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'

12-The

Sentinel

Local briefs:·-- Plans...

(Continued trom paae 1)
also l!e llled for other purposes such
as banquets, aerobic dancing,
tournaments.
Such a facUlty could not only
provide an atmosphere for peyslcal
fitness but would also serve as a
!lQlrce Of pride for aU Meigs
Countians, O'Brien said. Programs
would be oriented for all ages of
people.
R.ogJ!r Stewart, a committee
member, said that the planned
structure would be a metal type
building with brick veneering and
would be maintenance free for ~

Maintenance project scheduled
A highway maintenance project for Gailla, Meigs and Athens
counties has been planned by the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
· Rep. Jolynn Boster, O.Galllpolls, said the project w111 cost $6l,lm
and wUl upgrade highways In all three counties by replacing raised
pavement markers and refiectors.
The project wlll be let for bids In March, with a contract expected
to be awarded In AprU.

Buchanon gets maximum sentence
Roy Buchanon, 51, Coolvllle, was given the maxbnum sentence
Thursday when he appeared before Meigs County Coort Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien on charges of operating a motor vehicle while
under the lnfiuence of alcohol and driving with no operator's license.
Buchanon entered a plea of "no contest" to the driving while
Intoxicated charge and "guilty" to the chjlrge of driving without an
operator's license. He was sentenced to six months In the county jail
on the DWI charge and ::Kl days on the no operator's Ucense charge. In
addition, Buchanonwasflned$l,lmpluscostsontheDWichargeand
$250pluscostsonthenooperator'sllcensecharge. JudgeO'Brlenalso
ordered that Buchanon have delivered to the court the registration
and license plates to the 1974 auto he was driving when arrested and
that If Buchanon should obtain a driver's license, It will be suspended
for a period of five years.
Buchanon was cited Wednesday at Sgt. E.J.SheetsoftheOhloState
Patrol while traveling northbound on Route 7, according to Paul
Gerard, Investigator for the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred
w. Crow, Ill.
Gerald said a routine check of prior traffic offenses disclosed that
Buchanon had seven prior convictions for driving while Intoxicated
since 1981. Judge O'Brien described Buchanon's driving record as
"Unbelievable - the worst I have ever seen", Gerald reports.

'

Square, round and slow danclngw111 be featured at the Ell Dennison
Post467, American Legion, Rutland Saturday night from9p.m. until I
a.m.
Therew111 be a live band, snackbarandrefreshmentstand. Donations
w1ll be accepted at the door.
Dances are held at the Post every Satruday night. After Feb. 1,
admission w1ll be $2 per person and children under 12 w111 be charge
$150. The public Is welcome to attend.

Squads answer four calls
Four calls were answered by local units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 11:09 p.m. Thursday, Pomeroy went to E. Main St. for Marvin
Darst who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
7:02 p.m: tnok Robert Rinehart from 318 Rutland St. to Veterans
Memorial. At 6:!18p.m. the Chester Fire Department went to the Bob
Elberfeld home at Five Points for a chimney fire. At 12:!18 a.m.
Friday, Racine went to Durst Ridge Road for Lonnie Dalley who was
dead upon arrived at Veterans Memorial.

----Weather:--.

The rough drawing presented to
those attending last night's session
was done by- Stewart and another
committee member, Fenton
Taylor.
Robert Gilmore, a committee
member who as a Middleport
Village Council member has been
Interested In the establishment of a
civic center, spoke on the site
selection by the committee.
Gilmore said that the committee
liked the central location of the
Pomeroy site, and the 24 hour fire
and pollee protection which w1ll be
provided along with free water and
the fact that the recreational facility
would be c~ to the hospital and
senior citizens center. The land w111
be given free by the commissioners.
Pomeroy w1ll also pniVIde free
sewage as well as. water, w111
maintain ~ parking area and w1ll
help In other directions.
Mrs. Yonlece Miller, another
member of the committe, spoke on
financing the project. She emphas·
!zed the need for an enthustiastlc
attitude on the part of aU people of
the county. She spoke on tax levy
figures pointing out that a o:te nilll
levy would generate not only
opet'lltlng funds for the facillty but
would provide additional moneys
which could be used to help aU youht
organizations. She spoke on the
possibilities of state and federal
grants, private rorporatlon contrt·
butlons, local business contrlbu·
lions, private donations, out of
county membership sales and
Income from charges on special
activities.
O'Brien said that theiX)mmlsslon·
ers had been In touch with Robert
Wingett, Syracuse; publisher of the
Ohio Valley Publlsh1ng Co., and the
Meigs County Commissioners In
regard to the possibilities for grants
to buDd the facillty and the
committee Is encouraged.
Acoupleofstatementsweremade
from the Door In regard to the
location of the planned facillty In
Pomeroy. However, O'Brien, who
lives In Rutland, Indicated that the
committee feels the facillty would
be In a central 'location by being
placed on Mulberry Heights In
Pmteroy. Carolyn Thomas, one of
the residents attending the meeting,
drew applause when she spoke
urging people to forget their
community locations arid to pull
together for the facillty which
~:Veryone needs.

I "erphoto Map).

Extended Ohio forecast
.

I

SUNDAY THROUGH TIJESDAY:
Fair through period. Chance of rain or snow Monday. Highs In the
mld-D; to the mld-4Qs Sunday and In the ;n; Monday and Tuesday.
Lows In the ms.

Spring-like weather ending
By The Alllioclated Pl'e88
-The almost spring-like weather of the last two days w1ll come to an
end today and tonight.
A cold front wa.S to move across Ohio this morning, ushering In a
good deal of cloudiness. High pressure following on the heels of this
storm front w1ll arrive over Ohio tonight, partially clearing skle5 and
brlrtl!inllmuch cooler air.
terrmeJrallltres will be close to 40 degrees In most areas today,
but
thecoldfrontcouldstartthemercuryfalllngslowly.
The mercury w1ll ran more sharply tonight with the arrival of high ·
presaure. Lows w1ll range from around 15 degrees In the north to the _
mld-ms In the south.
The high w1ll move rapidly to the east on Sunday, and wanner air
w111 begin making Its way back Into Ohio ahead of the neXt storm
center moving out of Canada. This next low pressure area w111 move
out of the Canadian prairies and across the Great Lakes Saturday
night. It may cause some snow In northern Ohio by Saturday
afternoon.

Stewart Indicated the Interest of
churches In the plans for the facility
and Bruce Reed, another commit.
tee member, said the facillty would
be a big "plus" for Industry seeking
a location.
O'Brien Indicated that committee
members w1ll hold many public
meetings with groups to talk about
the facUlty and to seek support. Cost
of the buDding frame with rough
Installations has been estimated at
$169,00&gt;.
O'Brien announced also that the
committee w1ll seek to have an
operational tax levy on the ballot at
the May election.
Meigs County Commissioner
Manning Roush said that the
commissioners are 100 percent
behind the ~atlonal facility
plans and Eber Pickens, a member
of the committee, said that uniting of
thevartousemergencyunitslntothe
county emergency medical sem·
ces has broughtalloltheunitscloser
than ever although at first then!
were community location dltferen·
ces. He said he felt the recreational
facWty would also bring communi·
ties of the county closer together.
Announcements were made to the
effect that Feeney-Bennett Post 128 ·
Is 100 percent behind the plan as Is
Robert Melton, pastor of the
Middleport Church of Christ.

s

By The Alllloclated Pl'e88
HUlTicane-foroe winds that hurled a van down a cliff lashed
California today, whipping brush fireS out ol contrpl and knoCking
(R!t .power for half a mllllon, euslmlers,..and..inore rain swelled_

rivera II! the Oood·ravagal Northwest
Three people died In the windstorms with ll\ISt8 up to 100 .mph
'111ursday, ~1\ldlng the driver ol the van, a .YOIIemlte park Worker
· ~ by a·tfee &amp;nd a man electrocuted by a dowlied power line.
In the Pacific N(ll'thwest, rain this ~ threatened to further
bloat Ice-Jammed rivers that have forced hundreds it pec;!ple to flee
floodwaters. Temperatures were expected to remain Wen aboVe
.tree21Dg', with snowmelt swelllna' the waterways.
·
ElsewheJ'e, up to 31nches of IIIOW ~Michigan and dense
__patcbes .ot tilg_d.escende.d on Keittuci!;Y••~. Ai;ka.r!sas_and
Alabama.
~

.,

,_

_:__ _ _: _____,L,_

51-44 basketball victory •••C-4

Vol. II No. 41

Deellw ........................... .. A-6

Weather
forecast. .. A-3

Edllorlel .......................... A-Z
8poris ............................ C-1-8

tntitttl
10 Sections, 70 Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

SundayI January 29, 1984

Johnston .found guilty in mutilation slayings
'TWAS THE 8EA80N- SaalaCJaus Ia ihe~ru~~
M lhe ChlapMy hame Ill
Ohio" nOt a lip of
Irreverence. II merel,y l""'cttee lluJ&amp; their 'lfe-lllle
pllllllc lawa decoration met fatal IDJury when their

Du.,..,

whea

-

a~ne-~
Keith broke ott the teet
11e .
IICdde •Qy ldclred a bMiretbaiJ Into 1t. Carol
Chlapaty wuhel! tilt! family car Weclneldi.Y while
wallln1 for the lflll'llap! men to do their du&amp;y. (AI'

Luerpllli&amp;o).

,,

.

-

Deadline T:uesday for HEAP registration
Tuesday Is the deadline for
eligible households to receive help
on their utWty bills by signing up for
HEAP.
Residents are eligible If they are
renters or homeowners. and their
total household lncomeforthelast12
months Is less than 150percentofthe
federal Income poverty guidelines
fori~.

For example, a one person

I Area deaths I

household can have Income up to · or for those whose fuel service has
$7,290; a two person household up to alreadybeendlaconnecteed,lhlirels.
$9,810; a three per!IOn household up

to $12,3.ll.
The Senior Citizens Center has
two HEAP outreach workers,
Donna Williamson and Noreen
Ondruslro who w1ll be glad to help
residents with applications or
answer any questions. Residents
may go to the center of Mulberry
Helghtsorcall992-2161.

FRJQAY

The Rev. James E. Mahoney, 91,
O&amp;kdale, Calif, died Oct. 22,1983and
16 days later his wife, Gladys F'.
Mahoney, 90, died at her residence
In Oakdale.
Both were burled at Oaklawn
Cemetery, Oakdale.
. The Rev. and Mrs. Mahdnf.ywere
former residents of Meigs County.
He owned and operated a print shop
while living In Meigs County. He
served the United Brethren and
Methodist Churches In California, :
Arkonla and Utah.
Local SUJV!vor Is Joann Vaughan
a niece of Mrs. Mahoney.

HaJTyHill
· Harry Hill, 57, of Lodl, died
ThursdayattheAkronCII}'Hospltal
after a long illness.
BornatRaclneon~31.1926,

he was the son of ~tile Beaver Hill
andthetateHennanL.HW.Besldes
his father, he was p1eceded In death
byadaughter,Diane,andabrother,

·Dance at Rutland Civic Center
Friday from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Music
by ltomlc Sounds. Admission $2 a
slngleand$3a couple.

SATURDAY
A shower w1ll be held for Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Carr whose home was
destroyed by fire recent ley at Uncle
Bob's Chicken Palace Saturday
from 5op.m. 11.8 p.m.
Glory Land Believers w1ll be
featured at the Ash Street FreewUI
Baptist Ch•1rch, Middleport Saturday at 7: ::Kl .,.m. The public Is Invited
to attend.
SUNDAY
All day services will be held at the
Mt. Carmel Baptist Church Sunday
sponsoredbythel..aymen'sLeague.
SundaySchoolat9: ::Kla.m.; morning
worship at 10:45 a.m. afternoon

Thefl8 being probed
Two reported thefts are being

GObert.
. .
He Is survived by his mother,
Mattie Hill, now of Columbus; his
wife, BoMie Leathers Hill, five
daughters, Mrs. Jel\11 Neff, Mrs.
Maye Wilkinson, Mrs. Emma
BranhamandCaroiHW,.aUotLodl;
and Mrs. Crystal Gass, New York;
,..:: and "'• om,
three sons, Dan , Char..,
aU of the Lodl community; 12 ,
grandchildren, five step·

Michael Allen Tillis, 25, Rt. ·1,
Rutland and Teresa Renee Hut·:
tman, 25; Rt. 3, Pomeroy, were
Issued a marriage license In Meigs:

Investigated
by the Meigs ·County
SherUf
s Department.
Jeff Miller, Rt.l, Middleport had
his car parked on the parldrig lot at
MelgsHighSchoolThursdaywhena
set speakers was takeri from the
vehicle.
Gene Jeffers, Rt. 2, Albany
reported Thursday that a chain saw
was taken from a storage buDding
durlngthenlght.

J

services at 2 p.m. The Rev. Melvin ·
Freeman w111 bethespeaker. Voices
United w111 be featured at the
afternoon services. Everyone
welcome.
MONDAY
A special meeting of Eastern
Athletic Boosters w1ll be held
Monday to make plans for the
upcoming fifth and sixth grade
basketball tournainanet. Teams
will be drawn. Those Interested are
urged to attend.

'lUl!DAY
Salem Township Trustees w111
meet Tuesday at 9: ::Kla.m. at Salem
Fire Station.

Correction
The Gallla·Melgs Community
Action Agency and the Adult
Education Department of .Tr1·
County Vocational School w1ll meet
at the Pomeroy JTPA office
Tuesday, January 31, at 1 p.m. not
Sunday as was reported.

fir=========•
UNCLE BOB'S
1
IC en Pa ace

Ch • k

FRIDAY NIGHT ·
GUY THOMA
SATURDAY NIGHT
LONE WOLFE BAND
8:30·12:30

LOGAN, Ohio (AP)- DaleN. Johnston was found
guilty Saturday afternoon of two counts ol aggravated
murder In the mutilation slaylngs of his stepdaugher
and her fiance.
Each of the two counts carries death penalty
specifications. Sentencing w1ll be determined after a
second hearing, yet to be scheduled.
The judges returned the verdict after two hours of
deliberations, which began at 12:::Kl p.m.
Johnston, 50, stood quietly, but his face blanched as
the judges read the lengthy verdict convicting him of
the slaylngs of Annette Cooper Jol)nston,18, and Todd
Schultz, 19, both of Logan.
Although the spectators In the packed courtroom
listened to the verdict quietly ,'cheering could be hear
outside In the hallway on the third floor ol the Hocking
County Courthouse.
Johnston was Immediately hustled out of the
courtroom by a _cadre of Hockini County sheriff's

Earlier Saturday, defense lawyer Robert Suhr

argued that Johnston was chosen as a scapegoat to
ease the terror that the gruesome killings caused In
this southeastern Ohio city of about 6,Em.
"You can't have people from a city like Logan In a
county like Hoelting going out of their minds about
some unlalown person or persons who would do that to
people ... he said.
He also argued that the kUtlngs, which OCCUlTed In
October 1982, could have been done by more than one
person In a kind of cult ceremony.
"They were cut up, perhaps In some kind of
ceremony, perhaps not,'' Suhr told the three common
pleas judges: James E. Stilwell ol Hocking County,
Joseph E. Cirigliano ol Lorain County and Michael J .
Corrigan of Cuyahoga County.
The two out-of-rounty judges were appointed to

Patience, hard
work may pay off
f~r Meigs man
By BOB HOEFLICH
'111nee&amp;ntlnel staff
MIDDlEPORT - In this extremely eni)rgy conscious nation,
Mlddk!po11' s Charles F . Scott could
very easily strike It 11ch.
The talented Scott, an Inventor,
cartoonist and a pianist, has come
up With an energy measuring device
which Is being patented In Washing·
ton, D. C.
While the patent has not yet been
!Silled, Scott's Invention won out
over seve~ other similar devices
and he has been notified that the
patent w1ll be forthcoming In about
three months.

Getting the patent approval has
not been easy. It's taken more than
two years through the work of a

preside over the trial with Stilwell because Johnston
had waived trial by jury.
Suhr's statement was the only defense effort to
explain what might have happened to Miss Johnston
and Schultz after they disappeared Oct. 4, 1982. The
prosecution contended that Johnston killed the two
because he was jealous of the relationship Miss
Johnston had with Schultz.
Sandra Schultz, mother of Todd Schultz, testified
that Miss Johnston told her she had been raped by her
stepfather when she was 10 years old.
The prosecution stressed jealousy and Incest In Its
closing arguments.
The torsos of the two victims were found Oct. 14,
1982, In the Hocking River. Remaining body parts
were found two days later burled In seven shallow
graves In a cornfield.
Suhr said aU evidence shows that the young couple
never left the cornfield, which Is near the railroad

deputies.

patent attorney firm In Washington
to be successful. It's also taken
money._
Now, about the Invention.
The device for Indirectly monitor·
Ina cun;tulatlve utmty consumption
vlsally displays the dollar cost of
consumption of a ~tmty In the lxlmt
or omce. That's to say, !lit's the
middle of the month and the gas
meter Isn't to be read until the endot
the month, with Scott's device you
get an Instant figure on how
much you've spent for gas so far
during that particular month. If
you're over what you're going to be
abletopayfor, thenyoucanputalog
In the fireplace, don a second
sweater or just tum down the
(Continued on page A3)

Suhr said the autopsy shows.Schultz had a large
gash across his chest- cutting through his nbs-with
smaller Incisions In the shape of a cross on his
abdomen.
There were three gash marks radiating from the
upper left quadrant of the cross, Suhr said.
He also said that seven naUs wc:re missing from
Miss Johnston's fingers and that the graves for the
body parts were arranged In a semicircle.
Suhr said the·autopsy report shows that some of the
cuts made to dismember the bodies were clean, while
others appeared to be hacked, suggesting more than
one person might have been Involved.

Contract language
stumbling block in
JVSD negotiations

l

.,'

tracks where they were last seen alive. The
prosecution said the two were killed on Johnston's
property.
"Whatever was done to them was done therein the
cornfield," Suhr said. "They never lett."

By KEVIN KEU..Y
nn-&amp;utlnel staff

\

,_

RIO GRANDE - Negotiations
for a master · contract between
teachers In the Galla-Jackson·
VInton Joint Vocational School
District and the board of education
are nearly a year old, but both sides
are opttlmlstlc an agreementw111 be
reached.
They have expressed wtlllngness
to settle with good faith bargaining,

can

OOULD S'DUKE rr RICH - Charles F. Scott, Middleport, Is more
than bllppy to bave recetved word lbataU.S. patent wll belslluedsooa 011
a device he has lnveuled to lndlreciJy monitor cwnulatlve utility
IDBIIIlptloo.

but disagreement over one of the
board's articles remains a major
stumbling block.
In a review of a negotiating
session held Thursday between the
board and Buckeye Hills Teachers
Association, the board said It has
been advised that provisions of a
proposed agreement with BIITA
"shall supersede the law of the state

of Ohio" on terms and conditions of
employment for teachers.
Article m covers 14 such tenns
and conditions, Including teacher
salaries, contract non-renewal,
teacher discharge discipline, Issuance and provisions ot teaching
contracts, employment aJ]d reemployment of teachers, supplemental contracts and other dulles
and notice of annual salaries.
But In Article XIV, the board
stlpulates that ll any provision of the
agreement Is deemed Invalid In
court, "then such provision shall not
be applicable, performed, enforced," while other provisions w111
remain In effect.
"We have been advised this Is
legal and proper and In accordance
with the new public employees
(Continued on page A3)

Until church is rebuilt:

•
will
relocate
for
services
Congregation
By LEEK. wmmow
~staff
'
EUREKA - It w1ll be a long time

between a Sunday school classroom
and the sanctuary, damaged the
IJ.8.year-old structure.
The minister w1ll rely on Insurance, volunteers and donations to
restore damaged carpet around the
pulpit, smoke-damaged drapes,
holes In the attic and wall where the
blaze started. Estimated cost for the
repairs Is between $2i,OOl and
$::Kl,OOl.
Woodyard, who has no formal

before the Eureka United Christlan
Church Is rebuUt.
Rev. W81Te11Woodyard,ownerof
the non-denominational church,
says people In his congregation are
"pretty well" dedicated and ..may
follow him where he preaches.
Wednesday night, a fire originatIng In a main electric box In a wall

education for the ministry, says his
congregation of 50 to 60 persons w1ll
meet temporarUy at the Big Four
Church of God, located between
Eureka and Crown City. A few
church members actually attend
from Eureka while others are from
Gallipolis, Mercerville, Athalia and
Patriot.
Four years ago, the peopleoriented minister ran unsuccessfully for county commission as an

Independent. Now, he Is eyeing the
candidacy of county clerk of courts
as a Democrat although he has not
officially rued.
The death of his nine-year-old son
provoked him to enter the ministry.
For eight years, he has preached at
Eureka which he describes as a "big ·
country church." He purchased the
church In 1977 from the Methodist
Conference. Originally, the church
(Continued on page A3)

"

r~;~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~~~~

R. Wolfe, Carroll,
bar brothers,
grandchildren,
a slster:·Mrs.
Helen
Clark of Columbus; Carl, Don and
Jerry, aU of Texas.
HewasaveteranofWorldWarn,
having served In the army.
Funeral services are being ar·
ranged by the Parker Funeral
Home at Lodl.
•
In lieu offiowerscontrlbutlonsare
befni made to the family, 664
Highland Drive, Apt. ~F. Lodl,
Ohlo44254.

o en

Marriage license

Calendar of events

Gladys Mahoney

.

emergency money available
through the Community Action
Agen cy.
·

r ·-F-or_res_lden_,_•f_ac_ln_ga_fu·e·l-shu_toff
__
eoun_ty_Pro_ba_te_eou_rt_.- - - i

JIUile8 Mahoney

d

.OUR· BIG
WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE

I
I

I

-IS .·

CO"TINUING!
-

'

-~OJ
~n.Anf'«!_ ~
.JaR u0 lne,

.

. Wearing Apparal
For Men
&amp;
.
. Women
. .

ot :~~di=

County Common Pleu Ccurt.

' Lila ~ ~ Syracue !lied

for divorce apiJIIt Kenneth Cook,
San Antonia, ,_., and N~ E .
. Dl8cllira8f -~ Clarence McDa· Clu1ls, PortJml aiif Diiilver 0.
' nlel, Jobn Order. Pa~ Ann . .CUrtlia, ·f,ortlaDd fll,ed foi' dluolu·
Cleland.
.
tloil ol marrlqe. •
.~
HarUord, w. va.

Clewfledll ...................... D-3-7

luttS

Middlepol1 l"omefvr Gallipolis Point PlloiCiflt
,- .......
9!4
----- - - -- -- - - - - - -- -- - - -

t.ewenz.

V. . . . MemaiiaJ &amp;o?l)iMI'
Admitted - Cassandra ww,

Aloa11be Rlver ............... JH3

Bt"'-........................... D-3

•

unba

Cancel
the J.8.month-old tor a $31 fee so they Will not have to
chlldotMs.Ca!)celandLewenz,8JI(l make complete ln\1!l:ltorles at the
Clu1stqlher Len MacDonal, Ms. b9rdlir with HOIIdur*'i.
·eancers ~year-old child by a
1\YoU.S.consularptflcerstlewby
former marriage.
· -1\e~ to give assistance when
The family was traveUng with the embaaay heard ol the Incident
--- ~C I( the!!:_ ~ _ln__ !...L_.IIJidbroligl!tthebodyandtlief¥illY
converted 8Cboolbus with Alabama back to SaD Salvador-:- -llcenle plates, Lagana said.
,., .
Lllpna181d travelers may hire a .a
mam~
customs ltftcer to accompany lhllm
1
•
\

Hospital news

Inside:

Big issue in 1984:
The unitary tax•••A-2

American... _(_eon_ttn_ued_rrom_:..P~~&amp;e:......:1&gt;__,._...:.__
The natiof!. weather

~anager••

Athens regains SEOAL lead with

More than
'I do'•••B-1

years . .

Dancing featured Saturday

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service
forecallts fair sides 8lld wanner weather for mOlt of the nadon for
~.Snow Durrles are forecast for the upper Great Lakes. (AP

Glenn s new

.

MIDDLEPORT

BVILTIN 1818- Earella Ullled &lt;hi fht! Clllrcll,wlkleda "1111
~ ctm'ch" by Ill' piii!Gr, Will bull Ia . . 111111 - 'ori&amp;IDiiiY
.· called the Ollmbenbun M'lllodllt Clalrcb.lllea the United MetllldiBt

Clalrcb. Sceae Mlove w8a lakeD~
~ ~ followtq . Wecllleeda,y nllb&amp;'s fire. (l'hotos by Lee K. Withrow)
·

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29, 1984

Commentary ·and perspective

The Sunday nmes-S.ntlnel

Oh~Point

Amazing Grace· report _ __
.

j!25 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

l1l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
I;:xecutive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

•
A 1\IEMBER of The lbtoclated Press, Inland Dllily Pret." A."-liOCiltlion and the
'!'merlcan Newspaper Publkhers Association.

•

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. IIIey sllould be l.,..lhall300wonhloog. AD

letters are subject ioedltbtg and must be signed with name, addMI&amp;andtelephonenum-

bet-. No Wl!lped letters ..til be published. Letters sllould be In good Jaste. addrosslag Js.

....., not .,........utles.

$ig issue in '84:
~e unitary tax ·

I

Pressed for new sources of revenues, states this year are focusing on the
c&lt;iipora te unitary tax, a relatively new device that won clearance last J nne
min the U.S. Supreme Court.
targe corporations, especially multinationals, are furious about the
concept, which Is bound to raise their overall taxes as well as complicate
~lslons on matters such as future plant locations.
Their anger contrasts with relief among legislators In many states that
ha?e already employed the device, and more that are planning to, as a
ml!ans of resolvlfig or relieving their fiscal plight.
(Jnder the unitary tax concept, a company working within a state can be
coinPelled to pay tax on the basis of Its entire domestic or worldwide
operntlons, rather than solely on the performance of Its local facUlties.
As a consequence, a corporation with profits from operations throughout
tl$i :world mlght have to pay Income taxes to a state even though It~
fadlitles there are money losers.
Jrhe Impact Is being felt by both domestic and foreign companies. While
Japanese companies seem particularly unhappy, companies everywhere
ate seeking to develop opposition through their own magazines and letters
tO" shareholders.
:Twelve countries have filed complaints with the Unitary Tax Working
Ghlup, a presidential commlsslon appointed to resolve the conti'overy but
·wfJ.ich didn't. And two of the 12 have halted renegotiation of tax treaties.
·As more states consider such taxing, the responsibility for dealing with
the Issue has risen steadlly In the corporate hierarchy, from tax
clePartments to top-level managers, some of whom are expected to take
tbelr case before a conference of governors scheduled for February :zi In
W&amp;shlngton, D.C.
:Already, 12 states have Implemented worldwide unitary taxation: New
alil)lpshlre, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Alaska,
Qiltfornla, Colorado, Florida, Indiana and Massachusetts.
: ~estates stop at the water's edge, llrnltlng their taxation to domestic
oPel'ations, among them illinois, Minnesota and New York. Others limit
tlJeli concept to a company's earnings from a specific Industry In which the
local operation Is engaged.
: The classic method, according to William Dunlap of Arthur Andersen &amp;
OJ., the blg accounting firm, Is the Massachusetts or three-factor formula
JUal bases taxes on the local percentage of total payroll, sales and property.
•Over the past two decades, according to Dunlap, personal taxes have
llicreased from 7 percent of state revenues to 13 percent, whlle corporate
1Dc6me taxes have risen only from 4 percent to 5 percent of revenues.
-~ In Itself may have opened up for legislative consideration the entire
~iter of corJiorate taxes, but It Is generally agreed by those who have
s£oaied the situation that several other factors are Involved.

•
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utter
to the editor
..
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Kilpatrick responds

''
~-Back In October you carried a
column of mine In which I opposed a
ffderal holiday to honor Martin
~ther King Jr. The thrust of the
cptumn went to King's associates In
tile years before the death In 1968.
·;I spoke of evidence that linked
l(lng to the Highlander Folk School
l!j Tennessee, and I descrtbed the
~Mol as a communist training
~er. My concern was entirely
.gfth events and Individuals approx·
imately 25· to 30 years ago.
:.' I .am dismayed to learn that my

comments may· have been misinterpreted to apply to the school
today. This certainly was not my
Intention. I have no knowledge of
the current political afllllation of
the Highlander Folk School, If
Indeed It still exists. I retract any
Implication that the Highlander
Folk School Is now a communist
training center, and I apologize for
any such Inference that may have
been drawn.
James J. Kilpatrick
Universal Press Syndicate

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"In the long run thls'H make me·strC!"O«." ··- ·-

!Today
in
h
isiory
•
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~: Today Is ~unday, Jan. 29, 111e29th day ofl!Ml4. There are337dayslettln
-~:Y~·
.
I
.
, ...
..
•.. • .:;'•fodaY's hlghllght In hlstocy:_
,
.
:-- •:pn: Jan. 29;' 19$1, Canad8•s foreign minister revealed tltat six
~ts had been smuggled out of Iran atter hldlr.,r In the c;anaiuan
~Jn 'l'elln!!l,
. .
.
.
- '
~=·On this date;
.
t: jill843, the 25th president of the United Sta~, Wllllam McKinley, was.
~ ln _NIIes, Ohio.
.
1n 1861, Kansas entered the Union as the 34th state.

u.s.

,I

WASIDNGTON -The first thing funds- went Into the $75 million
to be said about the report of the
project. All told, 161 top executives
Grace Commission Is that no oneand 2,00! volunteers contributed
not the president, not the budget
their time and expertise to the
director, not the chairmen of two-year study. They came up with
appropriations committees - no·
almost 2,500 separate recommen·
body Is likely ever to read the whole dations for reducing federal outlays
of this multi-volume production. and Increasing federal revenues.
Life Is too short, and the books are
In his final report to the president
too long.
on Jan. 12, chairman J . Peter Grace
The second thing to be said Is that offered a blunt warning: "If
our nation might begtn to get out of fundamental changes are not made
the perilous fiscal mess we are In If In federal spending, as compared
ever a few "people In high places with the 1983 deficit of $195 billion, a
read even a few parts of the report.
deficit of over 10 times that amount,
In 40 years of covering the reports $2 trillion, Is projected lor the year
of study groups, task forces and ad
2001, only 17yearsfrom now. In that
hoc commissions, I have seen year the federal debt would be $13
nothing to compare with this
trtllion and the Interest alone on the
voluminous Investigation Into debt would be$1.5 trillion per year."
waste, abuse and mismanagement
Note the emphasis upon "lunda·
In the whole of the federal
mental" changes. A fair criticism
government. The report Is down·
of the Grace report Is that Its
tight awesome.
recommendations go far beyond
For the record, the commission the elimination of waste, abuse and
functioned entirely within the pri- mismanagement. For one large
vate sector. Not a penny of tax . example, the commission urges

massive reductions In outlays tor
military and civilian retirement.
These costly programs cannot
falrly be stigmatized as wasteful or
abusive; they represent deliberate
policies adopted by successive
Congresses over many years.
For another example: " the
Davis-Bacon Act should be re·
pealed." This Is the act that
effectively compels the payment of
high union wages , on federal
construction projects, even though
prevailing local wages may be
much lower. But Congress has had
abundant opportunities to repeal
Davis-Bacon and has chosen, as a
poHcy matter, to retain the law.
But many of the Grace recom·
mendatlons do not require lunda·
mental changes In law or policy. In
page after exhaustive page, the
report delves Into little IJ)elllclen·
cles and small economies. A typical
section deals with the purchase of
spare parts by the defense
establishment:

'GET TliE

#II,('• a;r

Of Bfi!Vr"

I

James J. Ktlpatrick

.Worn

WEATHER FORECAST - The NaUoaal Welllher Service
predicts for Sunday snow ID Indiana, Mlchllllll, Wle«wWn 111111 lbe
New England lltalee. (AP Luerphoto).

Ohio forecast
Cloudy with scattered snow Ourries. High 35 to 40. The chance of
prtclpltatlon Is 40 percent today.

Extended forecast
Ohio Extended Forecut- There Is a chanceofsnowonMonday,
followed by fair wea !her on Tuesday and a chance of rain &lt;r snow on
Wednesday. Highs In the lis on Monday, theupper:DI tomld-llson
Tuesday and In the 30s on Wednesd4y. Lows In the :16 earlY Monday
and In the upper teens to mid-:16 on Tuesday and Wedn~y.

Ohio weather story•••
By The AIIIIOCiated Pn.
Southerly winds brought highs In the lis Into Ohio on Saturday
afternoon. The weather picture wW be spolled by another low
pressure-cold front.
Snow spread over the western two-thirds of Ohio Saturday. With
the cold front moving through very quickly, Ourries probablY wUl
tast through Sunday morning In eastern Ohio.
Ohioans wtll see snow again on Monday as another low moves
from the west.

'
(Continued from page
ra t tence
... --~;:;;;=~~=::::

KGB Is happy, but I am angry,"' he
said. "(This bill) would make It
even easier for the Soviet Union to
steal America's high technology."
Given President Reagan's probusiness phtlosophy, the White
House Is Inclined to dismiss the
matter as a bureaucratic squabble
over turf. But tighter security could
save the taxpayers billions. The
Pentagon Is squandertng money on
weapons that 't wouldn't need II the
high-tech trade hadn't been so free
and easy .
The president wants to sink
billions, f&lt;'r example, Into the
developme tt of the MX missile.
This Is needed, he contends,
because the Soviets' S5-18 missiles
are so accurate they threaten the
old·llne Minutemen missiles. But
the 5S-18's accuracy was made
possible by American ball

bearings.
In fact, almost every weapons
system the Pentagon Is now
building Is justified by Soviet
technologic:~! Improvement - lm·
provements that orlgln&lt;ljed In
Silicon Valley or other U.S. high· ·
tech centers.
"Many of the 200 Soviet weapons
systems currently on the dra\VIng
board will require Amepcalflrnow·
how,"' von ~··~iild. ''The more
we try to dose holes In the net, the
quicker the KGB wlll move to open
new ones."
A classic case of Commerce's
sloppy enforcement of export law~
occurred last November. It made
headlines brtefly, but my associate
Dale Van· Atla has seen secret
documents and spoken to sources
who tell the truly appalling story
behind the story:

Co.ntract...

How about the four of us getting
together for dinner sometJme and
working out a plan to avoid blowing
up the world?"
"I'd like that" very much, Ronnie.
Here Is my hotllne number. Call me
day or night.''
"Great. And here's my card. If
I'm not at the White House, try the
Camp David number. :We're al·
ways there on \l(eekends."

That night as Ronnie and Nancy
are getting out of their soaking
clothes, Nancy says, "Wasn't she a
lovely person? Did you know she
also plays balalaika?"
And Ronnie says, "He's a first
class guy. He told me that before he
Invaded Czechoslovakia In 1968, hls
real ambition was to be a movie
actor."

Berry's World

nl!xt problem wW be how to get the
device to the public. Already he Is
maldng contact with large canpanles which could mass produce the
device at a reasonable price. One
such company has the policy of not
reviewing outside Ideas untll they
are completely protected by a U. S.
patent. However, the canpany has
asked for anot11er opportunity to
consider possible license negotiations with Scott when the patent has
been Issued.
Meantime, Scott Is testing the
water with other companies hoping
one wUl come forward with a
proposition and a promotion to put
one of his devices In every home and
office across the nation.

_____

bargaining law, " theboardsaldlna
statement released Friday.
Interviewed prior to Thursday's
bargaining session - In which
discussion over ground rules was
conducted BHTA President
Norman Stewart said the assoclation' s first Impression would be to
disregard the board's package and
counter-propose.
"It's wrttten very poorly," Stewart said. "U that's what their
counsel says Is legal, then they
should look at getting another
lawyer."
Stewart said the association
wantsacontractlnaccordancewith
state law.
The board said It doesn't feel
teachers ought to have " as thick a
contract as Is thecaselnotherschool
districts, because thickness of this
contract Is the result of 10 years of
past bargaining."
The board said It feels theJVSD's
contract should be closer to first
contracts In surrounding school
districts covering non-economic
matters.
Although the JVSD Is less than 10
years old, Stewart said the assoclalion feels mature enough to enjoy
benefits from a master contract
such as those In the six school
districts that feed Into the JVSD,
which Include Gallla County Local
and Gallipolis Qty.
After the board approved raises
for admlnlslrators and other nonteachlng employees In November,

Forget Sally &amp; Anya _ _--::--'--~___:_:.:Ar.. .:. . .B:.:t . ::.::uc::.. :.:::hwa:..::.::.=ld
In President Reagan's " I'm Not Soviet Union - when I don't have·
Really Mad at the Russians the Ou."
Speech" last week he ended by
"Hey, how about that, Nancy?
saying, "Just suppose with me for a Yurt here Is the president ·of a
moment that an Ivan and an Anya superpower just like me. We have a
could find themselves, oh say, In a
lot In common."
waiting room, or sharing a shelter
Nancy turns to Tatyana. "Do you
from the rain or a storm with a Jim ha"e to gtve a lot of state dinners?"
or a Sally. And there was no
Tatyana replies, "Every night I
language barrier to keep them from
have to give a "state dinner. I never
getting acquainted.
have enough china."
"Would they then debate the
"It seems that's my problem, too.
difference between their respective Who makes your clothes?"
governments? Or would they find
"Oscar of Belorussia. Who makes
themselves comparing notes about yours?"
their children and what each other
"Adolpho of New York. Here Is a
did for a living? ... And as they went
photo of the latest suit he designed
their separate ways maybe Anya for me."
would be saying to Ivan, 'Wasn't
"It Is very beautiful. But then you
she nice? She also teaches music.' are a beautiful lady ... "
And Jim would be telling Sally what
"She's !larling, Ronnie." ·
Ivan did or didn't like about his
Ronnie says, "Tell me, Yurt,
boss. They might have even what bugs you the most about being
decided they were all got,ng to get
president of the U.S.S.R.?"
together for dinner some 'evening
"The Party bosses. They are
soon."
always telling me I'm doing
Mr. Reagan's point, I believe, something wrong."
was that If people got to know each
"Isn't that funny? That's what
other one on Ol!e. they wouldn't
bugs me the most .atiout being
want to go to war.
president of the Uillted States. I
While getting Jim and Sally and don't mind the opposltldn. But I
Ivan and Anya together Is a very · sure get mairwhen my own people
~for peace, -I tbplk It's
keep telling me I'm screwing up."
,-more_.~ ...and- - Nancy-says to Tatyana, "How-doNancy and Yurl and his wife to find you get along with ~our chlldren?"
themselves sharing a shelter from . Tatyana replies, "Don't ask."
the rain or storm.
·
Nancy laughs, "Me, "too. I guess·
•·HI, my na!lle's Ronnie Reagan we'll . never close t~ generation
and this Is my wife Nancy. We're . gap .."
·
· ortglnally from Caltfornla.''
Ronnie says to Yurt,- "So w~t's
. "My name Is Yuri Andropov and the toughest thing about YOI!r job?"
this Is my wife Tatyana. We are
"Balancing the budget, providing
jobs and keeping the U.S.S.R. No.
· hardllne Communists.'~
'That's neat. We're rock-ribbed 1." .
.
.
.
conservative Republ1caits-:-Wiiat.do
"I can't believe 1i. ijere we are,
you \IO for a _living?"
strangers caught 1n -ihe storm and
"I used to be head of all Secret we have the same common probPbllce. Now I am.,_the leader of the !ems, Interests · and aspirations.

A1)

thermostat and be cold.
Through Scott's Invention consumers can do hour-by-hour monitorIng of the actual cost of the utlllty
being consumed. Not only that but
the device works for any equipment
that Is thermostatically controlled.
It Is an lndlrect device In that the
actual utllity being used does not go
through the equipment.
Scott's device wW be Inexpensive
to manufacture, easy to Install and
easy to repair. These are some of the
reasons his Invention Is being
patented over the devices of other
Inventors. Scott'sdevlceoperateson
one battery.
After receiving the patent, Scott's

High-tech flow_________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASIDNGTON - With run·uf· stop valuable technology from
the-mill regularlity, the United slipping through the cracks to the
States has allowed advance tech-· · Soviet Union.
nology to be sold · to the Soviet
The Commerce Department has
Union, which has routinely used the only 50 Inspectors and Investigators
purchases to Improve Its weaponry.
to keep an eye on high-tech exports."
This has contributed to the obsoles- In contrast, the Customs Service
cence of U.S. armaments, which has 200 years' expertence and more
must then be redesigned and than 5,00! trained people around the
replenished at a cost of billions.
world to track smugglers.
Perhaps It's too much to expect
Yet a little-noticed bill, -sponsored
that the government might occa· by Rep. Don Bonker, D-Wash.,
slonally exhibit a minimal level of would rewrtte the Export Admlnls·
'
awareness and cohesloln,
so U.S.
tration Act of 1979 and virtually
policy would serve some higher strip Customs of Its authority to
purpose than corporate greed. But examine export shipments. The
now there's a move to turn over to protection of our technology would
the Commerce Department the be left largely to the Commerce
main responsibility for policing Department, which has a history of
these sensitive sales.
putting profits ahead of securtty .
The mission of the Commerce
This has provoked the outrage of
Department Is to promote sales of WOllam von Raab, commissioner
U.S. goods. It has neither the of the U.S. Customs Service. "The
manpower nor the Inclination to

Plea1ant, W. Va.

dell replaces Btalne TayloJ' on the
board.
BurcleU said "With the help of the
people In the district, we wW
coordinate the work of our district
staff with that provided by the
Gallla SoU Consrevatton Service
and other local, state and federal
agencies to give the public of Gallla
County an efficient and effective
soil and water conservation
program."

Rename Mills board chainnan

D

-~,...

