 31-20

under seven minutes Into the second
half. Cincinnati could get no closer
than seven points therestoftheway.
Clncina ti ended up with 30 percent
shoot ing from the field, and Louisville connected on 44 percent of its
field goal tries.

AL season to open
Monday, April' 2
NEW YORK (AP) - The
American League opens its 84th
season on Monday, April 2 with
three games including a matchup
between last season's division
champions, the Baltimore Orioles
and Chicago White Sox.
The world champion Orioles open
at home against the White Sox and
the New YYork Yankees play at
Kansas City in day games to start
the season. That night, Boston opens
at California.
There arc 10 doubleheaders on the
league schedule and T/5 of the 1.134
games will be played at night. The
night schedule is down 25 games
from 1983 and 3e from 1982. Texas
again plays the most nlght games,
72, and Oakland the fewest. 38.

Mancini to defend WBA lightweight title ·against Chacon
SAVE BIG
ON_SEALY
POSTUREPEDIC
BEDDING·

1/2 PRitE
.

.REGULAR $400 TO $6()0 'A.SET

.

TWIN, FULL AND
·ouEEN' SIZE . '

.REDUCED .30°/o t·o 50°/o

~""'
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)

'

By BRUCE LOWriT

By IRA ROsENFEW

BIG ROLLS OF
CARPET AT
RUTLAND FURNITURE
HAS BEE~ REDUCED
EVEN ~ MORE
STOP IN AND SAVE!

REG. 15.99 'FOR

~imes- ientin.ef S

Raiders' ·Flores
low-keyed coach

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Washlngton Coach Joe Gibbs knows his
team belongs In the National
Conference title game Sunday
against San Francisco, he just
wishes everyone else wasn't so sure
!heRedsklnsaregolngtoadvanceto
the Super Bowl.
"Thesearethetwoteamsthatare
supposed to be here. I see this as a
very close, hard-fought game,"
Gibbs said Saturday at a news
conference.

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

·•

Gibbs feels contest
will be hard-fought

• SAVE UP TO ssoo ON THE
PURCHASE' OF ANY BEDROOM, LIVING ROOM OR DINING ROOM SUITE
AT RUTLAND FURNITURE.

Winter quarter
begins at
Shawnee State
PORTSMOUTH - Winter quarter at Shawnee State Communlty
College Is underway and with It
comes a new continuing educatln
program line-up. Offered as non·
credit courses are classes ranging
from sign language to wine apprecl·
atlon, with a number of courses
geared toward helping communlty
members deal with the ever
growing high technology field.
Computer competency classes
run the gamut from beglnnlng to
more advanced programs, and
special classes can be custom
designed to meet the specific needs ·
of area businesses or organizations.
Students can enrich their lives by
taking clogging or art ·or a class In
kitchen design.
Others who wish the most
practlcallearnlng experiences can
take Lamaze prepared childbirth
education, a hunter's safety program, CPR, an Investment workshop, a session relating to application for social security disability ,or
a course In communication skills.
There are also courses available '
relating to the S.B.A. and Real
E:state continuing education.
The office of continuing education
Is open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m ..
Monday through Thursday and 8
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Friday to
a nswer your questions. Contact
Dan Evans, Director, for
Information.

ort

I

'4M.tssn ·
1'1 PRIC£

124911
Ml

QUHN

'5"" Sll:

1'1 PRICE
• 129911
.
. tlf

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Spolia Writer
RENO, Nev. (AP) -Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini
will be looking In a "boxtn&amp; mirror" next Saturday
when he defends the World Boxing Association
lightweight champt.onshlp against Bobby Charon.
"What I see," the 22-year.old Mancini said, "II that
when he's hit or hurt or bleeding he fights harder. I
lJke to think l do, too.'.'
"I lmow he Is rugged, very determined and wllllng
to fight," said the 32-year-old Chacon, who exhibited
exceptional ruggedness arid determination In winning
a J2.round declslo~t over CornellusBoza·Edwards Ina
nationally te~ fight fl'Om Las Vegas, Nev., last
May15.
.
.
.
.
Chacon's bid for a third world title more than etglit
years after he held the World ·Boxing Council
featherweight ChamPloll$hlp will be televised live by
Home BOx OffiCe and bring lllin a P\11'111! of~
$.'100,10) alid 8aJO,Im, which wW be his blgaelt.
Mancini will earn betwel!ft $1..!1 million and $1.. 75
mW!on lor his tliJrd defen~e of the tltte he won on ~

first-round knockout of Art Frias on May 8, 1982, at
Las Vegas.
Bout SWl8 at 10 P.M.
The scheduled ~round bout Is set to start at 10
p.m., EST, at the Lawlor Events Center on the
campus of the Unlverslty of Nevada-Reno.
While both fighters say they mirror each other's
toughness and •rmlnatlon, they also claim to be
better boxers than they get credit for being.
"You go with what got you there- agresslveness,"
said Mancini. But, he added, 'I think I'm becoming a
more complete fighter. I'm .thinking In there. I'm
making moves for a pulllOse."
Mancini says his 5-foot·51h stature dictates his style
and makes It appear he Is Jess of a boxer than hels. " If
I wu 5-10 or 5-11, would I be getting hit with thOse
punchel?"

"Mancini Is all slugger, not much boxing abillty,"
•'..
.
said the 5-5 ChaCOft.
~ Wha&amp; M!!lt Be Done
,
"I'm dep!!ftdlntron my jab. I've been fighting for 14

years. I know what goes on In there. what has to be
done.''
Chacon won the WBC featherweight title with a
nlnth-round knockout of Alfredo Marcano on Sept. 7.
1974, and defended it once before losing It on a
second-round knockout to Ruben Olivares on June 20.
1975.
Chacon failed to win the WBC super featherweight
title from Alexis Arguello In 1979 and from
Boza-Edwards In 19!ll.
In March 1982, Chacon's first wife, Valerie. who
wanted him to stop fighting, committed suicide. The
next nlght, Chacon knocked out Salvatore Ulgade In
the thll'd round and three fights later won the super
featherweight title with a 15-round unanimous
'decision over Bazooka Limon on Dec. 11, 1982, a t
Sacramento, Calif.
His oniy fight since then was the decision over
Boza·Edwards last year. But It wasn't a title match.
The WBC refused to sanction It and then withdrew
. championship recognition from Chacon for falllng to
·fight Hector "Macho" Camacho, who now Is

champion.
"This could be my last fight." said Chacon . "It's a
good money fight. But there is Hector Camacho. and
that would be a good payday also."
Mancini had said on occasion thaf this might well be
his last year In boxing. But now. he feels. "I don't want
to put retirement in everybody's mind.
"U 1984 Is a very successful year. as we plan. then
we'll sit down and talk about it. ..
Fought Three Times Last Year

Mancini fought three times last year. He scored a
10-round decision over George Feeney in a non-title
bout Feb. 6 In Italy in his first fight since he scored a
14th-round knockout of Duk Koo Kim. who was
Injured fatally, on Nov. 13, 1982.
Then he defel)ded the title with a ninth-round
knockout'ofOrlandoRomeroon Sept . 15 at New York
and scored a first-round knockout of Johnny Torres in
a non-title bout Nov. 25 at Las Vegas.
·Mancini has a 28-1 record. with 22 knockouts.
Chacon Is 52-6-1 record, with 42 knockouts.

l)
(

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. -·

~~~~~~~~~~~~~==============~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~i~~
. ~~~·n~t~~~MG~~~n~t,~W~.~V~a~.;=;=;=;=;=~;=;=;=;=;=;=;=;=~~·~~~ft~Ni8~,i1~~~- ~

January 8, 1~

Southern rolls over Pirates
for ninth consecutive. .victQry

BATI'LE FOR POSS~ION - Southern's &amp;d
Wayne Diddle (00) of North Gallla
!little each lor possession of the ball after It
ri!bounded from the Southern basket Friday night.

IJttlefle!d and

Players from both teams watch lor the result. 'lbe
Tornadoes crested to their lOth consecutive season
win by defeating the Pirates, 81-51.

By SC0Tr WOLFE
.. Thnes-Senttnel Staff
~TMEIGS- VlsltlngSouthwest~rn beblnd a 25 point performance by Roger Wells and a
batimced team effort, streaked to a
30-:.J:! halftime lead, then outlasted
the' Eastern Eagles 51-44 here
Friday evening during a very
physical SVAC basketball battle.
Tbe win boosted Southwestern's
overall record to 3-7 and is the
Highlanders' first league win In
four starts, (1-3) . Eastern dropped
to 1-8 overall and 0-4 Inside the
SVAC.
Southwestern's Wells blazed the
trail to victory with a game-high 25
points tbat Included 21 In the first
half before foul trouble sidelined ·
him In the second period.
A very balanced a!tack from the
remaining Highlanders' first
league win In four starts, (1-3).
Eastern dropped to 1-8 overall and
0-4 Inside the SVAC.
I'
Southwestern's Wells blazed the
trail to victory with a game-high 25
points, that Included 21 In the first
half before foul trouble sidelined
him In the second period.

A very balanced attack from the Inside drives off the Highlander
remaining Highlanders also con- offense. At the buzzer SWHS owned
tributed to the win as Steve Pelfrey a 15-11lead.
Eastern stayed close throughout
notched eight markers, Randy
Layton sank seven, Mike Bailey the first half, but Southwestern with
Wells In command jumped to a
five and Joe Baker six.
Eastern's Jim Newell again 26-14 lead midway through the
reached double figures with a 12 · second round. At the 3: 18 mark
point night, while teammate Mike Mike Collins began a string of three
Collins sank 11. Troy Guthrie added straight jumpers that cut Into the
Highlander lead and the half ended
six and Tim Probert five.
Southwestern grabbed the open- at 30-22.
Throughout the third round
Ing tip but failed to score on Its first
possession and the Eagles followed Southwestern held onto Its lead
In the same fashion, however,atthe despite Wells being on the bench
7: 06 mark guard mike Salley broke much of the period with four fouls .
the scoring Ice for the game's first Randy Layton and Joe Baker were
score at 2-0. One minute· later, the pace setters at this time. scoring
senior forward Jim Newell sank six and four points respectively tor
both ends of a two shot foul lor a 2-2 the visitors.
After falling beblnd 42-30 a Troy
tie, before Wells started his scoring
rampage In the middle of Eastern's Guthrie steal and !wising lay-up
from Newell kept EHS within
d~fense.
Easterner Troy Guthrie knotted striking distance at 42-32 at the
the score at 4-4 and shortly after conclusion of the period.
Eastern quickly sparked an early
Tim Probert swished a 10 loot
jumper for Eastern's only lead of fourth period attack to pull within
the night. From that point on Wells five at 46-41, but could never pull
proved to be Coach Lloyd Myers' any closer despite much hustle by
bread-and-butter man, scoring on the Eagles as the game ended51-44.
Eastern hit 18 of 54 from the field
several rebounds and connecting on

By KEJm WISECUP

YOUGIT
WHAT YOU

'J'Ime..Senttnet Staff

WELLSTON - The Meigs Marauders sank 12 of 14 free throws
and outscored Wellston 26-111n the
fourth quarter to win going away,
73-53, snapping a six-game losing
streak here Friday.
Meigs was clinging to a 47-421ead
heading Into the final eight minutes

Dale-G~um

Mt. Vernon Na:z&amp;ren('

7:lJ p.m. R.oomen va. Mt . Vernon

Jan.

1~

N

aza"""'

1-3 p.m..()pen R&lt;e .....
S10 p.m.-Collet!e R&lt;e ....... ...... ... .

PATRIOT - Southwestern's varsity girls, paced byTonya McNeal's
22 points, scored a 54-31 win over
Eastern Tburiday.
Other scorers for the lady
Highlanders were Sandra Patrick
with 13; Tonya Adkins, nine; Carrie
Walker, six; and two each tor
Dianna Nlda and Tracy Hllft.
For Eastern, Dee Dalley led In
scoring with 11, complimented by

Tri-Valley
cage standings

The Sunday TimH-Sentinei-Page C-3

I

TVC box scores ...

Toimhle •· WlUTell Local !18
TRIMBLE 1•1 - Galclv&gt;l 1·1-3: HOOJl"f
24-4: sayers ~: Morris ~3-13 : Monison
2-6-10; Dupler J-1.7: Fair.. 3-2-8; Koons
6-l-13; l..enl H ll . TOiala %'7-1~ .
WARUN LOCAL (lti - Butcher 1.0:2:

F'rye 2-~9: Hul!man 3-ll&lt;l: lnjUam 0-J.I;
Knight 11·3-25: Pllllllpo 0-2-2: Sicoglond 1-0-2:
Sm!lh 0-2-2. TIUII !S-lUt.

lly fjiiAo1en;

............. 19 211 1~ 15--ffi
Wafl'f.n Local .................... 15 10 8 26--~
Raervtw: Tr1mbk&gt; 56, Warrt&gt;n Loca142 .

Trimble .. . . ..

Vlllloa

c.ny IS, Miller 4'1

VINTON 00'1.11\'n' (lSI - Radekln 1-3-~:

Hamon2-J-~ : M . llollender~JB;

Womeldorf
6-1 -lJ; Doder111 J-1.7: L. llollender 0-2-2:
Allman 1-1.J. Tolals Jt.IH3.
MIUSI (171 - Plem&gt; 4-1-9: Lanni~
4.J.ll; Van Way 1·3-5; Esselstetn 0-1 -1: Toth
6-1-JJ; Roberts 3-2-8. Tolals IJ-11-47.
By fjiiAo1en;
VInton County ...................... ~ 21 9 Ul-:iJ
Mlller ..................... .............. 7 9 14 2747

ReN!rvee - VInton Coonty 51. MWcr ll

FedenJHoddoqJill,

N.-vWe-\' orillll ((Jf)
NEL'!ONVJU.E.VORK (1111 - Bullock
4.().8; Bentley S~· 18: McDonald 3-ll&lt;l: Grandy
7·2·16: Kline 4-2-10. ToUII IU-lill.
FEDEKAL-HOCIUNG (ill) - KDI&lt;er 4-614: M.allack 6-2-14: Deeter l~; Slnneu 4-0-H:
Tabler 4-3-11: Watson W10. TIUII S-1:1-Q.
By quarten:
Nel. ·York .. ..
. 18 11 U 14 4-58
Fed.-Hocklng ................ .8 22 16 8 11 -{6

Renrv es - F' £&gt;deral
Nelsonvtlle- York 34.

Ho ck in ~

percent.
Rebounding was close as Ml'lgs
held a 37-35 edge. Both teams were
whiStled tor 18 personal fouls .
·Meigs had 18 turnovers compared
to Wellston's 26.
Wjth the win, Meigs went to ~
both . ove-rall and In the TVC.
Wellston fell to 2-8 overall and l -81n
the TVC.
Reserves Copy Vanlty
In the same manner as the
varsity, the Meigs reserves wiped
out a deficit with a strong fourth
quarter to defeat Wellston 49-40.
Coach MlckJ:::hllds' little Marauders trailed 34-32 going Into the fourth
quarter whl'n they ran past the little
Rockets 17-6.
"We went to man-to-man and
played with more Intensity durtng
the fourth period. I was especially
pleased with the play ot Parker
Long and Dave Warth," said Childs
after the game.
Chrts Shank, the little Marauders' top scorer. led with 14 paints
whUe Warth added eight off the
bench and rebounded well. Brad
Robinson and Brian Houdashelt
added six each. AU little Marauders
scored. Chrts Malone led Wellston

47 .

AJeunder l'l, llelpn 55 (0T)
BEU'B.E (II) - Holder 7-0-14: Lockhart
7-0-14: Logue 3-1·7: McDermln 4-0-8: 1\'UII·
ams ~2 -12 . Tolalo SUI.
Al.EilANDER (l'l) Jelfers 24-4:
Bennet! 6-0-12: !lobo 8-2-JB: Guthrte 9·1-19.
Tolals %'7-ul.
Byquor1en:
Belpre·.
. ......... 14 15 6 18 2-55
Alexander ... .. : ............ 10 lJ 17 lJ 4-~7
lla&lt;neo - Belpre 57, Aleunder 33.

with 12.
Tbe Meigs reserves are DC'.V 7-2
both overall and In the TVC.
Wellston Is ().9 ln the TVC. MelgB
climbed back Into a three-way tie .
for first.
In Tuesday action, the Marauders trav!'l to Federal-Hocking to
battle the Improved Lancers. Meigs
won earlier 62-52. Wellston hosts
undefeated Trimble.
MENlll 1711 - Rlgp 10-4-24: C.rpenle(
b-3-15; )VIse 2-6-W: Olancey 4-1 -9; Evalll
J-1.7: Powell 24-4: Fisher 1-0-2: Kenned)'o
0-2·2: Welker~- Tolalo 11-17-71.
WEUHI'ON (IS) - Sprtgp 7-2-16: UD' .
-..- U16: Jenkins f-0.8: Newman 1-2-4;
Aleshire 24-4: McCloud 1-0-2: RJce 1-0-2; .
F'r1ck 0-H Deck OM: Jordan ~ - Tolals ·
Z4-WI.
lly.........,
Meigs .. .... .. . . ... ... .

. ..211 12 15 :16--73
. ....... 17 lJ 12 U llia&lt;n'")
MEIGS l4tl- Kennedy 1-0-2: Shank :-.+14;
Houdaahel! 14-6: Baker 1-2-4: Long 1 · 3-~;
Robinson 3-ll&lt;l: Warth 3-2-8: llarT1oon 24-4.

Wellstoo . ...

Tololll7-l~ .

We- l4ti - M.alone 6-0-12: RanJdJI
3-ll&lt;l: F'rlck 1·24: Undower 4-&lt;HI: Jayjoho ·
3-ll&lt;l: Roy5ter 1-0-2: Benson 1-0-2. •
Jt.~ .
.
By_..,
Meigs ..
. ................... 8 15 9

Toun
WLP OP
'!1-1mbk&gt; ....... .. . .. . .
. ..... 9 0 612 494
Bolpre
.... ... .. ........ ..8 2 625 !129
Alexander ...... ....................... 7 2 !Ill!! 527
Wa""" Local .... .
. ......... .... 7 J 1111 515
Federal-Hocking ........ .. ......... 7 4 lli6 &amp;:15
Nelsonviii&lt;-YOrk .......... ......... 4 6 1M 586
Melp ... ..... ..................... ... .3 6 :133 ~
Vlnloo County .
. .. 3 7 551 586
Wel~lon .. . . .. . .. . . .. . . .. . ..
. .... 2 8 !!116 1111
Mlller .................... . ..... ... .... 0 11 ~73 7:12

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

GERNIE'S
Heating &amp; Cooling

•Commercial
*Residential

•

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES
START JANUARY 16
5 P.M. t!L 7 P.M.

GA.

CALL 446-3217

Ie

(TVC G.,_ Oaly )
T. .m

WLP OP

Trimble . .. .. . .. .. . . . .. . . . .. . ..... .... 9
Alexander
... .. .... 7
Bolpre .. .. .
. .. .. ...... , ..... 7
Warren Local ... .. ...... ·~ ..... ..... 6
Federal-Hocking .................... 5
NelsonvtJ.le.. York .. ....... _......... 4
Meigs ...... ... .... ............. .. ...... 3
Vlnloo County ................ ...... .3
Wellston
.............. ...... .1
Mlller ..
. ...... .. ......... 0
(-1

0 612 494
2 !Ill!! 527
2 574 489
J 5lll 49!1
4
5
6
6

PHONE 446-0699

'

·.

27ft.Q,9
rebate

SO MONTH REG . 34 .89 SALE 31 .

W. L

Meigs .....

. •'•

Motorcraft

40MONTH

514 :1M
517 533

:133 ~
49!1 ~10
8 484 612
9 4.li 618

Teun

. .... . 7 2

Belpre . ... ......... ... .....
..... 7
WIUTfll Local ...... ............... ............. 7
Trimble ................ ..................... ...... 6
Vlnlon County ......... . , . . . . . . ... . . .. .. ...... ~
Federai-Hockllll! ... ....................... . - ~

3

Alexander

~

. . . . . . .....

. ..... 4

2
2
4
4

LYNX

Nt&gt;lsonvUie-York ............................. .4 5
Miller .............
, ............ 1 8
Wellslon ......
. .......... .. 0 9

40MONTH
REG. 32.89

~.lu.ltGouna:

Ak&gt;under at Vinton County

Selpre at Warren Local
Melp al f&gt;l'derai-Hocklllll

SO MONTH
REG. 39.89

Nelson\1.111!'York at MIUer

Trtmblt&gt; at Wt&gt;ILston
~.I .... I -;
Alexander 57 Belpre 55 lOTI
Federai-Hocklllll 65 Nelsonville- York 58
I at'!
lllelp 73 Wellslon :iJ
Vlnlon County :iJ Miller 47
Trimble !It Warren Local ~
!Wurday, lu. 7 o.....

.,

Jackson at Vinton Counry

•'

MIDDLE MAN - Southwestern employes 1-3-1
zooe during Its game Friday night against Eastern. In
this Scott Wolfe photo, the ball Is passed to Eastern
center Mike CoDins (42). Highlander Mike Bailey, far '

2888
3488
4188

CITQO
lOW-30

Skyllae - . . . . ' MonolncGDetemher •• IIIIS

.''

T•em

1'18.
Francis Flor181.. ......
...... .. .. 72
The F'abr1c Shop ........ ...... ..... .............. 63
Simmons Olds. Cadlllac
and Chev............... ....
... 61
Custom Prlnt. ..............
...... 58
Gallery Hair Art ................................. ~
Herald's 011 &amp; Gas Co............................ 50
High Ind. game- June Lambert 221; Sue
Walker 2113; Arleno Evans 199.
High Ind. lhrfe.gameo -Arlene Evans 526:
June Lambert ~19; Sue Walker ~15.
High team. ..garn:e - Custom Prtnt 872;
Simmons Olds, CadllUc and Chev. 821:
F'rands Florida 812.
High team three-games - Custom ertnt
2407; Simmons Olds, C.dlllac &amp; Chev. 2.BI;
Francis Florist 2211!.

right, Is providing defense upfront whDe teammates,
Randy Layton (40),Joe Baker (14) and Steve Pelfrey
(24) surround Collins. At far left Is Eastern's LaiTy
Cowdery (12). Southwestern won the SVAC corXest,
51-44.
.

-·-

1 Loeal bowling 1

'

(

I

\~

60MONTH
REG. 46.89

-~

~

l'

..

DEACON TIRES BY COOPER

99t

FIRST 12 QTS. ,

STAUERS

-.
..
..'
•

&amp;

ALTERNATORS

PRICE GOOD ON . All TIRES IN STOCK

-..Le.....

EXCISE TAX HAS BEEN REMOVED
PRICES INCLUDED

&amp;wllnlllelloo

TRUCK

(Reg. Tread)
9.50x16.5 8 Ply tbls.
63.80
875x16.5 8 Ply Tbls.
59.00
800x16.5 6 Ply Tbls.
49.00
750xl6 8 Ply T.T.
56.00
700x15 6 Ply T.l
44.80
700x15 6 Ply TT. EOS
45.00
l78x15 6 Ply Tbls.
50.00
H78xl5 6 Ply Tbls.
52.50

'

950x16.5 8 Ply Tbls.
875xl6.5 8 Ply Tbls.
800xl6.5 8 Ply Tbls.
750xl6 8 Plv Tbls.
· 750xl6 8 Ply T.T.
750x16 l.T.D. 8 Ply T.T.
l78xl5 6 Ply Tbls.
. H78xl5 6 Ply .Tbls.
K70xl5 4 Ply Tbls.
31xl_0.5xl5 4 Ply Tbls.
3lxllx15 4 Ply Tbls.
3lxllx15 6 Ply Jbls.

STEEL SADIAL (Reg. Tread)
Pl65/80R13
Pi85/75Rl3
P185175R14
Pl95175Rl4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75Rl4

67.00
62 .00
55.00
62.50
59.00
66:50
52.50
56.80
53.00
60.00
63.50
68.00

RADIAL ALL SEASON

_3lxl0.5xl5 6 Ply Tbls.

-

36.00
39.00
40.00
41.00
42.50
"44.30
47.00
43.50
46.50
48.00
52.00

78.00

GLASS BELT RADIAL

(Reg. Tread)
P155/80Rl3
P165/80RI3
P185/80R13
P185175R14
P195175R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P225/75RI4
P205175Rl5
P215/75Rl5
P225175RI5
P235/7SR15

33.00
. 35.SO
38.00
39.50
40.50
41.50
43.50
44.50
43.00
44.00
45.00
47.00

Juncllon 81. 68 and R1. 2, Raven&amp;wood, WV
lhru :"'all•rd•ov

~..,.
q,
~ .~G ~o~~ ~t

STEEL BELT ALL SEASON

P155/80R13
Pl65/80R13
Pl75/80RI3
Pl85/80R13
Pl75/Rl4
PI85/Rl4
P195/R14
P205/Rl4
. P215175Rl4
P195175Rl4
P205/75R15
P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl5
P235/75R15

39.00
40.00
42.00
43.00
43.00
44.50
45.50
46.00
49.00 ,
46.00 .
47.00
49.50
52.00
56.00

0

.~\
{\~

GLASS BELT ALL SEASON

Pl55/BOR1l
P165/80Rll
Pl85/80Rl3
Pl85/75Rl4
~ Pl95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75Rl4
P205/75Rl5
P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl5
P235/?5Rl.5

BILL'S BODY SHOP .

••

Team standings as of J)ec. ll. 1983.
W.L
T..m
Sue's Ceramics ....
.. ................. li 28
Jordan's Gas Service ................. ..... 36 28
Galllpollllce Company ............ ...... . 36 28
Bryan's Servtce Center .. ...... ............ ]) 34
T11J1'' Body Shop .............. .. ............• 28 36
Bob Olnl Taxidermy ....................... 26 38
Individual high game and high senes:
Gallipolis Ice - Delphine Slarllng 1subt
hlg!t game of 2:14, high series ol601.
Bryan's Svc. Center - Karen Chattin 188
and high series a! ~19 .

;

TRUCK (Mud &amp; Snow)

8~5

e
1 l\e

Cl. ~
,_.....,\'C\9"'
~
• ..""''
r,p.\
c;,\0~
__.,c;
o\l ~
fo.a1-a
o'l&lt;\"~

o~"

elf..

\&lt;

11&gt;

\A _ \1 ~\e'i

"'-• t\1\q

...~

·'

~ttee"

·

~'J ·

~

FILTERS

~FROM

99¢

...•

.

AMBER LIGH];

FORBfTTtR
VISIBILITY

..

REAR WINDOW
DEFROSTER

'

••

:·. '

Kerosene
Heater

599 $7999·

1'18.

Francis Flori&amp;I.-........ ....... .... ................ .76

The Fabric Shop .. .•... .. ........................ .. Ill
Simmons Okll, C.dlllac
and Chev........................................... 67
Custom Print , ....................................... 62
Gallecy Hair Art ......... ........... ............ ... !~~!
Herak!'• 011 &amp;,Gas Co ...•... •.......... .......... ~
lllg~ Ind. ,_,... - Jean Norton Ul9; June
Lambet1182; Fran MattheWs llll.
Htait Ind. tlu'ee-aames - June Lambert
490; Fran Matthews Gill; Barbara Wllllttngtoo 110.
Hl&amp;b IHm pmt!- SlmmonoOkll, Cadlllac
• Chev. 1157; Franctl Flcrilt 11.11; Cuatom
0

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

WARM MATE

10,000 BTU

Teun

Print 784•.

..''..

•1 0 GA COPPfR

MornlncOiorteo

lll&amp;b tHm fllree.pmes- Francis Florist
:t:llll; Cuatom Print '2:IIKI: Stmrnono Okll,
Cadlllac • Clif!y, 21116.

.

.

S.ilver Bridge Plaza - Phone 446-9335

Bill Kelley ·
Manager

MON.-FRI. 8-8;
SAT. 8-6; SUN. 9·5

'

l

1

I

''

. ~

•12fl.
•TANG!£ PROOF
•BE PREPARED
roll EACH CAR

'

.\

BAnEIY
1005111
CABLES

Docember r7. tlll3
.t

..•

~

Sk,yllne-...,....._

, We've been helping our cus·

L

~

..

WITH ONE 5(l

tomers get the cash to buy their new
cars .for years, and each time, we get the
same response, "I can't believe how
fast and simple it was!" That's because .we
make it so. Immediately upon approval, we put the
~heels in motion, so that you could have
a check .in your hands the very same ~ay you apply,
Our Auto loan rates are even lower now, so why not see
us soon! The money for your new car is waiting for you.

273-3271

~AS

~

Tim'sllody Sllop- FloAnne Rll!le178. high
serlesl93.
Sue's Ceramics - Sue Holley high game
Ul9; VIolet Cox high series 495.
Gale ~'1!\ll&lt;lll converted the 4-7-9 split.

co\)t\

35.00
36.50
38.00
39.00
40.00
41.50
43.50
41.50
43.50
46.00
49.00

•••
,.

wlttort~ ........

Sharlene Dixon ~-

i'&gt;~qe

0
0

2 BARREL49 .89
4 BARRR 69 .89

Jordan's Gas Svc. -Betty Wise high gamE'
2112, high ser1es 499.
Bob Cline Taxidermy - LoWS. Green 157,

~,JI.\..~11-'(S ~\\'let~

17~

Wellslon .. .. .. . . ...... . .... 12 8 14 6-41)

TVC STANDIN08

.....

------

another 10 points from Angie
Spencer. Kelly Whitlatch and Margaret Heiner scored four points
each, while Mary Hlblis added two.
The Highlander reserve lost to
Eastem,l2-6.ShelleySmlth,Sandra
McFann and Lori Arrowood scored
a point each, while Eastern's
Christy Ha)"k and Patty Durst
scored two each.
The junior high girls game was
won by SW, 24-22. Vicky Hammond
supplied the lead tor the win with 14
points, and Aprll Ritchie scored nine
tor the lady Eagles.

came ot1 the bench to score four
points and followed Chancey wi\h
seven rebounds.
Ed Spriggs and Charley Lindower led Wellston with 16 points
apiece and 11 rebounds each. Meigs
built an 11-polnt second period lead
at 28-17, but had to settle for a 32-30
halftime lead .
Once aga in the Marauders
seemed to have tblngs under
control in the third quarter, leading
47-36, but Wellston hit three straight
baskets to trail 47-42 going to the
fourth quarter.
The Drummermen hit on 28 of 70
from the field for 40 percent and
made a fin!' 17 of 22 from the foul
line for 77 percent. Wellston made
24 of 59 from the field for 41 percent,
but only five of 14 foul shots tor 36

(.\110.,....1

SUPPLY

0

"We finally f9rced the tempo our
way, an up-tempo game, the way
we Uke lt. We played a lot better
with a lead than we h!'ve. OUr
overall play Improved," commented ,Meigs coach Greg
Drummer.
Jay Carpenter regained his
early-season scoring touch with a
15-polnt production and grabbed six
rebounds.
Tbe play of the Marauders'
sophomore trio of Rick Wise, Mike
Chancey and Lee Powell proved
that winning basketball Is In
Marauderland for years to come.
Wise had 10 points and a good
floor game while Chancey. forced
to sit out most of game with foul
trouble, had nine points and led
Meigs with 11 rebounds. Powell

I

. ............... ............. .. ... aooed
. ...................... aooed

SW girls top Eas~m, 54-31

'

•

......... aooed

8-10 p.m..lntramunll

j

ST/Ht.

Pool
. .......... .. ........ Oooed
. .. Oooed
.. . . ......................OOI&lt;'d

Jan. 12 &amp;8 p.m.-College R&lt;e ..... .
. ''1.: ......... ' ...... . ........... Ooled
8-10 p . m .· lntram uraL~ ........... .
. ... aooed
Jan. 13 ~; :I) p.m.· R«twomen va. Dyke .. .............. I ........... ..
. .... ... ... OOI&lt;'d
.June 14 5 p.m.·Redwomen vs .. ............ .
...... OOI&lt;'d

RIPENOUR

MILK COOLER
•Bush Hog
EQUIPMENT

Nick Riggs drilled 10 of 19 flelil
goal attempts and led the Marauders with 24 points. The senior guard
also added four rebounds.

Woek ol ~an. K, 18114

Jan. HC1ooed .............. ............ .
Jan. 9 S.JO p.m.·lntramurals ... .
Jan. W &amp;8 p.m.&lt;:oilege R&lt;e..... .
8-JO p.m.· lntramuntls
Jan, II &amp;8 p.m.-Collet!e R&lt;e ..... .

.

·ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.

and Ihe outcome still In doubt. But a
fierce Marauder press forced the
Rockets Into several untimely
turnovers and victory-starved
Meigs pulled away.

4'nO C..... Schedule

-.

PAY FOR

EASTERN (41)- Colllns 4-3-11: Guthrte
2-2-6: Newell ~2- 12 : Probert 2- 1 -~: Malson
24-4. Tolals ~SWIIS (11) - Wells 11-J-25; Layton 3-1-7:
Pelfrey 3-2-8: Bailey ~: Hal•lop ~­
Tolalo21-NI.
By quarten:
Southwestern
......... 15 15 12 9-51
£astern ...... ............ .. ....... 11 11 10 12-44

'A. Va.

M~igs snaps losing spell, wallops Wellstmi quintet, 73-53

VINTON - Rod Littlefield exance with the Pirates this season, with 13, while Mike Kemper
ploded with 41 points here Friday to
also snat~hed nine and contributed recorded 14 tor NG.
lead Southern to an 81-51 Southern
Southern's varsity continued with
four points to his team's scoring
a perfect 9-{) record this season, ,;
Athletic Conference win over host
efforts.
North Gallla.
Southern turned over the ball 14 while the Pirates dropped to 2·7'
Tbe Tornadoes held a slim 16-14
times, compared to the Pirates' 25. overall and H within the SVAC .· ·
first quarter lead before exploding - The gatne opened with both teams Southern, now 4-0 In SVXC play,
with 24 second quarter points and a
playing on equal terms, tying returns to league action Friday" J
40-24 halftime advantage. From
several times, but Llttlefield'squlck when the Tornadoes travel to_ •
there, Southern never looked back.
moves were just too much for the Hannan Trace. North Gallla goes to
Hannan, W.Va., Tuesday and hosts
Tbe Meigs County powerhouse led
Gallla Countians.
58-39 going Into the final stanza.
Going Into the second quarter. Eastern Friday.
Littlefield's scoring act was aided
action remained tight In the
SOI!I'IIERN (81) - Curfman lj)-2; S.
by the team's unerring shooting
beginning until Southern pulled Teaford
1j)-2; Roush I·I.J: K. Teaford 0.1-l;
record, as Southern was good for 37
away to record a sizable lead. Tbe D. Teaford f-0.8: Hlll1j)-2; Deer f-0.8: Schultz
of Its 63 field goal attempts tor 58
Pirates put up a stubborn defense, 3-ll&lt;l: Uttlelleld 18-Ml: Conoolly ~:
Cardone J.l.2. Tolals 11·7-81.
percent, compared to NG's 29
but wereunabletoshort-clrcult their
NOR111 GAU.IA (II) - Blackburn 1-0-2:
percent (16 of 50) . From the
W. Diddle 2-2-6; Penick 2-5-9: Smith 2-2-6:
guests' deadly shooting accuracy.
Holllday 4-2-10: Glassburn 0-l-l: Lee 0-2-2;
free-throw line. the Tornadoes were
Tony Deem and Dennis Teaford Beach
24-4; Hawks 2-!1-9; J . Diddle 1-0-2.
only 53 percent (seven ot13) despite . chipped In eight points apiece to help Tolals
lf.lf-11.
their numerous trips to the line In the
- . by ...........
the Tornadoes offensively.
. . .. ..
. ... ... .16 24 lB 23--&amp;
game's latter half.
For NG, Eric Penick and Brian Soulhern
North Gallla .............. ... ..... 14 w 15 12-~1
By comparison, the Pirates were
Hawks shared scoring honors for , - - - - - - - - - - hot at the foul line canning 19 of 25
the game, compiling nine points
attempts for 76 percent.
each. Tim Smith and Wayne Diddle
Both teams were almost equal In
added six each to the team effort.
rebounds, with Southern picking off
Ifi the reserve game, Ron
34and NG35.
Twyman's little Bucs battled their
Southern's Dennis Teaford was
Southern counterparts to a tie In the
top rebounder with nine, while
closing minutes. As the clock ran
Aaron Beach, In his first appear- out, NG tied the score at 46-46all, but
officials called a foul on the home
0.
team. The clock was then backed up
one second, allowing Howard Cald·
well's Tornado reserve to sink one
for a low 25 percent, while SWHS free throw to w1n the game, 47-46.
was shooting a warm 21 of 51 for 41 The SHS reserves are also unbeaten
percent. From the foul line EHS hit 1n nine tries this winter.
eight of 18, possibly a dlfterence In r__;~~Bos~t~lc~led~So~u~t~he~rn~ln~~!!.j
the game, and SWHS had a nine of
·&gt;
19 night for 42 percent.
The battle of the boards. was
nearly even with SWHS taking a
I
31-30 advantage, led by Wells' 10
The Stihl' 028 Wood Boss •
and Pelfrey's six. For Eastern
plenty ot muscle tor any cutting
Guthrie grabbed eight and Collins
chOie large 01 small. Easy to
seven.
handle. Wood Boss~d,gs ils leelh
in and won't let up until you do.
EHS had two steals, three assists
.,
(formerly Fulton-Thompson)
There are tots of chain saws on lht
and 00 fouls, while the winners had
11 0 Spring Ave .. Pomeroy)
market. so why buy Stlhl? Simply
eight steals, two assists and 17fouls.
PH.
992-6101
because you get what you pay for!·
In the reserve contest Eastern
again pulled off another fine win at
56-41 as Greg Leachman poured In
•Chore Boy
17 points for Coach Don Eichinger's
Eagles. Eddie Collins added 12,
MILKING SYSTEMS
Royce Bissell 10 and Kevin Barber
•Patz
10. For the opponents Sean CoUey
had 17, Jim Jeffers nine, John
FEEDING
0111111, 011.
Woolum five and Andy Haislop five.
EQUIPMENT
Eastern hosts North Gallla this
week.
•Mueller

•
oop
wm
~outhwestem
tops
Eastern
for
first
I
..

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh~~nl Plea~nt,

I

�~e

C4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January

Pome10y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

GAHS iii tie for firsl place after -54-52 league triumph
LOGAN - Gallla Academy High
'School's Blue Devils are back In a
tie for first place In the Southeastern Ohio League standings followIng Friday night's 54-52 victory ove r
host Logan . .
The GAHS triumph, coupled with
Athens' 65-60 upset loss at J ackson,
left the Blue Devils and Bulldogs
tied for top spot with Identical 2-1
conference marks.
Overall, Coach Jim Osborne's
lads upped thei r record to 7-2.
Logan dropped to 5-4 on the yea r
and 2-2 Inside the league.
Five In Double Figures
Five Blue Devils scored in double
figures Frlda:/'ntght as the Galllans
ran their winning streak to five .
It was senior guard Steve Wolfe's
two free throws with five seconds
left which iced the Devils ' 11th win
at Logan In 15 years.
"That was an Important road win
for us," remarked Osborne. Both
Osborne and Logan coach Kirk
Hardman agreed the turning point
came when GAHS outscored the
Chiefs 8-2 In the first two and
one-half minutes of the third period.
Logan was unable to regain the lead

after that spurt.
" I told our boys at halftime to go
back out there and play harder, get
the lead, the n make them play
catchup ba ll," Osborne added.
They did .
Chris Ellcessor and Kev Carty
paced GaUia's a ttack with 11 points
apiece. Todd Bergdoll, Brett Bostic
a nd Wolfe tossed In 10 points apiece.
Da n Dressel had five Blue Devil
assists, and stood out defensively.
Logan's J ack Miller tossed In 20
points for top scoring honors . Troy
Wright added 14 and Kelly York 12.
The score was tied four times In
the Initial period. GAHS led only
once, 5-4, on Carty's thref-polnt
play at the 6: 16 mark. Logan led
14-10 after the first break. ·
Coach Kirk Hardman's quinte t
held the upper hand throughout
most of the second period, leading
by four points On three occasions .
The score was tied four times in this
period.
DevOs Come Back
The lurnaround for GAHS began
with four seconds left In the first
half.
Wolfe dropped In a short jumper

with tour seconds left to cut Logan's
lead to 28 -2 6 ju s t b e for e
Intermission.
The Blue Devils stormed back In
the third quarter behind Bostic;
Ellcessor, Bergdoll and Caf'\Y to
take a 40-32 lead at the 4: 18 mark.
During the Gallipolis comeback,
GAHS outscored Logan, 16-4. •
Logan regained Its composure
and outscored Gallipolis 10-3 late In
the third period, reducing Gallla's
lead to 4342 going Into the fina l
period.
Bostic · and Kev Ca rte r hit
back-to-back goals In the first
minute oi play In the fina l period to

ATIIENSI&amp;Oi- Bill Flnneartv 5- t-11: Leon
Allen 7-0-t4: Brian Bllckle 3-3-9:' Chris Gong
2-4-8: Carl Matheny 9-0-t8. Tolalo 2lh'HIO.
~ACIISON 16111 - Jon C~i'Y tO-O-~ Joey
Vince Wolford 2·2-6:

·GAHS back in first ...
'

TIIIIIIDUI.

I.OOAN (It) - MWer 9-2-~ L, Conrad
~; Wrtcht 1-0-14; Mym 0-2·2: York 1&gt;0-12;
Stl'fllebeom ~ D. J . Conrad ~- Tolall

.......

.. c!:ll'~.................... .10

ts 11 u- M
Loean .. .............................. 14 t4 14 t0-62

lmPI Win Seventh
Coach Jack Payton's Gallipolis
Blue Imps built up a 20-6 first half
. lead, then turned back the Logan
. ,Papooses, 41·28, In Friday's preliminary contest.
Todd Slone paced the Galllans
•with nine points. Gary Harrison
'tossed In eight (all from the foul
line) while Jeff Atkinson, Gamble
Grant and John Strait each had slx
.markers.
Four Logan players shared ho-

IT
THE
TOlE IN
STEVE WOLFE scored 10
points, Including the game
winners Frlo1ay.

KEV CARTY picked off eight
reilounm; and scored 11 points at
Logan.

CHRIS EUC~R scored
II points In GARS' win over
Logan Friday.

(A

BREIT BOSTIC came off the
bench to score 10 markers at
Logan.

r

nors with siX points apiece.
Gallipolis led 8-4, 20-6 and 28-20 at
the quartennarks.
Both teams had 13 field goals.
t AHS was 15 of 18 and Logan 2 of 9
at the foul line.
The Blue Imps are 7-2 overall,
and 2-1 In SEOAL play. Logan
dropped to 4·5 ove rall, a nd 2·2 1nslde
the league.
Box score:
BLUE

DAN DRJ!MEJ, had live
..W. and lllood out defen&amp;lvely

J.0-6; Saunde&lt;s ~; Owens 2-0-4; Call 0-2-2.
Tolalo IS.tHI.
PAI'OOSI!II fZill - Wall 2-04 ; FarrarJ.0-6:
FIRKins 2-2-6; Wald 3-0-6: Rodgers 3-0-6
Tolalo t:H-211.
!icorebyq..........

.

·

·
'

Logan ... ..

TODD BERGDOLL taJIJed 10
markers In Friday's win over

Logan.

-'--

0 !1611
t 5.1'1
2 1'J}
2 496
2 6t7
3 577

440
4.16
633
434

(6t4)985-3341 '

6 !122

!64

11~sa

Frlda.Y'•-

GaUipolls M l.oflan S2
Jackson 611 Athens Ill
SEOAL RI!IIEKVEII
'I'Nm
WL P
Ironton
............. 3 0 136
Gll\llpolls...
.............. 2 t 119
l.oflan .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. ... ...
.. ..... 2 2 t62
Athens ...
.. .. .! 2 tCII
Jackson ..
.. ......0 3 124

ZaneaviU~

any way • • , Gord-A-Car
will stall the engine "DEAD"

B78x13................ 22.88
E78x14................ 26.88
F78x14................ 29.88
G78x14 ................ 31.88

99
1S8
122
t!IJ

A timed circuit breaker in
the unit cuts electric 'power
to the engine. The engine
cannot be restarted.

Thief !11ttst Flee!

•

GARD-A-CAR GIVES YOU THE LAST

~AUGH AT A CAR THIEF

road," GARD-A-CAR stalls the engine "DEAD." Suddenly
l~e thief is left stranded ·at the scene of the crime. He
canna! restart the engine. Your .c ar canna! be moved.

GARD-A-CAR IS DESIGNED FOR CONVENTIONAL
AND ELECTRONIC IGNITION
SYSTEMS.
.
.

EASY
TO
}
OPERATE

.. .

't

J

5

This oller is good far the 7 day period ol
January 8 lhru January 14

11a eon.ur.- a.ce.

'2.66

1.66
Purolator XSV

•

Oil
Filters
Reg. 2.59 Umit 2 For most domestic

and import cars

BY¥ 12 ~ ot Valvailne D a cased~
Buy 5 (JI(IJt5 ot VMvallne o1nd get a 5 75 meo.
and Of!' a 51 80 Chedl
To receve 'fOJI a:mumer mea. ...., IS a fWC:t1*tY meo good 1tr cast1 ar h' 5tl7e from wflld'llhe
~ rJ VatOne .as mD!!. ~ 1hs aq:D"' nt send ~ 111111 ~-diUtNSe ro
YlftaiM ~ 0.0 ......_PO lb ta!p Maple Plarc. ~ 55393
Proof-d1Ud'\a5&amp; ~'~dudes IAt Ca1uner SIMS nrc:ep diRd 'Mff'wllhe t"&lt;Say perm ot CDIJJOI'I after
Ordelhepnc«sJ rJ ~pt'OIU%5~. (B) FaS 75 Cfl~. a.« lhe *ln2 · VIMilne· t'Om It'll!
trcn ottwo cans For a St 80c:hedl. allhe wmt ·Yat\Onr' lrom lhe lmnt al flu ans 0' cutlhe bar 1}111:11
!UPC Code I !rum the tutom rl case
Aef\.rd reQ..Ie5b must be rnO onlhls t:QCJOn and~ net be~~ ()fy one
Ca'lswner OMldl r1!flm per r.n.ty a streef aonss ~ one~ Pf!f ~ Oftel' YCJd whiR
~ tved a OlherMse testnch!d by law Please ana. 8 wee~&lt;s lor ~very at yc:u Cm5umer ~
Alfund CXIIilpOI'I rnust -.,..... by April t5. ,.._

Save over ' 1

Purolator XSV
Air Filters
Reg. 3.77 Limit 2 For mosl domesl&lt;e

and import cars

.

•
•

s.rs Con~u~ner a.ec~~

STANDARD

RE SISTO R

Reg 99C hmtl 16

Reg 1 2: •t...-,. , 16

AC or Champion
Spark Plugs

_ _ _ _ s..... ----- '~ -----

- - - - -""'- - - - - -""''- - ~ 'Miolne Plrt Numbn 1Pa1 rurber5 are mltle lid ot al Yalvdlne pt'IJIU:tsJ

-·~m~~=--~~mvL=m~w•-m=~

: : : :: ~ :::

North GaUia ........................... 2 7 464 !i11l
Eutern .. .. .. .. .... ... .. . .. ..
.t 7 382 47)
SVAC ONLY
WLP OP
Southern .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ....... .4 0 2:12 tn
Hannan Trace ............ ........... .4 0 ~ t70

INSTALL IN MINUTIS With JUST A KNifl &amp; PUBS
DO IT YOURSELF (or take It to any auto

s~r~lce

7gc

Kyaer Creok ........................... 2 2 :m 196
Southwestern ...................... .. .. t 3 183 1!17
Eastern .... .. ........ .. ............ .. ...0 4 164 :116
' SVAC RESERVES
Teom
WLP OP
Southern ........... .. .......... .... ..... 4 0 183 140
Eastern .......................... .......3 I :IH L1l
North Gallla .. .... ........ .............2 2 m 164
Hannan Trace .......... .... ..........2 2 164 171
Kyaer Creok .............. ........ .... .I 2 161 181 ,
Southwestern ..........................o 4 t31 190
:nt11 week's ga'mes:

station)

ONLY TWO WIRES TO CONNECT (no holes to drill)
1, Find a place to conceal GARO·A·CAR : Under Seat or
Dashboard, ill Glove Compartment, etc .
2. Mount GARD-A-CAR with sell-ad~esive backing, supplied.
3. Pass GARD-A-CAR wires through any convenient hole in
_lire-wall into the engine compartment,
4. Cut thin t2-vcilt wire between coli and distributor.
5. Connect two cut wires to GARD-A-CAR wires. Use Insulated splice connectors, supplied. Crimp with pliers . ·

Snap De-Icer

or Starting Ruid
Reg. 1.09

Wahlma at Kyger Creek
North GaiUa at HaMan, W.Va.

•o
IGNII!QN
lOU

'

I

Gasline
Anti-Freeze
Reg. 33C

Qualeo

Lock De-Icer

"201 Reg.' t .29

0

26.8840~

North Gallla at Eastern

Maintenance Free

KYle' Creok at Southwestern

4.99
Dipstick

12.88

Heaters
Reg. 6.88

IUTION

tNSTIItU910NS INSID! ;ACKAGE for American &amp; for•ign Can

,.....,

Teom

...

'

$349'5~ :: .~

•

""-------"-·-.,·-1.

All batteries with rebuild . exch . lor

most cars and light trucks.

Plo.

24:88 ·schauer 6 amp

.''l'oilt•
~~~~::::::::::: : :::::::: : : ·: : : : : : :: : ::i