Gallia S&amp;WC District board ·
GAWPOUS - Lawrence Bur·
dell, Bidwell, recently elected
supervilor of the Gallla SoU and
Water Conservation District, was
Into otrlce last week In the
011tr1ct office by Notary Public
GaD Russell.
Elected to a three-year term,
Burdell joins Gary Altizer, Jim
Baughman, Noel Massie and Buz
Milia In admlnlstering the Gallta
SoU and Water Conservation District's conservation program. Bur-

"The Pentagon has been buying
screws for $91 which can be
purchased for three cents, breather
caps for compressors for $100 each
which can be purchased for 25
cents, and slllcon electric cells at
$114 each when they can be
purchased for9 \7 cents. The Navy's
Training Equipment Center, Or·
lando, Fla., has paid $511 for lamps
which cost 60 cents .. ."
Most of the Grace report deals
with reductions In spending. At the
Treasuty Department, the task
force had Ideas for Increasing
revenue. As of June 30, 1982, the
Internal Revenue Service estimated that Its accounts receivable
had reched a record level of $23.2
billion. The commission urged a
combination of aggressive measures for going after the delinquents. Efficient collections could
bring In a bllllon dollars a year
above current levels. ,
Preliminary reaction to the
commission's final report has been
both predictable and disappointing.
In the Pacific Northwest, for
example, the prospect of higher
rates on federal electrtc power has
generated no enthusiasm. · The
armed services are Indignant at the
Idea of the government's reneging
on promised retirement benefits.
Organized labor surely will oppose
any renewed effort to repeal
Davis-Bacon. So'. far, just about
every comment has amounted to a
defeatist expression that such-and·
such a savlnF Is "politically
unrealistic."
Very well. Congress and the ·
White House surely are not going to
buy the whole nine yards proposed
by the Grace Commission, but we
ought to be politically realistic on
one thing: The reality ls that our
government Is headed for financial
disaster, and we had better pay
atte ntion to most of the Ideas the
commission advances. Amazing
Grace, how sweet thy sound'

.

Burdell replaces Taylor on

----Weather:

Fage A-2
January 29, 1984

'

A Division of

'

__;_..;..._..;_
(Continued from
page Al)

Superliltendent Jerome R. Brockway said the board has alw&lt;I)'S been
wt11tng to negotiate a W&amp;gl! and
benefit" agreement with the
teachers.
Followlngthlsweek'ssesslon, the
board lndlcated that If contract
language could be settled first, It
would "do Its very best to present an
attractive economic pack&amp;gl! to
teachers."
"We feel, In all due respect, that
weshouldgtvetheboardachanceto
negotiate In good faith," Stewart
said. "We also feel time Is on our
side."
Negotiations began last Feb. 28,
with BliTAdeclarlnglmpasseSept.
22. At the time, the Impasse wasn't
recognized by the board. But on
Sept. 'r/, the board approved a
teacher election to decide whether ·
BHTA or Vocational Educators
Association of America would
represent the teachers In
negotiations.
BHTA's recognition status was
withdrawn by the board Oct. 1, but
two days later, It won a temporary
reslralning order In Jackson County
Common Pleas Couri. In a boardsought hearing Oct. 4, Judge
Thomas
Mitchell allowed the
election to be held, with a court
bailiff overseeing the balloting.
BHTA won the election Oct. 14
with a 33-23 vote. A bargaining
sesslonsetforNov.17brokeoffwhen
disagreement arose over presentatlon of j)ackages.

w.

GALLIPOUS - Frank "Buz"
MWs m was elected for the third
year as board chairman of the
Gallla SoU and Water Conservation
District during the 1984 reorganlzatlonal meeting held last week.
Other officers elected were:
James E . Baughman, vicechairman; Noel F. Massie, secretary; Gary Altizer, fiscal agent, aod
Lawrence H. Burdell, treasurer.
The board announced Its annual
tree seedling sale Is underway untll
March ll. Anyone who wishes
Information and order blanks may
contact the district office.
SWCD are presently taking reservations for the spring planting
season for rental Of the no-till corn
planter or the Haybuster drtll to
area farmers. District Technician
Kerry Martin wW be on hand to give
farmers assistance with planting,
planter adjustment and r:ecommen·
datons during the planting season.
A new shipment of mulch neetlng
has just been received In the district
office. It Is to be used on

cqnstructlon sites such as diversions and waterways . .Mulchnet,
open weave netting, keeps straw
and other mulch snug on top of
seeded areas, even on steep slopes
hit with heavy rains. Mulchnet
weathers away naturally. The
district wW provide the mulchnet
and staples for 5 cents per foot.
Gallla County plat directories are
still available from the District for
$5. The oniy publlhed plat directory
tor Galtla County Includes private
property ownership locations
within the county, a county map, all
township maps, Gallipolis street
maps, list of farm commodities and
services and a business directory.
The board also announced the
second annual Farm Qty Day I:;
being planned by area agencies and
businesses for Saturday, Sept. 8, at
Raccoon Creek County Park. Farm
aty Day's 1984 Chairman Terry
Murname said that anyone wishing
to assist In this year's Farm Qty
Day should contact the district
office.

Hays doubts he'll seek office again
Dll..LES BOTI'OM, Ohio (AP) Former Rep. Wayne Hays says he's
often asked to run for office again,
but he's not going to be pushed Into it.
He added that should he decide to

Congregation
(Continued from page A1)
was called Chambersburg MetbodlstChurch(Eurekawasatonetlme
called Chambersburg) and then
United Methodist Church.
Woodyard says he Is the only
minister around who preaches for
tree. "I've never taken pay for the
ministry,'' he says. H"e said the Lord
suppUes his salary. "If I honor him,
he'U honor me."
He has his own business, Wood·
yard's Used Cars In Crown Qty
where he resides with his wife,
Marjorie, a home Interior dealer to
whom he has been married for 24
years. Also, each Sunday, he has a
radio broadcast on the all-Christian
station WEMM In Huntington at 5
p.m.
As long as the sun shines, perhaps
the water-soaked carpet and plano
wW dry out. Maybe the portrait of
Jesus Christ can again hang upon
the wall where the !Ire started. But
most ImportantlY, Woodyard says,
the church Is keeping the people
together.

seek office, "I'm going to make that
decision myself."
At 72, Hays, who was forced out of
office by a sex scandal eight years
ago, says he no longer feels up to
working the 14-to 16-hour days he
worked In Washington.
Hays spent 28 years In Congress
representing Ohio's 18th District
and reslgned In the midst of his 1976
reelection campaign to stop a
House Ethics Canrnittee Investigation Into his conduct. He acknowledged having an aflalr with Eliza·
beth Ray, a House clerk, but dented
her charges that she was kept on his
committee payroll only for sex.

PRESEI'n'ED CER'DFICATE - Lawrence Bunlell, left, newlY
elected supervisor of the Gallla SolllUid Water Conservation District, Is
pretenled his Certificate of Etecuon from Doug Pauley, soD
cooaervatlon service, District Conservationist.

JANUARY AND FEBRUARY
HAY TOOL SPECIAL
Model

486
484
509
507
555
406

Sale Price

Round Bale, 1800 # Bale ........ ... ... .... s9375 _
-Round Bale, 900 # Bale .................... S8595 :
Mower/Conditioner, 9ft. .................. S6995
Mower/Conditioner. 7ft. .................. S6195 .,
Square Baler .................................... S5695 ...
Rake, 91/2 ft. ..................................... s2595

Take advantage of these great savings on:

1. Interest Waiver Unt'il 10/1/84
2. Special Finance Rate-13.9°/o Up

Dale Hill Ford Tractor
251 WEST

POMEROY,OH.
PH. 992-6441

Motor Car Brokers
•

REMEMBER:

Cars, Like Eggs
Cheaper In The Country

Hayes attended a United Mine
Workers of America conference
Friday on acid rain as an Invited
guest. He did not speak publicly but
said In an Interview that he favors
state and federal subsidies for
scrubbers to remove su!!uT~oxlde
emissions from lndustrtal smokestacks In Ohio.
"We should make money available like we do for highways to help
utilities put scrubbers In," he said .
"Tbey want to use money on
everythlngelse.Thlswouldbedolng ·
something for employment and for
the country at large."
Hays said he had a lunch date with
somepeoplewhowanthlmtorunfor
public otllce. He dldn 't say which
office.

4-door, white exterior with white vinyl top &amp; tan color vinyl Interior,
pawer steering &amp; brakes, air cond., am radio, wire wheel covers,
radial tires, &amp; only 28,000 miles.

only

'7,50000

Your Best Home

-Entertainment Value!

cablantarta•nmant
SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER
UP

SAVE

TO

75%

•

ON THE INSTALLATION CHARGES
THE REDUCED INSTALLATION IS GOOD FOR BASIC CABLE, CINEMAX,
HOME BOX OFFICE OR ANY COMBINATION OF THOSE SERVICES.
IF\ YOU DON'T HAVE OUR BASIC CABLE, THIS IS YOUR
OPPORTUNITY
.
TO RECEIVE 12 CHANNELS WITH ALL YOUR FA_VORITES LIKE
ESPN, CABLE NEWS NETWORK, SUPERSTATION WTBS AND CBN.

2Yt miles from Hazer Hospital on Kerr Harrisbur1 Rd.
Phone 446-7457 - After 6 P.M. «6·4920

Beef and Pork are on the rise and going up every day. lf you
are thinking about freazer beef or pork take advantage of
these LOW, LOW PRICE~. today!

Whole Beef Sides-..uw.cva~U •• JJI. $1.39
Front Quarter ........uw.cuo~U •• JI. '1.29
Hind Quarter .........uw.cuo~U•• JJI. S1.59
Vz.or Whole Hog.~ ............·.~. S1.19

t

Call us today for appointment for your home killed Beaf,
-Pork-or tam b. Cut-by-expert meat·cutters. Freazerwrlpped
and quick frozen.
Offer Expires Feb. 14th. Jack ltldoWs, Mar.

:be

"He appears-!Q
In a coma ro ·ibry cau_, .,...,..,...,. ~·
by 'post-football BBBI!On d/sorlt~ntat1on." ·

•'

top, V-8 engine, air
am-fm stereo, till wheel,
control, power windows, power door locks. wire wheel covers,
radial tires &amp; only !4,000 miles!
00

YOU PAY ONLY

$7.50

(Refundable converter deposit

Was "10,900 Now

For The lnatallatlon
requir~d

STOP IN AND SEE

tor HBO and/or Cinemax)

Merrill, Jay or Alan Evans

CALL DURING OFFICE HOURS OR STOP BY M08DAY THROUGH FRIDAY
AliD SPEAK TO ONE OF THE CUSTOMER REPRESENTATIVES.

Monday ·Thru Friday 8 a.m.-8 p.m~.
Saturday 8 a.m. • 3 p.m.

CALL NOW!
w. Va.
1410 Jefferson ilhd.

'10,400

675-3391- Ohio 99.241444

Point Pant
· ·-· -- - ----------~-----......_

�.

_._......~_....._-

.....

•
(

l'uge A-4

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

· January 29, 1914,

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge-A-5

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Local Briefs:-- Attorney, client 'face trial fo11 escape
January subsidy payments released
By the Tlmes&amp;ntlnel Staff
Meigs County's three local school districts received $462,117.98 as
their part of the January state school foundation subsidy payment.
Amounts of the total received by each of the districts following
deductions for retirement are Eastern Local, $106,623.84; Meigs
Local, $248,989.42, and Southern, $106,504.72.
Gallla County received a •total payment of $&lt;150,436.75, with
&lt;;;alllpolls City awarded $Z71,154.ffi and Gallla County Local,
$156,093.27'
From those amounts, the state deducted $7,925 for school
employees retirement and $41,765 for state teachers retirement from
the city schools, leaving the district with a net payment of$221,464.(8.
Gailla County Local had $14.155 taken for employee retirement
and $49,359 for teachers retirement. The net payment was $92,279.27.
The county board of education received a direct payment of
$23,00.40.

Lehew awarded scholarship
POMEROY - John W. Lehew, 28, Rt. 2, VInton, formerly of
Pomeroy, has been awarded a $500 scholarship bY the Order of
United Commercial Travelers of America to continue his studies In
the field of special education.
. Lehew Is seeking a master's degree In education from the
University of Dayton. He received a bachelor's degree In education
from Capital University, Columbus.
He Is presently employed as a special education teacher for
Buckeye Community Services, Gallipolis.
Lehew Is married to the former Allee Akers of Gallipolis, and Is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Lehew, Breezy Heights, Pomeroy.

CLINTON, Tenn. (AP) - A escape. Scott said the photos were
lawyer and the killer she's accused posed, but hewouldn'tsaywhat they
of helping nee from prison must showed.
stand trial together for escape,
armed robbery and aggravated r"iiii!i!!!ii!i!!!iiiiii
kidnapping, a judge has ruled.
Mary P. Evans, 27, and William
Timothy Kirk, :rr, who spent nearly
five months on the run together, are
scheduled to go on trial March 27.
Dlstrtct Attorney General James
Ramsey said he would appeal a
ruling Friday by Crtmlnal Court
Judge James B. Scott that such
Items as birth control pills and
photographs found In the couple's
F1orlda motel room cannot be used
as evidence against Ms. Evans.
If the state Court of Criminal
Appeals overturns the ruling, the
trial could be delayed, Ramsey said.
Rohert W. Ritchie, Ms. Evans'
attorney, asked that she be tried
separately because of a statement
Kirk allegedly made to FBI agents.
In the statement, which Kirk later
denied making, he said he and Ms.
Evans developed a "strong physical
attraction" and that he had
"ruined" her life.
However, Assistant District At·
torney Jan Hicks said prosecutors
would try touseKlrk'sstatementas
evidence only If he testified at the

Ms. Evans sat at a table with her
lawyers durtng the hour-long
hearing.

POMEROY - A radio was the only Item reported missing as the
result of a Friday break-In at the Racine Gas Co. office.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department said that the front door of
the office was forced open. A telephone cord was cut, postages tamps
'ftre torn up and scattered on the fioor and cigarettes were broken In
two pieces and put back Into a package.
Deputies were called to Dravo Corp. In Letart Township Friday
night where two Individuals were reportedly cutting firewood on
Dravo property without permission.
The Individuals left the scene but returned when deputies arrived.
No charges were flied.

Kirk, accompanied by I!IOtiUJ)·
toting 1111arda, sat with hli lawyeraat
the other end of the table.

Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

CLOSED SUNDAYS
Prices Good Thru Feb. 4 , 1984
We Reserve The Right to limit Quentlti•l

STARTS MONDAY
JAN. 30, 9:30 A.M.

BONELESS

Judge Scott ruled Jan. 9 that Ms.
Evans' light to privacy prevented
the more than 100 Items seized from
the motel mom from being used as
evidence against her.
The evidence could be used
against Kirk, because he was an
escaped convict at the time, but not
If the two are tried together.
Ms. Hicks asked Scott to reconsider his ruling as It affected thepllis
and photos.
But Scott said the evidence was
Irrelevant because It was seized
nearly five months after thecouple's

tJfJIJ)

'
: CLEVELAND (AP) -

If the

~pttorney

~.
SILVER
BR,IDGE
PLAZA

NATURE'S BOUNTY

Natural VItamins

TAVERN HAM

~~

Whole Lb. $1 59

· "I have serklus doubts as to'

because too often the ~te will
?Ole to confirm on the basis of
~t1cal allegiance," Metzenbaum
said. ''Therefore, I think It's an
uphW.battle."
Metzenbaum, a member of the
Republican-controlled Judiciary
Coounittee that will consider
Meese's nornlnatlon,.sald that willie
he Is "realist enoogh to ·know that
probably all the RepubUcans will
vote for him," some GOP senators
have Indicated reservations.
"I don't think the American
people really know as much about
this man as they lbluld and I'm not
sure the members of the ~te
know that much about him,"
Metzenbaum said.
The senator said he thought
Meese, a counselor to President
Reagan, bas had a "total lack of
llEIISitlvlty toward people-oriented
Noting that Meese was Reagan's
campaign manager and trlend,
Me121enbaum said: "That's government by croeytsm. That's appoint1ng one of yoor cronies to be the
attorney general of the United
States, the highest legal office
anyone can hold In the
administration.''
When the Watergate Investigation was completed, Metzenbaum
noted, the special proBeCUtor' s staff
recommended that no one who bas
served as thepresldent'scampalgn

manager or Jn a key campaign role
sllould be appointed attorney
general.

Metzenbaum said Meese's con"' troverslal comments about hunger
In America and· his lndltference to
clvU and truman rtghts smw him to
be "crass with respect . to the
Implementation of the la~s of this
country that protect thelnd1vldual.''
The senatcr also criticized Rea·
gao's administration In general,
saying there
"somethln&amp; like
36 Instances" since Reagan took
ot:!lce where people have resigned
from the admlidstratlon "beCause
of confilcts of Interest, Wegalltles,

were

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

~

GROUP MEN'S

:• SPORT SHIRTS

33

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR
Regular 16.49

$5 19 ea. or
2 for $9 99

OFF

MEN'S

MEN'S

SUITS
.;J
'1. · 1/3%
OFF
3·

$1999

A Mlllllmedla Newapapor
Published each Sunday, 82~ Third
Avenue, by lhe Ohio Valley Pu~llsh ·
lng Company· Mulllmedla, Inc. Serond clall pDIIIage paid al Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Enlered as serond clou
mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio.
PA&gt;ti-OIIIce.

·&lt;t

1/3%

· ~ . GROUP

USPS I -

'

SWEATERS.
'

25%o.FF

The_y won't · ·
open an Individual Retirement
that is
Account.
If you didn't take advan- invested and ,·ntPrP·c::t
tage of a Central Trust IRA
earned is not taxed until
last year, you missed a $2000 withdraw it at age 59~.
tax deduction. You see, when
At Central Trust
you invest ~2000 in a Central we know IRAs and we have
Trust IRA, you're investing
a number of IRA certificates
in a tax break. A$1000 tax
available to fit your n~eds.
break for people in ~fqO% tax
And teniember;-youcan
bracket; up to $800 in the
start an IRA with any amount
40% bracket and $600 in ~e up to·a maximu~ d~[X!sjt of
30% ~et. And all the money $2000 a year, or $40()0 if ·

· Merriber: The Associated Press In-

land llally Press Assoclallon and.lhe
,\merlcan Newit!aper Publishers As·
soclatlon •. Netlonal Advertising ft.e.
presenlallve, Branham, 1717 Wesl
Nine Milt Road, Suite 204, Delroll,
Michigan, 41K175.

you're married
. and both hold a
job. ($2,250 for
fcunilies with one working
spouse:) Substantial penalty
for early withdrawal.
So stop by any Cenb:al
Trust office for more infonna·
tion. But don't delay. Because
aher April15, you will have
. missed again.

SIJU()BJPTION RATBII

IIJ &lt;:arrter or Molor Roale
One Week .. .... ...... ..·.... ...... .... ... .SI.OO
One Monlh ..... ................ ... ....... suo
One Year .......... ....•... ..... ......... $ll2.80
SJNOLECOPY

. PBI&lt;:E

~cen1a

No aiiiCrlpllona by mall permllled In
towns where home carrier tervlce Is
avollablo.

The su~ay Tlmet-5enllnel wi n nof ·
lie rflpQftllblelor advance payments
made b)l carrters.

10,000,USP Un~s
1tlcANuua

:;'!t.~o

11

III'IIIC.

100 mg.

Super Potent
B-yomplex Formula

100 TAIUTS

100 TAaLETS

:,sm,

IAUI PRtC•

1329 ~:m.

IAUIIII'IIIC.

NATURAL

NATURAL

C·1000

E-400 I.U.

VITAMIN E·OIL

d·Aipha Tocopheryl

25,000 I.U. per bottle

1tiTA81.1TS

1M CAI'SULIS

2.1

1479 ::t.'i&amp;

::!t.'ms

8....,0.1y

•

one yeor ............................... 120.80

Six "'''"thl :.............................1MO

Dalb ... lhuldaJ
.
• MAIL I~PTIONI '

,_,_

'j,t•.
•'

52 Weeki ................. ,............. $51.tl

:•I

11 Weekl ..... ;.. ;,,.............h .... .. $14.0.
.
' .... Cholaklt Oldo '
52 Weeltl ..... .......................... $541.16·

LECITHIN
ioo TAIII.ETS

1M CAI'IULII

:::..sm.
s~9
lALII PRIC. , -

::t.'me
.,.... III'IIIC.1329
SELENIUM
&amp;Omcg.

J

oil

J:

2t WHiti ............................... $29.M

13 Weeki ................ ,............ ,. S}5.21

BACON
FRESH

'~YOUR

FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"

PHILADEPHIA

CREAM s oz.
CHEESEPKG.

~1883

~nc.••

I~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
A Meuage From Tile Bib!. ...
"FORBID NOT TO SPEAK WITH TONGUES"
William B. Kughn
Some, In order tojustif)' the IJI8aklug of tongues today, say, "Since
Paul said, 'forbid 110t to .,.U WUA to11gu1, ' DO one can prevent me
from doing that." The puaqe referred to Ia as follows, "Merehre,
brethren, covet to propMIJ/, and forbid not to lfHlalc with tongues" (1
Cor. 14:39).
,

Propbely

"Wherefore" su~ts that the Corinthian Christians were to study
the other thin~ Paul had written to them, considering the spiritual
(miraculous) gifts in chaptel'l twelve, thirteen, and fourteen. Paul
discusses the "diverftn.• (differences) of gifts" as coming from '~he
1aine Spirit"ln chapter twelve; euBittiolit!l of love in respect to the
mii'II&lt;:Ulolll gift• that were temporary (1 Cor. 13:8) in chapter thirteen;
and gift of "•peaking ill lo!lgtlc1" being inferior to the gift of prophecy
In chafter fourteen. He uses the wonls "rilther" and "greater" (1 Cor.
14:1,5 so as to show the superiority ofthuift of"propheey." ·
"Prophecy" denotes ~'telling forth the l&gt;ivine counsels." Since the
wonl was not (ully revealed and recorded in writing, the gift "to
propll.,!l" (1 Cor. 14:1) was the greatest. Why? It enabled the teacher
to receive, teach, and practice the mind/ or word of God. Paul sets forth
reasons why . "prophecy" is superior: (1)-lt was for "edification,"
promoting growth; "exllorta!ion." encouragement; and "comfort, "
consolation; (2)-lt was to convince the unbelievers and unlearned of his
sinful condition (l Cor. 14:24,25). Paul urges them to desire (covet)
earnestly the great gift of prophecy. ·
T011111es
Although Paul places '~,\e ipeaking of tongues" at the bottom of the
list (1 Cor. 12:28), he-encourages it (1 Cor. 14:6), and does not advocate
it being unimportant. He told the brethren at Corinth to ''forbid not to
speak with tongues." "Forbid" means to hinder or restrain while
"tonguer" mean lan1111ages. Paul was not hindering them so as to
_. restrain them.from speaking in another language.
·
The "tongu.," (languages) they spoke were to be understood by the
hearers (1 Cor. 14:19). If they were·not understood, it would consiSt of
"mysteries" (l Cor'. 14:3), and be unprofitable to the hearer (1 Cor.
14:16,17), ahd the one speaking would "rpealc into the air" (1 Cor. 14:9).
The gift of "tpea/cing in tongue a" must be accompanied by the gift of
·~nterpr&lt;~tation," otherwise the church would not profit (1 Cor.
14:5,26). If there is no interpreter, the one speaking should "keep
lilence in the c,\urc,\"(1 Cor.14:28).
·
The miraculous Jrift of "IJHla/cing ill tongues," along with the others,
was'temporary ancfhas passed away (1 Cor. 13:8-10). Therefore, we
cannot use Paul's wonls, ''forllid not to tpta/c fuitll t011gue1" to justify,
encourage, or.promote that.which dot1not exist tqdayt:
(FIM'Frte,llib!. CcnniJ!OIId~e.C!I!!rte H"ntJI= L

'

· lul•vtlle Rood • P.O.llox 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45831
0

lundtyMom.r.a
.... IWyi:IO
Ww"'¥ 10:)0

Wtdntldey
Evening
7,00

......

.......... .

"M....IIfrom

'

. •1

- Oolly-WJIH
11 :11A.M.

~·-·1~. ~.!11

VIM CO 3 LB. BOX

Spaghetti
ASST. FLAVORS

99¢
99¢
$100

FAYGO 3~
DRINKS R

GRAPE SMUCKERS

JELLY
OR JAM 2LB.
VALLEY BELL

2%
MILK GAL.

WILSON

...

69¢

CHUN K

BY THE
PIECE

BOLOGN-A

LB

Plus Dep.

KAHN'S CLUB,
BEEF OR GARLIC

n:f·

SNICKERS, M&amp;M'S,
MILKY WAY, TWIX, SKITTLES
STARBRUSTS &amp; 3 MUSKETEERS

4

FOR

$1 °0

·.
CHARMIN
'

BATHROOM
TISSUE

.
'

'

4 ROLL
PKG.

$169

CRISCO
SHORTENING

~8.CAN

$249

MAGIC '
BLEACH

79¢ GAL.

''

..,
0

.,•,

SCOT

99¢

''

...,

$109

HUNT'S 32 oz. BTL.

KETCHUP

LB.

Candy Bar Special

2 FOR

EVAPORATED

MILK

$149

MAINE

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

LB.

JUMBO

HAM
SALAD

13 9

BUTIERMILK Yl GAL.

400 Second.Aw.
.........

WHOLE
FRYERS

LB.

VALLEY BELL

arnmc~

89¢
oz.

HOMEMAD'E

FRESH
BEEF FILET

PEPSI ~~L~~~on little

12

$2 29

BOLOGNA LB.

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE.$
DIET OR REG.

NATURAL

$249

SUPERIOR

CUT TO ORDER

21 w- ............................. ,.W.30

,

WIENERS

$1 89

~at.r,UI~~~C~·~---1-IA_UI:;~C~·~=--t~I~A~Ul~PR=I~C~·----;

LB.

SUPERIOR

PORK CHOPS

oa.1629 :::OJi'no '399

1200 mg._

LB.

~¥~1K

CENTER ·CUT

1529

with ROM Hlpe

MAIL SIJU()RintON!i

,.,,.t

~~~D

LB

8·50®

issues.''

HEAVY LEVI
DENIM SHIRTS

SUPERIOR

$169

1/2 Lb.

'•whether I will be successful,

CALL (614) 997-2104
or (304) 675-1244

SPARE
RIBS

LEAN &amp; JUICY

'"and that would be a travesty," says

Jt.

SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS- ALL SALES FINAL

HOLLYWOOD

general, Meese might

U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaurn. .
Melzenbaum, D.Qhlo, In a · news
-~erence at his Cleveland otnce
:Friday, promlaed to work against
lhe confirmation of Meese, but
iloubted he could oo anything to stop

kllllt Shop

PORK
CHOPS

$}49

lrregularltles,"

1m1e day be considered for appoint·
(ment to the
Supreme Court,

u.s.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

' SUY NOW ANO SAVEl

Impropriety, or some other kind of

LOIN END

CHUCK ROAST

an

·~te
confirms Pres~t Rea- II
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
pn'snomlnatlonofEdwlnMeeseas

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

125.00

SAUSAGE

BONELESS

~!Metzenbaum faces 'uphill battle'

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

Regular

the pt'fJII!IItaUon are 'front row, from left, Donna
8mJtll, wife of Dan Smllh, local fair board memher;
Lodler, Muriel Bradfonl, WaDaoe Bradford, local
members; and back row, from left, Dan Smith,
William Radfonl, Bob Lee and WlDlam Downie,
members qf the local fair board.

·, FAIR REOOGNIZED - 'lbe Melp Coldy
;. Ap1cuMura1 !IoeWy, which IIIIIIIUIIy ll&amp;qe8 the
~Metp Coldy Fair, wM preeenled a cerilllcMe of
'adllevemeat by OWo Director of Apiculture Dille L.
:;l..ocker 11t the IIIIIIWII county and lndependeDt fair
'• CD~Ventioa held In Columbua lld8 month. PldJired at

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport POftlnaster Joe Struble outlined
postal services when the Middleport· Pomeroy Rotary Club met
Friday night at Heath United Methodist Church.
Struble gave Rotarians money savings tips In regard to air mall
service and special delivery mall. He was Introduced bY Bill Francis,
program chalnnan, while Roger Luckeydoo, president, presided
aver the meeting. Dinner was served by women of the church.

)!GULAR. STRAIGHT l!G AND
• IOOTL!G - 14 OZ. DENIM

BOB EVANS

WBITNER

Postmaster briefs_ Rotarians

LeVI'S

I

ENGLISH
ROAST

ENTIRE
STOCK
WINTER
MERCHANDISE

~li.

Gas office entered

STORE HOURS:·
~,,..,... -Thur.. 9 am til 10 pm ·

.,'•

.....,

PAPER
TOWELS

59

¢

., .
'·
•.

·.·.

ASST.
COLORS

COOKING

·.

WINESAP OR ROME

POTATOES

ONIONS

APPJ!S

10 LB. BAG

3 LB. BAG

3 LB. BAG

69¢

'89¢
"'

I .

' 0

'

'•

•.

•'.
..
'

..•
•
'

�........

•

-......

. .

'

. ........

.,
.•

.

Area deaths

,•.

,• .

~n P. Dailey

.·:
:: roMEROY - Jon Paul Dalley
~~,: 31615 Durst Ridge Road, Por:
lljlnd, died Friday morning in
'treterans Memorial Hospital.
::Born in Galltpolls, son of Lonnie
afld Joan Black Dalley who
'
iQiVIve, he attended Mount Olive
Cttnmuntty Church.
; : ~ surviving are maternal
~dparents, Mr. and Mrs. George
"Jack of PorUand; a paternal
Arandmother, Mrs. Gussie Dalley of
Jir.'and; a great-grandmother.
y Lawson of Portland; and
~era! alints, uncles and cousins.
~ · funeral services will be held at 2
~lm· today in Morris Chapel
~urch, with Lawrence Bush offt·
cfa:ting. Burial wlll be in Morris
~pel Cemetery.
::The body will be at the church
S!!nday at 12: llp.m.Ewing Funeral
~e Is bt charge of arrangements.

.

.

,. •

.avi Fitzwater

Gauley Bridge, W.Va.
Alsosurvlvtngaretwodaughters,
Margaret Huffman of Miami,
· W.Va., and Patricia Balls ot
Florida; and eight grandchildren
and lO great-grandchildren.
Shewasalsoprecededlndeathby
two brothers and a sister.
Funeralservlceswillbeheldat11
a.m. Monday in Wtllts Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Walter
Patterson otflclating. Burial will be
in Montgomery (W.Va.) Mel)lorlal
Park. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7-9 p.m. today.

Elsie Roush
POMEROY - Memorial sei'Vi·
ces for Elsie Roush, New Orleans,
La., who died recently, will be held
at 1 p.m. Tuesday in Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
In lieu of fiowers, friends are
asked to contribute to the church.

~: ;

Violet Teal

~,' W Mabelene Drive, Galllpoljs,
~ Frida)' afternoon In Holzer
6iecnca1 Center.
"'~ Born July 10, 1900, at Foster,
~:Va. , she was the daughter of the
'~ WUllam A. and Marcina

GALLIPOLIS - Violet Teal, 73,
1104 Adrian Drive, Galltpolls, died at
2: 15 p.m. Saturday in Pinecrest
Care Center.
She was a retired employee of
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by Waugh-Halley·
Wood Funeral Home.

~: GALLIPOLIS- Wavl Fitzwater,

~Tribble.

-;:!ille married Opha W. Fitzwater,
;,;tio survives, on March 10, 1925, at

thallenger slated for
~ 0 flights this year
·;:: WASHINGTON (AP) - Five
)Stronauts and the space shuttle
9!a1Ienger are to launch from Cape
'~avera! on Frtday to kick ott the
~t ambitious year In NASA's
•li1story- with a total of 52 men and
:iilomen scheduled to make 10filghts.
week's mission will feature
ftrst untethered space walks,
two astronauts testing jetered backpacks to roam up to
feet away from the orbiting
~iittle.
'
+ The fiight starts at 8 a.m. EST
;niday, and much ofwbat the crew
~. including the backpack tests,
~)"ehearsal for the next flight in
when another crew will
~mpt to retrieve and repair the
~lectlve Solar Max satellite.
· The astrona~ts also will chase an
orbiting balloon to test maneuvers
needed to track down Solar Max and
wlll practice the necessary repairs.
They plan to end the flight Feb. 11
with the ftrst landing on a 15,®foot
runway near the launch pad at
Kennedy Space Center.
~ :This fitght will be a brklge to the
n8xt one," said commander Vance
!Y. 'Brand, veteran of two earlier

::r:'rhts
:U!e

itlh

;W.O

space fitghts.
Other crew members are Navy
Lt. Cmdr. Robert L. Gibson, the
pilot; and three mission specialists,
Navy Capt. Bruce McCandless;
Army Lt. Col. Robert Stewart; and
Rllnald E. McNair, a physicist who
will be the secOnd black to fiy on an
American spaceship.
After the April filght, the NASA
launch rate accelerates to one a
month. The most manned filghts
ever launched by NASA in a single
year was five, during the Gemini
program in both 1965 and 1966.
The 1~ missions will include
deplayrnent of a dozen commercial
satellttes, the second Spacelab
science flight and the first all·
mllttary mission in June with a
secret payload. A thtrd shuttle,
Discovery, will debut in Juoc,
jotntng Columbia and Challenger in
thefieet.
Six women and three blacks have
been assigned missions during the
year. An August flight will have two
women in. the five-person crew Sally Ride and Kathryn Sullivan, the
first female astronaut ticketed to
make a space walk.

Court delays theft hearings
GALLIPOLIS - Three people
charged with grand theft scheduled
.;It! appear for prellrntnary hearings
•Firtday in Gallipolis Municipal Court
..had their cases continued until
•.Monday.
··. Charged by city pollee In the
alleged theft of four jackets from My
Sister's Closet Jan. 20 were Susan
Adkbts, Rt. 2, Chesapeake; Tammy
Aikins, Huntington, W.Va.; and
Gerald F. Halstead, also of
Huntington.
In other matters, Kevin M. Day,
22, Rt. 1, Bidwell, forfeited $&lt;10 bond
.JWr !allure to obey a traffic control
·•(Je(nce; John R. Ferguson, 22,
Ashland, Ky., forfeited $40 bond for
!allure to display disabled vehicle
i!Qiupment; Lyndon D. Hartman,
20, Rt.1, Northup, forfelted$40bond

for failure to obey a stop sign; Earl
R. Myers, 22, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
forfeited $40 bond for Insecure load.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Terry D. )'lowland, ll, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, $44; James W. Miller, 29,
Eureka Star Route, $43; Randolph
R. Carlson, 61, Worthington, $43;
Pamela S. Smith, 18, Rt. 4,
Galltpolls, $40i Danny R. Holley, 23,
Rt. 1, Bidwell, $40; Cindy L. Jones,
25, Point Pleasant, $38; Timothy M.
Hager,18, Rt. 2, Bidwell, $38.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Vatican Is described in a once
top-secret report as aldtllg the
escape ot German Nazis and Italian
fascists and of being the prime
mover of Ulegal emigrants from
Europe atter World War ll.
The report made JX~bllC Friday by
the State Department says that
among those aided by the Vatican
were WU!y Nix, head of the Free
German Committee in Rome and
well-known as a Nazi smuggler.
The study, dated 1.947, says the
Vatican's motives apparently were
"the propagation ot the faith" and
that church ottlclals asked few
questions of those they helped. The
church aided people who could
prove themselves to be Roman
Catholic and the report says the
Vatican provided the assistance
without regard to political beliefs or
nationality.
There was no Immediate com·
ment from the Vatican to the report,
although portions of It were made
JX~bllc in June in a Jewish
publication entitled "neform
Judaism."
At the time, the Rev. Plertranco
Pastore, the deputy Vatican spokes·
man bt Rome, told The Associated

Press that the article was "abeolutely absurd," adding "It doesn't
even merit a dental.''
A group of prominent American
JewsonTh\ll'!ldaycalledforapapal
investigation, and at thesametlme,
Vatican spokesman the Rev. Romeo Panctroll, told The New York
Times that he would feSlKind only to
written inquiries and would need
several days to check the archives.
The report was Prepared by a
former U.S. !llplomat bt Rome,
Vincent La Vista and was recently
declassified by the State
·
Department.
The Vatican was "the largest
in the
single
illegal OrgaJ)lzatlon
movement ofinvolved
emigrants"
bt
post-war Europe, the report said.
It said German Nazis and Italian
fascists were received In such Latin
Amerlan countries as Argentina,
Mexico and Cuba, and that the
yatican was instrumental in con·
vbtcing the countries to admit them.
It said that "in those Latin
American countries where the
church Is a controlltng or domina!·
ing factor, the Vatican has brought
pressure to bear which has resulted
in the foreign missions of those
countries taking an attitude almost

"

.--,--F¥.nergency
runs
.'

"

_;. _

'

..,....~.

i'oMEROY ..,: Three calls were
anSwered by loclll units Fl1day, the·
Meigs County E~ Medical
~Ices reports. '
J ~t 12':03 p.m., the Chester Fire

s.~t responded to a

car fire

at Five Points; Tuppers Plains at ·
-6:20p.m. wenttoanautoaccldenton ·
;, phlo 7, but no treatment was .
f!!Qutred; and at ·9: 37 pm.,-Pome'i toy went to 11 Oak St. for· George
Molden, who was taken to Veterans
~emorlal Hospital.
·

"'

f

tavorlngtheentcylntothelrcountry
ot tonner Nazi and torrmr tasctsts
or other poUtical groups, 10 long as
they are anti-O&gt;mmuntst."
It Said Vatican otflclals were
among those who helped "in
providing jobs tor (some) escapees
bt Sooth America." ·
The report said that among those
the Vatican helped was Nix, the
subject ot a secret investigation by
the Italian government, which
ordered his aiTeSt in 1.947, a few
weeks before La Vista's report was
written. "Only a matter ot minutes
before Dr. Nix's actual apprehen·
sion, he was able to learn ot hiS

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Pase:::A-7-

Pomeroy=Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

Clay Township. At a curve, the
vehicles went lett of center and
Cremeans' truck struck the bus.
The bus sustained moderate
damage and the truck, slight
damage in the 8:a&gt; a.m. accident.
In a 6:40a.m. wreck on U.S. 35in
Green Township, a car driven by
Anna R. Hawkins, 58, Rt. 2. Patriot,
was traveling east and passbtg
another vehicle. Lane was turning
right on the road. Hawkins' vehicle
then struck Lane's vehicle. Hawkins
continued on until her vehicle struck
a fence.
Lane's car hadmoderatedamage
and Hawkins' heavy damage.
Two cars received moderate
damage in Salisbury Township
Friday on Ohio 7 at the intersection
of County Road 24.
Tony R. Bolin, 29, New Marsh· ·
field, and WUllam M. Gaddls,l8, Rt.
1, Reedsville, were southbound. The
patrol said Bolin began to tum lett
onto the county road when his
vehicle was struck by the Gaddis
vehicle. Gaddis was attempting to
pass Bolin, the patrol said.
Qted by city pollee Saturday for
DWI and driving lett of center was
Lauralyn K. Burnett, 26, Addison.

GALLIPOLIS - Three persons
were cited by the Gallla-Melgs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol follow·
ing Friday accidents in Gallla and
Meigs counties.
Charged were Richard A. Mount,
48, Rt. 1, Bidwell, DWI and assured
clear distance; Mark A. Cremeans,
24, Gallipolis, failure to register
license tags; and Mary A. Lane,19,
Rt. 2, Bidwell, failure to yield.
In a 6:15p.m. accident on Ohto7bt
ChesterTownshtp,Mountwassouth
on the state highway wtiue another
driver, Angela E. Spencer, 16,
Tuppers Plains, was stopped to tum
left into a private drive. Mount was
unable to stop and struck Spencer's
vehicle in the rear.
Mount's velitcle received heavy
damage and Spencer's had moder·
ate damage.
Cremeans was traveling west and
another driver, VIrginia J. Hut·
!man, Zl, Galllpolls, operating a
Gallipolis City Schools bus, was
heading east on County Road 8 in

Grand jury
indicts three
GALLIPOLIS - A grand jury in
Gallla County Common Pleas Court
returned three Indictments Friday.
Two secrets indtclments
issued, reported _g~k of Courts

"It has always been suapected
that Dr. Nlxwasoperatfniunderthe
benevolent protection of the Vati,
can. His fllgltt and present sanctu·
ary In Vatican City Is positive proof
of this tact."
Ironically, La Vista said, It
appeared certain that 10 percent of
all Illegal emigrants paasJng
through Italy were RIISltan agents.
And It said Nix may also have been
receiving funds from Communist
sources.
•-

l/'J
ALL WINTER
MERCUANDISE

'

--- &amp;tc. o

1----.-....-=======

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

Money-Saving o~r from PIC-PAC!

Like a

Beautiful Hand Painted

good neighbor,
State Farm

Louise Burger.
Two of three Indictments were

charges of receiving stolen property
against Richard S. Daniels, a&gt;,
Eureka Star Route, and Johh E.
McGuire, 22, Rt. 1, Crown City.
The patr were arrested and
charged by the Gallla County
Sheriff's Department with the Dec.
16 break-in at the Johnny Caldwell
residence on Ohio 218.
Elble E. Burgess, 31, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, was Indicted tor theft.
Burgess was charged by city pollee
in connection with the Jan. 7theftot
a car from Jim Mink Auto Sales, 236
Second Ave.
The jury interviewed 14 wit·
nesses, Mrs. Burger said.

••••••••••••••••••

Imminent arrest, and fled to the :
Vatican where.he Is now residing," '
La VIsta wrote.

r-:;••p;.;;;::;.;;;;..~;;A;;;====;
*'"'d

Three drivers cited

Stoneware

is there
See me for car. home.
and health

• Dinnerware Elegance! • Uncompromising Quality! • Incredible Saving~~

,"

STATE PAlM

INSUIANC

Bold, rich Royalty Blue or Cocoa Brown bands encircle each lustrous Start now to collect a complete set
of this
dinnerware.·
piece, Imparting a dramatic touch of color to yout table settings. Versatile· dinnerware to highlight and delight all your dining occasions.
Safe In Microwave Ovens, Ovenproof, Dishwasher and Detergent Safe.
Each
with eac:b
Piece
$5.00
purchaq
Only

c

State Farm Insurance Companies

Home Offices: Bloomington. IIWnoil

Stickers due
GALLIPOLIS- Car owners with
last names beglnnlngwithAorBare
rembtded by Gailla County Deputy
Registrar Ruby Wilt that they must .
have their new stickers by midnight
Tuesday.
Names beginning with CorD may
purchase their stickers starting
Wednesday, Mrs. Wilt said.
Social security numbers for
Individuals or federal tax Identification numbers for companies are
required.
Office hours are from 9 a.m.-8
p.m. Monday; 9:ll a.m.-4 p.m.,
P.!esday, Wednesday and Friday; 9
..a.in.-1 p.m., Thursday and Satur·
'!lay. Phone number Is 440-8510.

1~84

Js!nuary 29,

Report slams Vatican's WWII activities

r---------------------""
~,

January 29, 1984

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

Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Follow This Weekly Schedule ·
This Week -Dinner- Plate 79'
2nd Week -Cup 79'
3rd Week -Saucer 79'
4th Week -Salad Plate 79'
5th Week -Cereal Bowl 79•

ROllS
ON
ALABAMA ...

Each with a $5.00 purchase.
Thlaschedule will be repeated.

their music, growth, accomplishments and sales ... no
oher councry crossover group can compare'!
Alabama has made chart hiscory ... all of their fourtee~
smgle releases have been #1 charted hits!

Imagine ... you can collect - -·
complete 40-pc. service for~

Alabar_na has won numerous fan and industry awards ...
mcludmg the CMA and ACM Entertainer of the Year
Award for the past CWO years ... the only sroup ever to do
so ... 1983 Grammy Award ... "Us" and People" maga·
zines' Favorite Councry Act and more.
.

· .~ _for!~·,DI~~~~~DI~~~~~~lf! ~r ~eigh~r~

And now ... Alabama ROLLS ON ... with their new album!

'

The Alcove

420...\:t

\

'

_OIPI)JUNDA11

...

a•.....c~~......~~m

.,

oaJv

31 •.60'

(That's for five pieces in each place set·
ting: dinner plate, cup, saucer, salad pia~
and cereal bowl ... for a total of 40 pteces·
to serve 8 persons! Incredible value!) Y~u
would pay al least twice as much in any
department store.
··

• 0

Gtilipols, Ohio

eRN IWLY f.JO iu am

for

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Oh~Point

man gets
s.upport

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Section [ID:

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Sunday

29, 1984

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-

WHAT'S NEXT TO PIAN?-

Members of Gallla Academy
High School's Marriage and
FamDy Living class, planned
and execuled a wedding at the
end of the semester. During the
course, sludents expolred their
ideas and attitudes toward
marriage and family. Taught by
Jenny Berridge, there were live
girls and 11 hoys In the class last
tenn, and approximately the
same this one. 'lbe girls hope to
prepare for their future, while
the boys learned marriage is
more than saying "I love you,

;a.. .--------------------.. . .---------

..,..,._

"

'.

~ .. .::

I I I 0 I I I

let's get married."

Marriage is more than ~I do'· students discover

RACINE - Annual approprlatlons totaling $116,949 were approved by Racine Village CouncU.
A breakdown of tundlng areas
tollbws: general, $5Q,!I14; pollee,
~0'.5; tire, $8,00&gt;; street, $16,DJ;
state highway, $4,00&gt;; cemetery,
$2,~00; revenue sharing, $3,®,
water department, $32,835.
CouncU held a hearing on the use
of revenue sharing tunds. Suggestlons made for use of the funds were
ditching, storm drains, well cleanIng, tire equipment, blacktopping,
buUdlng a shed tor equipment, brick
facing the village hall and lnsulatlon
for the tire station.
Asecond hearing will be held at 7
p.m. Feb. 6.
CouncU agreed not to move any
street lights that are located at
tntetsectlons; hired Linda Spencer
as I;JW!ng clerk tor the water and
trash collections; and considered
combining trash and water bills
with actlon to be taken before the
next quarterly bmtng.
Letters of appreciation are to be
sent to Pomeroy attorney Steve
Story and Phil Roberts, Meigs
Coonty engineer, tor work they have
done In helping prepare the preliminal}' appllcatlons for the FmHA

reported that the deparment re-

- --

'

Plea111nt, W. Va.

Village
approves
spending

Fire Chief Robert Johnson

~

...

•• c

•
l&gt;oMEROY - The husband of a
fotmer Pomeroy woman will feel
community support when he Is
released from a Columbus hospital
In late March.
:t'he recipient of cc:nmunlty good
w.IU Is Roger Wright, who was
paralyzed from the chest down In a
diVIng accident at his Pleasant Hill
home In the Athens area last ·
sununer.
He Is the husband of the former
Sl\lrley Baxter of Pomeroy and the
son-In-law of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
B8xter of Pomeroy.
Wright, who plans to return to his
business, Wright Constructlon Co., '
Is reportedly dolngwell and working
In preparatlon for a homecoming.
Vartous community events are .
being planned In the Athens area to
raiSe tunds to help with necessary
expenses Involved In his return to ,
work.
Besides the expenses Incurred In
his long treatment, he needs a
specially equipped van to get 'to
work sites and supervise his
workers.
Modem Woodmen of America,
Camp li990, of Shacje, sponsored a
basketball tournament at Shade
Elementary School this weekend to
help and will match tunds raised up
to$1,!XXJ.
New Lite Assembly of God Is
sponsoring an ali-(:hurch benefit
skStlng party on Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. at
Dow's Roller Rink In Nelsonville.
Anyone wishing tomakecontrlbutlops can make checks payable to
the Roger Wright Fund and mall
them to the New Lite Assembly of
God, 10 South Green Drtve, Athens.

loan.

'

By LEE ANN WELCH
'llmes-Sentlnel Staff

GALLIPOLIS -Getting mar.rled Is more tluin walking down
.the aisle, and students at GaUia
. Academy High School are findIng t~! out tor a tact.
{;. "Marriage and FamUy Llvlllg" Is an elective course at
QAHS, and In It, students are
exposed to. the reality of lite the responslbWtles of relationShips, both emotionally and
f!nanclally, according to Instructor Jenny Berridge.
· The class deals with a number
of topics, she said, and her main
goal is to acquaint students with
reality and dlspell myths being In love with being In love,
so to speak .
"I try to get them (students) to
think about their own Ideals and
attitudes - about their values,"
Mrs. Berridge said, adding
many of them have an unrealistic Idea about male and female
roles In a marriage - the men
work and the women stay home,
!Pvlng up their careers. In
today's world, she said, that
added income Is necessary to
make ends meet.
Reality - that Is what Mrs.

.

Berridge hope to get across to
the young men and women In
her class. For example, one
exercise In class Is setting
priorities concerning pleasurable activities, and their relative
cost money-wise.
Most of the Items on the list of
- 20 things students liked qo!ng
cost money to participate, anci
·' they have to understan~ that
cash after the essentials are paid
simply may not be there.
__ Money management was one
of the topics the 11-male, fivefemale member class studied.
Others Included value clarification and goal setting, child
rearing, discipline and developmental needs and family
planning.
The culmination of the
semester -long course was a
wedding - not real, of coursebut none the less, planned as It It
were. AU the members of the
class participated In some way,
right down to the "minister" In
robe, jeans and cowboy boots.
Krts Shepler and Scott Clark
were chosen to play the bride
and groom, and the entire class
planned the wedding - the
catering, gowns, music, flowers

sponded to 63 calls during 1983,
Involving 1,539 man hours. Ten calls
were In the village, 11 In Letart
ToWnship, 23 In Lebanon Township
and 191n Sutton Township.
CouncU will meet In special
session with fire departm!!llt
members at 7: ll p.m. Tuesday. Thenext regular meeting will be at 7
p.Ql.Feb. 6.
Frank Cleland presided In the .
ab6ence of Mayor Charles Pyles.

File for marriage

\

GALLIPOLIS - The following
!$pies tUed tor marriage this past ·
w~ In Gallla County Probate ·
Court.
James E. Roof, 49, Gallipolis,
railroad agent, and Shirley M.
~t. 41, 504 Spring Valley Drive,
waitress.
John C. Hogan, 43, Crown City,
cl{bletelevlslon,andShelbaJ.Short,
27j Rt.1, Crown City, mother.
Charles R. Bowling, 38, Rt 2,
G&amp;uipolls, truck driver, and Bar~~¥a A. Lewis, 27, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,

and rings. Catering was provided by the Food Preparation
class taught by Mary Bendixen.
Students also went shopping for
furniture and housing - all
within a set budget. Other
members of the class Included
KJrn Saunders. Lula Sergent ,
Waverly Wickline, Marjlll
Zembry, Shane Bailey, Shane
Davis, Mike McCormick. Rod
Morgan, Wes Mullen, Charles
Phtmps, Jeff Rathburn. Ray
Tope, Mike Simpson and Brad
Smith.
The big event - put on In the
junior high school gymnasium,
complete with basketball hoops
and physical education class
smells - was meticulously
thought out . and would have cost
between $3,!XXJ and $4,!XXJ, estimated Mrs. Berridge.
The girls in the class, with one
exception, hope to marry soon none of this "always a bridesmaid, never a bride" for these
young women. and that was one
of the reasons they decided to
take ~rriage and Family
Living.
"There's a lot more to getting
married than planning a wedding," one of them said alter the
"ceremony. " The young women
had come to the realization with help from the course there was a lot of expense in
being married and having a
family.
"Their (students) futu re Is so
full of uncertainties," ' Mrs.
Berridge said. "High school
students are unSUf'\' about their
futures - college, careers and
just 'making It' .out there."
Getting students in touch with
reality concerning that future,
that Is what J enny Berridge tries
to do during each term of
Marriage and Family Living,
and while her students may not
have completely grasped on to
"fact versus fiction" concerning
the futttre, thanks to the educational system, they have begun
to get a glimpse of what their
parents have tried to tell them
all along - things are tougher
than they think.

SOLEMN OCCASION - Weddlllgs are a solemn
time, and the "weddlllg" of two Gallla Academy Hlp
School students was no exoepUon. The bride, Kr1s
Shepler, and groom, Scott Clark, went through the
event with no problems. Here, they kneel before the

.... ......

-~

11JESE ARE REALLY EXPENSIVE - Sludents In Jenny
Berrid3e's Marriage aod Fam-

~e-

. &amp;bert Heady, 27, Rt. 2, Nelsonville, student, and Theresa R.

lb' Llvbig · class- -at

RQcchl, 26, 102 Mabelene Drive, .
waitress.
.
Augu&amp;tusC. Underwood, 73,Rt3,
B~. retired, andMaggleMWer,
67j Rl3, C'.a!Upolls, housewife.
Jeffrey A. Smith, 22, Dayton,
alictlon house employee, and Cynthia K. Wmtams, 18, Rt. 2, Crown
Ci!Y' UllelllPloyed.
Charles- A. · Burris, 23, Rl -5,
Gallipolis, laborer, and Rhonda L.
BllaDd, 32, 536 Jackson Pllre,

J ~~
-:

~!~

FtiTuRE

..

CATEJlERS'! -;- Chrll Elc emr,-left, and Steve WoUe
~ ·~cake'' clurlnc a fooclll clllia at GaJIJa Academy Hlp
ScliOOI. Ttils
wu parforan-ex~anoo ena of the Marriage
and Fiunlb' IJvkl&amp; ._, Ia wldcb ll&amp;udents parilclpated In a wedding,
~. but piiii!Mid by members of the coune.
' ·

l,

project

.,.

rEceptloolst'•

I ..,

i.

'

, ....

'

GaDia

Academy'vlsMed local stores to
!JIIdget • fot · a. family situation,
from wedding to housekeeping.
Here "bride to lie" Krts Shepler
looks·' at weddlllg gowns at a
local dress shop. 'lbe ~ts
p1anDecJ a wedciJrlg, . cOmplete
With budget Mtrlctlons, and set
up a first home uilder monetary

guidelines.

~

...

~

"rnlntiters," one decked out In typical school style boots and counleroy pants. 'The alter and flowers

were donated, as were the services of a number of
other local stores.

�..

·Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

. Poge- B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Kj! rie's Korner

Personal phone service,
that's how it used to be
lly KATIE CROW
Times-&amp;•ntiel Staff
E&lt;tdi~ Guinther, Gallipolis (for·
met;;~, of Syra ·
r ·us~ l bmught in lj;'&gt;,
a ~opy of The ~ ·
Dail~ Sen tin el ·
published Ma rch 1
[951.
·'
.rn t h ~ paper .•
waS: an ad under wanted which
r~aO. top qua lit y poultty, phone
.JOlY Pomeroy or Letart Falls or
coniact Crow and Co .. Letart Fa lls:
This brought back many memoriei; for me, as we once o~ned the
company mentioned .
] £ a lso remineded me how nice
pl\Qlle service was at that time.
~u would pick up the phone and
a pleasant voice on the other end
W'1_Wd say, "number please." There
w~ no hassle in those days.
l'ou would say " I would like 401Y
oc: :262X please. " · a nd the lady
ol)el'ator would dial the number for
yoi.J; and if the line happened to be
b~sy she would say. "Sorry the line
is -bUsy."
~ a t was most interesting you
aliYays (most of the time ) knew the
o~·a tor and would address her by
h()l':first name.
]-don't believe, no matter how far
w~ :go, they can ever replace the
wedderful service and the personal
e&lt;iltac t we had at that time.
have come a long way · it is
t!1fe. However, I don't believe we
cai( measure up to the "good old
days". don't you agree?
~anks Eddie for remembering

J.1

\WO!"""•

n

ile

&amp;:
_ : fy diagnosis

~STON

(AP I Research
sd~tists heresay
they havefounda

'YD)I to identify an abnormal feature

~hromosones that appears in
~ictpnsofHuntington'sdisease.
· ;rile disease affects about 40,000

of•

Americans.
~~ymptoms of the disease usually

~;c:re~p~farvi~~~/~~n~·aan~

RE!¢ent chance of inheriting the
~e. The scientists say their
dl¥t&gt;very could lead to a test within
tW«:(years that could be used on
adiJits to see if they will develop the
dltea
.,: se later inlife.
.

me and stopping by with the
clipping.
A Va lentine dance wUl be held
Sunday, February 12 at Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy from 8 p.m . to 11 p.m.
Advance tickets are $10 per
couple and may be purchased from
Elza Gilmore or Mickey Wllllams.
Take you Valentine and go · you'll
enjoy It . Oh yes, George Hall wUl be
providing the music.
Mrs. Eldon (Gladys) Walburn,
Middleport, extends her sincere
thanks to her many friends and
relatives for the wonderful cards
and flowers she received whlle a
patient in the hospital.
Mrs. Walburn Is improved but is
under home care.
We send best wishes.
. A reminder that the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce has
changed its meeting date from the
first Tuesday of each month to the
second Tuesday of each month.
The next meeting rf the chamber
wUl be held February 14 at noon In
the banquet room at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Celebrating birthdays Friday,
Jan. T7 were Becky Tannehill and
Pam Crow.
··
Becky and Pam were pleasantly
suprlsedwithaballoonboquetfrom
two of the nicest people, Bernadette
Anderson and Nancy Htll.
Becky and Pam were so pleased
with such a nice rememberance.
Congratulations to you both.

...• .
r:

·-~

~lJI':

,

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.. .

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'•

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Meigs County
POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomerw, Invites all senior
citizens of the county to take part tn
activities at the center. The center
Is open Monday through Friday
from 8:30 a.m. to 4: 30 p.m.
Schedule of activities for the week
of Jan. JO.Feb. 6 Is as follows:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m.; Chorus to Pomeroy
Health Care Center, 1-2 p.m.
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative, 10 a.m .-noon;
Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a .m.;
Games, 1-2 p.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.noon; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a.m.
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11: 30
a .m.
The pool table Is open dally, as
well as other games, Uno, Euchre,
Pitt, checkers and puzzles. Quilting,
lap robes, bed pads and various
other volunteer assignments are
avallableeachdaytobeworkedon.
Physical Fitness at 11:30 a .m .
daily.
The center wUl be open dally, but
bus routes wiU not be run It road
co.lC!ltlons pose a safety factor.
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves a hot meal at noon each day.
Call992-2161 to make a reservation
for a meal no later than 9 a.m., the
day o! the reservation. The followlng menu Is planned !or the week of
Jan. JO.Feb. 6.
Monday- Salmon patty, lima
beans, cole sla,w, roll, butterscotch
pudding.
Tuesday - Pork chops In gravy,
mashed potatoes, Harvard beets,
biscuit, rainbow gelatin cubes with
whipped topping.

,

·•·.

.......-

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'

Wednesday - Chicken liver with
rice pUat, baked grean beans (with
mushroom soup and bread crumb
topping), pineapple and cottage
cheese, pumpkin cake.
Thllrsday - Navy beans with
ham, penny carrot salad, lime
gelatin with pears, cornbread,
cookie.
Friday - Spaghetti, Italian
mixed vegetables, tossed salad, hot
buttered Italian bread, apricots.
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
available dally. Menu subject to
change as weather conditions and
attendance warrants .

Ga//;' C
ta

t

Wednesday - Ham and potato
casserole, cooked cabbag2, gingerbread with tppptng, bread, butter,
mllk.
Thursday - Wieners, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, jello and

The job counselors will explain · ·
the manner In which potential jobs
are matched with tile knowledge,
skills, and abllltles o! applicants.
•
At the present time there are job openings tor a live-In with the
elderly with pay, babysitter, and a
desk clerk tor a local motel.

---

GALLIPOLIS - Activities tor r:==---==---------~-----the week of Jan. 3(). Feb. 4 at the
Senior Citizens Ceqter located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, Jan. 30- BloOd Pres~OR
sure Check, 1:30 p.m .; Chorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, Jan . 31 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11: 15 a.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 1 - VInton
Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Crown City
MobUe Unit, 1 p.m. ; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 2- Bible Study,
11 a.m.-noon; Advisory Council, 1
p.m.
Friday, Feb. 3 - Stat! Meeting,
8:15 a.m.-1:45 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m. ;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 4 - Yoga Class,
WE HAVE A FULL TIME SHOP TECHNICIAN
10:30 a.m.
ON DUTY IN THE SHOP
The Senior Nutrition Program
wUl serve the following menus:
Monday -Macaroni and cheese,
green beans, beets, fruit cocktail,
bread, butter.
.
Tuesday - Pepper steak, boiled
potato, broccoli, plums, bread,
985-3307
butter, rnitk.

WF ARF YOUR SALES

NO PAYMENT OR INTEREST TIL APRIL

~

IIC,IIIP, ELIC, lEI.

AIWELL
HOUSE

..-

118 E. MAIN ST.

PHONE: 992-3233

You really can 't be too over-protective in the matterespecially in viewing those years ahead when you'll
be retired and no longer bringing in that paycheck.
Select one of our tax-deferred IRA plans. Our
personal bankers can offer a variety Qf
flexible plans with one sure to be just right
for you. Let us help you do the protecting
- come in today and start your IRA with
us - our answer to your retirement
peace of mind.

D:
A.

c(

·-.

THE ROSE

$49999

•

-.
•

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--.

..•.
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..

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..
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.•"'··.

...

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

• Silver Bridge

Plaza

·)&gt;

-a

0

YOUR CHOICE

$34999

~

Valley

--.
.--•..

•Denotes "Tellerific" Location

...

LARGE SELECTION OF

WA,TERBED
COMFORTERS
FOR

1/2 PRICE_

3 PC. PADDED

· RAILS
'$3995

..-.·
-.-.

241 THIRD AVE.

~

...•
.-~ WATER . BEDS ..
.
•
IN THIS AREA'

...

'

•1

GALLIPOLIS,
r

..

: 'I

TISSUE
4

ROLL

HOLLAID

CE
CREAM
~.$j39

99t
ARMOUR
BEEF

$169 FRillS

BEEF I CHEDDAR

Ll

rr-----=~ BEnY

~:

RINSO

RTS
FROSTIIG

*119

DETERGEIT
42
,

....... u

99t

CAMPBELL'S

CAMPBELL'S

HOMESTYLE
CHICKEN
NOODLE

TOMATO
SOUP

*1

CROCKER

SOUP
lOll.

oz

~FOR$
~

PRIDE
SALTilE

CRACKERS

69t

QUAKER

STEW

~$129
1----

3

~KR.FT ,

Ll

IIIWEmiD

LARGEST .
SELECTION OF

Wa~side furnitureOH.

BATH ROOI

7~oll

- ~

ALL BEDS INCLUDE:
Headboard t Frame • Regular Pedestal - Deck • Heater • Liner • Full Wave
Mattress • Fill Kit • Patch Kit • Water Treatment.
·
Delivered and Set Up.

1I

IORTHERII'

Ot i

'

.. 41.

MILK

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KAHI'S

*17.!.

2%

~·

-

"

SAUSAGE

SHURFIIE
SHORTEIIIG

. OR

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FALTER'S PIECE
BRIUISCHWIEIER

~

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FALTER'S REG. or HO~ft

CHIP CHOP

..•.

Member fDIC
Spring

FALTER'S

'

'

::•·:

FALTER'S

....- --

~

A.

Ll

Ll

.,THE

JOlES' BOYS

z

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SALE
)&gt;
~
ENDS
JAN. 31st ~

1&amp;1

C&amp;S Bank .Q

ROAST

169 CHUCK $13·
GROUID

SLICED

ROYAL CREST

...."

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~

COTTAGE
C"EESE

z -0
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The Commercial 8r Savings Bank

.-

....

........
-

$

HIWTHORI
MELLODY

2 DAYS

POMEROY, OH.

*599

ARM

BOlE
II

FRESH LEAl

U.S.U. CHOICE

SIDlED WHOLE

FINAL

GALLERY HAIR ARTS

COFFEE
3 LB

A New Look.

Specialists in Men's, Women's and Chldren's Styles

CDftYSTOIES

--

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

~~~Lda~O:~~i!~i

WHILE.QUAITITIES UST!

--

*ZENITH
*SYLVANIA
*KELVINATOR
*SPEED QUEEN
*WARM MORNING HEATERS
*SUNRAY
•UTTON
*KITCHEN AID
*INTERSTAT SATEWTES

w a' .t e rbed sa Ie

PRICEI-D IOIDAY JAI.30
THRU IUIDIY FEB. &amp;

.--...

SERVICE HEADQUARTERS

Lt0
•
I
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Ur pro f eSSIOna
Stylists Give You

WE WELCOME FOOD STIIPS

--

OUn ')'

RIDENOUR'S

131 PilE ST GALLIPOLIS 44..1311
loo·w.liall.sT.POMEROY IIZ·D31tlj
I

]ob Bank has openings
GALLIPOLIS - The Job Bank,
located In the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, welcomes employers and applicants to
telephone the center at 446-7000
between the hours ot 9 a.m. and 4
p.m. to discuss their employmen•
needs with the job counselors.

IILLIPOLIS I POMEROY

~

fruit, cornbread, butter.
,
Friday - Lasagna, tossed salad,
Italian bread, peach pte, butter,
milk.
Choice o! beverage served with
each meal. Meals subject to change
without notice.

r.r-~~~~~!_H~i;H;;;;;;;;;c;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;~
CHESTER, OH.
IS
HA
t~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~
..
VE THE WINTER BLAHS?

,. :

.
•
.•.

-.·-..

Area Senior Citizens' activities announced

A little over-protective
about your future?
--- ...-··
.......

January 29, 1984

-•

-·~

...• .

-•

~--

..
•;

•

...

ICEBERG

IRAPEFRU_IT
~ . ORAliE

·

FRESH

HEAD

LIRIE IREEI

LETTUCE

JUICE
FRESH

EAD$99• OIIOIS ·
YELLOW

I

I

I

�..

""·

,...

~

January 29, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea1ant, W.Va.

Page-64:!L The Sunday Times-Sentinel

COLUMBUS - Ohio State Unl·

Rev. and Mrs. George F. KeDey

~--

... ~

- ...

~

Page--~5~

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Penny Saunders bride of William Kail Burleson

"

the commitment of 10 many of Ita!
alumni to the preervatlon- of the"
rule of law and the-lnte8l'lty of the_,.
judicial system," said Dean James ~
E. Meeks.
Probably even more than 169 of •·
the 5,500 alumni of the college serve
as judges, but college officials could ·not determine all of the judgeships •
that they hold.
College alumni sit on state courts .
In 61 of Ohio's 88 counties, and they
hold all of the judgeships In Henry, •
Knox and Plckaway counties.

GALLIPOIJS- Penny Saunders
bride of Wllllam Kall
Burleson In a Sept. 3 ceremony at
became the

First Baptist Church In Gallipolis.

Th!! bride Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James W. Saunders
of
Gallipolis and the granddaughter of
Mrs. W. Earl Saunders of Gallipois.
The groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kail T. Burleson, Gallipolis.
The double ring ceremony was
officiated by the Rev. Alvis Pollard.
Music was provided by vocalists
Mr.andMrs.JamesW.Saundersll,
brother and sister-In-law of the
bride, and Joe Gully pianist.
Given In marriage t)y her father,
the bride wore a gown of white
organza with a Venice lace bodice
and seed pearls and sequins. The

gown featured a chapel train, full
Bishop sleeves with cuffs trimmed
in seed pearls and seq ins. Shew6rea
mantilla headpiece with Venice lace
and and a fingertip vell, and carried
a bouquet of white silk roses.
Matron of honor was Mrs. Debby
Simmons, sister of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Connie
Massie of Galllpolls, sister of the
groom, LuEllen Saunders of Hlns·
dale, Iii., sister of the bride and
Paula Pullins, GallJpolis .
'They wore fioor length gowns of
dusty
with bib
effectted
bodices.
They rose
carried
variega
pink
bouquets.
Best man was David Burleson,
Gallipolis, brother of the groom.
Ushers were Rob Massie of Galllpo·

.

The bride Is a graduate of Ho!zet
Medical Center School of NurslnC
and Cedarville College.
••
The groom Is a graduate ~
CedarvlllP College and Is employe&amp;
as a herdsman at BobEvansHJddesi
Valley Ranch, Bidwell .

lis, brother-in-law of the groom, Tim
Massey, Gallipolis and Johnny
Payne, Vinton .
Flower girls were Esther and
Bethany Simmons, nelces o! the
bride.
A reception followed in the church
fellowship room, given by Earlene
Sau nders, aunt of the bride. The
guest book wa s attended by Mrs.
VIcki Stairs, Grand Rapids, Mich .,
sister of the groom .
The couple will reside in Gallia
County.

II"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

IJ.IUJ {),1\ 1(.....

Brabhams celebrate anniversary

(Rita) Van Hoy of State Road, N.C.
They also have 15 grandchildren
and three great-grandchidren.
The couple moves to Gallipolis in
1957 from the Milton, W.Va. area
and have since lived in North
Carolina and Florida. He is a
minister and has been selfemployed as a carpenter. They
presently attend Poplar Ridge Free
Wtll Baptist Church.
Friends and relatives are invited
to attend the reception from 2 to 5
p.m.

RODNEY Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett Brabham (the former
Nola Matthews) will celebrate~helr
50th anniversary Feb. 4 with an
or-en reception hosted by their
chlldren at Rodney United Methodist Church (Fellowship room) 3 to
5 p.m .
The couple are the parents of
seven children: Mrs. Jesse (Mabel)
Runyon, Ashland, Ky.; Larry,
Kingston, Tenn. ; Don, Columbus;
Mrs. Robert (Joy) Trimble, Circleville; Mrs. Dan (Verna) Brown,
Greenville, S.C.; Ed, Pataskala;

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown

Browns note anniversary
a !tending were Mrs. Brown's sister,
Naomi Pickens, Chillicothe.
The children presented their
lJ8rents with a two tiered decorated
anniversary cake. Walter Brown
and the foriner Margaret Pickens
were married on Dec. 24, 1943 at
Proctorville.
During the Thomas and Cowdery
family holiday visit with the
Browns, the ninth birthday of Mara
Thomas, born on Christmas day,
was observed.

f,~r

Check with us at DJ's for a large
selection of Candy Molds and Nolions for Valentine Day. Also re·

"Only alter the books were
prlntedwastheerrornotlced,"sald
JohnMcManus,directorofadrnlnlstratlve information systems and
services.

Beginning Crochet Classes
Feb. 6-6:30 to 8:30p.m.
Intermediate Tole
Feb. 7-6:30 to 8:30p.m .
Beginning Cake Decorating

McManusd~

POMEROY - Bookmobile schedule in Meigs County is brought by ·
the Mlegs County Publl~ Ubrary
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, Jan. 30- Carpenter (Laura's
Store) , 3: 10.3: 40 p.m .; Dexter
(Church!, 4: 1().4: 40 p.m .: Danville
(Church). 5:20-5:50 p.m .; Rutland
(Civic Center), 6:30-8 p.m .
Tuesday, Jan. ~~ - Pon land
j?ost Office) , 2:10.2:40 p.m.; Le-

DJ's

numbers, but it's the University of
Dllnois that got the $32,00J case of
indigestion.
Treating professors and janitors
with equal abandon, the computer
somehow deleted names, addresses
and telephone numbers from a tape
usedinmaklngupanewunlverslty
directory - leaving 6,00J blanks
untll the problem was spotted and a
newdirectoryprlnted.

&amp;ister now for all our February
classes.
Beginning Cake Decorating
Feb. 1-9:30 to 11 :00 a.m.
Beginning Tole &amp;
Decorative Painting
Feb. 2-6:30 to 8:30p.m.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
$
COUPON
$ BRING THIS COUPON AND SAVE EVEN MORE!
$ SAYE AN EXTRA ss WHEN YOUR PURCHASE TOTALS 25
$ SAVE AN EXTRAs 10 WHEN YOUR PURCHASE TOTALS 50
$

The university Is supposed to
provide the company with the vital
Information on a computer tape. In
return, the university receives
24,00J free copies of the book, whlle
theprintingcompanymakesmoney
from the advertising in the
directory.

tan

Falls !Effie's Restaurant) .
~:05-3:50 p.m .; Racine (Bank),
4::1:&gt;-6:00 p.m .; Syracuse t Pooli ,

Save 40% to 50%
Storewide

6:20-7:50 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 1 -

Second Ave., L a fayette Mall, Ga llipolis
~V~~)

Chester

c:::ll r - tl
The Saving Place"

446-9510

Our lorm ontenhon os to have every •Ove•·

t•setl otem 10 s l oe ~ on ou1 shelves 11 •n
ad ~e•t• sed •te.n 15 not ava otabte l o• our cnase Oue 10 any untore seen •eason
t&lt;; ma11 will ossue a Ra on Cneclo. on request
l or tne me•cnandose tone ote m o• •easonoltlle lo11m•11 quantoty l to be purchased at
1ne sa1e OIIC!l ,. ne neve• a~ ;,ol atl t e 01 woll
sen 1o.., o11 co m~oat11e q..,olllly nem at o11
~o mo••aole •e&lt;luctoon on p"ce
Re gular or•Ces mav va•r between stores

A IWW DIIIECTION rN HAIR OEBKJN""

BEDROOM BONANZA
PINE BEDROOM Reg. S1072 ........... . . $697
CHERRY BED~ SOLD Reg. S1140 ..... $859
OAK BEDROOM Reg. S1536 ............ . $957

~

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Gingham checka. Polyester/cotton for crafts and
curtains. Machlnewash,45" wide. REG. S2.29YD.
Cancllewlcklng yam. For country crafts. Choice
of colors. NOW 2/$1.44

20 COLOR .PORTRAITS

Aida cloth.14-count, 18-countln 12" x 12" .

MAPLE

Our Reg. 3. 77

Natural clay
litter contains
odor.

E~t embrolcHrles. Polyester/coHon.

Machine washable, 45" wide.
REG. $4.99AND$5.99YD.

SAVE '300

Gabadreme'" and Cadence~~&gt;. Polyester.
Moctllne wash, 60". REG. $4.99-$5.99 YD.

2-8x10
3-5x7

McColl's
8245

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95
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temperature.
3 Heat Settings

Machlnewash,45" wide. REG. $5.99YD.

ON KODAK PAPER

c

Permanently
Oil-Filled
Electric Heater

•
•

Lepr.chaun linen lookl. Poly/rayon sulllngs.

LIVING COLOR
PACKAGE SPECIAL

&gt;

All-purpose fluorescent
plug-in light with 2, 40-W
rapid start lamps, hang.
ing hooks. cord. chain.

Our Reg. 67.87

2.27
25 lb. Cat Litter

6·pr. Pkg. Of
Tube Socks For
Girls' Or Boys'
Striped cotton/
polyester: sizes
7-8!1,; 9-11.

Dresser, mirror, bed, 4 drawer
chest and ltiaht stand.

•

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.:''
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$3.77vARD ·

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[;;)

3:g97

CGIIcol. Entire-stock In 100% coHon. Machine
wash,45" . REG. $3.99YD.

48" Utility Light

[;1

[;)

Concorcl'l Ketllecloth®. Crisp polyester/cotton;
Machine washable, 45". REG. $3.79 YD.
:

Mlr May Vary

12.88

I
I
I
I

polyester, 45". REG. $2.69 YD.

\lt'm ba \ arwn .tl B oJ o~ l St-n,d-

Open Daily 10-9
Sunday 1-6

Machine wash, 45" . REG. $2.99 YD.

Polh. For blouses or linings. Machine washable

o --

!Fire&amp;at~n),2:1~2:45p. m .; Krn'' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

!Nonh side of Keno Bridge), 3-~ : :~1
p.m .; Success Road (near 390001.
3:'45-4 : 15 p.m .; Long Bottom (Post
Ottlce), 4: 25-5:10 p.m .: Reedsville
!Reed's Store), 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains 1Lodw1ck'sl. 7:207:50p.m.; BaumAddltlon,8: 10-8: 40
p.m .

Printed puckers. For kldsweor. Poly/coiion.

I

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WAI.Ilth ()Ill t AU H)fl
AH oVf'()!H I Mflot t

Spring prints. For children's wear or dresses.
Poly/conan, machine wash, 45".
REG. $2.49-$3.29 YD.

-------·WITH THIS COUPON A--------1

b

I

$1.77 YARD

·----------------------------

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Monday thru Friday
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Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

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Further Mark Downs

Meigs Bookmobile set

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Spring Valley Plaza

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,,f {Jun.J tr~..,t J I Jnd nJ[ . . . .Jf(. l\·rtl·u "'-'-'-kilnt.:'&gt; JrtrLJnntd n1,.,..

1 anuary Clearance Sale

Mr. and Mrs. WUUarn Kail Burleson

gifts.

CHAMPAIGN. m. (AP) _ The
computer ate the s,OOJ phone

h.JH•

llllf ••UI&lt;iiJOdJn,L: &lt;_r,Jb..1JC JO

Mrs. Hoyt (Nell) Miller, Gallipolis.
Therearel6grandchlldrenandtwo
great-grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Brabham were
manied Feb. 5, 1934 at Catlettsburg, Ky. They are members of
Rodney United Methodist Church.
Both retired from G.D.C. In 1m
and live In Gallipolis. All relatives
and friends are invitl'd to attend the
reception. The couple requests no .

CAND.Y &amp; CRAFT
SUPPLY

jt·v. tk·r-,

h:: t'l l .J'I'&gt;l'l llf l}.: hrJt...,·ll o-lx·

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Computer deals
$32,000 blow

REEDSVU.LE - Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Brown of Reedsvtlle celebrated their 40th wedding annive;sary recently with a family dinner at
their home.
Attending were their children and
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. WllUam H . (Melanie) Thomas, Matthew, Devin and Mara, Springfield;
Mr. and Mrs. Steve (Linda l
Cowdery, Christopher, Jason, and
Bradley, Chillicothe, and Mr. and
Mrs. David Brown, Columbus. Also

~

Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Bra!JIIam

Kelleys to note 50th anniversary
BIDWELL - The Rev. and Mrs.
George F . Kelley, Route 1, Bidwell,
Wm observe their 50th wedding
almiversary with an open reception
on Feb. 5 at Suzannah Baptist
Church, Fudge's Creek, Ona, W.Va.
George Franklin Kelley and
J!!well Mlldred Birch were manied
Feb. 7, 1934 at Huntington, W.Va.
: They are the parents of five
children: Mrs. Herman (Clara
Jean) Johnson of Mllton, W.Va.:
Norman of Kissimmee, Fla.; David
of Gallipolis; Mrs. Gerald (Vivian)
""'""'" of Bidwell; and Mrs. Glenn

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

.

OSU·honors local judges
veralty' a CoUeae of Law has
honored 168 alumnl.wh.oareaervlng
as judges through tout the country.
II awarded Certificates of Dis·
Unction to the judges at its 1983
Annual Alumni Return, which the
college sponsors tn cooperation
with its alumni association. In
Gallla County, Thomas S. Moulton,
Gallia County Court of Common
Pleas, 8/ld Norah M. King, U.S.
Magistrate, Federal District Court,
Southern District, were honored.
"The College of Law is proud of

January 29, 1984

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THURS., FEB. 2 - 10:00. TO 7:60 OHIO VALLEY
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�.

Page-8-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January 29, 1984

January 29, 1984

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

-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-7

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

Community Corner

Film crew adopts stray animal

Lori Withee, Christopher Bullion
trade vows in GaTiipolis ceremony
GALLIPOLIS - Lori. Louise
Withee and Christopher Dean
Bulllon exchanged wedding vows
on Oct. 8 at the First United
Presbyterian Church, Galllpolls.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Allison Scott, Gallipolis,
and the groom Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Bullion, Lucasville.
The Rev. Frank Hayes and the Rev.
Tura Hayes performed the doublering ceremony following a program
of organ music by Ann Moody.
Allen Saunders, soloist. presented
"The Lord's Prayer."
The altar was decorated with an
arrangement of pink and burgundy
roses and carnations, candelabra,
and the pews were marked with
pink and burgundy bows.

short puffed sleeves.
Denise Scott, sister of the bride,
and Sherry Cornett, Pomeroy, were
the bridesmaids. Their dresses
were styled as the maid of honor's
In dusty pink. they carried a single
pink rose.
Kenny R. SMith, Lucasville, was
the best man. Ushers were Chris
Withee, brother of the bride, and
Jim Bateman, Union City. they
wore burgundy tuxedos. The groom
wore a gray morning suit.
A reception was held Immediately following the ceremony In
the church fellowship hall which
was decorated with bells and pink,
burgundy and white streamers.
The three-tiered cake was decorated with white and pink roses.

Escorted by her father, the bride
wore a gown of sheer polyester
lined with taffeta . It was fashioned
with Venlse lace panels and
appliques with a pearl trimmed,
scoop neckline. sheer long sleeves
with pearl accents at the cuffs, and
a dropped back bodice. The A·llne
skirt had panels of Venlse lace and

Assisting at the reception were
Miss Teresa Stowers, Miss Venita
Swetnam, and the Wbmen:S Associ·
ation of the Presbyterian Church.
A!tending the guest register was
Miss Kennl Horton.
The couple resides at Eureka
Star Route, Gallipolis.

featured a cathedral train. Her
fingertip veU feUfrom a picture hat
accented with Venlse lace and pearl
trim. She wore a pearl necklace and
earrings, and carried a cascade of
pink sweetheart roses and baby's
breath.
Miss Paula Bechtel, Tlpp City,
was . maid of honor. She wore a
mauve Oriental silk gown with a
round neckline, fitted bodice, and

A graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, the bride received a
B.M. Ed. from Morehead State
University. She is a substlt)lte
teacher In the GalllpollsCity, GaUia
County, and Meigs County school
districts.
The groom graduated from
Morehead State University with a
B.M. Ed. degree. He is employed as
a vocal music teacher In the KYger
Creek area schools.

How much longer?

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A consistent offering, although IIOITle
stray doe found . hanging around choice cuts of meat l)ave been
outside Cefll,l!IJ High School earlier spotl.ejlln Teacher's bowl.
"They pass through here and talk
lhls moqth 1ras been adopted by the
crew of the tUm "Teachers," which · to her. She's just a frteMly dog,"
Is shooting the movie at the school.
Curry said.
Appropriately named Tej!cher,
He said Teacher stays In her
the female mixed chow was a little house, which Is near the security
worse for wear untO a trip to the guard's post, but Is a welcome
veterinarian was arranged byoneof visitor Inside the buDding, renamed
the crew. After receiving shots, . John F. Kennedy High School fur the
· vitamins and a bath, she returned to movie.
a doghouse buUt by the movie's
Although Teacher Is In close
CllJ1.lE!Ilters. It even has a blanket.
proximity to movie stars Nick Nolte
"Just about everybody feeds It," and Judd Hirsch, the Hollywood
said Richard Curry, a security production hasn't seemed to turn
guard at the school.
her head, Curry said.
"She acts just like nothing etse Is
He said dog food Is the most
happening."

By Charlene HooOich
Dally Sentinel Stalf
We'll all khow Thursday ......
That Is whether
there wlli be six
more weeks. of
winter.
,
It all depends
on whether that
rascal groundhog
sees
after hibernating
shadow when he emerges from his
burrow Feb. 2.
The role of groundhog as weather
forecaster stems from age-old
customs and bellefs. The story goes
that I! the groundhog sees his
shadow, he is frightened by it and
crawls back Into his borrow to sleep
for another six weeks.
0!1 the other hand if the skies are
cloudy, the animal stays above
ground in anticipation of the spring
warmth.
Even though many think that this
whole groundhog thing is rtdicu·
lous, there are others who swear
thar tlu-ough the years the animals
have been more accurate than the
U. S. Weather Burea u.

A TOTALLY
UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS
No other tribute is as lasting
as a personalized memorial
from Logan Monument Co.
It is worthy expression of
love and respect.

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Dean Bullion

Airline offers aid to smokers
CHICAGO (AP) -Coffee, tea ora
helpful pamphlet on how to quit
smoking?
So goes the rundown of offerings
on Midway Airlines' tobacco·free
Chlcago·St. Louts flights, a week·
long experiment Inaugurated
Monday.

While banning all smoking during
the one-hour trip, Midway showed
compassior. for the 1\fcotlneaddicted, equipping planes with
special survival kits- plastic trays
with candy, gum and no-smoking
hints.

======Engagements)======

By ,Appointment

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., Inc.
POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2588

388-8603

SEWING -- c-.,..;
r---------------------~~~s

I

"

j/
Kelly Renee Shl1let
&amp;bert Nibert

Jennifer Oyler
Steve Darst

Kmttn Hoffman

Hoffman Morris
GALLIPOLIS - Wedding plans
have been completed by Kristin
Hoffman, Mansfield, and David R.
Morris, Gallipolis. ·fneweddlngwUl
take place 2:30p.m., July 7, at the
First Congregational Church of
Mansfield.
She Is the daughter of James and
Gloria Hoffman of Mansfield, and
he Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Christian Morris of Gallipolis.
Miss Hoffman is a graduate of

Lexington High School and Is a
junior at Ohio University, Athens.
She Is employed at Mansfield
Restaurant when not attending
school.
Morris is a graduate of Houston
Academy, Dothan, Ala. , and at·
tended George C. Wallace College In
Alabama. He Is a gradllale of Ohio
University with a B. B.A. degree. He
Is a bodybuilder trainer at Gold's
Gym In Columbus.