· Battery Chargers

.

Cony Out ................ ................. .. 0 .
Slidlllo- . . . .....: ....... ....... ;........... 0 .
_._,. aerleo - CblriOI Smllh 1118, Deb1
~~aUy 5.15; ~ Pholpo 1113, Ray Roach
. 515. .
'
' 111111 pme- 11-.v Roadh :m, Debl Hensley
Cilirl&lt;o Smllb 192. Pat
190.
~b'a Gun Shop 1992.
Team pme- Roocll'.,cun Shop 1115.

0

.. •',.'

m

1'eim--

,,

·I (.

'•

•

'.

"

.

From

29:!15

-

~~~ui~M~~ge
Example:

Fuel Pumps 1..- most dcxnosic """

Reg. t2.88.......

Now 9.88

!~~~.~~o~esvs

14.95
Wfrebuild. e•ch. for most
domestic 4 &amp; 6 cyl. Chevy and sm

Windshield
Washer Pumps

8 cyl. domestic cars.

Auto ConiJIOIItentts,
Replac:ement

block VB 69-7t

18.'95 Wlrebuild. exch. lor most

1.49 Thermostats Reg l .'LJJ·b .!r.&gt;
1.99 Radiator caps Reg. 2.99
For most popular applications

\

'

.
·.
.'•
0

\

'.

:~

:·

f

..
\

\

'
\

chevy
·

11

.-46 3807

canon

-...---v-

69-71 w/2 BBL

Houn: Sunday 11~5 p.m., Man •.fri. 8:3A:OO p.m. &amp; Sat.

I;

.

Remenulac:tlnd

Mo_nth Reg 37 88

60 Month Reg. 44.88

~Leap ­

·Roach's Gun Shop ..........: .... ... " .. .... ........ 8

'.

A SUPtit VALUE I

34.88 ~
41·.88

bowling

.

Everyday

Low Pnce

Calcium
Batteries
Reg. 30.88

I·Local
,__.,.LIIW I

1(0 IIE5(1

ONLY

4 for s1

·'*""
Southern at Hannan Trace

!JN·Off ~WitC H

R. R. 2, aox 388-Hamrick Rd. .
Bidwell, Ohio 45614.

"'=.~

77c

'
'•,

~

j

'

S7.08

·,
·,

WLP OP

=~.!:::

• When you leave car just flip switch to "on".
• When you re1urn 10 car flip switch to " oil".
• II thief made an attempt to start car, you reset
the element by pressing red button .
..

OLIVE STREET INDUSTRIES
.C1112.

-

·,

Southern ...... ..........................9 0 SZi Mt '
Hallnan ~ .... ....................8 2 5M 42!1

·'

GROSSE ILE, MICHIGAN

One 12-{luart CaSE of Valvoline

S8.88

-1.80

.UGUIMW

•

QA"D-A.CAR, INC.

One 12-{luart Case of VaJvoline

llullfactmr's Rellale

~

EldrW~

I

26.88
H78x 15............... 32.88 27.88
L78x 15 ........ ... ... 33.88 27.88

SVAC STANDINGS

There ' is no Interference ~ith normol car operation:
G~RD·A ·CAR 1ystern of operolibn (Potent Pending)

------G78x15................ 31.88

Dl8dl one rJ !he lollowii"'Q de.Jis ano get a d'ledl baD !rum V&lt;Wollne

'1'Nm

• Thiel can't get away with car -even it he has your key.
• T~ief can break or short out ignition lock and still
can't keep car running.
• Thief can 't wire
out ' or ch'eat GARD-A-CAR without taking
1
too much time for liis own safety.
• Thief can 't move car more than a few feet, if that far.
• Threl doesn't know why engine stalled - car appears to
have gone haywire: out or gas, carburetor !loaded.

ONLY

This oller is good far the 7 day period ol
January 8 lhru January 14

'Team

GARO.A.C:AR AUTO IMMOIIUZER
MAKES YOUR CAR THEFT-PROOF

•

PER CASE
OR
12-QUART
PURCHASE

at Logan

SVAC cage
standings ..........

THE SURPRISE CATCHES HIM OFF GUARD EVERY TIME

NOW reliable protection is within the budget of every car owner.

! OI I "' I AOI(I

-------------------Yalvoline Refund Coupon

Jackson at GaUipolls
Chesapealw at Rnck Hill
MOton at Pt. Pleasant
Southern at Hannan Tra('('
Waverly at Portsmouth Wl'SI
Greonlleld at Wuhlngton CH
Mlnlord at Wlleelenl&gt;wl!
Nonhwest at Valley
llal1onlqlRnck HIU at Ga!Upolls
R a - II Southern
Athens at Broollha"""
Jackson at Minford
Marlon Frankltn at Ponsmouth
l.oflan at Alexande&lt; tmakeupl

in less than 8 seconds.

GARD-A -CAR is a new and surprisingly simple invention that
has reduced the cost of auto theft protection.

19.88
22.88
26.88
26.88

Frlda.Y'•Irontoo at Athens

ONLY sECONDs Afi!R sTARTING

...

""' ,

REG. SALE

SIZE .

Rnck HIU at Fairland
Portamouth at Waverly
Grftlllleld at Madison Plains
South Point at Chesapealw

If a thief starts the car in

AT LAST . • • reliable aula .theft protection that is:
1. LOW COST-any car owner can afford GARD-A-CAR .
2. EASY TO INSTALL-only two wires to connect.
3. 100% EFFECTIVE-stops the thief e~ery time.

117

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

box

ENGINE STOPS " DEAD"

,_______

.78.13 .... 19.A

Athe1&gt;S S6 Jackson 19

anywhere" in your car.

In the pa;t, once a thief had managed to start a car
nothing could slop him from driving, away. But now, just
when the thief thinks he has "gotten his show on the

REG. SALE

SIZE

OP

R 8 ....

Frlda.Y'•GaWpolls 41 IJ&gt;I!an 28

.WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE!

417 Second Av e.
Ga llipoli s, Oh.
Phon e 446·4290
Home 446-4Stl

Retread Snow Tires

WLP OP.

T.-

NO HIDDEN COSTS!

N

CAR

of Valvoline 10W40

Gallipolis ...................... .........2 1 t4.'1 t4.'1
Athens .. .. .
.. ...... 2 t 1S8 1S7

•

Hide this small conlr!)l

Call me !r;u ae ta1l!:.

2.66
Advance -Anti-Freeze

6 622 63t
4 «l'l ll2
4 !Ill 361
8 63t Ill!
7 440 YJ1
7 !122 fll2

SEOAL VARSri'Y

THm

! GARD·A·CAR
11

sq 1nce -

all at a govrJ or ·c~ fndl s 1
what S t a t~': F~rm ,., !'t rr,'JU~ l or

$3.1

St9
4 SIS 497

Ironton ................................. t 2 148 1S6
Jacklon .. .... .. .. .. .. .. ..
.. .. t 2 183 189
T.8 IRIS 1113

GOODfiEAII

Good r.o Jf:rage good

WLP OP

Southern
............. 9
Groenlleld ....
.. .............8
Portamouth
... .......8
Gallipolis.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .
........... 7
Rnck HW .... . ....... ............. 7
Wlleelenbuf!l ..
.. .........6
Loean .. ...... .
.. ... S
... tllens .. .. .. . .. .................... .. .. 4
Nort/IWelt ....
.. ............. 4
Waverly . .............................. 3
Pt. Pleuant .. .
.. ... 2
South Point.. .......................... 3
Ironton .. , ......................... ...... 2
Jacbon .................................2
Soulltern 81 North Gallla St
WlleelersiJura 67 Northwett !115
Fairland II South Point 59
Gn!enlleltl54 Cln:leYtlte 41
Waverly 11 Valley 1!0
Pt. Pleuant '1:1 Wahama S6
ROOc HIU 72 Symrnea VaUey S2

I

""""' by q..........

992-2101 .

. .. R 12 R I:J.-j l
... ... 4 2 14 8-211

r.a lllpolls .. .

'Lopn .... ..... .. .. .. .. . .. ...... .. ... 2 2 229 216

Athem ........ ..................... 10 21 16 1.3--60
Jackson ........................... 18 15 24 ~
Reserve score: Athens 56, Jackson 49

··242·MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
WEST MAIN
·
POMEROY

Harrison 0-11-8;

Scoring picked up at tha t point as the
Wildcats outscored KC, 8-7. Brum·
field led HT wi th four points whlle
Bradbury had four for the Bobcats.
The third quarter was a duplicate
of the first IWO periods as neither
team could mount a fast break .
Wildcat mentor Mike Jenkins
sald,"Our kids played a super,
sma rt contest. We did exactly what
we had to do, na mely, keep the ba ll
away from Bradbury both Inside
and outside. Both teams played well
on defense.They have a good ball
club, but, we were better tonight. Of
course, our quickness pa id off in the
end,".
According to the charts, Kyger
Creek hit 16 of 27 floor a ttempts and
four of seven free throws. Hannan
Trace converted 16 of 32 fro m the
field and 12 of 17 at lhe foul circles.
The viclory gives Han nan Trace
an 8-2 overall record and 4-0 record
in the SVAC. Kyger Creek drops to
6-4 overall and 2-2 against league
foes.
Ha nnan Trace hosts Southern
Friday in a very Important SVAC
contest.
Kyger Creek plays Wahama
Tuesday and goes to Southwestern
·
!Continued on C-6)

W.GAMn!
' TeMII

Pat

BR78-13
CR78-13
ARJ0-13
CR78-14
BR70-14
ERJB-14
FR78-14
FR78-15
GR78·15
HR71-15

f4t ) -

AtkJMOn l-4-6; Gra nt 346; Slone 4·J.IJ; Strait

MER(;ERVILLE - The quick ,
Wildcats a 32-291ead.
Following another Bobcat turscrappy Hannan Trace Wildcats
parlayed slx fouhh quarter defen·
noYer. Deke Barnes connected on a
slve steals Into 20 points In a 44-36
12 footer before Brent Love put KC
back Into the gam~ with a basket a t
SVAC victory over Kyger Creek
the 2: 19 rnark.
here F riday night.
For Coach Mike Jenkins' WildAnother Barnes basket Increased
cats It was their second victory over
the score to 36-31 before Love hit two
foul shots. Following a timeout , the
Kyger Creek In a week. Last
Thursday In the Holiday Tourna- Bobcats who weren't In foul trouble
·m ent a t North Gallia, Ha nnan Trace
decided lo foul In order to stop the
Wildcat stall. After Hannan Trace
defeated KC, 41-34.
Coach Ke ith Carter 's Bobcats · enter~ the one-plus situa tion.
clutch foul shooting by Swain a nd
thanks to a one-handed,la yupoffthe
Deke Barnes "sewed-up" the game.
glass by gua rd Chuck Vogel took a
one point lead, 25-24, going Into the
In the fourth quarter, Jeff Barnes
final period.
collected seven of his 11 points on the
Da vid Martin , senior forwa rd, night while Robbie Brumfield had
connected underneath for a three- fi ve of his 11 a nd Swa in , four of his
polnt advantage before J eff Barnes eight.
canned a corner shol cutting the
The gam e's tempo as indica ted by
margin to27-26.
the final scorewasa slow, delibera te
J, D. Bradbu ry, who was a ble to pace for both teams. The fi rst period
break open under the basket for one ended 10-10 as Brent Love led the
of just a few times dur ing the
Bobcats with four points and Deke
contest, sank a two polnter for a29-26 Barnes paced Hannan Trace wi th
KC advantage.
IWo baskets.
F rom that point on, the Wildcats
With both teams playing a tight
went to work as Bill Swa in hit a
de fense while working for a good
jumper which was followed by a
shot, Coach Mike J enkins' Wildcats
steal on the lnbounds pass and la yup
took a 18-17 lead at the half. All
by J eff Ba rnes. Another steal and
except the fina l mlnu te of the second
conversion by Alan Bailey gave the
period was played at a slow pace.

SEOAL cage
standings

Stevens 2-4-8: Jetf Davis 7-3-17. Total8~.

Metric

IMPS

Jlannan Trace tops KC five
second time within a week

•

L

co.

Box 4 I Chester, Ohio 45720

(f:AntJnued from C4)

I '

At American Buildings, we honestly be·
lieve we offer the best metal building system on
the market today.
However; our future heavily depends on
our authorized builders.
'
So, we make ·sure we pick the very best
construction company we can find in a given
market.
In the Southeastern Ohio area, American
Buildings is proud to announce the association
with Karr Construction Co.
When it comes to builders, we seek out
only the best.
When it comes to your next building project, we invite you to do the same.

KARR

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-5

Pome10y-Middleport-&lt;;allipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Frtd~Qo.

In running their record to 1-2 and
2·7 the lronmen shot 50 percent
from the field, 28 of 57, by far thei~
best shooting of thg season. They
also hit nine of 13 at the charity
stripe, and pulled down 28 rebounds, nine by Joey Wyant .
Athens shot a respecta ble 43
percent, 26 of 60, hit eight of 12 gratis
throws, and collected 35 rebounds,
with BUckle snaring 12.
Jon Clay led three Jackson
players Into double digit scoring
with 20 points while Jeff Davis
added 17, and Wyant 14.
Athens, now 2·1 and 4-6, was
paced In scoring by Carl Matheny's
18 markers ":ith Leon Allen getting
14, and Bill Flnnearty adding 11
points.
Saturday night the Ironmen
journeyed to neighboring Vinton
County In search of their third
consecutive win.
Box score:

Wyant 7.0.14:

:January a, 1984

up Gallla's lead to 47-42.
Logan had no tlmeouts left.
14~ board advantaae the ftnt half,
GAHS held a slx-potnt advantage, GAHS let MUier dribble the length
finished with 28 reboundl, nire by
5246, with 3: 37 left.
of tbe court for a .layup at the
Wright and etght by York. Logan
York put one In from downtown buzzer.
had 15 costly turnovers . .
(1: 15) after Larry Conrad's layup
Gallipolis connected on 23 of 46
Logan wUI host ,zanesville Tues·
earlier to cut Gallla's margin to field goal attempts for 50 percent.
day and travel to Alexander for a
two, 52·50.
GAHS waS eight of 13 at the toulllne
makeup game Saturday.
York missed a free throw (1: 20) tor 61 percent. The Galllans had 20
Home Thla Weeketid
with Carty picking off the rebound. rebounds, eight by Carty. GAHS
·Gallipolis wW host Jackson In a
Wolfe Wins It
had seven turnovers.
leaguematchFrlday,andRoCkHW
Wolfe then calmly sank two free
Logan shot even better from the
In a non-conference tUt Saturday.
Box sco~:
throws with five seconds lett to field, hitting 24 of 44 for 54· percent.
make It 54-50. Wolfe had picked off The Chiefs were a cool 50 percent
GALIJPOU8 (It) - E l - 11-1·11:
the most Important rebound of his from the line, sinking only tour of
BorgdoU :'&gt;-0-IO; Cony 11-l·l1: Wolle U-10;
Drelsel 0-0-0-, Carter 1-0-2; Bootie 4-2-10.
career off a desperation shot by eight. The taller Chiefs, who held a
(Continued on C-5)
Logan's J ack Miller when he was . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . : . . . - fouled.

Jackson hands Athens
first league setback
JACKSON - A Jackson team
that had lost seven straight games
earlier In the season raced to a 10-0
-lead over visiting Athens Friday
night enroute to a 65-60 SEOAL
victory over the Bulldogs. The
lronmen, next opponent of Galllolis,
thus opened 1984 the way they
ended 1983, with an upset over a
visiting Triple A team.
On Dec. :ll Jackson surprised
Miami Trace, 61-58, for Its first
triumph after seven straight losses.
Friday, the Ironmen reeled off 10
straight points as the Bu,lldogs
missed their first seven shots before
the first period ended with JHS on
top, 18-10.
By halttlrne, Athens had cut the
martin to 33-31, but the Ironmen
tallied 10 of the first 12 points In the
third period. for a 43-33 lead.
During the remainder of the
contest, . the defending SEOAL
champions were forced to play
catch-up, and did close to within
three points, at 63-60, on Brian
BUckle's goal with 40 seconds
remaining.
Jackson's Jeff Davis drew a foul
with 24 . seconds showing, and
dropped In a pair of free throws to
Ice the victory.
\

a, 19t4

�"""'"

· · -·· - 4-

t

.• '

.•.•.

January 8, 1984 ·

Meigs girls lose
BARLOW - Jenny Meadows'
. game-high 26 points weren't nearly
enough as the Meigs Marauderettes
fell behind early and lost to Warren
Local, 7042, here Thu..S~ay.
The loss snapped a four-game
Meigs' winning stp·ak and dropped
their recQrd to 7 ~ r verall and 6-2
Inside TVC pia ~ 1 ~ :• tTen Local
leads the TVC w l n a u 8-0 record.
Other than Meadows' high out·
put, no other Marauderette had
more than five points. Jenny Mlller
led In rebounding with 10 whUe
Meadows and B. J . Gordon added
seven each. Denise Williams led the
winners with 23 while Sandy Knost
chipped In 16.
Coach Ron Logan's crew hit on 14
of 42 from the field for 33 percent
and 14 of 25 from the foul line for 56
percent. The red-hot Lady Warriors
:BIG STRETCH - Eastern's Mike CoWns (42) outstretches
S6uthwestem's Roger Wells (22) for a rebound during second quarter
action Friday night at Eastern.,Southwestern, behind Wells' 25 points
defeat the Eagles, 51-44. CoWns had 11 points for Eastern.

-------'-- High school scores - - - - ~teoak 113, Lynchb.L~ Oay 62

Wor11\lngloo ~. Gnwt&gt; Ory 47
Wvnford 7fi, Can&gt;\· ~
Xenia 49, Elt&gt;8V(•rCrmt 49
YelkMr Sprtngs tiS. CC'darvUit&gt; 58

"""""' 111. Gallon
" Val. 46
\14lmington
:;9, TPays
Woodrmre 72. EasiWoOO ol'l

Woodridae sa, R()()(st&lt;M"n til

Young. Chaney 69, Young. Wtlsoo :l)

made 32 of 58 for 55 percent and six
of nine foul shots for 67 percent.
Meigs had 34 total rebounds and
30 turnovers. Warren committed 26
fouls and Meigs 13.
In the reserve match, Meigs feU
to~ on the year with a 28-261oss at
the hands of Warren's reserves.
Julie MU!er led Meigs with 10
whUe Marla Musser added eight.
Layne Frye had 10 and Tina Dalton
nine for the winners. The Marauderettes return home Monday at 6
p.m. when they entertain Wellston.

Friday.
The Little Bobcats of Coach Mark
Hartman captured their second
straight victory Friday night, 47-38
over the Little WUdca ts. Anthony
Kitchen and Gary Pennington led
the winners with 17 and 12 points
respectively. Mike Davis had eight

Tol. Woodward M, ToL~tart 44

'nrulto 86, Braver LocaJ M
Tr1·Vi1111Y 7t RIVtr'Viow 7'l, 201'
1"11ml* EB. Waiftn LOcal !18
'!'roy ... 'l'rolw&lt;lo&lt;i Madllon "
.
1\&amp;lcarawu Val. • · MwWon Tualaw

RIV81RI SE 4.1, M01Dwe 38
RJdpwood 88, Indian Volley S. 3!1
Rlllmlllliii.W~13

.

n,

StMuy1
Van Wft111
Solan Ill, Clllllelcl ,

Son!liii!;Y Pwldno '13. Huron Ill
S I n • II I k )' SI.Mir)' !Ill,
St.Jcaeph !I&amp;
Slody Vol. 5~ Mlnorvo fl

F'rmlorll

-

·

,...,..._.Ill, Frontier Cl
rl, Dull!ovllo ,.
,...._,. Folrvltw Ill. H-vtllf :12
Sidley ... P&gt;!uo 51
~ l..etunan !1, MUton·Unlon 50
Sdon!I,Widllltlo54
S. Cl!!lrol rl, Alllllnd cr..Mow .,
S. CI!IMion SE 73, Wo)'IISVIIIo 54
S. RII&gt;IO 10, BorUn Cb'. W. Reerw 61
So.lthi\llon Ill, Fannlqton t8
S)&gt;orlo .... C'mlllne 29
SpoocervU.. 114. Cr1denYIIle Pmy !13
COli!Oik !1, Ml""! E. 0!1
Nor!.......,. G, Lonlbn ill
&amp;'I,G.........
Soulh 61. Fotrlxlm :16
so.n... Locol 71 C...mbllnl Oool-

WARREN LOCAL (.) - Kom ~;
wuuams 11·1·23: Adams ~; Hanna 1·2-4:
Knost 8.().16; Hanna 1.().2; WonleU HJ;
Horner~ ; Gessel l-2-4. Tullll IN-'ll.
Byquu1en:

-Shi. . .

Meigs ................................. 4 11 14 13-42
Wlll11!ll Local .................... 16 14 :II :JD-11)
- . . , , . - Warren Local2ll, Melp 26.

Steubtnvtlle 78, Brmklr. 'w.v•. ~
Stow tl. Atm:rt Sp1Jw. S1
Strubura !), 8erii'l Hlland •

, . . _ , . 11. llnmowtdl 59, OT
SwaDton IB, Llbrrty Cfnter :Ill
Sytvanll Soutlwll!w 61. Hollond

s. 87, AIWOI\liM
KeniiOO tJ

Upprr Artln,rton Ill. Wellervillfo S. &lt;19
Urtua
Spina. NmhwHIM'n M
Utica 57, Htattl ~
van 8u.ftrl •· VanW a
"VandaiJa.ButW 5&amp;. O.y. Noruvmnt ..
VmnWon 11. w~,.
Vrna111• S. Cnhanl U
Vlenna Mlttlewl 61, l.cr'dstawn «&lt;
VInton Co. M, MWer f'l
W-orll&gt; 46. Clowrlool 42
WapMoneta &amp;7, I.Jtnl Shlwrw 62

w....... ChompO&gt;n
61, "Howland
W&amp;J'Tt'l\
Hardlna ~.
Warm~
fl. :lOT
w....... !12. Poland SOmllwy
&lt;6
Wamn l..aflr'M flJ, Conland L.dt'Ylew

,.

Wulllnlfon C.H . !8. Plalnl &lt;II
Wole&lt;U'd19, Woodlll!ld 88, OT

Sorfna.

:16

fiu.m.tle 7t, Kent Rooltowtt 52
1'11101 CIMn Ill. Clydo ..
Tal. c..""' cai!L 111, Tal. o.vu,.. !I
Tal. R.,. 01. &lt;moon Slrl!ch .,
'I'd. St.JoM 61. Tal WaJiP 53

1421S:J31~

Walldnl Memor11174, Newark Cath. 73

:n

Waldl'On 87, Montpelier •
Wawrl)l 71, LucuvWe Val. !10
88, A)&lt;rlviiJe Cl

"

for the losers.

-

Twin Valley

'IWtnabuti 63,

n.

J7 Sotma McKinley 63. Sllolbjo Ill. Norwalk Ill. OT

Tulllllf.14-ll

HANNAN TRACE (44) - J . Barnes 4-3-11;
BNmlleld J.!HI; BoUey 2-0-4; Swain 2+8and
D. Barnes 5-o-W. Tullll 11-IJ.44.
By quutft'l:
Kyger Creek ...................... 10 7 8 11-J6
Hannan Trace ..... .......... .... 10 8 6 :JD--44

By GARY ClARK
_.season record..r\P.l:i on tJw year
~nel Stall
whUe Wahama dropped Its second
POINT PLEAsANT- The battle consecutive outing to fall Ill 4-2.
for Mason County high school
Point Pleasant, despite g~ttlng
basketball supremacy was never off to a slow start, began Ill find the
really In doubt Friday night as range with their shooting and
Larry Markham's Point Pleasant eventually warmed to a 50 percent
Big Blacks scored the game's ftrst
night from the field by cannlng28of
nine points and never looked back 56 attempts from the Ooor. The Big
In · coasting to a 75-56 hardcourt
Blacks were also hot from the
triumph.
charity stripe by converting 19 of 25
Shawn Nibert, the Big Blacks' 6' attempts for 76 percent.
2" junior forward, was a thorn 1n
Wahama missed )Js first nine
tries from the floor before Boyd
the Falcons' side With nine of Point
P leasant's first 11 points. Nibert
Northrop scored with 3: 35 to play In
finished the contest with 15 points as
the opening period . The bend area
did sophomore jumping jack Kelly team's scoring failed to Improve
Rltne.
·
much throughout ·the game with
The victory Improves PPHS'
(Coptlnued on C-8)

Tol. Scott fl . Tot. Macornbrr !i6
Tol. WNtmer 5'1, Or'fiOII O.y •~

"""'· Eall 111, """'· Oly •
"""'· WOOl ~ Minb'd T1
Pymlll!nbla Vol. G, Jdlenon il
llootne !bl.- 1!1, N. GoUII 51

MEIGS (U) - Haddox 2+5; Han-tson
Mea-s 9-8-26; Gordon !hl-3; Miller
~ Dean 02-2; Reeves 2-0-4; Fry 1.().2.

KYGER CREEK (.) - Vogel ~;
Waugh 2-3-7; MarUn :1.().6; Bradbury H ·9,
and Love f.OS. Tullll IU-11.

Pt. Pleasant hands Wahama ·second ·loss

Prep cage results

~

Hannan Trace ... --"(Co::::n:;::tln:::u:::.::ed:.::.fro:;::m:.:.,:C:..::·5!.....)-

Pom.roy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio2-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

w.,..,.,.,...,.

.

f'AIII'IIliN OONFI'!IIENC&amp;
--~~­

Wo~!O.Foll1&gt;onklfl
Wetrtm (W.Va.) M.toml81, C.CUZ M
Wflr'tm (W.Va.! Wetr S7, WtntenvllJt

~.._

w. Goouo•'ll. aw.lon ..
w. ,..........., ... Pll1lo lll
~

" ' L Pd. Gil
R •77J H .'J'JI I ~
Ul t'\ :.1'1 "
17 L'\ .1:11 Mil,
13 19
ttl 11 '-J

Bolton

11

Pt\Uadrlphla

)I

von

Nf'W
Wuhlnlflm
NPIII ..lenl&gt;y

W. 5aJem Nort~ 57, SmlthYUW

"Wrs&amp;ft'VWe N.'11.:.8. Mcllmmtt
Hilllatd 42

J3 21 7
176 l!t!
f'rtclll)"s 0Ail'lt
Nl."'t' Jt'N 'Y J, Plrtlbur'gh I
Sunday'• Ganww
WutlinWOO 81 Ph.l~hla
N Y l ~ land(&gt;n a t N Y 1Un2('1"'o
llaJ11ord at Wlnnlpt"K
Montn.•al at Rutlalo

fmtnll DtvWotl
\9 14

Mllwaukel&gt;
Oetroll

NW :16

Whltrhall fi7, C'hiWoolhf.

Ul
17
1.1

Atlanta
ClUe~
I ndlana

vancoUVf't' It, chk'a&amp;O'

Transactions

flli -

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J7

,JJ
4-l'l
..1L1

K

:a

w•l'l

17

to 21
9 ~

('l{'v('land

St I.nub at Toronto

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

I
2''l
4 ...J

BNIEIIALL

NEW YOHK YANKE~-SI~f'd Phil
J'l,k.&lt;kro, plldw&gt;r. to ',y twl}year c•ontr.act

N...... . . , _
01 f,(;O PADRES-Rl'IICh«:: an
agm'fflt'flt tn prlnctpk&gt; with Rid\ (~

WDin:RN CONFI'JU!2III(E
Mldwf!lll DtvWon
Ulah

,.

22 t!
19 14
H 'JJ
14 :II
lJ 19

Oall~
()('fl\'t't

s.n Antoruo
Kansa11 City

&amp;t7

SAN

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4.12

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4.12

8

BNIKETIIAU.
C..-OnllnmlaJ 8.ulw!tllldl A111101..i&amp;tlon
ornwn· SPIRITS--SI~OO Walke r
Hu.sseil. auan:l . P\acfd Kenny HIKJ!!i.
J(Uanl on Uv• suspended rt!fi~:&gt;rvt&gt; lilT
FOOI'IIALL
N...... FO!Xbal..,_
CINaNNATI BENGALS-Namf'd Dick
Sekw tiiV'backf't &lt;nidi.
UIIM.td Sbll8 Foo&amp;bltl ~
ARI7..DNA WRANGL.DlS-.~ Dovld
Hutl'marr: oft'enstve lineman. to a th!'('lf&gt; yrar
mnrract. Traded Junior Ah You. c!Arn.s/vr
tond. iltld ttl(&gt; rtaht s to Mlk.f&gt; Robinf.oo. tack it'.
to rtw&gt; NN.· Orlt'ans Brt"akN'I lor rht'
r1gtlls to RobPrt " llln:l" Smith. dMm

.Oi R
12Z2..:r.JIO
Palik DtvWon
23 1J
01 -

""'"""

Jtonland

Lo5 An~·lf&gt;!.
Cioldf&gt;n ~att&gt;
Sea nit&gt;

3112&amp;5
16 1H
tTl
~ 17
4111

-~

...,
l2

19
Zl

1
6

6

t41
;
..1'1.1 10

San """"' t"''Way'll o.....,..
lbton II~. Or&gt;.·t'land '17
Phlladrlphla lf.ll.. Nfow Jl'fV')' UM
Wui'Wijfi(JI 9&amp;, ('hieRRO It( OT
DPtroit lUI, Nf'W York 1(17
lndlaNJ tOt P'hol:n~ ffl

Clii CAGO BlrJ"l.-Narnl"d JoM Huard
, pl'('laJ ll•&lt;lfru ruactl.
PIT TSBURG II

Utah Lll, Kansu Ctry I 10
Sail Antonio J:;M, U. Anaf'l•'l 117
DeUu 123. San Dk&gt;Ro H'
Ponland )64, OOIVN' 1.29
Sf&gt;ank&gt; UH. How:too JIJ'.l

.
STAINLESS STEEL

20o/ooFF

SINKS

ALL
DOORS

ONLY

$31 95

FF

~ -

25o/o
OFF
.... ---

/

ALL .MINNESOTA
PAINT IN STOCK

30o/o OFF

25%

40%

~--

OFF

OUT
. CHECK
'
.
··ouR ~ PRICE
ITEMS.

PANELING NAILS ....89$' PER

30% OFF ITEMS
•Harthglass Fireplace Scrt:ens
•Timex Watches
•Hoyne .Mirror Tile
•Shovel~

•Lawn &amp; Garden Tools
•Soldering Tools

..

H A H T F 0 R D WU AI.ERS-Ilr
left wln(l. to Windsor of
rtw· Onr.ano ll&lt;rlP)' 1~
tumPC..\I'aull.a\1.'~ ,

MI~'E SO TA
NORT H
STARS-Ailnourrf"d that Don Bt.au!I"'.
gool\t&gt;, will I1'JXI1 to th(&gt; dub's Salr Lakl'
()T y afflllall' In thr&gt; Cmtral Hodt...y ~
Rt'ralk&gt;d .llm C'ralj;!. ROilllf'. from Salt l..akt&gt;

" ' LTPiaGP'GA
36 l1 2 !W II) ttl
%J l1 'l 'il Mil J!W
'l1 u fi "'} 1111 1~1
19 19 .1 41 JtJ 142
9 ~ 'i 21 l2't 174
H lJ 2 l8 Ill !HI

NY lslfo!..
J'I,'Y Ranjl(n
~phi.

Wutungton

Ptnaoorwn

t11)'

NF.W YORK RA,r&lt;;G[RS-AnOOJnt'f'd
thut Chrb Kontc.. Cf'nlf'r. hu agn&gt;r(J 10 )oln
ttw• dub'"
atnllalt' In thl' Cmtral
Hoctu,_ l.i'itR\.It'

Tul,,..,

...... ,.,_

Nf'W .k&gt;~&gt;v

Bowl games

~t235.117fil24

Zl

l1

4

_...,_
'll16

t9

50 164

.1(7

19

2

14 11

J

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I9fil~

«1 en
:n m

~

J!'JO
Jli.1

Ml~a

Sl . l..o.IIJ

Chic...,

.Toronro

At Mohile. A1lL

_,.,_
lJ

7
)6 31
1!11.8

Vanrouvrr
Cataar)'

u

Smklr~·l

19174t.ll*OO
17 31 4 :fl 1!t 1E5
16 72 .1 ~ ... ~~
·~ 31 ~ .:PI 1&amp;\ 19.1
l'\ 21
·I :W 145 166

Edm&gt;nl&lt;,.

Foo&amp;hd Bowl Glanol&gt;

lltm;unlng OOwll!ar'tll'!i
Saturday, J~n .

c.mpw~.

~011h

\'' Sout h
~G~

AIA ....... GL
SWAI ,., 1\'EAI
SUnday. Jan. IS
Rkoh , . . . Bowl
"' \ 'ollotum. fky . Japan

461117 1M
~
11 1111 173
7 11JSZI7J

Easr '"'

1981 CHEVROLET Y2 TON ....:... 6 cyl, 3 speed
transmission, power steering, radio, mirrors, 31,000
miles. SAVE. Call 992-2174.

Wf'St

Logan hands Gallia
eighth graders first
loss of year, 37-36
LOGAN- Logan's eighth grade
basketball team raliJed from a
six-point deficit In the final period
here Thursday evening to edge the
previously unbeaten Ga llipolis
eighth grade team, 37-36.
The loss left Gallipolis 5-1 over the
year. Logan Improved Its mark to

2-3.
Logan led 11-10 and 23-16 after two
periods, but fell behind 30-29 going
Into the final quarter.
Both teams had 15 field goals.
GaUia was a cool six of 11 a t the foul
line whlle Logan was seven of 10.
Jason Thomas had 14 points for
GaUl polls whUe Robin Young and
Mark Berklch each had eight. Jose
Medina and Sam Eggleton each had
11 points for the winners.
Gallipolis' eighth grade girls also
lost ·a one-point decision at Logan
Thursday, 15-14. Logan upped Its
mark to4-2. GaUia dropped to3-2on
the year.
Gallipolis led 2-0, 8-4 after two
periods, but fell behind 11-10 going
Into the final quarter.
Angel Holley and Betsy Bergdoll
led Gallla's attack with six points
apiece. Sheila Hackney had .,slx tor
the winners. .

OFF

'25% All
ARMSTRONG
CEI.LI NG TILE
EVERYTHING
ON SALE
FROM 15%
50% FF

19n FORD PICKUP - 6 cyl., 3 speed transmission,
power steering, 44,960 actual miles. Call 992-2175.

==

EAST
.r :.•

1979 FORD PICKUP - 6 cyl., 4 speed overdrive,
tires. "You Can Buy This One

Simulates a lived-In appearance by
turning tights and appliances on
andoff.
0111

College scores

•10.95

Falrk&gt;lgh DlddniOO 94, LoyolA. Md. Ill

Karvard 52, Prlnretoo !'jl
Notre Oamt 73, HOb' Cross 61
Pennsylvania Ill. Dlrtmoulh 61

800'111

Gnmbllng St. 62. S. Carolina St. riJ
Nrw Orleans 9~ lloollevolt 6J
MlllWI!liT
Ywnplc:M'n St. IIJ, Akron 57

FAR WI!BT - - • WashlngtCII :11, Wuhtngton Sl . 48
100RN.\MI!NT8

STOP IN AND SEE

l'lniMatne 78, Buckne1.1.75
MaliJl 73. Florida !bllh«n 10

81 Olive St.
Gallipolis

.

~

....,..,

__

CAROLINA LUMBER
. ' AND
SUPPLY COMPAN~

OWerellce Qurnplom*
s..io,, IM.I, liM.
.VCOW:tj;l Hp
stellle .. Lol AlfiOieo RflCBI

446-4464 '

......

p.li\.1 SA!. • a.m.-12 noon

AI TlrnpO SlaiiNm. T. .po,- FIL

. ''
'

SMITH~NELSON

Point Pleasant
675-1160
Store Houn : Mon .~Frl ., I a.m.-5

--..XWJ
I•

Open Monday Thru Friday 8 a.m.-8 p.m.,
Saturday 8 a.m.-3 p.m.

CALL 992-2174

312 $beth St.

~aws;'
Hr
San Frtndloo at Wu~

Merrill, Jay and Alan Evans

Quad-Trae, power
steering, power brakes, 'tilt cruise, air, AM/FM/CB.
PRICED RIGHT. Call 992-2175.

U•lt 1 Per C1llollttr

Playoff schedule

..

·All Sales Final
No. Returns
••

ro nrntcr

BATTLE FOR REBOUND - Although II looks Uke Point
Pleasant's John Oluiel (50) and Wahama's Roti Bradley (11) are
dancing, they are actually battling for a rebound during lbe PPJIS.WHS
basketball game Friday night In Point Pleasant. The Big Bla(:ks posted
a lopsided 75-36 victory' over tbe Falcons. (Photo by nm Davis) .

~l'lniF-~

•

-•

'9

HOOlEY

w•

25% OFF

SALE
STARTS
JAN . .3

stereo, rear defog ., trip odometer. quartz clock, &amp; only 16,000 miles.

~a&amp;Jonal Hodtry l.fo~

N6ul tlod&amp;ey Lr....By 11w "-'lllled ~
Callkueaa:
r.utdtiM,.......

DO-ITYOURSELF .
REPLACEMENT
COUNTERTOP

•Plumbing
•Caulking
•Insulation
•Glues
•Door Locks
•Sandp.aper
eMail ·Boxes
..t." Pipe
· •Gutter
•Galvanized Roofing

rhrft&gt;-~'at

qu:.orlt&gt;rb&lt;ri . to a

Hockey

2
0°/o
OFF ITEMS
•Electrical Supplies

OFF

ANTON I O
Bob G~llanu,

Por11and at Sfoank'

(Regular &amp;
Pr.!-Hunt)

ALL POWER
TOOLS·

flruNo Hutlv'r. llflf'-

CL'~ IJ NGER.&lt;.;-Signro

Hwstoo at lA Af\il'k'fi

.:·~ 15o/o OFF ITEMS

•z-Brick
.
:: · Facing Stone
•Nails
tNuts &amp; Bolts
;wrought-Iron
:Railing
' .
•Garage Door Hardware.
~Pre-Finished Shelving

MAUI..EHS-SI~f'd

ID&lt;k&lt;'l'
SAN

~•G...-ne.

7/16" - $799

~Unfinished Moulding

with chocolate brown cloth Interior, 3.8 lltre V-6

Drfrolt at MUwaukA&gt;

DMroi•

BLANDEX/WAFERWELD

Light desert tan exterior

ler1glr~e, power steering &amp; 'brakes, air conditioning, tilt wheel , am.fm

siYP t'fld

Atlanta 91, MltwaukA&gt; 87

WE ARE CLOSING THE BUILDING SUPPLY DIVISION OF OUR BUSINESS AND ARE
SELLING OUR INVENTORY AT DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES. EVERYTHING
MUST GO. THE CONSTRUCTION DIVISION OF CARTER &amp; EVANS WILL STILL BE
TED AT 417 SECOND AVENUE.

1983 FORD THUNDERBIRD

!1015(1', pltchl'l'. on a tlve-yt&gt;ar rontl'&amp;('t

I

. .

MOTORS
.

500 EAST MAIN ST.
OHIO

.

'

'

li

•

t

�·~-

. .

Page-=-C8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,----High schQol results---------.. Pt.
Akron Buchu&gt;!

~7.

Akron E. 42
Akron Cen·HCM·er 74, Akron Ellt&gt;t :\'!
Akron F'\I'{'StOOl' 49, Akron N. &lt;&amp;6
Akron Garfk&gt;ld 00, Akron Kmroot"E' ~
Akroa Hoban 62. Ravmna 9J
Akro n Manrhesl&lt;'r 59. W. Ho!trl('5 ~
~7.

AlelUUidl'r

Ashtabula EI~N'OOd 61. Cooneaut ~
Ashtabula HarbJr 61. Painf'SVU!l' Rl\'
f'rslct&gt; 54
Atwat('l' Chr lli. ~· Hood Chr 43
t\ustlnt&lt;N.·n·F'Itch .&amp;H. Wam&gt;fl W. fU&gt;.

"Uma 7t. W. Chetter Lakota 71
Uncolnv\ew

Unsly, W.Va. ~. Bfollalre St.J~ 61
1..15bon 66. Southrrn Local i3
Ulllf' Miami 00, Hamilton Roa 117
Lockland IIi. Nt'W Miami 47
LoQan £1m OJ. Liberty Union 52
Lorain Cath. 64, Lorain Southview ~
Lorain Klng 62, Fremont Rou .11
l..q.rel.and Ill, Madeira 00
Lucas rl. Danvtlle 56
LuTheran W. 58. ltklfl&gt;eru:lmCP :J1
Macon Eastf&gt;nl 61, ~ley ~
Madison 57. As.htaw.ta St.Jom o
Magnolla, W.Va. ~. Rtver i9
Mansfk&gt;td 60, Cot. Ltnclm-McKJnley .,
Mans. MaJ.abar 6t, Mans. M.t~Jon ~
Mans. St.Peter's 59, Panna HotY Nam&lt;&gt;

Carroll 53, Day. Fairmont &lt;&amp;~
Dunbar lfi, Day. Ml:'adowdalt&gt; 67
Oakwood 00, Day. Northridge ~ I
Waynr fil , Day . &amp;t&gt;ttli;ts S2
DE'flant1' liS, Kenton £6, or
Defptu St.Jotwl'l 50, New KrocvWe (l
Detroit Inner City ~. Emanu£'1 Chr. ~1
[):wer ~. Ashland J9
Ooyit"SSlM'n 67, Dalton 57
E. Canton l'l. Carrollton ~

Avoo &lt;&amp;7. Keystore 46
Avon ·Lake 66, Olmsll&gt;d Falls 45

Barbl&gt;r1on 9t Walsh Jl'Sutl 71
B.arnf'S\'UI(' 63, Union Local 56
Batavl11 ~. F'l'llcity ~
Ba)· ~. WrsllakP 47
Beaver Eastl'm 76. Pons. NotN' Oamf'

E. OrvMand Sha~
dy ..

"' &amp;dford

63.

~

Mans. Tei'T'Iplt&gt; 73. lndependern '
Maron Cath. ~. Cardington 46 •
Marton Loc&amp;lll, Fon JUocoo.tery
MarysvWr ts. Bi&amp; Walll.lt 45
Mason S.. Middletown Mad.bon 5ti
Moumet&gt; 51. Anthlf\y Wayne 49
Mayfield 31. Ck&gt;. Brush :J6
McClaln M. Ctn.·k'vilk' 41
McDonald 73, l..owt'IMUe 53

Parma Norman·

E. O lntoo 72, CUnton·Massk&gt; f7
Edison ~. Nl'W l.onOOn 44
Elida b'7, (('!Ina 53
Elmwood ~. Otseeo 56
Elyria 64. Lorain 63
Elyria W. Ill, Elyria Cath. &lt;&amp;&lt;&amp;
Euclid 60, Map!£&gt; His. 46
EVf'llt"'ffl 66. Delta 63
Falrlleld Union T7, Berne UniOn 47
F'alrless 48. On'Vllie- 47
F'edt&gt;ral Hcdc.lng ~. Nelsonville-York
51\0'1'
Fleld 60, C'rf&gt;stwood :10
Flndlay 59, Marton Harding 45
Flmands ~ BrooklYn «1
ron l.oramk' 111. Fairlawn .12
F'ostor1a 93, Bedford. Mlcft. 61
F'ostor1a St.Wmdel.ln 66. Lakeskle 42
F'ranklln f'umacp Green 64, S. Wet51er

70, Eas!lakro N. ~
Bedford Cham&gt;! tli, C'k&gt;. Cmtral Cath. 56

BcUbro.&gt;k 55, Olx\(' !iO

Tltfln Columbian 49 .

&amp;&gt;ll'a ~. Mle\lark !H ~
8(&gt;thl'I·Tutf:' !iO, Cll'rlnont NE of"/
Black Rl\•£&gt;r ~ . Plymout h 49
Bloom·CarmU r.2, Canal Wincheo·.Pr .))
Bloomtk&gt;ld 52. Brtlitol c;
13oar'Cnan 63, Young. M&lt;Xlr": v 50
BowUng Grt'~.'n ~ . Pen)'sbul\ &lt;&amp;J
Bradford 61. Tli·VIllag£' ~
Brookfteld 67. Hubbant Sol
Buckeyp Central 9J, PI('QS8llt 58, OT
Buck.eyp S. 98, BuckeyE" N. 61
BuckeyE' l'raU ~1. Skyvuf:' 47
Buckf:'yl' Val. 49, Dublin ~
Buck£&gt;ye W. lOt Mr Mechm 1W.\'a .1
Dooah"" !I;
Bucyrus 7o. Upper Sandu.~kY 59
Camptrii·MmlOriai 82, Strutht&gt;rs ~
Canal FUlton NW 91. Akron CCI'Ientry 75
Canton GtrnOak 19. Marlington 50
Canton Hl"'itagt&gt; 00, Rt&gt;al Ufe 62
Canton McKJnlt&gt;y 73. Newark 45
Canton South &lt;&amp;8, Alllan«: 4t

R.eynok1sburg 49

Galli~

54,

loRan

Meig5 73. Welllltoo 53

Carllslf:' 57, Brookvlllf:' ~2

CmtervUI£&gt; ~. Sprtng. North S2
C1n. Elder 61, Cln. Moeller 00
C\n. Hughes IIi. Cln. W\thnJN 69
Cln. Mwiemont 66, Cln. Indian Hills ~1
Cln. Norwood 76, N. Col.legt&gt; Hill 72
~

HUll ~

Ctn. PurceU·Mar1an ol6, Cln. LaSaJ.k&gt; 4.1
Ctn. Oak HUIS 8.1 Cln. Turpin 29
Ctn. Reading 47, Cln. Wyoming 45
Cln . St.Xavk&gt;t 36, Cln. Bacon 34
Cin . Seven Hills 54, ctn. Christian 34
Ctn. Syc~ 1;7, Deer Park 42
Cln. Woodward !II. On. Aiken 62
Claymont 58. UnlOnt(Min l...akf' 51
C1eer Fork 'Sl , Mans. Chrtsllan 49
0£&gt;. Baptl5t. 96. Ck&gt;. Griswold .12
Cle. Om!gl' 01. Chagrin Falli &lt;1
Cl£&gt;. St.Joseph 00, Lake Cath. 66
0('. Untverslty 70, Oe. Benedlc1!n(' &amp;
OeYf'land Hts. 100, Garfield Hts. Ql

52

1\r.•p.

'
Pioneer
match-up.

New Bo!;too 67. lrontoo St.Joaeph :m
New Richmond 85. W~I'J 53
New Rlegel Tl, Smeca E. ~7
NUes M~ ~. Ywng. UnW.Lne 37
N. Adams 'IU, MMche&amp;ler 9l
N. BaltlJrort&gt; 10, Nonhwood ~
N. canton &amp;~, MassUIOn JadUon 49
N. CE!Itral 91. Fayette Q1
N. Olmsted 91. Falrvk'w Pa rk ~
N. Rlc¥-vllle 66, l..oraln Cleuvlew 31
N. ~altoo 67. Brfdlsville 61
Nordonla fl. C'uyahoea Falls G
Nortoo Q:l, ReYere 51

~1

Norwayne Qi, Hlllsda.W t5

Oak Harbor 62. Genoa J7
Cb!rUn 72, ArrWrsl Steelf ~
Old F'or1 73, 8ett.sville 56
Ontario !0, Fn.&gt;dPr1dctown t6
Ottawa-Gtanoorf 61 , Bath tf
Ottawa Hills oM, HopewelH.mdon :fl
Oxford Talawanda 67, Trenton-Edgpwood6'l
Pantb'a.fiUOOI 81, Uberty Benton ill
Parkway 51, New Bremen 53
Parma 74, Shaker HIJ. 53
Parma Vallfy Forge 50, Lakewood 49
Pauldifl.q 61. Upper Scklto Val. 58
Patrick H~. Pen!Svtlle :II
Patrbc 'iNJ ~1. Reedlvi1le Ea~ 44
Peebk&gt;s 51, Georget&lt;Mtn ll
Petersb..l111 Sprtng. ~ . Jacbm·MUton

62. Panna Padua

~

Lebanon &amp;1, Franklin 62
LedRtmOnf 46, Fairport Harding .12
Lf.'E&gt;tonJa 72. llnlted Local ~7
Lf&gt;lpslc 61. McComb 49

WAHAMA (11411 - Ron Bradley 11-8-24: Donnlt
VanMeter 2-3-7: Matt Dawaon 1-0-21 Boyd
Northrop 6-!&gt;17: lllll Clendenin 2~: Jel1
Bamltz ~: Brian Fielder 1-0-2: PhWp
Hollman ~: Todd Gress ()()~ Mike Wolle
~.

Tolalo li0-11-11&amp;
I'QINT PLEASANT (711 - Donnie Joneo
~- 10: Brad Minton 1-1-3: John Oshel 3-1-7:
Shawn Nibert 5·!&gt;15: Guy MoiTOW 2-3-7: Kelly
Rlllle 7-1-15: Darrell Mitchell 2-1-5: Brian
Wedgei-0-2: J. L. Perry2·1-5: Shawn'l'homaa
2~ : Bobby Bamcttell-2-2. Tolalo 18-1&amp;-'15.

.,

CELEBRATE
THE NEW YEAR

Scorebyquarlen:

Wahama .. .. ............... .... ...... 5 16 1B 16-!16
Point Pleaaant ........... .. .......1f 16 :II 22-72

PAT HILL FORD
LTO Brougham

of the art engineering in a claaalc, fuU-slze car.

Was

NOW

$$SAVE$$

1

12,951.00 ·

•n,soooo

2 IN STOCK

Our lot is loaded with tremendous
Used Car Buys! Se'e us first!
19.81 LINCOLN MARK VI, 4 DR.
Black exterior with carmine leather interior. All the equipment you would expect.
Full power. Locally owned.
WAS 512,995
January Super Sale

$11 ,88400

1981 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.

Dark burgundy with landau roof and matching 60-40 seating. Tilt, cruise, AM-FM-8
track stereo, V-8 eng. and chrome styled wheels. New Caprice trade.
January Super Sale

$658400

Frost white with dark blue custom cloth inteior, tilt, cruise, AM-FM stereo, rallye
· wheels and much more. Only 15,178 miles.
WAS $9995
January Super Sale

$928400

1982 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC 4 DR.
Beautiful two-tone gold and beige with custom cloth interior, V-8 eng., tilt, cruise,
AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers, power door locks and extra clean inside and out.
WAS 59395

January Super Sale

$8584°0

1979 CHEVROLET CAMARO BERLINETT A
White finish with carmine interior, tilt, cruise, AM-FM, rallye wheels, new radial tires
and much more. Locally owned. New Monte trade.
WAS 55995
January Super Sale

$538400
$528400

Thunderbird·

1980 VW RABBIT, 4 DR;
Economy plus basic transportation. 4 speed and radio. Dark blue exterior.
-WAS $3995

January Super Sale

$348400

1978 DODGE MONACO, 2 DR.

'8011.00
Now '7, 79500

'8,065.00
NOW 1 7,695oo

Was

was

Air cond., auto. trans.

$278400

7 Other
Tempos
Ill Stock

1981 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE, 4 DR.
This one owner auto is extra clean, air conditioned, auto. trans., sport stripes.
Priced right.
WAS $3995

84 Country Squire

Wagon

.

Loaded.

Was

•""''"''"

1

16,446.00

84 Bronco II

12,377.50
NOW 1 11,360°0
Was

1

DEMO

83 T-Bird
Was 112,451.00
NOW 1999500
84 Ranger

waa '7 495.00
NOW '699500 ·

84 F250 Pickup
'9819.00
NOW '8695°0
Wae

84 E-150 Cargo Van
Was 1 13,268.00
NOW 1 11,900°0

1968
1972
1976
1975

1616

j

I

EASTER-N'AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

$184°0
384°0
1284°0
184°0

.... ~

)\

.,..,~

446-3672

SEE: George Harris, Max Miller, or Pat llill

I.

J
FORD FALCON
PYMOUTH FURY, 2 DR. As
~us
APA
FORD VAN
R EL
FORD TORINO S.W.
Y RE

ChevroletOldsmobile-, Inc.

PAT HILL FO-RD, INC.
l

$358400

· If you are looking for a New or Pre-Owned. Caror Truck
- Check Our Loti We're located between- Rax's &amp; '
M(Dona#d's.

RING OUT THE OLD. RING IN A NEW FORD AT

PH. 992-2196

January Super Sale

CHEAPIES

,2 -FREE OIL CHANGES WITH
PURCHASE OF NEW VEHICLE.

461 S. Third Ave.

(

Red with white vinyl roof. New premium tires, V-8, auto, air cond., new Mon\e Carlo
trade.
· '!JAS 53495
January Super Sale

Tempo

Middleport, OH.•
·-

. ' ' 1

J

I

..
,(

.~imo- Jmlind Section D

.

HO•

-

-

•

January 8, 1

•

welcome former captive G-oodman
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va~ (AP) - Navy Ll Robert
0. Goodman Jr., freed after a month r1 capttvtty In

returned Friday to hl5 own house and a Joyous,
blnner·wavlng welcome from nel&amp;hbors and fellow
alnnen.
"Hey, this Is my front door. This Is fantaltlc,"
Goodman said when he stood on the porcll of his
two-story colonlal·style , home In a Vltlllnl&amp; Beach
subdivision. ·
Goodman, '¥1, hugged several of his neighbors, who
had decorated his house with banners reading
'.'Welcome Horne Rob" and "Some people will do
~to come home early''- a Joldnerefen!nce to
(lis being shot dawn Dec. 4 over Syria.
· Goodman, his wife, Terry Lynn, and two4aughters,
11na. 7, and Morgan, 2, flew from Waahlnllton to
~yrla,

school, for more celebrations.
Goodman spent two days after his return
Wednesday meeting President Reagan and other
officials In Washington and said his reception has
been "pretty ove!Whelmlng."
"I don't want to change," he said. "I want to be the
same person I was before I left."
Goodman said medical examinations at Bethesda
Naval Hospital showed that a knee Injury he suffered
when his plane was shot dawn, killing the pUot, "Is a
little more serious than I had envisioned."
He said he will be on a month's convalescent leave
and may need surgery for possibly torn Ugaments.
After that his plans are uncertain, although
Goodman "said he would like to return to his attack
squadron. He has talked to his squadron leaders by

Oceana Naval Air Station, where Goodman's Attack
Sqaudron 85 Is based. ·
As a Navy band played "Anchors Aweigh,"
Goodman's friends and fellow fliers waved more
·
welcome baMerl and smaU American flags.
Srnlling and wearing a green cap marked VA-85,
Goodman shook hands with Navy olftclals and then
rushed to hug wives of his squadron mates.
Goodman's squadron Is aboard the aircraft earner
John F . Kennedy off the coast of I..ebinon.
"This Is home teiTitory for me, a lot more familiar
faces," Goodman said at a news conference. "My
hands are shaking."
He and his family plan to leave Saturday for
Portsmouth, N.H ., where Goodman attended high

ZANESVD.l..E, Ohio (AP) -Sen.
whoee bid for the
Democratic presidential nominalion has hit some financial barriers,
has now received some bad polltical
news from hl5 home county In Ohio.
Fred E . Mautz, president of the
Democratic club In Muaklngum
·County, has endoned former VIce
President Walter F. Mondale for the
Democratic 'nomination.
" It's a pltilollopllcal thing," said
·Mautz, who raises horses for a
"Uving. He said the endorsement was
his, not the dub's.
: Glenn grew up In New Concord.
Mautz Is tromZanesvUle.
: In Washington, meanwhile,
J::;lerm's olftce will be laying otr at
,least p and poss1bly as many as :aJ
campaign staffers In a " belt}lglttenlng" move, said news secre,tary Michael McCurry.
; The layoffs are needed to meet
-expected expe113e1 In the early
~rtmar.Y and caucus states that are
)een liS crucial to the senator's
ehanees of remaining In the race,
McCurry said.
• McCurry said the campaign
)YOOld try toolfset the cutbacks with
11ddltlonal volunteers. Glenn'scBil):patgn CUITE!IItly employs 78 staff
members 1n Washington and 58 1n
various states.
· The Glenn campaign ended 1983
with a balance of about $50,(XX),
McCurry said, although It will
receive more t11,an $2.1 mUUon In
federal matchbig funds by next
Week.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohio Is
spending S:ll mUJlon each year on
alcohol and drug-abuse programS,
but a lot of people who need the
service are not being cured,
Dagmar Celeste says.
Mrs. Celeste, wlfeofGov. Richard
Celeste, Is honorary chairwoman of
the Ohio Recovery CouncU, created
by Celeste to coordinate and
upgrade17unconnecteddrug-abuse
and alcohol programs scattered
throughout state government.
Mrs.CelestemetFrtdayherewlth
the 24-rnember council In its
quarterly meeting at the University
of Cincinnati Medical Center.
"The council wUl look at the
current programs and propose
changes to the administration," she
said. "A great deal of this may be
simply combining and coordinating
many of the programs.
"It Is something that has to be
done If we are to get the most benefit
from the moneyspentonalcoholand
drug-abuse programs. Right now
the lett hand does not know what the
right hand Is doing."
She was critical of what she
defined as the underserved people
- minorities, women, senior citizens and · chldren - who are

.. welcome home."
The Goodmans chatted briefly with neighbors
before heading Inside.
"Champagne and the fire. We're all set. Bye," Mrs.
Goodman said before she closed the door.

suffering from drug abuse and
alcohol and are not being cured.
"We have to set up a different
criteria formeasurlngsuccess," she
said. "In the past, if people
continued to use a program we have
called the program a success, not
whether the people were helped.
Reusing a program Is a sign of
failure.
"We have to start looking at these
programs In terms of recovery
Instead of utillzallon. We should
abolish programs If the same people
are constantly coming back to
them."
Mrs. Celeste said the council will
study, survey and track cllents and
develop recommendations by the
end of the year.
The malA group of 24 members
was appointed by Celeste for a
one-year period, and several subcommittees Involve about 250volunteers. The only paid council
members are the director, deputy
director and a secretary.
Mrs. Celeste said she has a
professional as well as social
Interest In alcohol and drug abuse.
She helped establish the Women and
Alcohol Center In Cuyahoga County
In 1978and worked with the program
four years.

"I think women and minorities
are prtme targets for drug and
alcohol suppliers," Mrs. Celeste
said. •'They consider them super
consumers. And these are the
persons least served by the
programs."
Sanford Weinberg, deputy dlrec·
tor of the council, said the different
systems for alcohol and drug abul;e
programs require two different
funding mechanisms, making delivery services difficult .
"What we have now are many
people becoming multi-addicted,"
Mrs. Celeste said.- "They may have
an alcoholic, drug problem or could
be addicted on prescription drug$.
The problem now Is before an
agency can get funding to treat that
person, the person has to be
classified under one specific area.
The person may not even know what
the addiction Is."
Weinberg said the council alaowUl
concentrate on revising programs
for theworklngpoorwho might have
drug or alcohol problems.
"These are people In the middle,
who don't qualify for aid programs
yet don't have the resources to
purchase adequate Insurance for
treatment," Weinberg said.

Economist calls for new policies

~

,

HAPPY TO BU)ME - Navy i..t. Rebert Goodman reads to a
queMioa u lie ud Ids wUe meet reporters outside their V1rpn1a Beach
honte ~- Goodman reWmed home to a wann welcome by
ne!pbon ud hiends ud a bouse decorated with ribbons and banners.
(AP I • erpbolol.

~

L

.._

-

CLEVELAND (AP) - PoUtlcal
economist Eliot Janeway says the
United States can put itself In the
economic driver's seat if It only
realizes how important It Is as a
market for thee rest of ·the world's
producers.
Janeway, an author and adviser
to seven presidents, told the Oty
Qub forum Friday that the United
States should not restrlct imports.
But he said this country should use
Its economic clout to force other
nations to buy no-Interest, non-

Protests mark release of Dan White
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
• fiamlng effigy lit the night as 9,(XX)
demonstrators protested the parole
at former city offiCial Dan White,
treEd less than five yearS after he
was convicted of kW!ng the mayor
jll1d a homosexual city supervlaor.
· Friday night's noisy but mostly
peaceful protest was In sharp
contrast to angry demonstrations
by the .g ay community on May 21,
1979, when about 5,!XXJ people
stormed City Hall after White was
found guilty of two counts of
- voluntary manslaughter In the
slaylngs of Mayor George Moscone
and SUperviSOr Harvey Milk. .
; Whlte,a37-year-oldformerpollce
!lfflcer who served briefly as a city

telephone since hls release. '\.
Goodman, who was freed ~ay after the Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a personal appeal to SyrtaG
leaders, said he had developed a good relationship
wlh the Democratic presidential candidate. As a
mllltary officer, Goodman said he Is prohibited from
campaigning for anyone.
After meeting with Navy officials at Oceana,
Goodman and his famlly were driven to their home,
where a small cluster of neighbors waited to yen

Mrs. Celeste decries cure efforts

.iohn Glenn,

This one owner is extra _nice throughout. Fully equipped with all the options you
would expect. New Chrvrolet trade.
WAS 55995
January Super Sale

The '84 Escort

I

;leader
~endorses
~Mondale -

1979 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER, 4 DR.

Was '13,306
NOW 1 ll,900oo

'

iOrial

~party

1983 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

IN A NEW FORD FROM

~" --

Scoreby qiiiU'Iel'l:

Wahama .... .. ...................... 9 10 17 :D--116
Point Pleasant .................... 16 :II 1B 21-7!1
ReooerveGame
WAIIAMA (Ill) - Todd Gresa!l-2-12: Ricltle
Clark 2~: Tom Bumgarner 1-0-2: Juon
HyaeU!&gt;!&gt;15: Mike Wolleii-H: R. Lavender
~ John Cook ~ Mitch Routh 6-6-18:
Rex Hendricks~ DeWayne Weaver~
Jel1 Bamltz 1-1-3. Tolalo 11-IHI.
POOO PLEASAIIII' (71) - Jimmy Reynolds 2-3-7: Jell Porter 4-().g: Odie Noble
4-3-11: Riehle Blain 4-0-8: Cllllort Slmpklna
12-!&gt;29: Tony Whlte l-0-2: Trevor P,ayttll-2-2:
Alan Kaufler 11-2·2: Mike Rhodci1-0-2: Kern
F'lernlna 11-1-1. Tolalo 18-16-71.

...

~te

··conference

.~ounty

WAS 57195

The '84 LID Crown Victoria

Athl ~ tl c

Motu"u_ovlllt&gt; 102, Mapk1on 64

Lancast('!' 64, Cln. PtlyL Ed. !il
l..ancaster F'isher 00, Col. HamUton

Cok&gt;nel Crawford 47, Rl\·er VaL 44
Colu mb6a +t S. Amhfrst 4J
Columb6ana 91, Mineral Rl• 50
Cot Academy 9l. N. UniOn &amp;I
Col. Brookhaven 76, Col. Wt'St 64
Col. Centmnlal 'Sl, Col. Eastmoor 44
Col . East 81. Col. Sooth 00

38 rebounds while committing 20
turnovers. Wahama grabbed 34
rebounds and turned the ball over
on 23 occasions.
In the preliminary game Coach
Dave Bod!dn's Little Blacks opened
a 30-21 halftime lead before going on
to capture a 72-55 decision for their
first win of the 1983-84 campaign.
Qlfford Simpkins dropped In a
cool 29 points for the Little Blacks'
wllose season slate Improves to 1-3
on the year. Odie Noble added 11
markers for the winners with J eff
Porter contributing eight and
Jimmy Reynolds seven.
Wahama, now 1-4 on the Junior
Varsity level, was led In scoring b y
Milch Roush with 18; Jason Hysell
with 15 and Todd Gress with 12.
Wahama visits Kyger Creek
Tuesday.
Point Pleasant returns to action
on Friday nlg)lt at home when PHS
entertains visiting Milton In a

Morxan &amp;1, Maysvill(&gt; ~
Mt .Gllead 1ft Ncrthrmr !VI
Mt.Healthy ~. Cln. C&lt;Meraln ~
Mt .Vemon fl. Pkkerlnaton 48
r
Napokoon ~. Sylvania Ncrthvil"N :II
NaUonal Thall &amp;&amp;. ~hel ~

6:2, Edon S2

Lakt'WQJd StEdward

only 20 of 65 attempts finding their
mark for an Ice cold 00.8 percent.
The White Falcons alao suffered
from the free throw stripe where
they canned juat16 of 28tossed for a
humble 57.1 percent.
Bradley, the White Falcons' 6' 4"
senior forward and leading scorer,
led all point getters with 24 points on
eight of 19 from the floor and eight
of l1 from the foul line. Boyd
Northrop followed with 17 tallies In
addition to haullng down a game
high 18 Individual rebounds.
Point Pleasant was paced In
scoring by junior forward Shawn
Nibert and sophomore sensation
Kelly Rl1fle, both with 15 points
whlle senior guard Donnie Jones
added 10 markers.
Guy Morrow led the Big Blacks In
the rebounding category with nine
to his credit with Nibert totallng six
caroms.
As a team Point Pleasant totaled

Lorain Brook!ldP 40
Minster 67. Sr.Henry 57
Mohawk li1 , Rlc¥'dak&gt; 00

:Ji

!'i6,0T

hands ... ____~(...;..eo_nun_ued_fro_m_c_-7_)_ __

"'Mld\.11l&gt;w 48.

Holgat£&gt; 73, ~on Ql
Howland Chr. 61, Por1ersvtJJp t Pa. t
Chr. lJ
Indian HUis C'hr. 00, Massillon Chr. 55
Indian l.ak£&gt; 75, Triad 15
Jarkson ~. Athens Q)
Jadtson Cmter 52, Houston 50
J&lt;'Yo'etl.sdo 76, Indian Valley N. 68
John Glel n 58. New Lexington 49
Jonattwt Alder 64, Nt'W Albany J7
l&lt;arlsM Lakota 62. Glblonb.Jrg 59 ayr
Kenton ~ 46, Btliefontalne
Klnas !E. Blanchrst£&gt;r ~
l....akeland 1i2. NE'Wl'Omer'!ltown ~

Coldwater 7l Mendon Union 48
Collin5 W.. Reserve 61, Norwalk St.Paul

'

Pleasa~J,t

Miami Val 53. Xenia Wllson Jl
MJamlsbwi 4J. W. CaiTOllton t2
Mlddk'torovn IW. Hamilton 83
Ml(kllel~· n Fenwick 00, Lemon·Monrot

~

Caraway !il, Tuscarawas Cath. ~1
Gam&gt;rtsvU!e 67, Waterloo 64
Gen('\la M . Ashtab.Jla !il
Cosho'l 51. Amelia &lt;&amp;3
Grand Val. 56. Perry 48
Gf"fen5bw'g Grem «1, Hud&amp;oo 31
Gn.&gt;enVllle n . Tl'C\IJnlt&gt;h 63
Hamilton Badln ~ On. Wail'l.lt HUis
Hannan 'I"ract' 44. KyKer Cl'l'ek 36
Hebron Lakl"WWOd 65, JotnstCM'll f8

\

Mentor ~. WUbipt~y S. 49
Miami Trace ti2. Hillsboro 58

Franklln·MOnmE' 82., Preble ShaWI'Il'E' 'Sl
~1 .

19

Mt&gt;adowtrook 56, Caldwell 49
Medina 47, Rocky River~ 20T

&lt;&gt;
Gahanna

83. F1ndlay Herttqeo ~
M. Delpta Jeftc.&gt;rson Q

Uma 1\&gt;mple

Day.
Day.
Day.
Day.

!il'f'V(' .tfi

Cln . Prtnccton 65, Falrfteld

l.Jcklng Val. 66, Johnstown Nontu1dg('

Copley 40. Medina HIRNand 24
Cory·Rnwson ti7LArcalla ~
CO!ihoctOO 1i. Zanesville~
C\lyahofr.i !Its. ~. Medina Buckeyt' 56,
JOT
Day. &amp;lmont 78, Day. WhltP 70

IK&gt;Ipre 55. OT

LwdonvUW 51

lJcl&lt;tni Ho. "'I'Granvttto 110

"'

Amanda OC'art•rrek 7:1, MIIII'!"SjXln ~7
Alt' anum !l!, 1't1·Cooary N li6
Arlln ~on 7t Hardia N. 41!

EJ(&gt;I!l'VU(' ~ 1.

~xln,ifton ~.

Col. Hartle)' ~ Col StOulrlel 49
Col. Markln-Franklln 511, Col MUllin 5.2
Col . Nor11\land 56, Col.. Brti!IPI t4
0&gt;1. IU&gt;&lt;dy 00, 0&gt;1 . lleSates"
Col. Wt-hrlt&gt; 57, Col. Watte-rson 5.2
Col. Whets!OO(&gt; 83, Col. lndepmdmce 65
Coootton Val. fW, Malvern 64
·
Conv&lt;&amp;- Cn&gt;SMew 67, CoJumbu.s Grovt'

Ohio H ~'i 8oy1 Bu.krihd
By 1be AMoclaWd PreM
Frkliq"• ReeuiC8

January 8, 1984

Pomeroy--Middleport-Gallipolis, OhiO-Point Pleaeant, W. Va.

supervisor, was released In secrecy
Friday at 8 a.m. PST from a Los
Angeles parole office and ordered to
stay out of San Franc~ for one
year.
He had served five years of the
maximum seven-year, eight -month
sentence for the Nov. '¥/, 1978,
slaylngs of Moscone, 49, and Milk,
48, the city's first op·mly gay city
supervlaor.
"We're very happy there's been
no violence," said Jonathan West,
who helped organize both the Friday
night protest In fhe predominantly
gay Castro District and a noon raUy
that drew about 1,500 people to
Union Square.' "People have been

able to vent their anger through
noise - without going out and
shooting two people."
But some demonstrators suggested · that White might be In
danger outside of. prison.
"Yesterday was the last day Dan
Whltecouldspendknowlnghewould
ilve through that day," a bearded
man whq wore a nun's habit and
caned himself "Sister Boom Boom"
told the afternoon rally. "Dan Wltlte
starts a Ute sentence, and It's not
going to be a long one."
In a brief statement, the state
Corrections Department said White
.had a job In Los Angeles County,
where he would llve In a rented
apartment tor his year of parole.

State prison spokesman Phil
Guthrie refused to discuss White's
job, saying, "Ican'treallytalkabout
that. If I give you any general
Information, It would give away the
location. "

·4

marketable government bonds If
they want to sell their wares here.
He likened the approach to the
sale of government bonds to the
American people to pay for the U.S.
defense In World War II and Korea.
"The non-marketable frees the
market from the pressure of
liquidation," Janeway said. "The
zel'O-mupon frees the market from
the pressure of new borrowing. We
did It at retail with our own folks.
Why don't we do It at wholesale with
the foreigners?
''I'm not a protectionist," Janeway said. ''I'm not telling outsiders
and foreigners that we're not going
to use I heir resources. I want to use
all their resources I can. But I don't
believe In fairy tales. Trade never
was free and pretending that it Is

.

now .. . Is a sure prescription for
depression and panic, and you know
where that leads-war.'·
He said other nations' economieS
are strongly dependent on the
American market.
"Pay no attention to what you
hear about the recovery overseas,"
he said. "Overseas, it 's half-past
1929. There Is only one game in town.
There is only one market theoutsidE&gt;
world Is still eating on."
.
Because of the importance of the
United States as a customer, wS
nation should dictate the terms upoii
which it wiD accept imports;
Janeway said.
''I'd say to the foreigners - ycit
want 60percent ofthesteel markeC
Be a goOd sport, take 70 percent.

· Los Angeles Police spokesman
Wllllam Booth said White's parole
location Is "probably the city of Los
Angeles." a possibility that angered
Mayor Tom Bradley.
"I had not been notified in any way
that Los Angeles was being contemplated as the site for White's
parole," Bradley said In a prepared
statement. He said he had raised
"strong objections" to White's
release In Los Angeles.

Ohio AIDS study looks at risk factors
• CLEVELAND (AP) syndrome.
tleveland-area doctors want to
The Cleveland area Is an Ideal
) tu&lt;Jy the lifestyles and sexual }ocalion for the study, one· repracttces of 500 homosexual men In searcher saUl, because AIDS has not
hopes of finding the factors that reached epidemic proportions .here
Increase the risk of getting the yet.
)ometlmes-deadly colldltlon .AIDS
"There have been a number of
;- acquired Immune' deficiency'·· ""eases In town, but AIDS Is not seen

Chinese premier visjts

u.s.

•
, PEJ{ING (AP) - Premier Zhao
Hls Itinerary calls for an over·
:7Jy~ SaturdaY left Peking for a
nlghtstoplnHawallbeforefiyingto
·~o-week North American trip Washington on Sunday. He \\(ill rest
ilmed at Improving ties with the 1n the Williamsburg, Va., area
P,nlted· ~tales and reaf11rmlng before his official U.S. vlslt stai:ts
'Jlhtila's . warm · r:elallons with Jan. W· He'wlll proceed to Canllda
~~~- · ' .
· . . Jan.17.
~~ Zhao 1s expected to sign a major
Zhao-left Peking by special plane
:ll.zreerrientwlththeUnl!edStateson at noOO• (ll p.m. EST) with a
1bdusirlal8nd techllologlcal cooper- · 70-member flltourage that Included
·· tlon Jlloni With other unspecUied Foreign-Minister Wu Xueqlan and
'
ts. But u.s; dtp~ta In .&lt;:hen Ch)l, ' deputy secretarysay they~ no major aeneraJoltheStateCouncil,Chlna's
lical~ts1rom1Jiao's cUinet.
11.
· .
"I lobk forw~ to exchanging
• In Washington, the White House VIews with· P.resldent Reagan and
lnnounced It baa inVIted 165lllillls Prime MlQister (Pierre Elliott)
to a fonll~W- diJIDeli 011 Tuelday to Trlldeau on a wide range of
' honor ZluiO, the hlghelt rankin&amp; ' ltitematlonal tpues and bilateral.
Chjnese re.lef to visit the United lslliellr'' Zlllio said In a formal
Stlftes.
'
sta~freleased at the aiiWrl.