Mary Marie Ridgway

John R. Hoffman

Shiflet Nibert
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Shiflet, Gallipolis, are an·
nounclng the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Kelly Renee, to Robert
Nibert, GaUipolls.

Miss Shiflet ·is employed as an
Orthodontic Assistant to Dr. E.
John Strauss, Gallipolis. Nibeli wUl
be entering the U.S. Navy in
February.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

I

Quilting Books &amp; Fabric
(Calicos Galore)
Craft Patterns
Embroidery Supplies
Candlewick Transfers
&amp; Thread
Hoops - For Framing
Quilting, Embroidery, etc.
Quilt Batting - poly-fill
Soft Sculpture Doll Patterns
Assorted Needles

Lincoln, home
for cribbage
LINCOI.,N, Neb. (AP) - John
Wunderlich has got big plans for a
big event that he hopes wtll do for
Lincoln what an auto race did for
Indlaitapolls. Now all he needs are
32,768 people as excited about
cribbage as he Is.
But he figures the truly fanatic
among the nation's estimated 4
million cribbage players wt11
emerge once. !hey learn truit he's
drawing up plans for l! world
cribbage tournament with a $1
mllllon first prize.
As president of Mllllon Dollar
Ciibbage Tournament Inc., Wun·
derllch isJX&gt;klng toward July 1985
when he hopes to hOI!! the finals of an .
tn~tlorial playoff In Lincoln.
The . prize money would be
obtained through one-time .I!IJ!ry
fees of $:1&gt; for each competitor, and
Wunderlich said he would accept
32,768 entrants, providing a purse of
$1,146,!130.
~ "That's a bigger ptlt.i! UWf"tlle "
IndianapOlis 500 or 'tile Kentucky
·' Derby," said the retired fraud
Investigator tor tile state weltafe' ·
~t.·

SALE DATES: January 29thru February 4, 1984

Quantity Rights Reserved
Not Responsible for Typographical Errors

Donna Drake has donated her
time and will be entertaining with
stories at the library from .6 to 7
p.m . each Monday evening begin·
ning tomorrow. .
Ever hear of Burford's Hotel?
Betty Denny, a collector of old
dishes and china, was recently
given a heavy white bowl by Louise
HaD clearly stamped on the bottom ,
"Bwford's Hotel China." Through
the years there have been Burford
.families In Middleport, but even
some of the old timers don't recall a
Burford's Hotel.
Betty would be delighted to hear
from someone about the place. Her
number Is 992·5.111.
Thought for this day .." People are
like stained gtass windows; they
glow and sparkle when it 's sunny
and bright; but when the sun goes
down their true beauty Is revealed
only if there is a Ugh! from within."
Au thor unknown.

Superior Tavem

.boneless
.hams . .

whole

Superior Whole or Half Slab

how old the oak is - maybe 100 or
200, she guesses. She said the tree
was tuUy grown when her husband
built their house 30 years ago.
Mayor Bob Martinez wt11 lead a
spectal ceremony today under the
spreading oak tree.
The contest was held to promote
publlc awareness of Tampa's ma·
ture native trees and to encourage
volunteer participation 1r tt· '11U·
nlclpal tree Inventory to keep tr dCk
of the tree population.
.
There Is no word on whether the
contest winner wUI tum over a new
leaf.

Slab Bacon.

HOOVER

$11495

Oyler- Darst

• Olrt·llnder headlight
• Wide tread wheels
• Full furniture guard
'O;~~tl• Comfortable grip

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Send the Letter Holder Bouquet.
Valentine's Day, Thesday, Fe6.14.
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• All-steel agitator
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• 4·on-the-floor
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chipped meats
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Beef,
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"Appliance$ And T.V.'s Arl Not Included In This Offer."

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POMER.QY
FLOWER
.SHOP
'-·"ThP''
A
Send• Love''· ··

Woy mPrica
101 lutt-ut Ave. .
·
PH. 112·2011
Pon~~ercov, OH. '
Or 112•1721
ell mljor creel~ cerdt, end wire flower•

~~iish'"~;~;ge ·s.:o99¢

With Attachments

\

PiESEIT THIS COUPOI TO.OlE Of OUI SALES CLEIIS
.AT MASOI FUII.ITUIE AID.GET AI miA I~ SAVINGS
Off OUI ALIEADY LOW, LOW SALE PIICES.
USE THIS COUrpl 01 AIY. PUICHAS!JOU JIAIE ~T
. OUI STOlE DUIIII THIS SALE.
.

By The Box -16 Packages(121bs.). only S13.99

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Stick 1h

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Give your sweetheart the
new Letter Holder Bouquet.
Fresh flowers delivered in a
solid, polished brass letter
holder. It's a gift your
Valentine will love now,
and use forever. And a
quick call or visit to
our shop sends it anywhere in the coUntry.
So you can fit the occasion~ to the letter.

frankies . . :k~~· 89

bologna

139.95

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Red Skin

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Superior

Superior

Ree.

social room.
Both are graduates of Meigs High
School and attended Hocidng Tech·
nicai College at Nelsonville.
Miss Ridgway is employed In the
office of Dr. John Ridgway, Pomeory. Hoffman is employed at Mister
Donut at BarboursvUie, W,Va.

lb.

...

CONVERTIBLE
RIGHT WITH
HEADLIGHT

Ridgway- Hoffman
POMEROY - Dr. John Rldg·
way, Chester Road, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Hattie Ridgway, Chester
Road, Pomeroy, are announcing
the approaching maniage of their
daughter, Mary Marte, to John R.
Hoffman, son of Lloyd Hoffman,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, and the
late Winona Roffman.
The open church wedding will be
an event of Feb. 19 at 2:30p.m. at
the Middleport Church of Christ,
Main Street, Middleport. MusicwUI
begin at 2 p.m., with a reception to
follow the ceremony !n the church

Locuat and Pearl Street- Middleport, Ohio- Telephone 992·3471

tlj'.

TAMPA, Fla. lAP)- The winner
of this beauty contest may branch
out to bigger and better things In the
shade of victory, or maybe simply
stay put and lay doWn more roots.
No ordinary victor, this one has
measurements that just won't quit :
about 21 feet around, 65 feet tall and
117 feet at its broadest point.
· Jt'sanoldglantoakstandlnglnthe
yard of Charles and Bethea Griffith,
and lt'stheproudwlnnerofTampa's
"Grand Tree Contest."
Mrs. Griffith says she Is 61 and her
husband Is Tl. But she has no idea

CRAFTS

PILLOW PANELS-20% OFF

Ina

Tampa tree big beauty

CRAFTS

I

•

The Middleport Library Is going
to give the children's hour another

While the Meigs County Fair Is
months away, Barbara Fry is
already In there planning for the
amateur artists display and
competition.
And she has asked us to put out
this word .. the largest size which
will be accepted for the exhibit this
year Is 16 .by 20 Inches without
frame.
it 'sall a matter of display space ..
there just isn't enough when the
larger art pieces come ln.
The decision was made this early
In the year to allow amateur artists
to re-think entry size If they are
doing paint !rigs now.

Open Evenings and Sunday

VINTON, OHIO
W. Main Street

And speaking of Barbara Fry,
she'll finally be getting rid of that
brace which she has worn since last
September when at the Meigs·
Nelsonvllle game, the bleachers
she was standing on broke and she
fell over nine feet to the ground
Injuring several vertabra.
Meanwhile, her sister Nina Crad·
dock underwent surgery Friday at
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg
for some corrective work on one of
her feet. Four years ago Nina was
seriously Injured In an auto acci·
dent and after months In a
wheelchair and extensive therapy,
she progressed to a three-legged
cane.

''

11b.

09

$

pkg.
l

•

·

�I

Page

_,,.

B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Beat of the bend

..
..... I

-~

' ~

RECEIVES PROMO'l10N - Staff Sergeant
L Irish, an Imtruclor In the Anny ROTC
• ~' prop-am at Rio Grande CoDege, was promoted to
•• SefJeanl F1rst Class during a formal ceremony on
• " campus recently. Having been in the Anny for 11
_

: )Welvln

yeiii'S, Irish's duty assignments have Included tours in
Gennany and WashiJogton State prior to his arrival at
Rio Grande. His new chevrons were placed on him by
his wife, Janet, right, and Ueutenant Colonel Richard
Mottl, left, Professor of MIDtary Science.

POMEROY - All day services will be held at the Mt.
Carmel Baptist Church Sunday
sponsored by the Laymen's
League. Sunday School at 9: ll
a.m., morning worship at 10:45
a.m. afternoon services at 2 p.m.
The Rev. Melvin Freeman wUJ
be the speaker. Voices United
be featured at the afternoon
services. Everyone welcome.
LECI'A - Ukey Church wUJ
: have special singing by the Born
· Again Sing!!rs and preaching by
the Rev. BUiy Payne, Sunday, 7
p.m. The public Is Invited to
attelld.
GAU.IPOLIS - The Grubb
'Family Singers will be at Battey
, _Chapel Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.
the public Is Invited to attend.

MONDAY
MIDOLEPORT - Officers
practice will be held by Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, Monday, 7 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic
Temple.

POMEROY A special
meeting of Eastern Athletic
Boosters wUJ be held Monday to
make plans for the upcoming
fifth and sixth grade basketball
tournamanet. Teams wUJ be
drawn. Those Interested are
urged to attend.

By JOHN CHALFANT
A!!!!OI'!ated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Move
over, "I Love New York." Take a
back seat, "Say Yes to Michigan."
Ohio Is jumping Into the battle
amongstatesfortourtstdollarswtth
"Ohio... the heart of It all." ·
That's the theme the Ohio
Department of Development picked
for use In an $11 mUllon campaign to
promote tourism and business
development.
In addition to the public funds,
officials want businesses to Invest up
to $2.5 mtlllon In j)romotional'
partnerships With the state.
Such efforts would Include savIngs coupon books for use at theme
parks and other attractions that
would be distributed by gasoline or
grocery retailers.
It Is the most expensive government tourism promotion program
ever In Ohio.
The marketing plan was developed by Hameroft-MUenthal Inc.,
the Columbus advertising agency
which handled Gov. Richard Celeste's election campaign and was
awarded the contract for the
tourism-economic development
promotion.
In addition to louting tourist

POMERO,Y I There wUJ be a
special meeting of the Eastern
Athletic Boosters Monday, January ll to make plans for the tltth
and sixth grade basketball
tournament. Teams wUI be
drawn at the meeting. AU
members and Interested
coaches are Invited to attend.

TIJESDAY
GAU.IPOLIS - Adults workIng with Gallla County Girl
" Scouts wtl) meet at the Activity
Center at GDC Tuesday, 6: ll to
S:ll p.m.
SALEM TWP -Salem Town.ship Trustees will meet Tuesday
at 9:ll a.m. at Salem Fire
Statton.

The beat goes on and on

By BOB HOSFUCH
kind of quiet with a dinner outing.
Tlmee&amp;nttllel Staff
However, they're looking foJWard
The beat of
Christ· to a bigger observance next year
mas cards BQeS
when the have the big 5 - 0.
on. As you may
--remember .. lt's
The valentine candy Is out..and
no big deal if
the prices make you want to have
don't--mine died
your sweet tooth removed.
on Dec. 'rl.
However, you could get a break.
However, Mr.
The Sundry Store tn Middleport Is
giving away a beautiful five pound
and Mrs. Carter
a new one !rom Orlando, Fla.
box of Whitman's chocolates. You
Isn't defective so I shall have music can register to wtn It at the store
-w~erever I go.
and no purchase Is necessary.
l3y the way, this brings about a Lotsa luck!
great opportunity to tell you that
--Mr. and Mrs. French have sold
their Sunoco stations and have
Allan Elberfeld, employed With
moved to the sunny (I hope) South. the U. S. Corps of Engineers In
So far they haven't suffered any Huntington, has compiled a book of
pangs of being homesick- now how essays · and short stories he has
could they not miss us, huh?! They written.
had the audacity to Write about the
Called "Broken Promises and
79 degree temperature. Now that Other Odds and Ends," the book
hurts--I've been cold since August. features some wise observances
Bytheway, backtotheranchand Elberfeld has made. There's an
the cards--Mary Bacon received a article about training your own
musical one !rom a granddaughter hunting dog which Is quite humorfor Christmas and Is enjaylng. It ous. There's a chance that Elberplays every evening and all wee- feld's Store may stock some ot the
kend while Mary Is home. It's books a little later, so perhaps,
ooldlng up well. Walt untU It gets you'll get a chance to read it. You
down to playing about one out of might remember that Elberfeld
every five notes, Mary. Then, you'll penned a nice article "Remember
When" about Christmases of yesebe glad when It goes.
--· ryear which we printed In The
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Sentinel during the holiday season.
Troy ZwUting, Syracuse. They will 'That article Is also Included In the
be observing their 49th wedding book.
anniversary Monday and It'll be
Allan lsBobElferfeld'ssonandof

~imes-

course, you all know Bob.
--I'm advised by Nancy GUibple
that some of our residents are
winners. Debbie Drake of Rock
Springs won a gallon of paint In
September; a set of dishes In
October; 8 watch In December, and
a $100glft certificate and a t·shlr't In
January. What's tor February,
Debbie? A mUtton dollars, maybe-gosh, I hope so.
--As you know by this time,_ a
~;Qmrnlttee has been formed . to
work towards the establishment of
an extensive recreational facUlty
for Meigs County.
Some 13 residents who are on the
committee were seated on the
speakers platfonn Thursday night
when aspects of the project were
presented to the public for the fillt
1m
t ~e 13 were Nancy Jeffers, Jay
Bentley, Roger Stewart, Bruce
Reed, Yonlece Muter, Brien Conde,
Pat O'Brien, Fenton Taylor, Eber
Pickens, Bob Gilmore, Bill Harris,
John Anderson, and Han)' Wilford.
The committee has Its work cut out
but enthusiasm reigns. The group
wants all sections of the county
Involved 1n the project so undoubtedly, the committee wUJ be
growing.
---As January wraps us, we are
closer to spring- so do keep
smtUng..... ,

anractl?ns,boostlngjobsandpromottngthestateasa prime location for
business, the campaign will try to
end what researchers say Is an
Inferiority complex which Ohioans
have about their state.
About $6.milllon will-be spent on
radio, television and print advert islng, With the biggest push In the
spring and swnmer months.
David Mtlenthal told a news
conference Thursday first ,year

plans call for 78 percent of the ad
money to be spent In Ohio. "The first
thing we think we need to do ... Is to
trytousethlsprogramtoendOhlo's
Inferiority complex about Itself and
buUd that positive attitude about the
state," MUenthal said.
Development Director Alfred
Dietzel Identified several reasons
for the complex.
"There's been a major structural
change In our economy which has .

resulted particularly In Ohio and
some other ofthernldweststatesofa
high unemplayment rate, a decline
lnthenumberofnewbustnessesthat
have started, and that kind of feeds
on Itself," Dietzel said.
The HIDBUCKEYE telephone
number - which now provides
tourist lnfonnation to callers from
wlthtn' Ohlo- wUI be expanded to
serve residents In other states.

Antique show

RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing Will be featured at the Ell Dennison Post
467, American Legion, Rutland
Saturday night from 9 p.m. untO
1 a.m. There wUI be a live band,
snack bar and refreshment
stand. Donations will be ac. cepted at the door.
Dances are held at the Post
~ every Satruday night. After Feb.
1, admission wUJ be $2 per
person and children under 12 will
be charge $1.50. .The public is
welcome to attend .

1
••

Sarajevo.hosts 1984
XIV Winter Olympics
'

.

SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP)- pions and de!endtng world champs,
A J.2.day spectacle of visible todowell; HamUton,tntact,maybe
contrasts will unfold Feb. 7, when the best American oope for gold.
the XIV Winter Olympics begin In And there are Pat Lafontaine and
Sarajevo.
Scott Bjugstad, star members of the
There Is the old Sarajevo With the youngest U.S. hockey team In
Oavor of - a Turkish bazaar, history.
minarets' spires, cobblestone
The contrasts continue. More
streets. And . there Is the new countries and more athletes will
Sarajevo, with a more modem look, participate In more events than
tall skyscrapers made of glistening anytime In the Winter Games,
steel and stone.
which began In 1924 at Chamonix,
The Olympic athletes, In some France.
More money has been paid for
ways, wUI mirror that old and new.
At one extreme are veterans television rights and more oours of
trylngonemoretlmetowtnamedal. televised coverage of the games will
At theother,athtetes, some as young be seen than ~Ner before.
And yet, for the first time, the
as 15 or 16 years of age, wUJ be
Winter
Olympics wUJ be held In an
participating for the first time.
EaJ!tem
European country - an
There's Franz Klammer of Austria, an Olympic gold medalist In the Independent Communist country 1976 games In Innsbruck, back for and that adds a touch of mystery.
Yugoslavia appears to be ready to
another try at the downhill at the age
prove, however, that It can handle
ofll.
The Mahre brothers, PhU and the onrush of 1,600 athletes !rom 49
Steve, of the United States, wUJ be countries, the4,000medla representhere, too, In the slalom events. Oft tatives, the 00,000 visitors.
"We will not taU," says Pavle
this season's perfonnances, their
chances for gold medals appear Lukac of the Sarajevo Olympic
modest, but PhU has won the World Organizing Comrnlttee.
History bathes this rtver city and
Cup t.hreetlmes and says this wUJ be
his last year after 11 on the U.S. Its 440,000.
The texture of Sarajevo Is a
team.
John Harrington and Phil Ver- curious mix. It has a Turkish
chota of tl)c 19!1l U.S. hockey team lnOuence that extends back to 14-li,
that won the gold In Lake Placid are when the city got Its name- " Land
back. So are J5.year-old Alexandar of Southern Slavs." It was stamped
Maltesev and 32-year-old goal- In history In 1914 when a young
keeper Vladislav Tretiak of the student, GavrUo Prlnclp, murdered
the Archduke Franz Ferdinand,
Russian hockey team.
There Is 1976 cross-country sUver heir to the Austro-Hungarlan Emmedalist Bill Koch of the U.S. nordic pire, triggering World War I.
In1941, theNaztGennanytoppled
team, who missed the gOld In Lake
and more than 10,000
Yugoslavia,
Placid, but who has a fine chance for
residents of Sarajevo were kUied.
a medal this year.
Today, Yugoslavia Is a country
Plenty of young stars, untested In
Olympic games, seem ready for With economic troubles lncludlngOO
stardom. Count on figure skaters per cent Inflation and a heavy
national debt. Yet, there Is a warm
Scott Hamilton and R.osaylnn
SQrnners, the U.S. national cham- spirit that greets visitors and makes

-

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Minnesota VIkings Coach Bud Grant, who
took the National Football League
team.to four Super Bowls, resigned
Friday after 17 years as VIkings
coach, ·a team spokesman said
today.
"I decided .this was the tlmr to
quit," Grant said Friday. "There
wasn't any p~re on me. There
area lot of things I want to do while I
still have my health."
Grant said he would remain as a
consultant to the team at least tor
another year. VIkings' spokesman
MerrUI Swanson Saturday confirmed the resignation and said he
learned about the decision Ia te
Fruday night.
"I'm not burned out," Grant said.
'Tveenjoyedeoachtngsomuch that
I never looked ·foJWard to· retirement from my job. I don't have any
aspirations totakeanothercoachtng
job or roach In another league."
Grant, 56, and General Manager
Mike Lynn fiew to Honolulu Friday,
where Grant told VIkings President
Max Winter ofhlsdectslon, Swanson
said. Winter lives In Honolulu In the
offseason.
"I was returning home from a
·walk when I noticed Bud and Mike
sitting on my porch," Winter said. "I
was hopingthatnothtngwaswrong.
And when he told me his decision, .
the tears rolled down my eyes. He
had never given me any hint of

Go In The Snow

LANCASTER - The 23rd
annual Lancaster Antique Show
wUJ be Feb. 11 and 12 at the
Holiday Inn In Lancaster. Hours
are Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.
There will be 25 dealers
500wlng American period and
country furniture, as well as
paintings, oriental rugs, china,
glass, sUver, jewelry, brass,
copper and prlmattves. Admission Is $2.50, and the event Is
sponsored by the LancasterFairfield Community Hosptlal
Twig 14.

with. Buick &amp; Pontiac
'

Front Wheel Drive!

WAREHOUSE
CLEARANCE
SALE!

retiring, so I was completely
surprlsedwhenhetoldmewasgolng
to quit. I don't know how to replace
him.,He was such a winner."
·Lynn said he also was surprised.
"Bud surprised me w~ he told
me Wednesdayofhtsdeclsion," said
Lynn, who has worked with Grant
for 10 years. "We spent three to four
oours dlsucsslng the subject. There
certainly wasn't any pressure for
him to quit. I tried very hard to talk
him rut of it. I told him we would do
anything, monetarUy or otheiWise,
If he would stay."
Winter and Lynn said they would
like to name a new coach In the next
72hours.
Grant has a year left on his
three-year contract and wUJ be paid
tor the year he spends as a
consultant. He wUJ remain In some
position With the team beyond next
year, Lynn said.
Grant said the VIkings' S.Srecord
and !allure to make the playoffs last
season didn't figure In his decision.
"Injuries hurt us this year," he
said. "I don't think there Is any
question that we have a good
nucleuseven'tOOughwedon'thavea
single player In the Pro Bowl. I think
that says sometllln,g. But the good
nucleus we have can be added to.
"And the stabilization of the
organization wUJ allow us to stay up
With the contenders. Anything can
happen In pro football·''

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Old timers' game highlights
34th NBA All Star contest

Reds more exciting product
than Skippy Peanut Butter
GRANT RESIGNS - Bud
Gl'lllll, 56, head football coach of
the Minnesota VIkings, announced his resignation Friday
after 17 years as coach. Grant
came to Minnesota after 10
years In the Canadian Football
leque, coaching at Winnipeg.
(AP Luerplloto).

CINCINNATI (AP)- Bobl:lowsam Jr., hired by his father away
!rom a Madison Avenue advertising
firm, says he likes promoting
baseball for the Cincinnati Reds
better.
The younger Howsarn, 42, was an
accountexecutiveatDancerFttzgerald Sam pel, handling accounts for
peanut butter and chewing gum,
when his father, president of the
Reds, lured him away !rom New
York.
"It's just a much more exciting
product, and the customrs feel
much more Involved With it. I mean,
nobody ever picks up a can of Skippy
Peanut Butter and says, 'Oh, wow,
It's Skippy,' " said the younger
Howsam.
The Reds are hoping to attract the
fans back to Riverfront Stadium this
summer by making It more fun,

even If they can't guarantee a
pennant contender. ·
"The won-lost record Is the most
Important thing, and there's no use
kidding about that,''· said the
younger Howsam, new vice president of marketing. "But I think
we're getting better on the field, and
what we can try to do Is make It as
pleasurable as pOssible to attend the
games.''
The Reds' cellar perfonnances
the last two seasons resulted In
sharply dropping attendance.
When Bob Howsam replaced
Dick Wagner as the Reds' president
midway through last season, he
stressed making the game fun for
fans and hired his son to helpchange
things.
"We want to have some surprises
this season,'' Howsarn Jr. said.
The surprises started this winter,

when the Reds rolled out a red
carpet and served breakfast for fans
waiting to buy tickets for 1984
games. They also maUed out a
surprise shipment of beach towels to
aU new season-ticket holders.
"I hope It'll get them to start
thinking about spring," HowsamJr.
said. "Or, they may just think the
Reds have lost their minds."
There are several more twists
planned this season: a beer garden
With calliope above the left-field
wall; a "treasure hunt" for the
Opening Day baseball; an exhibition game with the USA Olympic
;quad; and changes In procedures
at refreshment stands for more

ease.
"What we're trying to do Is make
the little things rtght," Howsani Jr.
said.

HONOLULU (AP) - Bill yvalsh, up to us as coaches to use aU tiH!ir an AFC high, voted onto the squad In
coach of' the Natio~l Football great lalents." balloting by the league's coaches
Conference team, marvels at the
Seattle'sChuckKnox,guldlngthe and players. The Redskins dupliaggregation of lalented players AFC In his fifth Pro Bowl coaching cated that with an NFC-htgh seven
who'll compete In Sunday's Pro assignment, echoed Walsh's state- players tabbed.
Bowl.
·
ments, saying: "Pride makes the
Startjng at quarterback for the
"It's kind of mind-boggling for players play hard In this game. As NFC wUJ be Washington's Joe
me, because everbody here Is so the coach, you try to Jet them 500w . 'Thelsmann, who led the Redskins to
great," said Walsh, the San Friln- theirshllls,Iettheplayersdectdethe ~single-season scoring record of 541
• clsco49erscoachwhotsdrawtnghts game."
points. He'll be operating behlnd ftrstProBowlasslgnment. "Ilookat
While some of the key players In Washington teammates ,Jeff Bostic
all these players !rom the other the Super Bowl - notably Los
at center, RussGrtmmatguardand
tearnsandwonderbowweeverwin Angeles' Marcus Allen and Wa- Joe Jlicoby at tackle.'
8 game."
shtngton's John Riggins -weren't
A number of the Los Angeles
Walsh said the contest Is 8 selected to the Pro Bowl, the
defenslveplayerswhoshutdownthe
showcasefoi'NFLtalentandadded natlonaUy televised, 4 p.m. EST
Redsklns In the Super Bowl wUJ tine
that they have plenty of Incentive to contest will have a . Raidersup on the opposite side, Including
play weD. ,
RedsklnsOavor.
end Howle Loilg, linebacker Rod
, STAB8 WORK our -11u ...,. rz1eltJMk Collf&amp;-'• lqlllld lor ...,.. Pro .Bowl pme. .
"It's an ·Important game to the
The Raiders, woo whipped Wa- Martin and cornerback Lester
.,.. ...... .... • hll"'nCC til Bo 1 •• Earl "'IGdd tMm. ..IM!Id fllllll pndlcea_. 8·, dl1- (AP_ ~ pla)'el's because they know. It's the _....shlngton 38-91n theSuper.Ba.vllast Hayes.
~--·_.....oltlleAmerlouFootblll · Jr erptab).
'
, ,_
· te.tagalnstthebest,''besald."It's Sunday,hadsevenofthelrp~rs.

*This price includes complete system plus installation. ·
·

44 State St.

them feel welcome.
Preparation for the games
started In 1979, and since that time
Sarajevo has constructed two new
figure skating arenas and a speed
skating oval, and renovated the
local soccer stadium where the
opening and closing ceremonies will
beheld.
Slopes for skiing were carved out
of the moontaln Bjelasnlca, a new
bobsled and luge track .was buUt on
Trebevic mountain and new hotels
sprang up.
The Olympic committe Is working
on a budget of $100 mUIIon, but
Lukac predicts costs wUJ be held to
$1.1) million and that the games will
soow a profit.
One reason for budget optimism Is
the $91.5 mUIIon ABC-1V paid for
American 1V rights ..
ABC plans to televise 63'n hours,
over 10 hours more than ever before
from a Winter Games. With a
six-hour time difference from the
East Coast, the network will tape the
daytime ~Nents and go live for some
of the night eVents, such as skating
or hockey.
Americans can anticiPate a
strong overall performance from
outside SaraJevo, Saturday. Soldiers pack the courses
SHOVEL BRIGADE - Two members of the
the U.S. team, yet It wUJ be difficult
with soow In the momlnp oo there wiD be plenty for
Yugoslavian anny walk With their shoveh near the
to match the drama of19!1l- of Eric
the games which start Feb. 8. (AP Laserplloto).
finish for Olympic Nordic evenl8 at Mount lgman
Heiden, who won five gold medals,
or the excltment of the hockey
team's golden victory.
The U.S. team won 12 medals four
years ago In Lake Placid, tying Its
own best. It has a good chance to win
more than that this time.
The hockey team, young and
extremely fast, has the additional
pressilre otfollowing a Winner. But It
the old-timers. J5.year-old t'ete
DENVER (AP) - Would men ready to run, Uke Dave Bing."
per1ormed well during a threeMaravich.
aU
based
on
pride,"
said
"It's
like
John
Havlicek
and
Oscar
month tour playing against national
" I made a call to aU these guys to
teams, college squads and minor Robertson embarrass themselves Auerbach. "I think these feUas are
make
sure they were In shape,'' said
going
to
surprise
a
lot
of
people
with
on
a
basketball
court?
~ague teams, finishing With a
Auerbach, wl¥lse938victorles make
the way they get down the Ooor."
Red Auerbach's , cigar glows a
37 -18-ll record.
Scheduled for two 20-rnlnute him the wlnnlngest coach In NBA
bright red at the very Idea. There
history.
would be plenty of competitive halves, the old-timers game wUJ
feature
such
HaU-{)f-Famers
as
Julius Erving, the Most Valuable
firepower In professional baSketPlayer In last year's All-Star game,
ball's first-ever old-timers game Robertson and Havlicek, Elgin
was considered the defending dunk
Saturday, predicted the architect of Baylor, Jerry West and Connie
Hawkins. In another first, the NBA champion for winning the contest
the Boston Celtic dynasty.
theoldAmericanBasketballAssoci"H these guys thought they were scheduled a slam-dunk contest prior
held In 1976.
atlon
to
the
old-timers
tipoff.
·going
to
get
out
there
and
make
fools
Only George Halas of the Chicago
Dick
McGuire
and
Bill
Shannan,
"I
see
a iot of high Dyers In this ·
of
themselves,
they
wouldn't
do
It,"
Bears had won more than the
283-regular-season and postseason Auerbach said at a news conference guards from the era of the 5ns, are league," said the Philadelphia 76er
forward . "The competition cergamesGrantwonatWinnlpeg (122) Friday, where many of sport's the oldest of the old-timers at 57.
Checking
In
at
55
was
Dolph
tainly has grown tougher. I Intend to
aU-time
greats
have
gathered
for
and with the VIkings (161). Halas
give
the fans a soow."
Schayes.
Sunday's
.34th
annual
National
won326.
West
squad
Includes
A
$10,000 first prize awaits the
Hannum's
AU-Star
Basketball
Association
Only two active NFL coaches,
Rick
Ban)',
39;
Baylor,
49;
Bing,
40;
slam-dunk
Winner. Others putting
game.
Auerbach
and
Alex
Hannum,
Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys
Hawkins,
41;
Lou
Hudson,
39;
John
their
sky-walktng
moves on display
who
coached
NBA
champions
In
St.
and Don Schula of the Miami
Dolphins, have won more NFL Louis and Philadelphia, were Kerr, 51; Earl Monroe, 39; Bob wUJ be Michael Cooper of the Los
picked to coach the opposing Pettit , 00; &amp;hayes and Jerry West, Angeles Lakers, Clyde Drexler,
games than Grant.
45.
Portland; Darren Griffith, Utah;
old-timer squads.
Under Auerbach's control were Edgar Jones, San Antonio; Larry
"You're going to be surprised at
the quality of play, and at how much Zelmo Beaty, 44; Dave DeBus- Nance, Phoenix; Dominique Wilfun we aU have," said Hannum. schere, 43; John Ha\&lt;llcek, 43; Tom kins, Atlanta; Orlando Woolridge,
Chicago, and .Ralph Sampson of
"I've got some backcourt men on Heinsohn, 49; Sam Jones, 50;
Houston, the lone rookie.
my team that are really In shape and Robertson, 45; Nate Thurmond, 42;
Wes Unseld, rl, and the youngest of

Pro Bowl concludes .NFL campaign

$}79500 Plus Tax

....

jeutin.el

Vikings' Grant retires

Happenings
Dance set

-

January 29, 1984

State gets to heart of tourism .

Calendar
SUNDAY

'

·Gallipolis, Ohio 4H31

i

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•

•

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�r '

Sunday Times-Sentinel

1984

Ohio-Point Pleatant, W. Va.

•
Belpre takes come-from-behind· wm·
By KEITH WISECUP
BELPRE - Belpre's Bill Wills·
man andJimMcDermltt combined
for
points a~ the 12·2 Eagles
sco
a come- rom-behind 6().55
wln over Meigs here Frtday.
Together with the personal foul
called on the ,play, Belpre went to
free throdw line with four attempts
(It rna e two) and also received
possesslon after the shots. This
resulted In four points and a 6().53
lead with 37 seconds left.
The loss dropped Meigs to 6-8
over all on the year and to 5-8 Inside

led In the second half.
For the second straight game, the
Marauders ran Into some hot
shooting by the opposition. Belpre
canned 25 of 49 from the !leld for 53
percent. Meigs hit on 24 of 56 for 43
percent.
Belpre was tee cold from the foul
line, however, as It made good on
only10of25for40percent.Melgshlt
on seven of 12 ·for 58 percent.
Belpre led In the rebounding
department, 28-25. WUlsman and
McDermitt led the Eagles with nine
and eight respectively. Carpenter

TVC
play. Belpre,
pace
with Alexander
for keeping
second place
and still an outside shot for title
aspirations, raised Its record to 1().2
In the TVC.
Nick Riggs paced Meigs with 15
~lnts while Mlk~ Chancey added 14
and Jay Carpenter 12. Rick Wise,
who made two key baskets In the
final minutes In keeping the
Marauders cl05e, added six points.
WUlsman led Belpre with 21,
mostly from five feet or closer,
while Jim McDermitt scored 18, his
too from Inside.
, Trailing 16-13 after one quarter,
the Marauders scored the first 11
points of the second period to take
their biggest lead of the night at
24-16.
Coach Dave Wilcoxen's Eagles,
however, the Marauders scored the
first 11 points of the second period to
take their largest lead ofthe night at
24-16.
Coach Dave Wilcoxen's Eagles,
however, outscored Meigs 14-5 the
remainder of the half to take a 3().29
advantage Into the lockerroom.
The final basket of the first half
came when Belpre stole the ball In
Meigs' backcourt and WIUsman
laid It In at the buzzer. Meigs never

paced Meigs
Chancey
followedwith
with nine
seven.while
Meigs' second-year coach Greg
Drummer thought his Marauders
played well even though In defeat.
"I thought our bench played real
good and I thought we played a good
defensive game. Weneededtoshoot
better In the second half In order to
win," commented Drummer. The
Marauders had 16 turnovers compared toBelpre's20. Meigs committed 17 personals while Belpre had 15
fouls called against ·them.
·
Reserves Drop Folll'th
Trailing by a single point at the
half, Belpre's reserves scored the
first 10 points of the third period and

r!:

- , .•
...

......

SHORTJVMPER-MeigsforwaniMikeChancey (15) lakesashort
jwnp &amp;bot durtng third quarter action In Friday's TVC eiiCOUJiter
agalnM Belpre. Chancey collected 14 points and seven rebounds In the
Marauders' ._Miollll. Trying to provide defense are the Golden Eagles'
Lee Holder (30) and Robert MIDer (42). Other Meigs players In this
Keith Wlllecup action shot Include Jay Carpenter (00) and Nick Riggs
(21).

held on for a 53-46 win In a battle for
first
place.
With
the loss, Coach Mlck Childs'
charges go to 1()..4 overall to 9-4 In
the TVC. Belpre gains control of
second place with a 9-3 slate.
Chris Shank, playing with a very
sore toe, led Meigs with 12 while
Shawq Baker added 10 and Brad
Robinson eight. Dwayne Roddy led
the winners with 17. Mljlgs returns
home next Tuesday when they take
on Alexander. Belpre goes to
Trimble.
MEIGS (Ill _ Rtw 1-1-~: Wise ~:

"'•' !!·

q-

Lockhar1 2-1·~:

McDermitt 7itJ. Wllllman

lli\!'~~~"= •1Ht~

By

:t!~2~.J'.~w"!~~~

Tollll.BEU'IIE (Ill -

ftti

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14

~'\':... ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 13

10
8

6 lt;-.46
16 lt-:13

1
FORD
ESCORT

No.4641

For Just

NO DOWN PA\'MI!NTI

'14479Month
Per

GIU!AT RATES ON
011II!R FORD CARS

FOODLAND
CORRECTION

AND TRUCKS, TOOl

Monthly Lease Payment St44.79; Number of Months 41; RefundMIIe
Security Deposit SUO; Total of Payments M,MU2;• Total Mileage
Allowed 60,000; Mileage Penalty Over 60.000: • cents-mile; Total Out
Inception S2t4.79.
-Figures Based on Gallta County, Ohio. Tax Structure.

195 Upp e r

446-9800G.dhpol1 •, , 0 111o
River Rd .

TVC results
Aleunder•

THE.·MONEY SAVERS
MOtorcraft

271.l.
.....
-34ll.

Wlllftft 5! M1Der U
1451 - Pierce 2·2.0:

1.JS.4$.

REG. 34.89 SALE 31

WARREN (5!) - Butcher 5-J.II: Frye
5-6-16: Rullman 1.0.2: Knight 5.o.10: PhUUps
2-04: Slogtund 2-04: Hesson 1.0.2: Smith J.I.3.
TolllltJ.tt-52.
Byqwuten:

'

Miller ............................... 7 16 11 11-45
WIIITl'n ............................. 12 8 14 18-52
Reflenea- Warren 43, Mlller 35.

........

Wello!Ga II
FedenJ.lloclda!r•

REG. 45.89SALE 39.

LYNX

FEDEKAlrHOCKING (18)- Koker 4.(1.8;

Metlack 9-1-19: Sinn Deeter 1-&amp;8; Watson
3-2.S: Sinnett &amp;.5-17: Tabler 1.0.2: Hams :~M:
Butcher 0.1-1. Tollll !HS..
WEUBIUN (Ill) Newman 2·2.0:
Ltndower ll-5-27: Aleshire 2·2.0: Jenkins
J.J.9: Deck 2.().4: Sprtw ll+26: Rtce o.n
Tollllll·tul.
Byqwuten:

Fed.-Hocktng

........

17

211

Wellston ............................ 22 13

40MONTH
REG. 32.89
SO MONTH
REG. 39.89

14

211--l!l
22 28-!fi

60MONTH
REG. 46.89

Re&amp;erves- Not available.

Eaglettes post 45-28 victory · over Wildkittens

SOUTil POINT - Behind Renee
Halley's 22 points, the Gallipolis
Blue Angels posted their 14th victory
here Saturday afternoon, 7&amp;-54 over
the South Pointer girls' basketball
team.
Also getting double figures for
Coach Gordon Baker's club were
Jody Adams and Jill Miller with 18
and 13 points respectively. Jan
Lockhart led. South Point with 18
points while Connie Hawks added 13
and Lynn Norris contrlbuted 11
points.
GAHS led 2().10 and the end of the
first period, 36-18 at he half and 55-29
going Into the final period.
The Blue Angels host Oak Hill
Tuesday.

40MONTH

Lanning
1&gt;2·14: VanWay 1.0.2: Westervelt ~ Toth
1·24: C3mpbeU 1.0.2: Roberts J.].7; Tolals
MILLER

Southern rallies
to defeat Bobcats

Blue Angels
post 14th win

N-York4Z

NEU!ONVJU.E.YORII (4!) - Bullock
HI: Bentley 3M: McDonald HI: Grandy
6.(1.12: KUne 5-1·11: Savage 2.().4: Wallen
O.HToiiiiJU.t%.
ALEXANDER(.)- Gu thr1e9-1 ·1~ !lobo
5-6-16: Fern. :~M: Carsey J.2.S: Bennett
5-2·J1: Wtngelt 1.0.2: McOatn 2·2.0. Tololo
!t&gt;1S..
By quarten:
Nei.-York ............... .. .............. 7 14 16 542
Alexander ......................... 10 17 19 2J.-{!j

Polueroy-Middleport-Gallipolit,

CHESHIRE- Southern, leading
by a precarious 44-42 score going ·•
Into the !Ina! period, bUtzed Kyger
Creek, 25-15 during the !Ina! eight
mll!utes here Friday night to take a
hard-earned, 71-59SVACvlctory.
The Tornadoes stormed from a
36-ll halftime deficit to knot the
score at 4242 with 3:07 lett In the
third quarter. The game see-sawe&lt;l
back and forth untU Southern took a
46-441ead just prior to the buzzer.
During the third period comeback, Kevin Curfman, whoflnlshed
as the game's top point-maker with
25, cannedelgl)t. JasonHUlhadfour.
In Southern's hot-shooting fourth
quarter,CurfrnanhadlOpolnts,Rod
Littlefield scored eight
~game was decided at the foul
line where Southern converted 21 of
32 attempts while !I.e Bobcats hit
nlneof16.The Bobcats'twoblgmen,
6-4 David Martin and 6-7 J .D.
Bradbury were In foul trouble In the
t111rd and fourth quarters. Bradbury
was forced to the bench with his
fourth personal midway through the
third quarter. He fouledoutwith4: 28
left In the contest. Martin collected
hls fourth and fifth fouls during the
final minutes of the third quarter.
Before leaving the game, both had
contributed board strength and
Important first half points.
Playing an aggressive defense,
the Bobcats of Coach Keith Carter
took a 16-131ead at theendofthefirst
period. Leading the hosts' attack
was guard Chuck Vogel with six
points wh!Ue Bradbury and Martin
each had four. Curfman and
Littlefield had four and three points
respectively.
Kyger Creek continued Its hot·

Melp ................................ .. 13 16 10 16115
Belpre ...............~;... 16 I 1 12 18-«J
MEIGS (41) - Shank W-12: Baker '-2-10:

r~E~vo~no~1;·1~-l:~Corpon~~t~er~6.().~12i:Clla~ncey~t&gt;~.2~·l~l:ri:!iiwi:ir.iP:n~P:ii

r:p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jjii

In our full color cjrcularthis week
(dated Jan. 29-Feb. 4) on paae 5,
the day for "Let's Go To The
Races" telecast was incorrectly
listed as Sunday.
The correct telecast date
is Sat., Feb. 4.
We are very sorry for this inconvenience.

PoweUI-1·3: Wellu!r0.2·2: F'liher!IOO.'I'alok
-~(.,I - ' -~z.u·, Ho-11410:
~--

2888
3488
4188

Georgetown
defeats Pitt
PITISBURGH (AP) - All·
American Patrlck Ewing scored 20
points and was an Intimidating force
at both ends of the court as
fourth-rankedGeorgetowneasedby
Pittsburgh 63-52 In a Big East
Conference game Saturday.