with anywhere near the frequency homosexual men, according to Dr.
In Cleveland as In New York, San v. Diana Morledge, city commlsFranclsco and Los Angeles," said slonerofhealth. ThreeofthoseAIDS
Dr. Michael M. Lederman of victims have dleil, Including one
Unlvers!ty Hospitals.
patient who died in December, she
"If .the disease arrives here - as said.
In allllkellhood It wUl- wewUl have
an opportunity to study the gay
Statewide, there )lave been 22
population before the disease ar- confirmed cases reported, nine
rives In large numbers," Lederman suspected cases, and 14dealhs, said
'
Lois Hail, an epl(lemiologist for the
said.
AIDScrlpplesthebody'sdlsease- state Department of Health. She
flgltting Immune system. Most of Its said the oldest reported case dates
victims are homosexual men. The · back to 1981.
disorder makeS Its vicllins susceptiHealth care professionals have
' l&gt;letO lnfectlonandr~cancers that been legally required toreportAIDS
usuaUy are fatal..
cases to health officials since last
"At this point, we really don't September.
know what factors are putting
In Cuyahoga County, there have
individuals a.t greater risk for been seven cases and four deathS
AIDS;'' Lederman said. "We know reported to the state. Harnllton
from early studies · \he larger County has had four cases and two
number of sexual contacts one had, deaths. There have been three AIDS
the greater one's risk was fof the . vlctlmslnFrankllnCounty,ofwhlch
dlsease.Atthlspolntwereallydon't two have died. In Stark County,
know ~T~Uch more-than tllat.
there have been two reported
"WehopetOfolkiwtheeemenover victims and one died.
a nwnber of years to · find out
prectsely what the r!Sk factors are
In Trumbull, Summit, Crawford,
for the disease,:•He said.
Alien and Montgomery counties,
In the city r1 Cleveland, there there has beenoneconflfmedvlctlm ·
have been nine conflnned cases of of AIDS who has died. Ucklng
AIDS and three suspected cases, all PJunty has one case.

PROTEST WIDTE RELEASE - Some 1,500 demonstrators
pn;Kested In San Francisco loBoWing the release of Dan White Friday
from a Cailfomltl prison. White's parole came five years after he
gunned down ~or George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Mill; In·
San F'rjutclsi;O's City Hallin 19'78. (AP Laserphot,o).

�....
Page

0.2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~··~··

......

January 8, i914

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

Coal, en~ironmental conce1 n
Celeste's current dilemma

1/

By JOHN CHALFANT
A~ated Preas Writer

·' '

. ; NEW DIRECroRY - ·ohio VaHey Phone Book, a
:drectory containing telephone munbers of residences
·ape! businesses In Gallla, Meigs 1111d Mason counties,
Is presenled to James R. WUUams, left, president of
'

tbe GaJUpolls Area Chamber of Cunmerce, by Bob
Young, preslden&amp; of Champloa Directories, Norwalk.
Copies of tbe directory are to be delivered to local
residents. The books are also available at several ·
locations.

Oil firm threatens legal ploy
fgainst Getty-Texaco merger
·'

By ROBERT BURNS
~~
AP Bn±ess WrMer
:f'IEWYORK (AP)-GettyOilCo.
~sIt wants to be taken over by
'Fexaco Inc. In a merger estimated
a't: $9.9 bUJion - the largest In
~rate history- rut the spumed
~ilCo. threatenedcourtactlon
14:\llock the deal.
: ()'exaco's takeover bid was ac·
®ted by the Getty board "In
~ciple" almost Immediately,
~tty Chairman Sidney R. Peterson
a'nnounced Friday night. The new
oomblnatlon would Increase Texa·
db:s assets by :rl percent and double
I~ crude oil reserves.
: ()fflclals at both companies de(ilned to release detalls or discuss
thf deal. Jack Leone, a Getty
s119kesman, said terms of the
a2reement might be released this

~d.

;In Its onty detailed statement,
which came earlier Friday, Texaco
said It had agreed tobuyll.8percent
of Getty's shares for$125apiece, or a
total of $1.16 billion.
'
:iiut if, as analysts expect, the
merger Involves Texaco buying 100
J:Jetrent of Getty's 79.1 million
shares of common stock for $125 a
shlll'e, the deal would be worth $9.9
bl\llon. That would top the previous
reg&gt;ni takeover prtce of $7.8 bUJion
paid by DuPont Co. for oil producer
COJioco Inc. In 1981
:The Texaco offer scuttled a
2-day-old agreement between Gordoli Getty, the youngest surviving
sliD' of the late billionaire J.P. Getty,

and Pennzoil, a Houston oil company, to convert Getty to a prtvate
entity under joint ownership.
Pennzoil Chairman Hugh
Liedtke, In a message citing
unspecified but "significant antitrust Issues presented by the Texaco
offer," urged Getty directors Friday
to comply with Wednesday's agreementandsaldbewouldtakeGettyto
court if It proceeded · with the
proposed deal. .
The PennzoU deal, which Liedtlt~
said was approved by a 14-1 vote of
the Getty Oil Board, had cUmaxed
months of warrtng between Getty •
management and Gordon Get)iy.
Even with the addition of Cktty,
Texaco would remain the nation's
thlrd·largest oil company, behind
Industry leader Exxon Corp. and
No. 2Mobil Corp.
In Washlngton, Justice Depart.
ment spokesman Mark T. Sheehan
said It was "certainly Ukely" that
either the department's antitrust
division or the Federal Trade
Commission would examine both
the PennzoU and the Getty
proposals.
But prtvate antitrust lawyers said
th!lt if there were any problems,
they would be minor, The New York
Times reported today.
Under terms of the Pennzoll
proposal, Getty would have been
converted to ·a private company
owned jointly by Pennzoil and the
Sarah C. Getty Trust, which holds
40.2 percent of Getty's stock. The
trust Is controlled by Gonion Getty.

~erry

Pennzoil was to put up $2.6 billion
to belp finance tbe purchaseofthe38
million Getty shares beld by the'
public and the 9.3 million shares
owned by the J. Paul Getty
Museum. Getty was to put up the
remaining $2.6 billion of the $5.2
l)llllon total.
Claire Eugenia Getty, a granddaughter of J. Paul Getty, challenged the Pennzoil-Getty deal In
court In Los Angeles, where Getty
Oil malnta'lns Its headquarters, and
obtained a temporary restraining
onier against that deal unm a
hearing Friday night. At the
hearing, Judge Richard P. Byme
blocked Getty and Texaco from
entering a binding agreement unW
noon Monday and required Getty to
give one of Ms. Getty's attorneys,
John Walker, details of Texaco's
takeover bid by noon today.
Tbe judge also gave Walker the
right to · give approval of the
Getty-Texaco merger by Monday
morning.
Byrne also ordered Getty OU to
Inform thebeneflclarlesoftheSarah
C. Getty Trust five days before
comlngtoamergeragreementwith
any company other than Texaco.
Texaco, which Is based at White
Plains, N.Y., earned$917mllllonon
sales of $.11.6 billion In the first nine
months of 1983, the latest period for
which figures are available. In the
same period, Getty earned fl55
million on sales of $8.9 billion.
Pennzoil's earnings totaled $107
·million on sales of $1.7 bUJion.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste, who mined polltl·
cal suppOrt a year ago by allgnlng
himself with environmentalists on
acid rain cleanup, now faces a
dllenuna In the battle over use of
OhiO's high-sulfur coal.
Environment and health •groups
that drafted a $7 bUJion nationwide
plan for acid rain control, to be
funded byelectrlcutWtycustomers,
have served notice they expect
Celeste to take a positive stand In
testimony before a congressional
subcommittee In Cleveland.
"We're saying that the 19th of
January Is going to be a litmus test
for Dick Celeste. And the env'lronmental community tully expects
Dick Celeste to live up tb the
cmunitments he made during the
campaign," said Ron Good, the
Sierra Club Ohio Chapter lobbyist.
Paul Costello, Celeste's press
secretary, expressed disappointment with that approach. ·
"The governor's litmus test has
been his own career In which he has
fought continilally for protection of
the environment," Costello said.
To I'EITilnd Celeste of his past
pledges, tbe Sierra Club dlstrtbuted
excerpts from statements he made
as a candidate In a meeting with the
group's leaders June 00.
Tbe Democratic governor drew a
contrast with fonner Republican
Gov. James Rhodes, a vocalcrtticof
those who charge Ohio with heine a
major acid rain polluter through
emissions from Industrial and
utillty company smokestacks.
Rhodes, who was famous for his
frequent railings against the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
and its air pollution ·regll)ations,
never acknowledged Ohio's role In
the problem. "Blaming Ohio for
acid rain is Uke blaming Florida for
hurricanes," he said.
Celeste sounded a different theme
In his Sierra Club session. "I want to
serve notice that things have
changed, that Dick Celeste Isn't 11
young Jim Rhodes on this Issue, that
In fact he has II different agenda,"
Celeste said.
But while environmentalists are
nervous, the coal Industry's main ·
spokesman - who was a close
Rhodes ally during his terms In
office - has .no complaints about
Celeste's policy.
Neal Tostenson of the Ohio Mining
and Reclamation Association was
asked if be !bought Ceteste had an

State fair
•
pnces
to
stay same

-;;. A Michigan decision to stop a
utlllty company from burning
high-sulfur roai dug out of the
SUJ)Jlyhill Mine here has left county
·officials hoping that a 600-acre
lndustrtal park will help save Perry
COUnty's economy.
Engineer T. Charles Wilson says
till!· park will be located on

.•.

strtp-mined land donated by Sunnyhill's owners, the Peabody Coal Co.
Announcement of the park was
made Thursday night during a
meeting of city and county leaders
with state officials.
The Sunnyhill Mine Is threatened
with closing because Its biggest
customer, Consumers Power Co. of
Jackson, Mich., has been ordered by

needed.

His concern appears well
founded. A Michigan ulllity which
had been burning Ohio coal has been
told by regulators to stop the

~- 8, 1914

practice, a move which threfllenl
5:MljobsataPenyCountycoalrnlne.
Celeste, who Is tryjng loaolve the
resulting economic problem, plana
to lntrbduce legislation this mooth
spelling out how the state will apelld
$4 mllllon to Invest In cleanlnc
methods that would make use rl
Ohio coal cost effective.
Tbe problem Is that Ohio coal lisa
a high sulfur content. When burned
It produces sulfur dioxtde whldl
some !;Cientlsts say Is carrleclloni
distanceS by air currents, falling to
the ground In rain or snow.
EnvlronmentaUsts say sclentillc
evidence documents the resuiUnr
damage to water, soli and plants In
acid-sensitive regions rl the eastern
United Slates and Canada.

ri;• ~ (AP) - Publllhlr J.tfre/ M. Gluck
· IIYI ,,.. plan to bliy the nllllla St. Loull
Globi-DitiliOOI'Pt "Ia lUll alive" IVtll dioqli he llld
he wltlldrtw hla otrtr. after ernPioY- rejected •
he l7ld wu CnJCial to the deal.

Tlon
.
lllOketman tor the u.s.

J\lltlce ~t.
llleiJIWhlle, COnfirmed Friday that the ~t

l'HIIterlna the neaotlatlonl and that Ita lawyen
would meet Mooday with owners of the 131-year-old •
'lllOI'IIIna publlcatton.
1n addltloll, U.S. Dlltrlct Judge John Nangle ·
• deferred untO Mondays hearing on the city's request
tor a temporary l'elfralnlng order to keep the
Globe-Dem9Cfat operating.
Nangle's declaton came after he received assuran·
ces that both the Globe-Democrat and the afternoon
St. Louts Post-Dispatch, which has said it would
Switch to morning publication If the opposition paper
folded, woold pubUah "as usual" through Monday.
Gluck withdrew his bid without explanation late
Friday after newspaper employees rejected part of
WU

,

,;.... '

GAU.IPOLIS - Candidates have unW Feb. 23 to file for county
offices for the May 8 primary election.
Tbe Gallla, County Board of Elections announces oftlces faclni
~lectlon are two county commissioner seats, praii!CIItor, clerk d.
courts, recorder, treasurer, sheriff, engineer, coroner, probate and
juvenile judge and central cmunltteemen. 'lbolbe seeking 1M
position of state representative for the 94th legislative district, a
two-year term, must file In Athens.
Fillng, which Includes declaration of candidacy, nomlnatlni
petitions, petitions for toea! option and local questlbns and issue
petitions, can be made untU 4 p.m. on Feb. 23 Tbe last day for voten
to register Is April 9 to 9 p.m. Tbe elections office Is open from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m .
•
Central committeemen serve a two-year tenn. A Democrat and
Republican represent each of the 36 precincts. The probate and
juvenile jiJ!Ige serves a six-year term and the remaining offices,
four-year tenns.
Successful candidates of tbe primary election will appear on 1M
Nov. 6 ballot.

. . ....
.. .......
........
'

Fll a1'snd •

.JIClbls! Pile _ . On!lr • Weld!- a wlaDer Iaiiie·

~·Go.., 111e .,-·~ ........

lipO!....__.., Food'•r· ; . ·- .

'

'

.

.

1 -Card of Thanks (paid in advance I
2 -ln Memory,
(paid In advance I
3·Announcamanu
1
4 -Giv•way
5 -Happy Ada
8 -loetand Found
7 -Yard Sele (paid In advance I
8 -Publc Sale
Auction
9-Wantld to Buy

a.

m. erown

.

.

.

•

21· Bualnaaa Opportunity
22- Money to loan
23-Profeaalonal Services

31 - Homea .for Sale
32·Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farma for Sale
34-Buaineaa Building~~
35-lota &amp; Acreage
26·R•I Eltata Wanted

41 - HouHaforRent
42•Mobll' Homes for Rent
4 3 -Farma for Rent
44-Apertment for Rent
45-Furniahed Room•
45-Spece for Rent
47-Wantaclto cRent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-ForleaH

11· Help Wanted ·
12-Situated Wanted
1 3-lnaurence
14-Bualnaaa Treining
15-Schools
1 8· Radio, TV C B Rap air
1.7 · Miscellaneous
18-Wantlld To Do

Resurfacing set for spring
GALLIPOLIS - A section of Ohio 141 will be resurfaced this
spring, announced Rep. Jolynn Boster, D-GaJUpolls.
Tbe project Involves resurfacing the 2.3-mlle section from County
Road 40 to a sixth of a mile west of County Road 25.
Bridges over Clear Creek and a branch of the creek will be covered
and waterproofed. Bids for the S153,(XX) project will be accepted In
February, ll!ld the contract will be awanied the following month.

a.

Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S IAI.E
OF REAL ESTATE
The . _ of ONo. MEIGS

WIC applications accepted

INVi'rAnON
TO BID
The M81QS So1l and Water
Conservat•on D•str•ct are tak•ng
btds pursuant to the PfOVISIOns

c:ornn- ......

County.
Court
JAMES WlftEIIIIENNER

...

Plolntlff

GAU.IPOLIS - Applications for participation In Gallla County's
WIC (Women, Infants and Children) program are being accepted.
WIC Is a supplemental food program sponsored by the USDA that
also offers nutrition education.
Eligibility requirements Include women who are either pregnant
or breastfeedlng; Infants less than 1 year old; children less than 5
years old; must be a Ga!Ua County resident; and meet Income
requirements based on gross Income and members In your
household.
Income guidelines Include, but not Umlted to a family of two
receiving $12,009 or less; three, $15~; four, $18,315; five, $21,423.
For additional Information regarding qualifications and Income,
call the Galla County Health Department at 446-2523.

of Secuon 151 5 08 of the Ohoo
Aev•sed Code. lor the loHowmg

LYDIAN. CHAMBERLAIN

o•eces of equ•oment
o ne no-1•11· 2-row pull -type
corn planter WJth the lollow•ng
attachments
1 plateless typew•th.mon.tor
2 fert•hzer bQKAS
3. lnSectiCidA bOKAS
4 acreage counter
5 tool boK mounted
For more mformat10n contact
the MP.1gs So 1l and Water
Conserva110n D1stnc t at the
above addess or phone 992·

one!

KENNIE L CHAMBERLAIN

D•••ltl
C.. No. 18371

In pursuance of an Order of
Sate '" the aboVe Anttlled
act•on . I wtll c f1er for sale at
public auctton. at the door to the

Court House tn PomerOy. '"the
above named County. on the

.'.

.

Publishing Co. whether the Globe-Democrat tsaoldor
Is closed.
"Tbe Intemperate remarks of Mayor Schoemehl
are categortcally denied by the Pu!lizer Publishing
Co. They are totally without mertt," said Nlcholaa G.
Penniman IV, assistant general manager of the

Post-Dispatch. An attorney from the Herald Co. In
New York didn 't return several phone calls.
Friday's rejection came In an emergency mee!lng
of the St. Louis Newspaper Guild only minutes before
a 5 p.m. EST deadline. Gluck said he needed approval
of the guild by that time or the saJe·of the newspaper
could Jail through.
A day earlier, about 150 employees had voted
overwhelmingly to reject the agreement rele8$1ng
the Herald Co. from financial liability after the
newspaper's sale to Gluck.

ftiHIWAiiiMi

'

61- Household Goods
52·CB, TV &amp; Redio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandioe
55- Bu~ding Supplies
56-Pets for Sale
57-Musicallnalrumento
58-Fruita Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

11th day of February. 1984 at
· 50:00 o'clock A.M . the followtog real estate. Sttuate '" the
County of MEIGS and State of
Ohto. and '" the Townshtp of

6647
B•d s w•H be opened at 8 p m
on January 25. 1984 at the

SctpiO, to-w• t
.
•
!:»ttuate .n the County o f

The Me1gs SWCD reserves
the r~gh t to re1ect any arid all

State of Ohto. to-w• t Begtnnmg

bods

at the Northeast corner of
Sectton 18: thence South
about one hundred and ltfteen

Thomas The•ss
Cha1 rman

Meogs SWCD
· 111l;)..r&lt;&gt;ds to the Northeast
corner of satd lands owned by il l 8. 24. 2tc
Eli Reeves. thence West etghty(801 rods: thence North one
Public Notice
Hundred fofteen (1151 rods:
thence East eoghty 1801 rods to
SHERIFF'S SALE
the place of begtnntng . contamOF REAL ESTATE
tng stxty-one and one-thtrd 161
l / 3) acres. more or less Wtth The a- of ONo. MEIGS
the assurance of an outlet County. Common ...... Court

T-- R-.

The smont IIOIId of Ohio
Plaintiff

staked through satd land to the
public property
~
Deed reference· . Volume

...

284. Page 275 Meogs County

Eddie - - , Turtoy one! Unda
Turtoy, .. II

Oeed Records. Meogs County.
Qhoo.

,

• Prem•ses lqcated -

c!o. Rd. 47 .

east of

.

• Premises

'
appr a•sed

at

869.500.00 and cannot be
!(old for less than IWO·thords Of
thal amount.
: Te(ms of Sale: Cash •n hand.
'

~
(.1,(8. 16. 22. 3tc

'

Public Notice

'i
\

O.londonto
C.. No. 83-CV-202
In pursuance of an .Order of
Sal,&amp; '" the above entitled
actton. I Wilt offer lor sale at
publ• c auctton. at the door of

the Court House on POMEROY.
tn the above named Cou nty. on

James J. Proffitt SATURDAY. the 11th day of
Sheriff . Februarv. 1984. at I 0: 15
· Me•gs County o'clock. A.M.. the following
descnbed real estate. Situate tn

1

MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD OF MENTAl
RETARDAnON • ,
""""lOPMENTAL

- ..DiiAamn

CAIILETON SCHOOl

~-

S141 11•·8183

M -

PREMI SES LOCATED on the
west s•de of SA 338
Sa•d Prem1ses appra1sed a1
S21. 166 00 and cannot · bP
sold lor less than l'lo't'O·th•rd s of
that amount

the County of MEiGS and State
of Ohio. and on the TOWNSHiP
of lETART. to-wn:
Situated on th ~ Townshop oi
letart, County of Meigs. and .
State of Ohoo, and descnbed as
toliows. to wot
PARCEL NO. 1: Being on lot
No. 249. Town 2.· Range 12 of
the Ohio Company's Purchase.

1\ nnnun r. Em~ nI'

Public Notice
amount equal to five per cent
of hia bid. but •n no f!Vent more
than IItty thou sand dollars or a
bond IOI ton per cent of hio bid,
payable 10 the 01rP.Ct or
81dders must app ly on thP
proper forms. for quald1C8t10n
at least tPn days pnor to 1he .
datP set tor ooon1ng b•d s •n
accordance wtth Ch apter 5525
Oh10 RB\IISed Code
Plans and spP.C d1cat10ns are
on fli P 1n the 0PpartmPnt of
Transponat1on g,N1 the olf1ce of
thP OIStriC\ DePuty Dnector
ThP 01rector reservf&gt;S !he
11qht to IPJf&gt;CI anv and all btds

2

In

Memoriam

Public Notice

M e1gs County

11 18. t 5. 22. 3tc
Public Notice
NOnCE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHiO
DEPARTMENT OF
niANSPORTAnON
Columbuo, ONo
DloonM! 30. 1983
car- -l.ogol
Copy No. 114-18
UNIT PRiCE
CONTRACT
SR-979(91
Sealed proposals will be
receiVed at the office of the
D•rector of the Oh1o Depart ment of TransportatiOn. Colum -

bus. Ohoo. unt o! 10 00 AM .
Oh10 Standard T1me. 1uesday.
January 31 . 1984. lor Improvements tn ·
Galha County, OhtO. on

GAL-S.R. 141 -14 00) -Stale
Route 141 and GAL·S A 223 (0.00·0 3 71-State Route 233.
by resurfactng w1th asphalt
concrete. .
Pavement Width - Vanes.
PrOJACt and Work length -

61 .565 ieet or .11.66 moles.
Btdd•ng on thts prOJect •s
restr1cted to M1nonty 8us1ness
Enterpnses (M·MBE'sl (rest·
dents or non -residents of Oh•ol

qualified 10 bod wolh the Ohoo
Department of Transportation

under Chapter 5525 of the
Ohio Revosed Code iOACI and
certified as a M-MBE by the
Siate Equai Empioyment Op·

NOnCE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHiO
DEPARTMENT OF
niANSPORTAnON
Columbus. Ohio
December 30. 19B3
Controct
Legal
Copy No. 84-17
UNIT PRiCE
CONTRACT
SR-981(41

s-

Seated proposals wdl be
recf'rved at the oll•ce of the
Ouec tor of the Oh10 OepanmAnt of Transporta tiOn. Colum·
bus. Oh10. un!ll 10 00 AM .
Oh•o Standatd l 1me. Tuesday.
January 3 1. 1984 . for 1mprove·
ffiPOIS In
Gatha County. Oh•o. on

GAL · 2 I 8-17 .70 - I 3 381 -Sta le
Acute 218. by resurfac•ng w1th
asphall concrete
Pavement W•dth · ~ Vane s
P.roJeCt and Work l ength -

33.898 leet or 6 42 moles

In loving memory of Charles
H. Wagnerwhopeuedaway
January 7. 197B. The love
you gave us is one we will
cherish forever . You ere
aadly missed by children
Jackie and Robin and wife
Alice .

1- - - - - - - - 3 Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick · up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Ca55
614-446•0294.
Balloons for Christmas. Get
Well. Anniversarys, Birth·
doys partlao. Ca55 Ba55oons &amp;
Co., 446-4313.

'

•
l
1

commencing at a stake on the

'

The Ohto Department of
Transporta!lon hereby notlft es
all b1dders that 11 w1H affir ma- · Harper' 1 Adult Care Homo
tively rnsure that 1n any contract hat e vacancy for another
entered 1nto pursua nt to thrs resident, elderly p'rson. Call
advert• sement mmontv bus•· 304·1176· 1293.
ness entmpnses w1 ll be afforded lutl opport unity to su b·
m1t b•ds •n response to th1s Wented·trying to form car·
1nV1 tallon and will not be pooi to Marohaif Wodneodoy
d•scnm•nated agamst on the nighll. Caif 304-876-2419.
grounds of race. color. or
nat1on al ong1n tn consrd erat•on
4
Giveaway
for an award
"M•n•mum wage rates for th1s
projeCt have been predeterm•ned as requtred by law and Pupplao to good homo. Coif
are set forth rn the b•d 814-266-6307.

I·

s.

LOST Misoing: Englioh Buiidog diuppeared Jan. 2nd.
Ught brown with white
chest and markings. Child•
pet. Female. Reward. Call
Jim Baughman. 614-2666636 .
Cushion to a sofa brown 6
orange. Found on At . 7,

Rat:coon Bridge area. Call
614-266·11 BB.
LOST· Horse. White with
red . 16 yearo oid. Red Bruoh
area near Bashan. Reward .
614-949-2293 or 614·949- .
2676.
LOST -Mabe Brittony Spaniel. Orange with white.
Forked Run area. 667-6427
ahar 6 p.m.

Two male Blue Tick Coon
Hounds. Between Redmond
Ridge and Crab Crook .
$60 .00 reward . 304-676·
2799 .

"'~r~NO

as

lost and Found

Vacancy ; Julia's Personal
Cer8 Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 years experience.
Ciifton, W .V . 304 -773 5873.

4l77i .

.. f

Announcements

lost· Biack pit bu$$ with
white markings on face and
chest and feet . 9 months
oid. Siuy. Co55ar. Wool
Coiumbia. 773-6348 .

Riverview Personal Cere
Home now has a vacancy for
a eideriy peroon. 304· 773·
6882.

I=--------

1'=--------

Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343 - Portlllnd
247- L.etart hils
949 - Racine
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolviile

large gray, white male cat.
lost Rt.2 Jerrico Road area.
Kid'a pet. can 304·6761408.

9

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furniture, 448 -3169. 3rd . &amp;
Obive !it .. Galiipolis. Oh .
Standing timer, will pay top
prices for red &amp;. white oak.
Cafi 614· 388-9906 after 5,
or anytime weekends.
We nud-tohcco poundage.
Wiii pay top price. Con
1-814-379·2156 .
Wanted tobacco poundage.
Con 446-0373.
Wanted to buy . New. used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holda. Also complete Aucti ·
oneering service. Call Rodney
Howery
614·69B· 7231 .
Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings. jewelry, sterling
were, old coins. large currency . Top pricea. Ed. Bur·
kott Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middlapon. Oh . 614 -992 3476.
Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
Hides·Ginseng. Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,
Rt. 2, Athens, Oh. Phone
814-66.4-4761 . 1-9 Dalby.

BEDS· iRON, BRASS oid
Furniture, gold, silver dollars. wood ice boxes. stone
jars. antiques, etc. Complete
households . Write M . D .
Miiier. Rt. 4. Pomeroy, Oh
46769 or 614-992-7760.
Wanted to buy. used bike
exceriser, good quality,
304-676-2942 .

Wanted to buy left over yard
lost pair wire rim glasses • 11le items. Mostly clothing.
tinted blue. New Haven 304-876-42BO.
Comm. Bldg. Saturday
night. 304-773·6727.
tlliplllVilll!lll

Serv11.es

8

675- Pt. Ple-t
1458 576 773 882 895 937 -

IAon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Haven
l.etert
Buffalo

11

Help Wanted

Development Yz·time. Weft
load fiuttuotn. Won witli
volunteert in· 8 aoutheut
Ohio counties. Develop·
ment experience, excellent
communication akHit ,.. ·
qui red . Team member C8pl·
bilities . Car neceeaery... •
88,000 to 810,000 to otort.
Send resume, portfolio ~ · ·
lections: Planned Parent ~ ·
hood of Southe11t Ohio, I ·
North Court sc....c. Athono.
Ohio 46701 . ·Doadbine: 1:
20-B4. EOE·AA.
.

AVON Poy your Chriotbills, make money 2 weyt.
Can 614-446 -3369.
·
Office clerk fOfl a mW.
industri.al selea co. Somt ·
experience preferred invoh. :
ing: inventory, cerdex &amp;ya· •
tom, typing. gonorob offlcoo •
reports, and te'ephone .....
duties. Send resume to lolt
102 in cere , of Gail...... ·
Daily Tribune. 826 Tillnl '
Avo .. Gafbipobio •. Oh 46131 : •

Needed fu55 time bllbyllttor
in Mercerville area, BAM tci
5 :30PM. Mondoy-Frldey.
CaJb 266-62111 oftor
5:30PM .
Experienced swimming in~ ·
structors needed for IWim· :
nastics and youth Red.Cro., ·
classes beginning in mid·
Jonuory on Mondoy, Tuooday and Thurodoy ._,1111111~
Mull be ovar 21 one! hew ·
cum~nt WSJ cord. Aptlllr ·
immadiJotofy 11 Go~ "
Parks and Recreation ~ :•
partment. 618 SecondAw~ ..;
phone 446 -1789.
•.

--------~·------~· ·
Truotwonhy middle ..... •
single lady to live ift w11f1 ;

oidorly iodioo. S1,014) •
month . Send resume: I~)
P.30. in care Pt. PINUftt.~
Register, 200 Moin St . .1'($
Pi._WV.
_
_ _ _26650.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..•
J

a·;

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pieaoont. WVo.
Auct. lonnie Naab. Youth
Cantor Bidg., Comdon St.
614-3117-7101.

Rick Pearson AuctionHr
Service. Eatate, Farm, An·
tiquo
liquicll.tion uleo.
Ucon"d &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
WYo . 304-773·67811 or
304·773· 91811.

a.

Auction ovety Fri. night It
tho Hortford Community
Center. Truckloodo of now
merchendiM every wook.
Conolgmonto of new and
""~ morchandioo olw-vo
-Jcome. Richard R8Vnolds
Auctioneer. 304 · 276·
3089.

9

Mason Co., WV
A""'Code304

Up to 15 words .. . One day insertion .......... $3.00
Up to 15 words ... Three day in-tion .. ...... $4.00
Up to 15Words ... SixdayinS«tion ........... $7.00
(Average 4 Words per lineI

One small male pup, 8
monrho oid. 304-896· 3390
between 2 and 7pm.

6

9 92 - Middleport

Galipolis
Chl!shire
Vinton
Rio Gr.,de
Guyen Dist.
Arabia Dist.
Walnut

Gun ahoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday staning 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only.

pertunity Coordinator in accorline bei'M!en Sadie Chapman's dance with .Section 523.15 5
~~:J~~~1_!114
lot in the co.unty road running 181121 of the ORC. Only , bids proposal." .·
"The date set for completion Angoro hempster. Ceif 814·
JOttN ITRI!ET
irom Racine to letart and submined by qualified and
SYRACUSE OHIO
running south alonq said road cert ilied M-,MBE's will be of thiS wor~ shall be set lorth on 448·8632.
· the boddong proposal.'
·
532 feet to Ella Ouoller&gt;'s band: opened and read. • ·
Each bodder shall be requored 8 pert Huaky puppleo,ll wko.
·
thence·west 2 7 rods to a stake'
Th' Ohio Department. of
Qeoo! tblr 30 1883
to John Brown·s land: thente . Transportation hereby notifies to file w•th h1s b•d a cert1hed oid. Coif 614-446·8832 or
'.
nonh along said line of Brown·s ·· all bidders thet it will affirma- check or cashier's check for an 448·2203.
l
land, 265 taettoJonas Roush's , tively Insure that in any contract amount equal to flw per cent
The Meigs county Board of line: thence east along said iine entered into pursuant to this of hil bid. but tn no event more · Ono yoar old block mole cot.
Mental Retardati 011 will 'hoid a 204'hfaet thencesouth 121'h advertisement. mil'}oritv busi- than tolty thousand dollars. or a doclo-d. Coll448·4727.
public heanng at Carleton . feet along Sadie Chapman's ness enterprises ·will be af- bond for ton per cent of hil bid,
To .good homo. Fuif blooclld
~chool on John Street on line to • .stake: t,hence east forded full opportunity to sub- payable to the Dorector.
Bidders must apply, on the block labrodor Rat. Mole, 1
~yracuse on. Tue~day. January along saod bone 24 t hfeettothe, mit .tJids in response to this
31. t 984. at 7.00 p M The pu911c ,. road, the, place • of invitation and will not be .proper forms . for .Qual•f•catton year old. Gentle and good
: durpose of the heanng 1s to beglnh1ng 1 contatn•ng 2 acres.: discriminated against on the at least ten day"'S prio( to the with chlidron. 614-992grQunds of race. color: or d8te set for open1ng b•ds in n74.
• • gather pubilc comment on the more or less, ·
.
·
• . cornprehen's1ve ServiGe Ptan . PAIIca NO. 2: Tho t.ollow- national Qfigin in constderatton accordance wolh Chapter 5525 1-~----"---0hio A9111Sed Code.
3 Aullrollon Shephord pup·
. f!&gt;r cariet6n School end Meogs ong real estate sotuate 1n . the for, an award. ·
· Plans and spec1ficat•ons are pies. 2 lomole, 1 mole.
~ Minimum wage rates for this
.• . iltdulllles, A copy of t~e ' County of Moogs. State of Ohoo, 1
on file in the Department of 814·992·8864.
· r' propoa"' Comprahanslllf Ser·j 'Townahip of let~rl. Be1ng on .l ot ,project have bee~ Predeter·
required by law al'ld Transportation and the office of
·Pfln Wiil 'be tWajilbie tor · No, 249, T~ . 2, Rangt 52. 1 mined
Good watch dog. Port block
,
fM ~ iniolested persons at
Oh~ Company s Purchose. Qe; are set tonh ·• In the bid the Distnct Deputy Director.
The Director res~rves the Shepherd. Maio. 814-742·
ari•Oil SchOol on or about· gonnong • the Northwfttcorner, proposal." ·
"The date set for compbetion right to re;ect any and ali bods. 2111111.
Wednesday Januo,Y 26 1994. of !he lOt formerly deeded to o
WARREN J. SMITH
·• i
·
,
'
Clcoha Roush and Morgan U of this w&lt;irk shall be set.forth on
DIAECTOA 8 WMk old pupploo, V.
JbHN
FOSTER
AousnbyJonasRouahand~e ~ the bidding proposal."
Shepherd, V. Collie. 304· ·Each bidder sh815 be required Rev, 8· 17· 73
q,
· · t ndent
by dited dated NoVember 2.
S711·4388.
v!f\~ e
·, • ·
. t907, rtloOrdid in Volume 97.; tb file Wit~ ~is .bid a cehified
111 8. 9:· 27. 29., 4tc
P.ai!e-4g3. Meigs .county Deed. . check or cashier's cneqi!_fg[ ~n .Jan. 8. 15

INDUITRIEI

446367 388 246 256643 379 -

In memory of Eleanor Robson who passed away 2
years ago Jan .8 . Sadly
mined by her family .

Jan 8 I 5
JAMES L PROFFtn
SHE RIFF

3

Meigs County
A""'Code614

ArM Code 614

81 -Home improvements
82-Piumbing &amp; Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eiectricai &amp; RefrigMation
85-G..,eral Hauling
86-M .H . Repair
87-Upholstety

a.

WARREN J SMITH
DIRECTOR
Rev81 7-73

Gallia County

lwelrt&amp;wl

I

TERM S OF SALE Cash '"
hand

MEIGS SWCO Olfoce

Mergs. Townshtp of Sctpto and

'

81-Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
6 3- Uveotock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
65- Seed Fertilizer

Records. thence east along the
south hne of John Sayre P.State
123 'h feet to a post. thence
south 102 feet to a ! take and to
the north hne of Magg•e E
Sayre's lot. thence west 123 1/,
feet along the north hn e of
M agg1e E Savre·s lot to the
northwest corner of her lot. and
to a stake. thence north along
the east l1ne of the land s of
Chas N Wagner 102 feet to
the place of beg1nn1ng. conta1 n1ng 12.697 square feet

Jollowinf{ telephone exchani{Ps ...

a.

-.I.'....U-_.... ... vh..... ..

Public Notice

Classified pa({es cot·er I he

71·Autos for Sale
72-Trucks for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74-Motorcycles
75-Boats Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Acc:essories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

a.

I

cmduct.

and shared In proflta and los~e~. The Herald Co. Is
retaining Its share of the business agency and will
continue to share profits or losses with Pulitzer

Globe-Democrat Is sold or Is closed.
Mayor Vincent Schoemehi cautioned newspaper
employees at their closed meeting earner In the day to
be sure of what theyweredolngln rejecting part of the
purchase agreement, rut told reporters later he
couldn't blame Guild members for the way they felt.
"It's apparent the companies Involved did
everything In their power to kill this newspaper," said
the mayor. "It's obviously worth more to them dead
than alive.
"If you and I did something ltke this, we would go to
jail for 50 years," he added. "They're going to share
profits for 50 years. This Is definitely a perversion of
the Newspaper Protection Act."
Under that act, the Globe-Democrat and the
Post-Dispatch have merged their business operations

)'lewspaper Guild, said the provision would have
allowed the Herald Co. proposal to pay severance only
to the lowest paid employees.
Gluck, who had said he needed approval by 5 p.m.
Friday, said, "'I'hls thing Is still alive, and we are
gojng to buy.thls newspaper."
Gluck, the :D-year-old pubUsber of the Saturday
Review and two other magazines, said he filed
documents Friday With the Justice Department
saying he still wants to buy the paper.
Under the Newspaper Protection Act, the
Globe-Demccrat and the Post-Dispatch. which Is

~ · ·

or

&amp;ta!: GAME WINNER -A died! ... ·~ II .. !1 !llfed to Gene

owned by the ~tzer Publllhlni Co., have
their bualnell operatio111 and 1hare In profltJ and
lol1e1. Tbe Herald Co. II retalnlni Its share of the
.buail)eu agency and would continue to share profits
or losaes with Pulitzer Publishing Co. whether the

County posts open in election

Financial aid sessiOn set

Welcllai.IMx ... rtpt,bJ.fMrJ1111ai fw,= n l'""ai&amp;IIJOIIIOValey

meraro

the purclwe qreemen~ niqulred b)i.the Herald Co.,
the JIIWIPSPII"• owner. The provlllon woold have
exempted the company trorn paytnaNVerance pay to
Ill but 12&gt; ot the :o,J employ• and would have
required the.new owner to take over any ootstandlng
libeiiUita and other flnanclalllabUlttes.
The Herald Co. II owned by the family of S.I.
Hewhouae Jr.
Robert A. Stetrure, execiltlve secretalY of Tbe

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

Emergency programs supplemented

Hdspital News

rejeCtion by employees

Loc~riefs:

. Liquor permit appraved

.•·
·.-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Paga D3

l'omtroy-Micldleport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

:neal Stilt alive despite provision

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ad·
mission to the 1984 Ohio State Fair
will remain at 1983 levels, thanks
· largely t.O an Increase In tbe number
of corporate sponsorships.
.. Basic adult admission prices which provide unllmlted amusement rides and free grandstand
shows as well as access to
GAU.IPOLIS - Ga!Ua County Is slated to receive $12,513.71 to
the state of Michigan to stop burning
trilditional fair exhibits - will
supplement emergency food and shelter porgrams In the area.
Suimyhill's high-sulfur coal by Dec.
remain at $4 weekdays and $5 on
Tbe selection was made by a national board made up of voluntary
31.
weekends. Parking Is $2 extra.·
organizations by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
Wilson and other Perry County
Dan Uncoln, spokesman for the
(FEMA). Red Cross or United Way will tunctton as the
leaders stressed that tbe Industrial Ohio Expositions Commission, cites
administrative staff and fiscal agent.
park was on tap before the the corporate sponsorships as a
A local board that will dlstrtbute the supplemental funds will
threatened mine closing.
major contrtbutor to keeping the lid
consist of representatives from the Galla County commissioners,
Wilson said the county Is looking on ticket · prices: 1n return for
Gallipolis City Commission, GaJUa County Ministerial Association,
for small lndustrtes and Is offering sponsoring certain events, the
Red Cross, Community Action Agency, Gauta County Senior
them low·prtced natural gil$, access
corporations receive advertising
Citizens and the Gallla County Welfare Department.
to rail facilltles about1,lXXlfeetn6rth and promotional considerationS.
Tbe board will determine how funds Will be dlstrtbuted 8J1lOiill
of the lndustrtal park, good roads
Lincoln said Nationwide Insu·
local emergency aid programs administered by private voluntary
with an Interstate highway about 15 ranee, for example, would sponsor a
organizations In the area. Loclll organlzatiolll cholen to receive
miles to the north and a readily day at the fair Aug. ll. "That's
funds must be nonprofit f~r a voluntary board, have an accounlln&amp;
available, eage.r work force.
costing them $5,lXXl. They will be
system, conduct an annual audit and be non.dJacrlmlnarory In Its
_T be Industrial park's first resi·
Included In our statewide advertis·
policies.
dent is expected to be the Ohio lng, public address announcements, ·
Proposals must be submitted at I! public meeting slated for 4 p.m.
Natlon\1 Guard, which Is Interested mentions In the dally schedule book,
Thursday In the county commissioners offtce. More Information ts
In no acres for a new annory all sorts of things. We encourage
available by calling 446-2465.
combining separate armorll!s at othl1r corporate sponsors,'' Lincoln
New Lexington and Zanesville. Tbe said.
armory woold be buUt In J.9lrS at the
Tbe fair spent $350,(XX) on lis
earliest, Wilson said. ·
advertising campaign last year."All this Is going to take time. I
Tbe Oak Ridge Boys and Ala·
have no illusions. 'It's an uphill bama will make a return visit to
GAU.IPOLIS - A C·1 (beer for carryoutj pemtlt .has been issued
battle," Wilson said.
entertain visitors to the 1984 fair,
by
the Ohio ~t of Uquor Control to G.C. Mw'jihy Co., doing
Terry Van otferen, a supervisor scl!eduled for Aug. 3-19, Lincoln
business
as mur.phy Mart, IIXJ Silver Bridge Plaza.
from tbe Ohio Department ~
Said.
Tbe
department
said
new
.
permits
are.
Is$ued
on
a
quota
.
basts
Natural ResOOrces' DlvlsJon of
Lincoln said negotiations for • acconilng to population.
Reclamation, said state and feder8I appearances by both country music
govemmenta woold pay'!or aetUDg groups have been completed, aJ.
the land ready for use by the neWly though contracts have yet to be
!onned Perry County ll,ldustrtal signed.
Corp. Reclamation
Tbe COO)Il1lsslon goes to the State
coilld begin b)llljl• $all .., said.... . • G=hn''~ng .I;IQard ,on MOIIday for
POMEROY - A financial aid meeting will be held at 1:00 p.m.
In another vein, David Berger, approval
Its plans to waive
Wednesday In Melp Hlgh School Library. Parents J7l seniors
deputy director rl the eDeliY Cmlpetitlve bkiding.
tlitwahout Metp ~ty who areplannJJwtoatlen\:1 twocrtouryear
divla~ of tbe Ohio Oepartmeut of
schools are UJ'IIt!(l to 4ttend.
•
· · '
~t. said the.state hopes
'
Jim Stephella, dlrectQr_ot tlnanciai aid at Marietta College, will
•Consumers PoWer wU1 be able ,to
present the '!Jrollram 'alid
qilestlor! and apswer 11!811on. . '·"
coatlnueburnlDaatleastGl,(XX)toas
AI)Yone wllhinl more lnb'rnatlon may contact the auldanCe otnce "I'
of the 1.5 mll1loli toas of coal
110LZEB MEDidAi. CENTER
at thi!lr il!lpeCUve ~ achooll.
·
·
....
previously )lW'Chased from !luney· .
JDIW IAN.'
Dilrtngtheeetalon,ltudenta 5lld Jill'l!lltl will be•ble to aet aQIIICk · ·
billeac:ll)'t\ar.
' ..
.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Irvine,
. ~te of tlnanciai nld ell&amp;fldty tram~· Steepiaa w111 be
Berler.saiiiOhlolsproposlngJbat · dauallter, ·RJo Grinde; Mr. and
equipped with a complier and pmter that can provide the estllnzle · ~:
the Mlcblgan uUUty alternate tJe. Mrs. Gary JoneS, daJ!ihter, 0a1c
of a fanilly's need In ll!la than ftve mlnuta • ·
Ma!n &amp;umyhUJ's hlgh-sultur coal HOI; Mr.andMrs.RichardMarkln,
. The daia can be llll!d tor any achool cr coUeae. Thne w01 z11o be , r•
and low..wtur cOal and ltlll meet - , Radcllft; Mr. and Mrs. Jeny·
· permitted at the end rl the -loa tor _a .,",..lei!llal ajJpraJaa) With
MJcbigan's tough alr · poUirtlon . Moore, 1011, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
aey family destrllli lnbmatton. '
.
. ..
..
standards. ~
, Ricbard MulllJis,
etty.

officials look toward
industrial ·park as salv·ation
['qEW LF.:XINGI'ON, Ohio (AP)

acceptable outlook on the problems
of acid rain and high sulfUr coal.
"I don't think It's so much what I
think as what the governor's done.
He's been at the Natlonai.Governors
Conference on theacldralncommit·
tee. He's stood up and fought for
Ohio. So I'm very comfortable with
what be's done so far," Tostenson
said.
Celeste fears that utWty users In
Ohio and other Industrial states will
have to foot tbe multi-billion dollar
cleanup bill while high sulfur coal
becomes Increasingly unusable. He
has said a national solution Is

:·

Wanted

To

Buy

We pay caoh for loto moclll
ciNn uHd cara.
Jim Mink Chov.·Oida Inc.
BMI Gone Johnson
44S·3il72

11 ,Help Wanted
Challenging Position ·
Diverse Reaponsibilitiea.
Auiatent Director for Program. Private. non·profit,
comprehenaive family plan·
nlng agency aerving 8 Sou·
thoaot Ohio countieo. B.S.
degree snd heilth back·
ground; minimum 2 yeara
supervisory experience .
Demonltrated management
ability In oervlcoo deilvery.
Energetic peroon with
proven Initiative, communi·
cotlon okl55a. obl55ty to
onolyza-utlllze dota •• mon·
ogomont toob. CioM cooper·
ative · work with Director.
Demonttrated pertonnel
"''lblo . .Supervioe 7 oitoo. pold
ond voluntMr Iliff Mrving
6,000 c55onta. Athono·
blloed. Cor required. Some
·evenings and weekend
work. S11i,OOO pbuo bene!·
Itt. Send reaume, name two
profoulonel reference•. K-v
Atkina, Exocutlve Dl;octor..
Planned Perenthoo~ of Sou·
thooot Ohio, 8 1\borth Court
Streot, Athena , Ohio
4670t. Dooclllno: 1-20· 84.
EOE·AA.

S A l ES P E R S 0 N
WANTED! Wo ore' noW
expanding salea force in the
immediate area. lntttfViewa
wiii be hold on Mondoy, Jan.
9th &amp; TUOI . Jon. 1Oth,
1984. ~~ our l't. PIHMnt
office. Cablentert•inment,
1410 Jofferoon·alvd·.
apply in person . ..

-

p.._

Noodod two poopio now for
pan time help. 304-878.
2296.

12

.
-----:-----r
Situations
Wanted

•'

mi :

Wiil core for the ebdoriy in
home. lota of refereno..r Men or• women. CaN 114:t ':
8117-340~
. .
•

Work wmtocl, trH -rl&lt;
prunning, topping. tail.;
downo:. free Eotlmatoo:
304-.76-'76119 .

.:.

�"
Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

12

They'll Do It

Situations
Wanted

Time

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

13

TRI - STAT E MOBI LE
HOMES . USED · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614 -446 -7672
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36 . PHONE 614· 446·
7274 .

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance

coverage in Gallia County

1977 12x60 mobile homo. 2

for almost a century . Farm.

bdr , furnished. good cond ,

home and personal property

I

Ufl· ~ !
41

1- - - - - - - - houoa, 4 bdr • 8260 per mo.
8260 dop raq . Buy
829.600. Call 446·4 222,
9:30 -6:00.

College student with associate degrees in business
administration will tutor students age 12 and over

ego Service. Call446-9340.

Reasonable rates. 304-676·
6618.

18 Wanted to Do
Ught dozer work &amp; lands-

caping. Kotalic Landscaping. Call446· 3100.
Cleaning houses, offices.
etc. Faa negotiable. Call
anytime, 614· 266· 1134.

Babysitting in my homo.
826 weak per child. Call
446·7402 .
Home appliance or electrical
repair. Call 446· 7402 after
&amp;PM.

F1nanml
Business
Opportunity

Priced to sell. 1979 Starling
14x70. 2 bdr. CA. vinyl

SUOI'E .
Eil'f:ENWICH,

ago Sorvoco . Call446· 9340

31

Business
Opportunity

2268 .

port Call614-992 -6941 .

Stripping Furniture &amp; M etal
Instant cash flow I First time
in this area. Our expert staff

3 bedroom ranch styled
home. Call 446 -0109 after
5 30

has many years of expone~ce

and has set up resto·
ration centers throughout

tho U.S. and Europa. We

to aend money through the

gated the offering.
Cigarette or VIDEO Distrib·

utorahips. Routes available.
Ing &amp; 1 BONDED staff to

Cigarette or VIDEO Distrib·
utorshlps. Routes available.
We provide money for exp•nslon. all locations, train-

Ing &amp; a BONDED otaff to
1ui1t you in setting up your
own pert or full time busi-

nou . . From 83.960 to
860,000. Winston-Salem·
Koolo. 1-B00-241 -226B.

1775 Tho Ex·

GA 30339.

1- -- - - -- - 22 Money to Loan

~dly missed by his wife.
childre~.
grandchildren

and all 'their families.
THANK YOU
6

located in Syracu se-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced

$23,500 or will rant for
$240 mo. 304· 865 -3934.

refinance. 11 1fc% adjustable
rate . leader Mortgage ,

$67.500. No down pay·

Athena. 1-800-341 -6664

23

Professional
Services

HOUSE

prices - regular tunmgs discounts to Samar Citizens.
Churches 81: Schools. Ward's

Keyboard. 304-675·3B24.
TANNING SSPECIAL - 16
tans for $26 .. regular $35.
Top of the Stairs Beauty
Studios, next to Stitflers in

Pomeroy. Phone 614 -992 6720.

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch home, large LA ,
full basement, With garage,
wood burner included. city
schools. 2 miles from town .

Call 446·0276 .
3 bdr. , Bath . Eat-in kitchen
Diningroom. Carpet: Large
lot. large basement. car-

port. Only $14,900. Last
house away from River on
Henderson St., Henderson.

wv.

Ranch on 5 acres, beautiful
setting with tall pmes
around the house Spacious
livingroom which overlooks
the pond 4 bedrooms, util itY r.oom and kitchen ha s a
built -in range. Assume pay ments with a sm all down

payment. $5B .900
446-3176 .

ment, owner w1ll carry at no
interest fo r 6 yearS. loan
assumpt1on possible. 614·

986-438 J:.

PIANO TUNING Lower

31

..

range list with u s. A -One
Real Estate, Carol Yeager

Baum addition, 3 bedrooms,
2 Y2 baths. A .C .• family room
with fireplace . 2 acres

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Bart Miller
Wish to take this oppor·
tunity to thank all who
shared in the illness and
loss of our loved one. A
very special thanks to his
sister. Joncie, Gallia Co.
Local School, Dr. Malt
Walker. Willis Funeral
Home. Rev. Ernest Baker
fbf words of comfort, the
pallbearers. -the singers,
and all who sent food,
flowers and money or
helped in any other way.

We have buyers for homes in

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'12% purchase or

Real Estate
1

10%

Realtor. Call 675 · 5104 or
675 -6386

aalist you in setting up your
own part or full time busi-

ness. From $3, 960 to
860 .00. Winston -Salem ·
Koola. 1-B00-241·2268 .

10 % down ,

financing

$32,600.00 ' Bonded' Call
Toll Free: (BOO) 241 -2269

We provide money for ex -

pansion, all locations. train-

3 bedroom, Superior loca-

tion ,

tho $40.000 to $55.000

change, Suite 600, Atlanta ,

m•ll until you have investi-

1- -' _ _· _ _ _ _ _ _ __

~urnished equipment. chem Icals, supplies, and an extensive training course at one of
our successful centers nearest you. Total cost

or write for more info: U S.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommends
thot you do buaine11 With
people you know, and NOT

Homes for Sale

6 room hou se, bath , 3 acres
Cigarette Distubutorshlp . ground, near Port er on Old
Instant cash flow I We are a Rt. 160 Call 446 -2857 or
Bonded national firm ex - 446 -4202
panding into the area. If you
are seeking a secure busi - 2 bdr. hom e in Gallipolis,
ness opportuinty. We pro - very reasonabl e Call 446 vide all retail locat1ons and 4684.
all necessary training Full or
Part time . Investment from Owner Must Sell! Firaplacel
$2',000 . 00 . Winston - Includes some furniture! In·
Salem-Kools. 1-B00-241 · credible low Price! Middle-

Stripping,

Call

Lost and Found

FOR

SALE - 6

rooms, basement. double
garage, 1 and one third acre
lot . Rose H1ll, Pomeroy .
E )J cellent condit•on

$32,900 . 1 · 814 - 678 ·
2513 .
4 bedroom house w1th one
plus acre at Mt. Alto , W. Va
Priced on inspection . 304 -

895 -3840.
BY OWNER . Meadowbrook
addition. all brick. assume
8 5 loan, moderate down
payment, 3 bedroom, 2
baths, dmning room, built 1n
k1tchen . garag e with auto
opener .• Central air -cond ,
larg e lot, priced m1d fifties .
Shown by appointment

only NO REALTORS
Phone 304-676 -3445
Gallipoli s Ferry, three bedroom , brick, four car g arage ,
plus wood building. Phone

304 -675-6851 .
Meadowbrook Driv e. 3 bedroom full ba sement. den.
fireplace. axe . home, will
con sider trade .. At . 2 Fla trock Area. New 3 bedroom
home, double car garage. %
acre lot. Small down paym ent and assume 9 .8 payment.; Gallipolis Ferry 2 or
3 bedroom. dining room ,
large family 'room, wood
burner. redwood deck, 2 car
garage. 160' lot Excell ent
C o nd•tlon . Will cons1der
trade on Mob1le Ho m e J H
" J ak e" So m er vill e . Ph

304-675 -3030 or 304 -6754232 .
Exc ellent Po int Plea sant location, hosp1tal. schools, 3

bedroom 2 baths. $48,500.
assume 8 % loan 304 -675 -

1219.

11

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED

LOST

English Bulldog disappeared Jan. 2.
Light brown w.ith white chest and markings. Female. Reward. Child's Pet. Call
Jim Baughman 614-156-6535.
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBUC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JAN. 14, 1984
Located at D.'J.'s Trading Post (Old Valley Lumber
Building) at 923 South Third Ave •• Middleport. Ohio.
"DOZER"
310 D. Case Bulldozer w/hyd. angle &amp; lilt blade.
•
"MACHINERY"
501 Ford mower, Ford 3 pt. corn planter, M.F. square
'hay baler, end loader for 4000 Ford tractor, Shaver
post driver and J.D. manure spreader.
CENTRAL TRUST CO . NA.
.CASH
POSITIVE I. D.
DAN ,SMITH

949-2033 or 992· 7301
"Not. responsible for'•ccidlnts or loss of property."
•Th1 Centr1l Trust Co. NA of lfiddleport, Ohio reserYes the
,richt to bid If t~is' l!lftion.
.
·

ON I fie ?G11.e

AqAiN

Medical
Transcriptionist
We are now accepting
applications for experi·
enced Medical Trnscrip·
tionists. Only experienced' trnscriptionists
need apply.
Send Resume To:
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. ·oH. 45769

1972 mob1le home. needs
so me repairs, with 1 Y:r acres
very reasonabl e Call 446 -

0063.

1978 Shultz 14x70 central
atr. all new furniture, ex.
cond. on rented lot. Call

evenings 446 -2075 .
1972 Kirkwood 12x60, 2
bdr .• mobile home, warm

morning WB. Caii614·3BS·
8169 .

6 bdr. 3 full botho, must

have ex. refarencea. Call

614-294-8637. In Gallipolis
area.
heat, at 660 '12 3rd . Ave ..

42

Gallipolis. Adults only, no
pets. Call 448 -1183.

Home Park. This

home has a front dining
room with wooden bow
window. a circular kitchen
with lot s of cabinets, 2
bedrooms, large luxury bath
with garden tub . Price of

$12,600.

1'\cludas

metal

building. patio cover, steps,
washer and dryer. Everything in tip-top condition .
Ready to live in . For informa-

tion call 614-992 -7034 or
614-992· 6284
ATIENTION ·Is thoro such a
thing as a classici In mobile
homes? When you view this
Holly Park we think you will
agree there is. A 1969

12x65 Holly Park with 2
bedrooms. 5 x 1 0 tip-out in
living room Completely set
up in nice park. Includes 40
foot patio furnishings, even
a wa sher and dryer, com pletely skirted and ready to
occupy There isn ' t a cleaner
or w ell kept home In the
area. Just like brand new.
You must see to appreCiated . All of this for
$12,900. Financing avail&amp;·
ble. low down payment and
low monthly payments. For
information call 614 -992 -

7034 or 614· 992 -6284.
1972 Skyline. 1 bedroom
furnished . Ideal for couple .