TVC
standings ·
TVC CAGE STANDINGS
ADG""""
Team
WLP OP
Trimble ............................ 14 0 11116 772
Alexander ......................... 13 3 1016 923

ISJ 8COTI' WOLFE
MERCERVILLE - Behind dual
15-polnt efforts from sophomore
Margaret Homer and senior KeUy
Wbltlatch, Eastern's Eaglettes powered to a 45-28 SVAC league win
over the Hannan Trace Wlldldttens
In recent girls' high school basket·
ball acUon. Eastern puahed Its
record to 5-6 overall and 5-2 Inside
loop play for a Ue tor second.
Hannan Trace Is 3-10 overall and 1~
In the league.
The Eaglettes of Coach Susan
Arnold raced to a 1().2 lead In the

Belpre .....................

VInton County ...................... . ·.·.·.·..... ·.·.·....... 87

Toiiii.!HI.
. J[YGER CREEK (•) -

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Create sharp graphics in red, green, blue and black, plus
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Defenders beaten

' .

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l!ll1rO large ltiYing ol del&gt;
cloul bite 111e flied Jhrlmp,
nalulal cut tench fries.

Ill NeltonviDe-York

GALLIPOLIS - The OVCS
Defenders' .volleyball team sut- fered Its second straight loss,
' 15-5,.11-15'to Mld·Amerlcan --~·-•: tian School.
·
-- After ·a slow start In the first
game, the girls picked up steam
and sailed through the second and
Into the tl1frd.-However, six mental
,mistake!!. which gave the oppo.
JlentS' sJx pOints cost the.Defeitders
the ~tcb. Coach Javls lamented,
"'lbe girls played weU, but we gave
If away!' ~ Defenders' record
pow ltaDds at 4-2.

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metal tape button. 1112-1903

DIN-size chassis. Wrth in-dash mounting
hardWare. "TM Dolby laboratories Licens-

CP·IIOI

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15,000

'

Uptld averted

In a stmUarpertormancewith the
same outcome, the Southern reserves took charge In the fourth
quarter to dump an up!lel-mlnded
Bobldtten reserve team, 35-3).
Southern won the contest with by
outscoring KC, 17·12 in the final
period. JayBostlckledthewaywith
13 points while Todd Adams
contrlbuted 11 points. Gary Pennlngton led Coach Mark Hartman's
club with nine points. Larzy Edge
and Riehle Gilmore had eight points
each.
Southern, 12-1 overall and 5-1 In
the league, plays at EastemFrtday.
Kyger Creek, 8-5 overall and 4-31n
theSVAC,goestoWaharna Tuesday
and North GaiUa Friday.
SOtmiERN (11) - K. CUrfman 9-7·~:
Rooah 0.1·1: D. Teaford 2-2.0: HW 4-Z.IO:
Deem 1·1·3: Untefteld 5-6-16: Connolly 4-2-10.

SAVE•&amp;

6
16

19

.-

28o/o

~
~

In the preceding junior hlg!t :
contest Eastern rolled to a J.5.13 ·
halftime lead, then rallied ln the •
second halt to pull off a 26-18
triumph. Janel Werry led the
winners with 15 points. J . Lockhart. .
had nine for Hannan Trace.
:- : ·

uni

Cut

dan.17Retulla
Belpre • Melp 55
AleuDder 18 NellonvUJe.York 12
w....... u Miller u
~

caroms, and teammates .Melinda
Mankin and Ann Diddle had eight
each. Dillon had 13 for Hannan
Trace.
Dillon displayed her talents to
lead Hannan Trace with 16 points,
Tabby S~tet!ts added six.
Eastern hit 15 of 37 attempts from
the field and canned 15 of 25 at the
charity strtpe, Including nine of 13
by Kelly Whitlatch. HT hit two of
five from the foul circles and
committed 23 fouls . EHS had eight
steals, 20 turnovers, and had eight
fouls .

By Realistic

NelsonvUie-\'ork ................................ 5 8
Miller .... .. ......................................... ! 12

Wellston...............

!lrst period, despite the absence of
senior Dee Dalley, a starter and
former all-leaguer, who was sidelined after having her wisdom teeth
removed. Eastern continued on for
a 24~ halftime lead, and held a28-14
after three frames as every Eagle
saw action. Behind a strong effort
from HT's Julie Dillon the Wlldklt·
tens outscored the winners the last
round, 14-8, but their bid well short
as the curtain fell on the 45-28
triumph.
Eastern won the battle of the
boards 39-18 as Horner grabbed 14

Save •s-Weatheradio® Oeskube

.. ........... 9 3

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Pleatanl, W. Va.

Ideal "starter" computer! Manual shows how to program in
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any colOr' TV. 2 x 7 x 8'/•" . 1126-3011

Meigs .............................................. 9 4

Alexander ...................................... 10
Trimble ........................................... 9

Oh~Point

shootlngandpressuredefenselnthe
second period as Bradbury scored
six polhts, Brent Love and Steve
Wa11gh tour each to pace the
Box ICOI"e.
•
Galllans' aJ poll!! effort that stanza.
EMTERN: Spenct&gt;r 2·2.0; WU.son 2.{)..j~ :
Horner t&gt;J.I5; Whlltalch 3-9-15: Mankin 2.().4; '
Substitute Larzy Edge had three
Capehan ~ ; Diddle ().I ·I. Tolalo IJ.IUI.. • .
points during the second period.
HANNAN TRACE: Dillon 7-2-14; Whl~ ::.·
2.().4; s-. 3M: Caldwell 1&lt;&gt;2: D. (lQJo, •
Dennis Teaford and Hill added four
()..6{; SchrOeder ~ !Woe ow. ToUI( ' :
points each for Southern.
IJ.Z.II!.
1n addition to Curfman, three
&amp;.&gt;r.by~
Eastern .
10 14 12 94')
other players !lnlshed with doul)le
Hannan Tract&gt; 4 8 14-28
figures for the Tornadoes. Rod
Llttle!leld, who was also In foul
trouble In the first half tlnlBhedwith . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 16 points, while
and Wade
Connolly had 10points apiece.
Vogel led KC witl1 15 points on
seven baskets and a free throw,
Bradbury had 12 points and Love
added 11.
According to the charts, Southern
hit 25 of 50 floor attempts for 50
percent and collected 36 rebounds
with Littlefield getting seven. The
Tornadoes had 17 turnovers. Kyger
Creek sank 25 of 45 field goal
attempts.

Belpre .............................. 12 2 917 m

WIIITl'n ...............................9 ~ 826 764
Federai·Hocktng .................. 7 9 892 !144
Melg:! .... ... .. .. .. .
. ........... 6 8 8.ll 796 ·
Nelsonville-York ..................~ 9 783 849
VInton County ......................... 5 10 866 863
Wellston .............................. 3 12 877 11173
MUier ................................. 0 13 749 !NO
TVCONLY
Team
WLP OP
Trimble
............. 14 0 11116 772
Alexander ......................... 13 2 993 853
Belpre ................ .............. 10 2 78S 671
Warren.. ..........
.. .......8 ~ 749 714
Meigs .
.. ........ 5 8 m 738
NetsonvtiJe.York .................. 5 8 741 796
Federal· Hocking .................. ~ 9 844 !NO
VInton County ...................... 5 8 745 n;
WellsI on ............................. 2 12 1m IOOi
MUier ................................. 0 13 6ll 845
RESERVES
Team
W L
WIIITl'n . ................. .. ....
.. ...... 10 3

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page-C-S ~

January 29, 1984

N;...,....-.

400/o

29!~.95

.• , 'I

Elliptical stylus tracks at an ultralight 3 /• to 1'/• grams. C::arbon fi.
bel'S neutralize static charges. With
screwdriver and stylus cleaning
tJN~~.II!tiHm

. ...

MON.-FRI.· a.;a~
SAT. 8·6; SUN~- 9-5

.,
. -. .

•

.;·'
.

.

/
I

"

,,

,,

�:.

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

...

---

i

..

~29,

~ Athens

regains first place
with 51-44 win over GAHS

ers

~roy-Middleport-Gallipolis_, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

1984

Friday's cage results Big Blacks drop '7 1-63 conference battle
til, Allnin Konrnore 111
Clo1-...,...
II AJtron n........,

..,Trotwood-Madlton

Aaron Alnln

•

,t,

~- ,., Altron E1let •
Allr(lll . . _ r 87, Altron C..entry

-

·&amp;I

THE PLAINS - Athens, down Bulldogs up 39-34. Flnnearty alSo
17-14 with 6:27 on the clock In the had two key steals on theGAHSend
second period, outscored visiting of the court early in the last stanza.
Gallipolis, down 4&amp;-40 with 2: 58
Gallipolis 12-2 'over the next five
minutes, then went on to hand the left , missed three front ends of
Blue Devils a 51-44 Southeastern one-and-one situations late in the
Ohio League basketball setback game, enabllng the Bulldogs to
· maintain their advantage.
here Friday night.
The victory snapped Athens'
Surprised GalllpoUs
three-game losing streak, ended
"We surprised Gallipolis with our
Gallipolis' eight -game winning man-to-man defense early in the
streak, and put the Bulldogs back game," Gibson said. He added,
ori top with Logan In the SEOAL "We worked hard all week on
standings with a 4-2 mark.
boxing out under the boards. It .
GAHS dropped to 10-3 overall and really paid o!f tonight. We've
3;2 inside the conference.
played three outstanding games
· '.'We had a chance to put Athens this year - twice against Gallipolis
away, but didn't get the job done,"
and once against Lancaster in a
losing cause. "
remarked GAHS Coach Jim Os~rne. "We played our worst game
Osborne added, "It's hard to
of . the year up here tonight," he
believe we played that bad out there
tonight. We also worked hard all
~: Bulldog mentor Fred Gibson week on aU phases of the game,
then lost."
said, "We were able to hold their top
Gallipolis shot 34.5 percent from
sCorer. Ellcessor (Chris) to four
!illnts. That, along with Gerig the field (19 of 55) and was six of 13
at the foul line. The Galiians had 30
(Ouis) controlling the boards, was
rebounds. 10 by Kev Carty.
the big difference."
Carty was the only Blue Devil in
Turning Point
• Both coaches felt the game's double figures with 10 markers.
turning point came early in the GAHS had 12 turnovers, six in the
final pertod.
fOurth period.
Flnnearty Top Scorer
GAHS had rallied late in the third
Flnnearty led Athens' attack with
stanza to reduce Athens' lead to
16 points, 10 in the final pertod. Leon
onr, 35-34.
: pallipolis committed four turnov- Allen added 12. Athens shot 40.9
percent, hitting 18 of 44 field goal
to start the fourth period - two
attempts. The Bulldogs were 15 of
llwing the initial seconds of that
QUarter - then the Bulldogs went , 26 at the foul line. Athens had 33
rebounds, 13 by Gerig. Athens had
bito a passing game, forcing the
21 turnovers.
~llians to play catchup,
:: Bob Finnearty was the Bulldog Gallipolis played Wheelersburg
IW!to in the final period. He at home Saturday night. Frtday,
GAHS will host Ironton. Saturday
COIIIIeCted on two free throws (6: 53)
8lld hit a layup at 6: 37 to put the the DeVils play at Portsmouth.
'
. '
Athens will host Canal Winches-

•
The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5·

Alltllnd

o.Mew illl, New l..ordon "

A - ·~ GaWpoitiM
Avuaill,nr.l.vtdo51

ven.au~

-Bly87,M«&lt;nall
m. GroonobuO'I c .... ,.
-I'I.C..I&lt;rYIIIe57
. . Maytlold 53
(.W 'II, lt-tdtt""' ..

......

WillTf'n W. R.Herve

,., Gallon iiB

114t1as !II

BmoiiW-.rtlt32

Watldnl Memoria.l 79, Lk.itlna Val. 49

~- 'II, C&lt;llu-.n. O..t -

WeU.non m. Fpderal Hocktng oo
Ill
W. CheatM" Lakota 411, Cln. Prlnceton 62
W. CHUM• Tl , Kenston ~
W. Holmel 58, Loudonvi!Jeo ot6
W. MusldnRUm &amp;1, Nt'W l..t&gt;xin(Ctoo 57
w Sbm Northwf'ltern 48, Waynodak&gt;

~83,Ba_,

Cl

!6, w. Brandt "
11, lllxlo 39, OT
Bnn11Wkil
N. ~alton 57

W. UnXm 63. WhJtooa.k ~
Wl'51t&gt;tVUie N. ti6, Pk:kt'rlngton 48
Westt-rvUIP S. 42, Gn7o'e Oty Jl
Whet&gt;lenbura !l7. Lucamue Val. 46
Whltehal.l 74. Col. Franklin Hts. 64
WkkJUit T1, Chardort ~
WUiard '15, Norwalk 48
Wilmington 48, Washington C.ll . 47
Wonhh'1~1on tB, Gn7o'epon 54
Xmta 6.1, Sprtna. North SJ
Young. Chaney 58, Young. W\.laul 42
Yoonsc. Eu.t M, You'*. Ra)'ftl lll

n.

BLUE IMPS (II) - Harrison 1-8-16:
Atkinson 3-0-6: Grant 1-l.J; Stone G-2·2: Strait
1·2-4: Owens 24-4: C. III-0-2: Woodrum 1-2-4.
Tolalt 111-IHI.
·
IIVUPIJPS (50) - .Dabelko 1-I.J: Jordon
J-2-1!: T. C. Howart12-5-9; Ona ll 0-2-2: Malone
1-0-2: Abdell~ 1-0-2: Ch~pman I.J-5: Maccombs 7-:1-19. Tolalo 18-18-50.
By quarters:
Gallipolis ............ .
.. ...... 13 II 9'15--41
Athens .................... ....... .... 7 L1 8 22-50

Redwomen defeat Malone, 78-66

- ' ! " N. !16, SNtdy- "

s. n. Cadiz 10

IU*.e)'f Val. 62. fla Watnu1 .e
8ucyrul 61. Shelby "
C&amp;Jvary OW. It, Atwatl'r C'hr. 82

r------------------------------------------------

c.vnbrlcllo n. E. u""""""
c.vnpltoii-M&lt;morto! ,.;, Cont.... 73

Canal-.,. &amp;8, ....... Elm II
Canton Calh. 61, l...oualvlk&gt; Aqulnu 49

TURNER'S SATELLITE
RECEIVER SYSTEMS

ConlOn GionOall Ill. Mualllort J"""""

Yoo nx.

Canton SCllth «J, MauUJon PeTTy .11,
OT
Cardinal f9, Bellt'hwood 43
Catdilloton 12, NMiumr 41
Corllole II, !loy. Nortltrtdoo 64, OT
o...,n. Filla SJ, """"""'~ ,
~he sr. MI. Vernon 56
Cll. Door Pal1c !6, ModPin ..
Cia. £Jdror m. LaU Cath. e
Cln. Greenttlll 74, RPadtna ~
CO.. H - 66, C'ln. W&lt;IOI!wan! 64
M&lt;NidWo " · C'lt. Tllrpin ..
Cln. Non~ ~- C1n. Cole"aJ.n •
a.. ou mu. fJ . an. Anllfnon ~- OT
Cln. PhyJ. Ed. 55. Macon Euttom !n
01. St.Xavk'r 74, O n. Pur-Mar fll
Cln. Srvm Hilll t6. Cin. Cwntry Dly J:i
01. Summit 92, Nf'W Miami 61
On. Westl'tll Hills t9, Ctn. Walnut lliJL,

DISHES

Ur~uilnf&gt;

·opened Its biggest lead ot the game,
those being 10 point spreads at 59-49
and 63-53 at the 2: ~ mark.
But the Big Blacks would not give
up. They rallied behing the scortng
of 6-1 junior forward Shawn Nibeyt.
Point pulled within tour points at
~7 (: 18), but there just wasn't
enough time lett .
Shooting percentages show the
Big Blacks hitting on 25 of 62 shots
from the Door (40 percent) and 13 of
21 (62 percent) at the tree-throw
line. East connected on 25 ot 54 shots

HUN'nNGTON EABI' (71) - CUllom Wol;
Byer 7-14-28; DeMoss 040: En1ngton 7-2·16:

Black 0-0-0 Mklns J.U: Petpenbrlnl&lt; 24-4:
Brown~. and F'lelderH11 . To4oiiii-IJ.n.
PO!Nr PLEASANT il:l) - Jones J..J-9;
Minton 5.().10; Oshel 2-3-7; Morrow 3--2-8:
Nibert 7-0-14: Rlltle U-1!: Mltchell 2-1-5: and ·
Perry 1-0-2. Totalo !$- I:H3.
BJ quarten:
Hunt . East ..
.10 21 18 22-TI
Pt. Piealant .. ...
.. 12 IJ 19 19-03

65, WarTm Hatdihg S7

2

SAlE

On Select Group of Fall &amp; Winter Women's Shoes
Buy one pair of shoes atthe regular price. and get
the second pair of equal o_r less value

{iaaNG Af~I~Ng\

FREE! · _iiii.tuiNUG~Y;no;;;u1;-:44~0,..,..~-

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Heating &amp; CoOling
•Commercial
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CALL 446-3217

Ambulance Service
:100 Second Ave.
lafayette :\1all
Gallipolis, 0.

8 A.M. til I 2 Midnight
24 Hour Service
Saturday &amp; Sunday

co..

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8Ft to 20Ft

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OrrlevUie 61. Madlial Plains a
Olk Harbor t6, Elmwood .-. O'T
Cltntll'li&amp;' 58, Mli)'IVIJif'·"
OrTvWe 67, Trtway it, 01'

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Pa.lntsvUW. flarvry 97, Falroon HarrlJna

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TO KEEP
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MAIN ST.
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PMOOri.CIJIDa 79, M1Cumb ~
Pl!eblts 61. N. Adam~ 41
~!'nbura Spina \1. l.lJWf'IJvuk' "'
f\&gt;ttlsvllk&gt; 64, II Wt~ ~
~uant fil, Mohawk ~
PoriL [lSI ~. S. Wf'bt,tr&gt;r 4..1
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For most domestic cars

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SanduskY SI .MII")'I 82, Huron 7!J

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Rlvmna SE IIi. Rootfl&lt;:Mrn s;
Rktnnond Oak&gt; Sl: Ill, Wf'lllall \l
~cod "' L.akf'land 44
Rlllman 81. ~lion 58
Rtvff Vkw 71. Shl'f1dan ~
Riverdale 57, Rtvtor VII. ~. (Jf
Rwtont ee. Bowtlna Grt'ftl ~

Limit t2

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Sft~K'a [ . 62, l.akrskr
~h 73, WatM'fbrd ~

Shtrwood Fall'\'if&gt;w 64,

Sial"'

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Wf'ltem

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S,we over 60'

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Sptla. Soulh 7'9, Day. CanUI 59.

Stanton l..ol'll t6, Sttrtna McKJruc.,• 43
Stf!Ubenvli.Jt' C.th. 81. Martins f('fl)' fl6
Stow 57, Nordonla e
StrliOOJ"R !16, Caraway tG
St~u~ a. &lt;."kwf'rJtoat +1
Swanton 85. OPtta 111
Sylvania Smithvk'W 64, Maulllft' t.1
TNys Val. ~ . Miami 'l'r"IC'l' 44
1'h:ln 72, Hk.'ksviUe &amp;1
Tlll. BowsN:or fll. Tot Sta rt 52
Tol. Central S . Tot. St.Jotrl'fi ~
Tot. Country Dly Jl), Ann Arbor 4Mich t
'· GI'f'l('flhii.Jstl
' T'ol. Emanufl '19, BlpU1t Park ~
Tol. ftc:w:n M. TOI. Wallt&gt; 46
'l'lll. St.Frands 64,. ~. Scott 49
Tol. Woochvard SJ, Tol. DPVIIblM ~
1'11-Ccunry N. 11. Nfwton 71
1'11-Valt..y 47. Pill" 46
Tr!;VIlllat" 16. P~ Sbawnfil" 71

-3301

pitched in with 12 markers.
"Overall team play was the key
to the win," said Redwomen head
coach Dixie Martino. "This was the
first game that everyone contributed. Each player thljt I put out on
the Ooor played hard for us."
The win lifted Rio Grande's
season record to 8-5 while Malone
dropped to 10-4.

from the floor (46 percent) and
converted 19 of 28 shots at the toil!
line (68 percent).
Both teams pulled in 36 rebounds
apiece and both committed nine
turnovers .

Emergency Squad
NOW OFFERING

GERNIE'S .

YOUI\R. Llblorty ~. Newton Fall&amp; 'J7
Youn~ . MOOI'W')' Tl, "NUes Mci&lt;Jnk!y f9

87.:m-

992 5692

Logan dumps Ironton
LOGAN - A 64 percent effort as the Chiefs finished the evening
from the Ooor carried the Logan with a 64.2 percent on 34 of 53 field
Chieftains' to an 87-72 SEOAL goals.
victory over the visiting Ironton
Ironton drtlled 32 of 63 tor 50
Tigers Friday night.
percent, added eight of 11 free
The victory enabled Logan to throws, and only committed nine
gain a tie With Athens for first place turnovers.
in loop standings with Identical 4-2
The Chiefs converted 19 of 25
records.·
gratis throws and were whistled for
Putting the ball down the hold 14
mistakes.
was the name of the game at Logan
Kevin
West paced Ironton' with 18
where the Tigers hit 62 percent of pOints while Todd Warner, protheir shots In the first ball whlle moted up from the reserve team to
Logan drtlled 59 percent. The Chiefs ceplace the InJured Steve Wlllls,
emerged at halftime clinging to a tallled 14 points.
'11-JSlead.
The Tiger records now show 1-4ln
1n the third pertod Ironton . the league and :HO overall.
grabbed a quick 48-471ead with 4:17
1n the preliminary contest Mike
remaining, but LHS tallied 15 of the Hood drtlled a 20 foot jump shot in
next 17 points for a 62-50 and the the final seven seconds to lift Logan
Tigers were never closer than six to a 50-49 win over the Ironton
points down the stretch. .
reserves.
Larry Conrad, who faUed to score
The box score:
in the Logan triumph over Athens
IRONI'ON (7%) 11 Ryan Ainsworth 3-2-1!:
lasCweek, accounted tor 10 of his Kevin ' West 7-4-18: Robert Waver 8-0-16:
David Phillips 7·2-16: Todd Warner 7-0-14.
game high 20 points In that torrid Tolalo 32-3-72.
LOGAN (87) - Jack Mltler 8-1-17: Larry
third quarter.
Conrad 7-6-at; Scot! Farrar 0.1·1: D. J .
The Chiefs, now 9-5 overall, Conrad
0-2-2: Troy Wlight 74-18: Chuck
outscored the visitors 25-20 to StutneDean H.J; Keith Myers 5-3·13; Kerry
York :1-1·11: Barry Rodgers 1-0-2. Tolalo
conclude the highest scoring 34-tu7.
SEOAL contest in six years.
Score by qwuter.:
Rebounds were at a premium, Ironton .............. .. ............. 22 16 II :.D-Tl
............. ................... 20 21 21 25-87
Logan snartng 30 and the Tigers 19 Logan
Reserve score: Logan 50. Ironton 49.

a.y
.. 87,c· lll.
-_
Cl . . . 53
-...
....,.,
IM*e)'!

IJJ, Jefferson Union m
Ca.rroUion 73. Mktdlet&lt;M'n fmwlck

wet~

w.

.
By TIM DAVIS
stanza. After East regained a 22-21
POINT PLEASANT- The Point lead, II ran ott five unanswered
Pleasant Big Blacks watched their points to take a 27·21lead at the2: 25
three-game losing streak extend to mark.
.tour games Frtday night as the
The two teams traded buckets
visiting Huntington East Highland· through the final two minutes of the
ers posted a hard fought 71~ win period and East held a 31-25 edge at
over the host Big Blacks in a halftime.
Pioneer Athletic Co nference
1n the second halt, the Big Blacks
matchup.
managed to pull within a single
PPHS' record dipped to 3-8 point of the Highlanders on three
overall and 1-8 in PAC8 play. East, different occasions, but just
posting Its tlfth consecutive win couldn't get the ball in the hole when
Frtday night, upped its record to 7-3 they needed it.
overall and 5-2 In the PAC-8.
Point pulled. within one at 43-42,
Earlier in the season, Point but that was as close as it came the
dropped Its first three games, but remainder of the game. East then
responded by winning the next scored on two consecutive field
three out ot four games.
goals as it opened Its lead back to
Alter falling behind early In tlve points.
Frtday night's contest, the Big
1n the fourth quarter,
Blacks rallied to take a 12-10 first
r;::::::;::;,:;::;:::;::::::~
quarter lead.
1n the second period, East got a
Gallia County
scoring surge midway through the
Volunteer

,------------------'-------------------====::::::::::::

W1)'11(' Trare 70, Antwt&gt;rp oH
W•yneatiPid&lt;.io&amp;hl!n Tl, Trlad Sf.
Waynewl11e 61, rnn ton-Maule ~I

-

Box~re:

Warren Howl·

8frlh&gt;il

- 5 3 , A""'"' !II
~ C1r, W. Rlttrw !16, Jack100·MII·
ton !II
~ Hlllnd 110, Newoomentown 41
llt!me Union Ill, Am..t .... -Ctea,.,... fl
Bolito! 72, llntd6&gt;nl 119
Brthei·Tare 53. WUI.lamltxn·a11
. Btxley 72, Dublin ttl
Jlttom.CIITOII !6, MW....prtll
&amp;Jartmlft 78, AUIUnlown·fltch 68

Plallls Friday n1~.1'111dacthe dlarp II .w-'881
Flnneariy (3). On left Is GaDia'a Dan nn.el (I%).

~.

Warrm Local 52, Milll!r 4-"
Waterloo 87, MOKador'e 66

-111

FOR
- Gallla
Academy's Brett Bo8tlc (with ball) was called for
charging In this 'J'trnes.Senttnel action photo at 'lbe

~

J9

-

Botpro II,

n, Sidney Lehman 61

Vlm.nl Mathtwt 915, F1rmington 61
Wallh htiult 64, A.kr"Q\ Hoban 5I&amp;
W1pakmcta II), Bath ~
WIJ'"TUI Champion 73, Badri:tr 54
WamJI LaBrat 16, Cortland LalteYiew

Avon Like IJ, Fal.rvlew Park 46

-

Upper Scioto Val. , 1, Coovw CretMew
Van Buren 51 , Lelplk· ~
Van Wrrt it, Krnton"82
VermWon 66, Lcraln Clet.rvk'w

Amolltt a.-Batovta II •·

GALUI'OIJS (f4) - Ellcessor 1-2-4:
Bergdoll ~ CArty 1-2-10: Wolle 24-4:
Dressel f.0.8; Duncan 1.().2: Caner ().().();
Bostic l-2-8; Fellure ~ Untjohn ~
Pasquale~ Splete ~- Tolalt ~ATHENS (II) - Metheny :1-4&gt;6: BUckle
0-1-1: Gertg :l-:1-9: Ftnnearty 4-8-16: Allen
:&gt;-2-12: Harter~ Leonard :1-4&gt;6: McCAilalster0-1-1: Dean~ Abdella~: Thompson
~ Warner~- Tolalt 13-11HI.
Byqwuter.:
Gallipolis ..
.. ............ 14 7 13 10--44
Athens .. ... ...... ........ .......... 14 12 9 1&amp;--51

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College Redwomen broke
away from a 33-33 deadlock at
halt-time and went on to overpower
Malone College 78-66 recently in
Greater Ohio Athletic Conference
action.
Leading the way tor tjle Redwomen onslaught were Kathy Delllllon and Joslyn Ames with 26 points
each. Point guaj'd Sue Camp also

Troy 17, Piqua 87
Unlortown LMe 70, Sandy Val. ~
Upper Arll0f81011 76, Reynoldii&gt;IJ'a !II
Upper Sandusk,y 46, Tttftn Columbian 4!1

~II.Nelbw~Yortctl

Vanity box:

Blue Imps Lose
In Friday's prelllnlnary game,
GAHS committed 22 turnovers as
Athens came from behind to post a
50-41 victory over the Blue Imps.
After being down 20-14 midway in
the second period, Gallipolis came
back in the third period to take a
25-22 lead at the 2: 18 mark, but
Athens tlnlshed strong and held a
28-26lead going into the final pertod.
The Bull pups went into a passing
game in the final pertod, and hit 10
chartty tosses to secure the victory.
Athens upPed Its season mark to
7·7 and Is now 3-3 In league play.
GAHS dropped to 9-4 overallanil2-3
inside the loop.
Gary Harrison led Gallia's attack
witn 19 points. Steve Maecombs had
19 for the Bullpups.

,

A1rn1n N. 87, Altron Oonlold !6
Alnln ...,_ 1'1. K"u "'-eit !6

ter Tuesday, then take this weekend off.

M. Vandal'-·Butler

ga= 3.88
Prestone

1.88

Prestone
Super
Flush or
Super

2.49

Prestone
Anti·

Anti-Freeze ,,
Coolant

Freeze ·

Tester or
Rush 'N'
Fill Kit
Reg. 3.49 - 3.99

Reg. 4.49 Limit 4 gallons

Sealer

Anti -Boi ls Run s Cooler

Reg. 2.49 · 2.98
AS107 AS127

Anlt ·Freeze and Coolant lor alummum for au
metal s To lock out ru st and corros•on.

Protects to -84• F

AFt420, AFKt2, AFK58

Cage standings
AIL GAMES •.

USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
.·
::LOOKING FOR-' STEAL- Athens' Leon ADen (10, left) has an eye
ea lbe ball as he lool!s for a steal from GaDia's Brett Bostic In Fliday's
siooAL contest at Athens. 'lbe BuDdop had at least lhree steals In the
!W*foug~

coraest.

Less than 9,000 miles, custom made top, AM/FM casette, alum. wheels, 4 speed trans. SUPER SHARP.
I

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Plus Deposit
limit One

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1111
864
87ll
85.1
1156
676

825

771

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PH-:992;2196 , - .

MIDDLEPORT, 011.

12.88
Sagaz Acrylamb

5.88

Save over -4

Universal Bucket
Seatcovers
Reg. 16.95 Silver 16207·2. Champagne 16205·2
High or Low Back

Bottle Jack

2 Ton Reg. 8.95

8.88 4 Ton
Reg. 12.95

10.88 6 Ton
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DR. PEPPER

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' Athens !!0 Gallipolis II

REG. &amp; DIET

: Lopn 50 Ironton 19

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177

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Pt. Pli!liNnt ·at Barllput'IVItte ··
~ Wawr!Y at Jackson
-· , (lreenlleld at Miami TraCt'
canal Wtncltetter at Athelll

llmil Ono

With This Coupon
Offer lxplr01 !'ell. 5, 19,4

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50 month

Water Pumps
Reg g 88 w11eouild e•ch
IOf all VB Chevy "69·'71
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11.95 Reg 1&lt; 95 wo

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rebuild. e~ch . tor most
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All Batteries with exchange Fot most cars and
light trucks

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Free Calcium40 Month
Batteries
Reg. 30.88

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and or Defoggers

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Wiper
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Reg. 12.95 · t8 .~ Rear window Defroster I
Delogger. Wind_OJN Defroster . Delu xe WindoW
Delogger BD-1 . ED6L DFV-1

8.'11

1.88

; Frtday'trsulll:
, Athens 51 Gallipolis 44
Loj(an fJ7 Ironton 72

15.95 Reg. 16 95 • •

=::i~~~~~ tor most 8 c~l.

•

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' South Point at Rock HW
Nort-atWbeelenburg

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, Ironton at Gatllpolll
~ Pt. PltUint at WIIWna

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lnterdynamics Defrosters

7Q!

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SEO.U. RESERVES
W. L P
t.ogan ............ ...... ............ ...l 2 2ti5
Athenl .. ............ ..................3 3 244
Ironton ............ .................. .3 3 251
.llocklon .............................. 2 3 188
Golllpolls .... .......... .... ...... ..... 2 3 IIJ7
........ .
_
,
14 14 lUI

-~~u:os~-

Your Choice

64l
7111

SEO.U. AIL GAMES

'l'um

89¢

6.'11
&amp;16

2 322 321
2 381 3.16
Calllpolls ............................. 3 2 257 2!18
Jackson ...................... ...... .. 2 3 312 314
Ironton .................... .......... .! 5 33.1 :m
To1a1t
14 14 1118 IIIII

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1977 GRA~ADA 2 DR .... ~ ................. 'lB95
1976 FORD EITE 2 DR .................;..-. 'l795
1976 BUICK LaSABRE 4 DR ....... ~ ..... '1095
BROUGHAM ....'.,.. '1'195 .
1974 V.W. SUP BEETLE.. .... ::·.~... : s6g5 1980 AMC SPIRIT ..... :.:............. :... L '2595

r or

Altltens ........................ .... .... l
I..bgan ................................. l

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Offer hplrn Fob. 5, 1984

V-8, stand. trans., low mileage: •

STOP BY OR CALl FOR DETAilS ...... ., , -

--~

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1976 F-100 Ford Pickup ..... $1195

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V-8, auto. trans., AM/FM, P.~. Local· owner.

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L

S(&gt;utltem ........ .. ............ .. ... 12 I 818
l')trismouth ....................... 12 2 1012
Gallipolis ........................ ... ur.r 731
Wheelersburg "" """"" " .. " 11 4 9.11
o'roenlleld ......................... 11 4 886
t.ogan ................................. 9 5 89!1
Rock Hill .. . .......................8 6 912
Northwest .....
.. ...6 8 819
Athens ........... ,.
...6 9 781
Jilcltson ........... ...................5 8 786
~-Pleasant ........................ 3 8 :
South Polnt .................... ...... 4 10
wav...-~ .............................. 3 10 742
l!&lt;Jnton ...............................3 10 69.1
, Non-SEOAL.!lunllngton East TI Pt. Pleasant 63
· Coal G"""' TI Rock Hltl 62
· Mlnlortl 59 Waverly 5.1
Hlllsboro 59 Greenfield 58
:South Poln: 77 Symmes Vattey 39
Portsmouth West 10 Northwest 6.1
:Southern 75 Kyger Creek 59

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•

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/,

. _ , F~ 1~ Ironton

l

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t

~- . OPEN

_ _ 2Q9 Upper River Road

I

'

- .

•" _...

·

\I

..._,

.\
.

Q

MS-3807 ---

.,''
~~

'•

�-~

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

___

Pomeroy-Midd~port-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page-C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

North Gallia outlasts Southwestern, 5·3 -50 in s·vAC battle
PATRIOT - Overcoming mis- estern has a good ball club, and we
lakes and a "discouraging" shoot- gave them opportunities to score,
ing record from the foul line, North but they didn't andwedld."
The game was a low-scoring
Gallia outlasted Southwestern, 53-50
in a nip and tuck struggle here . affair for players on both teams,
although NG'sTlm Smith scored 15,
Friday night.
The Pirates played a tough, followed by 14 from Thurman
Holliday. Aaron Beach added nine
man-to-man defensive game.
"Gamewise, the boys played a for the Pirates.
Roger Wells took high man honors
real good game," Pirate Coach
for
the Highlanders, racking up 14
Bruce Wilson said later. "Southw-

points, while Steve Pelfrey came
through with 11. Mike Bailey
chipped In nine.
From · the field, the Pirates
outdistanced their hosts by canning
21 of 45 attempts for 46 percent,
compared to sw·~ 18 of fr1 (26
percent). But the Hi·:tJanders took
th~ lead at the foL · '!" ~. slnklng14of
their 19 trtesforh9;:.ertent, whlleNG
managed 11 of 25 tor 44 percent.
The Pirates recorded 42 re-

bounds, with eight each supplled by
Smith, Holliday, Beach and Eric
Penick. SW had 29 rebounds. NG
totaled 22 turnovers and the
Highlanders recorded 15.
"After all !hose turnovers and the
shooting from the free-throw Une,
theseboysmustbedoingsomethlng
light," Wllson said.
Thegame 'sbrlskpacewassetat
the outset, when SW scored the first
bucket with six minutes left 1n the
first quarter. The Highlanders built
a 4-0 lead at the midway point, but
NG hustled Its way down court and
played a tough defensive game on
the inside to start turning the score
around and then leading, building a
14-6advantageoverswastbeclock
ran out.
The Highlanders played catchup
throughout the next stanza, but NG
continued bullding its lead, only·to

MEN'S

II (lJ

FRYE
BOOTS

$3500-

have aggressive drives by SW' s Jeff
Meek and, key position play by
Wells, Pelfrey, Bailey and Randy
Layton work to keep SW only three
points behind. NG managed to keep
SW a) bay at the halfwlthan11-polnt
lead.
Sec:ond half
Coming back In the third quarter,
SW got ahead by one with 6: 10 left,
but a Pirate bucket soon erased that

EXCISE TAX HAS BEEN REMOVED
PRICES INCLUDED

OFF
watching for the results are NG's WIQ'IIe Diddle, Randy La,vton of SW
and Pirate Tlm Smith. The Pirates scored a win over the mghlanders,
53.'10.

STEEL BELT All SEASON

Pl55/80Rl3
Pl65/80Rl3
Pl75'/80Rl3
Pl85/80Rl3
Pl75/Rl4
Pl85/Rl4
Pl95/ Rl4
P205/Rl4
P215175Rl4
Pl95175Rl4
P205/75Rl5
P215/ 75Rl5
P225175Rl5
P235/75Rl5

RADIAL All SEASON
STEEL .RADIAL (Rea. Tread)

Pl65/80R13
Pl85175Rl3
Pl85/75Rl4
Pl95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl¢
P215/75Rl4
P225/75Rl4
P205175Rl5
P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl5
P235/75Rl5

-

36.00
39.00
40.00
41.00
42.50
44.30
47.00
43.50
46.50
41.00
52.00

78.00

GLASS BELT RADIAL
(R11. Tread)

Pl55/80Rl3
Pl65/80Rl3
P185/80Rl3
Pl85/75Rl4
Pl95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75Rl4

P225/75~14

P205175Rl5
P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl5
P235175Rl5

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

Pl55/80Rl3
Pl65/80Rll
Pl85/80Rl3
Pl85/75Rl4
Pl95/75Rl4
P205175Rl4
P215/75Rl4

Southwestern ............... ...... 6 IH 12

P215/75Rl5
P225/75Rl5
P235175Rl5

273-3271

.

300 6 cyl., auto. trans.,
AM/FM, gauges, PS . .

Southern ....

410
400

5 224

714

•

Ba-con .............. .

FRESH PORK BUTT

S1
6
9¢
Bo Iogna ............L~
Steak or Roast. ...L~

19

.••

·-

- '·•.
.•.
.
.',.

......... 5 2
. .................. 2 4

r

~

~

'

.
...'
'·

.•••

HOMEMADE

Sa usa.ge ............L~

$}lg

.-•'
~

'•

..•.

.••

..
..,.
•.

'·'•

...''

,.~
~

·•-,
'•

..•.
~

Gfl , _ MOO I H-

•

I '

Lnflcjn•

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

t6-Ft....T'M

Potatoes

1QYIER TAPt

.

$

:.·.

}69
~~ ~B~ ~A2

.
..
..
~

~

I ••••

'•

..··-.

BROUGHTON'S

*

'

2% Milk

$

PLASTIC GAL.
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

''·
',,

I

.••

J
}

'

'
••'

JJ
I
I

•
,.•

•.

.,,,.
I

·

EMy to read ~" yellow bl8de
graduated to sixteenths. Hlghimr•r.t styrene case and toggle
lock.
· 8318

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

......~~~~PriM

Cat

KRAFT JAR

'

••

..''

J

'. .

.

BANQUET BUFFET (EXCEPT BEEF$

32 Oz. Btl.
'

•

FLAVORITE SUGAR
5 LB,

BAG

JELLO-GELATIN

•

30z.4/·
$}
Box
.

$}49.

Umit One Per Customer
Good Only At P()well's
· Offer Expires Feb. 4, 1984

461 S. 3rd AVE.

.

•••

~1\ITillal• • • • • • •
·•' -•·~•· ,•.. .• -\AJ\JC\11,
• • • • • •· •

..

¢

•

.
.
sg¢
Suppers ..... i......
Catsup._
.-............. .

HUNT'S

•

Food ... ~·~ ~z~ c.a!s.
~

;_W_e,1he_um!e(SlgnedJUr.ecjors, att.eat the correctness of th!s_report of ~Qill!l­
tion and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In co.nformance with the lgstructions lssue!l by the
Board oJ Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking
. Authority and Is true and correct.
· THEODORE T. REED, JI:t.
RICHARD C. ~OLLROD - DIRECTORS
·FERMAN E. MOORE

.-

tu.6 9¢

WILSON'S SAVORY SLICED

•.:

I Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions
ussed by the Board of Governors,of the Federal Reserve System and the State
Ban~lng Authority and-ts true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell

·'

Ground Beef .... :~-.~.1

39

N01'1h Gallla ....... ... .. . .
.I ~
Kygt'l" c ....k .................................... o 1

Amounts outstanding a's of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of
$100,00 or more ... .... .:............. , .............. .. .. ....... ..... ... ....... ........ ..... 300,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date:
Total deposits ... .... .. .. ........ .... .. ................. .... ..... ....... ... ....... ..... .33,656,000.00

IT'S A FACT!

W. l...
. ...... 9 4

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

Eastern .............. .
Hannan Trace ....

Hams .............~"~~E.$1

69

RED SKIN CHUNK

SouthWf:'S tcrn ... . . ..
. .9 4
Eastern ......
........ 5 6
Hannan Ttare
..... .1 10
N01'1h Ga llla ..... .. ... .. . ... .... .. ...
... 1 9
Kygt'l" C,...k ............................... . .. I II
SVAC Only Standlnp
T..,.
W. L
soou...-n .....
. ............ 7 o
SouthwestErn .. . .. ..
. ................. 5 2

MEMORANDA

GREAT SELECTION OF
RANGERS, · V-6's, 4
CYL.~s. AUTO. TRANS.
&amp; 5 SPEEDS~ (5) 4x4's

992~2J.!L--~-·

........ I

FLAVORITE BONELESS

1'18

6 Jll J64

Team

EQUITY CAPITAL

'

PH.