Roady to move · in'. $4760.
614-992-7479.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1- - - - - - -- - Nice 2 bdr

mobile homo

good location. kitchen
range, refrigerator, washer
&amp; dryer. carpet. expando,
natural gal furnance, CA.

Very nice house in city.
ready by end of month,

unfurnlahad. all carpeted, 3
bdr., yard, plenty parking,
quiet neighborhood. Call
Earl Tope or call 446·0332
dayo. or 446-0181

2 bdr. trailer comp. fur·
nished, 3 miles from Holzer
in Evergreen, ex. cond . Call

614-246· 9170.
Furn ie hed . nice mobile

children . Inquire in rear after

home.

!O :OOAM.

3

bedrooms.

All

electric-central air. Good
location. across from pool in
Syracuse. t260 per month

4 room house outdoor toilet,
cistern water. 1 mile from

plus utilities. Depoolt ra·
quirod. Call 992· 2669.

Holzer Hospital. •so mo.
plus deposit. Call 446·
4325 .

Two bedroom mobile home
12x60, near Pomeroy and

Deposit 8160. No pets. No
Sunday call a. 614 -949·
2801 .

1 Ox60

3919 .

homo.

2

bedroom s. No pets. 614 -

949· 2424.

1 bedroom garage apart·

Nice unfurnished 3 bedroom
mobile home. large yard .
Convienent location. t1 66.
plus deposit and referenc11.

mont. $200. month plus
utilities. $100. deposit re-

quired . AvaUoble Jan .1.
1984. 614·992· 6271 .

home

w ith

washer

and

dryer. No poll. 614-949·
2253

•

Country s8tting, 3 bedroom
remodeled home . new
forced air furnace. nice
kitchen. city water. near

Tuppers Plains Ohio $226.
without utilities. 614 -667·
3974 .

month plus utilities and
deposit. No pets. Country

Mobile Homo Park. 614·
992 -7479

1- - - - - - - - - -

Furnished mobile home. 2
bedroom s, utilities paid.
Couple preferred, 1 or 2

992· 686B.

304 -773· 6761
9620.

rett Kaefer. 304-896-3866 .
Extra nice two bedroom

Located Jarrico Rd. 304·
676-7308.

42 Mobile Homes

bldgs. Must Sell. $9000.
304· 773 -5023

12x60 2 bdr. modern fur·
niahod trailer, convenient
location, Upper River Rd.
deposit roq . Call 614-446·
8668.

10.870 lb. yearly tobacco
ba se Cai1614· 256-1922

or 773 ·

2 bedroom mobile home
$160. per month. Deposit.

homo. 304-676-379B

for Rent

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUYII NICE 14' WIDE.
ALL ELECTRIC, MOBILE
HOME. SETIING ON NICE
LOT. READY TO MOVE
INTO . $176 00 MONTH.
_3_0
_4_·_5_7_6_
· 2_7_1_1_._ _ _~
1
I

Nicly furnished modern mo-

bile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only. Cell 446·0338.
2 bdr. mobile homo partially
furnished. Call 446-4292.

E. Mai•oWIII

POMEROY,O.

992·2259
BALD KNOB ROAD - Beau!l·
lui 12 acre build1ng ~te tn the
country - on a paved road
and much potenbal, redatmed
spnng, could have gas
$7,00000
SOUTHERN DISTRICT - 5
bedroom home. enclosed sun
porch, large krtchen, spaciOus
dmmg · 1tv1ng room, part basemen~ 3 car garage, 2 bedroom
rental house for extra tncome
large lot. $39,900.00.
SALEM TWP. - N1ce mobile
home, huge p1cmc shelter, gar·
age and extra tra1ler . lot
$3(),000 00
ELBOW ROOM - Approx. 33
acres w1!h ntce 3 bedroom
ranch, 2 baths, full basement
wrth summer kt!chen, family
room wrth fireplace, patto, large
metal barn $47,500.00.
Ml DDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
ranch home, separate u!ility,
krtchen · dtntng wrth ref -range.
Ntce lot wtlh patiO. $24,000.00

Mobile Home for Rent ;
adults only, fully furnished .

Ml DDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
ranch home on a qu1et stree~
cute krtchen, largeutility room,
outstandmg storage.

2 bdr. trailer 2 mi., from

and approx . 20,000 ft . Lhosp"talat Evergreen private
446-0167.
timber. Call614· 256·1922.
For sale or rent 40 acres
farm with 8 room house on

At . 218. Call 614-266·
6317.

2 bdr. ~urniahad, adults only,
no ms1de pets. private lot.
Also furnished apartment,

Furnished 12x60, 1 bdr ..
nice &amp; clean. No pats,

$45,900 00. or with Mas·

depqsit required, ref. pre-

sey Ferguson tractor and

equipment, $57.900.00 .
Phona 304-676 -6166.

ferred. Call 614-26·

1----- - -- -54 Misc. Merchandise

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ-

ing available. Call446· 8221
after 6 weekdays .

Lot on Davia Rd. 200x200,
very reasonable. Call 446·
4684.
21ots in Crown City on Rt. 7.
Call614-266-1444.

Attentio~r.

Personnel Dept.
EOE

RN
Supervisory Position
PINECREST CARE CENTER
CONTACT:· OREIDA SCHRODER
·446-7112

ll!car.PelE!d.

man only. Caii446· 391S.

30 acres, 7 rooms and bath,
tobacco base, two barns.

Year-End
Clearance Sale
AT
Pomeroy
Landmark

Bluplng room 1126. utlltleo
&amp;
pold. Moles only.
rlfrlg . Coll448·4416 oftor 7
p.m .

'""II"

PlANTZ SUBDIVISION terms avatlable. You
I assume lhts 12% mort·
with payment of $315 per
month, tncludtng ta xes and m·
surance Ranch wrth 3bedrms.
. full basement woodburner,
catpor!. Only $28,900

48 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Llrr lots. Call
814-892-747 .

49

Ml:rl.ll.i illli ot:

61 Hou11hold Goods

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland1 Jr.
GRI 992·6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottle Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

Good UHd double bod •1 00
or belt offer. Coll448-4983
ot,.1_4·37;9· 2362 ofter 6.

Furni ohed Apt. 614 -892·.
6434.

Town end Country LP goa
hooter with blower end line,
Max Input 76,000 btu. Min
Input 46,000 btu, •160.00.
304-S96·3078.

614-992,

1 bodroom, lurnlohed Apt. ln
Racine. 1 child permitted,
no pets. Call614·423·8267
or 614·949 -2946 for •P·

Unl-llloctrlc stove with
double ovono. Coli 448·
1525.

pointment efter 4 p.m .

Woohora &amp; dryers ox. nice
vertoty. Avocodo. horvoot
gold, white, turquoiH. Also
Moytog14,18,181b. copoc·
lty woohora. Coli 814· 268·
1207.

3 bedroom furnished Apt. In
Syrocuaa. 614 -992· 7889
after 6 p.m
304 - 676 ·

- - -- - -

Ulld GE refrigerator, West·
lnghouH lloctrlc rongo. liv·
lngroom suite. fomUyroom
ouite. table &amp; 8 cholro.
Corbin • Snyder Furniture.
9511 Second Avo. 448·
1171.

TV llo Appll ancao. 627 Third
Ave,, Galllpoll o. 614-446·
1699. Spin w ashers, gao llo

Good selection of bedroom
eultes , ceder chests .
rockers , metal cabinet s.
swivel rockers .
U18d Furniture ·• bookc11e.
rangea. chelrs, dryera. re·

e l ectric dry e r s. auto
washers. g1s S. electric
range s, ref rigen t ort. T V
sets

·~~--

53

(XI I

Ol d

,.,

I I K J

WHAT A
, I"OPIA'T~IST

POES
FOR A LIVING .

Now arrsnge the drdld letters lo
loom lho ourpttso sn. u sug
gaotad by lho cartoon

Answer
YeSierOay

TV's. 3 mllaa
out Bulovlllo Rd . Open Bam

here:(

XXI X) THE [ I XX]

•I J.~

(""-0 _ . , ,

CLUCK

SCOUT

EMPLOY

RITUAL

Whal they said thai snobbish porcupine

was - STUCK UP

•

Weahers, dryers, refrigera -

tors, rongoa . Skaggo Ap·
plloncoa, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Croll Motel.
614-446-7398.
G.E. matched wuhar/ dryer
polr. Whirlpool hoovy duty
waeher . Other w1eher1 end

Brown living room suite

Phone: 446-0552
M~GK££ Reai .Estate a.nd
1•\ 'Realt
Auction Serv1ce
M. L. "Bud"McGhee. Broker

· ;*

Um estone, San d, Gravel
Delivered 1n M ason. M eigs.
Gallta or p1ck up a t Richards

22
No

614 · 9 4 9 ·

Old coins -lnd1 an hea d pe~
nies W heat and etc No

Sunday call a
2801

61 4 9 4 9 ·

6 piece wood living room
ouito with 8 Inch ftat erma
1399. bunk bldo complete
with bunkloa • 199. 2 piece
entron

$690 Ph 614 -266 -121 6

446·8221

limeatone delivered. t1 0 a

1 9 7 6 Po n tiac Ve n t ur a·
8 300 K1mball p1ano· S460
K1n g W ood b urne r - S 20 0

tors, ran gee. chest , dreuere,

wringer wuhors. TV's. dry·
era, &amp; ohooo. Coli 614 -448·
3169.

BMR 443 - NEW USTING - FIRST TIME ON MARKEll Bi·level
located ;ust mmutes from town on Debby Or Includes LR, eat·tn
krtchen With d~hwasher &amp; d ~posal, dmmg toom ;oms kitchen. 3
BRs. I bath plus 2 hall baths. Fam1ly roommbasement I car gar·
age Heat pump $99 mo budget City school dtsl Call 101 an appomtment
BMR426 - OWNER SAYS SELL -" has an assumableloanwrth
only 911% 1nterest We are talkmg aoout a very dean. 3BR home
Situated on ntce flat lot 1n a lam1ly orlerlled neghoorhood RE·
OUCEIJI $3,000 down and assume loan'

BMR 440 - 2 STORY FRAME home lor only $10.500 Rent rt or
ltve 1n II. Erthet way the value ~ thete Call now lot appomtment

OF THE FINEST HOMES IN GAUtA COUNTY
PRIME LOCATION

=====:;::;:;:::;:;:=:;:===~11
Real Estate General

STUTES
REAL ESTATE
446•4206

.· JSOJI~IIf Stutes, ~ea_ltor

to n Call 614 -256·1427

"Best 4ocated Subdivision in the Arair"
CALL:

RCS REALTORS
or

1·855-9163

l:--------water bed Kmg size
head boa rd $500

w tt h

614-992 · 720 1

5 4 Mi sc . M erchandise
For aale- Simmmons has p•·
tal bed with f ull length si de

ra ils $300 6 14·99 2·60 22
MOVIN G I MU ST SELL Wa·
to r bad . 1979 Jeep CJ ·7 .
baby baumet, t ub, hum1d1·
f ier, rototlll er, elec tn c range.
Remm gt o n M odel 742 w1t h
Redfield scope Ph one 6 14·

2 5 " co nsole co lor TV. hke
now, 8460 Call 446 ·4 164
Sout h Bend m etal benc h
la th e 9' awmg 11 5 volt one
th1rd HP mot o r or 3 ph ase

&amp;1.200 firm Call 6 14·l 4 5·
56 71
4 -12 ' radial snow ti res. V G

Gas clothes dryer-$8 6 Au ·
tomat1c wa sher and dryer·
$1 25
M a y ta g wr i ng e r
washer - $ 100 30 in alec
rang e, co pp er t on e· S 100
30 in gas range-&amp;85 Cop ·
perto ne Self def rost ing
refn g.- $1 00 40 10 ga s

range-86 6 614· 742 -2362

co nd 860 Call 446· 78 28
Hosp1t1l bed &amp; ta bl e 8300.
adult wheel c h a ~r $200.
child wheel chatr &amp;5 0 Call
614 -388-9807
Kin g coal &amp; wood heater
exc cond , used 4 m o ,

J

&amp;3 50 Call 446· 1735

Realty
A A£ 9

£ 9&amp;.

~

~Co"""•u

~eolt01r

LARGE CORNER lOT -

EXU

LOCATION. NEAR 001.0 OOURSE. 2
440·9b'lb S
TORY FRAME HOM[ 3 BR. 2

II til

~ 5lDCtllll Sl..n
YoHtpolts. €&gt;~ta

CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM
N1ce la rge lot, 100 h by 304
h 12 h by 60 It Pncemo·
b1le home m excellent con·
d1!1on. 2 car garage. rural wa·
ter N1ce area close to Galhpol~
land. home. and garage all lot
only $16.900 l et usshow you
th~ one now
• N~Rg

NICE BRICK LIKE NEW
CLOSE TO EVERYTHING
Beau!Jful sutroundtngs, 7
rooms, all bnck. two cat gatage.
large lot Fam•ly room 14'x28',
hvmg room 14' x28' N1ce roodern kitchen And the best part
aoout th~ property ~ the low,
low price Ptmne now *554

TIRED OF CITY'
Mother Nature has prov1ded apertect settmg wrthma few mtles of
Galhpol~ yel tn the City School System large ilvmg room. dmmg
room. 2 full baths. umque kitchen w•tlt plenty ol bUI"·m cab1nets
and convement worktng ~land Fronl potch plus 2 pabos. 2 car
garage. l ennox heat pump, wood burner and ovet 2 acres ol land
Call for personal showmg of !hts warm and mVIlmg super clean
home pnced tn lhe $60s
#586
GOOD TASTE AND GOOD BUY. CROUSE BECK ROAD
Beau!iful 3 to 4 bedroom, two &amp; one·ha~ baths. 2 cat garge, extra
large k•tchen leadmg to sundeck overtoo~ng a beautiful 20 It by
40 It m·ground pool famtly roomwrth fireplace Extralot avatlable.
Superb condt!ton Call for per&gt;anal showtng.
#514
BRICK HOME. FULL BASEMENT, TRADE OR SELL
3 lots tn Cheshtre. 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 1\l baths. family room.
d1mng room, mce modern ranch style home wrth wood or coal
burner Nat gas hot water baseboard healing system, modern
step-saver krtchen All wood ms•de tnm ~ oak. has "Malta" wood
frame wtndows Must see lhts noce latge home Phone today for
showm&amp;
#595

Real Estate General

BATHS. FAMILY SIZE KITCHEN.
DINING NOOK. THIS HOME HAS
OLD fASHIONED CHARACTER '
BEST OO.LAR VALUE $37,900

(H
REAllOt

,·

IWINER WANTS 10 MOVE TO CllY. EAGER TO SEll!' 2 BEOROOM BRICK
RANCH, NICE OPEN flOOR PlAN. BlACKTOP ORIVE $30s.
$16,0110. VERY WELL KEPT 2 BEOROOM HOME IN THE VILLAGE OF
910WELL EXTRA lARGE LOT.
FOR BARGAIN HUNTERS OR SroRTSMENI NEARLY 38 ACRES MIJSTL Y
WOOOEO. $12.0110.
GROCERY/SERVICE STATION/CARRY OUT - RIGHT COMBINATION FOR
UNU!IIITED . GROWlll. AMPlE PARKING. LIVING QUARTERS ON
~~ ~IGH TRAFFIC AREA ,OWNER WILL OPEN BOOKS TO SERIOUS

.BEAUnFULLY RESTORED Colomal home
. t
Galltpol~ ·3 bedrms . library, famtly room. formal
baths, New Orleans type courtyard. 3 wb fireplaces

e•• NEW LISTING mfnrmllhnn

•
•
•
•
•
.

e•

104 ACRE FARM
2 larm houses - one 6 rooms and bath- one 3 rooms. Wood·
burner heatet. 2 barns. 2 ch1cken houses. cellar With smokehouse
aoove All mmeral nghtsl\ll w1th sale Approx 60 acres tillableand
44 acres pastureland Pnced lo sell at $49.900 Don't let th~ larm
get away
#594

•
•

PEACEFULL AREA
A half acre more or less w1th lrutl trees. plus a three bedroom
home. hvmg room. kttchen wtl h bUilt-In ca~ nets. ut1itty room. full
basement and garage, that ~ partially converted 1nlo aden Unfin·
~hed room wtlh aheatolater ftreplace N1ce fenced 1n yard Call for
details
#492

•

1012 SQUARE FOOT BlOCK BUILDING
Many uses - used to be agrocery store. now made 1nto a4 room
plus bath home Fuel ol heater. rural water system. plusdnlled well
at Tycoon lake
#592

GRACIOUS UVtNG AT AMODERATE PRICE - 1600 SQ fT BEAUTIFUl
LIVING AR£.1. PlUS AFULL BASEMENT ANO 2CAR GARAG[ 3BR,2fUll
• BATHS, FANTASllC FAMilY RM. OPENS ONTO OOUBLE OECK EQUIPf'EO
FAMILY SIZE KITcHEN. 60s.
·

. I

61 4·986-3629

F ~r e w oo d dehv er ed
836
pickup load. 10 loads S300
Call6 14 -266-14 27

DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME
4 bedrooms. 2\\ aths, fully eqUipped eal·tn krtchen. formal d1mng
room, family room wtlh woodburner. two car garage With auto
opener Style. beauty, charm and comfort - all descnbe th1s
horne pnced $74,9110
#322

Four B~room brick home with
Chand~r kitchen, custom drapes.
plush carpet. attacf1ed 2 car ga,.g.,
Situated On 12 acres With stable, rail
' ·fences. ~iml'fllng pool, · garage-,
wortclhop. ,lmmeCIIIte poaealon.

F r •g • da ~r e c heat st yl e
freezer. 1 3 cub1 c f oot Good ·
co nd1t 1on $ 8 5 614 ·94 9· ·

27 19

BRICK HOME ANO 2 ACRES - $47.000
3 bedrooms. 1\\ bath home w1th lots ol extrafeatures. bUI"·Incabt·
nets, sell·cleamng range, d~hwasher. garbage d~posal and large
dtnong room Kyger Creek Schools
#50!

·Phone 44~8221

I

BMR 442 - OWNER SAYS REDUCEI 1974 Shultz mobile home
(12x65) Tip Out tncludes 3 BR~ new carpet, awmng &amp; pallo.
st!uated on I acre m4 Washer &amp; dryer~ncluded City schools Was'
$20,000. now $17.900 ·Call lot details'

LG. COIIFORTABL£ ROOMS - LIVING RM IS VERY SPACIOU&amp; HAS
STONE AREPLACE. 3 BR, 2 BATHS, NICE LEVEl lAWN YOU MIGHT
• QUALIFY FOR SPECIAL FINANCING ON THIS HOM[ CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT. $45,0110.

Attractiv•. brick and wood, 4 bedroom, bi·level with
gas heat, finished family room, garage, oo 1acre lot
in the top .subdivision of Meigs Co. Flexible terms.
For lease or sale,' immediately occupancy.

251 1

large 11ze buck stove . 1 yr
old. axe co nd . 8675 Call

nace. auto co nt rols. wat er
heater 1ncluded. Never used

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots Ntce s•ze butld•ng lots woth all uhhhes there l ot s~e
101 8 by 171 2 Bettet get 'um now
#456

"LEASE OR BUY"

wood Call 6 14· 266 ·1528

Call 446-0552 Anyt1me
Beth Null 245·9507

•ss.

1199, ontron recliners
other recliners 180. mapla
dinette 1111 •179, box
springe &amp; mettre11 twin or
full •100 HI regular-firm
1120, moplo dinette chairs
136, wuh atonda 134,
mople rockers 169, 7 piece
chromo dinette set •149, 6
piece dinette HI 899. UHd
bedroom suites. refrlgero·

Phone 513-793-2783 or 446-8223

FQr- $Qie-By Owner

W1ll cut and deliver f~r e ·

Broker·Aucttoneet

llvlngroom auit11

5 bedroom Geor&amp;iln Colon ill Brick- entry hall w/beauti·
·lui open stairway, den. 2\'t baths. Chandler kitchen
w/oodltl of aora1ous cherry c~binets &amp; new appliances.
btrtllll'llliv1n&amp; room w/woocl burnin&amp; fireplace, formal
dlnl111 w/built·in chiRI hutch. full blsement w/fireplace
finished lilies, 2 c1r Prtl&amp;e. beautiful finished natura1
wood floors &amp; woodwork throuahout.
BONUS: AttJchtd 7 room office w/1'2 bath - seller !inane·
in&amp; could be considered.

_... _,_ ...... .._ -

Woodburner · Used Horn et·
tea der wood an d coal burn mg M ay be seen at Rut land
Bot t le Gas off 1ce 814 -74 2·

a. uHd wood a. coal stoves.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

12 ACRES - ,Ntce 2 bedroom
ranch home wlt~ gas furnace,
rural water. full b•sement, root
cellar and bam Qnly $4,000 •
down.
'

Sun da y c all s
2801 8160.

$160

2634 $560

7 pc w ood gtoup. $600. 16
KW electnc f urnance t50
Call 4 46·6326

Real Estate General

BMR 389 - OWNER SAYS SELL TODAY! Yout lamtly will en;oy
the roommess of th~ house lnd~ 4 BRs, 2baths,LR. DR, bUI"·•n
krtchen Situated on large corner lot Close to town mctly school
distnct !Green Elem) Call to see th~ one'

SY.RACUSE - 10% down wtR ,·
buyl)'ou th•s home on a 3() yr.
ftxed&gt; mortgage One Hoor, 3
bedrooms. mce large lot.
automatic heat

446· 8221

1- - - - - - - - -

REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 742-3171

BMR 436 - EXCEUENT STARTER HOME wrth 2 BRs. LR, OR.
mce krtchen, u!Jiity and new balhtoom Carpetd throughout
Screened patto. carport large lot Call lor appOintment

IN TOWN - Ntce lot. 3
bedrooms, all city u!Jiities. hoi
water hea~ basemen~ storm
wtndows and oors. Walk to the
stores $4.000 down.

r~ lle - 1 887

pump

Ex c e ll ent con dit ion .
Kroehl er btg early a m e r~c a n
sofa an d c h a~r Dark Qold
Ca ll Anderaona at 61 4 - ~ 49 ·

M ornmg gas heater, 1 yr
old, ex cond , &amp;426 Call

CHERYL-. LEMLEY I

· SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Galli polio. Now

LAND CONTRACT $2,500.00 down. $215.10 a
month at 13% • ktr I~
payments. Has 3 bedrooms,
modern tub bath, natural $IS
with 45x146 lot Sale Price
$19.500

2 BEDROOMS·- One lloor 4
room small house. Bath,
lurnace and large lot tn
Middleport $2,100 down.

For sale 85,000 BTU Warm

FOR SERVICE IN MEIGS COUNTY

BMR 438 '- BUILDING SITE - Approx 2 acres 1n Me~gs Co
overlooking the OhiO River wrth publ•c watet and recently but" 2
car ¥arage Owner anxiOus to sell Call for deta•~

ONE

62 46

54 M isc. Merchandise ·

304-676 -7946.

Phone

CHESHIRE - Level 65 ol an
acre on Rt 7 Six room ranch
home, new natural gas fur·
nance and dnlled well. Alullll·
num sidmg and tnsulated.
$4,000 down.

Kn auff F ~r ew ood P1 ck up or
Delivered 12 "- 22 " atocked
1n yar d . HEA P ve nd er .
prompt delivery 6 14·266·

llo Son. Call 446 · 7785

986-4 368

Real Estate General

to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri , 9am

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Colt

ca hber

I YIVERF±

1-(614) ·992-3325 ,

4.n ACRES - Near Pomeroy.
7 rms., bath, carpeting, full
basemen~ 2 porches and large
carport $3,000 down

Anti ques

54 Mi sc . M erchandise 54 M isc. M erchandise

A DD ·ON Woodburnlng fur·

CENTENARY - Good frame
home, 3·bedrooms, bath, gar·
age, large metal barn, 71! acres
fenced with pond, tobacco
base, city schools.

-EXECUliVE-·HOME-

•

LAYNE 'S FURNITUR E
Solo. choir, rocker, otto·
men, 3 tables, textra hoovy
by Frontlorl. 10811. Solo,
choir and loveoeot. 1276.
Sofoo end chairs priced from
•2811. to t886. Tobl,a; 146
end up to •126. Hide·• ·
beds, 1440. end up to
•625 .. Roclinero, •176. to
1375 .. Limps from UB. to
t75.6 pc. dinettes from
•&amp;8 .. to 436. 7 pc. 1189
end up. Wood toble with six
cholro 1426 to t746. Deok
•110 up to t226 . Hutcheo.
1660. end up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bod complete
w ith .mattroneo, •260. end
up to 1396. Baby bods.
1 11 0 . Mottronaa or box
aprlngo. full or twin, 168 ..
firm . 188. end t78. Queen
Hll. • 196. 4 dr. chel ll,
• 42 . 6 dr. chuta. 104. Bed
fromea. 120 .and I :!6 .. 10
gun • Gun cablnell, 1360.
Goo or electric rangoo 1376.
Boby mattreoooa. U6 llo
135. bed fromoa 120. 126,
&amp; f 30. king !ramo 160.

-mflllll!l

992·2181
ON ALL
Hotpoint Appliances
General Electric TV's
Hoqver Sweepers

.,......

5 1 Hou sehold Goods

dryers 876 eoch. Coli 614·
266-1207.

3 room Apt. furnished. No
pats. 614-949·2263.

r.. 2nd 51.

For Leese

For IIIH, Chevron Station,
Muon oreo. Good locotlon.
304-876·2892 oftor 6pm.

New one bedroom oport•
manto In Middleport. Fur·
nlohed end unfurnished.
614-992-5304.

Apartmant o
5648.

61 Houl8hold Good•

to 6pm, Sot.
814-446·0322

Riverside Apta. Middleport:
Spoclol rat11 for Sonlo;.
Citizens. •130. Equol Houo:&lt;.
lng Opportunltlu . 814:•
992-7721 .

Apt. for rent
6908.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

frlgor~torund

1 bedroom Apt. 8198. mo. ·
Including utllltloo. Equol .
Housing Opportunity. Con·
tact Vl~oge Menor Apta,
614-992-7787.
...

216

Call 446·411 0.
70 acres woven wire fence,
1500 lb tobacco base. barn

For rent .Siuplng Room•
end light houH keeping
roomo. Pork Centrol Hotel.
Coli 814·4411-0768.

Real Estate General .

2 bedroom furnished . $166 .

doors. 614-992· 3090.

bile home. gas heat, 3 br, 2
baths, large kitchen &amp; living
room, underpenning, out

46 Furnl•hed Rooms

Nice 2 bdr. apt., rot . &amp; otove
furnished, Main St .. Vinton. ·
Call 614-245·6818 .

VIRGIL B. SR .

Unfurnished house, 4 rooms
and bath. Completely carpeted. Storm windowe and
House with bath and large
yard . Near Racine . 614-

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
A..,rtmentl now IYIIIoblo to
.. derty llo dlssblld with an
I ncome of leu then
•12,300. Renting lor ~0
percent of adJuotld Income·
.Phelno 304-6711·11879.

3 bdr. apta. Honeysuckle
Hilla l crou from Hlghwoy
Patrol. Appliances. woter ...
oewer furnlohed . Rent starts
at • 240 per mo. Coli 448·
3344 or 4411 -1134. Equ•l
Housing Opportunity.

quired. 614-992 -6236.

576 -2711 .

110 acre farm, 40 acres
tillable, rest in pasture; good
f ences. 7 room remodeled
house, 2 car metal garage, 2
b arns, 2 outbuildings,

1 bdr. apt. Coli 446-0390.

12x60 in Syracuse. Air ..
washer and dryer $200
plus utilities and deposit.
Also 12x60 in Syracuse.
$160. plus utilities and
depo sit . References re -

4 room house with bath,
school bus. mail route. Eve-

Farms for Sale

Brand new 2 bedroom du·
plex ept ., on one floor,
equip. kitchen, utility room .
Clrport a. storage room ,
large lot in country setting,
but city school system .

- ) Gorden apace. • 260 per
month plus deposit. Call
Furnished 3 bedroom mobile 446-4477 or 446-388B

reasonable offer will be
refused , low down payment,
bank financing available.

33

mo , references. Call 446·

614-986 -4 367 .

2 bedroom house. enctosed
front porch, natural gae. In
Chester. References. Phone

614· 774-1498.

mobile

Two bedroom mobile home.
completely furni s hed,
washer and dryer, air-cond .,
carpeted . Mason, W. Va •

1976 14x70 Kirkwood mo-

Apartment
for Rent

Middleport area. 614· 992·
6858
.

back yard . Call 304-676·
4.265 .

Huntington and Point Plea sant on St. Route 2 . 304-

44

2 bdr., part. turn., newly
remodeled, goa hell. pork
front view. water paid. 8175

como and SEE USII No

ALL STATE MODULAR
HOMES, half way between

2 bedroom Apt. In Middle·
port. 1176. plus utilitleo.
614-882· 6646 doya and
614· 949·2604 evenings.

Nice 2 bedroom house near
Eastern Schoof district .
$160 month plus utilities.

children . 614 -992 -6443.

new or used mobile home

304 -676-6166.

43 Farms for Rent

Two bedroom house, TV
room, basement. fenced in

DRIVE A UTILE SAVE A
LOTII For tho bast buy on a

Two bedroom furnished Or
unfurnished at Southside.

446· 0264.

8200 mo. Includes water &amp;

evening•.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two bedroom ell electric
mobile home. Ashton Upton
Rood, •126 . per mo. UO.
deposit. 304·876· 4088.

trash collection . Call eve's

move into a nice mobile 6 room (two story) house 66
home without the hassle of Garfield Ava .. no pets end
set -up . We have a 1979 must give references. Will
Freedom 14x70 deluxe take two or three email

Mobile

Smi ll f urn. houH 1 or 2"
adults only, no pots. Colt'
448-0338.
•

me11age.

ATIENTION -Do you need to

model on a lot in the Country

mobile
homeo, houaoo. Pt. Plouant
and Qolllpollo. 814· 448·
. 8221 .
.

stortlng at •157 for on"
bedroom end •183 per
month for two bedroom;
with 1200 dopbalt lo~otld
noer Foodland end Spring
Volley Plazo. pool end TV
ant . Coli 448-2746 or loovo.

1----------

Apartment
for Rent

APARTME~TS ,

one and two bedrooma. rent

Avail. now, 2 bdr .• LA. new

2 bdr unfurniohed 8176
mo. plus utllltlaa. Security
deposit raq . Cal 446-4303 .

44

Ap11rtment
. for Rent .

JACKSON ESTAT E
APARTMENTS IEquol
Housing Opportunity! hoo..

skirting French City Broker- - - - - - -- - - 4 rooms &amp; bath. furnanco

CT.

21

f,Re

ramod . kit .. &amp; both. Large

Creek. French City Broker-

~-'~

~

Duplex, 8260 plus utilities.

Must Sell 4 bdr.. 12x65, fenced yard, new carpet,
plus 12x20 room, CA. star· 668 3rd. Ava.. Gollipolio.
age.. building, porch &amp; •wn - Call 446 -2467 or 446·
•ng . Corner lot at Quail 0332
~CL.ANCV,
190~

i'J

o~ '&gt;fle '&gt;T~

For sale rent. Two story

44

2 JIR Apt.. 1128 mo.•
Utllltleo portially furnlohed .· •
... : ... 3 bdr. hOUII jOr Ill.
on lend -contract. 304 -876·
6104 or 304-876-11388,"
Cerol Yooger Rooltor.

l.&gt;;ffi&lt;R ftle
IMffiRooM

Houses for

tact Harry Pitchford, agent.
Phone 614 -446 -1427

21

&amp;14 -266 ·

·-·--·,

Renlal s

$7.6 00 . Call
6618 .

Schools
Instruction

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

~ Acreage

coverages are .. vailable to
meat individual needs Con -

15

8; 1984

One lot 60 x 119. 304· 876·
1768.

LISSIIUN·.. WHO WON THe

FIRST GllAZIANO·ZAI-e
FIGHT ?

Experienced mother will
babysit for one child, my
home on Sand Hill Road.
$60 00 par wook. 304-676·
2309

36 Lots

Pleasa~t, W. Va .

DRIVE A LITTlE. SAVE A LOT
3 BR. full basement wh•te alummum ~dtng, luel ool FA furnace
3()'x40', shmgled rpol,lots of youngpeach and apple trees All lhts
reduced to only $16,9110
6 ROOMS. CATHEDRAL CEILING
Approxtmately 2 acrs olland, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms. vertical wood
~ding, mce modern step-saver k1tchen. gas FA furnace, large ltv·
tng room 'tand has a spnng, fishtng pond, apple and peach trees,
mce peacelul setting Phone today .,
1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
Ntce home Central a1r, rural wa!et system, large fam•ly
26'x22 Garage, storage butldtng. storm wtndows and doors.
home See 1! now
#570
NEW AD DAILY

We're Out To Sell The Earth!

•

'

4 bedrm home Situated along old Rt. 7, lower • •
Rtver Rd Galhpol~ Ctty School D~t . City water. good locatiOn fore .
children and adults. fi teplace Pnce $37.5011 00 Call for ..
apjl(lnlment
. :
• ·
MODERN 3 BEDRM. HOME ~tuated along Kathy Ot . Pleasanl. ·
Valley SD neat Holzer Hosjlltal Catpeled. modified lot wood.. ·
burner Attached garage Pnce $50.000 00
'
NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm tanch home. sttuated near North Galha •••
School. n•ce lot laces Rt J 60~p7.50000_ .
:
2 BEORM. COTTAGE srtuated akmg Vmton Ave Nat gas heat
I \l baths. SIX rooms fa mtly room. 2 car garage Pnce e ; :
$32.00000
•
'
COLONIAL DUTCH. 2 or 3 bedrm. 2 ..II baths. convementfy
' :
located across from new court house Lg ltvmg rm w/ wb. . , .
fireplace, I~ krtchen and fotmal dtmng rm Call for •
·
.appomtment $82.000 00
• .

«

lam1~

•• 2 ACRES. more or less. w1lh 3 Bedrms.
rm . attached •
garage Prtvacy woth tn·ground pool Near ctty hmtls e &lt;
$59,000 00
•
•

e:

•
•

NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm home 1n Eureka neat Galltpol~ • ••.
darn Be ready lor conslrucnon boom Love 1n or rent
$22.000 00
•

•
•
•
•

QUALITY BRICK HOME stluated on apptox 2aetes. Wl!hm ctly •• .;
ol Galhpol~ Solid chetry woodwork and panel. 3 WB
fireplaces. fuH basement lftmshed). consltucled dunng late • ,
40's Amentl•es too numerous to list Call Ken Morgan
• ;

•
•

.

4 BEDRMS . 8 RM. HOME ~lualed along Garlield Ave A •
convement place lo live Overlooks lhe beautrtul OhiO Rtver
Pnce $30.000 00
•

•

10 UNIT MOTH wrth house and approx 8 acres f1shmgpond a •
socked w1lh f1sh Relax and en;oy hie while makmg a itvlng!' ~ :

,'

•:
:

•• J51 ACRE FARM near Vmlon Has 3 bedrm house. I~ • • :.
equtpmenl shed. bottomland paslure and somewooded atea
•
Pnce reduced to $86 000 00
•
•
•
•

3 BEDRM. HOME. farn1iy rm. ada pled lo1 w b heater •
ln·gtound pool I~ carport. lenced·ln ya~ d Mad•son Ave Pnce •
$46.900 00
•

•
•
•

INVESTMENT PROPERTY" 2 apartmenl home w1th 2 nedrms •
each l ocated wrthm 2 blocks from schools Plenly ~arkmg, •
e
gooo locatiOn $65.0110 00

•
••
•
•
•

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Apptox 4000 sq tt . local~ tn •
downlown Gaiilpolts Can beleased or purchased Acr oss lrom •
ctty parktng lot
•

,

COMMERCIAl PROPERTY - Achve reslauranl o"...
•
located on corner lot 1n Kanauga Purchase and get tmmed•ate •
"Cash Flow" owner may l1nance some to qualified purchaser
(:all for mme tnformatton
•

.PRICE REDUCED - 2 bedrm mo~le home srtuted alon1.
• Btdweii·Rodney Rd. 85'x208' lot fenced m several lrutl trees Pnce e
. $14,00000
•
• REMODELED STORE BUILDING wrth apartment upstan&gt; l ocated .
near Cadmus along Rt 141 County water. f A lurnace. 1? acre.
• $20,000 00
•
•

•

.
...•••••...•••••
•

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Approx 7.000 sq It ~tuated one '
• corner lot along 2nd Ave., Gallipolis Lg parktng area around.
• butlding. Can be purchase&lt;l or leased Call lor more tnformation

'

\\•'"ll RP.dly In c
• ' l ~ tt'&gt;l St lJ,tllqx•".