OP
262
422

BuketbaiStaadlnp
AI G.,_

Common Stock
No. shares authorized .. .... 16,000
No. shares outstanding .. .. 16,000
(par value) .. .. .. ....... .... ... .. ....... 400,000.00
Surplus .. ...... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... ... .. .. .. ........ .......... .......... ... ..... ...... ..... .... 600,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves .......................... ....... .. .... ....... .._. ... ... .. 2,013,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ................ ....... .. .... .............. ... ...... .. .... . 3,013,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .............. ... .. ........37,223,000.00 ,

F-150 STY(ESIDE
PICKUP

PAT HI~L .'FORD

WLP
0 .l02
I 449
J 316
4 J82
6 :m

rm

SVAC GIRLS

LIABILITIES

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations .. .... .... .......... .. .. .... ............... ... ..... ....... ... ... ....... 4,250,000.00
Time an savings deposits of individuals, partm.•rships,
and corporations .... ... ... ...... .. .... .. .... .. ... ... ... ... ... ........ ...... .... ....... 27,937,000.00
Deposits of United States Government .. ..... ... ...... ...... .. .... ....... .. ..... .. .. 34,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdlyisions in the
United States .......... .... ...... .... .. .. .......... .. .... ..... .. .... ....... ... ...... ..... I ,384,000.00
Ail other deposits .......... .. .. 1.... ................ .... .. .. .......... ..... . . ....... ... . ... . .. .. 4,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ............. ..... ........... ..... .......... ..... .... .. ... 177,000.00
Total Deposits .... ... .. .... ..... ... ... ........ ... .. ... .... ... .... .. ....... .... .... ........ .33,786,000.00
a. Total demand deposits .................. ............ ... . 5,163,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposits ......... .. .. .. ..... 28,623,000.00
Ail other liabilities ... .... .......... ... ....... ...... .... .... ......... .... ..... ....... .... .... 424,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) .. .... .. .... .. .. .. .. ............ ... ............... ........ .. ......... .. 34,210,000.00

• RIO RANGER

FORD PICKU,PS·ARE AMERICA'·S
BEST-BUILT ~SIZE P,ICKUPS:

700

644
8.11

S VA C standings

Cash and due from depository institutions ........ .. ...................... . S 2, 19.1,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ....... ...... ........ .... ............... .. ..................... 4,796,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies
and corporations ...... ........ .. .... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. ............. ..... ......... .. ...... 7,485,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States ......... .... .. .. ......... .. .. .. ............. .. .. .. ...... ........... 3,083,000.00
Ail other securities ... .. .... .......... ........ "" " .. ...... .. ....... ... , .... .. ... ... ......... 30,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .. .. .. ........ .. ... ...... .. .. ..... .... ...... ..... ....... 1,750,000.00
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ...17,050,000.00
b. Less: Allowance for possible loan losses .. ......... 147,000.00
c. Loans, Net ... .. .... .. ............ ...... .. ... ...... ... ... .... .. ... .. .. ... .... ......... 16,903,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets
representing bank premises ....... ...... .... .. ......... ..... ..... ... ............... .351,000.00
Ail other assets .......... ........ ........ .. .. ........ ...... ........... .. ...... .... ............ 632,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .. ... .. .... .... .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. ........ .. .. .... ... ... ..... .. ...... .. .. .. 37,223,000.00

F-1504%4

6 cyl., 4 spd. trans.,
traction lo~k, gauges.

9 6.ll

1117

Hannan Trace

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close or business on
December 31 , 1983, a state banking institution organized and operating under
the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve System.
Published in accordance with a call made by the State Banking Authority and by
the Federal Reserve Bank of I his District.

DISCOUNTS
UP TO
$1 ,soooo

~00

OP
6110

Hannan, W. Va. at North Gallla.
Friday - Southern at Eastern: Kyger
Creek at North Callla a nd Southw('5tern at

The Farme.rs Bank &amp;
Savings Company

F-150 STfLESIDE

302 engine, auto. trans.,
air, AM!FM, tutone, PS.

WLP
I 848
2 19'2
~ 1911
U nl
9 601

Kylll'f C!Wk ............... ...... 1 ~ 21;6 lll
n. weft's PfTWIJ:
n.d&amp;y - Kyger C'rt&gt;ek at Waha ma and

ASSETS

BRONCO WAGON .·

14 -~

AU Game.

Teem
SOOihem .......................... 12
II annan Tra&lt;'t' .............. .... 12
Kyaer Creek .
.. ...... B
SOOihwesl""' .. ................. .4
Eastern ......... .................. J
Nor1h Galli a .......................3
SVAC ONLY
Teem
Hannan Trare .
..... .6
SOOihem ............................ 6
Ky&amp;er Crt'&lt;'k .....
.. ..... 4
North Gallla ..
.. ....... 2
Southwestl'r.n
........ 1
Eal1em .. .... . .. ................ 1
RESmVEH
Team
SOOihem
.................. 1

390 Second,

DISCOUNTS
UP TO
$1,80090

F-150 STYLESIDE
4x4

.-

SVAC •'TANDINGS

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

351 engine, auto. trans.,
7300#GVW, sliding rear
wind
· · PS.

·-.

:SVAC standings

Hannan Trace . .

LOW PRIC_
Es---

302 engine, auto. trans.,
air. AM/FM, P.S.

·-.

WLP OP
0 332 244
Eastern ............................ 5 1 .'\44 228
North Gallla ("'uL1 3 21;6 24.1
SouthwestPrn .. .. .
..... 2 5 256 :J42

HIGH QUALITY

F-150 STYLESIDE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., FEB. 4, 1984

S0l1111W1!:8TERN (101 - M..,k 14-6;
Wells :1-4-14; Layton 3-2-8; Pel!rey 4-.H 1:
Bailey 4-1-9; Baker 1 ~2 . Tolak 18-14-10.
by quane,..:
Nor1h Gallla .
.. ..... 14 II 4 14-53

State Bank No. 223X

F-250 STYLESIDE
PICKUP

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

, _ fi-II·U .

35.00
36.50
38.00
39.00
40.00
41.50
43 .50·
41.50
43 .50
46 .00
49.00

P~05/75Rl5

BILL'S BODY SHOP

PAT HILL FORD FOR

TWO FREE OIL
CHANGES WITH
ANY NEW
VEHICLE
PURCHASE

We R_,e The Right To
Umlt Ouamltlee.

GLASS BELT All SEASON

33.00
35.50
38.00
39.50
40.50
41.50
43.50
44.50
43.00
44.00
45.00
47.00

Junction Rt. 68 and Rt. 2, Ravenawood, WV
.
thru Saturday 8-5

SEE

.

67.00
62.00
55.00
62.50
5$.00
66.50
52.50
56.80
53.00
60.00
63.50
68.00

The
·shoe Cafe

REACHING - A try for a basket Is made by Southwestern's Roger

Wells In mid-quarter action of the SW-Nonh GaDia game Friday. Seen

-

TRUCK (Mud &amp; Snow)

31xl0.5x15 6 Ply Tbls.

TO~

ssooo

line to sink one of two trles for the
additional points. Layton then
attempted to pass the ban to Meek,
andllmissed,allowtngNGonemore
time at the line, but the attempt by
Anthony Blackburn faUed .
UttJe Buce romp
The Pirate reserve also romped
rNer their SW counterparts with a
58-JGwln. PaulLeesteppedaheadas
high man with 16 points, with Todd
Deel supplying 15 and Mike
Keinper, ll.
John Woolum took the lead forSW
with 17, while Sean Coney provided
seven. ·
The wln boosts NG to 3-10 on the
season and 2-51n !heSVAC, whllethe
mghlanders tan to 4-10 overall and
l-51n the league. ThePirateswereto
play Berne Union away Saturday,
host Hannan, W.Va. Tuesday and
greet Kyger Creek Friday.
SW travels to Hannan Trace
Friday.
NORTH GALUA ($3) - Blackburn 2H;
W. Diddle 1}1-1; Penick 2-:1-1; SmUh 6.1- 1 ~ .
Holliday 6-2·14; Glassburn 1 ~2 ; Beach 4-1-9.

PRICE GOOD ON ALL TIRES IN STOCK

950xl6.5 8 Ply Tbls.
875xl6.5 8 Ply Tbls.
800x16.5 8 Ply Tbis.
750x16 8 Plv Tbls.
750x16 8 PI, T.T.
750x16 L.T.D. 8 Ply u.
L78xl5 6 Ply Tbls.
H78xl5 6. Ply Tbls.
K70x15 4 Ply Tbls.
31xl0.5x15 4 Ply Tbls .
llxl hl5 4 Ply Tbls.
llxl hl5 6 Ply Tbls.

.,

Continued from P&amp;Jl! 8

',;i;iiiijjjjjj;---~~~~~~!!!iii!!!i!iiii!!ii!~iii!!~-------~!!!;;;;;;;;.
I
DEAN TIR

TRUCK ~Reg. Tread)
9.50x16 .58 Ply bls.
63.80
875xl6.5 8 Ply Tbls.
59.00
800xl6.5 6 PI~ Tbls.
49.00
750x16 8 Ply .T.
56.00
6 Ply T.T.
44.80
700xl 5 6 Ply n. EDS
45.00
L78x15 6 Ply Tbis.
50.00
H78xl5 6 Ply Tbls.
52.50

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge-C7

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

North Gallia

through foul shooting, SW crept up,
and at 1: 31, a Pelfrey basket pushed
the score to 52-50. The Highlanders,
stalling for time, played a passing
game on the Pirate court untU Meek
trted for a basket at 26 seconds. The
attempt failed.
NG' Penick was then fouled by the
Highlanders. With nine seconds
remaining, Penick stepped to the
Continued on Page 7 .

lead and the battle continued, with
NG leading by three as they went
Into the final pertod,
SW succeeded In stalling the
Pirates and tying the score at 46-46,
with 4:04 left. A Pirate basket from
the charity Une erased that by one
point, and Smith rallied to sink the
ball with 3: 26 remaining to push the
score to 49-46.
NG pulled ahead to 52-46, but

29, 1984

JariUGIIV

January 29, 1984

•

Umit Four Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer ExpireLEeb._4,_t9H . •

'--

'

.·····

....

'••'

3lb.

Can

$229
·

•
•

1

Oz.$699

.

~

-

't

i

•

•e

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 4, 1984

•

•

..

---

-•

19

••••• COUPON
.
• •••• • ·····cooPON·:::::::~
. .. ,. •
'-~ ~ ···\
•
•
iCRISCO · · • • TIDE DETERGENT ••
•
•
SHORTENING
•
171
Box

••

::••
••

•

-

•'

"~

••
•

,•'
••

•

•
'

-

�Page-C8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

PanWroy-Micldleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Plea10nt, W.Va.

I .

January 29, 1984

HT Wildcats _prevail despite fourth quarter Eastern rally
E~{ ~~t ~o~lte

a
tremendous fourth quarter effort
by Ihe Eastern Eagles the leagueleading Hannan Trace Wildcats
managed to survive, hitting seven
of 11 free throws In the fourth period
enroute to a thrUilng 50-47 SVAC
triumph at Eastern Hlgq School
Friday evening
Coach Mike . Jenkins' Wildcats
maintained a perfect 7-0 league
ledger, while passing their overall
mark to 12-2. Eastern dropped to 1·5
. filn the SVAC a nd 5-11 overall, losing
ve games by less than five points.
Ha nna n Trace's 5-6 sophomore
guard Deke Ba~nes provided much
of the Wildcats spark to lead all
scorer with 18 points Robbie
Brumfield 5-10 senior n~tched 14
points. Jeff Barnes added 11
. h
·
Coac Dennis Eichinger's Eagles
produced a well-balanced attack

~=~ ~~t f~~ ~~~t o~~t l~nd

range jumper by Rob Brumfield f':;:
a 10-10 tie.
Both clubs played even thro hout the second period as EHS ug
Inside to Malson and C
~en1
Newell kept the lnsld o111ns. lm
0
couple outside jumpe~ !:~with a
Trace
1 hed
aMan
ma n ton~~-; wic
from man-tothe rest of th:On:~:~lch they used
Matching po!t-for-polnt untU the
last couple minutes of the second
round Eastern held tough at 21_21 ,
however the tide soon chan ed as
thr
' 11
g
ee cos Y turnovers were converted Into Wildcat scores. Deke
Barnes and Rob Brumfield gave
HT th ed
In
e ge In the canto, connect·
Elongt range jumpethrs
· - as ern zone as e
hal! ended 27-21
Press.Tak ToO

'cats In the corner, forcing several

q~k HT turnovers.
though Eastern dented the
~lldcat lead and started to foul In

w8:catsof regaining
possession, the
retained a 15 points lead
with a little over two minutes

re~lntng.

led by Bob Malson's 12 points, Jim

Although HT used Its press In the

e game was clearly decided at
the foul line as Eastern hit just
seven of 20 Including three one-and·
:~ut~tuations In the last two
·
a~~;:u~i t'::lr ~lslto~~ook
ree
ws,
especlaUy In the last round connectlng on seven of 11 hi h
good
enough for th wi • w c was
With
e n.
no time outs remaining
Eastern scored last with 12 seconds
left, but Hannan Trace le t the clock
run out and secured the 50-4? wi
E
n.
astern hit 20 of 46 from the field
and seven f 20 t th f0 u1
while the w~n
a e
circles,

and 5-7 guard Tim Probert seven'
. "I'm very proud of our kids and j

:::half, It really took Its toll In the
tess ~Ianza, utilizing a morep
u ng zone fuU court press tllat

the field and
stripe. Easternwonthebattleofthe
boards 26-23 led by Troy Guthrie

::~te~n:~ 6~u~!k:lg~~':
: praise their fine effort," Coach
Eichinger said.
FoUowtng the opening tip, Eastern drove to the bucket In a very
deliberate first period of play as
. Malson sUpped Inside for a 2-0 SHS
: lead. A see-saw battle that kept the
: hometown fans on the edge of their
. seat developed with Eastern holdlng a slight edge. Trailing 10-Sin the
final seconds of the frame HaMan

ov~~~~e2ra21

es

~~f~n!t :~~~~~
18

had six tor the Wildcats.
Eastern had just 10 Turnovers,
tlve steals, six assists, and commit·
ted20fouls.HThadelghtturnovei-s,
10 steals, six assists, and 22 personal
fouls.
Young Eagles Win
Eastern easUy won the reserve
contest 4~24 led by Royce Bissell
and Kevin Barber with 19 and 18
points respectively. Eastern led
22-12 at the halt, then came on
strong In the last half outscoring HT
13-0 In the third quarter. Gary Klrh
had eight points for the visitors.
Eastern's reserves are a strong
second behind undefeated Southern
In the reserve standings, currently

p

MONTE CARL
0, Monaco (AP)
West German Walter Rohrl
leading the Audl Quattro team to~

Jenny Meadows, whose bucket
with a minute left tied It at 50-50,
was awesome once again as she
canned 24 points and 13 rebounds.
Rhonda Haddox added ntne
points whUe JeMy Miller, who
fouled out· late In the game,
contributed eight points and also
puUed down 13 rebounds.
Sherry RusseU led Trimble with
13 markers.
The Lady Tomcats won It at the
foul Une where they went 24 times
and made 14. Meigs hit on four of
nine from the charity stripe. The
Marauderettes outgoaled Trimble
23-19.
Meigs made 23 of 54 from the field
for a warm 43 percent. The
Marauderettes grabbed 38 ~
bounds and had 18 turnovers. Meigs
was whistled for 19 personal fouls
whUe Trimble ahd 16 called against
them.
Coach Kim Adkins' little Marauderettes upped their fine record to
10-4 on the year with a narrow ~25
win over Trimble's reserves.
Julie Miller led Meigs with 12

1W1TE11N 1111 - Colll111 2+8;

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2-3-7; Shrtverol.o-2. 1'allll•1-4'1.
•· •
HANNAN TRACE (II) - J. Ba"""' :1-5-u;
Bnunlleld !!+It; Bailey ~2-2; Swain H6; D. .
Barnet 8-2·18. Tolalo 1&amp;-IWO.
•

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By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
A-ootated Pre88 Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Japa·
nese Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe
will spend the weekend In Georgia
after assuring President Reagan
that Japan wUJ strive to resolve a
number of lroublesome trade disputes In the next few months.
Abe returns to Washington Monday for a second day-long round of
talks aimed at bolstering what he
caDs "the most Important bilateral
relationship In the world ."
In Georgia he Is to meet with
JapaneSe business represenlatlves
and state officials.
Both Reagan and VIce President
George Bush have warned Abe that
progress on the trade and economic
dispute Is essential If Congress Is to
be persuaded not to pass protectionIst legislation to curb Japanese
expoi:ts to the United States.
AC!!QnUng to Japanese omclals,
Bush told the Japanese diplomatic
leader by Implication that faUure to
resolve key disputes may result In

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points while Marta Musser chipped
In with eight. T. S. Buchen led

Trimble with 13.
Meigs hosts Belpre In their next
game Monday at 6:30 p.m.
MEIGS (II) 1\ Haddox 4+9: Harrison
3-0-6; Meadows 11·2·24: Gordon HJ; Miller
4411; Dean ~ Reeves ~ - Tolalo I!UIIO.
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CINCINNATI (AP) - Joe WUU·
ams Jr., the blunt-speaking retired
Navy admiral hired 10 months ago
to finish Zimmer as a nuclear plant,
has t;eslgned from Cincinnati Gas&amp;
Electric Co. In the midst of
controversy.
The resignation was announced
Friday by the utilit y, and the
00-year-old WUUams could not be
reached for comment .
On Thursday, he had clashed with
CG&amp;E President William Dick·
roner and the CG&amp;E board over
WUUams' request that the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission continue
worldng on a plan which could have
led to resumption of nuclear
cons~tlon at Zimmer.
CG&amp;E omclals released a slatemen! Thursday saying wuuams
acted on his own and without the
consent ot his superiors In contactIng the NRC.
Williams, a slaunct;. supporter of
nuclear power, had expressed
disappointment at the announcement Jan. 21 that Zimmer would be
converted to a coal-fired plant.
·But he said Thursday he was not
tcymg to keep Zimmer going as a
nuclear project by contacting the
NRC about CG&amp;E's plan to verify
the quaUty of construction at
Zimmer.
"That place Is closed as far as
nt~clear Is concerned," WUIIams
said. :
He had said he did not consider It
necessary to Inform D!ckhoner or
the board of directors before

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Meanwhile, It was learned that
U.S. officials are Interested In using
Japan as a confidential channel for
sending messages to leaders of Iran
and Iraq In an attempt toendthewar
between the two Persian Gulf
naUons.

WASWNGTON MEETING -VIce President
George Bush, right, talks with Japanese Foreign
Mlnlsler Shlntaro Abe outside the White House In
Washington after a meeting with President Reagan.
Foreign Minister Abe Is in Washington to explore with

Reagan and other top U.S. omclals ways to defuse
smoldering trade frictions before they become Issues
In the U.S. election campaign, according to Japanese
diplomatic sources. (i\P Laserphoto).

The split "amounts to a vastly
different view of the responslbutttes
of this agency In assuring that
nuclear power plants are operated
by competent and trustworthy
organizations," said Commissioner
Victor Glllnsky, who opposed the
plan.
"The majority has adopted the
narrowest Interpretation of these
responslbilltles, " he added. "What
the NRC should have learned from
Its experience with Three MUe
Island and other problem plants Is
that timid regulation Is to no one's
advanlage."
The commission hopes to decide

whether· to lift two 1979 shutdown
orders by June. The orders were
Issued after the nation's worst
commercial nuclear accident In
March 1979 at the Unit 2 reactor
adjoining Unit 1 near Harrisburg,
Pa.
The NRC plan, approved by
Chairman Nunzto Palladino and
Commissioners Fred Bernthal and
Thomas Roberts, says temporary
removal of some plant employees
from nuclear operations can serve
as an "Interim solution" to llllresolved management Issues.
But Glllnsky and Commissioner
James Asselstlne criticized the

majority for allowing the preyldent
and chairman of General Public
U!Uities Corp., the plant owner. stay
In their jobs.
PaUadlno stressed that the plan
"Is not a restart decision and does
not autrorlze restart ... These
current views and plans are subject
to change."
But nuclear critics were not
reassured, Including two who halted
the proceedings by sitting on the
commission !able.
"You're lalldng about our lives,"
said Patricia Smith.
"You're out of order," Palladino
said.

.

communicating with the NRC.
Williams said he was merely
trying to "tie up loose ends" In the
nuclear project at Zimmer and that
he Intended to slay untU the job was
finished.
Dlckhoner refused to discuss the
circumstances of the resignation.
"I don't think that Is material,"
D!ckhoner said. "The Issue Is behind
both him and us and that should be
enough."
CG&amp;E announced WUUams' departure In a two-paragraph slatement, which said the resignation
would be effective Friday. WUIIams
had moved out of his omce a t the
Zimmer plant at Moscow. Ohio,
Friday afterooon, according to
CG&amp;E spokesman Bruce Stoecklln.
Three CG&amp;E directors resigned
earlier In the week. They had served
on the utlllty' s special litigation
committee to examine lawsuits flied
against the company over construction costs connected with Zimmer.
Stoecklin said they tnl!lcated that
their work ended with the. conversion decision.
CG&amp;E assistant vice president
Edwin J. Wagner, one of four
assistant vice presidents WWtams
hired to assist In completing the
nuclear project, was designated· to
lakeoverWUUams' jobofcloslngout
nuclear activities at Zimmer,
Stoecklin said.
Williams was brought on by
CG&amp;E last March to take over the
Zimmer operation from vice presl·
dent B. Ralph Sylvia.

"You're out of order," replied
Gene Stllp. "Nothing's worse than
quietly squashing the people's
wishes from Pennsylvania."
Palladino briefly recessed the
meeting, which resumed after the
pair stepped down from the com·
mission table.
Before making any~l restart
decision. the commission said It will
await the conclusion of an lnvestiga ·
tion of aUegations that reports to the
NRC of Unit l's cooling system leak
rate were falsified .
Similar allegations Involving operators at Unit 2 led to a federal
Investigation and criminal charges

against Metropolitan Edison Co ..
The GPU subsidiary that ran the
plant that has pleaded Innocent and
Is awaiting trial.
GPU President He rman Dieck·
amp said he was " pleased to see the
process working. I am confident In
my integrity and I am confident that
the process will reveal my
Integrity ...
In a statement from Harrisburg,
PeMsylvania Gov. Dick Thorn·
burgh said the NRC must resolve
management issues and clean up
the contaminated Unit 2 reactor
before making any decisions on
restarting Unit 1.

•

Manager boosts
Glenn campaign
By MICHAEL HOLMES
Assocl•ted Press Writer
In lapping Jerry Vento to run his
presidential campaign, Sen. John
Glenn chose a seasoned political pro
who, as an Iowa organizer for
President Carter tn198&gt;, helped deal
Sen. Edward Kennedy an early
defeat from which KeMedy's
campaign never recovered.
Vento was named Thursday to be
GleM's national campaign manager, replacing longtime Glenn aide
WUUam R. White.
" I am confident that tile changes
... wlllenhancetheprogress wehave
been making in reaching tile
American voter," Glenn said of the
switch.
White, chief of Glenn's Senate
staff since 1974, has been blamed for
the Ohioan's drop In na tiona Iopinion
poDs that have shown former Vice
President Walter Mondale steadily
padding his lead In backing for the
Democratic pr es identi a l
nomination.
"I am delighted that Jerry Vento
Is In a position to assume this new
role as campaign manager,·· GleM
said.

CAMPAIGN STOP- Demooratlc Presidential hopeful Sen. John
Glenn gestUres to the crowd prior to his speech at Boston's FaneuD Hall
Friday. (AP t:&amp;serphoto).

Vento, a Bostonian, earlie r was
recruited by Glenn and dispatched
to Iowa to strengthen Glenn's
support In thestatewhlch will be the
first In the nation to choose
Democratic National ,Convention
delegates.
Iowa's precinct caucuses are

scheduled for Fe b. 20, eight days
before the New Hampshire
primary.
Because the caucus system
requires Democratic Party
members to attend evening-long
neighborhood meetings rather than ·
cast a quick baUot, the Iowa
caucuses are regarded as a good
indicator of a candidate's organizIng abilities.
Upon his arrival In Iowa, Vento
got 25 field organizers for the slate
and started signing up county
chairmen, area campaign officials
and precinct captains to turn out
Glenn backers on caucus night.
Vento rose to national prominence In 1981, when working in Iowa
for Carter.
Kennedy, D-Mass .. who then was
seen as a potentla Uy tough challenger to the Incumbent president,
had declared that !he Iowa caucuses
would be a m ajor confrontation.
Carter forces wanted a quick,
decisive victory to dilute KeMedy's
inflluence and got it, winning by
about a 2-1 margin.
"It's a change that didn't come
any too soon, " one Ohio Democratic
official said Friday of Vento's
promotion. "They've fallen further
and further behind .' ·
The official, who asked not to be
Identified, noted that Mondale on
Thursday a lso snared the largest
number of convention delegates
chosen by U.S. Housemembers-75
delegates to Glenn's 17.

American killed attempting to flee Salvadorian violence

TABLE AND CHAIRS
REG. 1l131
TO

"It Is Important to have frank
exchanges of views on these
matters," Abetoldreportersoutslde
the White House after he met with
Reagan for 20 minutes.
"We must work hard to resolve
the (economic) problems of the past
and to move the partnership Into the
future," said Reagan.

•

CATNAPPER
YOUR CHOICE

Important political constituency for
the government of Prime Minister
Yasuhlro Nakasone.
Other Japanese omclals lndl·
cated the Nakasone government Is
trying to make Important progress
on other trade and economic
disputes by late spring In time for
discussion at the next economic
summit set for London In June.

Zimmer chief
•
• •
r~signs position

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A-ootated Prell Wliler
WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
plan ~t could reopen Three MUe
Island as early as June has driven a
deep wedge In the Nuclear Regula·
tory Commission, with two
meqlllers accusing their colleagues
of dodging responslbillty.
At a twnultuous meeting Friday
that was Interrupted by protesters.
the NRC voted 3-2 to deCide the
Imniedlate futureoftheundamaged
:TMt reactor before the completion
of, Sj.'Veral management Integrity
probes and a crlmlnal trial against
the former plant operator.

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Raerves - Meigs 28, Trtmble 25.

U .S.J apanese trade becoming a'n
unwelcome Issue In this tall's
presidential election campaign.
Japanese quotas on the Importing
of U.S. beef and citrus fruits have
bet.'O!Tie a symbolic Issue for many
U.S. offlctals seeking to open access
tor U.S. products to Japanese
markets.
Yoshlo Kartla, a spokesman for
tile Japanese foreign ministry. told
reporters at the end of a full day of
meetingll on Friday that Abe said
Japan's aim Is to resolve thedlspute
or make Important progress on It by
the time the current trade agreement expires In March.
But he said the foreign minister
also stressed repeatedly In his talks
with Reagan, Bush, Secretary of
State George Shultz and other
officials that Japan also seeks
"flexlbillty" from the United Slates
In trade negotiations.
Japan has long resisted asubstan·
tialloweringofbarrlersagalnstU.S.
beef and citrus fruit because of
opposition by Japanese farmers, an

Three Mile Island reopening divides NRC

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third period scoring 16-8 for a 43-29
lead.
Leading by 15 points In the last
round with six minutes remaining
Hannan Trace went Into Its spread
offense without even looking for any
further scoring. Eastern unveiled a
s uccessful halt cou r t zo ne·
matching press that trapped the

S

trade
differences discussed
with foreign minister

-

triumphant sweepofthe52ndMonte
Carlo rally, scored a personal
triumph with his third straight and

'limes- ientinel

U.S.- Japanese

Score b)' quanen:
.
.
Eutern ............................ 10 II 8 20-1'1.
Hannan Trace .................. 10 17 16 7-!19 •

rr:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::::;;:::;;:::;;;;::::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;

RETURN TO:

ersonellriumph

Lady Tomcats defeat
Marauderettes, 52-50
GLOUSTER - -The Trimble
Lady Tomcats scored at the buzzer
to post an exctlng 52-50 win over the
. Meigs Maraud e rettes here
. Thursday.
: Down 36-21 at the half, the
Marauderettes came roaring back
to tie the score at 50-50 before
Trimble's Downs won It with her
shot as time expired.
With the loss, Coach Ron Logan's
Marauderettes feU to 11-4 overaU
and to 9-4 Inside TVC play.

o
.
1
,;::rung a 0-2 overall record and 5-1
gue slate.
rlv~day the two cross-county
t
wUI meettor the second time
or a decisive rematch. The reserve
tilt will be at 6:30p.m. and varsity
8
contest at p.m.

.'
,r

$34444
..

'

bus as , they drove Thursday
By ISAAC A. LEVI
morning on a stretch of the Pan .
~Preis Writer
American Highway that,ts the scene
SAN SALVADOR, El · Salva~or of frequent clashes between guenil- (AP) - ·AI) American mother was las and troops of the U.S.-backed
lleeln&amp; .hate and violence In the government.
UJilted · Slates when leftiSt rebels ·
Lewenz said the famUy's destlna·
· slt(Jt her to de'ath on a highWay In
tton was Cosla Rica, "where the
eastern El Salvador, says her peoplearemorehuman"thantnthe
husban&lt;i who survived the attack.
Untied Slates. ·
"The guen111as, ohyes, they did It
Her two young children and a
- I have no doubt/' the husband,
Salvadora'ncustomsagentwhowas
Curtis Hendersen Lewen:z, told, a riding with them to the border With
!111Ws conference Friday 1n san Hondui'as were uninjured, as was
!WVIdOr.
Lewenz, a- 35-year-old mechanic
His conunon·law wife, Linda from Culver City, Callf..
LoolseCancel, 23, was gunned down
The rebels apparently shot at the
~ the -~pie's converted old school

vehicle because Lewenz didn't stop minutes later, Lewenz said.
He said he and his family. whom
quickly enough when ordered to do
he
described as deeply religious,
so, according to Salvadoran mU.
wanted
to escape " the rnJUtary
ltary otflclals.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman, aspect ofll!emtheUnltedStates, the
Gregory Lagana, said that he was illicit sex and use of drugs" they
"pretty sui'!!" leftist rebels shot Ms. believed were rampant In the
United Slates. He said they wanted
Cancel.
Salvadoran authorities said Ms: to try to tlnd a peaceful Ufe In Costa
Cancel was 'shOt at one of the rebels' Rica.
A democratic nation, Cosla Rica
roadblocks that often are used to
does
not have an army, although
demand "war taxes" from motorrebel
ex
ties use bases In the northern
lsts. Rebels also are known to stop
part
of
the
country to launch at lacks ·
cai-stncheckpassengers'ldentlflca·
on
the
lettlst government of
lion and destinations.
Hls wife was shotonceln the right Nicaragua.
Cos!a Rica haS an official policy ot
side of. .her chest and died several

,

'

neutrality.
"My feeling Is that war is foolish .
War Is a, horrible waste for both
sides," Lewenz said.
A reporter asked him why he
exposed his famUy to the dangers of
travel In El Salvador, where civU
was has been waged for four years.
"We have great faith In God," he
answered.
Right after his wife was shot,
Lewenz said he saw a man "with a
very ugly face" who apparently
fired the three or four shots that went
Into the bus.
"You kill my wife - why'i"
I..ewenz said he asked the rebel three

.,

times in broken Spanish. The rebel
just walked away, Lewenz said, and
he sped off in the bus with his dying
wife.
Travelers through El Salva-dor
can pay custom s agents to ride with
them to the border so they won't
have to have an extensive Inspection
of their belongings.
Lewenz drove about 23 mUes to El
AmatUio, a point on the Hondduran
border. where a p1iest was caUed to
give last rites to Ms. Cancel.
"She sang a few words softly Into
my ear and her soul !lew away : ·
through her mouth," Lewenz said,
describing her death.

•

•

�.... .

Page- D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

•t •

•

January 29, 1984

Ohio--Point Pleasant, W . Va .

Bum victim Jackson recovering

•

fiLES PETmON - Larry Spencer, Meigs County
Clerk of Courts, rued his petition Friday with the
board of elections to run for renomlnatlon In tbe May
prlinary. Spencer is a Republican, seeking his fourth
teryn. A Racine resident and graduate of Southern

mgh School, Spencer and his wUe, Kay, bave a son,
Mike. He l!i a member of Racine Ma8onlc Lodp 461
and York Rite Lodp, Pomeroy. Pldured with
Spencer l!i Frances 'lbomas, dlreclor of the Meip
County Board of ElecUom.

Reagan commends youthful hero
~PI'ON , Va. (API - An
11 -year -old boy who pulled an
elderly neighbor from a burning
a parl)nent got a telephone call from
President Reagan, who commended his heroism as a "a fine
example for all Americans."
Timothy Diakls almost didn't

take the call Friday afternoon
because he was groggy from
surgery at Hampton General Hospital, said his mother, Diana Diakis.
"The nurse talked with Tim and
said 'That's the president' and Tim
said 'What do you say?"' his mother
said.

Business Briefs:
Salon gets honorable mention
GALLIPOLIS- For the third consecutive yea r. Ha ir Happening
Styling Salon in the Silver Bridge Plaza has been listed among the top
10 sa lons in the nation in a competition sponsored by Steppes
Beauticia ns Inc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
The local Ha ir Ha ppening placed seventh In judging.
The honorable m ention award was baSEd on the salon's efficiency
of opera lion a nd improvements over the past yea r's performance.
The salon is m anaged by Sha ron Rudolph.

Kaiser restarting western potline

Reagan " just said that 1 was a
brave boy and that the whole United
States should beproudofme," Mrs.
Dlakis quoted her son as saying.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Megas·
tar Michael Jackson, hospitalized
with severe scalp burns today, was
"dancing around with his hair on
fire" before his singer-brothers
'helped snuff flames sparked during
filming for a TV commercial,
witnesses say.
The 2:&gt;-year-old pop singing phenomenon was In good condition
Saturday morning despite secondand third-degree burns, said a
spokesman for Brotman Memorial
Hospital In suburban Culver City.
"Michael is OK," Jackson's
father, Joe, told a reporter after
leaving his son's hospital room late
Friday.
Jackson, who won eight American Music Awards on Jan. 16 and is
nominated for 12 Grammy awards,
was burned during filming of a
special-effects scene for a PepsiCola ad at the Shrine Auditorium
near downtown.
Fans sobbed and shouted when
J ackson was rolled out of an
ambulance ·a t Brotman with his
head bandaged. He waved to the
crowd with a sUver-sequlned,
gloved hand before disappearing
Into the hospital.
Pollcesaidsparksfromfireworks
fell In the singer's hair, but a
Jackson spokesman said a smokebomb cannister may have exploded
on him.

Applications sought ex~~':!:~:'ei~c:~~:
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Health Department is accepting
applications for a clerk-receptionist
position.
Requirements Include but are not
ilrnited to high school graduation or
equivalency diploma, typing, filing,
45 words a minute or better,
telephone answering, greet and
direct general public to various inter
and lntro agency referral points.
Applications may be secured
from the health department on
Mulberry Heights and no appllcatlons wm be accepted after Feb. 3.
Applicants are pot to phone the
office.

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Department manager appointed
LANCASTER - Charles W. Bolin has been named manager of
machine ma intenance for American Electric P owe r fuel supply
dPpartment , replacing William Mark Hart, who resigned from the
company.
The fuel supply department Is responsible for management of
AEP's affil iated coal subsidia ries in Ohio, West Virginia and Utah,
as well as AEP's river and rail transportation network.
Bolin , who joined AEP In 1974 as a UMWA-affllia ted employee at
the Meigs division of Southern Ohio Coal Co. a t Albany, was
promolcd to ma inte nance supervisor at Meigs In 1975.
In 1981, he became maintenance superintende nt-underground at
AEP's Cedar Coal Co .. Chelyan, W.Va.
He served in the U.S. Air Force where he worked as a radar
repa irman and in advanced electlical and hydra ulic maintenance.
He IS cu rrently a ttending Ohio University and · also attended
Moorepark College in California.
An Albany native. Bolin and his wife, Judy, live in Pomeroy. They
have five children.

Station appointments made
I IURRICANE . W.Va.- Robert W. Dickey Jr. has been appointed
account cxeculive fur WV AH-TV, Channel 23.
Dickey was previously an account executive with WPGH-TV,
Piltsburgh. He a lso worked with KQV·WDVE-FM , P ittsburgh, In the
pregramm ing departmenl s. He is a 1900 gradua te of the University
of Pit tsbu rgh.
The sta lion has a lso promoted Diana Sole Shreve to program
director.
Formerly promotions coordinator for WVAH, Shreve joined the
station in August 1982 as a production department e mployee. She is a
M~ rshall University graduate.

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•16ll
1119
• Twin lemp hoedllght

ASSOCIAT-ED
FABRICATORS
INC.

•A~tldlpto

• Ea1y Empty Dull Cup
• Fingertip Switch
• Powerfui120V Motor

to moot carpet

• A little over 12" Long

(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-5101

HOOVERGD

~two'"
2-Spud

ONLY

_.

Reg.
144.95

• 18 qt. top-fill bag
• Cleana ahaga
• Headlight
• Cord reel
• Edgebruaher u 310 ~_ 9
Complete with 5 piece
P.ower-seal Attachments

HOOVER.

IC41H141:81»1 OneTM
Self-Propelled
Upright Reg. '249.95

Cleaning
System

S19995

Do you need a spare
sphere? Come
pick it up - Have
it repaired in Kentucky.
HAVE A SPARE!

10 DAY SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
BIG DISC·OUNTS

.Amalia
Bon

••

$528
In arecent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3out
ot 4 believed H&amp;R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4.

Z

What can we find for you?.;...

HOTPOINT
WASHERS ANo o·RYER~s
·-EXT-RA .DISCOUNTS
N ALL CHEST ·FREEZ·ERS
POM·EROYw. LANDMARK
,

2nd &amp; Sycamore

·

•

EVANS MANAGER RF.I:X)GNlzED- Bob Evans
Fanns Inc. recently recognized fonner GaDipolls
native Jack Mllls, at left, for ~ years with the
comp~. He was recognized byDanielM.Evans, left,
bolll'd cbalnnan, and Bob Stalbnan, regional sales
manager for Tennessee, Kentucky, southern Indiana

and Georgia. Mllls staried with the company as a
sausage salesman In 1963, was promoted to Chicago
area supervl!ior In 1970 and Is CWTelllly regional sales
manager for central Illinois, Chicago, northwestern
Indiana, St. l..ools, Mo. and Iowa.

·

Jack

Drlv1 allttl1 and uva 1 lot- FrH ·. -;;···-· 'ri"t ~ rm~:;~~~~or~dl~r within 75 miles .
Yes, WI uJYice wt~at · w. ull. W1 rc
Daalar
Stora Hours: 1:30 to 5:30.
P.ll.
Strlllll lltlp, Galli•

11

WE WILL
NOT BE
UNDERSOLD
614-992~2181

SERVICE FOR 'DIE COMPANY - Bob Evans
Fanns Inc. board chalnnan Daniel M. Evans, left,
congratulates Venlonna Slaughter for 15 years of
service with the company. AGalUaCounty native and
J:l'llliuate of Ga!Ua Academy mgh School,_Slaughter

JOined the company in 1968 in accounting at the
company's general office in Gallipolis. She was
promoted to data processing supervisor in l9'l6. She
and her daughter live in Grove City. She was
recognized at a recent company-sponsored ceremony.