I

,

~lt·1t)6 6

�.; '

Times-Sentinel

Ohio

154 Misc. Merchandise 64 Misc. Merchandise 156
Kitchen teble ond cholro
14(). Hotpolnt 40 ln. oolf
ol11n eleotrlo ronge. 1140.
Kenmore electric
dryer. • 1110. All llko now.
111 4·992·1128 1 or 81 4-892·
11883.
141nch homellte choln oow.
Good condition. 1110. 814·
986-4348.
t

UHd waaher. dryer, atoves,
30 day warranty. One BaldWin organ.
double keyboard. Jl!oS Pown
Shop. 314 Main St. Pt.

refrigerator.

Pleaunt .
36" Annie doll with com·
plete wordrobo I 100. Cab·

bago dooign poporo $22. ·
$40 . Quality craftsmanship.

304-876-61311.
Firewood. 304-875·2584.

Now wood burning atovo
with flrobriok t321. 11ah.
304·871· 1178 or 8711·
7888.

615 Building Supplies
Building moterlolo
block, brick, oowor plpoo,
wlndowo, llntelo, etc .
Claude Wlntoro, Rio Grenda.
0 . Coll814-246·6121 .
Why wait? Build your own
24ftx32ft. garoge or work·
ohop, 11 .596. Call 1-814888-7311 .

LUMBER - Rough cut: oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2x8. 2x8, 1x4.
1x8, 1x8, length availoble. 8
fool through 14 foot . Hogg
l!o Zuopon, 304-773-6554
daytime.

Sam Somerville'• Army Sur-

Judy Toylor Grooming. Coli
814-387-7220 .

plus. Eaet Ravenswood.
Normally open 1 :00·
7:00pm Fridoy. Soturdoy,
Sundoy. (Cioaed for Ropairo
Jon. 14-Jon. 281. All oizeo
now h11vy clothlng·Booto in
stock cheap all winter. We

hova Corhart Clothing. 304·
876-3334.
Uoed anow tires. 2·E78 14;
$40. 2·F7B 14, lluddod
polyootor $36. 304-876·
1224.
Couch end choir. 304-676·
5289.
SAVI!. lnoulato ottlc or
whole houN with blown in
Owena-Cornlng Fiborgloo.
FrH oatlmoteo. 304-8711·
3982.

Pets for Sale

Bri8rpatch Kennels Profes·
aional All ~ breed grooming .

Indoor-outdoor boarding locilitlaa. English Cocker Spaniol puppies. Call 81 4-3889790.
'

2

AKC

Registered malo

Cocker spaniels· blonde 6

yro. old, . red 3 yro., good
blood line, good tempera·
ment. Excellent for breed-

Ing. Call 446-9372 altar
5:30PM.

NORTH
t71!1
9AJI!I

Lh111 Apoo ruppleo AKC
Reglotered wll bereedyJen.
2111, UOO. Cell448·0708.
Brlttony Spenlol II moo. old,
AKC Roglatorod. Cell after
2:00, 448-4385 .
Reglotod Englloh Pointer
pupa, Champion bloodline.
$100 each . Call 814-245·
6027 or 448· 2107.
AKC Regiatereij block Lab·
rador pups . Shots and
wormed. $100. 814-9927285.
Registered r81f. male cocker

$200. 814-992-2807.
Beautiful pups, part Cock· APoo and part Poodle .

$60.00. 304-875-5381 .

57

Musical
Instruments

For sale-Spinet- Console Pi·
ano Bargain . Wanted Reaponaible party to take
over low monthly payments
on Spinet Piano. Can be
seen locally. Write Credit

1-f-14

coalrlel.
II• opealll till kial of dll·
moadllllll llilftld 10 1 club.

!oulll -

Ill 1111

OWII

buil

IIIII pracnd1d ~17 l'lpid17 llld . _ ,
10 alike

t9

till CODiriCI.

I

drew

.AQI
WEST
EAST
• KJ84
•101
9 --•t7!
tAKU,!
tQJ1072
• 10HZ
, .941
SOUTH
.AQ9
9KQ1064
• 54
.KJ7

with till -...ry
three lllda, ruffed 1111 lui
dilmoDd, ~till rwaalntnc two clubo, led 1 liPide
IIIII fm-ed btl niDe lfter
Eut bad played lbe eilbL
West wu ID IIIII lolally
end played. A dle!!!CI!Id or
club lead would llllow, South
to ruff 1D dummy IIIII discard the spade queen, end a

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

queen 10 win.

Wett

Nortb

E.ltt

Obi .
lt

Redbl . 2t
••
Pass

St

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pow

Pass

lnlmpl

spade lead would allow lbe

Solt•
19
Pau

Paa
s•

Opening lead: t K
By Oowold Jocoby
and James Jacoby

West's five-diamond call

was a sacrlfice bid. It would
have been set a maximum of
two !ricks, but South contin·
ued to five hearts and West

hoped

to

defeal

that

"Nicely ployed," uld
West, "but you were lucky."

"I don't see aay hack,"
oald Soulll. "What wu It?"
"I lbould have beaten
you," replied West. "All I
bad to ·dO wu to underlead
my A·K of dlamonda. My
partner would win and
return 1 spade. That woy I
would be oure to cet two
spade lricu."
II wu quite 1 ploy that
West bad mentioned. U be
had actually led that low
diamond, South would have
felt that the goda of chance
were determined to burt
him.
!NEWSPAPER E!ft1:11PRIIE AlliN.)

II Ill 1111111111111

11 111 : , 1!1111111

\ I

Drogonwynd Cotllry·
Kennell. AKC Chow pup·
pill, CFA Hlmeleyen, Per·
olen ond ·81emeee kltieno.
CoiL814·4411·3844 otter e.

dle puppies. Brown males.

66

I

I\. I

I il l k

Ooo11 niOic h - ·trelltr
21' ·4 hor11r W·llllplng
qtro..
700. C1ll 441·
17111 efter 12 noon.
·

ez,

Autoa for lale

TOI' CAIH p1ld for lite
modll Ulld 0111.

lmlth
lulok·Pontllo, 1111 1111·
ern Ave.. OelllpoHe. Cell
814-441·2212.

Livestock

1 880 Reneult LICer 2 dr. 4
epd .. full eunroof, AC. AM·
FM, opere tiro, 12,4811.
Plgo for oala-Call 814·378- John'o AU1o Soleo Bulavllle
81811 or 814-378-8221 . Rd. Call448-4782, Galllpo·
120.
llo. Oh.
Plgo 1211.00 Ten Mile Road.
2 mlloo off Rl. 82, flrlt
houoo poll Youger Church.
304-4118· 11183.

64 Hay &amp; Grain
Hoy lor oale. Call 814·38771143.
Hoy lor oale-11 .60. bole.
814-848-21114.

1881 2 dr. ~lack Che~
Chevette, 4 epd., AC, luggage rack , wire rime .
U, 1811. John'o Auto Still
Bulevllie Rd . Call 448·
4782, Galllpollo. Oh.
1877 Corvette T-top. cover.
looded, 18,800. Coil 814·
387-0232.

1--------

-.
2· 1 971 Volkowogon SuP.,

lllatleo, exoellent running
Ground 11r corn 18.50 per condition, price very riii0·
100. Bring own container. nable. CeH 441!·0848 otter
304-8711-3308. No Sundey ,_II_P_M_.- - - - . , - - -

71

Autos for Sale

;72 Oldomoblle; For 11ie or
trade. Phone 304 -8711 ·
3180.

lulo~ llegll ONIII., tNil
elr, PI, 1'1, e•o. ool!d. C1l

1117&amp; Plymou.th Y.l[lont. 8
cyl. 1300:·--Atter 11. 3048811-3838 .

441·4014.
1110 Meroury COUIIf 1(117,
..o. , o'Ond., 11.000 firm. ·
CIII44.J·7108.
1112 I porto oer. Dtllljn
200 ax. &amp;14-882·11137.
1882 Chryoler New Yortcer.
Good condition. 811,000
mll11. 814-882-7128.
1870Chevello Super oport.
4114-4 opoed. 814-888·
3848 .
1883 Ford Goloxl~ body
good ohapo, no motor 130D.
Cellanytlme304·1711·8208
or 304·4118-1727.
1978 Camero oliver with red
Interior, automollc, I · C, po,
pb, om B track t1200.
304-875-4181.

72

Trucks for Sale

1988 CHevy 1 tori truck;
P/ 8, booater broke, 12ft.
otHI bod, 3110 outomotlc .
11 BOO . Cell 81 4 · 388 8303.

.

1183 Charcoal J.roy Ford
lllplide 'h ton p • vii. e ft .
bed, auto., r1dlo, aun roof.
vinyl covered bed. apira tire,

oharp, priced to 1111. John'o
Auto Soloo, Bulovllle Rd.,
Gilllpollo. -Ohio . Coli 44847~2 .

1878 Ford 1 &amp;0 Super Cob
4x4. looded, outo .. 14,000
firm . Cell448-1758 after 12
noon.

1882 Z-28 Indy 1100.
18.800.00 Coli 304·871119111 eftar llpm.

72

72

Truck• for Sale

1878 Chevy C-30 crew cob
duolly, looded, low mlloo.
14,700 firm . Ca11448· 17&amp;9
otter 12 noon .
187B Chevy truck 12.800 or
boot offer. Coli 814-3792728.
1877 Chevrolet truck
38,000 mile. AC. PS. PB,
auto. AM · FM couette .
U.&amp;OO or beat offer. Coli
814-378-2726 .
1983 Chov. S-10 ext. cab
pickup, Tohoe equip. pkg ..
V·8 , elr. power ateering,

19B2 Ford F-150, PS , PB.
twin gaa tank1 , aluminum

1978 CJ7 jeep blue with rag

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

PLASTERING • New and
dentlal, frH eatlmatoo. Coli
814-268-11B2.
Marcum Roofing l!o Spouting . 30 years eKperience.

t o p , excellent condition

apecializing In built up roof .

$2900. 304-773-5023.

1986 GMC 30 pouenger
buo 491 ; 4 opd, good cond ..
e1soo. Coll448-28 38 .

maroon

Coli 614-388-9867.

e4.675. 1878 Corvette, IU ·
lomotlc, 18,500,· loadedl
1977 Pinto Sod on outomotlc , good condition .
1860. Call 448-7438 .

78 CJ -5 Jeep, 36.000 mi.,
t2 .400 . Call 614 · 379 2745 after 5.

black

Appliance Service all makes
a. models refrlgerton .
waahera . dryers. ranges •
compactors . dishw11hers.
microwavea . Heating &amp;.

top,

white l!o gold otripoo, 304
engine . 304-8B2 -3684.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

75

1972 Ford von , 302 . V-8.

nomical , low mileage ,

with

17ft. boat. never bean in

Cooling, Shell Metal Work.
Golllo Refrigeration Co .
81 4-446-4088 .

I- - - - - - - - -

wat er. Coll814-258 · 1651 ·

RON ' S Televiaion Service .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

houoe calla. Coli 304-576 2398 or 814 -446-2454 .

t600. Call 448-7809 .

ohorp . Coll614-992 -3187.

Estate General

81

Homa
Improvements

repair commercial and reai·

79 CJ -5 6 cyl .. 3 opeed,

197':1 Dodg e van tully ca r·
peted &amp; customized. 3 18, 2
barrell. auto ., aun -roof. very

•
1878 Honda Civic lor porta,
rebuilt carburetor, new front •
fendero, new radial•. :
t1 110.00. Cell 304-182- .
2874.

1979 Jeep CJ -5. 6 cyl.. 3

•Pd .. loaded with e•tr11. ex .

' 83 Ford Ranger, mu st aell.
will sell very cheap . Still

under worrenty. 304-875 1035 or 675 -4568 .

81

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

axe. cond .. 17.000
mllea. Coli 814-245-8228 .

wheel~ e.

1880 Luv truck 4 wheal
drive.- AM -FM, ohorp, eco-

~eal

73

cond ., U.300. Call 448 0615.

rebuilt trans, new w at er
pump, rebuilt head s. rebu ilt
starter. new fu el pump ,

Specializing in Zenith and

Motorola .

76

Ouazar .

and

RINGLE'S SERVICE expeBilly Lee ' a Tires and Battery rienced roofing, including

Sales. New and uaed tirll , hot tar application, carpen·
al ao, tire repairs . 1603 Jef· tar, electrician. muon . Call
farson Ave . Point Pleasant . 304 -875 -2088 or ~ 875 304-875-5405.

4560 .

Real Estate General

.Box 188 Sardis, Ohio
43948. Phone 814-4831805.

Real Estate General

.w, Dlllltt. IIIIa, . . .155

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC:

I
I
I
11

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
AGENCY

JUST LISTtD - NEW HOME PWS ACREAGE Approx. I year old brick and frame bi-le'lel. 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 car garage. Can be purchased
with 4 acres or 35 acres. 27x36 metal building. Within
9 miles of town. Take a look today!

446-0008

flocK

Fa. K Tree Trimming. atump

removal . Coli 304 -875 - Pasquale Electric Co. a ll
1331 .
phases of electric work , all

RUSS AND MAX

work guaranteed . Aerial
Water Walla. Commercial truck rental. 614 -446 ·
and Domestic. Teat holes. 4088.
Pumps Selea end Service.
304-896-3802.
SEWING Machine repai rs.
tervice . Authorized Singer
SEAMLESS GUTIERS, One Salea a. Service Sharpen
piece custom fit your home. Sciaaors . fabric Shop .
Guaranteed . Advanced Gut· Pomeroy. 814-992-2284 .

ELLIOTT

Coli 446-851 5
or 446-0445 li e

tar, !Day 614-582-4088.)
(night 814 -898-820.5.)

85

CO.

l ennox Heatin&amp; &amp; Air Condi·
tioninJ. All Types Insulation.
Electncal W1rinc.

Now,'s Th e Tim e
To In sulate For
Ho m e Win1er i zatio n
CALL

General Hauling

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal, JONES BOYS WATER SER furniture cleaning, free estl· VICE . Call 814-367-7471
mateo. 304-875 -2295 .
or 814 -387-0591 .

Bell Contracting Co.
446-4002

R. G. Mayes and Son. Dietel Need aom"ething haul ed
Service and major over· away or something moved ?
hauls. Ea:perienced in all We'll do it . Call 446-3159
types . dieHI and gasoline between 9 and 6 .
engines. lnduatrlal or auto,
hydraulic and electrial ser· Water hauling. Fast Service.
vice . Located at Mason Co. low rotao. Call 814-256 Industrial Park. Point Plea - 1743.

SHEET METAl WORK
We make cu stom duct
work. We Repair Furnaces and Heat Pumps .
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO .

oont . 304-675-7422 .

614-446-4066

JIMS

WATER SERVICE .
~;~/m Lanier. , 304-675 -

!I'~ !.MPROVEMENTS

875-2440 .

Dump truck for hire . Will .
haul coal or limestone . 304·

82

675 -3190 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

87

Upholstery

f : ·sill's

J

Nu-Prim e replacement
w indows
1 Storm windows &amp; doors
Alum inum &amp; vinyl

siding
Howmel Patio Covers
Howmet screen

Gollipolio, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888
_
814 446 _4477

rooms

TRISTATE
Mobile home awnings
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Aluminum util ity
0,
buildings
1183 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis.
614 -446 -7833 or614-446 691 Miller Dr' .e
JIM'S PLUMBING 1!t HEAT- 18 33 ·
446·2642
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 355. Galli· I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....J==:F:r:e:• :E;:•t;:im;:::a;;te:;s;::::!;
polii. Call814-367-0578 .

83

SOLUTION

~

Excavating

ELECTRONIC REAL
ASSOCIATES

J. lllltrill cnr. 111111r. m.UM
Wy 11n1. A1111 - . ttl ot51
CIIIIJ Pope, '-11 1 , J71.2741

REALTY

Business
Services

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Real EstateT~

floor only. Write giving
directlona. Witten Pianos-

84

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

to know in

$20. and $40. each . First

Home
Improvements

Building remolding , all car·
pentry, roofing, plumbing
and concrete work . 304-

All you need

·-

Manager:P.O.Box 537 Shelbyville, ln . 48176.

BLACKBURN

Trucka for Sale

AM -FM can. tope, olldlng
rear window, 2 tone paint. 4
WD, 4 opd ., 17,000 mi.,
exc . cond. Coli 446-9384.

Wanted old pianos. Paying

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boording all brHdo. Sailing
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppleo: Stud
Service. Call 814-4487796.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-7

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

1174 Plymouth V1U1nt I
Nnl ~good, r.od wortc
all. C1ll 441·14 I.
,
78

Ferm-•11 Iuper ·c aultlvetor,
bleak • oliver,
plow, dloa, greter blade. 2 T·top, Z·28;
IW, 4 opd.,ao, pw, pi,
mowing mechlnae 11,1100. rd. am/fm 0111 .. heeder and
Coli 814·2118·1433.
elr ohooko. New tlr11. Coli
814-387·0407 •

••lea.

71

ovt ..

61 Farm !qulpment

63

January 8, 1984

8, 1

W.Va.

Pets for Sale

spaniel pup. $75 . Toy poo-

Firewood. Phone 304-468·
1844.

Point

Good-1 Excavating, base·
mentt,' footera. driveways,
septic tanka, landscaping.

Coli anytime 814 -446 4637, Jameal. Davison, Jr.

REALTOR

BOTTOM PRICE - Owner has dr!Wfd the

price of ttis home as low as he can ~ $20,500. 2

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL - REOUC(D and frame ranch. 3 bedrooms, living room, family
room, large krtchen, bath. Chain link fence. Flat lawn.
Priced at $39.900.

. H500

bedroom remodeled home, bath, living room. family
room. Outbuilding. 2 mobile home pad~ I acre. Priced
to sell.

Mn

MARK OF OUALITY - Is found in this stylish older
nome. 2 sfory. Kitchen. 3 bedrooms. ~ving room,
fireplace. bath. lull basement large lawn. Priced in the

30s.
THIS ONE HAS IT ALLI- Exceptional home near
town features 2 family rooms. one with large stone
fireplace and ~tio doors. Other has a bar, 3 BRs,
dteam kitchen has cook top, microwave, eye level
oven, IJN, disp. and range, 14124 living room,
dinelle, carpeting and 2 car garage.

YOU'LL BE DELIGHTED- Wrth lh~ 4 BR ranch in
Vinton area. Also has 2 balhs, galley kitchen with·
eye level dven, range and CNI, 12x24 family room.
living room, dinette, and a 12x15 master BR.
lndudes a sundeck. unattached garage and ~
building. woodburning stove. level to rolling lawn
with above ground pool.

NEW USTIIIG - DON'T MISS THIS brick arll
aluminum siding home local8d in the Rutland •ea. 3
bedrooms. lui basement. 16'132' in-ground pool. All
!tis and ITlORI situated on .89 of an acre. Priced in the

40s.

OWIIER Will TRADE FOR ANYTHING OF VALUE -LDYely 3
bedroom bricll ranch sellina on • 2.3 ac. knoll with maslelftJ
View just ~ mi~ ~om cAy ~ITIIs" Green Twp. ;ust oil Rt 141.
This very pleasant home lellures a w~e approved ktcllen. 2~
baths. 2 woodburnlng firee'aces. lam]ly room. 2 car prage,
stir~~!'! bulding and beluliftJ lawn. Must sel and Will lrade lor
business property or anything else ol voile.

11481

57 ACR£S -

Free ps lor dwelling. Older 2 bedroom
mobile hdme partially lun\ished. Bam. Acreage mainly
wooded. Ruralater. Priced in the 30s.

rome.

MOBILE HOMES WELCOME -large lots lor sale..
I acre or more located on blacktbp road in North
Gallia school district Gallia County rural water
available. Owners will finance qualified bu~ with
a 25% down payment

GREEN TOWNSHIP _; GRAHAM SCHOOL ROAD : IF YOU WANT CONVENIENCE -Then this is the
- 12 acres more or less, _
approx. 720 It road i place lor you! Easy-to-care-for home, just steps to
frontage. rural water available, excellent for · stores and schools. New vinyl sidin&amp; 2 BRs, bath,
building _ or mobile homes. Call for more 1kitchen, living room, -dining room. Priced at
information.
. $23,1XXJ.
WILL . BE YOUR PROUDEST POSsEsSION! -&lt; CHESHIRE - I~ story lrame ~ers 4 BR~ bath,
Bealltifully landscaped. Splendid white brick horne . living room. kit!:hen carpet, Iron! and rear porches
exhibits approx. 3100 sq. ft. _cllivins area. with 3 or and a11 attached garage. Assumable loan at'9~%.
4 BR, 3 baths, 20140 family room, dong room. ·
beautiful carpet. kitchen offers fTN, disposal,· GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acies more or less,
microw~ and trash compactor, •fllercom. . a1r 1localed south of Mercerville. Approx. 20 A. tillable,
conditioning. 2 car
. 10X20 utility building. ·. balance woods, IDbacco base. Ownes will help
deck and 20x40
.1 finance.
·

stream
2 1 Confirmed

23 Gasp lor
breath
24 Mature

· 26 Landed

JUST USTtD- LIVE IN ONE and,rent the other. Two
2 bedroom mobile homes. Com~ete with lurniture. Set
up on one-half acre let Un!lerpinned, stora~ bufding.
patios. Wrthin 3 miles of Gallipolis. Priced 1n the 20s.

RANCH SlYLE - Immediate ~ 3 oeanoorn.
family room, living room. large eat-in kit!:hen. l..arle
patio, fireplace, chain Unk fence. House ooiH in 19T3,
very good condition. Located off State Rt 35. Owner
leaving area Must sell!

11497

11411
OIIE OF RIO'S FINEST - lcclted oo Lake llnve in 100
Grande ltlis 4 8R ranch provides lots of living space and
, plenly of ~bow room in !he yard. large living room wrth
woodburner and sliding doors openingmwrap-aroond dec~
2~ baths. full basement 2 car p~age. 6.5 acres lotal wh~h
i:ould be divided into lots .

MIDDLEPOIIT - 2 story stucco home on Front Street
Home has 3 bedrooms, bath, kit!:hen, living room.
dining room or family room Sliding glass doors from
living room to redwood decll Priced in the~ 40s.

11427

KINEON DRIVE -In town location. 3 bedroom frame
home. living room, family room with fireplace. kit!:hen,
bath, garage. Natural gas heat central air. Deck. Priced
in the 30s.

REDUCED $10,000 - This beautiful lri-iMI
space for the growin~ family. Amenities include 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen complete. family room.
formal entry, 2 car gara~. I.DCation is great with 1.33
acre lawn. Approx. 3 m1les from town.

11479

ENJOY niE PLEASURE OF UVING in this immaculate
home. 3 bedrooms. large livin' room. lormal dining.
bath, kit!: hen with very nice cabinets. Partial basement
Steel siding. garage. Level lawn. Priced in the 40s.

-

IMMACUlATE HOME - Located on 9 acres of
maoicured land thai will brighten your day. Acii'Ctllar
lane, tree planting. decorative sh~ a lazy lake adds
to your "awe". This ~ it Fairfield-Vancli Rd. Grein
Township. ·

.

•

. 11426

roorp with fireplace, formal dining room, livine room,
~!£hen with slidin doors ~ ellin area. new
bath, ~ on main level. 3 ~rooms. attic, blsemenl,
I acre. Priced in tl}e 20s.
,. · :
·.
. IN47

' new

::1

HOiiE·IIICOIIE ..._ Live in this 3 bedroom ranch and
rent the 2 bedroom apartment arll2 bedroom motile

home that is included with tllis P!UPer!Y. ·I.llihcr11S ol
land Garage. &lt;Nibutin(ll. Clclie ill HOlzer Medical
Cknter. Call lor moie .
.sot

11412

12

ACRES - Private setting. Recently remodeled
horne. 3 bedrooms. living room, equippejl kildlen

bath, utility. large tobacco·base.'Mineral righls. Priced
in the 40s.
,
·

'11419
A RARE FIND, GREAT LOCATION ...: Mcxlern 2 story
home and recenlly radecotated. 5 rooms, bath, part
~ and front porch. You may rent out the rest
EfficienCy apartment. OUiside entrance. 2 bedroom
81188 lilirtrnent 828 2nd Avenue. Only $44,900.

1389

COUNTRY UVINIIAT RS BEST.._ Owner will Sill part
or Ill ollhe 25 acres with this well mainllined horne. 3
lqe bedi'OOIJIS, 2 bitlis, livinc room, lill:hen with 45 ft
ol. cabinet space, 2 car enee with Medric """""'·
.Close to Holzer Medical Center.
.
..,.....~
11493

IIAIIT A~ICE 1.01'1 - l..ocilld just olf ~ Rt 160
within 2 lilies ol town..42 ol matre. Resbdd.
'
11431
LOOiltNG FoR A NICE BI·LEVEL? :... Then ;_ i look
II this spacious home. ~ ~ '1~ bathe, 1tien

eqiippad with disposal. disiiWIIhellrid rql. flrnily
room. 2 car ltllched ..._ Genlral air. Priclld In IIMi·
50s.
.

.

'

..

11414

-

2~ ACID. ITlORI or less, local8d2milei below Eureb. '

Use b' buiding sile or mobile home. Priced at S3,500.

( .

.

COUNTRY UYING AT ITS BEST - Th~ excellenl oome has3
lariJ! bedr~ !am i~ room. living room. modern eal·m
kilcllen, 2car garage and 2 full baths. Very ..,II insulated w1th
beauliiul sidin~ 18 rolling acres accompany !hiS gem ol a
oouse and !here's an excellent locaoon lor a lake. Owner
woold consider less acreage. Priced in lhe 801

•

OWNER MOVING TO COLUMBUS - Check the lealures ol
. lhis llii!Sianding 2 story co~mal. Has beenomplet~y
remodeled. New metal sidin&amp; new 1001. new modern
• basement complele~ new knchen wn~ nearly 30 fl ol
cabinet!, 2 wood burners plus lorced air furnace. 3 big
bedrooms, 2 full baths. lormal enUance, formal dinin&amp; pabo
doors leading lo a huge new sundec~ Loealed near Rll and
Buckeye fQs oo 2~ acres flat lot. Owners want «sold. Priced
al $72.000.
•

#503

AFFORDABU CONVENIENCE - Within walking
disllnce to the dowmown shopping i!fea· 3 bedrooms.
living (00111, large ~!£hen, bath. Basement Aluninum
siding. Natwl ps heat 2 car garage. Large flat lawn.

. . 11410

QUI£! COUNTRY UFE CAN 8E YOURS - \Wh efficient
modern log oome Own wood supplyjor heal and land 101
garden. 10.81 acres. 3 bed1 oo~ I ~ balhs with llg slone
fireplace. On Brumfield Road: 2 mdes off Rt 218 Reasona~y
!&gt;'ICed al $35.000.

PIIOOUCTION PER ACRE IS THE -KEY TO A SUCCESSFUL
FAlll OPERATION -1'r11y work extra acres when 1A. or less
will raise just as much. L~ 1~ show yoo a productivt 115 A.
iarm that will r~urn ""'' lor your invest10011t dolars. Tho
115 A. un~ is localed oo &amp;R. 775. II will coolinue to be a
productive farm with ~ management Wsalobacco. gra1n.
hay and liYestocl&lt; !arm.

NEW LISTING - DON1 MISS THIS EXCEPTIONAL
AIID IMMACUlATE HOME - 2 bedrooms, living
room. kit!:hen complete with range arll rellilll!f3!ol',
family room with ga:s fireplace. New carpet in bath.
Attached garage. large flat lawn. Within city imits.

POTENTIAl - large older home thai has some
remodeling. This home has a Qmal entry, new fatm'y,

.

boards
11 Suggest
18 Part of ·

20 Small

11415

LOOKING FoR SOMETHING NEAR THE LAKE? This IS it 3 BR modular with 2 baths, living room,
d1mng area, kit!:hen with s!Dve and refrig.
Comfortable screened porch, wood bum~ng stove,
24x60 block garage and lots cl trees.

6 Narrow. flat

19 Blemish

27xl0 BLOCK GARAGE - On corner lot in Vtnton.
Concrete ftoor and fuel oil furnace in garage. Roorp on
lot lor mobile home. Call lor details.

BEAUlY IN THE WOODS - Attractive bi-level is
nestled on a 1.21 acre rolling tract in the Kyger
Creek School District Features are 3 BRs, bath, LR,
kitchen and dining area, range, washer, dryer, nice
carpet and WB stove. 9~% loan can be assumed
wrth approx. $11,1XXJ down.

1 Supports

fortlflcation

#501

COMMERCIAl OR RESIDENTIAl - This nine
room two story home features two bathS, dining
room. kit!:hen with new cabinets, dishwasher,
carpeting. fireplace. fuM basement, gas heat block
3 car garage, vinyl siding. Level klt with highway
frontage on Upper Rt 7.

ACROSS

11496

district

COULDNl ASK FOR A BffiER LOCAnON
Handsorl'\f Vic!Drian home offers 3 BRs, I~ baths,
laundry room, living room, family room. carport.
unattached garage, 16x32 fenced pool. Kitchen
has range, refrig., fNI and disp. Nat gas heat and
alum. sidinp, Located at the edge of town. Call for an
appointment

ON THE EDGE Of TOWN you'll find an altro:tivestone oome
wrth more space itlan yoo ! ~nil 4 lariJ! BRs, formal &lt;1111n~
livmg room. famjy rllOII\ fireplace, 3 ballls. spacoos lulchen
and 2 car garage. Al lor ooly $65.000 and we'l itlrow 1n !he
nver view llee. don'l bellev&lt;! rt - Cal us and we'Utell yoo
mor•

ONLY $16,0001 - Can you believe you can stil
purchase a nice home lor this price? 2 bedrooms. living
room, lormal dining. bath, kit!:hen, enclOsed front
porch. Basement Slora(e building. Can lor an
appointment

CREMEENS ROAD - 53 acres 1110R1 or less. 10 A. ~
tilable. balance woods. rernodeleil
I ~ MAKE US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE MOVED
·stcries, 7 rms. and bath, new siding. new well, TO FLORIDA -And would like their home sold this
excellent 24x40 steel building. several old month. Uke new spirt level ~ is located on Oebby
Orive and offers approx. 3,1XXJ sq. It of living area
building.\ Only $37,500.
plus 2 car garage and oneol the area's nicest pools.
YOU'LL ENJOY LIVING HERE! Lovely brick ranch Over $100,1XXJ.
~I!IS 3 BRs, I~ baths, kit!:hen w/range and
~disposal, family room and living room Carpeting
and hardwood lloors. cent air, gas heat KC school

HEY MR. INVESTOR -You can lllOYe into this one
and pay your il'!Ymenls with the rent from the
ether two. Duplex. doubluide. and fenced pool
can be yours. Rear duplex oort is absolulely lovely.
Rustic walls, 3 BRs, loft. wood!Jumer, beamed
ceiUng.\ 3 BRs available in Iron! unrt with kit!:hen,
living room, chimney lor woodbumer, basement
bath. Ooublewide has 3 BRs, kitchen, living room
and bath.

NEW USTING IN TOWN - Sturdy brick oome on 41h Ave.
Altractive arched OOoroaY' and porch add lolhe charm. fuM
basement whldl ~ very dry, hasc~lar mom. smallworilsho;l
and some balh fixtu1es Rooms are large and spacKXJ&lt;
fweplace, breakfast nook. dm~g room, nled porches Y"d has
u11Que shrubbery I car g"age. Good stO&lt;age '" atlic.

This nice rorrle in1MdclepM
has been drastically reduced from $42.500 to
, $32,000. living room, formal dining room, bath, 2 1111. ·
luH basement, ' car prage, alum. siding,
11471
OWNER SAYS S(LL -

PRICE REDUCED- A
.HOME OF DISTIIICTIOII- ~
must see to ·~· 3 b!!di'OC!ms. I~ baths formal
dining. family room, equippejl kitchen, 2 fir8cuces.
·large llndscaped lawn, partially fenced. Storqe
buiding. Excellent .kltation. Call' '"' an appointment
tixlayl
•

.

ROONEY II - 3 BR, 6 room oome w~h siDrage buiding on
nice size lollndudes 1wo window air conditioners.
and
dishwasher. Priced in itle 30s.

""II'

teens.

U ACRES ON CHERRY RIDGE - bose I~ 100 Grande.
Gallipolis school~ Beautilul spot lor buildin~ Paved road.
Wooded area. Rural waler close. Drive by then call us.

liMI

=II.

QUICK -

Immediate ()OSSI!SSion.

Ul38

~ A~ ·2 bed~ .living room, formal ;
bath, f'nplace. Alumtnum siding. Garage. Nice .

.

'

, 11494 I

PIICED REDUCED SIO.Diio - f'tlmeroy. 3 bedroom
brick ranch slullad on I acre lot Kitchen will !lining:
..... !'Ofll;~ bath, ~ fuN basement OWniJi I
willlwlt Will op1on mbuy.
''~..''
, .

.. ·

.

,

•

lf402
I

- 62 acre farm.l New 3bedroom
~ ~ laiiDIIeied firm rome and a set~ .
,_., - • by lllemselves. Good fences Alfalfa
and ciMr lily. frae. Ill Call fOr ITIORI.
•
S(CUIII£D AI£A

- Owner has new position ool ol
~~~~~~:;J~_"r:~ stale of repair hof!l~ located in crty.
ne
yard lor pets. Storage buidin~
Aslling $44,900. Possible loan

2 rcnen.

114h

Ill

own ""' and veg. garden and be close to everylhin~

• $49,900.

$2&amp; 300 _; NOT A PENNY LESS - Owner has dropped h~
pnce so 1ow lhat $4 0011 ~~rz' to.'!.1Btmo. will buy itlis 2
8R oorre. H•·6nlfi l"L .-" ....
~ acre yard in city
sch0ol1 Yoo ~iirOiy renl for itlis. Paymenl indudes laxes
and insurance.

POMEROY - 2 story frame house on I acre lot 2
betlrooms, bath, living room. .2car garage. Priced in the

IIOVE

WANT A UnLE ROOM TO STRETCH - Here IS a2bedroom
oome on 91! acres only I mi~ llomcity hmils. 2bedroom wrth
full bosemenl Nat gas lurnace and 2 car garage. Raise yoor

II
I
I
SEE VINT()Ij FROM ROONEY - from thiS lovely warm
oomeyoo can on aclear day.Yoo appreaale !he floor plan I
lhe owner designed because everyth1ng .. cooven611 1nclud1ng he vow. And you can enjOy nthroo;gh theabundant I
w11100ws available w/o wmy111g about losing he.ll because rt
• well insulated. Well buill oome wrth living room. famiy room I
wrth
fireplace, lormal dinin&amp; 2
3 BRs. 2 car
garage
partial basement N1ce lol conta1ning
and I
patiO' Worry
for a full "'" wrth BUYERS PI«JTECTION
New islm&amp; so hurry.
I
167 A. FARM LOCATED 2 MilE SOUTH Of RIO GRANDE- I
m1le
ol S. R. 325on Cora-Cenlerpoml Road.Approx. 70
A. mce laymg ridge land lor Clop and pasture wnh some brush I
clearin&amp; Balance 1n good growmg limber with some ready lor
harvest Has ;.,ge llame barn with partial bUill sheds on lwo I
• des. Has other buildings and
Small tobacco base. No
oouse bul several ideallocalions to
Good water supply I
and GAS WELL Pri:ed al $85.000.
I
I
OFFICE CLOSEO ON SUNDAY - So
us a call at oome
We want to yoo 11101e aboullh• dean 3 BR
home I
on Neighborhood Road. Complete wrth 2 full
attractive
room. large eal;n kilchen and hardwood I
lloors. Natural 'gas heal. Allordajjy !&gt;'ICed al $45.000. Large
I
lot close lo lown.
I
NEW LISTING - Located 4 m1les south ollown. You1111nom1S I
oome very altractiv• When yoo walk
the llont
!he hardwood floors and beautiful ""'ft'a•binets w1U capture I
your altent~n The livin• ~· \J'I./
warm1ng fireplace,
ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE - $5.000 down will buy Ibis 2
~ory oouse. Older home rocentty rerrodeled in excelk!ot lasle
has 3 ~rge ill&gt;. 2 balhs,liv1ng room. famiy room.d1nmg room
and ;.,ge eal-in krtcllen. I car garage wnh workshop area 1n
back. Pnvale. fenced-in back yard~ 2 enclosed porches.
bock

WJII

I

~one

bath~

and

piXi

Free

PLAN.

START OUT ~IGHT - NICe n~ghborhood - Close lo
soop~ng wnh country atiOOSphere. N&lt;e home. clean an~ well
decorated w1lh 3 BR. 1~ bath~ aUradiVe eal~m k1lchen.l"ge
living room and 1 car garage. Start now by calling for more

mlo.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS _ Cozy 3 RO home2 m1~s wesl ol
Kyger Cleek Harnw~'
"~'"~ good v~
Excellent mortgagS()lD ~ .. ,..,,o11rt~s w1th ~w down
payment 1.91 acr.s tat~1n llrtchen. I balh 2 car

·lf4/S4

,.,port.

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER NEAR ADDISON
Altractive 4 bedroom ll&gt;level on Upper R•e~ Road 1n Kyge1
Cleek School Dislnd Srtualed on l&gt;lel 3 aCies lhiS oome
mcludes a lui~ eqUipped ~lch en, ~ m 1~ room, I ~ ba itl~
carport plus a 9Wib assumpl~n. $53,000.
OWNERS PURCHASED ANOTHER HOME - MUST SEll Your family will love the comfort and INeabllrty ol lhiS line 3
bedroom home ju~ a few blotks 11om downlown. There.IS a
large foy~r. a nee 20x20 lam1ly room w1th hreptace, equipped
kilchen, dining room. I ~ bath~ nat gas heal. central air and
good neigllborhood. Pncerl to sell. $53,000.
MAKE US AN OFFER - Ownern musl sell. This IS aquahly 3
bedroom home large enough lor the enlire lami~ and localed
'" a friend~ family-orienled n~ghborhood. Has alarge lamily
mom with ~one fir •place. 1~ balh~ equipped krtchen. d1mng
room. naL gas heal and central air. Pnced reduced to
$53.000.
WE'RE GmiNG ANXIOUS TO SELL TillS - Quafily brick
ranch with enlrance Ioyer, form~ dinin&amp; 3 bedrooms. YeiY
nice kilchen and 2 tar garage. ~ mile lrom Holzer Cenler and
convenient to soop~n&amp; city school. Located on aquiet streel
in good neigtloorhood. Owner will isten lo an offer.
OWNERS MOYING OUT OF TOWN- CITY SCHOOLS - Tho
is anice 3 be&lt;hoom brick and llameiK&gt;mejusl 2 miles Westol
taovn. lndudeS a warm and cort lireplace. full basemen! with
family .room. central air, garage and more. Call to see lhisone
IIX!ay. . .

31\ A. OR UP TO 17 ACRES - Wilh one oi lhestalely ~der
modern oomes in Clay Twp. Ju~offRt 7ooarCiay school. Has
4 8R hOuse, remodeled kilchen with wood stove. Home has
lots of slllrage area. Stone cellar altached. Frun trees.
Productive garden area
.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT Th~ is a spacious bricll ranch offering over 2200 SQ. fl ol
finished living area. Includes 3 bedrooms 112xl6 masier
suite), 2 bath~ equipped kitchen, 2 lovely fireplaces, lull
basement with 28' fi&gt;'llily room, eas furnace, prage pus
16146 barn and nearly 2h res. Owoors must selLMake us

an dfer.

~

we~

si~.
bu~d.

1wo

gn~e

1~1

br-~vel

bath~

L ~shaperf fO'II I ~

itlroo~

door

0".
leads to formal dinir.S()\.D ·"" ming effic61t kitchen. NICe
yard of over an acre ."rendsto the rNer and h.as several.tal
pines~ Owner saY' ""ghbols are fa~tasllc. Beautifulnver viE!W.

'FRONT YARD GOES TO TilE RIVER - You'll en10y itle view
itlis 1.3 lv;. lot pr1&gt;1ides almost as much as itle exceptionally
well decorated interilr 'Ill this 2 story home. features 3-4
bedrooms, lull basemen! with fireplace and &lt;lll&gt;ide enlrance.
wonderful kitchen lhat !he wittlwillove. formal enlrance hall.
formal dining living room with fireplace, t car garage ~us
much more! The yard is really landscaped nice and provides
maximum privacy whHe stil being within a mie of downtown
Don't lei anyooo Ileal yoo to Ibis one. Call todat.

...

I
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I
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yJ

CALL -US TODA
H N
.E
I
I
0
44 6 364 3
I
II
.

27 Mark : abbr .
29 Allude to
30 Theater box
31 Periods of
lime

32 Unll ol
Bulgarian
currency
33 Capuch in
monkey

34 Bad
35 Bog
36 Looked
intently
38 Annapolis' s
river
40 Deposil
41 Final
42 Form
43 Openwork
Iabrie
45 Savory
46 Negative
prefix
47 Sword
handle
48 Free tlr.kel

49 Plays
leading .
role
51 Pitch
52 Prefix: down
53 Worthless
leaving
54 Great Lake
55 Enduring
57 Affirmative

58 Dropsy
80 Sturl
61 Eleclrllled

65 Compass
point
66 Earth 's
satellite
67 Tender

69 M elanc h o ~ :
poet.
71 Succor
73 Vouth in

"The
Arabian
N tghts"
74 Pitfall
76 Weirder
79 Precipitous
81 Hawaiian
wreath
82 Crowd
84 Indian tent
85 Gems
87 Coarse
hominy
90 Insect 's
tactile
organs
9 2 Before
93 Chess
pieces
95 Rent
97 Kind of
hawk
98 Con junction
99 Printer 's
measure
101 Worker In
metals
103 Cravat
104 Fiber plant
105 Bishop 's
headdress
108 Edible seed
110 Dwelled
mo9dlly
11 2 Part of
skeleton
113 Naughty
114 French
article
115 Character In
''Othello''
11 7 Drinks

heavily
118 Part ol eye

particle
62 Vltal organ

119 Permits
120 Epistle:
abbr.
12 1 Entangle-

84 Saint: abbr.

men\

123 Footl ike

part
124
125
126
127
129

Location
Heap
Wine c up
Hatefu l
Parts of

p lay
13 1 Shopping
area
132 War g od
133L.air
134 Male
136 Smooth
137 Liquid
measure
138 Publish
139 Teutonic
deity
140 Competent
141 Born
142 Masculine
143 Takes from
144 Guided
146 Cosmet ic
148 Glistened
149 Individuals
150 Hebrew
festival
151 Soft drinks

DOWN
1 Gain
2 Carouse
3 River in
Germany
4 Cush ion
5 Symbol tor

lin

22 Venerated
23 Harbor
25 Long .
slender
fish
27 Sea sotdters
28 Most
gracious
30 Roster
3 1 Lampreys
33 lndtan
soldier
35 Beer
ingredien t
36 Alti tude
37 Dem•se
39 Large tub
41 Unit ol
Italian
currency
42 Cripple
44 Attempted
47 Domicile
48 Pertainmg
to a meal
49 More
ra!IOnal
50 Trap
54 Wears away
55 Attic
56 Welcomes
59 Make
beloved
60 Fuel
61 Supposmg
that
63 Bibhca t

weed

6 Platform

66 Roman

7 Path
8 River island
9 Symbol lor

67 Aun ntng
68 Baking

thoron
10 Looked
fixedly
11 Gills
12 A state:
abbr.
13 Egg-shaped
14 Whimpers
15 Martini
ingredient :
pl.
16 Deposit
17 Lat in
CQnjunc tion
21 Hold chair
of authority

1,050
d ishes
70 Most
mature
7 1 Snake
72 C)ufl ix: like
73 lelf·
assurance
75 Couneous
77 Withou t
end: poetic
78 Femaie rull
80.God of love
83 Greek teller
86 Part of
dress
88 Apporttol'l s

Rq Remunerated
90 Symbol for

•

lf(Jn

91 Concern1ng
94 Bend
96 Compass
potnt
98 Helps
99 Occurrence
100 Wander
Blmlessry
102 Expects
104 Corn cake
105 Part ner
106 Ingredient
107 Meals
109 Once more
11t Comes
down
112 Wagers
113 Gong
tt6 Span1sh for
" gold"
1t8 Hold on
property
1t9 Swing
122 Move
clumsily
124 Scoffs
125 Sheet of
glass
126 Gets up
128 Transact ions
t30 Day before
hOhday
131 Dtstance
r unner
132 Place for
combat
135 Roman
tyrant
137 Boy
attendant
138 Urge on
140 Consumed
142 Mtre
143 Wh ich
person?
144 Spa1n · abb r .
14 5 Prmter 's
mea su re
147 Faeroe
Islands
whirlwtnd
1~8

'
''

..
•

e

..
~

••

Steamshtp
abbr .

•

•
'•

.
~
\

'
''·

~
.
'

.•
'

••

p·

·

•'

~

"'
IKE WISEMAN, BROKER 446·3796
Jllol COCHRAN ASSOC. 446·7881
CLYDE WALKER, ASSOC. 245-5276
B. J. HAIRSTON, ASSOC. 446·4240
DAVID E. WISEIIAII, ~SSOC. 446-.3796

~··········~·~·········~···..·······....................

•
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••
..

io

•

••'

I '

�..

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·.

r'

\

Page-D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January e, .19M

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

. '

.·

Five hospitals served area residents prior to Holzer

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- Holzer Hospllal
began In GalUpolls In 1910, but It
was not the first hospllalln the Old
French City. In.facttt was about
sixth, by our
count, having
been preceded by
the U.S. Army
Hospital (186165); The Marine
Hospital (begun
In 1883); the Ohio
and Surgical Institute (1884-1887);
the Oho Hospital for Epileptics
(1893 to the present); and the
Galltpolls Private EpUepitc Hospltal (1896-98).
The buDding we feature today
was the second home for Holzer
Hospital having housed the medical
facility from 1914 to 1917. We are
uncertalr. of the age of the house. It
was at one time the office and home
of Dr. J. T. ~Janson, although'we do
not believe It was he who l&gt;uUt the
structure.
Of the five hospitals that preceded Holzer, the U.S. Army
• Hospital was the most unique as It
was housed In 1861 In at least five
different locations In town Including
HOLZER HOSPITAL - This Is the second home for Holzer
Union School and Gallipolis
Hospital, In this house at 1135 Second Avenue, known at the turn of the
Academy.
During the early fall of
century as the Dr. J. T. Hanson house. Holzer, the sixth hospital In
1861
there
were . at least 400
Gallipolis history, was begun In 1910 at 3IYl Second Avenue, moving to 1135
,
wounded
Federal
soldiers In the
Second Avenue about 1914. Holzer Hospital left 1135 Second Avenue In
Gallipolis
hospital.
1977, moving to First and Cedar where H remained until1972.
BY THE SPRING of 1862 the

army had constructed one hospital . venture.
brietl)'' as Mills and JohnstOII
on what would today be the grounds
James Johnston was born tn lA'l4 dissolved their partnenhlp.
\
of the · Gallipolis Developmental near GalJ!pOlls 11n4 was a graduate
The GalUpolla Private EpllPptlo
Center and for the remainder of the of Starling Medical CoUege In the _Hospital was actually the brain·
war both Federal and Contederate year 1817. Johnston set up practice &lt;lhUd of John Vanee who
mOIItly
soldiers were t.reated there. Thl$ In Kygervllle, where he remained responsible also for brlnilni the
fact explalri!nvhy there are so for 25 years. His wife was a Ohio Hospital for . Epileptics to•
manyunmarkedCivllWarsoldters' daughter of Asa and EJecta Brad- Gallipolis.
..
graves In Pine Street Cemetery.
bury, one of tile prominent KygerI was Vance's notion that thm!
The Marine Hospital began about ville famllles .
ouaht to be a half-way houte tor
1883 In the Our House and was
DVRING IDS 'PRACDCE at patten~ released from OHE to .
established by the government for KygervUle Dr. Johnston helped to make the transition back to the
the services of ailing rivermen. One popularize the water from the Blue community smoother. Obvloutly
of GalUpolis' doctors was usually Sulphur Springs (near Kygervtlle) this was a notion ahead of Ita time.
appointed as overseer of this and Its curative properties. In fact Dr. Johnston appears to have
facility which lasted well Into the about the same time Dr. Johnston served as the consulting inedlcal
20th century and was located at moved to Gallipolis In the 1lBls a doctor for this Vance venture.
other times In the house at 409 First resort was developed near KygerOF COVRSE, Holzer Hospital
and In the old hotel buDding which ville (today known simply as moved from tbe Hllll80n Houae In
today houses NAPA Motor Parts.
Kyger) where persons could stay In 1917 with the completion !1.111 own
WE HAVE RECENTLY given
luxury while "taking the cure."
buDding at First and Cedar wherj!
the early history of the Ohio
Johnston was for many years on they would be located for the next 1!6
Hospital for Epileptics and will not the Board of Pension Examiners years before moving to U.S. ~repeat ourselves herein. The other which handed out pensions tp Civil West.
two hospitals In early Gallipolis War .veterans; Johnston also was
In more recent' times Gatllpolla
were connected to Dr. James health officer of the county. During also had a hospital for • ·few years.
Johnston.
the CtvU War Dr. Johnston was at Fourth and Sycamore known as:
The Ohio Valley Medical and activelntheloyaiLeglonwhichwas theGalllpolisCIInlcHospltal,which.
Surgical Institute wsa located on an organization of commissioned mei:ged with holzer and became an
State Street and according to Its at officers of the Civil War. The doctor · out-station of tlje ho&amp;pltal, hanclllril'
treated "chronic diseases, skin was activie In pollttcs 'and twice ran ophthalmology and lll!l)eral
diseases, and deformities."
unsuccessfully for Congress.
practice.
·.
Dr. Mills, a brother-In-law of Dr.
. THE OHIO VALLEY Medical
Jamee Sandt' 1 ~I - Ia Iox IIi·
Johnston was a partner In this and Surgical Institute lasted onty ClarbburJ, Ohio 41115.

wu

-·.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Agriculture and CNRD
GalllaCounty
GALLIPOLIS - Our next Risk
Management · Farm Marketing
Meeting deals with the subject,

Exploration of a desk drawer reveals notes
parents of seven children, and there

are numerous direct descendants In
Gallipolis today ... and elsewhere.

IN 1797 COLONEL Robert Saf.
ford went alone by horseback to see
his mother In Vermont. He was
older than his brother, Dr. Jonas
French 500 moved In to previously
Safford, a Revolutionary War
buUt ~log cabins In What Is now the veteran and Vermont state legislaPublic Square. Robert was 96 years
tor. Dr. Jonas' home stiU stands
of age when he died July 26, 1863, In · 'today (1984) on the far slcte of· the
the middle of the Civil War. He Is
vault plant on Ohio 141. He Is burled
burled In Centenary Cemetery on a
In Pine Street Cemetery right next
hill back of Green Local School.
to his mother.

SUCH IS the case for this column.
It's like a meal of leftovers from
previous meals. The principal note
we have Is attributed to Frank Hill
under date of Aug. 6, 1982, and It
reads that Dr. Jonas Safford and
Col. Robert Safford, sons of Challis
and Lydia Warner, and the latter
(Robert) was born In Hardwick,
THE FRENCH remained beMass. July 7, 1768.
. cause the soU and climate suited
them. Col. Robert Safford - yeah,
ROBERT WAS 22 years of age we know, he wasn't a colonel untO
when he cut the &amp;st tree on the site later, but the "colonel" Is a klnda
of what later became Gallipolis trademark wtf him - married
and, of course, set the fliost foot on Catherine Cameron In 1'193, and she
the Old French City's area. The died In 1852. They became the

A SEPARATE no\e reads that Col.
Robert Safford's mother was Lydia
Fay, daughter of Jonathan and
Bethsheeba, late of Hardwick,
Mass. She was born Nov. 3, 1740,
and died at the residence of her son,
Robert, In GaUla County In 1828. She
was 88 years old.

Program will list new tax changes
'*

GUEST SPEAKER - Dr.
Dean Baldwin, Oldo State University, Extension Fann Markeang Specialist, wW speak on
the subject of the BrokerFarmer-Lender Pllltnershlp at .
the Tuet!day evening, Jan. 10,
Fann Marketing Meedng ·Prodnctloa Credit A8lloclatlon
lng, Upper River Road, GaDJpoUs. The meeting will begin at
7: 30 p.m.
·

Bund-

S-ALE

,.

SAVE ON QUALITY
WINTER CLOTHING
FOR THEENTlRE FAMILY.

SMITH SEEKS
SKYHAWK OWNER
We are making an e!!ort to locate Mercedes mad, so he took out and
passed ·h im at about !3l miles per · ·
the owner of the Buick Skyhawk
hour.
mentioned In the following report.
Tht.s really took the' man In the
It seems that a Skyhawk bearing a
West VIrginia· license plate, ran out Eldorado by surprise and when he
arrived In Columbus, he drove up to
of gasoline about 40 miles from
Columbus, and Onally a long, low the Orst Buick Si&lt;ybawk dealer and
asked the Skyhawk dealer to trade In
Mercedes stopped to ask him If be
his riew Eldorado Convertible for one
~uld help. He fortunately had a tow
of thole brand new Buick Skyhawkl.
rod In his car and agreed to tow him
Although the dealer wasn't exacUy
Into Colwnbus.
too surprbed, as buslneu had been
Before starting up, however: he
advised the fellOw In the Skyhawk very good that week, he did think tt a
that he was lncllned to do a lot of Uttle odd and asked the man why?
The customer replied, '"On my
speeding, and although he would try
to keep It down, hes'uggestedlhat the way. Into town on that flat stretch, I
fellow In the Skyhawk blow his hom was going about as fast as I could
and a Mercedes,went by me going to
If he was going too last. Or even blink
his Ughts, as maybe he couldn't hear beat the devil . That cllc!n't particularly bother me, but J1ght on his tall
the hom.
was a SkyhaWk who was goll!l just •
So they ambled along at a pretty
as . fast, but so dam mad at the
good rate and pretty soon an
EldoradO Convertible passed them · Mercedes, he was btowtn' his horn
both going about 95 miles per hour. and even bllnldng his lights trying to
get the 1fellow to ·move over so be
This made the fellow In the
could pass him."

.Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.
1911 Eastern Ave

. .

SERVIC E HE DUU ARTER S ~OH

A TOTALLY UNIQUE
IN MEMORIALS

Complete System Includes: ,

· •7'4" Danex Powder .Painted Steel Spun
· Aluminum Dish
·
•Janeil B~R·Z~ Receiver (wltlt cord typ~ remote) •
•Amplica U0° LNA
.
.
•CIItpparral Polarotpr II (for instant polarity switchin&amp;)
•SRS 3" SLM Polar Mount
.
·
•SRS Quad Pod Feed Sy::tem
•'125' Complete Cable Set
\.

*KELVINATOR
*SPEED QUEEN
*WARM MORNING
*SUNRAY
*LITTON

985-3307

Gallipolle, OH.

JANUAR·Y SPECIAL

*ZENITH
*SYLV:ANIA

RIDENOUR'S

TV &amp; AP~~MtCE
GAsSER
CHESTER, OH.

~

.

I

Regular
Price. '1945.00 plus tax and
. Retail
.
. installation

·'15 sooo

SPECIAL SALE PRiCE

- (Tu and lnlllllltlon Is Atldttlenli)

~OGAN

~~5-JSIUJl:o

MQNUMENT COMPANY, INC.

VINTON, OHIO
· James 0 . .lulh. Mgr.

Scholarship winner

Story, photo Page 3

Photo on Page 5

'

POMEROY. OHIO
Ph. 992.2188

."

.

'

enttne

h

Vot.32,No.lll

'
1 Section , 10 Paget , 20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 io, Monday, January 9, 1984

CopyrJthlod 1914

================~-

Glenn's acid rain plan
draws mixed reviews
'

,.

•

.....,...lll""'rmJREAG.\N- FC!rme.t ~ he~Idellt Waller MDndaletold
a paeked co erence on acid rain that l'l'eSident Reagan did not accept
an Invitation to speak because he has nothing to say about acid rain.
Mondllle was among six of the Democratic presidential contenders lo
appear at the conference this weekend: (AP Laserpholo).

worst offender, we think it Is a very
Important step."
The Ohio governor's office says
The Ohio Democrat presented his
Sen. John Glenn's acid rain cleanup proposal at a weekend International
plan Is "progressive" and an conference on acid rain In Bedford,
· environmentalist says It Is "cour· N.H.
ageous," but a utility Industry
Glenn proposed financing acid
lobbyist says Glenn Is playing rain cleanup through a tax on
poUtlcs with the Issue.
electricity In 31 states, Including
"I think where Glenn said It, In Ohio. The tax would create a fund to
New Hampshire, and what he's aid ut tlltles and Industries In adding
doing there, running for president, · smokestack scrubbers and other
says It aH," said C. Luther equipment to reduce sulfur dioxide
Heckman, aformerchalrmanofthe emissions.
Glenn's proposal would reduce
Public UtUities CommlssionofOhio,
.who now heads the Coalition for sulfur dioxide emissions by 8mllllon
Environmental-Energy Balance. tons a year by 1993, he said.
The coalition represents utUity and
It would aU but ban switching
labor interests.
from high-sulfur coal to lessGov. Richard Celeste, who has polluting low-sulftir coal to meet
been reluctant to support acid rain emission standards.
legislation because of possible harm
"We're pleased that Sen. Glenn's
to Ohio's coal industry and Ohioans' blll addresses the concerns of coal
consumer utUity costs, considers miners In Ohio who want to keep
Glenn's plan "the most progressive their jobs," CosteUo said.
yet," said Paul CosteUo, the
According to theGlenncampalgn
governor's press secretary.
staff, the tax on electricity would
Steve Sedam of the Ohio Environ· last unt U 1999 and would cost
mental Council said Ohio environ· residential customers, In the 31
mentalists will consider Glenn's states an average of $1.25 a month.
proposal "a very courageous act.
Heckman maintains the cost for
We · don't consider what he Is Ohio ratepayers would probably be
P!WPS!!:ti to be perfect, but consid- morebecauseOhlowlllhaveamuch
ering that · It wUI mean major higher . quota to meet on sulfur
reductions In acid rain and consider- dlwdde reduction than most states.
Ing the fact It came from a man who
"There's no doubt the tax would
comes frot;n the state which Is the create a pool of money to use for

Installing scrubbers and that would
ease the effect on the ratepayers,"
Heckman said. "But Instead of

paying for It through electric rates,
(the ratepayer) would pay for It In
taxes."

ACID RAIN PROPOSAL- Sen. Jolm Glenn of Ohio lellsdelep&amp;es
at an lnternatlonal conference on acld rain that electric
CUitGmen Ia 11
would pay 8bout SU$ a monih to dean
up acid rain If his proposal is adoll'ed by Congress. Glenn said he wW

~

EMtena.....,.

Introduce legislation that would protect Industrial jobs affected by
changes In poUutlon regulatloll'i and would clean up the atmosphere.

(AP La.serphoto ).

Mondale, Cranston blast President's acid rain policies
BEDFORD, N.H. (AP)- Democratic presidential
contenders Walter F . Mondale and Alan Cranston
blasted President Reagan on Sunday for falling to
combat acid rain, but each offered sharply differing
approaches for fighting the pollutant.
"Ronald Reagan thi.nks that people who care about
the environment are extremists," Cranston told a
packed conference on what some bellevels the nation's
most urgent environmental threat. "Ronald Reagan Is
wrong. It Is he and his administration who are the
extremists ...
"It's extreme to endanger the health of the people ...
by pretending there's no such thing as acid rain," the
California senator said.
Mondale said he understood why Reagan didn't
accept an Invitation to address the conference.
"I don't blame him. If 1 had a record on the
environment like his, as lousy as his Is, I wouldn 'tshow
up either," Mondale said.
At the conference, American environmentalists
from ~states joined with a contingent of Canadians In

calling for a 50 percent reduction In sulfur dioxide
emissions In both countries by 1990.
The proposal would requtre a 12-miUion-ton cut In
emissions of the pollutant believed to be chiefly
responsible for acid rain, which Is blamed for
poisoning lakes and wreaking-other environmental
havoc In the U.S. Northeast and eastern Canada. The
,goal Is that contained In the toughest major bUls
pending' before the U.S. Congress. On Saturday,
another Democratic presidential contender, Sen. John
Glenn, DOhio, proposed a bUI calling for reducing
sulfur dioxide emissions by 8 million tons a year by
1996.
Four other Democratic presidential contenders,
Glenn, Gary Hart and Ernest HoUtngs and the Rev.
Jesse Jackson, earlier blasted Reagan for his "acid
leadership."
Mondale endorsed a tax or fee on electricity to pay
for an acid rain control fund, a proposal found In
several bills pending before Congress and one Glenn
said he plans to Introduce. But Mondale said the tax

should be designed to make the worst polluters pay the
most, something not found In many other plans.
"Today, dirty air and acid rain Is good business, we
must make it had business. Polluters must pay more,"
Mondale said.
Hesaldhehadnospecificplanformakingthecharge
faU more heavily on polluters. One plan backed by
Northeastern governors has such a feature, however.
It would raise money with two taxes, one on electricity
and one on poUution-generattng Industries and plants.
Mondale said the 48 contiguous states should
contribute to the proposed' acid rain fund. Other plans,
Including Glenn's, would burden only the 31 Eastern
states.
Cranston said the key to cleaning up acid rain is
reducing utility generating plant emissions by
reducing elecricity use. He said any one of three steps
In his national energy plan could cut sulfur dioxide
emissions In half by 1990.
His energy plan would set efficiency standards for
major appliances, create incentives for co-generating

electricity and set efficiency standards for electric
motors and lights.
Co-generation Is generating electricity with
Industrial energy that normally would be wasted.
Cranston said his program would reduce pollution
because old coal-fired plants would be retired, as
would nuclear plants, by the year mi.
The use of renewable energy sources - Including
solar, wind and hydro-electric- would be more than
doubled and savings from conservation would be
doubled, he said.
He rejected the use of scrubbers to clean up smoke
stack emissions at power plants. "Those preferring
scrubbers should pay for them, not share their cost
with those already paying alone the costs of damage
from acid rain," he said.
Cranston said his proposals "are simple, commrnon
sense measures that will make It possible to end the
damage from acid rain. They will cut - not raise electric bllls ... (and) make our economy more
productive."

Another Marine .
killed in Lebanon

Chin~se -P remier

arrives for talks
WASHINGTON. (AP) - The matte .exchanges on the question
Reagan administration wUI explore .. between Washington and Peking.
with Chinese Premier Zhao Ztyang
He wou.Jd not discuss these
this week tile use of Chinese approaches but said that the United
tnnueneetoretntnwhatWashlngton States does feel that "the Chinese
views as a "murderous" and have been acting to reduce tenslolts
Increasingly. dangerous regime In and the posslbUity of war In the
North Korea.
(Korean) peninsula."
"The whole Issue Is so Important
that we j(eep looking for new
"They have an Interest In so
openings," said one senior U.S. doing," he said. "The R.:lngoon
official.
·
atrocity underscores just how
. "We hope somethlng positive murderous and serious the North
could be nudged along'' (with Korean government Is. u • .
China) ," he said. "But It Is such a
He added: "I think ·the Chinese
difficult problem that you can't get hav!! lnli\Jence, and It's worth
your hoPI!S up."
exploring. We certainly Intend t~do
puna has longsupportedco'lliTlu- · that during tll!'! visit."
nlst North Korea and Its leader, Kim
Premier Zhao Is scheduled to
confer with President Reagan at the
D-Sung.
,
But indePendent analysts report White House on Tuesday and to
ihat Peking was "aghasl" and . meetwtthanuml;lerofothertopU.S.
"appalled" at the attempted assas- · leaders,lncludlngSecretary of State
stnatlon of South Korea's President George P. Shultz and Defense
1
Cbun . Doo-Hwan In Rangoon, · Secretary Caspar Weinberger.
· Bwma lilst Oct. 9tn an attack th!lt
'
killed senior members of the South
The ChineSe leader arrived ln.
Cabinet.
VIrginia late Sunday and was
· · 'The senior U.S. official, who expected to spend part· of today
, ·cllacussed the IssUe on the condition BlghtaeeiJii at Colonial Wlll1amshe not be ldenWied by ~· llllld burg before flying . to Waslllngton :
· ~ have beeil numel'(m dlplo- l!lls attermon.

.

Korean

,

· Leo Vaughan, Mgr:

•

aily

he

'

Braker· Farmer-Lender understand the advantages of this
Partnership.
"partnership" systems.
Purpose of this topic Is to
3 - To have students better
demonstrate how cooperation be- unilerstand the o~ns of aervlceti
nefits all parties. Farmers who that could be provided by brokers
market grain may use credit to and lenders.
meet margin calls. Lenders can
The meeting Is scheduled for 7: :II
reduce pricing risk on loans by p.m., Tuesday evening, Jan. 10, at
encouraging their clientele to have the Production Credit Auoclatlon
a well-developed marketing stra- Building, Upper River Road, Galli·
tegy. Some lenders may not polls, Ohio.
understand hedging or Its Impor- · Refreshments wiD be courtesy of
tance. Lenders also face rlaks that the Ohio Valley Bank.
•.. ~
farmers and brokers will make
Last week's refreshments were
decisions wtihout cnsulting them, courtesy of Ohio Valley Uvestock
even though the lender Is a part of Co.
the transaction.
'
The broker, through cooperation
PubUcations available at tbe
with the farmer and lender, may Extension Offlc;e, 1502 Eastern
Increase the number of clients.
Ave., Gallipolis.
Specific· objectives .for the meet1-1984GardenCalendar,$2pl'us
tax
•
Ing are:
• · 1 - To make students aware of
2 - Agronomy Guide, $2.!50 plus
the need for communication and tax
understanding bet'ween the brker,
3 - Farmers Tax Guide - No
farmer · and lender In hedging Cl)arge
transactions.
4 - Farm Cust0111 Rates Paid In
2 - To help students better Ohio, 1983 - No Charge.

r;::::::::::::=======:::::::::;;:;;:;;:;;:;-l
January Clearance

WE ARE YOU R SALES

S_tiper Bowl bound

benefits all parties

Meigs County agent's comer

By JOHN C. RICE
.
quite Informal In their bQrrowtng
...comprehensive
approach from
Extel&amp;on Agent
and lending procedures. In many
Agriculture, Meigs County
Instances, farmers have been able lenders, Lines suggests that
POMEROY - Income Tax to successfuUy negotiate a loan farmers need to learn how to use
Update- Wednesday, Jan.llfrom armed with only a seed corn booklet anti understand th!:ee financial
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Meigs Inn In of notes, a smile, a sound balance statements: the balance sheet - to
• Pomeroy. The program will con- sheet, and a reputation for paying address the solvency Issue; tbe
tncome statement - to address the
tain the new tax changes, PIK bills.
program In regards to taxes, and
When other businesses request profltabutty question:
plenty of time for questions and . loans, however, lenders usually ask
answers. The program wUI be
for five years of CPA-audited
conducted by me and the H &amp; R fnanctal
statements. And now,
BLock Company. There will t&gt;e no lenders are changing their standlunch available at the Meigs Inn.
ards for farm loans. Their emphaParticipants wUI be on tl!elr own for sis Is broadening from "balance
lunch.
sheet" lending to a more complete
Power Show In Columbus- Jan. ' assessment of the loan request.
27-29, 1984 at the Ohio State
Lenders will be using three
Fairgrounds. The show will open at criteria for assessing loan requests
noon on Friday. Hours will be 9 a.m.
from farmers, says Allan Lines,
to 5 p.m. except Friday, Jan. 27.
Extension economist at The Ohio
Closing time on Friday will be 7 State Unlverstcy. They are: solp.m. The Power Show Is large and vency- the l!bUity to pay all debts;
will feature construction, agricultuliquidity - the abUity to pay
ral, recreational, and lawn and current debts; and profltabUtty garden equipment. We have free the ability to earn a profit.
tickets at our office.
These aren't new Ideas · that
Pork Profits - A five-part series lenders are beginning to apply just
on por~ production and marketing to farm loans. They are used with
outlook for 1984 wUI be shown on TV virtually all other busineSses. Actustarting Sundays, Jan. 8 at noon.
ally, they aren't new to farmers
The programs will be shown on either; It's just that they've been
WOUB-TV, Channel 20 from
referred to In other terms and
Athens.
phrases, such as, . "It won't cash
Applying For Farm Loans flow," "I'm making money," "pay·
Many lenders are going to be asking back· period," "return on Investfor more Information whe~ farmers
ment," and "bankrupt" to express
apply for loans. Historically,
the same Ideas.
farmers and lenders have been
To be . .
' .

January 22.1984

Story, photos, Page 4

griculture and our community

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Dairy:
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - If you will explore your desk drawer to start the new
year it's likely that you will discover some notes made In 1983 ... and fo~ ol'
Peeps the discovery could lead to the first Peeps column of 1984. That's not
phrased exactly correctly; it cOuld lead to materials from which the first
Peeps column of 1984 could be written.

Tampa, Florida

Editorial Page 2

A

C~peration

Tomadoettes beaten

Economic upswing

..

PREMIER~- Chlnele Pi'emledhao Zlyangstepsfrom
a presidential plane upoil arrival at·Langley Air Force Bille, Va.11po11
lrrtval from Hawaii S!md83' nlpt. The premier rode to Wllllamllburg
w11ere he wiD tour the oolcitilal Vlrglnkl capital before movlna on to
Wuldllpoa for a meetiq with Preslden&amp; Reagan later today. (AP
Luerphoto).
.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (API - U.S.
Navy heUcopters today landed
Marines tightened security today troops on the broad sidewalk of the
foUowlng an ambush which killed an boulevard stretching between the
American corporal, and pollee said British and U.S. Embassy buildings
six people were killed In new fighting Instead of the previous landing zone
between Druse and Christian mUlti- at a beach below the road where
Sunday's attack occurred.
amen south of Beirut.
PoUce said rival militias were
The half-mOe stretch of the
engaged In battles with mortars, boulevard' between the two em bas·
rocket-propeUed grenades and rna· sies is sealed off by waist-high
chine guns this morning In the concrete barriers and manned by
Kharroub region, 20 mlles south of Marine guards on both sides, while
Belrutandthreemllesfromlsrael's the former landing zone about 500
ffront Une along the Awall River. yards southward Is guarded by
Pollee said all six casualties were Lebanese troops.
civilians.
The chief Marine. spokesman,
Despite the fighting, negotiators Maj. Dennis Brooks, Identified the
met again today In Riyadh, Saudi dead Marine as Cpl. Edward J.
Arabia, In an effort to resolve final Gargano of Quincy, Mass., and said
detaUs of a proposed security plan his body would be flown back to the
that would disengage Lebanon's United States as soon as possible.
warring factions and stabilize an
Gargano was killed when-gunmen
often-broken tease-fire.
.
fired two rocket-propelled grenades ·
In west Beirut, the Marines at a 12-man detail of U.S. Marines
moved their heUcopter landing zone · who had been unloaded on the beach
several hundred yards northward · byaCH46SeaKntghthellcopter.No
ori the main seafront · boulevard group claimed responsibility for the
following a guerr!Ua attack Sunday attack.
In Riyadh, foreign ministers Elle
that killed a Marine. He was the
258thmemberoftheU.S.conttngent Salem of Lebanon, Prince Saud
of tbe multinatio'nal force killed ai-Falsal of Saudi Arabia, and
since the Martnes arrived In Abdui-Hallm Khaddam of Syria
Lebanon In September 1982.
met for the second straight day

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