Local women entrepreneurs: from home into business
EDITOR'S N()'l'E - Students for
Free Enterprise (S.A.F.E.) at Rlo
Grande College will be autboring a
series of twelve articles, commentIng on economic issues and conditions that affect Soutbe1181em Ohio.
II l!i the hope of the program that
through these articles, the citizens
In our area will become concerned
with tbe subject of economics - a
subject which Imposes major Influence on all of our Individual and
community decisions.
By SANDY MERSHON
For the 'lbnes-Sentlnel
RIO GRANDE - An e ntrepreneur Is "one who organizes.
ma nages, and assumes the risks of
a business or enterprise." There Is a
growing trend in Southeastern Ohio
of women to own 11nd operate their
own businesses. Some of these
women are getting out of their
houses to start a business while
othe rs are operating their businesses from their home.
Wom e n e nt repre neurs were
somewhat of a novelty when J an
Thaler and Peggy Evans opened
PJ's In Gallipolis on April Fool's
Day In 1973. One of the reasons
given for sta rting this business was
Ihat they knew how they liked to be
treated and what they liked In
clothing; and they felt they could
give their customers this special
type of trea tment as well as offe r
them quality clothing.
Evans says that as her family
grew a nd she became involved In
va rious civic activities with Thaler .
they decided they would like the

additional challenge of owning their
own business. They knew they
would be successful because they
worked well togethe r and their
personalities complemented each
other.
Alt hough Thaler holds a m aster's
degree In nursing education and
had ta ug ht at the Uni versity of
Buffalo (now known as State
University at Buifalol and also a t
Holzer School of Nursing, one gets
the Impression that she enjoys the
challenges of retailing.
E vans and Thale r recall the
experience or one of the ir first
buying t11ps to New York. As they
tell It, II was a tota lly ne w
jlXperience for them . They made
the trip and found themselves In tht'
midst of a busy city which was
ma tched only by the hubbub of the
huge clothing market.
At the market, sales people were
very helpful and gave them some
valuable pointers on buylog which
they have been a ble to use for the 11
years they have been In business .
As seasoned experts, they now go
on buying trips to diffe rent parts of
the country at least two times a
quarter, In order tha t they may
continue to offer to their custome rs
the most up-to-date styles In
fas hion.
PJ's was launched at a time whe n
some merchants were leaving
Gallipolis for the newly opened
Sliver Bridge Shopping Center .
Because of the historical significance to Gallipolis, Tha ler a nd
Evans felt strongly a bout m ainta in·

lng an attractive and vibra nt
downtown area .
They also realized that people
would still wa nt to go Into Gallipolis
to th&lt;' court house. the bank , the
post office, etc. They wa nted to
offer these people qua lity merchandise from a n attractive. easily
accessible shop. They feel that·good
stores help all surrounding busl·
nesses. because if the store Is able to
offer li s customers reput able ser·
vice and qua lity products. people
will come to it no m atter where it Is
located. a nd the surrounding stores
could benefit from the walk·ln
business which Is generated by the
addlllona l traffic in the area .
To be successful In business,
Thaler maintains , one musl be a
hard worker. be a ble to anlicipate
and offer whal the public wa nts, be
fl exible, Innovative, a nd creative.
and be willing to ta ke risks. Evans
adds that a pleasant attllude. a
willingness to learn, a nd the ability
to get along "1th others are also
pre requisites for a successful
business.
Women e ntre prene urs. such as
Thaler and Evans, have much to
offer Gallipolis a nd its sun·ounding
areas. Other women who own
businesses in this area include
Mary Morrison a nd Karen Berklch
of Peddlar' s Pantry. They have
been In business since October 1983.
One reason these women have a
successful business partnership Is
that they each have separate and
distinct duties at their gift shop.
Carolyn Grove, another lady

·Innov~tion Center plans workshop

ON ALL

PH. 446-0303

Chelter, Ohio
9811-3308

Upright with
Headlight

• 3-way filtered air system

All-steel agitator
Big disposable bag
4-on-the-floor carpet shift

Found

I

Ridenour Supply

~~~~~~~

• OuadrelloxTM ogit8tor
• BruohededgaciMning

H&amp;R BLOCit

GallipoJis, QH.

FOR THIS AND
OTHER HOMELITE
CHAIN SAWS
SEE

1

ROCK SPRINGS- The menu for
aU Meigs Local ElementarySchools
for the week of Jan. :Jl-Feb. 3 is as
follows:
Monday , hamburger-pickles,
french fries, pineapple and milk;
Tuesday,. chili and cracker, half a
peanut butter sandwich, peaches,
and milk; Wednesday, macaroni
and cheese, applesauce, hot rolls
and butter and milk; Thursday,
corn dogs, baked beans, cookie,
milk; Friday, cooks choice.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page--D-3
January 29, 1984

In the hospital bum ward, said a
hospital guard who had seen the
singer.
Angela Bennett, who was back·
stage, said Jackson's brothers
rushed to help smother the flames.
"The flames shot extremely
high," she said, adding that pomade
uSEd In Jackson's hair appeared to
catch fire.

HOMELITE.

Lunch menu

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Sta rtup is underway for an
aluminu m -producing potline at Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp.'s Mead smelter near Spokane, Wash., company offij:lals said.
The polline is expected to begin production in Ma rch.
Wilh the restart, Kaiser's number of opera ting lines will be
increased to seven, or 87.5 percent of the plant's capacity. Mead
Works has eighl potlines, with a total capacity of 2W,&lt;XXJ tons per
· year.
· Addition of I he Mead line will bring Kaiser's primary operating
ra te lo 49 percenl of ils annual rated world capacity.

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy; OH.
PH. 992-3795

said.
Pollee Lt. Marion Helenkamp
said fireworks were being uSEd
during the filming.
.
"As he came out on stage It seeJT111
that the fireworks were going off,
and sparks fell on him, burning his
hair and scalp," he said.
His head and neck bandaged,
Jackson was sleeping Frlday nlaht

Athens, will discuss bank and SBA
live of six firms primarily related to
ATHENS - Ohio University's
loan requirements a nd procedures
the nuclear medicine .field . He
Innovation Center will host an open
beginning at 2: 30p.m .
currently serves as a consultant to
house and workshop on "Funding
Attention will be directed to SBA
Malllnkrodt and as vice president of
Sources for Small Business" Feb.
503,
7A direct loans and 7A loan
Spaulding Racquetball Clubs and
16.
guarantees,
as well as traditional
Infacare, a medical products
Workshop speakers will include a
bank
financing.
company.
Clevela nd venture capitalist and
An SBA employee for 17 years,
Dr. Dwight Pugh, Ohio Univerexperts In other aspects of small
Bauer manages loan processing,
sity associate professor of finance,
business finan c ing, Including
servicing and liquidation activities
will speak on miscellaneous fundgovernment-guaranteed Joans .
for the Columbus District. Watson
Ing sources and alternative busiThe program Is free and open to
Is responsible for commercial loans
ness structures beginning at 1:15
all persons who own their own
at
Bank One.
p.m. Pugh will discuss friends,
business or who are contemplating
Venture
capitalist David T. Morrelatives and small Investors .as
beginning a small business. Regisgenthaler
wUI
speak on the "realisources of capital and the advantration is llinlted, and Individuals
ties"
of
venture
capital investment,
tages and dfsadvantages of sole
interested In participating are
Including
criteria
for Investment,
proprietorship,
partnership
and
requested to register In advance.
Interest
rates
and
pay-back
requireincorporation.
The
latter
will
InForms are available by writing
ments, beginning at ·3:30p.m.
clude Interest and tax features .
Ohio University Innovation Center,
Morganthaler Is president of
The professor is director or the
1 President St. , Athens 45701 or
Morganthaler Ma nagement Corp. ,
university's Center for Business
calling (614) 594-6682.
a Cleveland venture firm, and Is
Enterprise, which provides busiThe program will begin with an
past chairman and co-founder of
ness consulting to regional firms
Informal open house starting at
the
National Venture Capital Assoand Is the owner or a variety of
noon. Innovation Center staff wUI
ciation.
He served as a director on
conduct tours of the new business . small real estate, fast food and
'
the
boards
of m ore than a
. clothing operations.
Incubator.
half-dozen
firms
including Lubrlzol
disRobert
E.
Bauer,
assistant
Center director Dr. Wlfred KonLFE
Corp.,
and Tartan
Corp.,
trict
director
for
finance
and
necker will welcome workshop
Laboratories,
Inc.
Columbus
office
Investment,
for
the
partiCipants at 1 p.m. A former vice
Question and answer sessions
president of MalllnkrodJ Cl\emical of the U.S. Small Business Admlniswill
follow each segment of the
Corp., Konneker has been co- ·, tration, and Roger Watson, assistprogram.
founder ~nd corpoqtte chief execu-, ant vice pre'sid~nt, Bank ,One of

.Sohio earnings ·:drop 20 percent
CLEVELAND (AP) The
Standard OU Co. (Ohio) sal(! today
that its earnings dropped~ percent
last year, In part because of an
unsuccessful off-shore oU explorat1o11 venture In Alaska, but that the
companywasstUiprofltable:
Sohlo said It earned $1.51 billion In
1~ or $6.14 per &amp;bare, on sales and
re\oenues of $l2.0f! biiUon. That -

I

compares to1982netlncomeof$1.88
billion, or $7.63 per share, on sales
and revenues of $13.5 bllllon.
For the fourth quarter of 1!&amp;,
Sohio earned $324 miiUon, or $1.32
per slilire, down trom the ~
mllllon and $1.89 per share \II the
same period of 1982.
..
Just las,t weet. the · company'
·announced that It was taking 11'$163

million tax write-off on the Mukluk
welllntheBeaufortSeaoffAlaska,a
joint venture on which it and 10other
partners hac:llnvested more than $1
bllUon. The companies fouoo no oll.
Sohio hil(l)be..largeSt Investment
lntheMukiukislandventure,aUttle
over 31 percent, and was the
operating partner for the exploralion.

formula to offer for her success.
Among_ these were: a belief in
yourself and what you're doing, a
willingness 10 work hard to achieve
a goal, and cultiva tion of a positive
attitude. T hese hard working
women and others not mentioned in
this article are. without a doubt ,
having a posilive influe nce in the
economic growlh of Gallipol_is.

F lower Shop. .Jurrle has worked
with flowers for much of her adult
life. She decided to open he r own
shop when her business outgrew
her house. She said she allows her
customers to sel their own prices
and she works from there. She feels
that in order 10 be successful it's
important to like what you'redoing.
Each of these wom en had a

entrepreneur, has been the owner

for the past 12 years of Carolyn's In
Gallipolis. This store specializes In
uniforms. maternity wea r and
full -figure a pparel. Carolyn's success Is, In part. attributable to her
hig hly developed organizational
skills.
J u rr ie Rey nold s a nd her
da ughter-in-law, Robin. own J .R.'s

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

__
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1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Jerry L
Shaffer wishes to thank
the family and all our
friends .who shared in
the illness and loss of
our loved 11ne. A special
thanks to Willis Funeral
Home, Revs. Ernest
Baker and James lusher
for their comforting
words, the singers, the
pallbearers and those
who sent (Jowers, food,
or helped in any way.
Very sadly missed by
wife, children, grandchildren and family memb-

ers.
2

In Memoriam

In loving Memory of
Stanley Swain, who
passed a\vay Jan. 28,

1978.
Don't ask me if I miss him,
For life is not the same:
All the world would be like
Heaven
Just to see him , once
again.
I never knew my heart
could ache
With such a bitter pain,
Longing for his smiling

face

Or to hear his voice again .
I didn't know that life
could be
So Ioney, told and dim.
But I have learned so many

things
Because of losing him.
But memories are treasures
That no one can take away.
I thank God for the "time"
that he loaned ~im to

us.

Sadly missed and loVed 6y
his wife, Bessie Swain,
children, grandchilcken,
&amp;JUt-&amp;Jindchildren.

11-U........

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Public Notice

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
CITY OF
GAWPOUS
518 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
45631

thP VIIIJOP ot ::,ytau,S•' Tov..n
sh1p ot Sulton Counh ot M.,1'1S
.:~nd StatP o i Oh1 0
8P1na Lot Nl1rnbPr TPn 11 Q\ •n
Crook-5 Add 1 t • O~' 10 &lt;;,N i VdLlqP
at Svr aru"~'- Mt&gt; •·1~ Count\
Oh •O E)( Cf'P t•no ann rP&lt;;Prv1no
lrom th1s c On\f"'V.l nCP Jll tn ~
real .Jnd mHlPr at v. r-"· '"' "unrtpr
sa•rl Lot No 10 Jn. : 1r,, ' ' 1"110
m1nf' and rr&gt;m0 \P ··1o· ~ .J m ..
RPit&gt; rt'll ( f' Of-t · ~ VOit, •T, f'
2..J8 Paa•"' 81 ' .1·1, : VoiL,mf'
253 Pam' 34::&gt; MP •. l" Cou nty
0PPr1 RPc o rds

APPRAISED AI S5')00 l'O
TFRMS OF SAlE CAS H
NOT TO BF SOLD FOR LESS
IHAN TWO -THIR DS THE AP .
PI1AI SED VALUE
J&lt;J rnP5 J

Prall •!!

Shr&gt;r11! of
MPIQ S C , untv OhiO
( 11 1 5 22 29 Jt c

Public Notice
MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD OF MENTAL
RETARDATION &amp;
DEVELOPMENTAL
DtSABIUTIES
CARLETON SCHOOL
!614]992-6683
MEIGS INDUSTRIES,
INC. (6141 992·6684
P.O. Box 307 JOHN STREET
SYRACUSE. OHIO
45n9

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE

• ..

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lA. . . . . . . . . , . .....

11 U!oM6.....,

Public Notice

By W hJP. o f an Ord+:r of Sal+"
ISSuPd o ut of th f! Common
Pl r.Js Cou rt of MP1 qs County
Oh1 0 1n th~~ Cast&gt; ot nw
Far mf'rS Bank nnct Sav1 nq s
CompJnv
Po mP1 ov Oh10
Pl a1nt1H M}aln&lt;;t Curt VJnnvPt
Pt a!
0P fr.md.lnts unon a
tud{.lment thPrf'll1 l f'f1c1r&gt; rf'd
hP111Q Casf' No 83 CV 740 1n
S.Jid Court I wilt o t!t'l for :-;,liP at
thr hont d oor o f tht" C\ lw t
housP tn
Ponlf'I O'I
MP1i1S
County. Oh•o on th•' 18th ddv
ot FPbiUCif y. 1984 c1 t 10 00
AM thP l o llow ,nq 1Jnd5- anti
tenPrnPnts toc atP.d Jt Ftlth
S!IPPt Syt ac use. Oh10 IL' w1 1
SnuatP.d '" the Countv of
MP.1QS 1n thP. State of Ohro and
1n thP V1llage of Sy1 acusP i'lntl
bounded and dP.scnbf'fl as
follows
Bemg Lot Number ed Onr&gt; 111
1n C!Ooks Adc11\I On to th P Town
of Svracusf!. Me•gs County
Ohi O
Al so the tollowtng pr operty'"

1118. 9. 27. 29. 4t c

3 Announcemen~s '-

6

150 TO THE FIRST
PERSON TO GIVE ME
THE ADDRESS OF
BURL WRIGHT, SR.
446-3059 1

-'

•• a..t•

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M-c... wv

.,_CIIIIIJ04

"-c.RIU

"' r·_,.,

~

SeparatP seaiPd b1ds tor thP
sale o f the follow•na parCf'l at
land will bP rPCf'IVPd by thP C1tv
M anaaPr o f thP C•tv at GaU1po
lis. ofuo at hiS OI!ICf' at !) 18
Second A vPnuP Gall1p0I1S
Oh10 45631 until 12 00 Noon
local t1me on TuPsd.J" FPb ruarv
21 1984 and th Pr' ,11 s,11d
OfiiCP pulliiCiy 0Qf' rlPc1 Jnr1tt'ilc1
alouq
40 ac res norttl s1dt&gt; of
EJ ste1n Ave nuP allhf' COIIWr of
Mill Creek Road alono w / r x1St
1nq structures wh1c h cons1s ts ot
a sTOnP. bu1 id1ng. mo1P com
monlv kn own as thP Gal! ,pohs
Watet W or ks and a two -.torv
houSP With two car oa rao ,~
8 1d documPntS and propPrtv
dP.SCfip!lon mav bP obt a1nf'd at
thP Off•CP o f thP. C•tv M anagPr
Chnst•.Jn P M01115
C 1ty M anagt&gt;r
Jan 29. FP.b 5

,_

o\lel~tu

11C...,f....-

Announcement s
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 .
Call
614 -446 -0294.
Balloons for Christmas. Get
Well , Anniversarys , Birthdays parties. Call Balloons &amp;
Co ., 446 -4313 .
Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Vacancy: Julia' s Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 years experience .
Clifton . W .V . 304 -773 5873.
Riverview Personal Care
Home now has a vacancy fOr
a elderly person . 304 -7735882 .
Professional Electrolysjs
Clinic . 2513 Jackson
Avenue , Pt . Pleasant . Tele phone 304 - 675-5568 .
A.M .A .. F.D .A. &amp; F.C.C.
Approv ed . Or . referrals .
Member I.G .P.E.

December 30, 1983
NOTICE OF
PUBUC HEARING
The M e1gs County Boa1d of
M ental Aet ardat 1on will hold 11
publ1c hP.ar1ng at Car IPton
Sc hool on John StrflP.t 1n
Syracuse on Tuesday January

3 1 1984.

at

7 00 PM The

PUI OOSP. Ol the hPanng IS tO
gathe1 pubhc comment on thP
Comprehens•ve Servtce Plan
lor Ca rleton School and MP1Qs
lndus tr1es
A co py of the
pr o posed Comprehen s1ve SerVICes Plan w1ll be available for
rev1ew by mterP.sted person s at
Carleton Sc hoo! on or about
WP.dnesdav. January 25. 1984

JO HN S FOSTER
SupenntP.ndP.nl

Lost and Found

LOST
Fat, gray cat. Vicinity
Third &amp; Cedar. Reward
offered.

446-0590 or
446-4294 After 5 P.M .

4

Giveaway

3 fuzzy kittens, ~ tt ll black.
Cell614·367 -0482 .
Peek -a-poo 9 wk . old male .
Call 6 14 - 367 - 0621 be tween 4 :30 &amp; 6 :30 .
Wanted to giveaway mixed
breed puppies. Call 446-

3197.

"

Old gas cook stove, in
working order . Call 614367·7350.
4 puppies. 2 mate. Z lema~
3 black. 1 cream. Mother
Leb. Call 614-388-8589
before 2 .

-v;

One swivel rocking chair.
Phone 304-676 -6480. •·
mother, VJ
'h Collie.
.304.,73 -9147.
- Puppies

and

Ger~n Shepherd,

....

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
4

11

Giveaway

2 free cats. Calico striped,
mixed with white Call614·
742-232B .
Two female Dobermans to

give away. One is 4 yrs. old
and regiatered. One is red
and one Ia black. Please call
614· B43· 5231 .

6

REWARD for return , black

canelott at Plc· Pac Wednesday. Pleaoe. Call 614 -446·
0521 .
FOUND. hound dog. Call
John E. Denney 614·245·
5546 .
LOST fat, gray cat. vicinity
of 3rd. &amp; Cedar St. !!award
offered. Call 446-0690 or
446-4294 after &amp;PM .

Lost female beagle. last seen
. on Jenuary 18, 2 m1les
North of Chester road . Sha

waa

wearing
call

collar

and

614 -985·

Found. Doberman m Ru ·

ttand area, owner must
identify. Call 742 -2234.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal Youth
Center Bldg .. Camden St.
014-307-7101 .

Rick Peareon Auctioneer
S'e rvice. Eotate, Farm, An·
tlque S. liquidetion aalea.
Ucenoad &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
WVa . 304-773 - 5785 or
304· 773 -9185.
·Auction every Fri. night at
_the Hartford Community
-Center. Truckloads of new
·merchandise every week .
:conaigmenta of new and

.uaed merchandise always
·welcome. Richard Reynolds
'Auctioneer . 304 - 276 ,3069.

.9

Sac rata ry - reception eat
downtown Golllpollo. All
replies confidential. Send
resumes to Box 6000, in
care of the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune. B25 3rd . Ave ..
Gallipolio. Oh 45631.
Someone to do light house
cleaning &amp; laundry one day 1
weak Contact 446-3163.

Lost and Found

llcenao.
398B

Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

Needed base player fqr
country -rock band . Call
614 -245 -9316 or 614 -245 5018
One of the country ' s leading
financial institutions Is look·
ing for neat appearing Individuals to work three even ings per week . Excellent
opportunity for advance ment. Reply to box 6000 in
care of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune. 826 Third Avo ..
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
A golden opportunity with
Friendly Home Parties Sell
the largest line of gifts, toys,
and home decor in party
plan Openings for manag ers and dealers Earn high
dealer rebate plus win free
trips and cash Party plan
experience helpful. Car and
phone necessary . Call col lect 51B -489 -8395 or 518·
489-4429 .
HAIR DRESSER, New York
New York Hair Salon is
looking for experienced styl·
est. Apply 401 Viand St .
Point Pleasant . 304 -675·
7311 .
Overseas . Domestic .
$26.000-60,000 plus poss.
Will train . Advancement
poss. Call Petroleum Servv·
cas at 219-931 -2199 ext.
3670. Also open evenings.
AVON , two way s to earn 36.
40 commission and an extra
5 per cont. 304 -675 -1429.

12

Situations
Wanted

Will care for the elderly in my
home. lots of references .
Men or women Call 614·
667-3402 .

"We pay cash for late model
-clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chov.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
•
446· 3672

WiU care for elderly lady in
my home. Ressonable rates.
Experience and references .
304-773 -91B5

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
..wood heaters. Swain Furni ture, 446-3169, 3rd. &amp;
'Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.

Harper's Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
resident, elderly person. Call
304-675-1293.

We nHd tobacco poundage.
)VIII pay top price. Call
.1114-379-2165.
:Buy ~r trade 1979 F-250
'7900 GVW camper special
,for a 79 283 Mini motor
home. Must be fully con"tained, first class cond .•
.ftaoonably price. Call 614·
2110·8244.

•.

,wanted to buy, travel
trger,16 ft. or larger. self~
intd. Call 614-266:1218.
'Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete houseiloldo. Aloo complete Aucti·
,oneering aervlce. Call Rod·
ney
Howery
.014-898-7231 .
'lluying doily gold. silver
-coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large curjency. Top prices. Ed Bur.kett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave .
-Middleport, Oh. 614 -992·
,3476.
4!EDS-IRON. BRASS old
Furniture. gold, silver dollara, wood ice boxes, atone
jara, antiques. etc. Complete
houoeholds. Write M . D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh
411769 or 614 -992 -7760.
Caah paid for fancy iron or
~eovy iron beds. S 160 and
up for certain Meigs Co.
ltone jars. Old time cup·
board. call 1 -304-882 2711

Master watchmaker. Jeweler. Stone Setter. Re·
sume on request Inquire
Tom Pullin, 121 S Park
Drive. Point Pleasant, WV.

13

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurence
coverege in Gallia County
for almost a century. Ferm.
home and personal property
coverage&amp; JUe available to
meet individual needs. Contact Harry Pitchford, agent
Phone 614 -446 -1427.

15

18

Manager Trainee. Up to
$1,460.00 per mo. Pluo. 70
Yr . old company Ia expand·
ing to the Golllpolio area and
Ia looking for highly moti·
~ated people who fool they
are 1ble to manage their own
bulineas, no experience neC:ellary. factory training
Program. Must be neat In
oppoaronce. Call 304-926·
6747 for ;nterview. Inter·
vlew• will be hold in the
Golllpolio area.
Soleoporoon wanted. Expo·
rience preferred. commis·
lion oalao only. Managerllent open for right peroon.
440-3815.
Reat1urant manager, 2 yrs
... perience required . Send
reeumea to Box 40PO. in
cora of tho Gallipolis Daily
T,rtbuna, B25 3rd. Avo ..
Gollipolla. Oh 45631.

Wanted to Do

Wanting to 1:lean up brush,
etc. Work by hour or job. Call
614-256·1628 or 614 -2566574.
College student will do
tutoring in my home on
week ends. For Information
call. 992 -2264.

Financial
21

Help Wanted

Schools
Instruction

Train to Drive Semi's In
Middletown , Ohio . Job
placement assistance TriState Driver Training, Inc.
1-614-424- 1237

Employment
Serv 1ces

'1

Insurance

Business
Opportunity

- - - -- - - - - - I
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . rocommondo
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to sencf"fnQney through the
mail until you ~ha~e investigated the offering\
A golden opportunity with
friendly homo portioo. Sell
the largest line of gifto, toys
&amp; home decor in party plan.
Opening• for managera and
daaloro. Earn high dealer
rebate pluo experience help·
lui. Cor &amp; phone neceooary.
Cali collect 518-489-B396
or 518-489-4429.
Cigarette or VIDEO Diotrib·
utorahips. Routes available.
We provide money for expansion, ell locations. train·
ing &amp; a BONDED staff to
assist you in setting up your
own part or full time bull·
noll. From $3, 950 ' to
·•&amp;o.oo. Wlnaton·Safem,
Koola. 1-800-241·2268.

WANTED: Part-time Communtiy Servlceo Worker (16
hro·wlcl for on intermediate Aollaurant and fee cr•am
C.r facility for tile mentally parlor. price reduced for
retardad In Golllpolia. High quick aale. &amp;66.000.00.
oohool diploma and Ohio Building and equipment.
Driver'a Ucanae required; to Maoon. W. Va. Phone 304·
be I lalf·ltlrtor, and IXPI· 882-2400 or 882-2161 .
rfance In 1 human oarvlca
Httfng ·or In tho field of
mental retardation pre- 22 Mone y to L o l'l n
ferred. Contact Dave We~er.
P.O. Box 908, Gallipotio,OH
41831, 448· 1642, ext.
HOME lOANS FIXED
332. Oaadffne for appfl.
canta: 2·8·84. Buckeye RATES 12'h" purchaea or
,. Community Servl- fa an refin1nce, 9" edjullebfe
Leader Mortgage,
equal opportunity em"tyer.
1-800·341-68114

23

,.K_IT_'_N_'C~A_.R_,L;;..Y..;;L..;;E_
®....;,_ _ _...;b~y...:L:.:a:;.:rry.!...:.W:..:.r.:.:lg~ht

Professional
Services

3 bdr. houoa, hallway &amp;
bath, LR. kltohan, utll. room.
all nioe. new p1int, atove.
refrirretor . Call 814·440·
104 .

Brunicardi Muoio Co .. Galli·
polls. Call 446-0687. Piano
tuning, repair with okll( •
Jntegrlty. lano Daniels, 814·
742-2961 .

4 bdr. new home In country,
1 'h acre of land. Bidwell
School diltrict, UIIO mo.
pluo alect .. haata whh wood .
Call814· 440·7354 or 014·
388-9820.

low coat legal eervices.
Emphasis on family law,
divorce. disaolution, bank·
ruptcy .
Call 694-8592.
Patrick McGee.

For rent. laroa 3 bedroom
houoe In Syrecuoa. *226 . •
month, f,luo utilltiea. Dop·
oait requ red. ph. 8g2·0284
or 992-5732.

"

0

TWO MONTH SPECIAL,
Jan. and Fob. 1984 off
season prices on furniture
re- upholstering. Mowreya
Upholotary, 304-675-4154.

••

2 bedroom home for rent in
Pomeroy. Woodburner, car·
call
poling, and bath.
992-8943.
Three bedroom, two batho.
locatad Handeroon, W. Va ..
phone 304-8711-2007.

Real Estate
31
Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch home,largelR ,
full baaement, with garage,
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town.
Call 446 -0276 .
Ranch on 6 acres. beautiful
setting with tall pine•
around the house. Sp1cioua
livingroom which overlooks
the pond. 4 bedrooms util·
ity room and kitchen has a
built-in range. Assume PlY·
manti with a small down
payment . $68,900. Call
446 -3176 .

Homes for Sale

Four bedroom-all electric
brick homo, two batho. largo
living room whh firaplaca,
dining room, two car garage,
on one acre lot, one mile
north of Challar on Routa 7.
Twenty minute• from Bel·
pre. *65.000 .. will conolder
mobile homo or traval treilar
trede. call 304-773-11319.
Four bedroomo. three batho,
large beautiful kitchen. lam·
ily room with wood bumer.
Many extraa, *98.000.00,
2904 Sprue• Ave.. Maa·
dowbrook Addn. 304·0711·
1991 .

3 BR houae. single garage in
subdivision , reaaonably
priced. 1614) 446-1343.

Six room frema houoa. 2124
Uncoin Avenua, 304-076·
4680 after 5 p.m.

Middleport, home. A whale
of a deal with furniture too.
Bargain priced. Call 614 992 -6941 .

Excellent condition, trl·
level, 81ti percent a•eumeble
lo~n.
*11,000.00 down.
Call after 6 p .m .. 304 -075·
1529.

Attention : owner buying
houoo &amp; must oall 1975
Holly Park 3 bdr, total
electric. central air. fully
underpinned, with 1Ox60
porch, with awning &amp; 2 car
carport. Exc. cond. situated
on a beautiful rented double
lot overlooking the Ohio
River Must see to fully
appreciate. Call 614-367·
7648 .

Three bedroom home. 2'h
yra. old, auume 81/a percent
loan . Priced in tho 60' • ·
304·676· 6713 morningo.
3 bedroom houoa. Clifton.
&amp;1500.00 down. Auume
loan. 304· 773·6860.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sala

3 bdr. home 2"12 yrs. old,
assumable 8"12% loan, priced
S50'o. Call 676-6713 call
mornings.
By owner with 2 acrea more
or leas. Been remodeled,
smell orchard. beautiful location Good neighborhood.
Priced $19,000 or will ooll
on land contract $8,000
down, t160 month. Call
614-38B-9063.
4 Br,3 Baths. Family room.
Dining room. Utility room,
Central air, City water&amp; gas.
or trade for smaller house in
town. Call 614-446-0761
after 6pm.
located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot . Price reduced
823,600. or will rent for
&amp;240 mo. 304· 866-3934.
HOUSE FOR SALE - 6
rooms, basement. double
garage. 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill, Pomeroy.
Excellent condition .
832 , 900 . 1-614-678 2513 .
House with five rooms. full
basement. I car garage.
patio, 2 fireplaces, extra lot,
near Pomeroy Elementary
and town. Bedroom• and
living room carpeted. Priced
in low &amp;40' 1. Call collect.
614-267-6668 or614 -268·
7979 .
Home for uta in letart. 2 or
3 bedroom home, large
porch Good &amp;tarter home or
rental
812,600. Terms
negotiable. Ph. No. 9926284 or 992-5732.
House for ule by owner. In
Pomeroy, Must see to appre·
ciate.6
rooms and bath,
large attic and basement.
large entrance and pantry,
open atairway, finiahed
floors, old fashioned woodwork, firoplacu, largo
new roof end partially
i,n ..•iated . Will ucrafice.
an offer. Call 992·
or 992· 7887.
SOMERVILLE REAL
ATE . 304-675-3030.
dance 675-4232 ;
Cuto 675-3431 ;
McNeely 675 -2563.

EST·
Real·
Joan
Jack

BY OWNER, \hree bedroom.
tri-level house on 3A acre lot.
Fully air conditioned. family
room with fireplace. One
and one-half batha. Car·
peted throughout. Calil304)
676-2497 after · 6:00
o'clo,:k.

Hou 1 a 1 for Rent

For Rent or 81la: New 3 BR
houoe. dep. &amp; ref. C1ll
445·17119. *3711 month or
*39,800 ..

PIANO TUNING lowwer
pricea-reguler tuning• ·
dlocounta to Senior Citlzeno.
Churchao &amp; Schoolo. Ward'•
Keyboard. 304-676 -3B24.

31

41

January

1983 Clayton mobile homo,
12x66, 2 bdr., all electric.
partially fuml•hed , oat up on
rented lot at Quail Creek
M .H. Park. *11,000. Call
614-246 -5500.
For aala or rent mobile
home. 3 roomo and bath.
Completely furnlohad ox·
capt couch, clean. no child·
ron or palo. Call 440-2223.
Bayview expando Iota of
extra1, need to sale imme·
diately. Cali anytime 4469416.
In Syracuoa-14x70 mobile
homo. All electric wood·
burner. central air. diahwalher, garbage dlopoul,
double oven. front deck
covered, back deck, waeher
and dryer. large lot with
garden, large atorege build·
ing, anchored and under·
pinned. For detallo call614·
992·7B40.
ATTENTION·II there ouch 1
thing •• a clauicl In mobile
homea7 When you view thia
Holly Park we think you will
agree there Ia. A 12x65
Holly Park whh 2 badrooma.
5x10 tip·out In living room.
Completely 181 up in nice
park. lncludeo 40 foot patio
fumlohinga, even e wuhar
and dryer, completely
okirted and raady to occupy.
There ian 't e cleaner or wall
kept home In tho araa. Jull
like brand new. Youmulllto appreciate. No lot rent tHI
March. no peyment till
March . All of thia for
*12.900. Financing availa·
ble. low down payment and
low monthly paymento. For
information call 014-992·
7034 or 6t4-992-8284.
19B1 Shultz Mobile Home
14 x 70.3 bedroom. 1 V.
batho, like new, front porch
attached 12 x 115.
call
614-247-2664
1978 Wlndoor opecial edl·
tion, 14x70, raal nice, three
bedroom•. one and half
batha. 304-937-2120.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sala

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED · CARS.
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CAll
014 -440·71172.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614 -440·
7274.

34

Business
Buildings

Moving; Mull oall 19BO
14xll2 Uberty mobile homo.
fum .. 2 BR. *7200. 814·
2411-92118 after 6 p.m.

42

12x60 2 bdr. modarn fur·
nlohed treller. convenient
location, Upper Rivar Rd.
dapoolt req . Call 014·440·
855B .

Bar bueineea for sale and
carry out licenM. Pomeroy
area. •Booo . 014 -992 6848.

Houoa tr'lller. edu!,to only, no
poll. Call 440-3748 or
614·250-1903.
2 and 4 bedr. trailer for rent.
Call 440 -0508 or 440·
1809.

2 llory block bldg ., with 3
unit apt. upotaira and 2000
oq. ft. of floor apace down·
llalra. Aloo 2 otory block 2 bdr. partially furnlohed
and frame apt. in rear of trailer In Cheohlre with free
bldg. and large lot adlolning gao. Call 446·4369.
whh troller hook-up and 1- - - - - - - -- parking facilitl01. located in
Melgo Co .. Oh. 111 minultl
•
from Ravanawood bridge.
ONLY SERIOUS INQUIR·
IESI For an appointment 64 Misc. Merchandise
after 4 p.m .. call 0 14-423·
B257

PIUA
FRANCHISE
FOR SALE
In Gallipolis

Commercial propertlea, axe.
location. has 1 variety of
uoaa. Call 304-773 -6944.

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

36 aero• at Rodney on W.T.
Wataon Rd. Owner financ·
ing available. Cali446-8221
after 8 weekdaye.
Building lot, utilitieo avalla·
bla.
located on alate
highway in Melgo local
Schoof Diotrict. *4200 .
Termo negotiable. ph. 99282B4 or 992·5732.

NEED

41

CASH!
INVENTORY

Houses for Rent

Fantaotic home at the edge
of Gollipollo . large In ·
ground awimming pool,
huge gorgeoua family room
with fireplace, aloo a fire·
place in the living room . 3
bedrooma, game room, 2"h
batha. plua a beautiful view
of the river. 2 aero a of yard
for outdoor living. •400
month. Call 446· 3175.

64

Misc. Merchandise

Year-End
Clearance Sale
·AT

Pomeroy !)?on·'
Landmark ~
. 992·2181
ON ALL

Hotpolnt Appliances
General Electric TV's
.Hoover Sweepers

REDUCTION SALE!
All

44

Apartment
for Rent

Apt. 3 roomo and beth. All
utilitiea paid, U50 mo. c,u
440 -8283.

12x80 in Byreouaa air,
waaher &amp; dryer, UOO, gluo
utilitiOI and dapoalt.
lao
12x50 in Syreouae, *180
pluo utilitiu &amp; dapoait.
Aeferencu &amp; Dapooit Re·
quired. Call614-1192-7080.

Small turn. houoa 1 or 2
adulta only. no peto. Call
448-0338.
N-ly redecorated 1port·
menta kitchen furnilhad. 2
bdr .. utUitleo partially paid.
304-e75-51 04 or 304-8711·
53B8.
JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS !Equal
Houoing Opportunity! h01
one and two bedrooma, rent
lltarting at *157 for one
bedroom and *193 par
month for two bedroom.
with *200 dapoolt located
naar Foodland and Spring
Vallay Plaza. pool and TV
ont. Call 448-2745 Of leave
me11age.
Modern 1 bedroom apt ..
carpet, complete kltchan.
well lnoulatad, all alae.,
air / heat. Dapooit required.
Ph. 440-4383 dayo or 440·
0139 even .
· · ' · • ·• · '

1 11. floor oduho preferred.
fumlohad apt .. utilhieo fur·
niohed. ref . required . Call at
631 4th Ava., Galllpollo. Oh.
RioGrande2bdr. apt .. *215
mo. plul electric. no peta.
Call 440·8038 .
Deluxe 1 bdr., opt .. all new
kitchen, n - carpet, redeco·
rated throughout. *275 mo.
including heat.. Call 446·
4607 dayo. 446-2602 evea.

47 Wanted

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR. furnlohjld. W &amp; D , air,
1dulto only, no lnoide poll.
priv111 lot At . 141 . Call
81.4 ·448· 3818.

For rent , furniahed 3 room
Apt . 014-949 -2253

Troller for rant. Call 440·
4225 after 4PM.

Apartment for rent . 2 bed·
rooms . Free heat . 814 · 992·
2388.
TENDER LOVING CARE
Th1s spill-level
·
cellenl cond1l1on .
bedrooms, master bed1roon1l
very large, Ill
carpeted, patio and c•rl"'"·l
located on a large
on Rt. 160 Pr1ced vuy
sonable

• ~nuMy,ov LIVING remodeled home w1th 4
rooms, bath wilh
carpeted , 3 beautiful
Kerr-Hamburg Rd

HOLIDAY HILLS- Two
w1th 26' Trotwood
AC. Sleeps 6. Also, contcrell!l
pad w1th shelter 1
place and small
Owner wants to sell
lhe low pnce of $9,700.
Eumce N1ehm
MOBILE HOllE
Holly Park One
cellenl cond1t1on,
bedrooms, extra s, sto,ra&amp;lll
bu1dmg Located at
Creek

INVESTORS SPECIAL
Two bedroom home
alummum s1dmg level
Out ol town owner says
sell1mmed1ately. $6,500
150 ACRE FARM
barn, tobacco
and large
11on.

For rent two bedroom fur·
niohad apartment. Call 614·
992 -5434. 814 -992 -5914,
304-8B2 -2560 .

6 room unfurnished Apt
614-992 -6434 or 614 -992·
,5 914 or 304·882·2566
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houae1. Pt Pleasant
and Gallipcllo . 614 - 446·
B221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Apartments now evailebletO
elderly &amp; dioabied w~h on
lncome of less then
*12.300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted Income·
Phone 304 -675 -6679

46

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room o
and light houoa keeping
room1 . Park Cantril Hotel.
Call 614-445 -0756 .

48

Space for Rent

Commercial space for rent
Downtown location. Uae for
office and shop or store Call
446-9283
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parle, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
614-992 -7479 .

47 Wanted

to Rent

Chria11an. non -drinking.
hon-amoklng, female col·
lege studentdeaireasiHplng
room with klchen privilege&amp;.
Write Bo•1128, Rio Grande
Collage. Rio Grande, Oh
-411874 or call 614 -246·
9347 .

to Rent

Phyolcian moving to area
wiahe1 to rent 3 BR hou se or
apt . in Pt . Pleuont . Call
304 . 823 _3362 .

1- - - - - - - - 49

For Lea se

For Iee se, Chevron St at1on.
Mason area. Good location
304 · 87~· 2982 after 6pm.

Merch~ndise
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUR E
62 Olive St • Gallipoli s New
8e uaed wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
1ulte with 8 Inch flat arms
$389, bunk bodo complete
with bunkioo $199. 2 piece
antron llvlngroom suites
$ 199, antron recliners 899,
other recliners $80, maple
dinette sets 8179, bo x
sprlng a &amp; mattress twin or
full $1 00 set regular-firm
* 120, maple dinette chaLrs
•36, waah stand s 834 ,
maple rockers t 69, 7 piece
chrom e dinette set 8149. 6
piece dinette set t99 , used
bedroom su1tes. refrigera ·
tora. ranges. chest. dressers ,
wringer wa shers, TV 's, dryera. &amp; ohooo Coli 614 -446 3159 .

Misc. Merchandise

CARPET 'FOR LESS
DIRECT MILL BUYING AND LOW OVER·
HEAD COMBINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES.
WE ALSO- HAVE EXPERT 'INSTALI:A·
TION AND ONE OF THE LARGEST SE·
LECTION!I OF CARPET IN THE AREA.
CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATES. IT
COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF
DOLLARS.

ODDS&amp;ENDS
CARPET SHOP

I

Business Route 7, Middleport, Ohio

; ,992'-6173
Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Gibson freezer chest type.
16 cu ft. like new . $226
Call814-367 -0138
For aale Early Ameri c an ptn e
sofa, with matching love
seat. eac co nd Call 614446 -3939
Older model Hotpoint Re·
fngerator . like new . Electri c
range, both work ex eptlon olly w ell &amp;7 5 for both. Call
614 -256· 1919
Early Amert ca n wmg style
sofa . dark red wtth black.(not to obviou s). Excellent
cond1tion
Wm Matlack
res , Ch ester Rd . c all 986·
3370
Brown two p1ece livmgroom
1u1te 603 Robm son St .
304-675 -7945

I K)

·::-~-

Sea r s co ld
Call
spot , 16 cub1 c f ee t
99 2-5 174

55

...

RABIN

rJ

I
] I I

H IS LOOK5LEFT

NOTH INl5 TO 15E

rn r I I I XX]

(AnaWO&lt;I Monday)

54

Real Esta t e G e n e ral

Jumbles TARDY W INCE CHORUS OAR ING
Answer How he won that laz iness contest HA NDS DOWN

Misc . Merchandise

limest one. Sand , Gra vel
Delivered in Maso n, Metg&amp;.
Gallia or p1 ck up at Richard s
&amp; Son Call 446 -778 5

54

Mise Merchandise

Fu ewoo d cut up sl abs S15
pickup loa d Ca ll 614 · 24 55 804
Case 3 10 fro nt end loa der
dozer, $4.500 Call 6 14266-1427
RAY ' S US ED FURN
Breakfast se t &amp;25 . oak
dresser S45, refrige rat or
$85. rebuilt Maytag washer
8100, alec range S75. hall
bod lcomplote } S45, plat·
form rocker S2 0. 2 pc.
bedroom suite 8 50. laundry
st ove S60 We h ave a large
ass ortment of used furniture
and ant1ques If you need
furn1ture. and 1nflat1on has
put a squeeze on your
budge t, Ca ll Ray's. 614 367 -0637
7 pc w oo d f am1l y room set ,
$600. ox. cond 446 -63 26

83 Ch evette Scoot er , low
m1l eage
Alpm e st ereo,
AM .FM , Cassette. Kenwood
992 ·
speak ers. S5 200
2042
Craftsman 6 1n J o1ner With
mot or and st an d. $300 .
Rockwell 48 1n wood lathe
w tth Buck Brot her toa ls,
$200 , Belknap Ban d sa w
with m6tor, $ 1 00 . ca ll
992 -7178

EAFORD(B
VIRGIL B. 51! . REAlTOR
216 E . 2nd 51
Phon e

m opo

SOUTHWESTERN SCHOOL
VERY NICE DOUBLE WIDE
HOME IMMACULATE CONOI·
liON 3 BEDROOMS. 2 FULL
BATHS, FORMAL DINING AREA.
CENT AIR COND. COPP£R
PLUMBING OVER AN ACRE
BEAUTIFUL LOT $28.000

LINCOLN HEI GHTS - Re
modeled 3 bed room home
Gas furnace. \llnyi s1dmg,
base ment and latge lol '"
the low 20 's
ELEGANT - 2800 sq h
modern 7 room tanch . 21ull
ba ths. lurnace he atolat or
cook anQ ba ke un1IS relrlger alor and cathed ral cetl
mg, swtm pool and lennts
court
IN TOWN - Plenly ol room
1n l hrs one lor a large lamrly
4 bedrooms. balh lu rn ace.
basemenl. lg k1lchen and
slorm IIX tur es
EOGE OF TOWN - Prrm1t1ve
hv1ng Chrmney lot you r
wood burner. 6 room s on one
lloor c1s1ern ca rport and
one acre Only $1 2 000
$12 .500 - Small and well
worth I he askmg prrce Oak
floor s. gas lurnace bath and
garden space on large level
lol

New woo d burmng st ove
w 1th f~r e bn c k 5325 each
304 -675 - 1578 or 67 5 ·
7896

Hom e lnsul at1 on sa ves
Owens· Corn1n g Ft ber gla s.
blown -In attic or wh ole
house Free est1m at es 30 4·
675 -3962

HELEN, G. BRUCE
SUE MURPHY AND
MILTON ROUSH
All REALTORS

Housing
Headquarters

Real Estate General

·I

OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE Of THIS HOllE! - N1ce 3
bedroom, lamily room with wnntl~...,-liiGNing room Modern
Uchen. Slidrng !l'rll.'·c
I' Assumable loan to
qualified buyl!l 8\? ;)r'\.1:_ . '"'"'mr; payment $204 00 Ca ll lor
more details. City schools. Pnced reduced to $32,500

p£MO

&lt;MNm WANTS TO MOVE TO ClTY. EAGER TO SELL! 2 BEOOOOM BRICK

811440 - 2 S10RY FRAIIE home b' ooly $10,500. Rent ~or
live in It Either way the value is there. Call now b' appoiribnent.

.NEW LISTING - 4 bedrm home srtua led along old Rt. 7. Lower .
R1ver Rd Gallipol iS C1ly School Otst. crty water. good locatiOn lor.
• children and adults lueplace Pnce $37.500 00 Call lor.
• appomtment
• MOO ERN 3 BEORM. HOME ~tuated along Kathy Dr . Pleasant.
• Valley S 0 near Holzer Hospital Ca rpeted. mod1l1ed lor wood.
~ bu rner Attac hed garage Pnce $50.000 00
•
NEW LISTING- 3 bedrm ranch home. ~tualed near North Gallia •
• School mce kll laces Rt. 160 Pnce $3 7.5DO 00

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2 HtuHM

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THIS IS ONE OF 'THE BEST BUYS IVE SEEN IN 25 YEARS I
I e
IN THE REAL ESTATE BROCKERAGE BUSINESS.
The owners must sell and will help finance aqualified buyer. This outstanding home has I
been completely redone from head to toe including abrand ne~ roof, co~pletely_ new 3 I
zone hot water heating system, 2 sparkling new baths, attractive new k1t~hen w1th ex· I
posed brick wall and attractive oak cabinets, new wiring and breaker panel, new ~~t water I
tank, new carpet and floor covering, new insulation. freshly_decorated wall ce1hng and I
wooCIWork.
I
This home includes 3 or 41arge bedrooms, formal dining room, family room, 2'12 baths,
large kitchen, large foyer, basement and 2 porches. Located on alarge deep_lot ~verlook­ I
ing the river with plenty room in the back yard for agarage, garden and sw1mmmg ~ol. I
Children can walk to all school activities and it's only ablock from downtown shoppmg. I
Owner has moved out of&gt;the area an desires to sell without further delay. He will provide I
you with an E.R.A. buyers protection plan which will eliminate the :OVOITY that one of t~e I
- major systems will blow up. This may~~!! the last chance for some t1me to own ahome 10
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the neigl!borhood. .
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COTIAGE srtualeo along Vtnton Ave Nal gas heat
I '' balhs. SIX rooms. lam1ly room 2 car garage Pnce
$32.000 DO
COLONIAL DUTCH . 2 or 3 bed rm . 2 lull balhs, conventently
located across hom new court house Lg hvrng rm w/ w b
l1replace lg krtchen and lormal d1nm g rm Call lor
ap~ntment $82 000 00

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2 ACRES . more or

less w1th 3 Bedrms lamrly rm. attached •
Pnvacy wrlh rn ground pool N~a; City hmrts •

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garage

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$59 00000

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NEW LISTING - 2 bedrm home 1n Eureka nea r Gallipoi5 •
dam Be ready 101 constru ct1on t:oom Lrve m or rent •
$22.000 00

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QUALITY BRICK HOME s11uated on approx 2 ac res. wrthrn city •
ol Gallipolis Solid cherry woodw o1k and pa nel. 3 WB
fireplaces lull basement (hmshed). consl ructed dunng late •
40's Amemtres too numerous to I~L Call Ken Morgan
•
4 BEORMS . 8 RM HOME 9tuated along Gartreld Ave A •
conven1ent place to ll\le 0\lerlooks ' ~ heautiful Oh10 Rwer •
Pnce $30.DOO 00

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!0 UNIT MOTEL wtth house and approx 8 ac res Ftsnrng pond •
socked w1th fish Relax and en1oy hie wh1le makmg a IMng'' •
! 51 ACRE FARM neat Vmton Has 3 bed tm house. I&amp; •
eqwpmenl shed. bottom land, pasture and some wooded area •
Pnce red uced to $86.000 DO

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3 BEDRM HOME. lam1~ rm . adapled 101 w b healer •
In ground pool. I&amp; carport, lenced "' ya1d. Mad~&gt;OII Ave Pnce
$46,900 00
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•• INVESTMENT PROPERTYII 2 apartment home w1th 2 bed rms ••.
each Located wrt hm 2 blocks hom schools Plenty park1ng
good locatiOn $65.DOO 00
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LOWER RT 7. NICE LOT WITH

PRC~ERTY

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COMMERCIAL
- Approx 4,000 sq It located rn •
downtown Gallipol~ Ca n be leased or purchased Across hom . .
city parkin g lot
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COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - AtiiVe testa uram ou,..
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located on corner lol1n Kanauga Purchase and get tmmedtate . :
'Cish Flow" owner may hnance some to qualified purchaser •
Call tor more 1nlormat1on

!PRICE REDUCED - 2 bedrm mobile home 9tuted alon1.;
•Bidwell-Rodney Rd 85'x208' lotlenced rn. several lru1t frees. Pncee
.$14,00000
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BUILDING SITE - ~· 2 acres in Meigs Co.,
owrloOking the Ohio River wilh publiC wale! and recently buift 2
car garage. Owner anxious sell. Call lor delails.
,

BMR 389 - OiliER SAYS SEll TODAY! Your lamiiy wil enjoy
the roominess of this house. Indues 4.8Rs, 2 baths, LR, DR. bulli-in
kitchen. Situated on large corner lot. Oose town in c!Y scliool
lfiStliCf (Green Elem.). Call see this one!
~- ~

1nlormanon
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NEW LISTING - comfortable 3 bed room home located ak&gt;ng
Vmton Ct. Gallipolis Compact easy to heal central a11. lencro me
yard and convement to serv1ces Pnce $39.500 00
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RANCH, NIC£ OPEN FlOOR PLAN, BlACKTOP DRIVE. $301
44 ACRES- AOOISON TWP., 3 BEDROOM RANCH HOME, FULL
BASEMENT, GOOO BARN, ON BLACKTOP RO. PUBLIC WATER.
SEVERAL GOOO BUILDINGS.

431 -

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436 - EXCEUENT STARTER HOllE with 2 8Rs. LR, OR,
·nice kitchen, utilily and new batllloom. Carpetd throughout
Screened patio, carpet Large lot. Call b' aiJIIOitllmeril •

baths. New Orleans lype courtyard. 3 w b l1repiaces Call lor more

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• BMR426- OWNER SAYS SEll- tt has an assumable loan with
only 9\1% interest We are talking abod a very clean, 3 BR home
sjtlllll1d on nice flat lot in a lamily oriented neighborhood. RE·
DUCED!.,.. $3.000
'
..... down., and assume loan!

BMR

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GRACIOUS UVING AT A MODERATE PRICf - 1600 SQ. FT BEAUTIFUL
LIVING ARU, PLUS AFUU BASEMENT AND 2 CAR GARAGE. 3 BR 2 FUU
BATHS, FANTASTIC FAMILY RM. OPENS ONTO DOUBLE DECK. EQUIPPED
FAMILY S~E KITCHEN. ~

dowritaN'ii

. Ga ll1poi~ 3 bedrms . library lam1ly room. formal drmng rm , 2\?

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Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitchen, custom drapes,
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 1 2 acres with stable. rail
fences, swimming pool, garageworkshop. Immediate possession.

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LIKE A VISIT TO GRANDMA'S HOUSE - HOMEY FRONT PORCH,
COZY SlOE PORCH, LG FENCED B~CK YARO. 3 BEDROOMS.FORMAL
DINING. EAT-IN KITCHEN, PANTRY. SUPER LOCATION NEAR CITY
SCHOOLS. $45,000

NEW USTING- FIRST TIME ON MARKET! Bi·level
localed just minutes from town on Debby Dr. Includes LR. eal-m
kitchen with dishwasher &amp; disposal, dininJ room joins kitchen, 3
BRs,l bath plus 2 half balhs. family room 1n basement I car garage. Heal pump. $99 mo. budget City school dist.
tor an appoint~

For Sale By Owner
Phone 446-8221

INVESTMENT - 2 1evellols
wtt h 3 renled ltaliers and
small home near stores m
MKldlejX)It Just $20 000 lor all
lour

N£AR

NEW LISTING- Home, Busmess and extra bu1ld1ng lot or garden
space; all lor under $20,000 00. Busmess was used as a gasstation
and focer;. Cozy 3 bedroom home. Llvmg room. modern eaHn
kitthen Woodburnl!l Th~ 5 a good buy.

BIIR 442 - OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 1974 Shultz mobile home
(12x55} Tip Out includes 3 BRs. new carpet awmng &amp; pat10,
situaled on I acre m~. Washer &amp;dryer 1ncluded. Cily schools. Was
$20,000, now $17,900. Call lor details!

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BARGAIN - N1te tellle ·
ment or slarlet home I 8
actes 2 bedrooms nal gas
fur nace 1 P walet honl
porch and vmyl ~ramg lor

LG LIVING RM . EAT IN KITCHEN.
NEW GAS FURANC£. CITY

BETWEEN
HUNTINGTON &amp;
POINT PLEASANT
ONST. RT.2

Beth Null 245·9507

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1-(6.14) ·992 · 3325

$30,000 STIU BUYS A NICE
PLACE 10 UVEI-2 BR RANCH.

HALF-WAY

576-2711

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Now arrange lhe drc:ted leners to
lorm tM surprl11 anawer, as suo·
118!10&lt;1 by lhe ilboYe canoon

Print answer here ·

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R eal Estat e G e n e r a l

17E51Fi!:ED -

tCROUTY

Yestttlday 1

Building S u p pli es

Bu i ld ing S uppl ies

No w open fo r bu11 neas.
Moun tam Stat e Block, At
33. New Haven Complete
masonry supplies, 4 " . 8 ".
12 " block D elivery serv1ce
Ph one day 304 -882-22 2 2 .
evenmg 882 -323 7

LU MB ER - Rough cut . oak .
poplar. 2x 4 , 2x6 . 2x8. 1x4,
1 x6 . 1 x8, lengt h availabl e. B
foot thr ough 14 f oot Hogg
&amp; Zuapan . 30 4 · 77 3-555 4
dayt1me

Bu1ldmg m aten als
blo ck , brick . sewer pi pes,
wind ows . l int el s. etc
Claude Winters. R1 o Grande ,
0 Call614 -24 5 ·5 121

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55

Bui lding S u p pli es

R e fr~g e rator .

[j

IFENTAS

55

Mi sc . M er c h a n d1se

Real Estate General

HOMES

Call 446-0552 Anytime

m

Dining room table, 6 chaira.
cullom podo. Call 614 -446·
8237

I JONEY I

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EXCEUENT BUY!.- Owner has reduced th1s stately ·.
QUICk sale 4 bedrooms. 2\? bath~ formal livm~ d1mng room Mo·
dem kitchen, large rec room, 2 car garage, deck off d1mn g and
k~chen area Use of clubhouse. basketall court and sw1mmmg
pool Kyger Creek school d1stnct Pnced m 60's

Broker-Auctioneer

BMR

Hupp' a Appliance AI Glaasware , Corner Rt 141 &amp; Rt
7 . 1 rofrlg . white like new,
1 · 30 " gu rang e. 1-40 "
rang e,
a vocado ale c
w u han &amp; dryera all nice I
guaranteed Call 446 -8033 .

byHen~Arnoldond llobLOO

Unscramble theN lour JumbiH ,
one latter to each ~quare . to form
lour ordinary words

.BEAUTIFULLY RESTORED Colon1al home srtualed '"

BUI,AVILLE RD. - 1'.4 ACRE NICE tEVEL LOT WITH 14x70 MOBILE
HOME IN MINT CONDITION 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. UTILITY BLDG
$24,500
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GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahera. dryera, refrigera ~
toro. rangu . Skaggo Ap·
pllancea, Vpper River Rd.
booldo Stone Crall Motel.
614-446-7398.

ft\1\H~lffi,.. \'jl THATICRA118LEOWORDOAME

~ ~ ~~ e

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Furnlohad apt ., 1 bdr ..
*226. utilitleo paid. Adulta.
243 Jackoon Pike. Golllpo·
111. Call 446-4416 a4tar 7
PM

ALL-STATE
MODULAR

Real Estate General

~·

Household Goods

LAYN E' S FURNITURE
16 ft tand em equipment
Sofa. chair. rocker, otto trailer $ 1 ,000 Gr avely
man, 3 tsble s, (extra heavy 52 CB.TV. Radio
backho e 81 .200 Call 614 ·
by Frontier), 8686 Sofa.
256 -1427
Equtpment
chair and loveseat. t276
Sofas and chairs priced from
3M copy machme. $300
t2B6 . to $896. Toblao, 145
Cell 446 -3332
Royce
607
40
channel
CB
and up to 8125 Hide·• ·
beda .* 440 and up to end antenna, like new. $46 For sale, freezer beef Call
8626 .• Roclinoro. $175. to both. Coli 446 -9478 after 614 -256 -6775 .
$375 .. Lampo from 828 to 6PM . anyttme weekends .
*76.6 pc dinettes from
6 mo old water bed w1th 3
•99 ., to 435. 7 pc $189 For sale. used 26 in Quas ar complete sets o f shee t s,
TV
'a,
8100
and
up
and up Wood table w ith six
S350. Coli 614 -446 -7 35 4
chai ro 8425 to &amp;745 Du k Hamson ' o TV, 992 -6259
or 614 -388 -982 0
811 0 up to 8225. Hutchu.
1660 •nd up. maple or pine
Aug er type wood spli tter
finish . Bunk bed complete 54 Misc . Merchandise Fits 4-6 ·8· lug wheel. ca r or
with mattreues. $260 and
pickup truck Call614 · 256·
up to *395 . Baby bod s,
6240.
*11 0 . Mattreues or box Knauff Firewood Pickup or
apringa. full or twin , 868 .• Delivered 12 " -22 " stocked Mob1le home supphes non firm . &amp;68. and 878 Queen in yard HEAP vender. tOXIC antifreeze -as 50 per
loll, 8196 4 dr chests. prompt delivery 614 -266 · gallon Water heatmg ale·
$42 6 dr. chella. S54. Bed 6245
mentl, water heater, step s,
framu . 820 and $26 . 10
windo ws. doors. faucet s.
gun · Gun cabinets. 8350
breaker s. etc
HotPo1nt
Built on your lot a new home heavy-duty electrtc dryers,
G11 or electric range s 8375
you
can
afford,
o
ver
1,
1
00
Baby mattresses, S26 &amp;
th1 s m o nth o nly &amp;279 .
t36. bed frames 820. 826. sq.ft .. 6 room a &amp; beth. King sbury Homes Part s and
carpet ed, ready to
&amp; 830. king frame &amp;50
Accessory St ore 900 Ea st
Good selection of bedroom 1nto $26,500 Also garages Main St . old 8ookm ob1l e
s uit es, cedar c he sts . &amp; basements. Call Patriot building m Pomeroy or call
Homes Buulders 446 -8038 992 -5587
rock ers , metal cabi nets .
W1ll consider mobile home
swivel rockers
Used Furniture ·· bookcase. 11 trad e in
V1lla ge Shop . •oA am St Au ·
rangea , chairs , dryers, re·
tland. Oh Army field j acket s
frlgeratonand TV ' s 3 mile s 2. f . 78 14 '" radial snow startmg at $2 9 95 New and
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9om tires on Chev wheela both used cam o pants and sh1rt1
to 6pm , Mon. thru Fn , 9am for &amp;50 Call 304 -458 · Guns and ammo, lined mit 1997
to 6pm, Sat .
ten s &amp;12 Rubber sea
614-446-0322
boots· $ 10 Bow s and ar Sculpter doll s. Cabbag e row s Rubbertzed rain suits
TV &amp; Applionceo, 627 Third Pat ch re · cre at1on s Call Toys, combat bo ot s. new
Ave .. Gallipollo. 614 -446 - 446 -1262
and used Rutland, Oh
1699 Spin waohers, gao &amp;
electric dryers. auto
waehera , gas &amp; electric
Real Es1ate General
ranges . refrigerator&amp;, TV
seta

BIIR 443 -

64

61

new 1H4·AII Eledrlc

Homes. Many
anergy ef.
6" outside
and R-19 In·
n
factor.
10
percent Down Low Bank
Financing
Payments
less than rent In many
UHS. No reaso1111ble
offer refustdf
Example: 2 bldroom 14'
SiftS, 14' wide, 3
IIMdroom. bath &amp; half
Plus many

The Sunda y Times-Sentinei- Page-0.5

Ohio--Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Rlvarolde Apll . Middleport
Special ratu for Senior
Citizano. *130 . Equal Houolng Opportunitieo . 614 ·
992 -7721 .

2 bdr. houoa troller for rant .
Call 440· 1062.

Apartment
for Rent

44

29, 1984

t bedroom Apt . *196 mo.
Including utllitiu. Equal
Houolng Opportunity. Con·
tact Village Manor Apts
014 -992· 7787.

Two bedroom ell alectrlc
moblla home, Aohton Upton
Road, *1211. par month,
UO. dapooit . 304 -075 ·
408B .

2 bdr. unfumiohod 12x00
moblla homo, on Rt. 35 .
Depoatt • references re·
quirad. Call 440-4309 .

January

Avallabla for Immediate
oocupency· Four-3 bedroom
:Op,ertmantl, *200.00 to
12211.00 per month. Aloo
hl!ve othar unito that are
H .U.D . approvad. Colonial
VNiega, R1vonowood , W.
V.I. 26184. Call 304- 273·
3344.

WITH OPTION TO I!UY. 14'
wide all alectrio moblla
home, oatting on lot ready to
move into. UOO.OO down
*1711 .00 MONTH . 304·
570-27t 1.

Furniohed afflclancy. •145.
Utiliti01 paid. Shara bath.
007 2nd, Gailipollo. Call
440 -4418 attar 7 PM .

Complete turnkey oper·
ation already. established. $28.000 total in·
vestment. If you're wil·
ling to work for yourself
respond to Box 3000,
c/o Gallipolis Daily
Trib~ne •. 825 3rd Ave ••

Renlal s

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. moblla homo, ref. &amp;
dep. required . Call 814·
2110·1922 .

44

Mobile Homes
for Rant

Nicely furnlohed modern
moblla home. in city. 1 or 2
edulto only. Call 446 -0338.

1977 12x60 mobile homo. 2
bdr .• furnlahed, good cond ..
t6,300. Call 014-250·
B818.
197B Shultz 14x70 central
air. all new furniture, ex.
cond. on rented lot. Call
avanlnga 448·20711.

Bend area very nice thrH
bedroom home. two and half
bath,l. family room, two car
garage, haat pump. 304·
875-5640 or 304-B82 ·
2406.

42

29, 1984

?

Fa! M N HUNTERS al SI'OR1SMEN! NEARlY 38 ,ICR£5, tml.Y
VrOOOED. $12.000.
~
GROOERVISBMC£ STATION/CARftY OUT- RIGHT COMBINATION fOR .
UNUr.ITED GAUNIIL AMI'LE PAAI&lt;Jt«l. LIYING .OUN!I£RS.....DN

PREMISES. HIQ!liWflC ARfA. OWNER W1U OPEN 8001&lt;S 10 S£TliOUS •
BUYEJl I
.
J&gt;
'
Nfi8HIOIHOOP TAVEl. - WELL ESTABLISHtU.'IJND, BUILD-'
IN_G AND EQUIPMENT. 'OON'T ~ISS THIS OPPORTUNTY. $~7, ,

~EW USTING - 3 bedroom home, 2 baths. kitchen, lormal living
room. dini~g tami~ room. Uvmg space 1,920 SQ. It large carport
and a coveied patio with carpet and sliding doo~ off patio.Storage
building. 1,590 acres more or less. In city school d1strict.lmmed1·

ate possession:
LOVEtY 4-BEDROOII HOME IN CllY -

RIC£

Excellent locatioo.

1BEDIOOM HOME within wllk111g distance of town.

I·1£~11AV£ • • USTINGS ...., GIVE .us A CALL

w~h

upstan~

.REMODELED STORE BUILOING
apart ment
Locatede;
enear Cadmus' along Rt. 141 County water. FA furnace. \1 acre . .
.$20,00000

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.COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Approx 7.000 sq ft gtuated on··
e corner lot along 2nd Ave, Gallipolis Lg parkmg area arw n .
. bUIIdm&amp; Ca n be purchased or leased. Call lor more lnlormation.• ;'

.WISEMAN .REAL EST AT~ AGENCY - 446-3643

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,_, 1 ~

~
ll

R1·
.t St

lit'~

Inc

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c;,,\hp1. 1 1' ·

44b 1066

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·Page 0-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Gallipolis' early doctors died young from niany ills
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
. GAU.IP.OLIS - Probably the
lnost heroic people In 1he early
l)lstory of Gallipolis were the
doctors, who we1re callE!d
a· wide vartety of
disease s for
which tectmology
bad made little
-headway. Ainong
those ailments
were yellow
fever, scarlet fever, and cholera.
... -In looking over the Pine Street
:I:emetery records, we find three
:DOctors who died at relatively
young ages In 1824 and 1825 .. poctors Hamlin, Mathews, and
.~ttredge. One would suspect some
·type of Infectious disease as the
cause.
~ We do not have adequate records
for those two years so that we can
J!lppolnt which disease killed the
·ttlree. We do know that Gallipolis
· :lied severe cholera epidemics tn
:: Jll32, 1833 and In 1849, For Instance
; 'fjf- 1833 practically every family
liVIng In the 500 block of First
Avenue was· hit by cholera from
May 26 to June 18. It started with
M,rs. John Vanden on May 26; then
spread to Mrs. Boothe, Anselm
, D~rst, John Atkinson, David
BOothe, WUUam Curry, Mrs. Sl·
m,onln, and Mrs. Carl. Three of the
~ lfumber died - Simonin, Carl, and
:, ,&lt;\tldnson. A few GaiUpolltans had
·. alto died of cholera morbus the
:· autumn before.
• It Is Interesting to read the
· Galllpolls Journal for these years
· for the advice given by the paper on
~- how to prevent cholenl and how to
~; treat it. There were five main points
on)low to prevent cholera morbus:

1. Do not get drunk;

2. Limit your menu to beef,
mutton, eggs, milk, tea, cotfee,
chocolate, light bread, potatoes,
lice, a nd boiled onions;
3. Avoid rain and dress In
woolens;
4. Do not lrrttate the system with
medicines; and
5. Do not neglec~ a lax bowel.
When the symptoms of cholera
hit (diarrhea, vomiting, and
cramps) one was Instructed to
bathe his feet, go to bed, drtnk herb
tea, eat gruel, place a poultice of
mush and herbs over the bowels,
take 10 grains of calomel and one
grain of opium.
The last bit of advice given by the
Journal defies credibility as It said:
"Cholera morbus Is not catching."
The house we feature today was
built by one of the town's early
doctors. In 1840 Dr. Darius Maxon
built the lovely home at 212 First
Avenue. Maxon, who moved to
Gallipolis with his three brothers
sometime around l&amp;ll, was called
on to treat people durtng all of these
cholera epidemics; but Ironically
Dr. Maxon survives all these
diseases, only to fall to his death.

GAlLIPOLIS -

Jimmy Beav·

sclieol book. A junior at Gallla
Academy High
Sc.hool, Jimmy
has-bee!! selected
:111-have his loot·
ball biography In
.lhfl year's edition
ol :WOO's Who In
HI~ School Football.
- FEwER THAN TWO percent of
~ .PBtlon's high school grtdmen
are ~en considered for this honor,
and · fewer than one-half of one
percent are finally selected.

TIDS HONOR WAS based on

GALLIPOUS - Two Important
educational meetings on farming
are coming up In Gallla Coiuity this
week. One Is Monday evening on
hedging. This Is the third meeting of
our Risk Management . Farm
Marketing series and the meeting
will be held Monday evening, Jan.
30, 7: 30 p.m .. at the Production

Baker

made

his

trip

to

Credit Association Building, Upper
River Road, Gautpolls.
Dean Baldwin, Ohio State Unl·
verslty, Extension Marketing Specialist, will be the speaker.
Purpose of the meeting Is to help
farmers , lenders, and other agrt.
cuslness people to become more
lamlllar with the Futures Market
and how to make a hE!dge. Quoting
from Doane's booklet entitled
"Marketing For Farmers" a
hedger might be a livestock feE!der,
a crop farmer, a country elevator
manager or a grain or livestock
processor. In other words, hE!dgers
are people who either use or
produce commodities tradE!&lt;! on the
various Futures Marke t ex·

SAVE 1/2
ON WINTER CLOTHING
•MEN'S and BOYS-Corduroy Jeans, Sweaters,
·Shirts, Jackets.

- :, FIRST TEAM: AU-League
SEOAL. Second team: AU District,
HonOrable Mention AU State, GAHS
Bes(Recetver trophy; Playerotthe
Yea( and Golden Helmet award.

•WOMEN'S and JUNIORS'-Sieepwear, Coats,
Blouses, Sweaters, Dresses, Sportswear,
Corduroy Slacks.

HOMER BAKER, Lower River
Rd. ~ Galltpolis, was the first Gallla
Countlan to pay his property taxes
this : year according to Myron L.
(Bu(l) McGhee, county treasurer.

ALL
SALES
FINAL

.

1981 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
This sharp one owner has it all. Tilt,
cruise, V-8 eng., 60-40 seats, AM·
FM-Stereo, wire wheel covers and
only 13,678 miles.

1981 OLDS
CUTLASS SUP.
2 Or. This locally owned Cutlass
Supreme is double sharp. P.
wmdows, V-8 engine, cruise
·control and AM·FM stereo. Extra
sharp.

1982 FORD
MUSTANG
This red Mustang is very peat &amp;
clean. Only 24,468 low ~iles. 4
speed, AM·FM radio, s~nroof,
sport wheels.
.

NO EXCHANGES
REFUNDS OR
LAY-A-WAYS

1983 CHEV.
SCOTISDALE
4 wheel drive &amp; classy. Scotts·
dale Pkg., cloth interior, AM·FM
' stereo, dual gas tanks, bed rails,
two-tone paint &amp; Rallye wheels.
Only 1,259 miles.

1983 TOYOT
4x4 LONGSE
This is truly one of the nicest
compact 4 wheel drives in the
area. Op.e local own~r. loaded
With eqvipment and nly 4,762
miles.

Monday thru Saturday

11 A.M. til 8 P.M.

'
"

~Dependable, Low· Cost Prescription Service
:,3 Registered Pharmacists
:-.Most complete P-rescription
Stock·
.
.:.• Itemized Receipts for Insurance and Income Tax Purposes
-;,We Compound Prescriptions
::'~We Fill All Third Party Prescriptions
·7eWe Maintain A Complete Record of all
-:;:..Prescriptions Filled
;•Free Parking
~

(60 and Over)
(For 6 and Under)

'

We Have Plenty of New
4 Wheel Drive Pickups &amp;
Blazers- Ready To Go!
Also: 2---2-10 Exte~ded &lt;;ab'
1~2 Wheel Drive
,
1~4 .w h-eel Drive

10% SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
KIDDIE-SAY PROGRAM-1 0% DISCOUNT 1

•.

p·

SUNDAY

,.

'

at y

he
• VeU2,Ne.203
Copy..,,... 1914

PHONE ___
446-6620- 992-6491

Chevrole~~O,dsllJo~ile

.

Inc. . · ,

446-3672 --"l'f'-Minf-

. •Bi' G1f11 Jfhi111Pft·

•

enttne
1 Section , 10 Poget
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. N.W"spof»J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 30, 1984

Reagait presidential h~d
draws varied reactions

$ggggoo

9 A.M. til 9 P.M.

.

•

Fully Equipped-Mileage Range 4,000-6,000

OPEN

&gt;.

See photo on Page 6

3 To Choose From

.....

TWO LOCATIONS
783 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH.
364 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH.

' .
,,

Stortes on Page 4

1984 Olds Cutlass Supre

~.---

FRUTH PHARMACY

·~

Racine business sold

So We Are Extending Our Sale

Your Choice

Coonty Agent's Comer P.5

All Star game results

The Bad Weather
May Have Kept You Away

ELBERFELDS

•CHILDREN'S-Coats, Snowsuits, Sleepwear,
Cords and Jeans, Sweaters, Dresses, Sportswear.

..

TIDS HOUSE, built In 1840 by Dr. Darl1111 Maxon at 212 First Ave.,
h
st
as a one over the door which Is engraved. One wlU note the Inscription
over the doorway as one of the lew GalUpolls houses to JlO!IM!88 such an
You can write to James Sands, U
accurate record ollts history. Thil lnscrl"'lon dates to the time the boule
you wish. Address your mall to him
,..
at Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
was erected. Dr. Maxon was a druggist and a physician and practiced
r - - - - - -- - - - - - d_urt
_n_g_t_he_.d_a..:.y_s_
w_h_en_c:_h..:.._:
ole:_ra::_m::.:.:::or~b.::ll8::_1dll=ed=a~n:::u.::m:::he:::r~oi::_:G:::alU=po=lU=11118=:_·

j( f

Herbicides ••..

top Cedanrille

II.;co;urt:;ho;:use;;Frt;;:d;a;y;m;o;m;l:ng:.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~

Jlminy's football accomplishments
at Gallla Academy High School for
1983:84 season. For that season he
was'·selected -

'

" Dr. Rogers' Liverwort a nd Tar,"
and " Mexican Mustang Liniment."
One of the most Intriguing
doctors of the 184(ls In Gautpolls was
Dr. Wilson. When he arrived tn
town his ad stated that "he was 26
years old, was In perfect health, and
never had a failure In a single
Instance."
Dr. Wlison later claimed that he
could cure cancers In a few days.
He was so confident that he
advertised that he extracted roots.
One would assume this referred to
teeth and not to the fact that Dr.
Wilson also moonlighted In the tree
business.

By BRYSON R. CARTER

:funrny Beaver's biography
rates prep Who's Who hook
rr~s biography has rated a high

some years until her poverty forced
her to vacate. Mrs. Maxon must
have picked up some practical
medicine from her husband lor we
note that In the 1870s Mary sold at
her house " Maxon's Patented Cure
for Deafness" which we suppose.
she made In her home.
Dr. Maxon was also a druggist
along with being a doctor and In his
20 or so years of practice In town he
prescribed such things as: "Dr.
Leroy ' s Cherry Pills," "Dr.
Cullen's Indian Vegetable Pana·
cea," "Dr. Lane's Verrnltuge,"

Hedging Monday topic

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

_,;,: By J . SAMUEL PEEPS

In 1851 Dr. Maxon attended a
lodge meeting on the top floor of the
Star House (which In 1984 was tom
down to make way for the new
Revco store) . The designer of the
Star House had Intended to put a
balcony on the second floor but all
that was there In 1851 was a door
which was open to let air come tn.
Dr. Maxon made the mistake of
thinking the second floor ' was the
first and so he stepped out the door
and feU to bts death. At least the
Injuries Incurred that day led to his
death shortly afterwards.
Darius' wife Mary Maxon con·
tlnued to Uve tn the Maxon house for

REAGAN ANNOUNCEMENT - President &amp;nald Rea«an
embraces lint lady Nancy aeqan alter announclnl that he wlU eeek a
!leCOIId tenn as President. Declarln,, "Our work 18 not llnl8hed,"
Reapn said In • paid political broadcast Sunday nlpt that he wlU lltand
lor reeledlon. (AI' Luerphoto).

Spratley charges
rates ·a re unfair,
highest in-state
COLUMBUS - Columbia Gas of
Ohio custoiners stU! pay the highest
and most Inequitable gas rates In
Ohio, said Ohto Consumers' Coun·
sel William A. Spratley.
The av e rage monthl y
munlctpaUy-set bill In Columbia's
service area (based on use of 13,(XX)
cubic feet of gas, or 13 met) ranges
from $17.96 ' in Sheffield (Lorraln
County) to $132.60 In Stafford
(Monroe County), according to a
semi-annual survey of the utility's
rates done by the Ohio Office of the
Consumers' Counsel (OCC). The
survey reflects rates as of Dec. 5,

Pomeroy and Middleport with
populations of 2,118 and 2,967
respectively, Customer charge at
Pomeroy Is $4 and~ at Middleport .
Customer charge plus commodity
rate equals the base rate plus
G.C.R. plus taxes equals MCF
Billing.
The commodity rate lor Pomeroy Is $15.00 and $15.73 In Middleport. Base rate at Pomeroy ts $19.00
while Middleport residents pay
$15.73 while the G.C.R. Is $64.20 In
both villages.
At Pomeroy the tax Is $4.00 while
Middleport residents are assessed
$3.93 making the MCF bUI, $87.35 In
1~.
The average monthly bUI for the
Pomeroy and $83.!!6 In Middleport.
gas company's entire service tern·
Other unincorporated municipal·
tory totaled $85.61, compared to
Illes Include Coolville, commodity
$73.38 lor customers of East Ohio
rate, $15.71; G.C.R. $64 .20; tax .59
Gas Company, $75.70 for Dayton
for a total bUI of ~.52; Cheshire,
commodity rate, $13.90: base rate,
Power &amp; Light Company custo'
mers, and $17.48 In areas serviced
$13.90: G.C.R. $64.20; .59 cents, and
by Clnclnna.tJ Gas &amp; Electric · total bill ·$78.69; Meigs-Pomeroy
Commodity rate, $13.90; base rate,
Company.
In addition, Spratley charges that
$13.90: G.C.R. $64.20; tax . .58 and
total MCF bUI, $78.36: Meigs·
Columbia's plan to divide Its
Athens, Commodity rate, $12.04:
territory Into five regional rate
base rate, $12.04; G.C.R. $64.20;
districts could hike bllls even higher
tax, $.57 and MCF bill, $76.81.
In municipalities and townships,
Meigs-Middleport, Commodity
plus undermine the efforts of the
rate, $11.03; base rate, $11.03;
uniform rate coalitions.
G.C.R. $64.20; tax, .56 and MCFbill,
Meigs County's rate compartson
$75
.~.
follows:

Fire levels home
in Meigs County
An early Monday morning fire
leveled the story and one-half frame
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Sheets,
Christy Road, In the Tuppers Plains
area.
The Orange Township Fire Department at Tuppers Plains was
called to the residence at 12:06 a.m.
Monday and found the home
engulfed In flames. The Chester and
Coa1vllle units provided mutual aid
In flghtlbg the blilze which leveled ·
the home. All of the fllJ'111s111niS and .
personal belongings of the tamlly
were di!stroYed the fire. .
Cause of the blaze has I)Ot ,been
11etenn1nec1 and tl)i!re.had been no..
IIIOIIetacy Joss established this
morning~ It Will! reported that the
1amUY narrowly escaped tJUn the
homi!. tbe ~ PJaJns Depart·
ment .retumed'to the scene at 4:40
a.m, Monday
the fire brokeout

tJr.

when

uecond time.

Meanwhile, Don Johnson, Dewitts Run, Long Bottom, Informed
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment Sunday at 3: ll a .m . that his
.1979 Ford Pinto had been stolen.
Deputy Manning Mohler located
the vehicle at 4: ll a.m. Sunday
along SR 124 east of Bashan Road
near Dorcas. The keys were the
noor of the vehicle.
The department Is Investigating
an acto! vandalism that occurred to
a lawn ornament !It the Gene RJas
residence on SR 7north or Eastern.
High School.
. Acoachmanwithlantemstatueat ·
the end of the Riggs driveway was
~during the night as was a
mall box.
'Saturday, a mailbox at the Odds
and Ends Shop, located below
Middleport, wasltoJen.Ail tnckleni'A

By The AMoclated Pn.
Democratic presidential candl·
date John Glenn says President
Reagan Is open to criticism on
"peace and war'' and the economy
In a re-election campaign.
Reagan's announcement Sunday
night that he will run for re-election
drew applause from an Ohio
legislative leader and a Republican
mayor.
Glenn said Reagan Is "an affable,
pleasant man."
The U.S. senator said the presl·
dent was vulnerable on "the Issue of
peace and war, the Issue of the
economy andwhetherlt'sonasound
basis for the long-term fUture."
Glenn asked, "What kind of futu re
are we setting up for our children . Is
It fair?"
Declaring, "Our work Is not
flntshE!d, " Reagan said In a paid
political advertisement Sunday
night that he will stand for
re-election as president.
DaveJohnson,OhioHousemlnor·
lty whip, said, " I support President
Reagan. I just think another four
years of his political views will help
the majortty of society. I think the
country Is better ott today than It
was lour years ago."
Unfortunately, the poor have
suffered from Reagan's economic
policies that have helped start the
nation back on the road to economic
recovery, said Johnson , a
Republlcan.
"They (Reagan's economic poll·
cles) couldn't benefit everybody:
somebody had to sutter. I have to be
sympathetic towards those who
have suffered. But nobody's ever

Columbus Mayor Dana Rinehart
put together a happy medium on this
said, "I think he's going to trounce
thing," he said.
Johnson said he'd Uke to see a the Democrats like a good speaker
second Reagan\ administration trounces hecklers. President Rea·
make "some more conservative gan will just keep oq succeeding.
steps toward cuttlngthedeftctt. It's · He'll carry Ohio and he will can)'
Columbus substantially, It doesn't
stU! a questionable scary thing."
As for how a Reagan-led ticket
matter who the opponent Is:"
The Republican mayor said
will affect the election fortunes of
Ohio's Republicans, Johnson said he Reagan should be able to cash In on
foresees no significant coattall economic Improvements. "Obviously, one of the big Issues will be
effect.

TOUGH COMPETITION - Democratic presl·
dentlal hopeful Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohl9.._watches
as President Ronald Reagan announces that he
will seek a second term as president In 1984.

tn the domestic arena, will be the
fact that our S(}-Called misery Index
Is no longer a misery," he said.
ije said that Internationally,
"Wha1 the president has done over
tl!e past four years with respect to
the Middle East, China and the
Soviet Union reflects what Aineri·
cans want to see."
U.S. Rep. Louis Stokes, DOhio,
said , "I think Mr. Reagan will be
very difficult to defeat."

Declaring, "Our work Is not finished," Rea, au
said In a paid political announcement Sunday
nt,ht that he will stand lor re-election. (AP
Laserphoto) .

Verdict relieves fear in Logan
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) -The fear
that gripped this southeastern Ohio
community 15 months ago when the
mutilated bodies of two teen-age
lovers were discovered turned to
jubilation when one of the victim's
stepfather was found guilty of the
slaylngs.
The conviction of Dale N. John·
ston, 50, brought cheers outside the
courtroom In this town where fear of
more slaylngs had led to locked
doors and .formation of neighbor·
hood crime watch patrols. Halloween trick-or-treating was canceled
after the kllllngs In the city of about
6,100people.
Johnston, convicted of the dis·
memberment slaytngs of his stepdaughter and her fiance, must walt
for an Investigation, Including
psychiatric tests, to determine If he
will be sentenced to death.
Sentencing by the three-judge
panel that found him guilty of two
counts of aggravated murder Satur·
day In the deaths of Annette Cooper
Johnston, lB. and Todd Schultz,l9,1s
not expected for several months.
Ten days after their disappear·
ance Oct. 4, 198'.!, the couple's torsos
were found In the Hocking River.
Remaining body parts were found
two days after that In seven sha}low
graves In a com field.

Schultz's family left the courtroom tn tears. His mother, Sandra,
said, "Justice has been done, but
that doesn't brtng .back Annette and
Todd."
Incestuous relationship
Prosecutors depleted what they
claimed was an Incestuous relation·
ship between Johnston. and his
stepdaughter and his jealousy over
her decision to move In with
Schultz's family.
Two witnesses testified that Miss
Johnston told them that Johnston
had raped her. Another witness,
who had dated Miss Johnston, told of
receiving telephoned death threats
he believed were made by Johnston.
Special Prosecutor Fred Mong
charged that Johnston killed the
teen-agers when they went to his
rural home to settle an argument

over a car titled to Johnston's wife
but promised as a gift to Miss
Johnston.
Johnston testified that he loved
Annette. He said they had dltferen·
ces, but that they had been resolved.
He said he and his wife approved of
the couple's marriage plans, al·
though he was upset with Schultz
when he found him in the same room
with Miss Johnston while she
changed clothes. Miss Johnston
moved Into the Schultz home shortly
afterward.
The judges, after more than two
weeks of testimony In the non-jury
tria l, returned the verdict after
deliberating a little more than two
hours.
Johnston stood quietly but paled

Snow closes Meigs schools
Meigs County schools were closed
today as the result of a snow which
fell overnight a nd created an Icy
road situation.
This Is the seventh day tha t

schools in the county h&lt;!ve been
closed recently due to inclement
weather. Schools are permitted five
calamity days each school year
before days must be made up.

as the verdict was read. He was
hustll'd out of the courtroom by
Hocking County sheriff's deputies
while people on other floors of the
courthouse cheered the verdicts.
Scapegoat
Defense lawyer Robert Suhr said
tn closing arguments that Johnston
was chosen as a scapegoat.

"You can 't have people from a
city like Logan In a county Uke
Hocking going out of their minds
about some unknown person or
persons who would do that to
people," he said. Suggesting cult
involvement, he said, "They were
cut up, perhaps In some kind of
ceremony, perhaps not. "
Johnston's wife, Sarah, and his
other stepdaughter, Michelle , 17.
were not In the courthouse when the
verdict was read .
Defense attorney Thomas Tyack
said he was astonished at the judges'
unanimous decision and would
appeal.

oo

are under ln~_tlon.

'

FINDS JOHNSTON GUU.TY - A three-plllld jury
CUi I 11ii•g ol three elected judges Saturday altemoon
found Dale N. J.n.tm, 110, IApn, guilty In the
October, 1982nludallonlllaympofbla~,
AnDe&amp;te Jolntoa and her !lance, Todd Sclallz.

Reoderlng the verdict alter hearing two weeks of
lelltbnony were left to rtpa, Judges Joseph Cirigliano,
James SWweD and Michael Corrlpll. (AI'
~).

.,

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